"Smith, Wilbur - Egyptian 01 - River God" - читать интересную книгу автора (Smith Wilbur) RIVER GOD Wilbur Smith This book, like so many others before it, is for my
wife, Danielle Antoinette. The Nile that flows through this story has both of
us in her thrall. We have spent days of delight voyaging together upon her
waters and idling upon her banks. As we are, so is she a creature of this very
Africa of ours. Yet this great river runs neither so strongly nor
so deeply as my love for you, my darling.
THE RIVER LAY HEAVILY UPON THE desert, bright as a
spill of molten metal from a furnace. The sky smoked with heat-haze and the sun
beat down upon it all with the strokes of a coppersmith's hammer, hi the mirage
the gaunt hills flanking the Lostris was fourteen years of age. The I remember her so vividly on that day. She would
grow more beautiful as the years passed, become more poised and regal, but
never again would that glow of virgin womanhood radiate from her so
overpoweringly. Every man aboard, even the warriors at the rowing-benches, were
aware of it. Neither I nor any one of them could keep our gaze off her. She
filled me with a sense of my own inadequacy and a deep and poignant longing;
for although I am a eunuch I was gelded only after I had known the joy of a
woman's body. Taita,' she called to me, 'sing with me!' And when
I obeyed she smiled with pleasure. My voice was one of the many reasons that,
whenever she was able, she kept me near her; my tenor complemented her lovely
soprano to perfection. We sang one of the old peasant love songs that I had
taught her, and which was still one of her favourites: My heart flutters up like a wounded quail when I see my beloved's face and my cheeks bloom like the dawn sky to the sunshine of his smile— From the stern another voice joined with ours. It was
a man's voice, deep and powerful, but it lacked the clarity and purity of my
own. If my voice was that of a dawn-greeting thrush, men this was the voice of
a young lion. Lostris turned her head and now her smile shimmered
like the sunbeams on the surface of the Tanus' father, Pianki, Lord Harrab, had been one of
the grandees of the Egyptian nobility, but his mother had been the daughter of
a freed Tehenu slave. Like so many of her people, she had been fair-headed and
blue-eyed. She had died of the swamp fever while Tanus was still a child, so my
memory of her was imperfect. However, the old women said that seldom before had
such beauty as hers been seen in either of the two kingdoms. On the other hand, I had known and admired Tanus'
father, before he lost all his vast fortune and the great estates that had once
almost rivalled those of Pharaoh himself. He had been of dark complexion, with
Egyptian eyes the colour of polished obsidian, a man with more physical
strength than beauty, but with a generous and noble heart—some might say too generous
and too trusting, for he had died destitute, with his heart broken by those he
had thought his friends, alone in the darkness, cut off from the sunshine of
Pharaoh's favour. Thus it seemed that Tanus had inherited the best
from both his parents, except only worldly wealth, hi nature and in power he
was as his father; in beauty as his mother. So why should I resent my mistress
loving him? I loved him also, and, poor neutered thing that I am, I knew that I
could never have her for myself, not even if the gods had raised my status
above that of slave. Yet such is the perversity of human nature that I hungered
for what I could never have and dreamed of the impossible. Lostris sat on her cushion on the prow with her
slave girls sprawled at her feet, two little black girls from Cush, lithe as
panthers, entirely naked except for the golden collars around their necks.
Lostris herself wore only a skirt of bleached linen, crisp and white as an
egret's wing. The skin of her upper body, caressed by the sun, was the colour
of oiled cedar wood from the mountains beyond Byblos. Her breasts were the size
and shape of ripe figs just ready for plucking, and tipped with rose garnets. She had set aside her formal wig, and wore her natural
hair in a side-lock that fell in a thick dark rope over one breast. The slant
of her eyes was enhanced by the silver-green of powdered malachite cunningly
touched to the upper lids. The colour of her eyes was green also, but the
darker, clearer green of the Nile when its waters have shrunk and deposited
their burden of precious silts. Between her breasts, suspended on a gold chain,
she wore a figurine of Hapi, the goddess of the Nile, fashioned in gold and
precious lapis lazuli. Of course it was a superb piece, for I had made it with
my own hands for her. Suddenly Tanus lifted his right hand with the fist
clenched. As a single man the rowers checked their stroke and held the blades
of their paddles aloft, glinting in the sunlight and dripping water. Then Tanus
thrust the steering-oar hard over, and the men on the port bank stabbed their
backstroke deeply, creating a series of tiny whirlpools in the surface of the
green water. The starboard side pulled strongly ahead. The boat spun so sharply
that the deck canted over at an alarming angle. Then both banks pulled together
and she shot forward. The sharp prow, with the blue eyes of Horus emblazoned
upon it, brushed aside the dense stands of papyrus, and she lanced her way out
of the flow of the river and into the still waters of the lagoon beyond. Lostris broke off the song and shaded her eyes to
gaze ahead. 'There they are!' she cried, and pointed with a graceful little
hand. The other boats of Tanus' squadron were cast like a net across the
southern reaches of the lagoon, blocking the main entrance to the great river,
cutting off any escape in that direction. Naturally, Tanus had chosen for himself the
northern station, for he knew that this was where the sport would be most
furious. I wished it was not so. Not that I am a coward, but I have always the
safety of my mistress to consider. She had inveigled herself aboard the Breath
of Horus only after much intrigue in which, as always, she had deeply
involved me. When her father learned, as he surely would, of her presence in
the thick of the hunt, it would go badly enough for me, but if he learned also
that I was responsible for allowing her to be in the company of Tanus for a
full day, not even my privileged position would protect me from his wrath. His
instructions to me regarding this young man were unequivocal. However, I seemed to be the only soul aboard the Breath
of Horus who was perturbed. The others were simmering with excitement.
Tanus checked the rowers with a peremptory hand-signal, and the boat glided to
a halt and lay rocking gently upon the green waters that were so still that
when I glanced overboard and saw my own reflection look back at me, I was
struck, as always, by how well my beauty had carried over the years. To me it
seemed that my face was more lovely than the cerulean blue lotus blooms that
framed it. I had little time to admire it, however, for the crew were all
abustle. One of Tanus' staff officers ran up his personal
standard to the masthead. It was the image of a blue crocodile, with its great
coxcombed tail held erect and its jaws open. Only an officer of the rank of
Best of Ten Thousand was entitled to his own standard. Tanus had achieved such
rank, together with the command of the Blue Crocodile division of Pharaoh's own
elite guard, before his twentieth birthday. Now the standard at the masthead was the signal for
the hunt to begin. On the horizon of the lagoon the rest of the squadron were
tiny with distance, but their paddles began to beat rhythmically, rising and
falling like the wings of wild geese in flight, glistening in the sunlight.
From their sterns the multiple wavelets of their wakes were drawn out across
the placid waters and lay for a long while on the surface, as though moulded
from solid clay. Tanus lowered the gong over the stem. It was a long
bronze tube. He allowed the end of it to sink below the surface. When struck
with a hammer of the same metal the shrill, reverberating tones would be
transmitted through the water, filling our quarry with consternation. Unhappily
for my equanimity, I knew that this could readily turn to a murderous rage. Tanus laughed at me. Even in his own excitation he
had sensed my qualms. For a rude soldier he had unusual perception. 'Come up
here in the stern-tower, Taita!' he ordered. 'You can beat the gong for us. It
will take your mind off the safety of your own beautiful hide for a while.' I was hurt by his levity, but relieved by the
invitation, for the stern-tower is high above the water. I moved to do his
bidding without undignified haste, and,'as I passed him, I paused to exhort him
sternly, 'Have a care for the safety of my mistress. Do you hear me, boy? Do
not encourage her to recklessness, for she is every bit as wild as you are.' I
could speak thus to an illustrious commander of ten thousand, for he was once
my pupil and I had wielded the cane on more than one occasion across those
martial buttocks. He grinned at me now as he had in those days, as cocky and
impudent as ever. 'Leave that lady in my hands, I implore you, old
friend. There is nothing I would relish more, believe me!' I did not admonish
him for such a disrespectful tone, for I was in some small haste to take my
place in the tower. From there I watched him take up his bow. Already that bow was famous throughout the army,
indeed throughout the length of the great river from the cataracts to the sea.
I had designed it for him when he had grown dissatisfied with the puny weapons
that, up until that time, were all that were available to him. I had suggested
that we should try to fashion a bow with some new material other than those
feeble woods that grow in our narrow riverine valley; perhaps with exotic
timbers such as the heart-wood of the olive from the land of the Hittites or of
the ebony from Cush; or with even stranger materials such as the horn of the
rhinoceros or the ivory tusk of the elephant. No sooner had we made the attempt than we came upon
a myriad of problems, the first of which was the brittleness of these exotic
materials. In their natural state none of them would bend without cracking, and
only the largest and therefore the most expensive elephant tusk would allow us
to carve a complete bowstock from it. I solved both these problems by splitting
the ivory of a smaller tusk into slivers and gluing these together in
sufficient girth and bulk to form a full bow. Unfortunately it was too rigid
for any man to draw. However, from there it was an easy and natural step
to laminate together all four of our chosen materials—olive wood, ebony, horn
and ivory. Of course, there were many months of experimentation with
combinations of these materials, and with various types of glue to hold them
together. We never did succeed in making a glue strong enough. In the end I
solved this last problem by binding the entire bowstock with electrum wire to
prevent it from flying apart. I had two big men assist Tanus in twisting the
wire on to it with all their combined strength, while the glue was still hot.
When it cooled, it set to an almost perfect combination of strength and pliability. Then I cut strands from the gut of a great
black-maned lion that Tanus hunted and killed with his bronze-bladed war spear
out in the desert. These I tanned and twisted together to form a bowstring. The
result was this gleaming arc of such extraordinary power that only one man out
of all the hundreds who had made the attempt could draw it to full stretch. The regulation style of archery as taught by the
army instructors was to face the target and draw the nocked arrow to the
sternum of the chest, hold that aim for a deliberate pause, then loose on
command. However, not even Tanus had the strength to draw this bow and hold his
aim steadily. He was forced to develop a completely new style. Standing
sideways to the target, addressing it over his left shoulder, he would throw up
the bow with his left arm outstretched and, with a convulsive heave, draw back
the arrow until the feathered flights touched his lips and the muscles of his
arms and chest stood proud with the effort. In that same instant of full extension,
seemingly without aiming, he would loose. At first, his arrovlfe flew at random as wild bees
leave the hive, but he practised day after day and month after month. The fingers of his right hand became raw and
bleeding from the chafing of the bowstring, but they healed and toughened. The
inside of his left forearm was bruised and excoriated where the bowstring
slashed past it on the release of the arrow, but I fashioned a leather guard to
protect it. And Tanus stood at the butts and practised and practised. Even I lost confidence in his ability to master the
weapon but Tanus never gave up. Slowly, agonizingly slowly, he gained control
of it to the point where, finally, he could launch three arrows with such
rapidity that they were all in the air at the same instant. At least two of the
three would strike the target, a copper disc the size of a man's head set up at
a distance of fifty paces from where Tanus stood. Such was the force of those
arrows that they would fly cleanly through the metal which was the thickness of
my little finger. Tanus named this mighty weapon Lanata which was,
quite coincidentally, the discarded baby-name of my mistress. Now he stood in
the bows with the woman at his side, and her namesake in his left hand. They
made a marvellous couple, but too obviously so for my peace of mind. I called sharply, 'Mistress! Come back here
immediately! It is unsafe where you are.' She did not even deign to glance over
her shoulder, but made a sign at me behind her back. Every one of the crew of
the galley saw it, and the boldest of them guffawed. One of those little black
vixens that were her handmaidens must have taught Lostris that gesture, which
was more appropriate to the ladies of the riverside taverns than to a high-born
daughter of the House of Intef. I considered remonstrating with her, but at
once abandoned such an imprudent course, for my mistress is amenable to
restraint only in certain of her moods. Instead, I applied myself to beating
the bronze gong with sufficient vigour to disguise my chagrin. The shrill, reverberating tone carried across the
glassy waters of the lagoon, and instantly the air was filled with the
susurration of wings and a shade was cast over the sun as, from the papyrus beds
and the hidden pools and open water, a vast cloud of water-fowl rose into the
sky. They were of a hundred varieties: black and white ibis with vulturine
heads, sacred to the goddess of the river; flights of honking geese in russet
plumage, each with a ruby droplet in the centre of its chest; herons of
greenish-blue or midnight black, with bills like swords and ponderous
wing-beats; and ducks in such profusion that their numbers challenged the eye
and the credibility of the beholder. Wild-fowling is one of the most ardent pursuits of
the Egyptian nobility, but that day we were after different game. At that
moment, I saw far ahead a disturbance upon the glassy surface. It was weighty
and massive, and my spirits quailed, for I knew what terrible beast had moved
there. Tanus also had seen it, but his reaction was altogether different from
mine. He gave tongue like a hunting hound, and his men shouted with him and
bent to their paddles. The Breath ofHorus shot forward as though she were one
of the birds that darkened the sky above us, and my mistress shrieked with
excitement and beat with one small fist upon Tanus' muscled shoulder. The waters roiled once more and Tanus signalled to
his steersman to follow the movement, while I hammered upon the gong to bolster
and sustain my courage. We reached the spot where last we had seen movement,
and the vessel glided to a standstill while every man upon her decks gazed
around eagerly. I alone glanced directly over the stem. The water
beneath our hull was shallow and almost as clear as the air above us. I
shrieked as loudly and as shrilly as my mistress had and leapt back from the
stem-rail, for the monster was directly under us. The hippopotamus is the familiar of Hapi, the
goddess of the Nile. It was only with her special dispensation that we could
hunt it. To that end Tanus had prayed and sacrificed at the goddess's temple
that morning, with my mistress close by his side. Of course, Hapi is her patron
goddess, but I doubted that alone was the reason for her avid participation in
the ceremony. The beast that I saw beneath us now was an enormous
old bull. To my eye, he seemed as large as our galley, a gigantic shape that
lumbered along the bottom of the lagoon, his movements slowed down by the drag
of the water so that he moyed like a creature from a nightmare. He raised puffs
of mud from beneath his hooves the same way that a wild oryx stirs the dust as
it races across the desert sands. With the steering-oar Tanus spun the boat about and
we sped after the bull. But even at that slow and mannered gallop he rapidly
drew away from us. His dark shape faded into the green depths of the lagoon
ahead of us. 'Pull! By Seth's foul breath, pull!' Tanus howled
at his men, but when one of his officers shook out the knotted lash of the whip,
Tanus frowned and shook his head. I have never seen him ply the lash where it
was not warranted. Suddenly the bull broke through the surface ahead
of us and blew a great cloud of fetid steam from his lungs. The stink of it
washed over us, even though he was well out of bowshot. For a moment his back
formed a gleaming granite island in the lagoon, then he drew a whistling breath
and with a swirl was gone again. 'After him!' Tanus bellowed. 'There he is,' I cried, as I pointed over the side,
'he's doubling back.' 'Well done, old friend,' Tanus laughed at me,
'we'll make a warrior of you yet.' That notion was ridiculous, for I am a
scribe, a sage and an artist. My heroics are of the mind. None the less, I felt
a thrill of pleasure, as I always do at Tanus' praise, and my trepidation was,
for the moment, lost in the excitement of the chase. To the south of us the other galleys of the
squadron had joined the hunt. The priests of Hapi had kept a strict count of
the number of these great beasts in the lagoon, and had given sanction for
fifty of them to be slaughtered for the coming festival of Osiris. This would
leave almost three hundred of the goddess's flock remaining in the temple
lagoon, a number that the priests considered ideal to keep the waterways free
of choking weed, to prevent the papyrus beds from encroaching upon the arable
lands and to provide a regular supply of meat for the temple. Only the priests
themselves were allowed to eat the flesh of the hippopotamus outside the ten
days of the festival of Osiris. So the hunt spun out across the waters like some
intricate dance, with the ships of the squadron weaving and pirouetting while
the frenzied beasts fled before them, diving and blowing and grunting as they
surfaced to dive again. Yet each dive was shorter than the last, and the
swirling breaches at the surface became more frequent as their lungs were
emptied and could not be fully recharged before the pursuing ships bore down
upon them and forced them to dive again. All the while the bronze gongs in the
stern-tower of each galley rang out to blend with the excited cries of the
rowers and the exhortations of the helmsmen. All was wild uproar and confusion
and I found myself shouting and cheering along with the most bloodthirsty of
them. Tanus had concentrated all his attention on the
first and largest bull. He ignored the females and younger animals that
breached within bowshot, and followed the great beast through all his
convolutions, drawing inexorably closer to him each time he surfaced. Even in my
excitation I could not but admire the skill with which Tanus handled the Breath
of Horus and the manner in which his crew responded to his signals. But
then, he always had the knack of getting the very best out of those he
commanded. How otherwise, with neither fortune nor great patron to sustain him,
could he have risen so swiftly to exalted rank? What he had achieved he had
done on his own merit, and that despite the malignant influence of hidden
enemies who had placed every obstacle in his way. Suddenly the bull burst through the surface not
thirty paces from the bows. He came out gleaming in the sunshine, monstrous
black and awful, clouds of steamy vapour spurting from his nostrils like that
creature from the underworld that devours the hearts of those who are found
wanting by the gods. Tanus had an arrow nocked and now he threw up the
great bow and loosed it in the same fleeting instant. Lanata played her
dreadful shimmering music, and the arrow leaped out in a blur that deceived the
eye. While it still hissed in flight, another followed it and then another. The
bowstring hummed like a lute, and the arrows struck one after the other. The
bull bellowed as they buried themselves full-length in his broad back, and he
dived again. These were missiles that I had devised especially
for this occasion. The feathered flights had been removed from the arrows and
replaced by tiny floats of baobab wood such as the fisherman use to buoy their
nets. They slipped over the butt of the shaft in such a way that they were
secure in flight but would become dislodged once the beast dived and dragged
them through the water. They were attached to the bronze arrow-head by a fine
linen thread that was wound around the shaft, but which unravelled once the
float was detached. So now, as the bull sped away beneath the water, the three
tiny floats popped to the surface and bobbed along behind him. I had painted
them bright yellow so that the eye was drawn to them and the bull's position
was instantly revealed, even though he was deep in the lagoon. Thus Tanus was able to anticipate each of the
bull's wild rushes and to send the Breath of Horus speeding to head him
off and to place another set of arrows deep in the glistening black back as it
bulged out of the water. By now the bull was towing a garland of pretty yellow
corks behind him, and the waters were streaking and swirling red with his
blood. Despite the wild emotions of the moment I could not help but feel pity
for the stricken creature each time it came bellowing to the surface to be met
by another hail of the deadly hissing arrows. My sympathy was not shared by my
young mistress, who was in the very thick of the fray and shrieking with the
delicious terror and excitement of it all. Once again the bull came up dead ahead, but this
time facing the Breath of Horus as she bore down upon him. His jaws
gaped so wide that I could see far down his throat. It was a tunnel of bright
red flesh that could easily have engulfed a man entirely. The jaws were lined
with such an array of fangs that my breath stopped and my flesh chilled. In his
bottom jaw they were huge ivory sickles designed to harvest the tough and
sinewy stalks of standing papyrus. In his upper jaw they were gleaming white
shafts as thick as my wrist that could shear through the hull timbers of the Breath
of Horus as easily as I would bite through a cake of cornflour. I had
recently had the opportunity of examining the corpse of a peasant woman who,
while cutting papyrus on the river-bank, had disturbed a cow hippo that had just
given birth to a calf. The woman had been severed in half so neatly that it
seemed she had been struck with the keenest of bronze blades. Now this enraged monster with his maw filled with
these gleaming teeth was bearing down upon us, and even though I was high in
the stem-tower and as far from him as I could possibly be, yet I found myself
as incapable of sound or movement as a temple statue, frozen with terror. Tanus loosed yet another arrow which flew squarely
down the gaping throat, yet the creature's agony was already so terrible that
he seemed not to notice this further injury, although it must eventually prove
fatal. He charged without check or hesitation straight at the bows of the Breath
of Horus. Such a fearsome roar of fury and of mortal anguish issued from
the tortured throat that an artery ruptured deep within it and gouts of blood
were sent spraying from his open jaws. The spewing blood turned to clouds of
red mist in the sunlight, both beautiful and horrible at the same time. Then
the bull crashed headlong into the bows of our galley. The Breath of Horus was cutting through the
water at the speed of a running gazelle, but the bull was even swifter in his
rage and his bulk was so solid that it seemed as though we had run aground on a
rocky shore. The rowers were sent sprawling from their benches, while I was
hurled forwards with such force against the rail of the stern-tower that the
air was driven from my lungs and replaced by a solid rock of pain in my chest. Yet even in rny own distress my concern was all for
my mistress. Through tears of agony I saw her flung forward by the impact,
'fcnus threw out his arm to try to save her, but he was also off-balance from
the shock, and the bow in his left hand hindered him. He was only able to check
her impetus for a moment, but then she teetered at the rail with her arms
windmilling desperately, and her back arched out over the drop. 'Tanus!' she screamed, and reached out one hand to
him. He recovered his balance with the nimbleness of an acrobat and tried to
catch her hand. For an instant their fingers touched, then it seemed that she
was plucked away and dashed over the side. From my elevated position in the stern I was able
to follow her fall. She flipped over in the air like a cat, and the white skirts
streamed upwards to expose the exquisite length of her thighs. To me it seemed
that she fell for ever, and my own anguished cry blended with her despairing
wail. 'My baby!' I cried. 'My little one!' For I was
certain that she was lost. It seemed that all 'her life, as I had known it,
replayed itself before my eyes. I saw her again as a toddling infant and heard
the baby endearments that she bestowed on me, her adoring nursemaid. I saw her
grow to womanhood, and I remembered every joy and every heartache that she had
caused me. I loved her then in the moment of losing her even more than I had
done in all those fourteen long years. She fell upon the vast, blood-splattered back of
the infuriated bull, and for an instant lay spread-eagled there like a human sacrifice
upon the altar of some obscene religion. The bull whirled about, mounting high
out of the water, and he twisted his huge deformed head backwards, trying to
reach her. His bloodshot piggy eyes glared with the insanity of his rage, and
his great jaws clashed as he snapped at her. Somehow Lostris managed to gather herself and cling
to a pair of the arrow-shafts that protruded from the bull's broad back as
though they were handles. She lay with her arms and legs spread wide. She was
not screaming now, all her art and strength employed in staying alive. Those
curved ivory fangs rang upon each other like the blades of duelling warriors as
they gnashed in air. At each bite they seemed to miss her by only a
finger's-breadth, and any instant I expected one of her lovely limbs to be
pruned away like a delicate shoot from the vine, and to see her sweet young
blood mingle with those brutish effusions that streamed from the bull's wounds. In the prow Tanus recovered swiftly. For an instant
I saw his face and it was terrible. He tossed aside the bow, for it was useless
to him now, and he seized instead the hilt of his sword and jerked the blade
free of its crocodile-skin scabbard. It was a gleaming length of bronze as long
as his arm, and the edges were honed until they could shave the hair from the
back of his hand. He leaped up on to the gunwale and balanced there
for an instant, watching the wild gyrations of the mortally wounded bull in the
water below him. Then he launched himself outwards and dropped like a stooping
falcon with the sword held in both hands and pointing downwards. He dropped across the bull's thick neck, landing
astride it as though he were about to ride it into the underworld. The full weight of his body and the impetus of that
wild leap were behind the sword as he struck. Half the length of the blade was
driven into the hippopotamus's neck at the base of the skull, and, seated upon
it like a rider, Tanus worried and worked the keen bronze deeper, using both
arms and the strength of those broad shoulders. At the goad of the blade the
bull went berserk. His strivings up to that point seemed feeble in comparison
to this fresh outburst. The bull reared most of his enormous bulk out of the
lagoon, swinging his head from side to side, throwing solid sheets of water so
high in the air that they crashed down on the deck of the galley and, like a
curtain, almost obscured the scene from my horrified gaze. Through it all I watched the couple on the
monster's back tossed about mercilessly. The shaft of one of the arrows that
Lostris was holding snapped, and she was almost thrown clear. If this had
happened she would surely have been savaged by the bull and chopped into bloody
tatters by those ivory fangs. Tanus reached backwards and with one arm seized
and steadied her, while with his right hand he never ceased working the broifce
blade deeper into the nape of the bull's neck. Unable to reach them, the hippopotamus slashed at
his own flanks, inflicting terrible gaping wounds in his sides so that for
fifty paces around the galley the waters were incarnadined, and both Lostris
and Tanus were painted entirely crimson from the tops of their heads to the
soles of their feet by the spurting blood. Then- faces were turned to grotesque
masks from which their eyes whitely glared. The violent death-throes of the bull had carried
them far from the galley's side, and I was the first aboard to recover my wits.
I yelled to the rowers, 'Follow them! Don't let them get away,' and they sprang
to their stations and sent the Breath of Horus in pursuit. At that instant it seemed that the point of Tanus'
blade must have found the joint of the vertebrae in the breast's neck and
slipped through. The immense carcass stiffened and froze. The bull rolled on to
his back with all four legs extended rigidly, and he plunged below the waters
of the lagoon, bearing Lostris and Tanus with him into the depths. I choked back the wail of despair that rose in my
throat, and bellowed an order to the deck below. 'Back-water! Do not overrun
them! Swimmers to the bows!' Even I was startled by the power and authority of
my own voice. The galley's forward way was checked, and before I
could reflect on the prudence of what I was doing, I found myself heading a
rush of hulking warriors across the deck. They would probably have cheered
while they watched any other officer drown, but not their Tanus. As for myself, I had already stripped off my skirt
and was naked. Not the threat of a hundred lashes would have made me do this in
any other circumstances, for I have let only one other person ever see those
injuries that the state executioner inflicted upon me so long ago, and he was
the one who had ordered the castrating knife used upon me in the first place.
But now, for once, I was totally oblivious of the gross mutilation of my
manhood. I am a strong swimmer, and although in retrospect
such foolhardiness makes me shudder, I truly believe that I might have dived
over the side and swum down through those blood-dyed waters in an attempt to
rescue my mistress. However, as I poised myself at the ship's rail, the waters
directly below me opened and two heads bobbed out, both of them streaming water
and as close as a pair of mating otters. One was dark and the other fair, but
from both of them issued the most unlikely sound I had ever heard. They were
laughing. They were howling and shrieking and spluttering with laughter as they
floundered towards the ship's side, locked so firmly in each other's arms that
I was certain that they were in real danger of drowning one another. All my concern turned instantly to outrage at this
levity, and at the thought of the dreadful folly which I had been on the point
of committing. Like a mother whose first instinct on finding her lost child is
to thrash it, I heard my own voice lose all its previous deep authority and
turn shrill and querulous. I was still berating my mistress with all my famous
eloquence as she and Tanus were dragged by a dozen willing hands from the water
on to the deck. 'You reckless, unbridled little savage!' I railed
at her. 'You thoughtless, selfish, undisciplined little hoyden! You promised
me! You swore an oath on the maidenhead of the goddess—' She ran to me and threw both arms around my neck.
'Oh, Taita!' she cried, still bubbling with laughter. 'Did you see him? Did you
see Tanus spring to my rescue? Was it not the noblest deed that ever you heard
of? Just like the hero of one of your very best stories.' The fact that I had been on the point of making a
similar heroic gesture was quite ignored, and this only increased my
irritation. Added to which I suddenly realized that Lostris had lost her skirt,
and that the cold, wet body she pressed to mine was entirely naked. She was
displaying to the rude gaze of officers and men the neatest, tightest pair of
buttocks in all Egypt. I snatched up the nearest shield and used it to
cover both our bodies while I shouted at her slave girls to find another skirt
for her. Their giggles only increased my fury, and as soon as both Lostris and
I were once again decently covered, I rounded on Tanus. 'As for you, you careless ruffian, I shall report
you to my Lord Intef! He will have the skin flogged from your back.' 'You will do no sucff thing,' Tanus laughed at me,
and threw one wet muscled arm around my shoulders to hug me so soundly that I
was lifted off my feet, 'for he would have you flogged just as merrily.
Nevertheless, thank you for your concern, old friend.' He looked around quickly, with one arm still
encircling my shoulder, and frowned. The Breath of Horus was separated
from the other ships of the squadron, but by now the hunt was over. Every
galley but ours had taken its full share of the bag that the priests had
sanctioned us. Tanus shook his head. 'We did not make the most of
our chances, did we?' he grunted, and ordered one of his officers to hoist the
recall signal to the squadron. Then he forced a smile. 'Let us broach a jug of
beer together, for now we have a while to wait and this has been thirsty work.'
He went to the bows where the slave girls were fussing over Lostris. At first I
was still so angry that I would not join their impromptu picnic on the deck.
Instead I maintained an aloof dignity in the stern. 'Oh, let him sulk a while,' I heard Lostris'
stage-whisper to Tanus as she recharged his cup with foaming beer. "The
old darling gave himself an awful scare, but he will get over it as soon as he
is hungry. He does so love his food.' She is the epitome of injustice, is my mistress. I
never sulk, I am no glutton, and at that time I was barely thirty years of age,
although to a fourteen-year-old anyone above twenty is an ancient, and I admit
that, when it comes to food, I do have the refined tastes of a connoisseur. The
roast wild goose with figs that she was ostentatiously displaying was one of my
favourite dishes, as she very well knew. I made them suffer for a while longer, and it was
only when Tanus brought me a jug of beer with his own hand and cajoled me with
all his charm that I deigned to relent a little and let him lead me to the
prow. Still, I was a little stiff with them until Lostris kissed my cheek and
said, loud enough for all to hear, 'My girls tell me that you took command of
the ship like a veteran, and that you would have dived overboard to rescue me.
Oh, Taita, what would I ever do without you?' Only then would I smile at her
and accept the slice of goose she pressed upon me. It was delicious, and the
beer was of three-palm quality. Even so, I ate sparingly, for I have my figure
to consider and her earlier jibe about my appetite still rankled a little. Tanus' squadron was scattered widely across the
lagoon, but now it began to regroup. I saw that some of the other galleys had
suffered damage, as we had. Two ships had collided in the heat of the chase,
while four others had been attacked by the quarry. However, they reassembled
swiftly and took up their battle stations. Then, in line astern and with
strings of gay pennants fluttering at the mastheads to proclaim the size of
each galley's bag, they dashed past us. The crews raised a cheer as they came
level with the Breath of Horus. Tanus saluted them with a clenched fist
and the Blue Crocodile standard was dipped at the masthead, for all the world
as though we had just achieved a famous victory against daunting odds. Boyish
display, perhaps, but then I am still enough of a boy to enjoy military
ceremonial. As soon as it was over, the squadron resumed its
battle stations and was holding its position against the light breeze that had
sprung up, with skilful use of paddles and steering-oars. Of course, there was
no sign of the slaughtered hippopotami as yet. Although every galley had killed
at least one, while some had killed two and even three, the carcasses had all
sunk away into the green depths of the lagoon. I knew that Tanus was secretly
lamenting the fact that the Breath ofHorus had not been the most successful
boat, and that our protracted encounter with the bull had limited our score to
only that single animal. He was accustomed to excelling. Anyway, he was not his
usual ebullient self and he soon left us on the prow and went to supervise the
repairs to the hull of the Breath ofHorus. The bull's charge had sprung the underwater
planking and we were taking enough water to necessitate constant bailing of the
bilges with leather buckets. This was a most inefficient procedure which
diverted men from their duties as rowers and warriors. Surely it could be
improved upon, I thought to myself. So while we waited for the carcasses of the dead
beasts to rise, I sent one of theslave girls to fetch the basket that contained
my writing instruments. Then, after a little further thought, I began to sketch
out an idea for mechanically removing the water from the bilges of a fighting
galley in action, a method which did not demand the efforts of half the crew.
It was based pn the same principle as the shadoof water buckets. I thought that
two men might operate it instead of a dozen at the buckets, as was now the
case. When I had completed the sketch, I pondered on the collision
that had caused the original damage. Historically, the tactics used in battles
between squadrons of river galleys had always been the same as those of land
engagements. The ships would lie alongside each other and exchange volleys of
arrows. They would then close and grapple and board, and finish the business
with the sword. The galley captains were always careful to avoid collision, as
this was considered sloppy seamanship. 'But what if—' I thought suddenly, and I began a
sketch of a galley with a reinforced bow. As the idea took firm root I added a
horn like that of the rhinoceros at the water line. It could be carved from
hardwood and clad with bronze. Angled forwards and slightly downwards, it could
be driven through the hull of an opposing vessel to rip out her belly. I was so
engrossed that I did not hear Tanus come up behind me. He snatched the papyrus
scroll from me and studied it avidly. Of course, he understood instantly what I was
about. When his father had lost his fortune, I had tried everything in my power
to find a rich patron to sponsor him to enter one of the temples as a novice
scribe, there to continue his studies and his learning. For I truly believed
that, with my tutelage, he had every prospect of developing into one of the great
minds of Egypt, perhaps in time a name to rank with that of Imhotep who, one
thousand years before, had designed those first marvellous pyramids at
Saqqarah. I had been unsuccessful, naturally enough, for the same
enemy whose spite and guile had destroyed Tanus' father had set out to bar the
way to Tanus himself. No man in the land could prevail against such a baleful
influence. So instead I had helped Tanus to enter the army. Despite my
disappointment and misgivings, this had been his own choice of career ever
since he had first stood upright and wielded a wooden sword on the other
infants in the playground. 'By the carbuncles on Seth's buttocks!' he
exclaimed now, as he studied my drawings. 'You and that designing brush of
yours are worth ten full squadrons to me!' Tanus' casual blasphemy on the name of the great
god Seth always alarms me. For although both he and I are Horus men, still I do
not believe in flagrantly offering offence to any member of the pantheon of
Egyptian gods. I personally never pass a shrine without offering a prayer or
making a small sacrifice, no matter how humble or unimportant the god it
houses. It is, to my mind, simple common sense and good insurance. One has
sufficient enemies amongst men without deliberately seeking out others amongst
the gods. I am particularly obsequious to Seth, for his formidable reputation
terrifies me. I suspect that Tanus knows all this and deliberately does it to
tease me. However, my discomfort was soon forgotten in the warm glow of his
praise. 'How do you do it?' he demanded. 'I am the soldier,
and today I saw everything that you did. Why did not the same ideas occur to
me?' We were instantly immersed in a lively discussion
of my designs. Of course, Lostris could not be excluded for long, and she came
to join us. Her handmaidens had dried and rebraided her hair and retouched her
make-up. Her loveliness was a distraction, especially since she stood beside me
and nonchalantly draped one slim arm over my shoulder. She would never have
touched a man like that in public, for it would have offended against custom
and modesty. But then I am not a man, and though she leaned against me, her
eyes never left Tanus' face. Her preoccupation with him went back to when she had
first learned to walk. She had stumbled along adoringly behind the lordly
ten-year-old Tanus, faithfully trying to copy his every gesture and word. When
he spat, she spat. When he swore, she lisped the same oath, until Tanus had
complained bitterly to me, 'Can you not make her leave me alone, Taita? She's
just a baby!' He was not doing much complaining now, I noticed. At last we were interrupted by a hail from the
lookout in the bows, and we all hurried forward and peered eagerly across the
lagoon. The first hippopotamus carcass was rising to the surface. It came up
belly first as the gases in its intestines expanded and the guts distended like
a child's balloon made from a goat's bladder. It bobbed on the surface with all
its legs extended stiffly. One of the galleys sped across to recover it. A
saitor scrambled out on to the carcass and secured a line to one of the legs.
As soon as this was done, the galley towed it away towards the distant shore. .
By now the huge corpses were surfacing all around us. The galleys gathered them
up and dragged them away. Tanus secured two of them to our stern-hawser and the
rowers strained at their paddles to move them through the water. As we approached the shore I shaded my eyes against
the slanting sun's rays and peered ahead. It seemed that every man, woman and
child in Upper Egypt was waiting upon the bank. They were a vast multitude,
dancing and singing and waving palm-fronds to welcome the incoming fleet. The
restless movement of their white robes seemed like a storm surf breaking upon
the edge of the placid lagoon. As each galley drew up against the bank, teams of
men clad only in the briefest loin-cloths waded out as deep as their armpits to
fasten ropes to the bloated carcasses, hi their excitement they were oblivious
to the ever-present threat of crocodiles lurking in the opaque green waters.
Every season these ferocious dragons devour hundreds of our people. Sometimes they are so bold that they rush out on to
dry land to seize a child playing near the water's edge or a peasant woman
washing clothes or drawing water for her family. Now, in the vast meat-hunger that gripped them, the
people were interested in only one thing. They seized the ropes and hauled the
carcasses ashore. As they slithered up the muddy bank, scores of tiny silver
fish that had been feasting on the open wounds were slow to relinquish their
hold and were drawn out with the carcasses. Stranded upon the mud-banks, they
flopped and quivered like stars that had fallen to earth. Men and women, all wielding knives or axes, swarmed
like ants over the bodies. In a delirium of greed they howled and snarled at
each other like vultures and hyenas on a lion's kill, disputing each titbit as
they hacked at the gigantic carcasses. Blood and bone chips flew in sheets as
the blades hacked and hewed. There would be long lines of wounded at the temple
that evening, awaiting treatment from the priests for their missing fingers and
gashes down to the bone where the careless blades had slipped. I too would be busy half the night, for in some
quarters I have a reputation as a medical doctor that surpasses even that of
the priests of Osiris. In all modesty I must admit that this reputation is not
entirely unwarranted, and Horus knows my fees are much more reasonable than those
of the holy men. My Lord Intef allows me to keep for myself a third part of all
that I earn. Thus I am a man of some substance, despite my slave status. From the stern-tower of the Breath of Horus
I watched the pantomime of human frailty that was being played out below me.
Traditionally the populace is allowed to eat its fill of the meats of the hunt
upon the foreshore, just as long as none of the spoils are carried away. Living
as we do in a verdant land which is fertilized and watered by the great river,
our people are well fed. However, the staple diet of the poorer classes is
grain, and months may pass between their last mouthful of meat and the next.
Added to which, the festival was a time when all the normal restraints of
everyday life were thrust aside. There was licence to excess in all things of
the body, in food and drink and carnal passion. There would be sore bellies and
aching heads and matrimonial recriminations on the morrow, but this was the
first day of the festival and there was no check on any appetite. I smiled as I watched a mother, naked to the waist
and plastered from head to toe with blood and fat, emerge from the belly cavity
of a hippopotamus, clutching a running lump of liver which she threw to one of
her brood in the jostling, shrieking pack of children that surrounded the
carcass. The woman ducked back into the interior of the beast, while, clutching
his prize, the child darted away to one of the hundreds of cooking-fires that
burned along the shore. There an elder brother snatched the hunk of liver from
him and threw it on the coals, while a pack of younger urchins crowded forward
impatiently, slavering like puppies. The eldest child hooked the barely scorched liver
off the fire with a green twig, and his brothers and sisters fell upon it and
devoured it. Immediately it was consumed they bayed for more, with fat and
juice running down their faces and dripping from their chins. Many of the
younger ones had probably never tasted the delicious flesh of the river-cow
before. It is sweet and tender and fine-grained, but most of all it is fat,
fatter than beef or striped wild ass, and the marrow-bones are truly a delicacy
fit for the great god Osiris himself. Our people are starved of animal fat and
the taste of it drove them wild. They gorged themselves, as was their right on
this day. I was content to keep aloof from this riotous mob,
happy in the knowledge that my Lord Intef s bailiffs would secure the finest
cuts and marrow-bones for the palace kitchens where the cooks would prepare my
personal platter to perfection. My precedence in the vizier's household exceeds
all other, even that of his major-domo or the commander of his bodyguard, both
of whom are free-born. Of course, it is never openly spoken of, but all tacitly
acknowledge my privileged and superior position and few would dare challenge
it. I watched the bailiffs at work now, claiming the
share of my lord, the governor and grand vizier of all the twenty-two nomes of
Upper Egypt. They swung their long staves with the expertise bom of long
practice, whacking any bare back or set of naked buttocks that presented
themselves as targets, and shouting their demands. The ivory teeth of the animals belonged to the
vizier, and the bailiffs collected every one of them. They were as valuable as
the elephant tusks that are brought down in trade from the land of Cush, beyond
the cataracts. The last elephant had been killed in our Egypt almost one
thousand years ago, in the reign of one of the pharaohs of the Fourth Dynasty,
or so the hieroglyphics on the stele in his temple boast. Naturally, from the
fruits of the hunt my lord was expected to tithe the priests of Hapi who were
the titular shepherds of the goddess's flock of river-cows. However, the amount
of the tithe was in my lord's discretion, and I who was in overall charge of
the palace accounts knew where the lion's share of the treasure would end up.
My Lord Intef does not indulge in unnecessary generosity, even towards a
goddess. As for the hides of the hippopotamus, these
belonged to the army and would be turned into war shields for the officers of
the guards regiments. The army quartermasters were supervising the skinning-out
and the handling of the hides, each of which was almost the size of a Bedouin
tent. The meat that could, not be consumed on the bank
would be pickled in brine, or smoked or dried. Ostensibly it would be used to
feed the army, the members of the law courts, the temples and other civil
servants of the state. However, in practice a large part of it would be discreetly
sold, and the proceeds would filter down quite naturally into my lord's
coffers. As I have said before, my lord was the wealthiest man in the Upper
Kingdom after Pharaoh himself, and growing richer every year. A fresh commotion broke out behind me, and I turned
quickly. Tanus' squadron was still in action. The galleys were drawn up in line
of battle, stem to stern, parallel to the shore-line, but fifty paces off it on
the edge of the deeper water. On each ship harpooneers stood at the rails with
their weapons poised and pointed down at the surface of the lagoon. The taint of blood and offal in the water had
attracted the crocodiles. Not only from all over the lagoon, but from as far
off as the main course of the Nile, they had come swarming to the feast. The
harpooneers were waiting for them. Each long harpoon pole was tipped with a
relatively small bronze head, viciously barbed. Spliced to an eye in the metal
head was a tough flax rope. The skill of the harpooneers was truly impressive.
As one of these scaly saurians came slipping through the green water, with its
great crested tail flailing, moving like a long dark shadow, silent and deadly
beneath the surface, they would be waiting for it. They would allow the
crocodile to pass beneath the galley, and then, as it emerged on the far side
with the harpooneer's movements screened from it by the ship's hull, he would
lean out over it and stab downwards. It was not a violent blow, but an almost delicate
dab with the long pole. The bronze head was as sharp as a surgeon's needle, and
its full length was buried deep beneath the reptile's thick, scaly hide. The
harpooneer aimed for the back of the neck, and so skilful were these thrusts
that many of them pierced the spinal cord and killed the creature instantly. However, when a blow missed its mark, the water
exploded as the wounded crocodile burst into wild convulsions. With a twist of
the harpoon pole the metal head was detached and remained buried in the
reptile's armoured neck. Then four men took the creature on the flax line to
control its contortions. If the crocodile was a large one— and some of them
were four times the length of a man stretched out on the ground—then the coils
of line were whipped away smoking over the gunwale, scorching the palms of the
men who were trying to hold it. When this happened, even the hungry crowds on the
beach paused for a while to cheer and shout encouragement, and to watch the
struggle as the crocodile was eventually subdued or the rope parted like a whiplash
and the sailors were sent tumbling backwards across the deck. More often, the
stout flax line held. As soon as the crew were able to turn the reptile's head
towards them, it could no longer swim out into the deep water. They could then
drag it in a turmoil of froth and white water to the ship's side where another
gang was waiting with clubs to crush the rock-hard skull. When the carcasses of the crocodiles were dragged
to the bank, I went ashore to examine them. The skinners of Tanus' regiment
were already at work. It was the grandfather of our present king who had
granted the regiment the honorific 'the Blue Crocodile Guards' and bestowed
upon them the standard of the Blue Crocodile. Their battle armour is made from
the horny skins of these dragons. Properly treated and cured, it becomes hard
enough to stop an arrow or turn the edge of an enemy sword-cut. It is far
lighter in weight than metal, and much cooler to wear in the desert sun. Tanus,
in his crocodile-skin helmet all decorated with ostrich plumes, and his
breastplate of the same hide, polished and starred with bronze rosettes, is a
sight to strike terror into the heart of an enemy, or turmoil into the belly of
any maiden who looks upon him. As I measured and noted the length and girth of each
carcass, and watched the skinners at work, I felt not even the most fleeting
sympathy for these hideous monsters as I had for the slaughtered river-cows. To
my mind there is no more loathsome beast in nature than the crocodile, with the
possible exception of the venomous asp. My revulsion was increased a hundredfold when a
skinner slit open the belly of one of the largest of these grotesque animals,
and out on to the mud slithered the partly digested remains of a young girl.
The crocodile had swallowed the entire top half of her body, from the waist
upwards. Although the flesh was bleached soft and pasty-white by the digestive
juices and was sloughing from the skull, the girl's top-knot was still intact
and neatly plaited and coiled above the ghastly, ruined face. As a further
macabre touch, there was a necklace around her throat and pretty bracelets of
red and blue ceramic beads on the skeletal wrists. No sooner was this gruesome relic revealed than
there came a shriek so high and heart-rending that it cut through the hubbub of
the throng, and a woman elbowed aside the soldiers and ran forward to drop on
her knees beside the pitiful remains. She tore her clothing and keened the
dreadful ululation of mourning. 'My daughter! My little girl!' She was the same woman
who had come to the palace the previous day to report her daughter missing. The
officials had told her that the child had probably been abducted and sold into
slavery by one of the gangs of bandits who were terrorizing the countryside.
These gangs had become a force in the land, blatantly conducting their lawless
depredations in broad daylight right up to die gates of the cities. The palace
officials had warned the woman that there was nothing they could do about
recovering her daughter, for the gangs were beyond any control that the state
could exert upon them. For once mis dire prediction had proved unfounded.
The mother had recognized the ornaments which still decorated the pathetic
little corpse. My heart went out to the stricken woman, as I sent a slave to
fetch an empty wine jar. Although the woman and her child were both strangers
to me, I could not prevent my own tears from welling up as I helped her to
gather the remains and place them in the jar for decent burial. As she staggered away into the uncaring multitude
of revellers, carrying the jar clutched to her breast, I reflected mat despite
all the rites and prayers mat the mother would lavish upon her daughter, and
even in the unlikely event that she could afford the staggering cost of the most
rudimentary mummification, the child's shade could never find immortality in
the life beyond the grave. For that to happen, the corpse must be intact and
whole before embalming. My feelings were all for the unfortunate mother. It is
a weakness of mine that I so often lament, that I take upon myself the cares
and sorrows of every unfortunate that crosses my path. It would be easier to
have a harder heart, and a more cynical turn of mind. As always when I am saddened or distressed, I
reached for my brush and scroll and began to record all that was taking place
around me, everything from the harpooneers, the bereaved mother, the skinning
and the butchery of the dead river-cows and crocodiles on the beach, to the
unfettered behaviour of the feasting, revelling populace. Already those who were stuffed with meat and gorged
with beer were snoring where they had fallen, oblivious of being kicked and
trampled by the others still capable of remaining upright. The younger and more
shameless were dancing and embracing and using the gathering darkness and the
inadequate cover of the scanty bushes and the trampled papyrus beds to screen
their blatant copulations. This wanton behaviour was merely a symptom of the
malaise that afflicted the entire land. It would not have been thus if only
there had been a strong pharaoh, and a moral and upright administration in the
nome of Greater Thebes. The common people take their example from those above
them. Although I disapproved most strongly of it all,
still I recorded it faithfully. Thus an hour sped away while I sat cross-legged
and totally absorbed upon the poop-deck of the Breath ofHorus, scribbling and
sketching. The sun sank and seemed to quench itself in the great river, leaving
a coppery sheen on the water and a smoky glow in the western sky as though it
had set fire to the papyrus beds. The crowds on the beach were becoming ever more
raucous and unrestrained. The harlots were doing a brisk trade. I watched a
plump and matronly love-priestess, wearing the distinctive blue amulet of her
calling upon her forehead, lead a skinny sailor who was half her size from one
of the galleys into the shadows beyond the firelight. There she dropped her
skirts and fell to her knees in the dust, presenting him with a quivering parr
of monumental buttocks. With a happy cry the little fellow was upon her like a
dog on a bitch, and within seconds she was yapping as loudly as he was. I began
to sketch their antics, but the light faded swiftly, and I was forced to quit
for the day. As I set my scroll aside, I realized with a start
that I had not seen my mistress since before the incident with the dead child.
I leaped to my feet hi a panic. How could I have been so remiss? My mistress
had been strictly raised, I had seen to that. She was a good and moral child,
fully aware of the duties and obligations which law and custom placed upon her.
She was aware also of the honour of the high family to which she belonged, and
of her place in society. What was more, she stood in as much awe as I did of
her father's authority and temper. Of course I trusted her. I trusted her as much as I would have trusted any
other strong-willed young creature in the first flush of passionate womanhood
on a night such as this, alone somewhere in the darkness with the handsome and
equally passionate young soldier with whom she was totally infatuated. My panic was not so much for the fragile maidenhead
of my mistress, that ethereal talisman which once lost is seldom mourned, as
for the much more substantial risk of damage to my own skin. On the morrow we
would return to Karnak and the palace of my Lord Intef, where there would be
wagging tongues aplenty to carry the tale of any lapse or indiscretion on any
of our parts to him. My lord's spies permeated every layer of society
and every corner of our land, from the docks and the fields to the palace of
Pharaoh itself. They were even more numerous than my own, for he had more money
to pay his agents, although many of them served both of us impartially and our
networks interlocked at many levels. If Lostris had disgraced us all, father,
family, and me her tutor and guardian, then my Lord Intef would know of it by
morning, and so would I. I ran from one end of the ship to the other,
searching for her. I climbed into the stern-tower and scanned the beach in
desperation. I could see nothing of her or of Tanus, and my worst fears were
encouraged. Where to search for them in this mad night I could
not begin to think. I caught myself wringing my hands in an agony of
frustration, and stopped myself immediately. I am always at pains to avoid any
appearance of effeminacy. I do so abhor those obese, mincing, posturing
creatures who have suffered the same mutilation as I have. I always try to
conduct myself like a man rather than a eunuch. I controlled myself with an effort and assumed the
same coldly determined mien that I had seen on Tanus' features in the heat of
battle, whereupon my wits were restored to me and I became rational once again.
I considered how my mistress was likely to behave. Of course, I knew her
intimately. After all, I had studied her for fourteen years. I realized that
she was much too fastidious and conscious of her noble rank brazenly to mingle
with the drunken, uncouth throng upon the beach, or to creep away into the
bushes to play the beast with two backs, as I had watched the sailor and the
fat old harlot do. I knew that I could call upon no one else to assist me in my
search, for that would have guaranteed that my Lord Intef would hear all about
it. I had to do it all myself. To what secret place had Lostris allowed herself to
be carried away? Like most young girls of her age she was enchanted with the
idea of romantic love. I doubted that she had ever seriously considered the
more earthy aspects of the physical act, despite the best efforts of those two
little black sluts of hers to enlighten her. She had not even displayed any
great deal of interest in the mechanics of the business when I had attempted,
as was my duty, to warn her, at least sufficiently to protect her from herself. I realized then that I must look for her in some
place that would live up to her sentimental expectations of love. If there had
been a cabin on the Breath ofHorus I would have hurried to it, but our river
galleys are small, utilitarian righting ships, stripped down for speed and
manoeuvrability. The crew sleep on the bare deck, while even the captain and
his officers have only a reed awning for a night shelter. This was not rigged
at the moment, and so there was no place aboard where they could be hiding. Karnak and the palace were half a day's travel
away. The slaves were only now erecting our tents on one of the small inshore
islands that had been set aside to give our party privacy from the common herd
of humanity. It was remiss of the slaves to be so tardy, but they had been
caught up in the festivities. In the torchlight I could see that a few of them
were more than a little unsteady on their feet as they struggled with the
guy-ropes. They had not yet erected Lostris' personal tent, so the luxurious
comforts of carpets and embroidered hangings and down-filled mattresses and
linen sheets were not available to the lovers. So where then might they be? At that moment a soft yellow glow of torchlight
farther out on the lagoon caught my attention. Immediately my intuition was
aroused. I realized that, given my mistress's connections with the goddess
Hapi, her temple on its picturesque little granite island in the middle of the
lagoon would be exactly the place that would draw Lostris irresistibly. I
searched the beach for some means of reaching the island. Although there were
shoals of small craft drawn up on the shore, the ferrymen were mostly
falling-down drunk. Then I spotted Kratas on the beach. The ostrich
feathers on his helmet stood high above the heads of the crowd, and his proud
bearing marked him out. 'Kratas!' I yelled at him, and he looked across at
me and waved. Kratas was Tanus' chief lieutenant and, apart from myself, the
firmest of his multitude of friends. I could trust Kratas as I dared trust no
other. 'Get me a boat!' I screamed at him. 'Any boat!' I
was so distraught and my tone so shrill that it carried clearly to him. It was
typical of the man that he wasted not a moment in question or indecision. He
strode to the nearest felucca on the shore. The ferryman was lying like a log
in his own bilges. Kratas took him by the scruff of the neck and lifted him out
bodily. He dropped him on the beach, and the ferryman never moved, but lay in a
stupor of cheap wine, twisted in the attitude that Kratas had dumped him in.
Kratas launched the craft himself and, with a few thrusts of the punt pole,
laid alongside the Breath of Horus. In my haste I tumbled from the tower
and landed in a heap in the bows of the tiny craft. 'To the temple, Kratas,' I pleaded with him as I
scrambled up, 'and may the sweet goddess Hapi grant we are not already too
late!' With the evening breeze in the lateen sail we were
whisked across the dark waters to the stone jetty below the temple. Kratas
secured the painter to one of the mooring-rings, and made as if to follow me
ashore, but I stopped him. 'For Tanus' sake, not mine,' I told him, 'do not
follow me, please.' He hesitated a moment, then nodded. 'I will be listening
for your call.' He drew his sword and offered it to me, hilt first. 'Will you
need this?' I shook my head. 'It is not that kind of danger.
Besides, I have my dagger. But thank you for your trust.' I left him in the
boat and hurried up the granite steps to the entrance of the temple of Hapi. The rush torches in their brackets on the tall
entrance pillars threw a ruddy, wavering light that seemed to bring to life the
bas-relief carvings on the walls and make them dance. The goddess Hapi is one
of my favourites. Strictly speaking, she is neither god nor goddess, but a
strange, bearded, hermaphroditic creature possessed of both a massive penis and
an equally cavernous vagina, and bounteous breasts that give milk to all. She
is the deification of the Nile, and the goddess of the harvest. The two
kingdoms of Egypt and all the peoples in them depend utterly upon her and the
periodic flooding of the great river which is her alter ego. She is able to
change her gender or, like many of the other gods of this very Egypt, take on
the shape of any animal at will. Her favourite guise is that of the
hippopotamus. Despite the god's ambiguous sexuality, my mistress Lostris always
considered her to be female, and so do I. The priests of Hapi may differ from
us on this view. Her images upon the stone walls were vast and
motherly. Painted in hectic primary colours of red and yellow and blue, she
beamed down with the head of a kindly river-cow, and seemed to invite all of
nature to be fruitful and to multiply. The implied invitation was most
inappropriate to my present anxiety. It was my fear that my precious charge
might even at this moment be availing herself of the goddess's indulgence. A priestess was kneeling at the side-altar, and I
ran to her, seized her by the hem of her cape and tugged at it urgently. 'Holy
sister, tell me, have you seen the Lady Lostris, daughter of the grand vizier?'
There were very few citizens of Upper Egypt who did not know my mistress by
sight. They all loved her for her beauty, her gay spirit and her sweet
disposition, and they clustered around her and cheered her in the streets and
market-places when she walked abroad. The priestess grinned at me, all wrinkled and
toothless, and she laid one bony finger on the side of her nose with such a sly
and knowing expression that all my worst fears were confirmed. I shook her again, but less gently. 'Where is she,
revered old mother? I beseech you, speak!' But instead she wagged her head and
rolled her eyes towards the portals of the inner sanctum. I sped across the granite flags, my heart
outrunning my frantic feet, but even in my distress I wondered at the boldness
of my mistress. Although as a member of the high nobility she had right of
access to the holy of holies, was there another in all of Egypt who would have
the nerve to choose such a place for her love tryst? At the entrance to the sanctum I paused. My
instinct had been right. There they were, the two of them, just as I had
dreaded. 1 was so obsessed by my own certainty of what was taking place that I
almost yelled aloud to them to stop it. Then I checked myself. My mistress was fully clad, more so than was usual,
for her breasts were covered and she had spread a blue woollen shawl over her
head. She was kneeling before the gigantic statue of Hapi. The goddess beamed
down upon her, bedecked in wreaths of blue water-lilies. Tanus knelt beside her. He had laid aside his
weapons and his armour. They were piled at the door of the sanctuary. He was
dressed only in a linen shift and short tunic, with sandals on his feet. The
young couple were holding hands, and their faces were almost touching as they
whispered solemnly together. My base suspicions were refuted, and I was struck
with remorse and shame. How could I ever have doubted my mistress? Quietly I
began to withdraw, although I would go only as far as the side-altar, where I
would give thanks to the goddess for her protection, and from where I could
keep a discreet eye on further proceedings. However, at that moment Lostris rose to her feet
and diffidently approached the statue of the goddess. I was so enthralled by
her girlish grace mat I lingered a moment longer to watch her. From around her neck she unclasped the lapis lazuli
figurine of the goddess which I had made for her. I realized with a pang that
she was about to offer it as a sacrifice. That jewel had been crafted with all
my love for her, and I hated to see it leave her throat. Lostris stood on
tiptoe to hang it on the idol's neck. Then she knelt and kissed the stone foot
while Tanus watched, still kneeling where she had left him. She rose and turned to go back to him, but then she
saw me in the doorway. I tried to melt away into the shadows, for I was
embarrassed at having spied upon so intimate a moment. However, her face lit
with joy and before I could escape, she ran to me and seized my hands. 'Oh, Taita, I am so glad that you are here—you of
all people! It is so fitting. It makes it all so perfect.' She led me forward
into the sanctum and Tanus rose to his feet and came smiling to take my other
hand. 'Thank you for coming. I know we can always count
upon you.' I wished that my motives had been as pure as they believed them to
be, so I hid my guilty heart from them with a loving smile. 'Kneel here!' Lostris ordered me. 'Here, where you
can hear every word we say to each other. You will bear witness for us before
Hapi and all the gods of Egypt.' She pressed me to my knees, and then she and
Tanus resumed their places in front of the goddess and took each other's hands,
looking full into each other's eyes. Lostris spoke first. 'You are my sun,' she
whispered. 'My day is dark without you.' 'You are the Nile of my heart,' Tanus told her
quietly. "The waters of your love feed my soul.' 'You are my man, through this world and all the
worlds to come.' 'You are my woman, and I pledge you my love. I
swear it to you on the breath and the blood of Horus,' Tanus said clearly and
openly, so that his voice echoed through the stone halls. 'I take up your pledge and return it to you one
hundredfold,' Lostris cried. 'No one can ever come between us. Nothing can ever
part us. We are one, for ever.' She offered her face to his and he kissed her,
deeply and lingeringly. As far as I was aware, it was the first kiss that the
couple had ever exchanged. I felt that I was privileged to have witnessed such
an intimate moment. As they embraced, a sudden chill wind off the
lagoon swirled through the dimly lit halls of the temple and fluttered the
torch flames, so that for an instant the faces of the two lovers blurred before
my eyes and the image of the goddess seemed to stir and quiver. The wind passed
as swiftly as it had come, but the whisper of it around the great stone pillars
was like the distant sardonic laughter of the gods, and I shuddered with
superstitious awe. It is always dangerous to pique the gods with
extravagant demands, and Lostris had just asked for the impossible. This was
the moment that for years I had known was coming, and which I had dreaded more
bitterly than the day of my own death. The pledge that Tanus and Lostris had
made to each other could never endure. No matter how deeply they meant it, it
could never be. I felt my own heart tearing within me as, at last, they broke
the kiss and both turned back to me. 'Why so sad, Taita?' Lostris demanded, her own face
flooded with joy. 'Rejoice with me, for this is the happiest day of my life.' I forced my lips to smile, but I could find no word
of comfort or of felicitation for these two, the ones I loved best in all the
world. I remained upon my knees, with that fixed, idiotic smile on my lips and
desolation in my soul. Now Tanus lifted me to my feet and embraced me.
'You will speak to Lord Intef on my behalf, won't you?' he demanded as he
hugged me. 'Oh yes, Taita,' Lostris joined her plea to his. 'My
father will listen to you. You are the only one who can do it for us. You won't
fail us, will you, Taita? You have never let me down, never once in all my
life. You'll do it for me, won't you?' What could I say to them? I could not be so cruel
as to tell them the blunt truth. I could not find the words to blight this
fresh and tender love. They were waiting for me to speak, to express-my joy for
them, and to promise them my help and support. But I was struck dumb, my mouth
was as dry as if I had bitten into, an unripe pomegranate. 'Taita, what is it?' I watched the joy wither upon
my mistress's beloved countenance. 'Why do you not rejoice for us?' 'You know that I love you both, but—' I could not
continue. 'But? But what, Taita?' Lostris demanded. 'Why do
you give me "buts" and a long face on this happiest of all possible
days?' She was becoming angry, her jaw was setting, but at the same time there
were tears gathering deep in her eyes. 'Don't you want to help us? Is this the
real value of all the promises you have made to me over the years?' She came to
me and thrust her face close to mine in challenge. 'Mistress, please don't talk like that. I do not
deserve that treatment. No, listen to me!' I placed my fingers on her lips to
forestall another outburst. 'It is not me. It is your father, my Lord Intef—' 'Exactly.' Impatiently Lostris plucked my hand away
from her mouth. 'My father! You will go to him and speak to him the way you
always do, and it will be all right.' 'Lostris,'"! began, and it was a sign of my
distress that I used her name in this familiar fashion, 'you are no longer a
child. You must not delude yourself with childish fantasies. You know that your
father will never agree—' She would not listen to me, she did not want to
hear the truth that I would speak, so she rushed in with words to drown out
mine. 'I know that Tanus has no fortune, yes. But he has a marvellous future
ahead of him. One day he will command all the armies of Egypt. One day he will
fight the battles which will reunite the two kingdoms, and I will be at his
side.' 'Mistress, please hear me out. It is not only the
lack of Tanus' fortune. It is more, much more.' 'His blood-line and his breeding, then? Is that
what troubles you? You know full well that his family is as noble as ours.
Pianki, Lord Harrab was my own father's equal and his dearest friend.' She had
closed her ears to me. She did not realize the depth of the tragedy on which we
were embarking. Neither she nor Tanus did, but then I was probably the only
person in the kingdom who understood it fully. I had protected her from the truth all these years
and, of course, I had never been able to tell Tanus either. How could I explain
it to her now? How could I reveal to her the depths of the hatred that her
father bore towards the young man she loved? It was a hatred born out of guilt
and envy, and yet all the more implacable for these reasons. However, my Lord Intef was a crafty and devious
man. He was able to conceal his feelings from those around him. He was able to
dissemble his hatred and his spite, and to kiss the one he would destroy and
heap rich gifts and lulling flattery upon him. He had the patience of the
crocodile buried in the mud at the drinking-place on the river, waiting for the
unsuspecting gazelle. He would wait years, even a decade, but when the
opportunity arose, he was as swift as that reptile to strike and drag his prey
under. Lostris was blithely unaware of the depths of her
father's rancour. She even believed that he had loved Pianki, Lord Harrab, as
Tanus' father had loved him. But then how could she know the truth of it, for I
had always shielded her from it? In her sweet innocence Lostris believed that
the only objections that her father would have to her lover were those of fortune
and family. 'You know it is true, Taita. Tanus is my equal in
the lists of the nobility. It is written in the temple records for all to see.
How can my father deny it? How can you deny it?' 'It is not for me to deny or to accede, mistress—' "Then you will go to my father for us, won't
you, dear Taita? Say you will, please say you will!' I could only bow my head in acquiescence, and to
hide the hopeless expression in my eyes. THE FLEET WAS HEAVILY LADEN ON THE return to
Karnak. The galleys were low in the water under their cargoes of rawhides and
salted meat. Thus our progress against the Nile's current was slower than on
our outward journey, but still too swift for my heavy heart and mounting dread.
The lovers were gay and euphoric with then- newly declared love and their trust
in me to remove the obstacles from their path. I could not bring myself to deny
them this day of happiness, for I knew that it would be one of the very last
they would share, I think that if I could have found the words or summoned the
courage, I would have urged them, there and then, to seek the consummation of
then- love that I had so opposed the night before. There would never be another
chance for them, not after I had alerted my Lord Intef with my foredoomed
attempt at matchmaking. Once he knew what they were about, he would come
between them and thrust them apart for ever. So instead I laughed and smiled as gaily as they
did, and tried to hide my fears from them. They were so blinded by love that I
succeeded, whereas at any other time my mistress would have seen through me
immediately. She knows me almost as well as I know her. We sat together in the prow, the three of us, and
we discussed the re-enactment of the passion of Osiris that would be the
highlight of the festival. My Lord Intef had made me the impresario of the
pageant, and I had cast both Lostris and Tanus in leading roles. The festival is held every second year, at the
rising of the full moon of Osiris. There was a time when it was an annual
event. However, the expense and disruption of royal life caused by having to
remove the court from Elephantine to Thebes was so great that Pharaoh decreed a
greater interval between the festivals. He was always a prudent man with his
gold, was our Pharaoh. The plans for the pageant provided me with a fine
distraction from the looming confrontation with my Lord Intef, and so now I
rehearsed the two lovers in their lines. Lostris was to play Isis, the wife of
Osiris, while Tanus would take on the major role of Horus. They were both
vastly amused at the idea of Tanus playing Lostris' son, and I had to explain
that the gods were ageless, and it was quite possible that a goddess could
appear younger than her offspring. I had written a new script for the pageant to
replace the one that had remained unchanged for almost a thousand years. The
language of the ancient one was archaic and unsuitable for a modern audience.
Pharaoh would be the guest of honour when the pageant was performed in the
temple of Osiris on the final night of the festival, so I was particularly
anxious that it should be a success. I had already encountered opposition to my
new version of the passion from the more conservative nobles and priests. Only
my Lord Intef's intervention had prevailed against their objections. My lord is not a deeply religious man and would not
normally have interested himself in theological arguments. However, I had
included a few lines that were designed to amuse and flatter him. I read them
to him out of context, and then tactfully pointed out to him that the chief
opposition to my version came from the high priest of Osiris, a prissy old man
who had once frustrated my Lord Intef's interest in a comely young acolyte.
This was a trespass for which my lord had never forgiven the high priest. Thus it was that my version would be performed for
the first time. It was essential that the actors bring out the full glory of my
poetry, or it might well be the last time it would be heard. Both Tanus and Lostris possessed marvellous
speaking voices, and they were determined to reward me for my promise to help
them. They gave me of their best, and thus the rehearsal was so absorbing,
their recitations so startling, that for a while I could forget myself. Then I was brought back from the passion of the gods
to my own mundane preoccupations by a cry from the lookout. The fleet was
sweeping around the last bend in the river, and there lay the twin cities of
Luxor and Karnak, that between them made up Greater Thebes, strung out along
the bank before us and sparkling like a necklace of pearls in the stark
Egyptian sunlight. Our fantastic interlude had ended, and we must face reality
once again. My spirits tumbled as I scrambled to my feet. 'Tanus, you must transfer Lostris and myself to the
galley of Kratas before we come any closer to the city. My lord's minions will
be watching us from the land. They must not see us in your company.' 'A little late, is it not?' Tanus smiled at me.
'You should have thought of that some days ago.' 'My father will learn about us soon enough,'
Lostris endorsed his objection. 'It might make your task easier if we forewarn
him of our intentions.' 'If you know better than I, then you must do it
your way and I will take no further part in this crazy business of yours.' I
put on my most stiff and offended air, and they relented immediately. Tanus signalled Kratas' galley alongside, and the
lovers had only a few moments for their farewells. They dared not embrace
before the eyes of half the fleet, but the glances and the loving words they
exchanged were almost as fulfilling. From the stern-tower of Kratas' ship we waved to
the Breath of Horus as she turned from us, and with her paddles flashing
like the wings of a dragonfly, she bore away to her moorings in front of the
city of Luxor, while we continued on up-river towards the palace of the grand
vizier. IMMEDIATELY WE DOCKED AT THE PALACE wharf, I made
enquiry as' to the whereabouts of my master and was relieved to learn that he
had crossed the river to undertake a last-minute inspection of Pharaoh's tomb
and funerary temple on the west bank. The king's temple and tomb had been under
construction for the past twelve years, ever since the first day that he had
donned the double white and red crown of the two kingdoms. It was nearing completion
at last, and the king would be anxious to visit it as soon as the festival was
over and he was free to do so. My Lord Intef was anxious that the king should
not be disappointed. One of my lord's many titles and honours was Guardian of
the Royal Tombs, and it was a serious responsibility. His absence afforded me a further day in which to
prepare my case and plan my strategy. However, the solemn promise that the two
lovers had extracted from me was to speak out for them at the first
opportunity, and I knew that would be on the morrow when my lord held his
weekly assize. As soon as I had seen my mistress safely ensconced
in the harem, I hurried to my own quarters in that wing of the palace which is
reserved for the special companions of the grand vizier. My Lord Intef's domestic arrangements were as
devious as the rest of his existence. He had eight wives, all of whom brought
to his marriage-bed either substantial dowry or influential political
connections. However, only three of these women had ever borne him children.
Apart from my Lady Lostris, there were two sons. As far as I was aware, and I was aware of
everything that happened in the palace and most of what happened outside it, my
lord had not visited the harem in the last fifteen years. The getting of
Lostris had been the last occasion that he had performed his matrimonial
duties. His sexual tastes lay in other directions. The special companions of
the grand vizier who lived in our wing of the palace were as pretty a
collection of slave boys as you could find in the Upper Kingdom, where over the
previous hundred years pederasty had replaced wild-fowling and hunting as the
favourite preoccupation of most of the nobility. This was merely another
symptom of the ills that beset our lovely land. I was the eldest of this select company of slave
boys. Unlike so many others over the years whom, once their physical beauty had
begun to fade or pall, my lord had sent to the auction block in the
slave-market, I had endured. He had come to value me for virtues other than my
physical beauty alone. Not that this had faded—on the contrary, it had grown
more striking as I had matured. You must not think me vain if I mention this,
but I have determined to set down nothing but the truth in these accounts. They
are remarkable enough without my having to resort to false modesty. No, my lord seldom pleasured himself with me in
those days, a neglect for which I was truly thankful. When he did so, it was
usually only to punish me. He knew full well the physical pain and the humiliation
his attentions always caused me. Although I had still been a child when I first
learned to hide my revulsion, and to simulate pleasure in the perverse acts
that he forced upon me, I never succeeded in deceiving him. Strangely, my feelings of disgust and my loathing
for this unnatural congress never detracted from his own enjoyment, rather they
seemed to enhance it. He was neither a gentle nor a compassionate man, my Lord
Intef. I have counted in the hundreds the slave boys who, over the years, were
brought to me weeping and torn after their first night of love with my master.
I doctored them and tried my best to comfort them. That is perhaps why they
called me Akh-Ker in the slave boys' quarters, a name which means Elder
Brother. I might no longer be my master's favourite
plaything, but he valued me much more highly than that. I was many other things
to him—physician and artist, 'musician and scribe, architect and bookkeeper,
adviser and confidant, engineer and nursemaid to his daughter. I am not so
naive as to believe that he loved me or that he trusted me, but I think that at
times he came as close to it as he was capable. That was why Lostris had
prevailed upon me to plead on her behalf. My Lord Intef had no concern for his only daughter,
other than to maintain her marriage value at its optimum, and this was another
duty that he delegated entirely to me. Sometimes he did not speak a single word
to her from one flooding of the Nile to the next. He showed no discernible
interest in the regular reports which I made to him of her training and
schooling. Of course, I was always at pains to conceal from
him my true feelings for Lostris, knowing that he would certainly use them
against me at the first opportunity. I always tried to give him the impression that
I found her tuition and her care a tedious duty that I mildly resented having
thrust upon me, and that I shared his own disdain and distaste for all of
womankind. I don't think he ever realized that, despite my emasculation, I had
the feelings and desires of a natural man towards the opposite sex. My lord's disinterest in his daughter was the
reason why I was occasionally tempted, on the urging of my mistress, to run
such insane risks as this latest escapade of ours on board the Breath of
Horus. There was usually at least a chance that we would get away with it. That evening I retired early to my private
quarters, where my first concern was to feed and pamper my darlings. I have a
love for birds and animals, and a way with them that amazes even myself. I had
an intimate friendship with a dozen cats, for no one can ever claim to own a
cat. I owned, on the other hand, a pack of fine dogs. Tanus and I used them to
hunt the oryx and the lion out in the desert. The wild birds flocked to my terrace to enjoy the
hospitality I provided for them. They competed raucously amongst themselves for
a perch on my shoulder or on my hand. The boldest of them would take food from
between my lips. My tame gazelle would brush against my legs like one of the
cats, and my two falcons squawk at me from their perches on the terrace. They
were the rare desert Sa-kers, beautiful and fierce. Whenever we were able,
Tanus and I would take them out into the desert to fly them against the giant
bustards. I took great pleasure from their speed and aerial grace as they
stooped down on their prey. Anyone else who attempted to fondle them would feel
the cutting edge of those hooked yellow bills, but with me they were as gentle
as sparrows. Only once I had taken care of my menagerie did I call
one of the slave boys to bring my evening meal. On the terrace overlooking the
wide green expanse of the Nile I savoured the exquisite little dish of wild
quail cooked in honey and goat's milk that the head chef had prepared
especially to welcome me home. From there I was able to watch for the return of
my lord's barge from the far bank. It came with the sunset glowing on the
single square sail, and I felt my spirits sink. He might send for me this
evening, and I was not ready to face him. Then with relief I heard Rasfer, the commander of
the palace guard, shouting for my lord's favourite of the moment, a sloe-eyed
Bedouin lad, barely ten years old. A short while later I heard the child
protesting in a terrified treble as Rasfer dragged him past my door towards the
curtained entrance of the grand vizier's chambers. Although I had heard it so
many times before, I never could harden myself to the sounds of the children,
and I felt the familiar pang of pity. Still, I was relieved that it was not I
who would be called that evening. I would need a good night's sleep so as to
look my best in the morning. I woke before dawn with the feeling of dread still
strong upon me. Even my ritual swim in the cool waters of the Nile did nothing
to relieve it. I hurried back to my chamber where two of the slave boys were
waiting to oil my body and comb out my hair. I detested the new fashion amongst
the nobility of wearing make-up. My own skin and complexion were fine enough
not to require it, but my lord liked his boys to use it, and I wanted to please
him especially that day. Even though my image in the bronze mirror reassured
me, I could find no appetite for my breakfast. I was the first member of my
lord's entourage awaiting his arrival in the water-garden where he held his
assize every morning. While I waited for the rest of the court to
assemble I watched the kingfishers at work. I had designed and supervised the
building of the water-garden. It was a marvellous complex of channels and ponds
which overflowed from one into the other. The flowering plants had been
collected from every part of the kingdom and beyond, and they were a dazzle of
colour. The ponds were stocked with all the hundreds of varieties of fish that
the Nile yields up to the nets of the fishermen, but they had to be replenished
daily as a result of the depredations of the kingfishers. My Lord Intef enjoyed watching the birds hovering
in the air like jewels of lapis lazuli, then darting down to hit the water in a
flash of spray, and rising again with a silver sliver quivering in their long
bills. I think he saw himself as a fellow predator, a fisher of men, and that
he looked upon the birds as his kin. He never allowed the gardeners to
discourage the birds. Gradually I was joined by the rest of the court. Many
of them were dishevelled and yawning from sleep. My Lord Intef keeps early
hours and likes to complete the bulk of the business of state before the main
heat of the day. We waited respectfully in the first rays of the sun for my
lord's arrival. 'He's in a good mood this morning,' the chamberlain whispered,
as he took his place beside me, and I felt a tiny prickle of hope. I might yet
be able to escape the serious consequences of my foolhardy promise to Lostris. There was a stirring and a murmuring amongst us as
when the river breeze moves through the papyrus beds, and my Lord Intef came
out to us. His walk was stately and his manner was sumptuous,
for he was mighty with the weight of his honours and his power. Around his neck
he wore the Gold of Praise, that necklace of red gold from the mines of Lot
which Pharaoh had laid upon him with his own hands. His praise-singer preceded
him, a stump-legged dwarf chosen for his misshapen body and stentorian tones.
It amused my lord to surround himself with curiosities, either beautiful or
grotesque. Cavorting and prancing on his bowed legs, the dwarf chanted the
lists of my lord's titles and honours. 'Behold the Support of Egypt! Greet the Guardian of
the Waters of the Nile! Bow down before Pharaoh's Companion!' These were all
titles granted by the king, and many of them imposed specific duties and
obligations on him. As Guardian of the Waters, for instance, he was responsible
for monitoring the levels and flows of the seasonal floods of the Nile, a duty
which was naturally delegated to that faithful, indefatigable slave, Taita. I had spent half a year with a team of engineers
and mathematicians working under me, measuring and carving the rock cliffs at
Assoun so that the height of the waters rising up them could be accurately
gauged and the volume of the flood calculated. From these figures I was able to
estimate the size of the harvest months in advance. This enabled both famine
and plenty to be anticipated and planned for by the administration. Pharaoh had
been delighted with my work and bestowed further honours and reward upon my
Lord Intef. 'Bend the knee for the Nomarch of Kamak and the
Governor of all the twenty-two nomes of Upper Egypt! Greet the Lord of the
Necropolis and the Keeper of the Royal Tombs!' My lord was by these titles
responsible for designing, building and maintaining the monuments to pharaohs
long dead and the one still living. Once again, these duties were unloaded upon
a long-suffering slave's shoulders. My lord's visit to Pharaoh's tomb the day
before had been the first that he had undertaken since the previous festival of
Osiris. It was I who was sent out in the dust and the heat to cajole and curse
the lying builders and the conniving masons. I often regretted having let my
master realize the extent of my talents. He singled me out now without seeming to have done
so. The yellow eyes, as implacable as those of a wild leopard, touched mine,
and he inclined his head slightly. I stepped in behind him as he passed, and I
was struck as always by his height and the width of his shoulders. He was an
outrageously handsome man with long, clean limbs and a flat, hard belly. His
head was leonine and his hair dense and lustrous. At this time he was forty
years of age, and I had been his slave for almost twenty of those. My Lord Intef led us to the barrazza in the centre
of the garden, a thatched building without enclosing walls, open to the cool
breeze off the river. He seated himself cross-legged on the paved floor at the
low table on which lay the state scrolls, and I took my usual place behind him.
The day's business began. Twice during the morning my lord leaned back
slightly towards me. He did not turn his head nor did he say a word, but he was
asking my advice. I barely moved my lips and I kept my voice pitched so low
that no one else could hear me and very few were even aware of the exchanges
between us. Once I murmured, 'He is lying,' and a second time,
'Retik is a better man for the post, and he has offered a gift of five gold
rings to my lord's private treasury.' And though I did not mention it then,
another ring of gold to me if the post were secured. At noon my lord dismissed the congregation of
officials and petitioners and called for his midday meal. For the first time
that day we were alone together, except for Rasfer, who was both the commander
of the palace guard and the official state executioner. Now he took his post at
the gate to the garden, within sight of the barrazza but out of earshot. With a gesture my lord invited me to move up to his
elbow, and to taste the delicious meats and fruits that had been laid out
before him. While we waited for the effects of any possible poisoning to
manifest themselves upon me, we discussed the morning's business in detail. Then he questioned me about the expedition to the
lagoon of Hapi and the great hippopotamus hunt. I described it all to him and
gave him the figures of the profits that he might expect from the meat and
hides and teeth of the river-cows. I inflated the estimate of profits a little,
and he smiled. His smile is frank and charming. Once you have seen it, it is
easier to understand my Lord Intef's ability to manipulate and control men.
Even I, who should have known better, was once again lulled by it. As he bit into a succulent cold cut of river-cow
fillet, I drew a breath, screwed up my courage and began my plea. 'My lord
should know that I allowed your daughter to accompany me on the expedition.' I
could see by his eyes that he already knew this and that he had been waiting
for me to attempt to conceal it from him. 'You did not think to obtain my permission
beforehand?' he asked mildly, and I avoided his eyes and concentrated on
peeling a grape for him as I answered, 'She only asked as we were on the point
of departure. As you know, the goddess Hapi is her patron, and she wished to
worship and make sacrifice at the lagoon temple.' 'Still you did not ask me?' he repeated, and I
offered him the grape. He parted his lips and allowed me to slip it into his mouth.
That could only mean that he was well disposed towards me, so obviously he had
not yet found out the full truth about Tanus and Lostris. 'My lord was in council with the nomarch of Assoun
at the time. I would not have dared disturb you. Besides, there was no harm in
it that I could fathom. It was a simple domestic decision which I thought
beneath your concern.' 'You are so glib, aren't you, my darling?' he
chuckled. 'And so beautiful today. I like the way you have painted your
eyelids, and what is that perfume you are wearing?' 'It is distilled from the petals of the wild
violet,' I replied. 'I am happy that you like it, for I have a flask of it as a
small gift for you, my lord.' I produced the flask from my purse and went on my
knees to offer it to him. He placed his finger under my chin and lifted my face
to kiss me on the lips. Dutifully I responded to the kiss until he drew back
and patted my cheek. 'Whatever it is you are up to, you are still very
attractive, Taita. Even after all these years you can still make me smile. But
tell me, you took good care of the Lady Lostris, did you not? You never let her
out of your sight or care for a moment, did you?' 'As always, my lord,' I agreed vehemently. 'So there is nothing unusual concerning her that
you wish to report to me, is there?' I was still on my knees in front of him, and my
next attempt to speak failed. My voice dried up. 'Do not squeak at me, my old darling,' he laughed.
'Speak out like a man, even though you are not.' It was a cruel little jibe,
but it steeled me. 'There is indeed something I wish humbly to bring
to my lord's attention,' I said, and it does indeed concern the Lady Lostris.
As I have already reported, your daughter's red moon rose for the first time at
the flooding of the great river. Since then the courses of her moon have flowed
strongly each month.' My lord made a small grimace of distaste, the
functions of the feminine body repelled him. I found this ironic, considering
his own preoccupation with those far less savoury reaches of the masculine
anatomy. I hurried on. 'The Lady Lostris is now of
marriageable age. She is a woman of an ardent and loving nature. I believe it
would be wise to find a husband for her, as soon as we can.' 'No doubt you have one to suggest?' he asked drily,
and I nodded. 'There is indeed a suitor, my lord.' 'Not one, Taita. You mean another one, don't you? I
know of at least six, including the nomarch of Assoun and the governor of Lot,
who have already made offers.' 'I did mean another one, but this time one that the
Lady Lostris approves of. As you recall, she referred to the nomarch as that
fat toad, and to the governor as a randy old goat.' "The child's approval or disapproval is of no interest
to me whatsoever.' He shook his head, and smiled and stroked my cheek to
encourage me. 'But go on, Taita, tell me the name of this lovelorn swain who
will do me the honour of becoming my son-in-law in return for the richest dowry
in Egypt.' I steeled myself to reply, but he stopped me. 'No, wait! Let me
guess.' His smile turned into that sly and foxy grin tha,t
I knew so well, and I realized that he had been toying with me. 'For Lostris to welcome him, he must be young and
handsome.' He pretended to muse on it. 'And for you to speak out for him, he
must be a friend or a protege of yours. There must have been an opportunity for
this paragon to declare his suit and to solicit your support. What would be the
time and the place for that to have happened? I wonder. Could it have been at
midnight in the temple of Hapi, perhaps? Am I on the right trail, Taita?' I felt myself pale. How did he know so much? He
slid his hand around behind my head and caressed the nape of my neck. This was
often his prelude to love-making, and he kissed me again. 'I can see by your face that my guesses are close
to the target.' He took a handful of my hair and twisted it lightly. 'Now it
remains only to divine the name of this bold lover. Could it be Dakka? No, no,
Dakka is not so stupid as to incur my wrath.' He twisted my hair just hard
enough to bring tears to my eyes. 'Kratas, then? He is handsome and foolhardy
enough to take the risk.' He twisted harder and I felt a clump of my hair come
away in his hand with a tearing sound. I choked back the whimper in my throat. 'Answer me, my darling, was it Kratas?' He forced
my face down into his lap. 'No, my lord,' I whispered painfully. I was not
surprised to find that he was fully aroused. He pushed my face down upon
himself and held me there. 'Not Kratas, are you sure?' He pretended to be
puzzled. 'If it was not Kratas, then I am at a loss to guess who else might be
so insolent, so insulting and so mortally stupid as to approach the virgin
daughter of the grand vizier of Upper Egypt.' Abruptly, he raised his voice. 'Rasfer!' he cried.
My head was twisted in his lap so that through streaming eyes I could watch
Rasfer approach. In Pharaoh's menagerie on Elephantine Island at
Assoun there was a huge black bear brought in many years ago by one of the
trade caravans from the East. That vicious, scarred brute always reminded me
strongly of the commander of my lord's bodyguard. They both had the same vast,
shapeless body and the raw, savage power to crush a man to death. However, in
loveliness of face and sweetness of disposition, the bear had been favoured far
beyond Rasfer. I watched Rasfer approach now at a trot that was
surprisingly swift and agile for those heavy, tree-like legs and the swell of
his hairy gut, and I was transported back over the years to the day that my
manhood had been plucked from me. It all seemed so familiar, as though I was being
forced to live once more through that terrible day. Every detail of it was
still so clear in my mind that I wanted to shriek aloud. The actors in that
long-ago tragedy were the same. My Lord Intef, Rasfer the brute, and me. Only
the girl was missing. Her name had been Alyda. She had been the same age
as me, sixteen sweet innocent years. Like me, she had been a slave. I remember
her now as having been beautiful, but it is likely that my memory cheats me,
for had she been so she would have gone into a harem of one of the great houses
and not been relegated to the kitchen. I do know for certain that she had skin
the colour and lustre of polished amber that was warm and soft to the touch. I
will never forget the feel of Alyda's body, for I will never experience
anything like it again. In our misery we had found comfort and deep solace in
each other. I never discovered who it was that betrayed us. I am not usually a
vengeful man, but I still dream that one day I will find the person who
delivered us up. At that time I had been my Lord Intef s favourite,
his special darling. When he discovered that I had been faithless to him, the affront
to his self-esteem was such as to drive him to the very frontier of madness. Rasfer had come to fetch us. He dragged us to my
lord's chamber, one of us in each hand, as easily as if we had been a pair of
kittens. There he had stripped us naked while my Lord Intef sat cross-legged on
the floor, just as he was doing now. Rasfer bound Alyda's wrists and ankles
with rawhide thongs. She was pale and shivering but she did not weep. My love
for her and my admiration for her courage had never been stronger than at that
moment. My Lord Intef beckoned me to kneel in front of him
and he took a lock of my hair and whispered endearments to me. 'Do you love me,
Taita?' he asked, and because I was afraid, and because in some dim way I
thought that it might spare Alyda's suffering, I answered, 'Yes, my lord, I
love you.' 'Do you love anyone else, Taita?' he asked in a
voice of silk and, coward and traitor that I was, I answered him, 'No, my lord,
I love only you.' It was only then that I heard Alyda begin to weep. It was one
of the most harrowing sounds of my life. He called to Rasfer, 'Bring the slut here. Place
her so that they can see each other clearly. Taita must be able to see
everything that is done to her.' As Rasfer pushed the girl into my line of vision I
could see that he was grinning. Then my master raised his voice slightly: 'Very
well, Rasfer, you may proceed.' Rasfer slipped a loop of braided rawhide rope over
Alyda's forehead. At close intervals the rope was knotted, so that it looked
like a headband such as the Bedouin women wear. Standing behind the girl,
Rasfer thrust a short, stout baton of olive wood through the rawhide loop and
twisted it until it came up tight against her smooth, unblemished skin. The
knots of harsh leather bit into her flesh and Alyda grimaced with the pain. 'Slowly, Rasfer,' my lord warned him. 'We still
have a long way to go.' The olive-wood baton seemed like a child's toy in
Ras-fer's huge, hairy paws. He twisted it with careful deliberation, a quarter
of a turn at a time. The knots bit in deeper, and Alyda's mouth dropped open
and her lungs emptied in a gasping rush of air. All the colour drained from her
skin so that it turned to the colour of dead ashes. She struggled to fill her
empty lungs with air and then released it in one long, penetrating scream. Still grinning, Rasfer twisted the baton and the
line of leather knots buried themselves in Alyda's forehead. Her skull changed
shape. At first I thought it was a trick of my overwrought mind, then I
realized that her head was, in truth, constricting and elongating as the loop
tightened. Her scream was now a single unbroken peal that plunged into my heart
like a sword-blade. It went on and on- for what seemed like for ever. Then her skull burst. I heard the bone collapse
with a sound like a palm-nut crushed in the jaws of a feeding elephant. That
terrible, piercing scream was cut off abruptly, as Alyda's corpse sagged in
Rasfer's hands, and my soul was filled to overflowing with my sorrow and
despair. After what seemed like an eternity my lord lifted
my head and looked into my yes. His expression was sad and regretful as he told
me, 'She has gone, Taita. She was evil and she led you astray. We must make
certain that it never happens again. We must protect you from any further temptations.'
Once again he signalled to Rasfer and he took
Alyda's naked body by the heels and dragged it out on to the terrace. The back
of her crushed head bumped down the steps and her hair streamed out behind her.
With a heave of his massive shoulders, Rasfer threw her far out into the river.
Her slack limbs flashed and tumbled as she fell and struck the water. She sank
swiftly with her hair spreading out around her like trailing fronds of the
river-weed. Rasfer turned away and went to the end of the terrace
where two of his men were tending a brazier of burning charcoal. Beside the
brazier a full set of surgeon's instruments were laid out on a wooden tray. He
glanced over them and then nodded with satisfaction. He returned and bowed
before my Lord Intef. 'All is in readiness.' My master wiped my tear-streaked face with one
finger, then lifted the finger to his lips as though he were tasting my sorrow.
'Come, my pretty darling,' he whispered, and lifting me to my feet he led me
out on to the terrace. I was so distraught and blinded by my tears that I did
not realize my own peril until the soldiers seized me. They threw me down and
held me spread-eagled on the terracotta tiles, pinning me at wrists and ankles
so that I could move only my head. My master knelt at my head, while Rasfer knelt
between my spread thighs. 'You will never do this evil thing again, Taita.'
Only then did I become aware of the bronze scalpel that Rasfer had concealed in
his right hand. My master nodded at him and he reached down with his free hand
and seized me and stretched me out, until it felt as though he were plucking my
entrails out through my groin. 'What a fine pair of eggs we have here!' Rasfer
grinned and showed me the scalpel, holding it up before my eyes. 'But I am
going to feed them to the crocodiles, just as I did with your little
girl-friend.' He kissed the blade. 'Please, my lord,' I begged, 'have mercy—' but my
entreaties ended in a shrill cry as Rasfer slashed down with the blade. It felt
as though a redhot skewer had been thrust up into my belly. 'Say goodbye to them, pretty boy.' Rasfer held up
the sac of pale wrinkled skin and its pathetic contents. Then he began to rise,
but my lord stopped him. 'You have not finished,' he told Rasfer quietly. 'I
want all of it.' Rasfer stared at him for a moment, not
understanding the order. Then he began to chuckle until his belly bounced. 'By
the blood of Horus,' he roared, 'from now on pretty boy will have to squat like
a girl when he wants to piss!' . He struck again, then bellowed with laughter
as he held up the finger of flesh that had once been the most intimate part of
my body. 'Never mind, boy. You'll walk a lot lighter without
that weight to carry around with you.' Staggering with laughter, he started
towards the edge of the terrace as if to hurl them into the river, but once
again my lord called to him sharply. 'Give them to me!' he ordered, and obediently
Rasfer placed the bloody fragments of my manhood in his hands. For a few
seconds my lord examined them curiously, and then he spoke to me again. 'I am
not so cruel as to deprive you for ever of such fine trophies, my darling. I
will send these to the embalmers, and when they are ready I will have them
placed on a necklace surrounded with pearls and lapis lazuli. They will be my
present to you at the next festival of Osiris. Thus at the day of your burial
they can be placed in your tomb with you, and if the gods are kind, you may
have the use of them in the afterlife.' Those terrible memories should have ended at the
moment when Rasfer staunched the bleeding with a ladle of boiling embalming
lacquer from the brazier, and I was plunged into blessed oblivion by the
unbearable intensity of the pain, but now I was trapped in the nightmare. It
was all happening again. Only this time little Alyda was missing, and instead
of the gelding-knife Rasfer held the whip of hippo-hide in his great hairy
fist. The whip was as long as the full stretch of
Rasfer's arms and it tapered to the thickness of his little ringer at the
point. I had watched him whittling it himself, shaving off the coarse outer
layer from the long strip of cured hide until the inner skin was exposed,
periodically pausing to test the balance and the heft of it, cutting it through
the air until it keened and whined like the desert wind through the canyons of
the hills of Lot. It was the colour of amber and Rasfer had polished it
lovingly until it was smooth and translucent as glass, but so supple that he
could bend it into a perfect arc between those bear-like paws. He had allowed
the blood of a hundred victims to dry upon it and to dye the thin end of it to
a lustrous patina that was aesthetically quite beautiful. Rasfer was an artist with this awful tool. He could
flick out and leave on the tender thigh of a young girl only a crimson weal
that never broke the skin, but stung as viciously as a scorpion and left his
victim writhing and weeping with the agony of it; or with a dozen hissing
strokes he could strip the skin and flesh from a man's back and leave his ribs
and the crest of his spine exposed. He stood over me now and grinned as he flexed the
long lash in his hands. Rasfer loved his work, and he hated me with all the
force of his envy and the feelings of inferiority that my intelligence and
looks and favour engendered in him. My Lord Intef stroked my naked back and sighed.
'You are so wicked sometimes, my old darling. You try to deceive me to whom you
owe the deepest loyalty. Nay, more than simple loyalty—to whom you owe your
very existence.' He sighed again. 'Why do you force this unpleasantness upon
me? You should know much better than to press the suit of that young jackanapes
upon me. It was a ludicrous attempt, but I suppose that I understand why you made
it. That childlike sense of compassion is one of your many weaknesses, and one
day will probably be the cause of your complete downfall. However, at times I
find it rather quaint and endearing and I might readily have forgiven you for
it, but I cannot overlook the fact that you have endangered the market value of
the goods that I placed in your care.' He twisted my head up so that my mouth
was free to answer him. 'For that, you must be punished. Do you understand me?' 'Yes, my lord,' I whispered, but I rolled my eyes
to watch the whip in Rasfer's hands. Once again my Lord Intef buried my face in
his lap, and then he spoke to Rasfer above my head. 'With all your cunning, Rasfer. Do not break the
skin, please. I do not want this delightfully smooth back marred permanently.
Ten will do as a start. Count then aloud for us.' I had watched a hundred or more unfortunates
undergo this punishment, some of them warriors and vaunted heroes. Not one of
them was able to remain silent under the lash of Rasfer. In any event it was
best not to do so, for he took silence as a personal challenge to his skill. I
knew this well, having travelled this bitter road before. I was quite prepared
to swallow any stupid pride and pay tribute to Rasfer's art in a loud voice. I
filled my lungs in readiness. 'One!' grunted Rasfer, and the lash fluted. The way
a woman later forgets the full pain of childbirth, I had forgotten the
exquisite sting of it, and I screamed even louder than I had intended. 'You are fortunate, my dear Taita,' my Lord Intef
murmured in my ear. 'I had the priests of Osiris examine the goods last night.
They are still intact.' I squirmed in his lap. Not only from the pain, but also
at the thought of those lascivious old goats from the temple probing and prying
into my little girl. Rasfer had his own little ritual to draw out the
punishment and to ensure that both he and his victim were able to savour the
moment to the full. Between each stroke he jogged in a small circle around the
barrazza, grunting exhortations and encouragement to himself, holding the whip
at high port like a ceremonial sword. As he completed the circle he was in
position for the next stroke, and he raised the lash high. 'Two!' he cried, and
I shrieked again. ONE OF LOSTRIS' SLAVE GIRLS WAS WAITING for me on
the broad terrace of my quarters when I limped painfully up the steps from the
garden. 'My mistress bids you attend her immediately,' she
greeted me. 'Tell her that I am indisposed.' I tried to avoid
the summons and, shouting for one of the slave boys to dress my injuries, I
hurried through into my chamber in an attempt to rid myself of the girl. I
could not face Lostris yet, for I dreaded having to report my failure, and
having at last to make her face the reality "and the impossibility of her love
for Tanus. The black girl followed me, ogling the livid weals across my back
with delicious horror. 'Go tell your mistress that I am injured, and that
I cannot come to her,' I snapped over my shoulder. 'She told me that you would try to wriggle out of
it, but she told me also that I was to stay with you and see to it that you did
not.' 'You are insolent for a slave,' I reprimanded her
sternly as the boy anointed my back with a healing salve of my own concoction. 'Yes,' agreed the imp with a grin. 'But then so are
you.' And she dodged the half-hearted slap I aimed at her with ease. Lostris is
much too soft with her handmaidens. 'Go tell your mistress that I will come to her,' I
capitulated. 'She said I must wait and make sure you did.' So I had an escort as I passed the guards at the
gate of the harem..The guards were eunuchs like myself, but, unlike me, they
were portly and androgynous. Despite their corpulence, or perhaps because of
it, they were powerful men and fierce. However, I had used my influence to
secure both of them this cosy sinecure, so they passed me through into the
women's quarters with a respectful salute. The harem was not nearly as grand nor as
comfortable as the quarters of the slave boys, and it was clear where my Lord Intef's
real interest lay. It was a compound of mud-brick hutments surrounded by a high
mud wall. The only gardens or decorations were those that Lostris and her maids
had undertaken, with my assistance. The vizier's wives were too fat and lazy
and caught up in the scandals and intrigues of the harem to exert themselves. Lostris' quarters were those closest to the main
gate, surrounded by a pretty garden with a lily pond and song-birds twittering
in cages woven of split bamboo. The mud walls were decorated with bright murals
of Nile scenes, of fish and birds and goddesses, that I had helped her paint. Her slave girls were huddled in a subdued group at
the doorway, and more than one of them had been weeping. Their faces were
streaked with tears. I pushed my way past them into the cool, dark interior,
and at once heard my mistress's sobs from the inner chamber. I hurried to her,
ashamed that I had been so craven as to try to avoid my duty to her. She was lying face down on the low bed, her entire
body shaking with the force of her grief, but she heard me enter and whirled
off the bed and rushed to me. 'Oh, Taita! They are sending Tanus away. Pharaoh
arrives in Karnak tomorrow, and my father will prevail upon him to order Tanus to
take his squadron up-river to Elephantine and the cataracts. Oh, Taita! It is
twenty days' travel to the first cataract. I shall never see him again. I wish
I were dead. I shall throw myself into the Nile and let the crocodiles devour
me. I don't want to h've without Tanus—' All this in one rising wail of
despair. 'Softly, my child.' I rocked her in my arms. 'How
do you know all these terrible things? They may never happen.' 'Oh, they will. Tanus has sent me a message. Kratas
has a brother in my father's personal bodyguard. He heard my father discussing
it with Rasfer. Somehow my father has found out about Tanus and me. He knows
that we were in the temple of Hapi alone. Oh, Taita, my father sent the priests
to examine me. Those filthy old men did horrid things to me. It hurt so,
Taita.' I hugged her gently. It is not too often that I
have the opportunity to do so, but now she hugged me back with all her
strength. Her thoughts turned from her own injuries to her lover. 'I shall never see Tanus again,' she cried, and I
was reminded of how young she truly was, not much more than a child, vulnerable
and lost in her grief. 'My father will destroy him.' 'Even your father cannot touch Tanus,' I tried to
reassure her. 'Tanus is a commander of a regiment of Pharaoh's own elite guard.
He is the king's man. Tanus takes his orders only from Pharaoh, and he enjoys
the full protection of the double crown of Egypt.' I did not add that this was
probably the only reason that her father had not already destroyed him, but went
on gently, 'While as for never seeing Tanus again, you will be playing opposite
him in the pageant. I will make certain that there is a chance for the two of
you to speak to each other between the acts.' 'My father will never lei the pageant go on now.' 'He has no alternative, unless he is prepared to
ruin my production and risk Pharaoh's displeasure, and you can be certain that
he will never do that.' 'He will send Tanus away, and have another actor
play Horus,' she sobbed. "There is no time to rehearse another actor.
Tanus will play the god Horus. I will make that clear to my Lord Intef. You and
Tanus will have a chance to talk. We will find a way out for the two of you.' She gulped back her tears and looked up at me with
complete trust. 'Oh, Taita. I know that you will find a way. You always do—'
She broke off suddenly and her expression changed. Her hands moved over my
back, exploring the ridged welts that Rasfer's whip had raised across it. 'I am sorry, mistress. I tried to put forward
Tanus' suit, as I promised you I would, and all this is the consequence of my
stupidity.' She stepped behind me and lifted the light linen
tunic I had donned' to hide my injuries, and she gasped. "This is Rasfer's
work. Oh, my poor dear Taita, why did you not warn me that this would happen,
that my father was so violently opposed to Tanus and to me?' I was hard put not to gasp at this artless piece of
effrontery, I who had pleaded and warned them and in return been accused of
disloyalty. I managed to hold my peace, however, although my back still
throbbed abominably. At least my mistress's own misery was forgotten for
the moment in her concern for my superficial injuries. She ordered me to sit on
her bed and remove my tunic while she ministered to me, her genuine love and compassion
making up for the lack of her medicinal skills. This distraction lifted her
from the utter depths of her despair. Soon she was chattering away in her usual
ebullient fashion, making plans to thwart her father's wrath and to reunite
herself with Tanus. Some of these plans demonstrated her good common sense,
while others, more far-fetched, merely pointed to her trusting youth and lack
of knowledge and experience in the wicked ways of the world. 'I shall play such
a fine role of Isis in the pageant,' she declared at one stage, 'and I shall
make myself so, agreeable to Pharaoh that he will grant me any boon that I ask
of him. Then I shall beg him for Tanus as my husband, and he will say—' here
she mimicked the king's pompous ceremonial tones so cleverly that I was forced
to grin, 'and he will say, "I declare the betrothal of Tanus, Lord Harrab,
son of Pianki, and of the Lady Lostris, daughter of Intef, and I raise my good
servant Tanus to the rank of Great Lion of Egypt and commander of all my armies.
I further order that all the former estates of his father, the noble Pianki,
Lord Harrab be returned to him—" ' Here she broke off in the middle of her
ministrations to my wounds and flung her arms around my neck. 'It could happen like that, could it not, dear
Taita? Please say that it could!' 'No natural man could resist you, mistress,' I
smiled at her nonsense. 'Not even great Pharaoh himself.' If I had known then
how close my words would turn out to being the truth, I think I should have
placed a live coal on my tongue before I spoke them. Her face was shining with hope once again. That was
enough reward for me, and I donned my tunic again to bring to an end her too
enthusiastic ministrations to my back. 'But now, mistress, if you are to make a beautiful
and irresistible Isis, you must get some rest.' I had brought with me a potion
of the powder of the sleeping-flower which is called the Red Shepenn. The seeds
of this precious flower had first been brought into this very Egypt by the
trade caravans from a mountainous land somewhere far to the east. I now
cultivated the red blooms in my garden, and when the petals were fallen I
scratched the seed carapace with a gold fork of three tines. Thick white milk
flowed from these wounds, which I gathered and dried and treated in accordance
with the formula I had evolved. The' powder could induce sleep, conjure up
strange dreams or smooth out pain. 'Stay with me awhile, Taita,' she murmured as she
settled down on the bed, curled like a sleepy kitten. 'Cuddle me to sleep like
you did when I was a baby.' She was a baby still, I thought, as I took her in
my arms. 'It will all turn out all right, won't it?' she
whispered. 'We will live happily ever after, just like they do in your stories,
won't we, Taita?' When she was asleep" I kissed her forehead
softly and covered her with a fur rug before I stole from her chamber. ON THE FIFTH DAY OF THE FESTIVAL OF Osiris, Pharaoh
came down-river to Karnak from his palace on Elephantine Island which was ten
days' travel away by swift river galley. He came in full state with all his
retinue to officiate at the —— festival of the god. Tanus' squadron had left Karnak three days
previously, speeding away upstream to meet the great flotilla and escort it on
the last stage of the voyage, so neither Lostris nor I had seen him since we
had all three returned from the great river-cow hunt. It was a special joy for
both of us then to see his galley come flying around the bend in the river,
full on the current and with a strong desert wind abeam. The Breath of Horus
was in the van of the fleet, leading it up from the south. Lostris was in the grand vizier's train, standing
behind her two brothers, Menset and Sobek. The two boys were comely and well-favoured,
but there was too much of their father in them for my taste. Menset, the elder
of the two, I particularly mistrusted, and the younger followed where his
brother led. I was standing further back in the ruck of
courtiers and lesser functionaries from where I could keep an eye both on
Lostris and on my Lord Intef. I saw the back of her neck flush with pleasure
and excitement at the glimpse she had of Tanus' tall figure on the stern-tower
of the Breath of Horus. The scales on his crocodile-skin breastplate
gleamed in the simlight, and the spray of ostrich feathers on his helmet
floated in the draught of the galley's passage. Lostris was hopping with excitement and waving both
slim arms above her head, but her squeals and her antics were lost in the roar
of the vast crowd that lined both banks of the Nile to welcome their pharaoh.
Thebes is the most populous city in the world, and I guessed that almost a
quarter of a million souls had turned out to welcome the king. Meanwhile Tanus
looked neither left nor right, but stared sternly ahead with his unsheathed
sword held before his face in salute. The rest of his squadron followed the Breath
of Horus in the wide vee of the egret formation, named for the pattern that
those birds fly in as they return in the sunset to their roosts. All their
standards and battle honours were streaming out in a fluttering blaze of
rainbow colours, a noble show that set the crowds cheering and waving their
palm-fronds wildly. It was some time before the first vessel of the main
convoy came wallowing round the bend behind them. It was laden with ladies and
nobles of the king's entourage. It was followed by another, and then by a great
untidy horde of vessels great and small. They came swarming downstream,
transports filled with palace servants and slaves and all their accoutrements
and paraphernalia, barges laden with oxen and goats and chickens for the
kitchens, gilded and gaily painted vessels bearing cargoes of palace furniture
and treasure, of nobles and lesser creatures, all uncomfortably jumbled
together in a most unseamanlike fashion. In what contrast was the display put
up by Tanus' squadron as it rounded-to downstream and held its geometrically
spaced formation against the swift Nile current! At last Pharaoh's state barge lumbered around the
bend, and the cheering of the crowd rose to a crescendo. This huge vessel, the
largest ever built by man, made its ponderous way towards where we were waiting
to welcome it at the stone wharf below the grand vizier's palace. I had plenty of time in which to study it and to
muse how aptly its size and design, and the handling of it, reflected the
present state and government of this very Egypt of ours—Egypt as she stood in
the twelfth year of the rule of Pharaoh Mamose, the eighth of that name and
line,,and the weakest yet of a weak and vacillating dynasty. The state barge
was as long as five of the fighting galleys laid end to end, but its height and
breadth were so ill-proportioned that they gravely offended my artistic
instincts. Its massive hull was painted in the riotous colours that were the
fashion of the age, and the figurehead of Osiris on the bows was gilded with
real gold leaf. However, as she drew closer to the landing where we waited, I
could see that the brilliant colours were faded in patches and her sides were
zebra-striped in dun where her crew had defecated over the rail. Amidships stood a tall deck-house, Pharaoh's
private quarters, that was so solidly constructed of thick planks of precious
cedar, and so stuffed with heavy furniture that the sailing characteristics of
the barge were sadly affected. Atop this grotesque edifice, behind an ornate
railing that was woven of fresh lilies, beneath a canopy of finely tanned
gazelle skins skilfully sewn together and painted with images of all the major
gods and goddesses, sat Pharaoh in majestic isolation. On his feet were sandals
of gold filigree and his robe was of linen so pure that it shone like the high
cumulus clouds of full summer. On his head he wore the tall double crown; the
white crown of Upper Egypt with the head of the vulture goddess Nekhbet,
combined with the red crown and the cobra head of Buto, the goddess of the
Delta. Despite the crown, the ironic truth was that this
beloved sovereign of ours had lost the Delta almost ten years previously. In
our turbulent days another pharaoh ruled in Lower Egypt, one who also wore the
double crown, or at least his own version of it, a pretender who was our
sovereign's deadly adversary, and whose constant wars against us drained both
kingdoms of gold and the blood of the young men. Egypt was divided and torn by
internal strife. Over the thousand or so years of our history, it had always
been thus when weak men took on the mantle of pharaoh. It needed a strong, bold
and clever man to hold the two kingdoms in his fists. In order to turn the unwieldy vessel into the
current and bring her to her moorings at the palace wharf, the captain should
have steered close in to the far bank. If he had done so, he would have had the
full breadth of the Nile in which to complete his turn. However, he had
obviously misjudged the strength of wind and current and he began his turn from
midstream. At first the barge swung ponderously across the current, listing
heavily as the height of the deck-house caught the hot desert wind like a sail.
Half a dozen boatswains raged about the lower deck with their whips rising and
falling, the snapping of the lash on bare shoulders carrying clearly across the
water. Under the goading of the lash the rowers plied their
paddles in a frenzy that churned the waters alongside the hull to foam, one
hundred paddles a side pulling against each other and none of them making any
effort to synchronize the stroke. Their curses and cries blended with the
shouted orders of the four helmsmen who were struggling with the long
steering-oar in the stern. Meanwhile, on the poop-deck, Nembet, the geriatric
admiral and captain of the barge, alternately combed his fingers through his
long scraggy grey beard and flapped his hands in impotent agitation. High above this pandemonium sat Pharaoh, motionless
as a statue and aloof from it all. Oh, verily this was our Egypt. Then the rate
of the barge's turn bled away until she was no longer swinging but heading
straight for where we stood on the bank, locked in chains by the pull of the
current and the contrary push of the wind. Captain and crew, despite all their
wild and erratic exertions, seemed powerless either to complete the manoeuvre
and head her into the current, or to heave-to and prevent her from ploughing
headlong into the granite blocks of 'the wharf and staving in her great gilded
bows. As everyone realized what was about to happen, the cheers of the crowd
watching from the shore slowly died away and an awful hush fell upon both banks
of the Nile into which the shouting and the turmoil on the decks of the huge
vessel carried all the more clearly. Then suddenly all the eyes of the crowd were drawn
downstream, as the Breath ofHorus broke from her station at the head of the
squadron and came tearing up-river, driven by the flying paddles. In perfect
unison those paddles dipped and pulled and swung and dipped again. She cut in
so sharply under the bows of the barge mat the. crowd gasped with a sound
higher than the wind in the papyrus beds. Collision seemed inevitable, but at
the last possible moment Tanus signalled with a clenched fist lifted above bis
head. Simultaneously both banks of rowers backed water and the helmsman put the
steering-oar hard over. The Breath ofHorus checked and paid away before the
ponderous advance of the great barge. The two vessels touched as lightly as a
virgin's kiss, and for an instant the stern-tower of the Breath of Horus
was almost level with the barge's main deck. In that instant Tanus poised himself on the bulwark
of the tower. He had kicked off his sandals, divested himself of his armour,
and thrown aside his weapons. Around his waist he had tied die end of a light
flax line. With the line trailing behind him he leaped out across the gap
between the two vessels. As though awakening from a stupor, the crowd
stirred and shook itself. If there was still one amongst them who did not know
who Tanus was, he would know before this day was out. Of course, Tanus' fame
had already been won in the river wars against the legions of the usurper in
the Lower Kingdom. However, only his own troops had ever seen him in action.
The reported deed never carries the same weight as the one that the eye sees
for itself. Now, before the gaze of Pharaoh, the royal flotilla
and the entire populace of Kamak, Tanus leaped from one deck to the other and
landed as lightly as a leopard. 'Tanus!' I am sure that it was my mistress,
Lostris, who first called out his name, but I was next. 'Tanusl' I yelled, and then all those around me
took up the cry. 'Tanus! Tanus! Tanus!' They chanted it like an ode to some
newly discovered god. The moment he landed on the deck of the barge,
Tanus whirled and raced into the bows, hauling in the thin line hand over hand as
he ran. The crew of his galley had spliced a heavy hawser, as thick as a man's
arm, to the end of the carrying-line. Now they sent it across as Tanus lay back
against the weight of it. With the muscles of his arms and back shining with
sweat, he dragged it in. By this time a handful of the barge's crew had
realized what he was about, and rushed forward to help him. Under Tanus!
direction they took three turns with the end of the hawser about the barge's
bowsprit, and the instant it was securdd Tanus signalled his galley away. The Breath of Horus leaped into the current,
gathering speed swiftly. Then abruptly she came up short against the hawser,
and the weight of the heavy vessel on the other end threw her back on her
haunches. For a dreadful moment I thought she might capsize and be dragged
under, but Tanus had anticipated the shock and signalled his crew to cushion it
by skilfully backing the long paddles. Although she was dragged down so low that she took
in green water over her stem, the galley weathered it, bobbed up and came back
taut on the hawser. For a long moment nothing happened. The galley's puny
weight made no impression on the great ship's ponderous way. The two vessels
were locked together as though a crocodile had an old bull buffalo by the snout
but could not drag him from the bank. Then Tanus in the bows of the barge
turned to face the disorganized crew. He made one authoritative gesture that
caught all their attention, and a remarkable change came over them. They were
waiting for his command. Nembet was the commander of all Pharaoh's fleet
with the rank of Great Lion of Egypt. Years ago he had been one of the mighty
men, but now he was old and feeble. Tanus took over from him effortlessly, as
though it were as natural as the force of the current and the wind, and the
crew of the barge responded immediately. 'Pull!' He gestured to the port bank of oarsmen and
they bent their backs and pulled with a will. 'Back-water!' He stabbed his clenched fist at the
starboard side and they dug in hard with the pointed blades of their paddles.
Tanus stepped to the rail and signalled to the helmsman of me Breath of
Horus, masterfully coordinating the efforts of both crews. Still the barge
was bearing down upon the wharf and now only a narrow strip of open water
separated the vessel from the granite blocks. Then at last, slowly, too slowly, she began to
respond. The gaudily painted bows began to swing up into the current as the
galley dragged mem round. Once again the cheering died away and that fateful
hush fell upon us all as we waited for the enormous ship to crash into the
wharf and tear out her own guts on the rock. When that happened there was no
doubt what the consequences must be for Tanus. He had snatched command from the
senile admiral and so must bear the full responsibility for all the old man's
mistakes. When Pharaoh was dashed from his throne by the collision, when the
double crown and all his dignity were sent rolling across the deck, and when
the state barge sank beneath him and he was dragged from the river tike a
drowning puppy before the gaze of all his subjects, men there would be both the
insulted Admiral Nembet and my Lord Intef to encourage Pharaoh to bring the
full weight of his displeasure to bear upon the presumptuous young upstart. I stood helplessly and trembled for my dear friend,
and then a miracle occurred. The barge was already so'close to running aground
and Tanus so near to where I stood that his voice carried clearly to me.
"Great Horus, help me now!' he cried. There is no doubt at all in my mind that the .gods
often take a hand in the affairs of men. Tanus is a Horus man, and Horus is the
god of the wind. The desert wind had blown for three days and nights
out of the western desolation of the Sahara. It had blown at the strength of
half a gale without a check for all that time, but now it dropped. It did not
taper off, it simply ceased to blow at all. The wavelets mat had flecked the
surface of the river flattened out, and the palms along the waterfront that had
been vigorously shaking their fronds fell still, as though frozen by a sudden
frost. Released from the claws of the wind, the barge
rolled back on to an even keel and yielded to the pull of the Breath of
Horus. Her elephantine bows turned up into the current, and she came parallel
with the wharf at the exact moment that her side touched the dressed stone and
the rush of the Nile killed her forward-way and stalled her motionless in the
water. One last command from Tanus and, before the ship
could gather stern-way, the mooring ropes were cast on to the wharf and swiftly
garnered up by eager hands and made fast to the stone bollards. Lightly as a
goose-down feather floating on the water, the great barge of state lay safe and
serene at her berth, and neither the throne upon which Pharaoh sat, nor the
high crown upon his head, had been disturbed by her moorage. We, the onlookers, burst out in a roar of praise
for the feat, and the name of Tanus rather than that of Pharaoh was on all our
tongues. Modestly, and very prudently, Tanus made no attempt to acknowledge our
applause. To draw any further attention to himself that might detract from the
welcome that awaited the king would have been folly indeed, and would certainly
have negated any royal favour that his exploit had earned him. Pharaoh was
always jealous of his royal dignity. Instead, Tanus surreptitiously signalled
the Breath of Horus alongside. When she was hidden from our view by the
bulk of the barge, he dropped overside on to the galley's deck, quitting the
stage on which he had just earned such distinction, and leaving it now to his
king. However, I saw the expression of fury and chagrin
on the face of Nembet, the ancient admiral, the Great Lion of Egypt, as he came
ashore behind Pharaoh, and I knew that Tanus had made himself another powerful
enemy. I WAS ABLE TO MAKE GOOD MY PROMISE to Lostris that
very evening when I put the cast of the pageant through their dress rehearsal.
Before the performance began I was able to give the two lovers almost an hour
alone together. hi the precincts of the temple of Osiris, which was
to be our theatre for the pageant, I had set up tents to act as dressing-rooms
for each of the principal players. I had purposely placed Lostris' tent a
little apart from the others, screened from them by one of the huge stone
columns that support the roof of the temple. While I stood on sentry duty at
the entrance to the tent, Tanus lifted the opposite panel and slipped in under
it. I tried not to eavesdrop on their cries of delight
as they first embraced, nor to the whispering and cooing, to the muffled
laughter and to the small moans and gasps of their decorous love-making which
followed. Although at this stage I would not have made any attempt to prevent
it, I was convinced that they would not carry this love-making to its ultimate
conclusion. Long afterwards both Lostris and Tanus separately confirmed this
one for me. My mistress; had been a virgin on her wedding day. If only any of
us had known how close upon us that wedding day was, I wonder how differently
we might have acted then. Although I was acutely aware that every minute that
they were alone together in the tent increased the danger for all of us, still
I could not bring myself to call enough and separate them. Although the welts
on my back that Raster's whip had raised still burned, and although deep in
that morass of my soul where I attempt to hide all my unworthy thoughts and
instincts my envy for the lovers burned as painfully, still I let them stay
together much longer than I should have done. I did not hear my Lord Intef coming. He used to
have his sandals shod in the softest kid-skin to muffle his footfalls. He moved
silently as a ghost, and many a courtier and slave felt either Rasfer's whip or
his noose on account of a careless word that my lord overheard on his noiseless
peregrinations through the halls and corridors of the palace. However, over the
years I developed an instinct that enabled me most times to sense his presence
before he materialized out of the shadows. This instinct was not infallible,
but that evening it stood me in good stead. When I looked round suddenly he was
almost upon me, gliding between the pillars of the hypostyle hall towards me,
slim and tall and deadly as an erect cobra. 'My Lord Intef!' I cried loudly enough to startle
myself. 'I am honoured that you have come to witness our rehearsals. I would be
deeply grateful for any advice or suggestions—' I was gabbling wildly in an
attempt to cover my confusion and to alert the lovers in the tent behind me. In both objects I succeeded better than I had any
right to expect. I heard the sudden scuffle of consternation within the
dressing-tent behind me as the lovers broke apart, and then the flutter of the
rear panel of the tent as Tanus ducked out the way he had entered. At any other time I would never have succeeded so
easily in deceiving my Lord Intef. He would have read the guilt upon my face as
clearly as I read the hieroglyphics on the temple walls or my own characters on
this scroll; but that evening he was blinded by his own wrath, and intent only
on taking me to task for my latest misdemeanour. He did not rage; or roar with
anger. My Lord is at his most dangerous when his tone is mild and his smile
silky. 'Dear Taita.' It was almost a whisper. 'I hear that
you have altered some of the arrangements for the opening act of the pageant,
despite the fact that I personally ordered them. I could not believe that you
have been so presumptuous. I had to come all this way in the heat to find out
for myself.' I knew it was of no avail to feign innocence or
ignorance, so I bowed my head and tried to look aggrieved. 'My lord. It was not
I who ordered the changes. It was His Holiness, the abbot of the temple of
Osiris—' But my lord broke in impatiently, 'Yes, of course
he did, but only after you put him up to it. Do you think I do not know both
you and that mumbling old priest? He never had an original thought in his head,
while you have nothing but.' 'My lord!'I protested. 'What devious little trick was it this time? Was it
one of those convenient dreams sent to you by the gods?' my lord asked, his
voice as soft as the rustle of one of the sacred cobras that infested the
temple, sliding across the stone flags of the floor. 'My lord!' I did my best to look shocked by the
accusation, although I had indeed given the good abbot a rather fanciful
account of how Osiris in the guise of a black crow had visited me in my sleep
to complain of the spilling of blood in his temple. Up until that time the priest had voiced no
objection to the realistic piece of theatre that my Lord Intef had planned for
the amusement of Pharaoh. I had only resorted to dreams when all my efforts to
dissuade my lord had failed. It was deeply abhorrent to me to be party to such
an abomination as my lord had ordered to be performed in the first act of the
pageant. Of course I am aware that certain savage peoples in the eastern lands
make human sacrifice to their gods. I have heard that the Kassites, who live
beyond the twin rivers Tigris and Euphrates, cast new-born babes into a fiery
furnace. The caravan masters who have travelled in those distant lands speak of
other atrocities performed in the name of religion, of young virgins
slaughtered to promote the harvest or captives of war beheaded before the
statues of a triple-headed god. However, we Egyptians are a civilized people and we
worship wise and just gods, not blood-crazed monsters. I had tried to convince
my master of this. I had pointed out to him that only once before had a pharaoh
made human sacrifice; when Menotep had slit the throats of the seven rebel
princes in the temple of Seth and quartered their corpses and sent the embalmed
fragments to the governors of each of the nomes as a warning. History still
remembered the deed with distaste. Menotep is known to this day as the Bloody
King. 'It is not human sacrifice,' my master had
contradicted me. 'Merely a well-merited execution, to be carried out in a
rather novel fashion. You will not deny, dear Taita, that the death penalty has
always been an important part of our system of justice, will you? Tod is a
thief. He has stolen from the royal coffers and he must die, if only as an
example to others.' It sounded reasonable, except that I knew he was
not at all interested in justice, but rather in protecting his own treasure and
in impressing Pharaoh, who so loved pageant and theatre. This had left me with
no alternative but to dream for the benefit of the good abbot. Now my Lord
In-tef's lip lifted in a smile which exposed his perfect teeth but which
chilled my blood and raised the hairs on the nape of my neck. 'Here is a little piece of advice,' he whispered
close to my face. f'I suggest that you have another dream tonight, so that
whichever god it was that visited you last time has an opportunity to
countermand his previous instructions to the abbot and to endorse my
arrangements. If this does not happen, I will find some more work for
Rasfer—that is my solemn promise to you.' He turned and strode away, leaving me
both relieved that he had not discovered the lovers and miserable that I was
forced to go ahead with the vile display which he had ordered. Nevertheless, after my master had left, the
rehearsal was a heartening success that revived my spirits. Lostris was in such
a glow of happiness after her tryst with Tanus that her beauty was indeed
divine, and Tanus in his youth and power was the young Horus incarnate. Naturally I was perturbed by the entrance of my
Osiris to the stage, aware as I now was of the fate that my Lord Intef had
ordered for him. My Osiris was played by a handsome, middle-aged man named Tod
who had been one of the bailiffs until he had been caught dipping into my Lord
Intef's coffers to support a young and expensive courtesan of whom he was
enamoured. I was not proud that it was my examination of the accounts that had
brought to light the discrepancies. My lord had released him from custody, where he was
awaiting formal trial and sentencing, to play the part of the god of the
underworld in the pageant. My lord had promised not to take the matter further
if he fulfilled the role of Osiris satisfactorily. The unfortunate Tod was
unaware of the hidden menace in this offer and threw himself into the act with
pathetic enthusiasm, believing that he was about to earn his pardon. He could
not know that, in the meantime, my lord had secretly signed his death warrant
and handed the scroll to Rasfer, who was not only the state executioner but my
choice to play Seth in our little production. It was my lord's intention that
he should combine both roles on the following evening when the pageant was
performed before Pharaoh. Although Rasfer was a natural choice for the role of
Seth, I regretted having cast him in it as I watched him rehearse the opening
scene with Tod, and I shuddered as I imagined how the main performance would
differ from the rehearsal. After the rehearsal it was my most pleasant duty to
escort my mistress back to the harem compound. She would not let me leave but
kept me late listening to her excited resume of the day's extraordinary events
and the role that Tanus had played in them. 'Did you see how he called upon the great god Horus
and how the god came at once to his aid? Surely he has the full favour and
protection of Horus, don't you agree? Horus will not let any evil befall us, of
that I am now certain.' There was much more of this happy fantasy, and no
more talk of parting and suicide. How swiftly the winds of young love shift! 'After what Tanus did today, the way he saved the state
barge from wrecking, surely he must also have earned Pharaoh's high favour,
don't you think so, Taita? With favour of both the god and Pharaoh, my father
can never succeed in having Tanus sent away now, can he, Taita?' I was called upon to endorse every happy thought
that occurred to her, and I was not allowed to leave the harem until I had
memorized at least a dozen messages of undying love which I was sworn to carry
to Tanus personally. When, exhausted, I finally reached my own quarters,
there was still no rest for me. Nearly all the slave boys were waiting for me,
as excited and garrulous as my mistress had been. They also wanted Jo have my
opinion of the day's events, and particularly of Tanus' rescue of Pharaoh's
ship and the significance of that deed. They crowded around me on the terrace
above the river as I fed my pets, and vied with each other for my attention. 'Elder brother, is it true that Tanus called upon
the god for his help, and Horus intervened immediately? Did you see it happen?
Some even say that the god appeared in his falcon shape and hovered over Tanus'
head, spreading protective wings over him. Is it true?' 'Is it true, Akh, that Pharaoh has promoted Tanus
to Companion of Pharaoh, and given him an estate of five hundred fed dan of
fertile land on the riverside as reward?' 'Elder brother, they say that the oracle at the
desert shrine of Thoth, the god of wisdom, has cast a horoscope for Tanus. The
oracle divines that he will be the greatest warrior in the history of our Egypt
and that, one day, Pharaoh will favour him above all others.' It is amusing now
to look back on these childish prattles, and to realize the strange truths that
were adumbrated in them, but at the time I dismissed them as I did the
children, with mock severity. As I composed myself to sleep, my last thought was
that the populace of the twin towns of Luxor and Karnak had taken Tanus to
their hearts completely, but that this was an onerous and dubious distinction.
Fame and popularity breed envy in high places, and the adulation of the mob is
fickle. They often take as much pleasure in tearing down the idols that they
have grown tired of, as they did in elevating them in the first place. It is safer by far to live unseen and unremarked,
as I always attempt to do. ON THE AFTERNOON OF THE SIXTH DAY OF the festival,
Pharaoh moved in solemn procession from his villa in the midst of the royal
estates in the open country between Karnak and Luxor, down the ceremonial
avenue lined with statues of granite lions, to the temple of Osiris on the bank
of the Nile. The great sledge on which he rode was so tall that
the dense crowds lining the avenue were forced to strain their necks backwards
to look up at him on his great gilded throne as he trundled by, drawn by twenty
pure white bullocks with massive humped shoulders and wreaths of flowers on
their horned heads. The skids of the sledge ground harshly over the paving and
scarred the stone slabs. One hundred musicians led the procession, strumming
the lyre and the harp, beating the cymbal and the drum, shaking the rattle and
the sistrum, and blowing on the long straight hom of the oryx and on the
curling horn of the wild ram. A choir of a hundred of the finest voices in
Egypt followed them, singing hymns of praise to Pharaoh and that other god
Osiris. Naturally I led the choir. Behind us followed an honour guard from the
Blue Crocodile regiment led by Tanus himself. The crowds raised a special cheer
for him as, all plumed and armoured, he strode past. The unmarried maidens shrieked
and more than one of them sank swooning in the dust, overcome by the hysteria
that his new-won fame engendered. Behind the guard of honour came the vizier and his
high-office bearers, then the nobles and their wives and children, then a
detachment of the Falcon regiment, and finally Pharaoh's great sledge. In all,
this was an assembly of several thousand of the most wealthy and influential
persons in the Upper Kingdom. As we approached the temple of Osiris, the abbot
and all his priests were drawn up on the staircase between the tall entrance
pylons to welcome Pharaoh Mamose. The temple had been freshly painted and the
bas-relief on the outer walls was dazzling with colour in the warm yellow glow
of the sunset. A gay cloud of banners and flags fluttered fiom their poles set
in the recesses of the outer wall. At the base of the staircase Pharaoh descended from
his carriage and in solemn majesty began the climb up the one hundred steps.
The choir lined both sides of the staircase. I was on the fiftieth step and so
I was able to study the king minutely during the few seconds that it took for
him to pass close to me. I already knew him well, for he had been a patient
of mine, but I had forgotten how small he was—that is, small for a god. He
stood not ~as tall as my shoulder, although the high double crown made him seem
much more impressive. His arms were folded across his chest in the ritual
posture and he carried the crook and the flail of his royal office and his
godhead. I remarked as I had before that his hands were hairless, smooth and
almost feminine, and that his feet also were small and neat. He wore rings on
all his fingers and on his toes, amulets on his upper arms and bracelets on his
wrists. The massive pectoral plate of red gold on his chest was inlaid with
many colours of faience depicting the god Thoth bearing the feather of truth.
That piece of jewellery was a splendid treasure almost five hundred years old
and . had been worn by seventy kings before him. Under the double crown, his face was powdered dead
white like that of a corpse. His eyes were dramatically outlined with startling
jet black and his lips were rouged crimson. Under the heavy make-up his
expression was petulant, and his lips were thin and straight and humourless.
His eyes were shifty and nervous, as well they might be, I reflected. The foundations of this great House of Egypt were
cracked, and the kingdom riven and shaken. Even a god has his worries. Once his
domain had stretched from the sea, across the seven mouths of the Delta,
southwards to Assoun and the first cataract—the greatest empire on earth. He
and his ancestors had let it all slip away, and now his enemies swarmed at his
shrunken borders, clamouring like hyena and jackal and vulture to feast on the
carcass of our Egypt. In the south were the black hordes of Africa, in
the north along the coast of the great sea were the piratical sea-people, and
along the lower reaches of the Nile the legions of the false Pharaoh. In the
west were the treacherous Bedouin and the sly Libyan, while in the east new
hordes seemed to rise up daily, their names striking terror into a nation grown
timid and hesitant with defeat. Assyrians and Medes, Kassites and Humans and
Hittites—there seemed no end to their multitudes. What advantage remained in our ancient civilization
if it were grown feeble and effete with its great age? How were we to resist
the barbarian in his savage vigour, his cruel arrogance and his lust for rapine
and plunder? I was certain that this pharaoh, like those who had immediately
preceded him, was not capable of leading the nation back to its former glories.
He was incapable even of breeding a male heir. This lack of an heir to the empire of Egypt seemed
to obsess him even more than the loss of the empire itself. He had taken twenty
wives so far. They had given him daughters, a virtual tribe of daughters, but
no son. He would not accept that the fault lay with him as sire. He had
consulted every doctor of renown in the Upper Kingdom and visited every oracle
and every important shrine. I knew all this because I was one of the learned
doctors he had sent for. I admit that at the time I had felt some trepidation
in prescribing to a god, and that I had wondered why he should need to consult
a mere mortal on such a delicate subject. Nevertheless, I had recommended a
diet of bull's testicles fried in honey and counselled him to find the most
beautiful virgin in Egypt and take her to his marriage-bed within a year of the
first flowering of her woman's moon. I had no great faith in my own remedy, but bull's
testicles, when cooked to my recipe, are a tasty dish, while I reckoned that
the search for the most beautiful virgin in the land might distract Pharaoh and
prove not only amusing but pleasurable as well. From a practical point of view,
if the king bedded a sufficient number of young ladies, then surely one of them
must eventually drop a male pup into his harem. Anyhow, I consoled myself that my treatment was not
as drastic as some of the others proposed by my peers, particularly those
disgusting remedies dreamed up by the quacks in the temple of Osiris who call
themselves doctors. If not actually efficacious, my recommendations would at
least do no harm. That was what I believed. How wrong ;the fates would prove
me, and if only I had known the consequences of my folly, I would have taken
Tod's place in the pageant rather than have given Pharaoh such frivolous
counsel. I was amused and flattered when I heard that
Pharaoh must have taken my advice seriously, and that he had ordered his
nomarchs and his governors to scour the length'of the land from El Amarna to
the cataracts to find bulls with succulent balls and any virgin who might fit
my specifications for the mother of his first son. My sources at the king's
court informed me that he had already rejected hundreds of aspiring applicants
for the- title of the most beautiful virgin in the land. Then the king was swiftly past me and gone into the
temple to the keening of the priests and the obsequious bobbing of the abbot.
The grand vizier and all his train followed closely, and then there was an
undignified rush of lesser citizens to find places from which to watch the
passion play. Space in the temple was limited. Only the mighty and the noble
and those rich enough to bribe the thieving priests were allowed into the inner
courtyard. The others were forced to watch through the gates from the outer
court. Many thousands of the citizenry would be disappointed and would have to
be content with a secondhand account of the pageant. Even I, the impresario,
had great difficulty in fighting my way through the press of humanity, and I
only succeeded when Tanus saw my predicament and sent two of his men to rescue
me and force a path for me into the precincts reserved for the actors. Before the pageant could begin, we were obliged to
endure a succession of flowery speeches, firstly from the local functionaries
and government ministers, and then from the grand vizier in person. This
interlude of speechifying gave me the opportunity to make certain that all the
arrangements for the pageant were perfect. I went from tent to tent, checking
the costumes and the make-up of each of my actors, and soothing last-minute
attacks of temperament and stage-fright. The unfortunate Tod was nervously dreading the possibility
that his performance might not please my Lord Intef. I was able to assure him
that it most certainly would, and then I administered to him a draught of the
Red Shepenn, which would deaden the pain that he was about to have inflicted
lipon him. When I came to Rasfer's tent he was drinking wine
with two of his cronies from the palace guard and, with a whetstone, laying an
edge on his short bronze sword. I had created his make-up to render him even
more repulsive, which was not an easy feat given the high plateau of ugliness
from which we started. I realized how well I had succeeded as he leered at me
with blackened teeth and offered me a cup of the wine. 'How does your back feel now, pretty, boy? Have a taste
of a1 man's drink! Perhaps it will give you balls again.' I am accustomed to
his taunts and I kept my dignity as I told him that my Lord Intef had
countermanded the abbot's orders and that the first act was to be played out in
the original form. 'I have spoken to Lord Intef already.' He held up
the sword. 'Feel the edge, eunuch. I want to make certain that it meets with
your approval.' I left him feeling a little queasy. Although Tanus would not be on stage until the
second act, he was already in costume. Relaxed and smiling, he clasped my
shoulder. 'Well, old friend, this is your opportunity. After this evening your
fame as a playwright will spread throughout Egypt.' 'As yours has already. Your name is on every lip,'
I told him, but he laughed it away with careless modesty as I went on, 'Do you
have your closing declamation prepared, Tanus? Would you like to recite it to
me now?' Traditionally, the actor who played Horus would
close the pageant with a message to Pharaoh, ostensibly from the gods but in
reality from his own subjects. In olden times this had been the one occasion
during the year when the populace, through the agency of the actor, could bring
to the king's notice matters of concern which they were not able to address to
him at any other time. However, during the rule of this last dynasty of kings
the tradition had fallen away, and the closing speech had become merely another
eulogy to the divine pharaoh. For days past I had been asking Tanus to rehearse
his speech for me, but every time he had put me off with excuses so lame that I
was by now thoroughly suspicious of his intentions. "This is the last
opportunity,' I insisted, but he laughed at me. 'I have decided to let my speech be as much a
surprise to you as I hope it will be to Pharaoh. That way you should both enjoy
it more.' And there was nothing I could do to persuade him. At times he can be
far and away the most headstrong and obstinate young ruffian I have ever
encountered. I left him in not a little dudgeon, and went to find more convivial
company. As I stooped in throughjhe entrance of Lostris'
dressing-tent, I froze with shock. Even though I had designed her costume
myself and instructed her handmaidens as to exactly how I wanted her powder and
rouge and eye-paint applied, still I was not prepared for the ethereal vision
that stood before me now. For a moment I was convinced that another miracle had
taken place and that the goddess had indeed risen up from the underworld to
take my mistress's place. I gasped aloud and had actually begun to sink to my
knees in superstitious awe when my mistress giggled and roused my from my
delusion. 'Isn't this fun? I cannot wait to see Tanus in full
costume. I am sure he must look like the god himself.' She turned slowly to
allow me to appraise her own costume, smiling at me over her shoulder. 'No more godlike than you, my lady,' I whispered.
'When will the play begin?' she demanded impatiently. 'I am so excited that I
can wait no longer.' I cocked my ear to the panel of the tent and
listened for a moment to the drone of the speeches in the great hall. I
realized that this was-the final oration and that at any moment my Lord Intef
would call upon my players to perform. I took Lostris' hand and squeezed it. 'Remember the
long pause and the haughty look before you begin your opening speech,' I
cautioned her, and she slapped my shoulder playfully. 'Away with you, you old fuss-pot, it will all go
perfectly, you'll see.' And at that moment I heard my Lord Intef's voice
raised. 'The divine god Pharaoh Mamose, the Great House of
Egypt, the Support of the Realm, the Just, the Great, the All-Seeing, the
All-Merciful—' The titles and honorifics continued while I hurried out of
Lostris' tent and made my way to my opening position behind the central pillar.
I peered around the column and saw that the inner courtyard of the temple was
packed and that Pharaoh and his senior wives sat in the front rank on low
benches of cedar wood, sipping cool sherbet or nibbling dates and sweetmeats. My Lord Intef was addressing them from the front of
the raised platform below the altar that was our stage. The main body of the
stage was still .hidden from the audience by the linen curtains. I surveyed it
for one last time, although it was too late to do anything further about it now. Behind the curtains the set was decorated with
palms and acacia trees that the palace gardeners had transplanted under my
instruction. My masons had been taken from the work on the king's tomb to build
a stone cistern at the back of the temple from which a stream could be diverted
across the stage to represent the river Nile. At the rear of the stage, hanging from floor to
ceiling, were tightly stretched sheets of linen on which the artists from the
necropolis had painted marvellous landscapes. In the half-light of the dusk and
the flicker of the torches in "their brackets the effect was so realistic
as to transport the beholder into a different world in a distant time. There were other delights that I had prepared for
Pharaoh's amusement, from cages of animals, birds and butterflies that would be
released to simulate the creation of the world by the great god Ammon-Ra, to
flares and torches that I had doctored with chemicals to burn with brilliant
flames of crimson and green, and flood the stage with eerie light and
smoke-clouds, like those of the underworld where the gods live. 'Mamose, son of Ra, may you be granted eternal
life! We your loyal subjects, the citizens of Thebes, beg you to draw nigh and
give your divine attention to this poor play that we dedicate to Your Majesty.' My Lord Intef concluded his address of welcome and
resumed his seat. To a fanfare of hidden rams' horns, I stepped out from behind
the pillar and faced the audience. They had endured discomfort and boredom on
the hard flagstones, and by now were ripe for the entertainment to begin. A
raucous cheer greeted my entrance and even Pharaoh smiled in anticipation. I held up both hands for silence, and only when it
was total did I begin to speak my overture. 'While I walked in the sunlight, young and filled
with the vigour of youth, I heard the fatal music in the reeds by the bank of
the Nile. I did not recognize the sound of this harp, and I had no fear, for I
was in the full bloom of my manhood and secure in the affection of my beloved. 'The music was of surpassing beauty. Joyously I
went to find the musician, and could not know that he was Death and that he
played his harp to summoame alone.' We Egyptians are fascinated by death, and I
had at once touched a deep chord within my audience. They sighed and shuddered. 'Death seized me and bore me up in his skeletal
arms towards Ammon-Ra, the sun god, and I was become one with the white light
of his being. At a great distance I heard my beloved weep, but I could not see
her and all the days of my life were as though they had never been.' This was
the first public recitation of my prose, and I knew almost at once that I had
them, their faces were fascinated and intent. There was not a sound in the
temple. 'Then Death set me down in a high place from which
I could see the world like a shining round shield in the blue sea of the
heavens. I saw'all men and all creatures who have ever lived. Like a mighty
river, tune ran backwards before mine eyes. For a hundred thousand years I
watched their strivings and their deaths. I watched all men go from death and
old .age to infancy and birth. Time became more and more remote, going back
until the birth of the first man and the first woman. I watched them at the
moment of their birth and then before. At last there were no men upon the earth
and only the gods existed. 'Yet still the river of time flowed back beyond the
time of the gods into Nun, into the time of darkness and primordial chaos. The
river of time could flow no further back and so reversed itself. Time began to
run forward in the manner that was familiar to me from my days of life upon the
earth, and I watched the passion of the gods played out before me.' My audience
were all of them well versed in the theology of our pantheon, but none of them
had ever heard the mysteries presented in such a novel fashion. They sat silent
and enthralled as I went on. 'Out of the chaos and darkness of Nun rose
Ammon-Ra, He-Who-Creates-Himself. I watched Ammon-Ra stroke his generative
member, masturbating and spurting out his seminal seed in mighty waves that
left the silver smear that we know as the Milky Way across the dark void. From
this seed were generated Geb and Nut, the earth and the heaven.' 'Bak-her!' a
single voice broke the tremulous silence of the temple. 'Bak-her.' Amen!' The
old abbot had not been able to contain himself, and now he endorsed my vision
of the creation. I was so astonished by his change of heart that I almost
forgot my next line. After all, he. had been my sternest critic up to that time.
I had won him over completely, and my voice soared in triumph. 'Geb and Nut coupled and copulated, as man and
women do, and from their dreadful union were bom the gods Osiris and Seth, and
the goddesses Isis and Nephthys.' I made a wide gesture and the linen curtains were
drawn slowly aside to reveal the fantasy world that I had created. Nothing like
this had ever been seen in Egypt before and the audience gasped with amazement.
With measured tread I withdrew, and my place upon the stage was taken by the god
Osiris. The audience recognized him instantly by the tall, bottle-shaped
head-dress, by his arms crossed over his chest and by the crook and the flail
he held before him. Every household kept his statuette in the family shrine. A droning cry of reverence went up from every
throat, and indeed the sedative that I had administered to Tod glittered
weirdly in his eyes and gave him a strange, unearthly presence that was
convincingly godlike. With the crook and the flail Osiris made mystical
gestures and declaimed in sonorous tones, 'Behold Atur, the river!' Once more the audience rustled and murmured as they
recognized the Nile. The Nile was Egypt and the centre of the world. 'Bak-her!' another voice called out, and, watching
from my hidden place amongst the pillars, I was astonished and delighted as I
realized who had spoken. It was Pharaoh. My play had both secular and divine
endorsement. I was certain mat from now on mine would become the authorized
version, replacing the thousand-year-old original. I had found my place in
immortality. My name would live on down the millennium. Joyfully I signalled for the cistern to be opened
and the waters began to flow across our stage. At first the audience did not
comprehend, and men they realized that they were actually witnessing the
revelation of the great river, and a shout went up from a thousand throats,
'BaK-her! Bak-her!' 'Behold the waters rise!' cried Osiris, and obediently the
Nile was swollen by the inundation. 'Behold the waters fall!, cried the god, and they
shrank at his command. 'Now they will rise again!' I had arranged for buckets of dye to be added to
the water as it poured out of the cistern at the rear of the temple. First a
green dye to simulate the low-water period, and then, as it rose again, a
darker dye that faithfully emulated the colour of the silt-laden waters of the
high inundation. 'Now behold the insects and birds upon the earth!'
ordered Osiris, and the cages at the rear of the stage were opened and a
shrieking, chattering, swirling cloud of wild birds and gorgeously coloured
butterflies filled the temple. The watchers were like children, enchanted and
enthralled, reaching up to snatch the butterflies from the air and then release
them again to fly out between the high pillars of the temple. One of the wild
birds, a long-billed hoopoe marvellously patterned in colours of white and
cinnamon and black, flew down unafraid and settled on Pharaoh's crown. The
crowd was delighted. 'An omen!' they cried. 'A blessing on the king. May he
live for ever!' and Pharaoh smiled. It was naughty of me, but afterwards I hinted to my
Lord Intef that I had trained the bird to single out Pharaoh, and although it
was of course quite impossible, he believed me. Such is my reputation with animals
and birds. On the stage Osiris wandered through the paradise
mat he had created, and the mood was set for the dramatic moment when, with a
blood-chilling shriek, Seth bounded on to the stage. Although they had been
expecting it, still the powerful and hideous presence shocked the audience, and
the women screamed and covered their faces, only to peer out again from between
trembling ringers. 'What is mis you have done, brother?' Seth bellowed
in jealous rage. 'Do you set yourself above me? Am I not also a god? Do you
hold all creation to yourself alone, mat I, your brother, may not share it with
you?' Osiris answered him calmly, his dignity remote and
cool as the drug held him in its thrall. 'Our father, Ammon-Ra, has given it to
us both. However, he has also given us the right to choose how we dispose of
it, for good or for evil—' The words that I had put into the mouth of the god
reverberated through the temple. They were the finest that I had written, and
the audience hung upon them. However, I alone of all of mem knew what was
coming, and the beauty and the power of my own composition were soured as I
steeled myself for it. Osiris drew to the close of his speech. 'This is
the world as I have revealed it. If you wish to share it in peace and brotherly
love, then you are welcome. However, if you come in warlike rage, if evil and
hatred fill your heart, then I order you gone.' He lifted his right arm all
draped in the gleaming diaphanous linen of his robe and pointed the way for
Seth to leave the paradise of Earth. Seth hunched those huge, hairy shoulders like a
buffalo bull, and he bellowed so mat the spittle flew from his lips in a cloud
that was flavoured by the rotting teeth in his jaws. I could smell it from
where I stood. He lifted high the bronze broad-sword and rushed at his brother.
This had never been rehearsed, and it took Osiris completely by surprise. He
stood with his right arm still outstretched, and the blade hissed with the
power of the stroke as it swung down. The hand was lopped off at the wrist as
cleanly as I would prune a shoot from the vine that grows over my terrace. It
fell at Osiris' feet and lay there with the fingers fluttering feebly. The surprise was so complete and the sword so sharp
that for a long moment Osiris did not move, except to sway slightly on his
feet. The audience must have believed that this was another theatrical trick,
and that the fallen hand was a dummy. The blood did not come at once, which
lulled them further. They were intensely interested but not alarmed, until
suddenly Osiris reeled back and with a dreadful cry clutched at the stump of
his lower arm;' Only then did the blood burst out between his fingers and
sprayed down his white robe, staining it like spilt wine. Still clutching his
stump, Osiris staggered across the stage and began to scream. That scream, high
and clear with mortal agony, broke the mood of the spectators' complacency.
They knew then for the first time that what they were witnessing was not
make-believe, but they were trapped in horrified silence. Before Osiris could reach the edge of the stage,
Seth came bounding after him oik those thick bow-legs. He seized the stump of
Osiris' arm and used it as a handle to drag him back into the centre of the
stage, where he threw him sprawling full-length on the stone flags. The tinsel
crown tumbled from Osiris' head and the plaits of dark hair fell to his
shoulders as he lay in a spreading puddle of his own blood. 'Please spare me,' Osiris shrieked, as Seth stood
over him, and Seth laughed. It was a full-throated roar of genuine amusement.
Rasfer had become Seth, and Seth was hugely enjoying himself. That savage laughter woke the audience from its
trance. However, the illusion was complete. They no longer believed that they
were watching a play, and for all of them this terrible spectacle had become
reality. Women screamed and men roared with fury as they witnessed the murder
of their god. 'Spare him! Spare the great god Osiris!' they
howled, but not one of them rose from his seat or rushed on to the stage to
attempt to prevent the tragedy from being played out. They knew that the straggles and passions of the
gods were beyond the influence of mortal men. Osiris reached up and pawed at Seth's legs with his
one remaining hand. Still laughing, Seth grabbed bis wrist and pulled his arm
out to its full length, inspecting it as a butcher might inspect the shoulder
of a goat before he sections it. 'Cut it off!' screamed a voice in the crowd, thick
with the lust for blood. The mood had swung again. 'Kill him!' screamed another. It has always
troubled me how the sight of blood and violent death affects even the mildest
of men. Even I was stirred by this terrible scene, sickened and horrified, it
is true, but beneath it stirred by a revolting excitement. With a casual sweep of the blade, Seth struck off
the arm, and Osiris fell back, leaving the twitching limb in Seth's red fist.
He was trying to rise to his feet, but he had no hands to support himself. His
legs kicked spasmodically, and his head whipped from side to side, and still he
screamed. I tried to force myself to turn away, but though my gorge rose and
scalded the back of my throat, still I had to watch. Seth hacked the arm into three pieces through the
joint of the wrist and the elbow. One at a time he hurled the fragments into
the packed ranks of the audience. As they spun through the air they sprinkled
those below with drops of ruby. They roared like the lions hi Pharaoh's zoo at
feeding-time, and held up their hands to catch these holy relics of their god. Seth worked on with dedicated gusto. Osiris' feet
he chopped off at the ankles. Then the calves at the knees, and the thighs at
the hip joints. As he threw each of these to mem, the mob clamoured for more. "The talisman of Seth!' howled a voice amongst
them. 'Give us the talisman of Seth!' and the cry was taken up. According to
the myth, the talisman is the most powerful of all the magical charms. The
person who has it in his possession controls all the dark forces of the
underworld, It is the only one of the fourteen segments of Osiris' body that
was never recovered by Isis and her sister Nephthys from the far corners of the
earth to which Seth scattered them. The talisman of Seth is that same part of
the body that Rasfer deprived me of, and which forms the centre-piece of that
beautiful necklace that was the cynical gift of my Lord Intef. 'Give us the
talisman of Seth!' the mob howled, and Seth reached down and lifted the red
sodden tunic of the limbless trunk at his feet. He was still laughing. I
shuddered as I recognized that merciless sound that I had heard so often at my
own punishment sessions. In sympathy I experienced once again the sudden fire
in my groin as the short sword flashed in Seth's hairy paw, already wet and
running with his victim's blood, and he lifted on high the piteous relic. The crowd pleaded for it. 'Give it to us,' ttfey
begged him. 'Give us the power of the talisman.' The spectacle had transformed
them into ravening beasts. Seth ignored their pleas. 'A gift,' he cried. 'A
gift from one god to another. I Seth, god of darkness, dedicate this talisman
to the god-Pharaoh, Mamose the divine.' And he hopped down the stone stairs on
those powerful bow-legs and placed the relic at Pharaoh's feet. To my amazement the king leaned forward and gathered
it up to himself. His expression beneath the powder and paint was
spellbound,"as though this was the true relic of the god. I am sure that
at that moment he truly believed it was. He held it in his right hand through
all that ensued. His gift accepted, Seth rushed back on to the stage
to complete his butchery. The thing that haunts me still is that the poor
dismembered creature was alive and sensate to the very end. I realized that the
drug I had given Tod had done little to dull his senses. I saw the terrible
agony in his eyes as he lay in the lake of his own blood and rolled his head
from side to side, the only part that remained to him to move. For me, then, it came as an intense relief when at
last Seth struck off the head and held it up by its thick plaited locks for the
crowd to admire. Even then, the poor creature's eyes swivelled wildly in their
sockets as he looked for the very last time on this world. At last they dulled
and glazed over, and Seth tossed the head to them. Thus the first act of our pageant ended in swelling
and rapturous applause that threatened to shake the granite pillars of the
temple from their bases. DURING THE INTERMISSION MY SLAVE helpers cleaned
away the gruesome evidence of the slaughter from the set. I was particularly
concerned that my Lady Lostris should not realize what had truly taken place in
the first act. I wished her to believe that all had gone as we had rehearsed
it. So I had arranged that she stay in her tent, and that one of Tanus' men remain
at the entrance to keep her there, and also to ensure that none of her Cushite
maidens were allowed to peep out at the first act and rush back to Lostris with
a report. I knew that if she realized the truth, she would be too distraught to
play her part. While my helpers used buckets of water from our stage Nile to
wash away the ghastly evidence, I hurried to my mistress's tent to reassure her
and to satisfy myself that my precautions to shield her had been effective. 'Oh, Taita, I heard the applause,' she greeted me
happily. 'They love your play. I am so happy for you. You so richly deserve
this success.' She chuckled in a conspiratorial fashion. 'It sounded as though
they believed the murder of Osiris was real, and the buckets of ox-blood with
which you drenched Tod were truly the blood of the god.' 'Indeed, my lady, they seemed totally deceived by
our little tricks,' I agreed, although I still felt faint and ill from what I
had just lived through. My Lady Lostris suspected nothing, and when I led
her out on to the stage, she barely glanced at the grisly stains that remained
upon the stones. I posed her in her opening position, and adjusted the
torchlight to flatter her. Even though I was accustomed to it, still her beauty
choked my throat and made my eyes sting with tears. I left her concealed by the linen curtains, and
stepped out to face my audience. There was no sarcastic applause to greet me
this time. Every one of them, from Pharaoh to the meanest vassal, was captive
to my voice, as in my lambent prose I described the mourning of Isis and her
sister Nephthys at the death of their brother. When I stepped down and the curtain was drawn aside
to reveal the grieving figure of Isis, the audience gasped aloud at her
loveliness. After the horror and blood of the first act, her presence was all
the more moving. Isis began to sing the lament for the dead, and her
voice thrilled through the gloomy halls of the temple. As her head moved to the
cadence of her voice, the torchlight was reflected in a darting and flickering
shaft from the bronze moon that surmounted her horned headdress. I watched Pharaoh
attentively as she sang. His eyes never left her face, and his lips moved
silently in sympathy with the words that swelled from her throat. My heart is a wounded gazelle,
torn by the lion claws of
my grief— She lamented and the king
and all his train grieved with her. There is no sweetness in
the honeycomb, no perfume remains in the
desert blossom. My soul is an empty temple,
deserted by the god of
love. In the front rank one or
two of the king's wives were snuffling and blubbering, but nobody even glanced
at them. I look on death's grim face with a smile. Gladly would I follow him, if he could lead me to the arms of my dear lord. By now not only the royal wives but every one of
the women were weeping, and most of the men also. Her words and her beauty were
too much for them to resist. It seemed impossible that a god should show the
same emotions as mortal men, but the slow tears were cutting runnels through
the white powder on Pharaoh's cheeks, and he blinked his heavy, kohl-darkened
eyelids like an owl as he stared at my Lady Lostris. Nephthys entered and sang a duet with her sister,
then hand-in-hand the two women went in search of the scattered fragments of
Osiris' corpse. Of course I had not placed the actual dismembered
portions of Tod's corpse for them to find. During the intermission my helpers
had retrieved these and carried them away to the'embalmers on my instructions.
I would pay for Tod's funeral out of my own purse. It seemed the very least
that I could do to compensate the unfortunate creature for my own part in his
murder. Despite the missing portion of his anatomy that Pharaoh still held in
his hand, I hoped the gods might make an exception in his case and allow Tod's
shade to pass into the underworld, and that there he might not think too badly
of me. It is wise to have friends wherever you can, in this world and the next. To represent the body of the god I had the funeral
artists from the necropolis build for me a magnificent mummy car-tonnage,
depicting Osiris in his full regalia and in the death pose with his arms folded
across his chest. This container I had cut 'into thirteen sections that fitted
together like a child's building-blocks. As the sisters retrieved each of these sections
they sang a hymn of praise to the god's parts, to his hands and feet, to his
limbs and trunk, and finally to his divine head. Such eyes, like stars set in the heavens, must shine for ever. Death should never dim such beauty, nor the funeral wrappings contain such majesty. When at last the two sisters had reassembled the
complete body of Osiris, except for the missing talisman, they pondered aloud
how they could return it to life once more. This was my opportunity to add to the pageant that
essential element that makes any theatrical production appeal to the popular
taste. There is a broad lascivious streak in most of us, and the playwright and
the poet does well to bear this in mind if he hopes to have his work
appreciated by the main body of his audience. "There is but one certain way to bring our
dear lord and brother back to life.' I placed the words in the mouth of the
goddess Nephthys. 'One of us must perform the act of generation with his
shattered body to make it whole again and to fan the spark of life within it.' The audience stirred and leaned forward with
anticipation at this suggestion. It had elements to appeal to even the most
prurient of those present, including incest and necrophilia. I had agonized over how I would represent upon the
stage this episode in the myth of the resurrection of Osiris. My mistress had
shocked me when she had declared herself willing to carry her role through to
the end. She had even had the effrontery to point out, with that impudent grin
of hers, that she might gain some valuable knowledge and experience from doing
so. I was not certain if she was jesting or if she would really have gone
through with it; however, I would not give her the opportunity to demonstrate
her good faith or lack of it. Her reputation and the honour of her family were
too valuable to trifle with. So it was that at my signal, the linen curtains
were drawn once more and my Lady Lostris quickly left the stage. Her place was
taken by one of the upper-class courtesans who usually plied her trade in a
palace of love near the port. I had hired this wench, from amongst several that
I had interviewed, because of her fine young body that so much resembled that
of my mistress. Of course, in facial beauty she could not come close to my Lady
Lostris, but then I know of none who could. As soon as the substitute goddess was in position,
the torches at the rear of the stage were lit so as to cast her shadow upon the
curtain. She began to disrobe in the most provocative manner. The males in the
audience cheered on her shadowy gyrations, convinced that they were watching my
Lady Lostris. The harlot responded to this encouragement with an increasingly
lewd display that was almost as well received as the slaughter of Osiris in the
first act. Now came that action of the play that had given me,
the author, considerable pause, for how could I contrive fecundity without a
stout peg to hang it on? We had just seen Osiris forcefully deprived of his. In
the end I was forced to stoop to that tired old theatrical device that I so
scorned in the work of other playwrights, namely the intervention of the gods
and their supernatural powers. While my Lady Lostris spoke from the wings, her
shad-owy alter ego on stage stood over the mummiform figure of Osiris and made
a series of mystical gestures. 'My dear brother, by the rare and marvellous
powers granted to me by our forefather, Ammon-Ra, I restore to you those manly
parts that cruel Seth so brutally tore from you,' intoned my mistress. I had equipped the mummy case with a device that I
could raise by hauling on a length of fine linen twine that ran over a pulley
in the temple roof directly above where Osiris lay. At Isis' words the wooden
phallus, hinged to the god's pudenda, rose in majestic splendour, as long as my
arm, into full erection. The audience gasped with admiration. When Isis caressed it, I jerked the string to make
it leap and twitch. The audience loved it, but loved it even better when the
goddess mounted the supine mummy of the god. Judging by the convincing
acrobatics of her simulated ecstasy, the harlot I had chosen to play the part
must have been one of the truly great exponents of her art. The audience gave
full recognition to her superior performance, egging her on with whistling and
hooting and shouting ribald advice. At the climax of this exhibition the torches were
extinguished and the temple plunged into darkness. In the darkness the
substitution was made once more and when the torches were re-lit my Lady
Lostris stood in mid-stage with a new-born infant in her arms. One of the
kitchen slaves had been considerate enough to give birth a few days previously,
and I had borrowed her whelp for the occasion. 'I give you the new-born son of Osiris, god of the
underworld, and of Isis, goddess of the moon and of the stars.' My Lady Lostris
lifted the infant high and he, astonished by the sea of strangers before him,
screwed up his tiny face and turned bright red as he howled. Isis raised her voice above his and cried,
"Greet the young Lord Horus, god of the wind and the sky, falcon of the
heavens!' Half the audience were Horus men and their enthusiasm for their
patron was unbounded. They came to their feet in a roaring tumult, and the
second act ended in another triumph for me and in mortification for the infant
god, who on later examination was found to have prodigiously soiled his
swaddling-cloth. I OPENED THE FINAL ACT WITH ANOTHER of my
recitations describing the childhood and the coming to manhood of Horus. I
spoke of the sacred charge laid upon him by Isis, and as I did so, the curtains
were drawn aside to reveal the goddess in the centre of the stage. Isis was
bathing in the Nile, attended by her handmaidens. Her wet robe clung to her
body so that the pale glory of her skin shone through. The indistinct outlines
of her breasts were tipped with tiny rose-buds of virgin pink. Tanus as Horus entered from the wings, and
immediately dominated the stage. In his polished armour and his warrior's pride
he was a perfect counterpoint for the beauty of the goddess. The long list of
his battle honours in the river wars, together with his most recent exploit in
saving the royal barge, had focused the attention of the populace full upon
him. For this moment Tanus was the darling of the crowd. Before he could speak,
they began to cheer him, and the applause continued so long that the actors
were forced to freeze in their opening positions. While the cheering swirled around Tanus, I picked
out certain faces in the audience and watched their reactions. Nembet, the
Great Lion of Egypt, scowled and muttered fiercely into his beard, making no
attempt to hide his animosity. Pharaoh smiled graciously and nodded slightly,
so that those seated behind him were made aware of his approbation, and their
own enthusiasm was encouraged. My Lord Intef, never one to fly against the
prevailing winds, smiled his most silky smile and nodded his head in concert
with his king. His eyes, however, when seen from my vantage-point, were deadly. At last the applause abated
and Tanus could speak his lines, not without difficulty, however, for every
time he paused to draw breath another outburst of cheering broke out. It was
only when Isis began to sing that complete silence fell upon them once more. The suffering of your
father, the terrible fate that
hangs over our house, all these must be expunged. In verse Isis warned her
noble son, and held out her arms to him in supplication and in command. The curse of Seth is upon us all, and only you can break it. Seek out your monstrous uncle. By his arrogance and his ferocity, you will know him. When you find him, strike him down. Chain him, bind him to your will, that the gods and all men will be freed for ever from his ghastly sway. Still singing, the goddess withdrew and left her
son to his quest. Like children following a well-loved nursery rhyme, the
audience knew full well what to expect and leaned forward eagerly and hummed
with anticipation. When at last Seth came leaping back on stage for
the cataclysmic battle, the age-old struggle between good and evil, beauty and
ugliness, duty and dishonour, the audience was ready for him. They greeted Seth
with a chorus of hatred that was spontaneous and unfeigned. In defiance Rasfer
leered and gibbered at them, strutting about the stage, cupping his genitalia
in his hands and thrusting his hips out at them in a mocking and obscene
gesture that drove them wild with fury. 'Kill him, Horus!' they howled. 'Smash in his ugly
face!' And Seth pranced before them, stoking their fury. 'Kill the murderer of the great god Osiris!' they
roared in a paroxysm of loathing. 'Smash in his face!' 'Rip out his guts!' The congregation's reaction to him was in no way
moderated by the fact that it knew, deep down, that this was Rasfer and not
Seth. 'Hack off his head!' they screamed. 'Kill him! Kill him!' At last Seth pretended to see his nephew for the
first time, and swaggered up to him, lolling his tongue out between his blackened teeth, drooling like an idiot so that
silver strands of saliva slimed down on to his chest. I would never have
believed that Rasfer could make himself more repulsive than nature had already
accomplished, but now he proved me wrong. 'Who is this child?' he demanded, and belched full
in the face of Horus. Tanus was unprepared for this and stepped back
involuntarily, his expression of disgust unfeigned as he smelled Rasfer's
breath and the contents of his stomach, the sour wine still fermenting in it. Tanus recovered swiftly and spoke his next line. 'I
am Horus, son of Osiris.' Seth let out a mocking peal of laughter. 'And what
is it you seek, boy child of a dead god?' 'I seek vengeance for the murder of my noble father.
I seek the assassin of Osiris.' 'Then search no further,' Seth shouted, 'for I am
Seth the vanquisher of lesser gods. I am Seth the eater of stars, and the
destroyer of worlds.' The two gods drew their swords and rushed at each
other, to meet in mid-stage with a ringing clash of bronze as blade struck
blade. In an attempt to reduce the chances of accidental injury, I had
attempted to substitute wooden swords for bronze, but neither of my actors
would have any of it. My Lord Intef had intervened when Rasfer had appealed to
him. He had ordered that they be allowed to wield their real battle weapons,
and I had been forced to yield to this higher authority. At least it added to
the realism of the scene as they stood now chest to chest, with blades locked,
and glared into each other's face. They made an extraordinary pair, so totally
dissimilar, pointing up the moral of the play, the eternal conflict of good
against evil. Tanus was tall and fair and comely. Seth was swarthy and
thick-set, bow-legged and hideous. The contrast was direct and visceral. The
mood of the audience was as fiery and as fiercely partisan as that of the two
protagonists. Simultaneously they pushed each other backwards and
then rushed in again, thrusting and cutting, feinting and parrying. They were
both highly trained and skilled swordsmen, amongst the finest in all Pharaoh's
armies. Their blades whirled and glinted in the torchlight so that they seemed
as insubstantial as the sunlight reflected from the wind-ruffled surface of the
great river. The sound of their flight was that of the wings of the birds
startled from their roosts in the gloomy heights of the temple, but when they
clashed together it was with the heavy ring of hammers at the coppersmith's
forge. What seemed to the observer to be the chaos of real
battle was in fact a meticulously choreographed ballet which had been carefully
rehearsed. Each man knew exactly how each blow must be launched and each parry
timed. These were two superb athletes engaged in the activity for which they
had trained their entire warrior's lifetime, and they made it seem effortless. When Seth thrust, Horus left his parry so late that
the point actually touched his breastplate and left a tiny bright scratch on
the metal. Then when Horus launched himself forward in riposte, his edge flew
so close to Seth's head that a coil of his coarse matted hair was shorn from
his skull, as if by a barber's razor. Their footwork was as graceful and
intricate as that of the temple dancers, and they were swift as falcons and
lithe as hunting cheetahs. The crowd was mesmerized and so was I. Therefore it
must have been some deep instinct that warned me, perhaps even a nudge from the
gods, who knows? At any rate, something outside myself made me tear my eyes
away from the spectacle and glance at my Lord Intef where he sat in the front
row. Again, was it instinct or my own deep knowledge of
him, or the intervention of the god who protects Tanus that placed the thought
in my mind? A little of all three of these, perhaps, but I knew with instant
and utter certainty the reason for that wolfish smile on my Lord Intef's
handsome features. I knew why he had chosen Rasfer to play Seth. I
knew why he had made no effort to exclude Tanus from the role of Horus, even
after he had found out about the relationship between him and my Lady Lostris.
I knew why he had ordered the use of real swords, and I knew why he was smiling
now. The massacre was not over for the evening. He was looking forward to more.
Before this act was played out, Rasfer would ply his special talents once
again. 'Tanus!' I screamed, as I started forward. 'Beware!
It's a trap. He intends—' My cries were drowned out by the thunder of the
crowd, and I had not taken a second step when I was seized by each arm from
behind. I tried to struggle free, but two of Rasfer's ruffians held me fast and
started to drag me away. They had been placed there for just such a moment as
this, to prevent me from warning my friend. 'Horus, give me strength!' I rendered up a swift
and silent entreaty, and instead of resisting them I hurled myself back in the
same direction as they were pulling me. For an instant they were thrown
off-balance, and I broke half-free of their grasp. I managed to reach the edge
of the stage before they could control me again. 'Horus, give me voice!' I prayed, and then screamed
with all my breath, 'Tanus, beware! He means to kill you.' This time my voice carried above that of the mob,
and Tanus heard me. I saw his head flick and his eyes narrow slightly. However,
Rasfer heard me as well. He responded instantly, breaking the rehearsed
routine. Instead of dropping back before the whirlwind of cuts and thrusts that
Tanus was aiming close to his brutish head, he stepped in and, with an upward
sweep of his own blade, he forced Tanus' sword-arm high. Without the benefit of surprise he would never have
made the opening into which he now launched a thrust behind which was the full
weight of those massive shoulders and mighty trunk. The point of his blade was
aimed an inch below the rim of Tanus' helmet and directly at his right eye. It
should have skewered his eye and cleaved his skull through and through. However, my shouted warning had given Tanus that
fleeting moment of grace in which to react. He recovered his guard just in
time. With the pommel of his sword he managed to touch a glancing blow to
Rasfer's wrist. It had just sufficient force to deflect the sword-point a
finger's-width, and at the same moment Tanus tucked in his chin and rolled his
head. It was too late to avoid the blow entirely. However, the stroke that
might have skewered his eye and split his skull like a rotten melon, merely
laid open his eyebrow to the bone, and then flew on over his shoulder. Instantly a sheet of blood gushed from the shallow
wound and flowed over Tanus' face, blinding his right eye. He was forced to
fall back before the savage onslaught that Rasfer now launched at him.
Desperately he gave ground, blinking at the blood and trying to wipe it away
with his free hand. It seemed impossible that he would be able to defend
himself, and if only I had not been held so securely by the palace guards, I
would have drawn the little jewelled dagger at my belt and rushed to his aid. Even without my assistance Tanus was able to survive
that first murderous attack. Though he was wounded twice more, a gouge across
the left thigh and a nick on the biceps of his sword-arm, he kept weaving and
parrying and ducking. Rasfer kept coming at him, never letting him recover his
balance or his full vision. Within minutes Rasfer was blowing and grunting like
a giant forest hog, and running with sweat, his misshapen torso gleaming in the
torchlight, but the speed and fury of his assault never faltered. Though no great swordsman myself, I am a student of
the art. So often had I watched Rasfer at practice in the weapons-yard that I
knew his style intimately. I knew he was an exponent of the attack khamsin, the
attack 'like the desert wind'. It was a manoeuvre that perfectly suited his
brute strength and physique. I had seen him practise it on a hundred occasions
and now I divined by his footwork that he was gathering himself for it, for
that one last effort that would end it all. Struggling in the grip of my captors, I screamed at
Tanus again, 'Khamsin! Be ready!' I thought that my warning had been drowned
and washed away by the uproar that filled the temple, for Tanus showed no
reaction. Later he told me he had indeed heard me, and that with his impaired
vision that second warning of mine had certainly saved him once again. Rasfer dropped back a half-pace, the classic
prelude to the khamsin, relaxing the pressure for an instant to position his
opponent for the coup. Then his weight shifted and his left foot swung forward
into the lead. He used his momentum and all the strength of his right leg to
launch his entire body into the attack, like some grotesque carrion-bird taking
to flight. As both his feet left the ground, the point of his blade was aimed
at Tanus' throat. It was inexorable. Nothing could prevent that deadly blade
from flying true to its mark except the one classic defence, the stop-hit. At the precise instant that Rasfer was fully
committed to the stroke, Tanus launched himself with equal power and superior
grace. Like an arrow leaving the bowstring, he flew straight at his opponent.
As they met in mid-air Tanus gathered up Rasfer's blade with his own and let it
run down on to the pommel, where it came up hard and short, stopping it dead.
It was the perfectly executed stop-hit. The mass and speed of the two big men were thrown
on to the bronze blade in Rasfer's fist, and it could not withstand the shock.
It snapped cleanly, and left him clutching only the sheared-off hilt. Then they
were locked chest-to-chest once more. Although Tanus' sword was still
undamaged, Rasfer had got in under his guard and he could not wield it. Both
Tanus' hands, the sword still held in his right fist, were locked behind
Rasfer's back as the two men heaved and strained at each other. Wrestling is one of the military disciplines in
which every warrior in the Egyptian army is trained. Bound to each other by the
crushing embrace of arms, they spun about the stage, each attempting to throw
the other off-balance, snarling into each other's eyes, hooking a heel to trip,
butting at each other with the visors of their helmets, equally matched thus
far in strength and determination. The audience had long since sensed that this was no
longer a mock engagement, but a fight to the death. I wondered that their appetites
had not been jaded by all they had witnessed that evening, but it was not so.
They were insatiable, howling for blood and yet more blood. At last Rasfer tore his arm free of Tanus'
encircling grip. He still clutched the hilt of the broken sword in his fist,
and with the jagged edge he struck at Tanus' face, deliberately aiming at his
eyes and the wound in his brow, trying to enlarge and aggravate it. Tanus
twisted his head to avoid the blows, catching them on the peak of his bronze
helmet. Like a python shifting its coils around its prey, he used the moment
to, adjust his crushing hold around Rasfer's chest. The strain that he was
exerting was such that Rasfer's features began to swell and engorge with blood.
The air was being forced out of him, and he struggled against suffoca-- tion.
He began visibly to weaken. Tanus kept up the pressure until a carbuncle on
Rasfer's back was stretched to bursting-point and the yellow pus erupted in a
stinking stream and trickled down into the waistband of his kilt. Already suffocating, Rasfer grimaced at the pain of
the bursting abscess and checked. Tanus felt him falter, and he summoned some
deep reserve of strength. He changed the angle of his next effort, dropping his
shoulders slightly and forcing his opponent backwards and upwards on to his
heels. Rasfer was off-balance, and Tanus heaved again and forced him back a
pace. Once he had him moving backwards, he kept the momentum going. Still
locked to his opponent, he ran Rasfer backwards across the stage, steering him
towards one of the gigantic stone pillars. For a moment none of us realized
Tanus' intention, and then we saw him drop the point of his sword to the
horizontal and press the hilt hard against Rasfer's spine. At a full run the point of Tanus' sword hit the
unyielding column. The metal screeched against the granite, and the shock was
transmitted up the blade. It stopped those two big men in their tracks, and the
force of it drove the hilt into Rasfer's spine. It would have killed a lesser
man, and even Rasfer was paralyzed by it. With the last gust of his foul breath
he let out a cry of agony, and his arms flew open. The broken haft of his own
sword spun from his grip and skidded away across the stone pavement. Rasfer's knees buckled, and he sagged in Tanus'
arms. Tanus thrust his hip into him, and, with a heave of his upper body,
hurled Rasfer over backwards. He landed so heavily that I heard more than one
of his ribs crackle like dry twigs in the flames of the camp-fire. The back of
his skull bounced upon the stone flags with a sound like a desert melon dropped
from on high, and the breath from his lungs whistled out of his throat. He groaned in agony. He had barely the strength to
lift his arms to Tanus in capitulation. Tanus was so carried away by battle-rage,
and inflamed by the roar of the crowd, that he was a man berserk. He stood over
Rasfer and lifted his sword on high, gripping the hilt with both hands. He was
a dreadful sight. Blood from the wound in his forehead had painted his visage
into a glistening devil mask. Sweat and blood had soaked the hair of his chest
and stained his clothing. 'Kill him!' roared the congregation. 'Kill the evil
one!' The point of Tanus' sword was aimed at the centre
of Rasfer's chest, and I steeled myself for the down-stroke that would impale
that gross body. I willed Tanus to do it, for I hated Rasfer more than any of
them. The gods know that I had reason, for here was the monster who had gelded
me, and I longed for my revenge. It was in vain. I should have known my Tanus better
than expect him to skewer a surrendered enemy. I saw the fires of madness begin
to fade from his eyes. He shook his head slightly, as if to regain control of
himself. Then, instead of stabbing down, he lowered his sword-point slowly
until it just pricked Rasfer's chest. The keen point raised a drop of blood,
bright as a garnet amongst the coarse hair of Rasfer's chest. Then Tanus picked
up the lines of his script. 'Thus I bind you to my will, and I expel you from
the light. May you wander through all eternity in the dark places. May you
nevet jnore have power over the noble and the good amongst men. I give you to
rule over the thief and the coward, over the bully and the cheat, over the liar
and the murderer, over the grave-robber and the violater of virtuous women,
over the blasphemer and the breaker of faith. From henceforth you are the god
of all evil. Get you gone, and carry away with you the curse of Horus and of
his resurrected father, Osiris.' Tanus lifted the point of his sword from Rasfer's
chest and tossed the weapon aside, deliberately disarming himself in the
presence of his enemy to demonstrate his disdain and scorn. The blade clattered
on the flagstones and Tanus strode to the running waters of our stage Nile and
went down on one knee to scoop a handful and dash it into his own face, washing
away the blood. Then he tore a strip of linen from the hem of his kilt and
swiftly bound up the wound on his forehead to stem the bleeding. Rasfer's two apes released me and rushed on stage
to succour their fallen commander. They lifted him to his feet, and he
staggered between them, heaving and blowing like a great obscene bullfrog. I
saw that he was grievously injured. They dragged him from the stage, and the
crowd howled its derision and hatred at him. I watched my Lord Intef, and his expression was for
the moment unguarded. I saw every one of my suspicions confirmed there. This
was how he had planned to wreak his vengeance on Tanus—to have him slain before
the eyes of the entire populace—and on his own daughter: to have her lover
killed before her eyes—that was to have been Lostris' punishment for flouting
her father's will. My Lord Intef s frustration and disappointment now
were enough to make me feel a smug satisfaction as I considered what retribution
must be in store for Rasfer. He might have preferred more of the rough
treatment that Tanus had dealt out to him, to the punishment that my Lord Intef
would inflict upon him. My master was ever harsh with those who failed him. Tanus was still gasping from the exertions of the
duel, but now, as he moved to the front of the stage, he drew a dozen deep
breaths to steady himself for the declamation that would bring the pageant to
an end. As he faced the congregation it fell silent, for in blood and anger he
was an awe-inspiring sight. Tanus lifted up both his hands to the temple-roof
and cried out in a loud voice, 'Ammon-Ra, give me voice! Osiris, give me
eloquence!' The traditional entreaty of the orator. 'Give him voice! Give him eloquence!' the crowd responded,
and their faces were still rapt with all they had witnessed, but hungry for
more entertainment. Tanus was that unusual creature, a man of action
who was also a man of words and ideas. I am sure that he would have been
generous enough to admit that many of those ideas were planted in his mind by
that lowly slave, Taita. However, once planted, they were in fertile ground. When it came to oratory, Tanus' exhortations to his
squadrons on the eve of battle were famous. Of course, I had not been present
at all of these, but they had been relayed to me verbatim by Kratas, his
faithful friend and lieutenant. I had copied many of these speeches down on a
set of papyrus scrolls, for they were worthy of preservation. Tanus had the common touch, and the ability to
appeal directly to the ordinary man. I often thought that much of this special
power of his sprang from his transparent honesty and his forthright manner. Men
trusted him and followed willingly wherever he led them, even unto death
itself. I was still overwrought by the conflict we had all
just witnessed and the closeness of Tanus' escape from the trap that my Lord
Intef had laid for him. Nevertheless, I was eager to listen to the declamation
that Tanus had prepared without my help or advice. To be truthful, I was still
a little resentful that he had declined my assistance, and more than a little
nervous as to what he might come out with. Tact and subtlety have never been
Tanus' most notable virtues. Now Pharaoh made a gesture of invitation to him to
speak, crossing and uncrossing the ceremonial crook and flail, and inclining
his head gracefully. The congregation was silent and intent, leaning forward
eagerly so as not to miss a single word. 'It is I, Horus the falcon-headed, that speaks,' Tanus
began, and they encouraged him. 'It is verily the falcon-headed! Hear him!' 'Ha-Ka-Ptahr Tanus used the archaic form from which
the present name of Egypt was derived. Very few realized that the original
meaning was the temple of Ptah. 'I speak to you of this ancient land given to
us ten thousand years since, in the time when all the gods were young. I speak
to you of the two kingdoms that in nature are one and indivisible.' Pharaoh nodded. This was the standard dogma,
approved by both temporal and religious authority that neither recognized the
impostor in the Lower Kingdom, nor even acknowledged his existence. 'Oh, Kemitr Tanus used another ancient name for
Egypt: the Black Land, after the colour of the Nile mud brought down by the
annual inundation. 'I speak to you of this land riven and divided, torn by
civil war, bleeding and drained of treasure.' My own shock was mirrored on the
faces of all those who listened to him. Tanus had just given voice to the
unspeakable. I wanted to rush on to the stage and clap my hand over his mouth
to prevent him from going on, but I was transfixed. 'Oh, Ta-Merir Another old name: the Beloved Earth.
Tanus had learned well the history I had taught him. 'I speak to you of old and
feeble generals, and admirals too weak and indecisive to-wrest back the stolen
kingdom from the usurper. I speak to you of ancient men in their dotage who
waste your treasure and spill the blood of your finest young men as though it
were the lees of bitter wine.' In the second row of the audience I saw Nembet, the
Great Lion of Egypt, flush with anger and scratch furiously with chagrin at his
beard. The other elderly military men around him frowned and moved restlessly
on their benches, rattling their swords in their scabbards as a sign of their disapproval.
Amongst them all, only my Lord Intef smiled as he watched Tanus escape from one
trap only to blunder into the next. 'Our Ta-Meri is beset by a host of enemies, and yet
the sons of the nobles prefer to cut off their own thumbs rather than to carry
the sword to protect her.' As he said this, Tanus looked keenly at Menset and
Sobek, Lostris' older brothers, where they sat beside their father in the
second row. The king's decree exempted from military service only those with
such physical disability as to render them unfit. The surgeon priests at the
temple of Osiris had perfected the art of removing the top joint of the thumb
with little pain or danger of infection, thus rendering it impossible for that
hand to wield a sword or pluck a bowstring. The young bucks proudly flaunted
their mutilations as they sat gambling and carousing in the riverside taverns.
They considered the missing digit a mark not of cowardice, but of
sophistication and independent spirit. 'War is the game played by old men with the lives
of the young,' I had heard Lostris' brothers argue. 'Patriotism is a myth
conceived by those old rogues to draw us into the infernal game. Let them fight
as they will, but we want no part of it.' In vain I had remonstrated with them
that the privilege of Egyptian citizenship carried with it duties and
responsibilities. They dismissed me with the arrogance of the young and
ignorant. Now, however, beneath Tanus' level stare they
fidgeted and concealed their left hands in the folds of their clothing. They
were both of them right-handed, but had convinced the recruiting officer to the
contrary, with their eloquence and a dash of gold. The common people at the rear of the great hall
hummed and stamped their feet in agreement with what Tanus had said. It was
their sons who filled the rowing-benches of the war galleys, or marched under
arms through the desert sands. However, in the wings of the stage I wrung my hands
in despair. With that little speech Tanus had made an enemy of fifty of the
young nobles in the audience. They were men who would one day inherit power and
influence in the Upper Kingdom. Their enmity outweighed a hundred times the
adoration of the common herd and I prayed for Tanus to cease. In a few minutes
he had done enough damage to last us all a hundred years, but he went on
blithely. 'Oh, Ta-Nutri!' This was yet another ancient name:
the Land of the Gods. 'I speak to you of the wrong-doer and the robber who
waits in ambush on every hilltop and in every thicket. The farmer is forced to
plough with his shield at his side, and the traveller must go with his sword
bared.' Again the commoners applauded. The depredations of
the robber bands were a terrible scourge upon them all. No man was safe beyond
the mud walls of the towns, and the robber chieftains who called themselves the
Shrikes were arrogant and fearless. They respected no law but their own, and no
man was safe from them. Tanus had struck exactly the right note with the
people, and suddenly I was moved by the notion that this was all much deeper
than it seemed. Revolutions have been forged and dynasties of pharaohs
overturned by just such appeals to the masses. With Tanus' next words my
suspicion was strengthened. 'While the poor cry out under the lash of the
tax-collector, the nobles anoint the buttocks of their fancy boys with the most
precious oils of the orient—' A roar went up from the rear of the hall, and my
fears were replaced by a tremulous excitement. Had this been carefully planned?
Was Tanus more subtle and devious than I had ever given him credit for? 'By HorusF I cried in my heart. 'The land is ripe
for revolution, and who better to lead it than Tanus?' I felt only
disappointment that he had not taken me into his confidence and made me party
to his design. I could have planned a revolution as skilfully and as cunningly
as I could design a water-garden or write a play. I craned to look over the heads of the
congregation, expecting at the very next moment to see Kratas and his brother
officers burst into the temple at the head of a company of warriors from the
squadron. I felt the hair on my forearms and at the nape of my neck lift with
excitement as I pictured them snatching the double crown from Pharaoh's head
and placing it upon the blood-smeared brow of Tanus. With what joy I would have
joined the cry of 'Long live Pharaoh! Long live King Tanus!' Heady images swirled before my eyes as Tanus went
on speaking. I saw the prophecy of the desert oracle fulfilled. I dreamed of
Tanus, with my Lady Lostris beside him, seated on the white throne of this very
Egypt, with myself standing behind them resplendent in the apparel of the grand
vizier of the Upper Kingdom. But why, oh why, had he not consulted me before
embarking on this perilous venture? With his next breath he made the reason plain. I
had misjudged my Tanus, my honest, plain and good Tanus, my noble, straight and
trustworthy Tanus, lacking only in guile and stealth and deceit. This was no plot. This was simply Tanus speaking
his mind without fear or favour. The commoners, who only moments before had
been clinging enraptured to every word that fell from his tongue, were now
quite unexpectedly given the sharp edge of that organ as he rounded upon them. 'Hear me, oh Egypt! What is to become of a land
where the mean-spirited try to suppress the mighty amongst them; where the
patriot is reviled; where there is no man of yesterday revered for his wisdom;
where the petty and the envious seek to tear down the men of worth to their own
base level?' There was no cheering now as those at the back of
the hall recognized themselves in this description. Effortlessly my Tanus had
succeeded in alienating every man amongst them, great and small, rich and poor.
Oh, why had he not consulted me, I mourned, and the answer was plain. He had
not consulted me because he knew I would have counselled him against it. 'What order is there in society where the slave is
free with his tongue, and counts himself as equal to those of noble birth?' he
blazed at them. 'Should the son revile his father and scorn the wisdom paid for
in grey hairs and wrinkled brow? Should the waterfront harlot wear rings of
lapis lazuli and set herself above the virtuous wife?' By Horus, he would not spare one of them from the
lash of his tongue, I thought bitterly. As always, he was completely oblivious
to his own safety in the pursuit of what he saw as the right and open way. Only one person in the temple was enchanted with
what he had to tell them. Lostris appeared at my side and gripped my arm. 'Isn't he wonderful, Taita?' she breathed. 'Every
word he utters is the truth. Tonight he is truly a young god.' I could find neither the words nor the heart to
agree with her, and I hung my head in sorrow as Tanus went on relentlessly. 'Pharaoh, you are the father of the people. We cry
out to you for protection and for succour. Give the affairs of state and war
into the hands oЈ honest and clever men. Send the rogues and the fools to rot
on their estates. Call off the faithless priests and the usurious servants of
the state, those parasites upon the body of this Ta-Meri of ours.' Horus knows that I am as good a priest-hater as the
best of them, but only a fool or very brave man would call down the wrath of every
god-botherer in Egypt upon his own head, for their power is infinite and their
hatred implacable. While as for the civil servants, their lines of influence
and corruption have been set up over the centuries and my Lord Intef was the
chief of them all. I shuddered in pity for my dear blunt friend as he went on
handing out instructions to Pharaoh on how to restructure the whole of Egyptian
society. 'Heed the words of the sage! Oh, king, honour the
artist and the scribe. Reward the brave warrior and the faithful servant. Root
out the bandits and the robbers from their desert fastnesses. Give the people
example and direction in their lives, so that this very Egypt may once again
flourish and be great.' Tanus fell to his knees in the centre of the stage
and spread his arms wide. 'Oh, Pharaoh, you are our father. We protest our love
to you. In return, show us now a father's love. Hear our entreaties, we beg of
you.' Up to that moment I had been stupefied by the
depths of my friend's folly, but now, much too late, I regained my wits and
signalled frantically for my stage-hands to drop the curtain before Tanus could
do any further damage. As the gleaming folds of cloth floated down and hid him
from their view, the audience sat in stunned silence, as though they did not
believe all that they had heard and seen that night. It was Pharaoh himself who broke the spell. He rose
to his feet, and his face behind the stiff white make-up was inscrutable. As he
swept from the temple, the congregation prostrated itself before him. Before he
too went down in obeisance, I saw my Lord Intef’s expression. It was
triumphant. I ESCORTED TANUS BACK FROM THE TEMPLE to his own
sparsely furnished quarters close to the dock at which his squadron was moored.
Although I walked beside him with my hand on the hilt of my dagger, prepared
for the consequences of his foolhardy honesty to be visited on us immediately,
Tanus was quite unrepentant. Indeed, he seemed oblivious to the depths of his
folly and inordinately pleased with himself. I have often remarked how a man
freshly released from terrible strain and mortal danger becomes garrulous and
elated. Even Tanus, the hardened warrior, was no exception. 'It was time somebody stood up and said what needed
to be said, don't you agree, old friend?' His voice rang clear and loud down
the darkened alley, as though he were determined to summon any awaiting
assassin to us. I kept my agreement muted. 'You did not expect it of me, did you now? Be
honest with me, Taita. It took you quite by surprise, did it not?' 'It
surprised us all.' This time I could agree with a little more enthusiasm. 'Even
Pharaoh was taken aback, as well he might be.' 'He listened, Taita. He took it all in, I could
tell. I did good work this evening, don't you think so?' When I attempted to raise the subject of Rasfer's
treacherous attack upon him and broach the possibility that it might have been
inspired by my Lord Intef, Tanus would have none of it. 'That is impossible,
Taita. You dreamed it. Lord Intef was my father's dearest friend. How could he
wish me ill? Besides, I am to be his son-in-law, am I not?' And despite his
injuries he let out such a happy shout of laughter that it roused the sleepers
in the darkened huts that we were passing and they shouted grumpily back at us to
be quiet. Tanus ignored their protests. 'No, no, I am sure that you are wrong,' he cried.
'It was simply Raster working out his spite in his own charming way. Well,
he'll know better next time.' He threw his arm around my shoulders and hugged
me so hard that it hurt. 'You saved me twice tonight. Without your warnings
Rasfer would have had me both times. How do you do these things, Taita? I swear
you are a secret warlock, and have the gift of the inner eye.' He laughed
again. How could I stifle his joy? He was like a boy, a
big rumbustious boy. I could not help but love him all the more. This was not
the time to point out the danger in which he had placed himself and all of us
who were his friends. Let him have his hour, and tomorrow I would sound
the voice of reason and of caution. So I took him home and stitched the gash in
his forehead, and washed his other wounds and anointed them with my special
mixture of honey and herbs to prevent mortification. Then I gave him a stiff
draught of the Red Shepenn and left the good Kratas to guard his slumbers. When I reached my own quarters well after midnight,
there were two summonses awaiting me: one from my Lady Lostris and the other
from the vanquished Rasfer. There was no doubt as to which of them I would have
responded to if I had been given the choice, but I was not. Rasfer's two thugs
almost dragged me away to where he lay on a sweat-soaked mattress, cursing and
moaning by turns, and calling on Seth and all die gods to witness his pain and
his fortitude. 'Good Taita!' he greeted me, raising himself
painfully on one elbow, 'you will not believe the pain. My chest is afire. I
swear every bone in it is crushed, and my head aches as though it is bound by
thongs of rawhide.' With very little effort I was able to force back my
tears of pity, but it is a strange thing about those of us who are doctors and
healers that we cannot find it in our hearts to deny our skills to even the
most abominable creatures that require them. I sighed with resignation,
unpacked the leather bag that contained my medical equipment and set out my
instruments and unguents. I was delighted to find that Rasfer's
self-diagnosis was perfectly valid, and that apart from numerous contusions and
shallow wounds, at least three of his ribs were broken and there was a lump on
the back of his head almost the size of my fist. I had, therefore, a perfectly
legitimate reason for adding considerably to his discomfort. One of the broken
ribs was seriously out of alignment and there was genuine danger that it might
pierce the lung. While his two thugs held him down and Rasfer squealed and
howled most gra-tifyingly, I manipulated the rib back into place and strapped
up his chest with linen bandages well soaked in vinegar to shrink as they
dried. Then I addressed myself to the lump on the back of
his skull where it had struck the stone paving. The gods are often generous.
When I held a lamp to Rasfer's eyes the pupils did not dilate. There was not
the least doubt in my mind as to what treatment was required. Bloody fluid was
gathering inside that unlovely skull. Without my help Rasfer would be dead by
the following sunset. I thrust aside the obvious temptation and reminded myself
of the surgeon's duty to his patient. There are probably only three surgeons in all of
Egypt who are capable of trepanning a skull with a good chance of success, and
personally I would not put much faith in the other two. Once again I ordered
Rasfer's two oafs to take hold of him to control his struggles, and to hold him
face down on his mattress. By the roughness of their handling and their obvious
disregard for their master's injured ribs, I surmised that they were not
exactly overflowing with loving feeling towards then- master. Once again a chorus of howls and squeals turned the
night hideous and gladdened my labours, as I made a semicircular incision
around the lump on his scalp, and then peeled a large flap of skin away from
the bone. Now not even those two strapping ruffians could hold him down. His
struggles were splashing blood as high as the ceiling of the room and
sprinkling us all, so that we seemed to be inflicted with a red pox. At last,
in exasperation, I ordered them to bind his ankles and wrists to the bedposts
with leather straps. 'Oh, gentle and sweet Taita, the pain is beyond belief.
Give me but a drop of that flower juice, I beg you, dear friend,' he blubbered. Now that he was safely bound to the bed, I could
afford to be frank with him. 'I understand, my good Rasfer, just how you feel.
I also would have been grateful for a little of the flower when last you took
the knife to me. Alas, old comrade, my store of the drug is finished, and there
will not be another eastern caravan for at least a month,' I lied cheerfully,
for very few knew that I cultivated the Red Shepenn myself. Knowing that the
best was yet to come, I reached for my bone-drill. The human head is the only part of the body that
puzzles me as a doctor. At the orders of my Lord Intef the corpses of all
executed criminals are handed over to me. In addition Tanus has been able to
bring me many fine specimens from the battlefield, suitably pickled in vats of
brine. All these I have dissected and studied so that I know every bone and how
it fits into its exact place in the skeleton. I have traced the route by which
food enters the mouth and passes through the body. I have found that great and
wondrous organ, the heart, nestling between the pale air-bladders of the lungs.
I have studied the rivers of the body through which the blood flows, and I have
observed the two types of blood which determine the moods and emotions of man. There is, of course, that bright joyous blood that,
when released by the cut of a scalpel or the headsman's axe, spurts out in
regular impulses. This is the blood of happy thoughts and fine emotions, it is
the blood of love and kindness. Then there is that darker sullen blood that
flows without the vigour and the bounding joy of the other. This is the blood
of anger and of sorrow, of melancholic thoughts and evil deeds. All these matters I have studied, and have filled
one hundred papyrus rolls with my observations. There is no man in the world
that I know of who has gone to such lengths, certainly none of those quacks in
the temple with their amulets and their incantations have done so. I doubt any
one of them could tell the liver from the sphincter of the anus without an
invocation to Osiris, a casting of the divining dice and a fat fee paid in
advance. In all modesty I can say that I have never met a
man who understands the human body better than I, and yet the head is still a
puzzle to me. Naturally I understand that the eyes see, the nose smells, the
mouth tastes and the ears hear— but what is the purpose of that pale porridge
that fills the gourd of the skull? I have never been able to fathom it myself, and no
man has ever been able to offer me a satisfactory explanation, except that
Tanus came closest to it. After he and I had spent an evening together sampling
the latest vintage of red wine, he had woken in the dawn and suggested with a
groan, 'Seth has placed this thing in our heads as his revenge on mankind.' I once met a man who was travelling with a caravan
from beyond those legendary twin rivers, the Tigris and the Euphrates, who
professed to have studied the same problem. He was a wise man and together we
debated many mysteries over the course of half a year. At one point he
suggested that all human emotion and thought sprang not from the heart, but
from those soft amorphous curds that make up the brain. I mention this naive
assertion only to demonstrate how gravely even an intelligent and learned man
can err. Nobody who has ever considered that mighty organ,
the heart, leaping with its own life in the centre of our body, fed by great rivers
of blood, protected by the palisades of bone, can doubt that this is the
fountain from which all thought and emotion springs. The heart uses the blood
to disseminate these emotions throughout the body. Have you ever felt your
heart stir within you and quicken to beautiful music, or a lovely face, or the
fine words of a moving speech? Have you ever felt anything leaping around
inside your head? Even the wise man from the East had to capitulate before my
ruthless logic. No rational man can believe that a bloodless puddle
of curdled milk lying inert in its bony jar could conjure up the lines of a
poem or the design of a pyramid, could cause a man to love or to wage war. Even
the embalmers scoop it out and discard it when they prepare a corpse for the long
journey. There is, however, a paradox here in that if this
glutinous mass is interfered with, even by the pressure of trapped fluid upon
it, the patient is certainly doomed. It requires an intimate knowledge of the
structure of the head and a quite marvellous dexterity to be able to drill
through the skull without disturbing the sac that contains this porridge. I
have both these attributes. As I ground down slowly through the bone,
encouraged by Rasfer's bellows, I paused regularly to wash away the bone chips
and filings by splashing vinegar into the wound. The sting of the liquid added
little to the patient's well-being, but revived the flagging volume of his
voice. Suddenly the sharp bronze drill bit cleanly through
the skull, and a tiny but perfect circle of bone was blown out of the wound by
the pressure within. It was followed immediately by a spurt of dark, clotted
blood that hit me in the face. Immediately Rasfer relaxed under me. I knew, not
without a sneaking pang of regret, that he would survive. As I stitched the
flap of scalp back into place, covering the aperture in the depths of which the
dura mater pulsed ominously, I wondered if I had truly done mankind a great
service by preserving this specimen of it. When I left Rasfer with his head swathed in
bandages, snoring and whimpering in porcine self-pity, I found that I was
completely exhausted. The excitements and alarums of the day had expended even
my vast store of energy. However, there was to be no rest for me yet, for my
Lady Lostris' messenger still hovered on the terrace of my quarters and pounced
on me as I set foot on the first step. I was allowed only sufficient grace to
wash away Rasfer's blood and change my soiled raiment. As I tpttered into her chamber, barely able to
place one . foot before the other, my Lady Lostris met me with blazing eyes and
ominously tapping foot. 'Just where do you think you have been hiding yourself,
Master Taita?' she lashed out at me immediately. 'I sent for you before the
second watch, and it's now not much short of dawn. How dare you keep me waiting
so? Sometimes you forget your station. You know full well the punishment for
impertinent slaves—' She was in full flight, having let her impatience brew for
all these hours. In anger her beauty is stunning, and when she stamped her foot
in that adorable gesture that was so typically her own, I thought that my heart
must burst with my love for her. 'Don't you stand there grinning at me!' she flared
at me. 'I am so truly angry that I could order you flogged.' She stamped her
foot again, and I felt the tiredness fall from my shoulders like a heavy load.
Her mere presence had the power to revitalize me. 'My lady, what a wondrous role you played this
night. It seemed to me and all who watched you that it was indeed the divine
goddess that walked amongst us—' 'Don't you dare try your tricks with me.' She
stamped for the third time, but without conviction. 'You'll not wriggle out of
this so easily—' 'Truly, my lady, as I walked back from the temple
through the crowded streets, your name was on every tongue. They said your
singing was the finest they had ever heard, and had quite stolen every heart.' 'I believe not a word,' she declared, but she was
clearly having difficulty sustaining her fury. 'In fact I thought my voice was
awful this evening. I was flat at least once, and off-key on numerous—' 'I must contradict you, mistress. You were never
better. And what beauty! It lit the whole temple.' She is not truly vain, my
Lady Lostris, but she is a woman. 'You awful man!' she cried in exasperation. 'I was
ready to have you flogged this time, I truly was. But come and sit beside me on
the bed and tell me all about it. I am still so excited that I am sure I will
not sleep for a week.' She took my hand and led me to the bed, babbling on
happily about Tanus, and how he must have won every heart as well as Pharaoh's
with his wonderful performance and fearless speech, and how the infant Horus
had beshat her dress, and did I truly think that she had sung even passing
well, and wasn't I just saying so? At last I had to stop her. 'My lady, it is almost
dawn and we must be ready to leave with all the court to accompany the king
when he crosses the river to inspect his funerary temple and his tomb. You must
get some sleep if you are to look your best on such an important state
occasion.' 'I'm not sleepy, Taita,' she protested, and went
chattering on, only to slump against my shoulder a few minutes later, fallen
asleep in mid-sentence. Gently, I slipped her head down on to the carved
wooden headrest and covered her with a rug of colobus monkey furs. I could not
bring myself to leave immediately but hovered beside her bed. At last I placed
a gentle kiss upon her cheek. She did not open her eyes, but whispered
sleepily, 'Do you think there will be an opportunity for me to speak to the
king tomorrow? Only he will be able to prevent my father sending Tanus away.' I could think of no ready answer for her, and while
I still dithered, she fell fully asleep. I COULD SCARCELY DRAG MYSELF FROM my couch at dawn,
for I seemed barely to have closed my eyes to sleep before it was time to open
them again. My reflection in the bronze mirror was haggard and my eyes were
underscored in purple. Swiftly I touched on make-up to cover the worst of my
sorry condition, enhancing the hollows of my eyes with kohl and my pale
features with a brushing of antimony. Two of the slave boys combed out my hair
and I was so pleased with the result that I felt almost cheerful as I hurried
down to the grand vizier's private dock where the great state barge lay moored. I was amongst the last to join the throng upon the
quay, but no one seemed to notice my late arrival, not even my Lady Lostris who
was already on the deck of the barge. I watched her for a while. She had been invited to join the royal women. These
comprised not only the king's wives, but his numerous- concubines and all his
daughters. Of course these last were the cause of much of Pharaoh's
unhappiness, a flock of them ranging in age from crawlers and toddlers to
others of marriageable age, and not a son amongst them. How was Pharaoh's
immortality to be maintained without a male line to carry it forward? It was difficult to believe that, like me, Lostris
had not slept more than an hour or two, for she seemed as sweet and fresh as
one of the desert roses in my garden. Even in mat glittering array of feminine
beauty that had been hand-picked by Pharaoh's factors or sent to him in tribute
by his satraps at the ends of the empire, Lostris stood out like a swallow in a
flock of drab little desert larks. I looked for Tanus, but his squadron was already
lying well upstream, ready to escort Pharaoh's crossing, and the reflection of
the rising sun turned the surface of the river into a dazzling silver sheet that
blinded the eye. I could not look into it. At that moment there was the steady boom of a drum,
and the populace craned to watch Pharaoh's stately progress down from the
palace to the royal barge. This morning he wore the light nemes crown of
starched and folded linen, secured around his forehead with the gold band of
the uraeus. The erect golden cobra, with its hood flared and its garnet eyes
glittering, rose up from his brow. The cobra was the symbol of the powers of
life and death that Pharaoh held over his subjects. The king was not carrying
the crook and flail, only the golden sceptre. After the double crown itself,
this was the most holy treasure of all the crown jewels and was reputed to be
over a thousand years old. Despite all the regalia and the ceremonial, Pharaoh
wore no make-up. Under the direct rays of the early sun, and without make-up to
disguise the fact, Mamose himself was unremarkable. Just a soft little godling
of late middle age, with a small round paunch bulging over the waistband of his
kilt and features intricately carved with lines of worry. As he passed where I stood, it seemed he recognized
me, for he nodded slightly. I immediately prostrated myself on the paving, and
he paused and made a sign for me to approach. I crawled forward on hands and
knees, and knocked my forehead three times on the ground at his feet. 'Are you not Taita, the poet?' he asked in that
thin and petulant voice of his. 'I am Taita the slave, your Majesty,' I replied. There
are times when a little humility is called for. 'But I am also a poor
scribbler.' 'Well, Taita the slave, you scribbled to good
effect last night. I have never been so well entertained by a pageant. I shall
issue a royal edict declaring your poor scribblings to be the official
version.' He announced this loud enough for all the court to
hear, and even my Lord Intef, who followed him closely, beamed with pleasure.
As I was his slave, the honour belonged to him more than to me. However,
Pharaoh was not finished with me yet. 'Tell me, Taita the slave, are you not also the
same surgeon who recently prescribed to me?' 'Majesty, I am that same humble slave who has the
temerity to practise a little medicine.' "Then when shall your cure take effect?' He
dropped his voice so that only I could hear the question. 'Majesty, the event wiE take place nine months
after you have fulfilled all those conditions that I listed for you.' As we
were now in a surgeon-and-patient relationship, I felt emboldened to add, 'Have
you followed the diet I set you?' 'By Isis' bountiful breasts!' he exclaimed with an
unexpected twinkle in his eye. 'I am so full of bull's balls, it is a wonder
that I do not bellow when a herd of cows passes the palace.' He was in such pleasant mood that I tried a little
joke of my own. 'Has Pharaoh found the heifer I suggested?' 'Alas, doctor, it is not as simple as it would
seem. The prettiest flowers are soonest visited by the bee. You did stipulate
that she must be completely untouched, did you not?' 'Virgin and untouched, and within a season of her
first red moon,' I added quickly, making it as difficult as possible to put my
recipe to the test. 'Have you found one who meets that description, Majesty?' His expression changed again, and he smiled thoughtfully.
The smile looked out of place on those melancholy features. 'We shall see,' he
murmured. 'We shall see.' And he turned and mounted the boarding-ladder of the
barge. As my Lord Intef drew level with me, he made a small gesture, ordering
me to fall in behind him, and so I followed him up on to the deck of the royal
barge. The wind had dropped during the night and the dark
waters of the river seemed heavy and quiet as oil in the jar, disturbed only by
those streaks and whirlpools upon the surface where the eternal current ran
deep and swift. Even Nembet should be able to make the crossing in these
conditions, although Tanus' squadron stood by in most unflattering fashion, as
if Tanus was preparing to rescue him from error once again. My Lord Intef drew me aside as soon as we reached
the deck. 'You still have the power to surprise me sometimes, my old darling,'
he whispered, and squeezed my arm. 'Just when I was seriously beginning to
doubt your-loyalty.' I was taken aback by this sudden flush of goodwill,
since the welts from Rasfer's lash across my back still ached. However, I bowed
my head to shield my expression and waited for him to give me direction before
committing myself, which he did immediately. 'I could not have written a, more appropriate declamation
for Tanus to recite before Pharaoh if I had tried myself. Where that imbecile
Rasfer failed so dismally, you retrieved the day for me in your usual style.'
It was only then that it all fell into place. He believed that I was the author
of Tanus' monumental folly, and that I had composed it for his benefit. In the
uproar of the temple he could not have heard my shouted warnings to Tanus, or
he would have known better. 'I am pleased that you are pleased,' I whispered
back to him. I felt an enormous sense of relief. My position of influence had
not been compromised. It was not my own skin I was thinking of at that
moment—well, not entirely. I was thinking of Tanus and Lostris. They would need
every bit of help and protection that I could give them during the stormy days
that lay ahead for both of them. I was grateful that I was still in a position
to be of some use to them. 'It was no less than my duty.' Thus I made the most
of this windfall. 'You will find me grateful,' my Lord Intef replied.
'Do you remember the piece of ground on the canal behind the temple of Thoth
that we discussed some time ago?' 'Indeed, my lord.' We both knew that I had hankered
after that plot for ten years. It would make a perfect writer's retreat and a
place to which I could retire in my old age. 'It is yours. At my next assize, bring the deed to
me for my signature.' I was stunned and appalled by the vile manner in which it
had come into my possession, as payment for an imagined piece of treachery on
my part. For a moment I thought of rejecting the gift, but only for a moment.
By the time I had recovered from my shock we were across the river and pulling
into the mouth of the canal that led across the plain to Pharaoh Mamose's great
funerary temple. I had surveyed this canal with only minimal help
from the royal architects, as I had planned virtually single-handed the whole
complicated business of the transport of Pharaoh's body from the place of his
death to the funerary temple where the mummification process would take place. I had assumed that he would die at his palace on
lovely little Elephantine Island. Therefore his corpse would be brought
down-river iri the state barge. I had designed the canal to accommodate the
huge ship snugly. So now she slipped into it as neatly as the sword into its
scabbard. Straight as the blade of my dagger, the canal cut
through the black loam soil of the riparian plain two thousand paces to the
foot of the gaunt Saharan foothills. Tens of thousands of slaves had laboured
over the years to build it, and to line it with stone blocks. As the barge
nosed into the canal, two hundred sturdy slaves seized the tow-ropes from the
bows and began to draw her smoothly across the plain. They sang one of the sad
melodious work chants as they marched in ranks along the tow-path. The peasants
working in the fields beside the canal ran to welcome us. They crowded to the
bank, calling blessing on the king and waving palm-fronds, as the great barge
moved majestically by. When at last we slid into the stone dock below the
outer walls of the half-finished temple, the slaves made the tow-ropes fast to
the mooring-rings. So precise was my design that the. entry port in the bulwark
of the state barge lined up exactly'with the portals of the main gate to the
temple. As the huge vessel came to rest, the trumpeter in
the bows blew a fanfare on his gazelle horn, and the portcullis was raised
slowly, to reveal the royal hearse waiting in the gateway attended by the
company of embalmers in their crimson robes and fifty priests of Osiris in rank
behind them. The priests began to chant as they trundled the
hearse forward on its wooden rollers, on to the deck of the barge. Pharaoh
clapped his hands with delight and hurried forward to examine this grotesque
vehicle. I had taken no part in the conception of this
celebration of bad taste. It was entirely the work of the priests. Suffice it
only to say that in the naked sunlight, the superabundant gold-work shone so
brightly as to offend the eye almost as painfully as did the actual design.
Such weight of gold forced the priests to pant and sweat as they manhandled the
clumsy ark on to the deck, and it listed even the great ship alarmingly. That
weight of gold could have filled all the grain stores of the Upper Kingdom, or
built and fitted out fifty squadrons of fighting ships and paid then- crews for
ten years. Thus the inept craftsman attempts to hide the paucity of his
inspiration behind a dazzle of treasure. If only they had given me such
material to work with, they might have seen something different. This monstrosity was destined to be sealed in the
tomb with Pharaoh's dead body. No matter that its construction had contributed
largely to the financial ruin of the kingdom, Pharaoh was delighted with it. At my Lord Intef's suggestion, the king mounted the
vehicle and took his seat on the platform designed to carry his sarcophagus.
From there he beamed about him, all his dignity and royal reserve forgotten. He
was probably enjoying himself as much as he ever had in all his gloomy life, I
reflected with a pang of pity. His death was to be the pinnacle to which most
of his living energy and anticipation were directed. On what was clearly an impulse, he beckoned my Lord
Intef to join him on the ark and then looked around the crowded deck as if
seeking someone else in the throng. He seemed to find who he wanted, for he
stooped slightly and said something to the grand vizier. My Lord Intef smiled and, following his direction,
singled out my Lady Lostris. With a gesture he ordered her to come to him on
the ark. She was clearly flustered, and blushed under her make-up, a rare
phenomenon for one who was so seldom caught out of countenance. However, she
recovered swiftly, and mounted the carriage with girlish, long-legged grace
that as usual carried every eye with her. She knelt before the king and touched her forehead
three times to the floor of the platform. Then, in front of all the priests and
the entire court, Pharaoh did an extraordinary thing. He reached down and took
Lostris' hand, and lifted her to her feet, and seated her beside him on the
platform. It was beyond all protocol, there was no precedent for it, and I saw
his ministers exchange looks of amazement. Then something else happened of which even they were
not aware. When I was very young there had lived in the boys' quarters an old
deaf slave who had befriended me. It was he who had taught me to read men's
speech not only by the sound of it, but also by the shape of their lips as they
formed the words. It was a very useful accomplishment. With it I could follow a
conversation at the far end of a crowded hall, with musicians playing and a
hundred men around me laughing anxl shouting at each other. Now, before my eyes I saw Pharaoh say softly to my
Lady Lostris, 'Even in daylight you are as divine as was the goddess Isis in
the torchlight of the temple.' The shock of it was like the blow of a fist in my
stomach. Had I been blind, I berated myself desperately, or had I merely been
stupid? Surely any imbecile must have anticipated the direction in which my
capricious meddling must incline the order in which the dice of destiny might
fall. My facetious advice to the king must inevitably
have had the effect of directing his attention towards my Lady Lostris. It was
as though some malignant impulse below the surface of my mind had set out to
describe her precisely to him as the mother of his first-born son. The most
beautiful virgin in the land, to be taken within the first season after her
moon had flowered—it was her exactly. And then, of course, by casting her as
the leading female in the pageant, I had managed to display her to the king in
the kindest possible light. What I suddenly realized was about to happen was
all of it my fault, as much as though I had deliberately engineered it. What is
more, there was nothing I could do about it now. I stood in the sunlight so
appalled and stricken with remorse that for a while I was deprived of the
powers of speech and of reason. When the sweating priests shoved the hearse off the
deck and through the gateway, the crowd around me started after it and I was
borne along with them willy-nilly, as though I were a leaf upon a stream
without direction of my own. Before I was able to recover my wits I found
myself within the forecourt of the funerary temple. I began to push my way
forward, jostling those ahead of me to get past them and to reach the side of
the hearse before it came to the main entrance of the royal mortuary. As one team of priests pushed the vehicle forward,
a second team picked up the wooden rollers that were left behind it and ran
forward to place them ahead of the ponderous golden vehicle. There was a short
delay as the carriage reached that area of the courtyard that had not yet been
paved. While the priests spread straw ahead of the rollers to smooth the
passage over this rough ground, I slipped quickly around the back of the row of
huge carved stone lions that lined the carriageway, and hurried down this clear
space until I was level with the ark. When one of the priests tried to bar my
way and prevent me reaching the side of the vehicle, I gave him such a look as
would have made one of the stone lions quail, and spat a single word at him
that was seldom heard in the temple confines and caused him to step hurriedly
aside and let me pass. When I reached the near side of the ark I found
myself directly below Lostris, close enough to stretch up and touch her arm,
and to hear every word she addressed to the king. I could tell at once that she
had completely recovered her poise which Pharaoh's unexpected interest in her
had disturbed, and was now setting out to be as agreeable as possible to him.
Miserably, I recalled how she had planned to do exactly this, and to use his
favour to secure his agreement to her marriage to Tanus. As recently as last
evening I had dismissed it as girlish prattle, but now it was happening, and it
was beyond my power to prevent it or to warn her of the dangerous waters into
which she was steering. If, earlier in this chronicle, I have given the
impression that my Lady Lostris was a flighty child with not a thought in her
pretty head other than romantic nonsense and her own frivolous enjoyment of
life, then I have fallen short in my efforts as historian of these
extraordinary events. Although still so young, she was at times mature far
beyond her years. Our Egyptian girls bloom early in the Nile sunlight. She was
also a diligent scholar, with a bright mind and a thoughtful and enquiring side
to her nature, all of which I had done my very best over the years to foster
and develop. Under my tutelage she had reached the stage where
she could debate with the priests the most obscure religious dogma, could hold
her own with the palace lawyers on such matters as the Land Tenure Acts and the
extremely complicated Irrigation Act that regulated the usage of the waters
from the Nile. Of course, she had read and absorbed every single one of the
scrolls in the palace library. These included several hundred of which I was
the author, from my medical treatises to my definitive essays on the tactics of
naval warfare, together with my astrological scrolls on the names and natures
of all the heavenly bodies, and my manuals on archery and swordsmanship,
horticulture and falconry. She could even argue with me my own principles of
architecture, and compare them to those of the great Imhotep. Thus she was perfectly equipped to discuss any
subject from astrology to the practice of war, from politics or the building of
temples to the measurement and regulation of the Nile waters, all of which were
subjects that fascinated Pharaoh. In addition she could rhyme and riddle and
coin an amusing pun, and her vocabulary was almost as extensive as my own. In
short, she was an accomplished conversationalist, with a ready sense of humour.
She was articulate and had an enchanting voice and a merry little laugh. Truly,
no man or god could resist her, especially if she could offer to someone
without a son the promise of an heir. I had to warn her, and yet how could a slave
intrude upon the congress of persons so infinitely high above his own station?
I skipped nervously beside the carriage, listening to my Lady Lostris' voice at
its most enthralling as she set herself out to engage the king's fancy. She was describing to him the manner in which his
funerary femple had been laid out to conform to the most propitious
astronomical aspects, those of the moon and the zodiac at the time of Pharaoh's
birth. Of course she was merely repeating knowledge that she had gleaned from
me, for I was the one who had surveyed and orientated the temple to the
heavenly bodies. However, she was so convincing that I found myself following
her explanations as though I was hearing them for the first time. The funeral ark passed between the pylons of the
inner court of the temple and rolled down the long colonnaded atrium, past the
barred and guarded doors to the six treasuries in which were manufactured and
stored the funerary offerings which would go with the king to his tomb. At the
end of the atrium the acacia-wood doors, on which were carved the images of all
the gods of the pantheon, were swung open, and we entered the mortuary where
Pharaoh's corpse would one day be embalmed. Here in this solemn chapel the king dismounted from
the carriage, and went forward to inspect the massive table on which he would
lie for the ritual of mummification. Unlike the embalming of a commoner, royal
embalming took seventy days to accomplish. The table had been sculpted from a
single block of diorite, three paces long and two wide. Into the dark, mottled
surface of the stone had been chiselled the indentation that fitted the back of
the king's head, and the grooves which would drain the blood and other bodily
fluids released by the scalpels and the instruments of the embalmers. The grand master of the guild of embalmers was
standing beside the table, ready to explain the entire process to the king, and
he had an attentive audience, for Pharaoh seemed fascinated by every gruesome
detail. At one stage it seemed that he might so far forget his dignity as to
climb up upon the diorite block and try its fit, very much as though it were a
new costume of linen presented by his tailor. However, he restrained himself with an obvious
effort, and instead devoted himself to the mortician's description of how the
first incision would be made from his gullet to his groin, and how his viscera
would be lifted out cleanly and then divided into their separate parts—liver,
lungs, stomach and entrails. The heart, as the hearth of the divine spark, would
be left in place, as would the kidneys with their associations with water and
thus with the Nile, the source of life. After this edifying instruction, Pharaoh minutely
examined the fqur Canopic jars that would receive his viscera. They stood on
another smaller granite table close at hand. The jars were carved from gleaming
translucent alabaster the colour of milk. Their stoppers were fashioned in the
shapes of the animal-headed gods: Anubis the jackal, Sobeth the crocodile,
Thoth the ibis-headed, Sekhmet with the head of a lioness. They would be the
guardians of Pharaoh's divine parts until his awakening in the eternal life. On the same granite table that held the Canopic
jars, the embalmers had laid out their instruments and the full array of pots
and amphorae that contained the natron salts, lacquers and other chemicals that
they would use in the process. Pharaoh was fascinated by the glistening bronze
scalpels which would disembowel him, and when the embalmer showed him the long
pointed spoon that would be pushed up his nostrils to scoop out the contents of
his skull, those cheesy curds over which I had pondered so long and
fruitlessly, the king was fascinated and handled the grisly instrument with
reverential awe. Once the king had satisfied his curiosity at the
mortuary table, my Lady Lostris directed his attention to the painted
bas-relief engravings that covered the walls of the templi from floor to
ceiling. The decorations were not yet completed, but were none the less quite
striking in their design and execution. I had drawn most of the original
cartoons with my own hand, and had closely supervised the others drawn by the
palace artists. These had been traced on to the walls with charcoal sticks.
Once the tracings were in place, I had corrected and perfected them in
free-hand. Now a company of master sculptors was engraving them into the
sandstone blocks, while behind them a second company of artists was painting in
the completed bas-relief. The dominant colour I had chosen for these designs
was blue in all its variation: the blue of the starling's wing, the blues of
the sky and the Nile in the sunlight, the blues of the petals of the desert
orchid and the shimmering blue of the river perch quivering in the fisherman's
net. However, there were other colours as well, all thqse vibrant reds and
yellows that we Egyptians love so well. Pharaoh, accompanied closely by my Lord Intef, in
his capacity of Keeper of the Royal Tombs, made a slow circuit of the high
walls, examining every detail, and commenting on most of them. Naturally the
theme I had chosen for the mortuary was the Book of the Dead, that detailed map
and description of the route to the underworld that Pharaoh's shade must
follow, and the depictions of all the trials and dangers he would confront
along the way. He paused for a long while before my drawing of the
god Thoth, with his bird head and long curved ibis beak, weighing Pharaoh's
disembodied heart on the scales against the feather of truth. Should the heart
be impure, it would tip the scales against the feather, and the god would
immediately toss it to the crocodile-headed monster that waited close at hand
to devour it. Softly, the king quoted the protective mantra laid down in the
book to shield himself from such a calamity, and then passed on to my next
engraving. It was almost noon before Pharaoh had completed his
inspection of the mortuary temple and led the way out into the forecourt where
the palace chefs had laid out a sumptuous open-air banquet. 'Come and sit here, where I can speak to you
further on the matter of the stars!' Once again the king ignored precedent to
place my Lady Lostris close to him at the banquet table, even moving one of his
senior wives to make a place for her. During the meal he directed most of his
conversation towards my mistress. She was now completely at her ease and kept
the king and all those around her enthralled and merry with her wit and charm. Of course, as a slave I did not have a seat at the
table, nor could I even inveigle myself within range of my mistress to warn her
to moderate her demeanour in the king's presence. Instead, I found myself a
place on the pedestal of one of the granite lions, from where I could look down
the length of the banquet table and watch everything that took place there. I was
not the only observer, for my Lord Intef sat close to the king and yet
withdrawn, watching it alj with glittering, implacable eyes, like a handsome
but deadly spider at the centre of his web. At one stage of the meal a yellow-billed kite wheeled
high over head, and uttered a screech, a sardonic and mocking cry. Hurriedly I
made the sign against the evil eye, for who knows what god it was that had
taken the form of the bird to muddle and confuse our petty endeavours? After the midday meal it was customary for the
court to rest for an hour or so, especially at this the hottest season of the
year. However, Pharaoh was so wrought up that today he would have none of it. 'Now we will inspect the treasuries,' he announced.
The guards at the doors of the first treasury stood aside and presented arms as
the royal party approached, and the doors were swung open from within. I had planned these six treasuries not only as
store-rooms to hold the vast funerary treasure that Pharaoh had been collecting
for the past twelve years, ever since his accession to the double throne, but
also as workshops in which a small army of craftsmen and artisans was
permanently employed in adding to that treasure. The hall that we entered was the armoury that
housed the collection of weapons and accoutrements of the battlefield and the
wild chase, both practical and ceremonial, which the king would take with him
into the afterworld. With my Lord Intef's concurrence, I had arranged for the
craftsmen to be at their benches so that the king would have the opportunity of
watching them at work. As Pharaoh passed slowly down the row of benches,
his questions were so astute and technical that those nobles and priests to
whom he addressed himself could provide no answers, and they looked around
frantically for someone who could. I was summoned hastily from the back of the
crowd and pushed forward to face the king's interrogation. 'Ah, yes,' Pharaoh grimaced bleakly as he
recognized me. 'It is none other than the humble slave who writes pageants and
cures the sick. No one here seems to know the composition of this electrum wire
that binds the stock of the war-bow that this man is making for me.' 'Gracious Pharaoh, the metal is a mixture of one
part of copper to five parts of silver and four of gold. The gold is of die red
variety found only in the mines of Lot in the western desert. No other gives
the wire the same pliability or elasticity, of course.' 'Of course,' the king agreed wryly. 'And how do you
make the strands so thin? These are no thicker than the hairs of my head.' 'Majesty, we extrude the hot metal by swinging it
in a special pendulum that I designed for the purpose. Later we can watch the
process in the gold foundry, if Your Majesty so wishes.' Thus during the rest of the tour I was able to
remain at the king's side and to deflect some of his attention away from
Lostris, but I still could not find the opportunity to speak to her alone. Pharaoh passed down the armoury to inspect the huge
array of weapons and armour already in store. Some of these had belonged to his
forefathers and had been employed in famous battles; others were newly
manufactured and would never be used in war. All of them were magnificent, each
a pinnacle of the armourer's art. There were helmets and breast-plates of
bronze and silver and gold, battle swords with ivory hilts set with precious
stones, full-dress ceremonial uniforms of the commander-in-chief of each of the
king's elite regiments, shields and bucklers in hippo-hide and crocodile-skin,
all starred with rosettes of gold. It made a splendid array. From the armoury we crossed the atrium to the
furniture store, where a hundred cabinet-makers laboured with cedar and acacia
and precious ebony wood to build the funeral furnishings for the king's long
journey. Very few substantial trees grow in our riparian valley, and wood is a
scarce and costly commodity, worth very nearly its weight in silver. Almost
every stick of it must be carried hundreds of leagues across the desert, or
shipped downstream from those mysterious lands to the south. Here it was piled
in extravagant stacks, as though it were commonplace, and the fragrance of
fresh sawdust perfumed the hot air. We watched while craftsmen inlaid the head-board of
Pharaoh's bed with patterns of mother-of-pearl and woods of contrasting colour.
Others decorated the arm-rests of the chairs with golden falcons and the
back-rests of the padded sofas with the heads of silver lions. Not even the
halls of the royal palace at Elephantine Island contained such delicate
workmanship as would grace the rock cell of the king's tomb. From the furniture treasury we passed on to the
hall of the sculptors. In marble and sandstone and granite of a hundred
differing hues, the sculptors whittled and chipped away with chisel and file so
that a fine, pale dust hung in the air. The masons covered their noses and
mouths with strips of linen on which the dust settled and their features were
powdered white with the insidious stuff. Some of the men coughed behind their
masks as they worked, a persistent, dry cough that was peculiar to their
profession. I had dissected the corpses of many old sculptors who had worked
thirty years and died at their trade. I found their lungs petrified and turned
to stone in their bodies, thus I spent as little time as possible in the
masons' shop lest I contract the same malady. None the less, their products were wondrous to
contemplate, statues of the gods and of Pharaoh himself that seemed to vibrate
with life. There were life-sized images of Pharaoh seated on his throne or
walking abroad, alive and dead, in his god form or in the shape of a mortal
man. These statues wouMJine the long causeway that led from the funerary temple
on the valley floor up into the wall of black hills from which his final tomb was
even at this moment being excavated. At his death the golden hearse, drawn by a
train of one hundred white bullocks, was to bear his massive sarcophagus along
that causeway to its final resting-place. This granite sarcophagus, only partially completed,
lay in the centre of the masons' hall. Originally it had been a single block of
pink granite quarried from the mines at Assoun, and ferried down-river in a
barge especially constructed for that purpose. It had taken five hundred slaves
to haul it ashore and drag it over wooden rollers to where it now lay, an
oblong of solid stone five paces long, three wide and three tall. The masons had begun by sawing a thick slab from
the top of it. Upon this granite hd a master mason was fashioning the likeness
of the mummiform Pharaoh, with his arms crossed and the crook and flail gripped
in his dead hands. Another team of masons was now engaged,in hollowing out the
interior of the main granite block to provide a nest into which the cluster of
inner coffins would fit perfectly. Including the huge outer sarcophagus, there
would be seven coffins hi all, fitting one within the other like a child's
puzzle-toy. Seven was, of course, one of the magical numbers. The innermost
coffin would be of pure gold, and later we watched it being beaten out of the
formless mass of metal in the hall of the goldsmiths. It was this multiple sarcophagus, this mountain of
stone and gold housing the king's wrapped corpse, that the great golden hearse
would carry along the causeway to the hills, a slow journey that would take
seven whole days to complete. The hearse would stop each night in one of the
small shrines that were spaced at intervals along the causeway. A fascinating adjunct to the hall of statues was
the ushabti shop at the rear where the servants and retainers who would escort
the dead king were being carved. These were perfect little manikins of wood
representing all the grades and orders of Egyptian society who would work for
the king in the hereafter, so as to enable him to maintain his estate and the
style of his existence in the underworld. Each ushabti was a delightfully carved wooden doll
dressed in the authentic uniform of his calling and bearing the appropriate
tools. There were farmers and gardeners, fishermen and bakers, beer-brewers and
handmaidens, soldiers and tax-collectors, scribes and barbers, and hundreds
upon hundreds of common labourers to perform every menial task and to go
forward in the king's place if ever he were called upon by the other gods to
work in the underworld. At the head of this congregation of little figures
there was even a grand vizier whose miniature features closely resembled those
of my Lord Intef. Pharaoh picked out this manikin and examined him closely,
turning him over to read the description on his back. My name is Lord Intef, grand vizier of the Upper
Kingdom, Pharaoh's sole companion, three times the recipient of the Gold of
Praise. I am ready to answer for the king. Pharaoh passed the doll to my Lord Intef. 'Is your physique
truly so muscular, my Lord Intef?' he asked with a smile just below the surface
of his dour expression, and the grand vizier bowed slightly. 'The sculptor has failed to do me justice, Your
Majesty.' The last treasury that the king visited that day
was the hall of the goldsmiths. The infernal glow of the furnaces cast a
strange glow on the features of the jewellers as they worked with total
concentration at their benches. I had coached them well. At the entrance of the
royal entourage, the goldsmiths knelt in unison to make the triple obeisance to
Pharaoh, and then rose and resumed their work. Even in that large hall the heat of the furnace
flames was so sulphurous as almost to stop the breath, and we were soon bathed
in our own sweat. However, the king was so fascinated by the treasure displayed
for him that he seemed not to notice the oppressive atmosphere. He went
directly to the raised dais in the centre of the hall where the most
experienced and skilful smiths were at work upon the golden inner coffin. They
had perfectly captured Pharaoh's living face in the shimmering metal. The mask
would fit exactly over his bandaged head. It was a divine image with eyes of
obsidian and rock-crystal, and with the cobra-headed uraeus encircling the
brow. I truly believe that no finer masterpiece of the goldsmith's art has ever
been fashioned in all the thousand years of our civilization. This was the peak
and the zenith. All the unborn ages might one day marvel at its splendour. Even after Pharaoh had admired the golden mask from
every angle, he seemed unable to tear himself too far from it. He spent the
remainder of the day on the dais beside it, seated on a low stool while box
after cedar-wood box of exquisite jewels were laid at his feet and the contents
catalogued for him. I cannot believe that such a treasure was ever
before accumulated in one place at one time. To make a bald list of the items
does not in the least way suggest the richness and the diversity of it all.
None the less, let me tell you at the outset that, there were six thousand four
hundred and fifty-five pieces already in the cedar-wood boxes, and that each
day more were added to the collection as the jewellers worked on tirelessly. There were rings for Pharaoh's toes as well as his
fingers; there were amulets and charms, and gold figurines of the gods and
goddesses; there were necklaces and bracelets and pectoral medallions and belts
on which were inlaid falcons and vultures and all the other creatures of the
earth and the sky and the river; there were crowns and diadems studded with
lapis lazuli and garnets and agate and carnelians and jasper and every gemstone
that civilized man holds dear. The artistry with which all this had been designed
and manufactured eclipsed all that had been created over the preceding one
thousand years. It is often in decline that a nation creates its most beautiful
works of art. In the formative years of empire the obsession is with conquest
and the building-up of wealth. It is only once this has been achieved that there
is leisure and a desire to develop the arts, and—more importantly—rich and
powerful men to sponsor them. The weight of gold and silver already used in the
manufacture of the hearse and the funeral mask and all the rest of this
breathtaking collection of treasure was in excess of five hundred takhs; thus
it would have taken five hundred strong men to lift it all. I had calculated
that this was almost one-tenth of the total weight of these precious metals
that had been mined in the entire one thousand years of our recorded history.
All of this the king intended taking with him to the tomb. Who am I, a humble slave, to question the price
that a king was willing to pay for eternal life? Suffice it only to state that
in assembling this treasure, while at the same time conducting the war against
the Lower Kingdom, Pharaoh had, almost alone and unaided, plunged this very
Egypt of ours into beggary. No wonder, then, that Tanus in his declamation had
singled out the depredation of the tax-collectors as one of the most terrible
afflictions visited upon the populace. Between them and the robber bands that
ravaged unchecked and unhindered through the countryside, we were all ruined
and crushed under the financial yoke that was too heavy for any of us to bear.
To survive at all, we had to evade the tax collector's net. So as he set out to
beggar us for his own aggrandizement, the king made criminals of us at the same
moment. Very few of us, great or small, rich or poor, slept well at night. We
lay awake dreading at any moment the heavy knock of the tax-collector upon the
door. Oh, sad and abused land, how it groaned beneath the
yoke! LAVISH QUARTERS HAD BEEN PREPARED in the necropolis
in which the king would spend that night upon the west bank of the Nile, close
to his own final resting-place in the gaunt black hills. The necropolis, the
city of the dead, was almost as extensive as Karnak itself. It was home to all
those associated with the building and the care of the funerary temple and the
royal tomb. There was a full regiment of the elite guard to protect the holy
places, for the usurper in the north was as avaricious for treasure as was our
own dear king, while the robber barons in the desert became each day bolder and
more daring. The treasuries of the funerary temple were a sore temptation to
every predator hi the two kingdoms, and beyond. hi addition to the guards there were the companies
of the craftsmen and the artisans and all their apprentices to house. I was
responsible for the records of wages and rations, so I knew exactly how many
there were. On the last pay-day their number had been four thousand eight
hundred and eleven. Added to this, there were over ten thousand slaves employed
upon the work. I will not weary myself by listing the numbers of
oxen and sheep that had to be slaughtered each day to feed them all, nor the
cartloads of fish that were brought up from the Nile, nor the thousands of jars
of beer that were brewed daily to slake the summef thirst of this multitude as
they laboured under the watchful eye and the ready lash of the overseers. The pecropolis was a city, and in that city was a
palace for the king. It was with relief that we moved into it to spend the
night, for it had been a wearying day. But once again there was little rest for
me. I tried to reach my Lady Lostris, but it was almost
as if there existed a conspiracy to keep me away from her. According to her
little black maids, first she was at toilet, and after that she was in her
bath, and then she was resting and could not be disturbed. Finally, as I still
waited in the antechamber of her quarters, a summons reached me from her
father, and I could linger no longer, but must hurry to my master. As soon as I entered my Lord Intef s bedchamber he
dismissed all the others in the room. When we were alone, he kissed me. I was
once more surprised by his benevolence and disturbed by his excited manner.
Seldom had I seen him in such mood, and always before it had adumbrated
calamitous events. 'How often the gateway to power and fortune is
found in the most unexpected place!' he laughed at me, and caressed my face.
'This time it lies between the thighs of a woman. No, my old darling, don't
play the innocent. I know just what a cunning hand you have taken in all of
this. Pharaoh has told me how you cajoled him into it by promising him a male
heir to his line. By Seth, but you are the cunning one, are you not? Not a word
to me of your design, but you schemed it all on your own account.' He laughed again, and twisted a lock of my hair
between his fingers. 'You must have divined my ultimate ambition all along,
even though we have never discussed it openly. So you set out to achieve it for
me. Of course, I should have you punished for your presumption,' he twisted the
lock of hair until tears started into my eyes, 'but how can I be angry with you
when you have placed the double crown within my grasp?' He released the tress
of my hair and kissed me again. 'I have just come from the king's presence. In
two days, at the culmination of the festival, he will announce his betrothal to
my daughter, Lostris.' I felt a sudden darkness behind my eyes, and a chilly
dew formed on my skin. 'The wedding will take place the same day,
immediately after the closing ceremony of the festival, I saw to that. We don't
want any delay in which something might happen to prevent it, do we?' Such a swift royal wedding was unusual but not
unheard of. When brides were chosen to seal a political union, or to
consolidate the conquest of a new territory, the wedding often took place the very
same day it was decided. Pharaoh Mamose the First, forefather of our present
pharaoh, had married the daughter of a conquered Human chieftain on the actual
battlefield. However, such historical precedents were of little comfort to me
now as I faced the bleak maturation of my worst fears. My Lord Intef seemed not to notice my distress. He
was too concerned with his own immediate interests, and he went on speaking.
'Before I gave my formal consent to the union, I prevailed on the king to
concede that if she bore him a son then he would elevate my daughter to the
rank of principal wife and queen consort.' He clapped his hands in unrestrained
triumph. 'Of course, you realize what that means. If Pharaoh
should die before my grandson is of age to rule, then I as his grandfather and
closest male line would become regent—' He broke off suddenly and stared at me,
and I knew him so well that I- understood exactly what was running through his
mind. He was bitterly regretting that indiscretion, nobody should ever have
heard that thought expressed. It was purest treason. If Lostris bore a son to
Pharaoh, then the father would not live long thereafter. We both understood
that. My Lord Intef had given voice to regicide, and he was considering
removing the only one who had heard it spoken, the humble slave, Taita. We both
understood that clearly. 'My lord, I am only grateful that it has turned out
the way I planned it. I admit now that I have worked deviously to place your
daughter in the king's way, and that I described her to him as the mother of
his future son. I used the pageant as a show-piece to focus his attention upon
her. However, I could not bring myself to speak to you of such momentous
affairs until they had been successfully engineered. But there still remains a
great deal for us to do, before we can count ourselves secure—' and I began
swiftly to extemporize a list of all that might go awry before he could gain
control of the crown and the golden sceptre of Egypt. Tactfully I made it clear
how much he still needed me if he were to achieve his design. I saw him relax
as he followed my arguments, and I knew that at least for the immediate future
I was safe. It was some time before I could reasonably escape
from his presence and hurry to warn my Lady Lostris of the terrible predicament
in which I had placed her. However, before I reached her door I realized that
my warning to her would serve no purpose other than to distress her to the
point of dementia or even suicide. I could waste no further time if I were to prevent
events from rushing to their tragic conclusion. There was only one person to whom I could turn now. I LEFT THE NECROPOLIS AND SET OFF alone along the
tow-path of the canal, back towards the river-bank where I knew that Tanus'
squadrons were encamped. The moon was only three days from full and it lit the
jagged hills of the western horizon with a cold yellow radiance and threw black
shadows on the plain below. As I hurried along, I recited to myself a full list
of all the possible calamities and misfortunes that might befall Tanus, my Lady
Lostris and myself in the days ahead. I was goading myself the same way that a
black-maned desert lion lashes up his temper with the bony spike in the end of
his tail before he charges at the huntsman. Thus I was in fulminating mood long
before I reached the bank of the Nile. I found Tanus' encampment without
difficulty, hard by the bank of the Nile and the mouth of the canal. The ships
of the squadron were anchored below the camp. The sentries challenged me and
then, when they recognized me, led me to Tanus' tent. Tanus was at late supper with Kratas and four other
of his subordinate officers. He rose to greet me with a smile and offered me
the beer tankard in his hand. "This is such an unexpected pleasure, old friend.
Sit down beside me and have a pull of my beer while my slave brings you a cup
and platter. You look hot and out of sorts—' I cut short these pleasantries by
rounding on him furiously. 'To Seth with you, you great senseless oaf! Do you
not understand what jeopardy you have placed us in? You and that flapping
jawbone of yours! Do you have no thought for the safety and the well-being of
my mistress?' In truth I had not meant to be so harsh on him, but once I had
started, it seemed that I was unable to control my emotions, and all my fear
and anxiety came tumbling out in a flood of invective. Not all that I accused
him of was true or fair, but it made me feel better to have it out. Tanus' expression changed and he held up one hand
as though to shield himself. 'Whoa! You take me unawares. I am unarmed and
unable to defend myself from such a murderous assault.' In front of his
officers his tone was jocular, but his smile was thin as he seized my arm and
steered me out of the tent into the darkness, and half-dragged me beyond the
regimental lines into the open moonlit fields beyond. I was like a child in the
grip of that right hand that was trained to wield the sword and draw the great
bow Lan-ata. 'Now puke it up!' he ordered me grimly. 'What has
happened to put you in such vile humour?' I was still angry, but more afraid than angry, and
my tongue took flight again. 'I have spent half my life trying to protect you
from your own stupidity, and I am sick of it. Don't you understand anything of
life? Did you truly believe that you would be allowed to escape unscathed from
the incredible folly into which you threw all of us last night?" 'Are you talking about my declamation at the
pageant?' He looked puzzled, and released the crushing grip on my arm. 'How can
you say it was folly? All my officers, and every other person I have spoken to
since then, are all delighted with what I had to say—' 'You fool, don't you see that the opinions of all
your officers and all your friends count for the price of a rotten fish in the
scheme of things? Under any other ruler you would already be dead, and even
this weak and vacillating old man of ours cannot afford to let you escape the
consequences of your insolence. It is more than his throne is worth. There will
be a bill for you to pay, Tanus, Lord Harrab. Horus knows, it will be a heavy
bill.' 'You' are speaking in riddles,' he snapped at me.
'I did the king a great service. He is surrounded by fawning toadies who feed
him the lies they think he wants to hear. It was past time that he learned the
truth, and I know in my heart that once he considers it, he will be grateful to
me.' My anger began to evaporate before his simple and
steadfast belief in the triumph of good. 'Tanus, my dearest friend, what an
innocent you are! No man is ever grateful for having the unpalatable truth
rammed down his throat. But apart from that, you have played directly into the
hands of my Lord Intef.' 'My Lord Intef?' He stared at me hard. 'What of my
Lord Intef? You speak of him as though he were my enemy. The grand vizier was
my father's dearest friend. I know that I can trust him to protect me. He swore
an oath to my father as he lay on his death-bed—' I could see that despite his sunny disposition and
our friendship, he was becoming truly angry with me, probably for the first
time in his life. I knew also that, although it was slow to rouse, Tanus' anger
was something to fear. 'Oh, Tanus!' I curbed my own anger at last. 'I have
been unfair to you. There is so much that I should have told you, and never did.
Nothing was as you thought it. I was a coward, but I could not tell you that
Intef was your own father's deadliest enemy.' 'How can this be true?' Tanus shook his head. 'They
were friends, the dearest friends. My earliest memories are of them laughing
together. My father told me that I could trust my very life to my Lord Intef.' "The noble Pianki, Lord Harrab believed that,
it is true. His faith cost him his entire fortune, and in the end his life
which he placed in Intef's hands.' 'No, no, you must be mistaken. My father was the
victim of a series of misfortunes—' 'And every one of those misfortunes was engineered
by my Lord Intef. He envied your father for his virtues and his popularity, for
his wealth and his influence with Pharaoh. He realized that Lord Harrab would
be appointed grand vizier before him and he hated him for all these things.' 'I cannot believe you. I cannot bring myself to
believe you.' Tanus shook his head in denial, and the last of my anger was
snuffed out. 'I will explain it all to you, as I should have
done long ago. I will give you all the proof you need. But there is no time for
it now. You must trust me. My Lord Intef hates you even as he hated your
father. Both you and my Lady Lostris are in danger. In danger of more than simply
life itself, in danger of losing each other for ever.' 'But how is that possible, Taita?' He was confused
and shaken by my words. 'I thought that my Lord Intef had agreed to our union.
Have you not spoken to him, then?' 'Yes, I have spoken to him,' I cried, and I seized
Tanus' hand and thrust it up under the back of my tunic. 'That was his reply.
Feel the welts left by the lash! He had me flogged for even suggesting the
marriage between you and my Lady Lostris. That is how much he hates you and
your family.' Tanus stared at me speechlessly, but I saw that he
believed me at last, and so I was able to come to the subject that was
dominating my thoughts more even than his intemperate speech, or the vendetta
that the grand vizier had conducted so successfully against him over so many
years. 'Hear me now, my dear friend, and brace yourself
for the very worst tidings yet.' There was no other way to tell him, except as
directly as Tanus would have told me. 'Far from agreeing to your marriage, my
Lord Intef has this very night pledged his daughter's hand to another. She is
to be married immediately to Pharaoh Mamose, and after she bears his first son
she will become his principal wife and consort. The king will make the
announcement himself at the end of the festival of Osiris. The marriage will
take place that very same evening.' Tanus swayed on his feet and in the moonlight his
face turned ghostly pale. Neither of us could speak for a long while and then
Tanus turned away from me and walked out alone into the field of standing corn.
I trailed behind him, keeping him in sight, until at last he found an outcrop
of black rock and seated himself upon it with the weary air of a very old man.
I came up softly and seated myself below him. Deliberately I remained silent
until he sighed and asked quietly, 'Has Lostris consented to this marriage?' 'Of course not. As yet she probably knows nothing
about it. But dp you think for one moment that her objections would count
against the will of her father and the king? She will have no say in the
matter.' 'What are we to do, old friend?' Even in my distress I was grateful to him that he
used the plural, including me, reassuring me of our friendship. 'There is one
other probability that we must face,' I warned him. 'And that is that in the
same speech that Pharaoh announces his betrothal to Lostris, he will order your
imprisonment, or worse still, issue your death warrant. My Lord Intef has the
king's ear and he will certainly put him up to it. In truth he would have good
reason. You are certainly guilty of sedition.' 'I do not care to live without Lostris as my wife.
If the king takes her from me, then he is welcome to my head as a marriage
gift.' He said it simply, without histrionics, so that I had difficulty in
feigning anger and putting the edge of contempt into my voice. 'You sound like a weak and pitiful old woman,
giving herself up to the fates without a struggle. What a fine and undying love
is yours, if you will not even fight for her!' 'How do you fight a king and a god?' Tanus asked
quietly. 'A king to whom you have sworn allegiance, and a god who is as remote
and as unassailable as the sun?' 'As a king he does not deserve your allegiance. You
set that out clearly in your declamation. He is a weak and dithering old man
who has divided the two kingdoms and brought our Ta-Meri bleeding to her
knees.' 'And as a god?' Tanus again asked quietly, as
though he were not really interested in the answer, although I knew him to be a
devout and religious man, as so many great warriors are. 'A god?' I made my tone derisive. 'You have more of
the godhead in your sword-arm than he has in all his soft little body.' 'Then what do you suggest?' he asked with deceptive
mildness. 'What would you have me do?' I drew a deep breath and then blurted it out. 'Your
officers and your men would follow you to the gates of the underworld. The
populace loves you for your courage and your honour—' I faltered, for his
expression in the moonlight gave me no encouragement to continue. He was silent
for twenty beats of my racing heart and then he ordered me softly, 'Go on! Say
what you have to say.' 'Tanus, you would make the noblest pharaoh that
this Ta-Meri, this mother-land, has known for a thousand years. You with my
Lady Lostris on the throne beside you could lead this land and this people back
to greatness. Call out your squadrons, and lead your men down the causeway to
where that unworthy pharaoh lies unprotected and vulnerable. By dawn tomorrow
you could be ruler of the Upper Kingdom. By this time next year you could have
defeated the usurper and have reunited the two kingdoms.' I leaped to my feet
and faced nun. 'Tanus, Lord Harrab, your destiny and that of the woman you love
await you. Seize them in both your strong warrior's hands!' 'Warrior's hands, yes.' He held them up before my
face. 'Hands that have fought for my mother-land and have protected her
rightful king. You do me a disservice, old friend. They are not the hands of a
traitor. Nor is this the heart of a blasphemer, that would seek to cast down
and destroy a god, and take his place in the pantheon.' I groaned aloud in my frustration. 'You would be
the greatest pharaoh of the Isist five hundred years, and you need not proclaim
your godhead, not if the idea offends you. Do it, I beseech you, for the sake
of this very Egypt of ours, and of the woman that we both love!' 'Would Lostris still love a traitor as she loved a
soldier and a patriot? I think not.' He shook his head. 'She would love you no matter what—' I began, but
he cut me short. 'You cannot convince me. She is a woman of virtue
and of honour. As a traitor and a thief, I would forfeit all right to her
respect. What is of equal importance, I would never respect myself again, or
consider myself worthy of her sweet love, if I did what you urge. Speak of it
no more, as you value our friendship. I have no claim to the double crown, nor
will I ever make such claim. Horus, hear me, and turn your face away from me if
ever I should break this pledge.' The matter was closed, I knew him so well, that
great infuriating oaf, whom I loved with all my heart. He meant exactly what he
said, and would cleave to it at any cost. "Then what will you do, damn your stubborn
heart?' I. flared at him. 'Nothing that I say has any weight with you. Do you
want to face this on your own? Are you suddenly too wise to heed my counsel?' 'I'm willing to take your counsel, just as long as
it has sense to it.' He reached out and drew me down beside him. 'Come, Taita,
help us. Lostris and I need you now as never before. Don't desert us. Help us
find the honourable way.' 'I fear there is no such thing,' I sighed, my
emotions bobbing and spinning like a piece of flotsam caught in the Nile flood.
'But if you will not seize the crown, then you dare not stay here. You must
sweep Lostris up in your arms and bear her away.' He stared at me in the moonlight. 'Leave Egypt? You
cannot be serious. This is my world. This is Lostris' world.' 'No!' I reassured
him. 'That is not what I had in mind. There is another pharaoh in Egypt. One
who has need of warriors and honest men. You have much to offer such a king.
Your fame in the Lower Kingdom is as great as it is here at Karnak. Place
Lostris on the deck of the Breath of Horus and send your galley flying
northwards. No other ship can catch you. In ten days, with this wind and
current, you can present yourself at the court of the red pharaoh in Memphis,
and swear allegiance to—' 'By Horus, you are determined to make a traitor of
me yet,' he cut across me. 'Swear allegiance to the usurper, you say? Then what
of the allegiance I swore to the true Pharaoh Mamose? Does that count for
nothing with you? What kind of man am I, that can make the same oath to every
king or renegade that crosses my path? An oath is not something to be bartered
or reclaimed, Taita, it is for life. I gave my oath to the true Pharaoh
Mamose.' 'That true Pharaoh is the same one who will marry
your love, and will order the strangling-rope to be twisted around your neck,'
I pointed out grimly, and this time even he wavered. 'You are right, of course. We should not stay in
Karnak. But I will not make myself a traitor or break my solemn oath by taking
up the sword against my king.' 'Your sense of honour is too complicated for me.' I
could not keep the tone of sarcasm from my voice. 'All I know is that it bodes
fair to make corpses of us all. You have told me what you will not do. Now tell
me what you will do to save yourself, and rescue my Lady Lostris from a hateful
fate.' 'Yes, old friend, you have every right to be angry
with me. I asked for your help and advice. When you gave it freely, I scorned
it. I beg your patience. Bear with me a while longer.' Tanus sprang to his feet
and began to prowl about like the leopard in Pharaoh's menagerie, back and
forth, muttering to himself, shaking his head and bunching his fists, as if to
face an adversary. At last he stopped in front of me. 'I am not
prepared to play the traitor, but with a heavy heart I will force myself to
play the coward. If Lostris agrees to accompany me, and only if she agrees,
then I am prepared to take flight. I will take her away from this land we both
love so well.' 'Where will you go?' I asked. 'I know that Lostris can never leave the river. It
is not only her life and mine, but her god also. We must stay with Hapi, the
river. That leaves only one direction open to us.' He raised his right arm,
gleaming with muscle in the moonlight, and pointed south. We will follow the
Nile southwards into the depths of Africa, into the land of Gush and beyond. We
will go up beyond the cataracts into the un-fathomed wilderness where no
civilized man has ever gone before. There, perhaps, if the gods are kind, we
will carve out another Ta-Meri for ourselves.' 'Who will be your companions?' 'Kratas, of course, and those of my officers and
men who are game for the adventure. I'll address them tonight and give them the
choice. Five ships, perhaps, and the men to work them. We must be ready to
leave by dawn. Will you go back to the necropolis and fetch Lostris to me?' 'And me?' I asked quietly. 'You'll take me with
you?' 'You?' He laughed at me. Now that the decision was
made, his mood took flight, high as the bating falcon launched from the gloved
fist. 'Would you truly give up your garden and your books, your pageants and
your building of temples? The road will be dangerous, and the life hard. Do you
truly want that, Taita?' 'I could hot let you go alone, without my
restraining hand upon your shoulder. What folly and danger would you lead my
mistress into, if I were not there to guide you?' 'Come!' he ordered, and clapped me on the back. 'I
never doubted that you would come with us. I know that Lostris would not leave
without you, anyway. Enough chatter! We have work to do. First, we will tell
Kratas and the others what we intend, and let them make their choice. Then you
must go back to the necropolis and fetch Lostris, while I make the preparations
for our departure. I'll send a dozen of my best men with you, but we must
hurry. It is past midnight, and well into the third watch.' Silly romantic fool that I am, but I was as excited
as he was as we hurried back to the regiment's encampment below the temple and
the causeway. I was so elated that my sense of danger was dulled. It was Tanus
who picked out the sinister movement in the moonlight ahead of us and seized my
arm and drew me beneath the shelter of a stunted carob tree. 'An armed party,' he whispered, and I saw the glint
of bronze spearheads. There was a large band of men, thirty or forty, I
estimated. 'Bandits, perhaps, or a raiding party from the
Lower Kingdom,' Tanus growled, and even I was alarmed by the stealthy behaviour
of the armed men ahead of us. They were not using the tow-path of the canal,
but creeping through the open fields, spreading out to surround Tanus'
encampment on the river-bank. 'This way!' With a soldier's eye for ground he
picked out a shallow wadi that ran down to join the river, and he steered me to
it. We jumped down and ran doubled over until we reached the perimeter of the
camp. Then Tanus sprang out of the wadi and roused the camp with a bellow. 'Stand to arms! On me, the Blues! Form on me!' It
was the rallying cry of the Blue Crocodile Guards, and it was taken up at once
by the sergeants of each company. Instantly the camp boiled to life. The men
sleeping round the fires leaped to their feet and snatched up their stacked
weapons, while the officers' tents burst open as though the men within had
never slept but had been waiting, tensed and ready for Tanus' command. Sword in
hand, they raced to their stations, and I saw Kratas in the forefront. I was amazed by the swiftness of their response,
even though I knew that these were all battle-tested veterans. Before I could
draw a dozen excited breaths they had formed in their phalanxes, with
overlapping shields and long spears thrust outwards facing the darkness. The
strange band out there in the night must have been as startled as I was by this
militant display, for although I could still make out the vague shapes of many
men and the gleam of their weapons in the gloom, the murderous charge we were
all expecting from them never materialized. The instant that Tanus had his formations in line,
he ordered the advance. We had often debated the advantages of offensive action
over defence, and now the massed squadrons moved forward, poised to break into
a full charge at Tanus' command. It must have been a daunting spectacle to the
men out there in the darkness, for a voice hailed us with an edge of panic in
its tone. 'We are Pharaoh's men on the king's business. Hold your attack!' 'Hold hard, the Blues!' Tanus stopped the menacing
advance, and then called back, 'Which pharaoh do you serve, the red usurper or
the true pharaoh?' 'We serve the true king, the divine Mamose, ruler of
the Upper and the Lower Kingdoms. I am the king's messenger.' 'Come forward, king's messenger, who creeps around
in the night like a thief. Come forward and state your business!' Tanus invited
him, but under his breath he told Kratas, 'Be ready for treachery. The smell of
it is thick in the air. Have the fires built up. Give us light to see.' Kratas gave the order and bundles of dry rushes
were flung on to the watch-fires. The flames leaped up, and the darkness was
thrown back. Into this ruddy glow the leader of the strange band stepped
forward and snouted, 'My name is Neter, Best of Ten Thousand. I am the
commander of Pharaoh's bodyguard. I bear the hawk seal for the arrest and
detention of Tanus, Lord Harrab.' 'By Horus, he lies in his teeth,' Kratas growled.
'You are no felon with a warrant on your head. He insults you and the regiment.
Let us at them and I'll thrust that hawk seal up between his buttocks.' 'Hold!' Tanus restrained him. 'Let us hear the
fellow out.' He raised his voice again. 'Show us the seal, Captain Neter.' Neter held it aloft. A small statuette in
glistening blue faience, in the shape of the royal hawk. The hawk seal was the
king's personal empowerment. The bearer acted with all the force and validity
of Pharaoh himself. On pain of death, no man could question or hinder him in
the course and commission of the royal business. The bearer answered only to
the king. 'I am Tanus, Lord Harrab,' Tanus conceded. 'And I
acknowledge the hawk seal.' 'My lord, rny lord!' Kratas whispered urgently. 'Do
not go to the king. It will mean your certain death. I have spoken to the other
officers. The regiment is behind you, nay, the entire army is behind you. Give
us the word. We'll make you king before the new day breaks.' 'My ear is deaf to those words,' Tanus told him
softly, but with a weight of menace in his tone more telling than any growl or
bellow. 'But only this once, Kratas, son of Maydum. Next time that you speak
treason, I will deliver you to the king's wrath with my own hands.' He turned from Kratas to me, and drew me a little
to one side. 'It is too late, old friend. The gods frown on our enterprise. I
must trust myself to the king's good sense. If he is truly a god, then he will
be able to look into my heart and see for himself that it contains no evil.' He
touched my arm, and that light gesture was to me more significant than the
warmest embrace. 'Go to Lostris, tell her what has happened, tell her why it
has happened. Tell her I love her and, whatever happens, I will do so through
this life and the next. Tell her I will wait for her, to the ends of eternity,
if need be.' Then Tanus ran his sword back into the scabbard at
his side and with empty hands stepped forward to meet the bearer of the hawk
seal. 'I stand ready to do the king's bidding,' he said simply. Behind him his own men hissed and growled, and
rattled their swords against their bucklers, but Tanus turned and quieted them
with a gesture and a frown, then strode out to confront Neter. The king's guard
closed in around him, and then at a trot they moved away along the tow-path of
the canal, back towards the necropolis. The camp was filled with angry, bitter young men
when I left it and followed Tanus and his escort at a discreet interval. When I
reached the necropolis, I went directly to my Lady Lostris' quarters. I was
distressed to find them deserted except for three of her little black maids,
who in their usual lazy and lackadaisical manner were packing the last of their
mistress's clothing into a cedar-wood chest. 'Where is your mistress?' I demanded, and the
eldest and most insolent of them picked her nose as she gave me an airy reply,
'Where you can't reach her, eunuch.' The others tittered at her powers of
repartee. They are all of them jealous of my favour with my Lady Lostris. 'Answer me straight, or I'll whip your insolent
backside, you little baggage.' I had done so before, so she relented and
muttered sulkily, "They have taken her to Pharaoh's own harem. You have no
influence there. Despite your missing balls, the guards will'never let you pass
amongst the royal women.' She was right, of course, but still I had to make
the attempt. My mistress wouM need me now, as much as she ever had in all her
life. As I feared, the guards at the gate to the king's
harem were intractable. They knew who I was, but they had orders that no one,
not even the closest members of Lostris' retinue, was to be allowed to go to
her. It cost me a gold ring, but the best I could
achieve, even with that extravagance, was the promise that one of the guards would
take my message to her. I wrote it out on a scrap of papyrus parchment, a bland
little attempt at encouragement. I dared not relate all that had befallen us,
nor the peril in which Tanus now stood. I could not even mention him by name,
and yet I had to reassure her of his love and protection. As an investment, it
was not worth the price I was forced to pay. Hardest of all to bear, I learned
later that my gold had been entirely wasted and that she never received the
message. Is there no man we can trust in this perfidious world? I was not to see either Tanus or my Lady Lostris
again until the evening of the last day of the festival of Osiris. THE FESTIVAL ENDED IN THE TEMPLE OF the god. It
seemed once more that all the populace of Greater Thebes was packed into the
courtyards. We were jammed so tightly that I could scarcely breathe in the
press and the heat. I was feeling wretched, for I had slept little for
two nights in succession on account of the worry and the strain. Apart from the
uncertainty of the fate of Tanus, I had been further burdened by my Lord Intef
with the onerous duty of arranging the wedding ceremony of the king to his
daughter, a duty that ran so contrary to my own desires. Added to which, I was
parted from my mistress, and I could scarcely bear it. I do not know how I came
through it. Even the slave boys were concerned about me. They declared that
they had never seen my beauty so impaired, or my spirits so low. Twice during Pharaoh's interminable speech from the
throne, I found myself swaying on my feet, on the very point of fainting.
However, I forced myself to hold on, while the king droned out the platitudes
and half-truths with which he sought to disguise the true state of the kingdom
and to placate the populace. As was only to be expected, he never referred
directly to the red pharaoh in the north or the civil war in which we were
embroiled, except in such broad terms as 'these troubled times' or 'the
defection and insurrection'. However, after he had spoken for a while it
suddenly became plain to me that he was referring to every one of the issues
that Tanus had raised in his Reclamation, and attempting to find remedies for
each of them. It was true that he was doing so in his usual inept
and vacillating fashion, but the simple fact that he had taken notice of what
Tanus had said braced me and focused my wandering attention. I edged forward in
the press of humanity until I had a better view of the throne, by which time
the king was speaking about the impudence of the slaves and the disrespectful
behaviour of the lower classes of our society. This was another issue that
Tanus had mentioned, and I was amused to hear Pharaoh's solution. 'From
henceforth the slave-owner may order fifty lashes to the insolent slave, without
recourse to the magistrate to sanction such punishment,' he announced. I smiled when I remembered how this same king had
almost wrecked the state twelve years previously with another proclamation that
ran in the exact opposite direction to this latest pronouncement. Still
idealistic at his coronation, he had set out actually to abolish the ancient
and honourable institution of slavery. He had wanted to turn every slave in
Egypt loose and make him a free man. Even at this remove in time, such folly is still
incomprehensible to me. Though I am myself a slave, I believe that slavery and
serfdom are the institutions on which the greatness of nations is founded. The
rabble cannot govern itself. Government should be entrusted only to those born
and trained to it. Freedom is a privilege, not a right. The masses need a
strong master, for without control and direction anarchy would reign. The
absolute monarch and slavery and serfdom are the pillars of a system that has
allowed us to develop into civilized men. It had been instructive to see how the slaves
themselves had rebelled at the prospect of having freedom thrust upon them. I
had been very young at the time, but I too had been alarmed at the prospect of
being turned out from my warm and secure niche in the lioys' quarters to
scavenge on the rubbish-heaps for my next crust of bread with a horde of other
freed slaves. A bad master is better than no master at all. Of course, the kingdom had been thrown into chaos
by this folly. The army had been upon the brink of revolt. Had the red pharaoh
in the north seized the opportunity, then history might have been written
differently. In the end our own pharaoh had hastily withdrawn his misguided
decree of manumission, and managed to cling to his throne. Now here he was little
more than a decade later proclaiming increased punishments for the impudence of
a slave. It was so typical of this hesitant and muddling pharaoh that I
pretended to mop my brow in order to cover the first smile that had creased my
face in the last two days. 'The practice of self-mutilation for the purpose of
avoiding military service will in future be strongly discouraged,' the king
droned on. 'Any eligible young man claiming exemption under this dispensation
is to appear before a tribunal of three army officers, at least one of whom is
to be a centurion or officer of superior rank.' This time my smile was one of
reluctant approval. For once Pharaoh was on the right tack. I would dearly love
to see Menset and Sobek displaying their missing thumbs to some hardened old
veteran of the river wars. What tender sympathy they could expect! 'The fine
for such an offence will be one thousand rings of gold.' By Seth's bulging
belly, that would make those two young dandies pause, and my Lord Intef would
have to meet the fine on their behalf. Despite my other concerns, I was beginning to feel
a little more cheerful, as Pharaoh continued, 'From this day forward it will be
an offence punishable by a fine of ten gold rings for a harlot to ply for trade
in any public place, other than one set aside by the magistrates for that
purpose.' This time I could barely prevent myself from laughing aloud.
Vicariously Tanus would make puritans and honest men of all of Thebes. I
wondered how the sailors and the off-duty soldiers would welcome this
interference in their sporting lives. Pharaoh's period of lucidity had been
short-lived. Any fool knows the folly of trying to legislate to man's sexual
foibles. Despite my doubts as to the wisdom of the king's
remedies, still I found myself overtaken by a tremulous excitement. It was
clear that the king had taken serious notice of every issue that Tanus had
brought forward in his declamation. Could he now go on to condemn Tanus for
sedition? I wondered. However, Pharaoh had not finished yet. 'It has been
brought to my notice that certain officials of the state have abused the trust
and faith that I have placed in them. These officials, concerned with the
collection of taxes and the handling of public funds, will be called upon to
account for the monies placed in their care. Those found guilty of embezzlement
and corruption will be summarily sentenced to death by strangulation.' The
populace stirred and sighed with disbelief. Would the king truly seek to
restrain his tax-collectors? Then a single voice at the back of the hall cried
out, 'Pharaoh is great! Long live Pharaoh!' The cry was taken up until the
temple rang with the cheering. It must have been an unusual sound for the king
to hear, that spontaneous applause. Even at the distance that I was from the
throne I could tell that he enjoyed it. His lugubrious expression lightened and
the double crown seemed to weigh less heavily on his head. I was certain that
all of this must improve Tanus' chances of escaping the executioner's noose. When the cheering eventually subsided, the king
went on in his particular style to diminish everything that he had just
achieved. 'My trusted grand vizier, the noble Lord Intef, will be placed in
sole and absolute charge of this investigation of the civil service, with the
full powers of search and arrest, of life and of death vested in him.' There
was just the softest echo of applause to greet this appointment, and I used it
to disguise a sardonic chuckle. Pharaoh was sending a hungry leopard to count
the birds in his chicken-coop. What sport my Lord Intef would have amongst the
royal treasuries, and what a redistribution of the nation's wealth would now
take place with my master doing the counting, and milking the tax-collectors of
their secret hoards of savings! Pharaoh had a rare talent for capsizing or running
the noblest sentiments and intentions on to the rocks with his blundering
helmsmanship. I wondered what other folly he would manage to perpetrate before
he finished speaking that day, and I did not have too long to wait. 'For some time it has been a cause for great
concern to me that a state of lawlessness exists in the Upper Kingdom, placing
the lives and the estates of honest citizens in the gravest jeopardy. I had
made dispositions to deal with this state of affairs at an appropriate time.
However, the matter was recently presented to me in such an untimely and
ill-advised manner as to reek of sedition. It was done under the dispensation
of the festival of Osiris. However, that dispensation does not cover treason or
the crime of blasphemy, an attack on the person and divinity of the king.'
Pharaoh paused significantly. It was clear that he was speaking of Tanus, and I
was once again critical of his judgement. A strong pharaoh would not explain
his motives to the people, or seek to win their approval for his actions. He
would simply have ,pronounced sentence and have had done with the matter. 'I speak, of course, of Tanus, Lord Harrab, who
played the role of the great god Horus at the pageant of Osiris. He has been
arrested for the crime of sedition. My councillors are divided on the subject
of this person's guilt. There are those amongst them who wish him to pay the
supreme penalty—' I saw my Lord Intef, standing below the throne, avert his
gaze for a moment, and it confirmed what I already knew, that he was the chief
amongst those who wished to see Tanus executed '—and there are those who feel
that his declamation at the festival was indeed inspired by divine forces and
that it was not the voice of Tanus, Lord Harrab, that spoke out on these
matters, but the veritable voice of the god Horus. If this latter be the case,
then clearly there can be no culpability to the mortal through whom the god
chose to speak.' The reasoning was fair, but what pharaoh worth the
double crown would deign to explain it to this horde of common soldiers and
sailors and farmers, of tradesmen and labourers and slaves, most of whom were
still suffering from the ill-effects of too much wine and revelry? While I
still pondered this, the king gave a command to the captain of his bodyguard
who stood below the throne. I recognized him as Neter, the officer who had been
sent to arrest Tanus. Neter marched away smartly and returned a moment later,
leading Tanus from the sanctuary at the rear of the hall. My heart leaped at the sight of my friend, and then
with joy and hope I realized that he was unbound, there were no chains on his
ankles. Although he carried no weapons and wore no badge of rank, and was
dressed in a simple white kilt, he walked with his accustomed elastic step and
jaunty grace. Apart from the,healing scab on his forehead where Rasfer had
struck him, he was unmarked. He had not been beaten or tortured, and I felt my
optimism revived. They were not treating him as a condemned man. A moment later all my hopes were dashed to pieces.
Tanus made his obeisance before the throne, but when he rose to his feet again,
Pharaoh looked down upon him severely and spoke in a voice without pity.
'Tanus, Lord Harrab, you stand accused of treason and sedition. I find you
guilty of both these crimes. I sentence you to death by strangulation, the
traditional punishment of the traitor.' As Neter placed the noose of linen rope around
Tanus' neck to mark him as one condemned to die, a groan went up from the
people who watched. A woman wailed, and soon the temple was filled with cries
of lamentation and the ululation of mourning. Never before had such a display
accompanied the passing of die death sentence. Nothing could demonstrate more
clearly the love which the populace bore Tanus. I wailed with them and the
tears broke from my lids and streamed down my face to pour like a waterfall on
to my chest. The bodyguards fell upon the crowd, using the butts
of their long spears in an attempt to beat the mourners into silence. It was in
vain, and I screamed out over their heads, 'Mercy, bountiful Pharaoh! Mercy for
the noble Tanus!' One of the guards struck me on the side of the
head, and I fell to the ground half-stunned, but my cry was taken up. 'Mercy,
we beseech you, oh divine Mamose!' It took all the efforts of the guards to
restore some order, but still a few of the women were sobbing. Only when Pharaoh raised his voice again were we at
last silent, so that every one-of us heard his next pronouncement. "The
condemned man has complained of the lawless state of the kingdom. He has called
upon the throne to stamp out the bands of robbers who ravage the land. The
condemned man has been called a hero, and there are those who say that he is a
mighty warrior. If this be true, then he himself would be better suited than
any other to carry out those measures he demands.' Now the people were confused and silent, and I
struck the tears from my face with my forearm as I strained to catch the next
word. 'Therefore, the sentence of death is deferred for two years. If the
condemned man was truly inspired by the god Horus when he made his seditious
speech, then the god will assist him in the task I now place upon him.' The silence was profound. None of us seemed able to
understand what we were hearing, although hope and despair filled my soul in
equal measure. At a signal from the king one of the ministers of
the crown stepped forward and offered Pharaoh a tray on which lay a tiny blue
statuette. Pharaoh held it aloft and announced, 'I issue to Lord Harrab the
hawk seal of the pharaohs. Under the auspice of the seal he may recruit all the
men and materials of war that he deems necessary to his task. He may employ
whatever means he chooses, and no man may prevent him. For two full years he is
the king's man, and he answers only to the king. At the end of that time, on
the last day of the next festival of Osiris, he will come before the throne
once again, wearing the noose of death around his neck. If he has failed in his
task, the noose will be tightened and he will be strangled to death on the spot
where he now stands. If he has completed his task, then I, Pharaoh Mamose, will
lift the noose from around his neck with my own hands and replace it with a
chain of gold.' Still none of us could speak or move, and we stared
in fascination as Pharaoh made a gesture with the crook and the flail. 'Tanus,
Lord Harrab, I charge you with the task of eradicating from the Upper Kingdom
of Egypt the outlaws and robber bands that are terrorizing this land. Within
two years you will restore order and peace to the Upper Kingdom. Fail me at
your peril.' A roar went up from the congregation, wild as the
sound of storm surf beating on a rocky shore. Though they cheered unthinkingly,
I lamented. The task that Pharaoh had set was too great for any mortal man to
achieve. The cloud of death had not been lifted from over Tanus. I knew that in
two years from today he would die on the very same spot where he now stood so
young and proud and tall. FORLORN AS A LOST WAIF, SHE STOOD alone in the
midst of the multitude, with the river that was her patron god at her back and
before her a sea of faces. The long linen shift that fell to her ankles was dyed
with the juice of shellfish to the colour of the finest wine, a colour that
proclaimed her as a virgin bride. Her hair was loose. It flowed down on to her
shoulders in a soft dark tide that shone in the sunlight as though with an
inner fire. On those shining locks she wore the bridal wreath woven from the
long stems of the water-lily. The blossoms were an unearthly cerulean blue,
with throats of the clearest gold. Her face was as white as freshly ground cornflour.
Her eyes were so large and dark that they reminded me heart-breakingly of the
little girl whom, in years gone by, I had so often woken from the grip of
nightmare, and lit the lamp and sat beside her cot until she slept again. This
time I could not help her, for the nightmare was reality. I could not go to her, for the priests and
Pharaoh's guard surrounded her, as they had all these days past, and they would
not let me near unto her. She was lost to me for ever, my little girl, and I
could not support the thought of it. The priests had built the wedding canopy of river
rushes on the bank above the Nile, and my Lady Lostris waited beneath it for
her bridegroom to come to claim her. At her side stood her father, with the
Gold of Praise glittering around his neck and the smile of the cobra on his lips. The royal bridegroom came at last, to the solemn
beat of the drum and the bleat of gazelle-horn trumpets, and to me this wedding
march was" die saddest sound in all the earth. Pharaoh wore the nemes crown and carried the
sceptre, but behind the pomp and the regalia, he was still a little old man
with a pot-belly and a sad face. I could not help but think of the other
bridegroom who might have stood under the canopy beside my mistress, if only
the gods had been kinder. Pharaoh's ministers and high officials attended him
so closely that my view of my mistress was obscured. Despite the fact that it
was I who had been forced to arrange every detail of it, I was excluded from
the wedding, and I had only glimpses of my Lady Lostris during the ceremony. The high priest of Osiris washed the hands and the
feet of both the bride and the groom with water freshly drawn from the Nile to
symbolize the purity of their union. Then the king broke a morsel from the
ritual corn-loaf and offered it to his young bride as a pledge. I glimpsed my
mistress's face as he placed the crust between her lips. She could neither chew
nor swallow but stood with it ia her mouth as though it were a stone. Once again she was hidden from my view, and it was
only when I heard the crunch of the empty jug that had contained the marriage
wine as the bridegroom shattered it with a blow of his sword, that I knew that
it was done and that Lostris was for ever more beyond the reach of Tanus' arms. The crowd beneath the canopy opened and Pharaoh led
his newest bride forward to the front of the platform to present her to the
people. They showed their love for Lostris in a chorus of adulation that went
on and on until my ears rang and my head swam. I wanted to escape from the press and go to find
Tanus. Although I knew that he had been released from detention and was once
again at liberty, he had not attended the ceremony. He was perhaps the only man
in Thebes who had not come to the riverside today. I knew that wherever he
might be, he stood in as dire need of me as I was of him. The only small
comfort that either of us might find on this tragic day was with each other.
However, I could not tear myself away. I had to see it out to the final
harrowing moment. At last my Lord Intef came forward to take his farewell
of his daughter. As the crowd subsided into silence he embraced her. Lostris was like a corpse in his embrace. Her arms
hung limply at her side, and her face was pale as death. Her father released
her, but kept a grip on her hand as he turned and faced the congregation to
offer the ritual gift to his daughter. Traditionally, this gift was made over
and above the dowry that went directly to the bridegroom. However, only the
nobility observed this custom, which was designed to give the bride an independent
income. 'Now that you go from my house and from my
protection to the house of your husband, I bestow upon you the gift of parting,
that you will remember me always as the father that loved you.' The words were
inappropriate to the circumstances, I thought bitterly. My Lord Intef had never
loved another living soul. However, he continued the ancient formula, as though
the sentiments were his own. 'Ask any boon of me, my beloved child. I will
refuse you nothing on this joyous day.' It was the usual practice for the extent of the
gift to be agreed in private between father and daughter before the ceremony,
hi this case, however, my Lord Intef had told his daughter unequivocally what
she was entitled to ask for. He had done me the honour of discussing the matter
with me the previous day, before .informing Lostris of his decision. 'I don't
want to be extravagant, but on the other hand I do not wish to appear
parsimonious in Pharaoh's eyes,' he had mused. 'Let us say, five thousand gold
rings and fifty feddan of land—not on the riverfront, mind you.' He had, with my prompting, finally decided on five
thousand gold rings and one hundred feddan of prime irrigable land as being a
suitable gift for a royal wedding. On his instruction I had already drawn up
the deed of grant for the land, and set aside the gold from a secret store that
my master kept out of the way of the tax-collectors. The matter was settled. It remained only for
Lostris to give voice to the request before her groom and all the wedding
guests. But she stood pale and silent and withdrawn, seeming neither to see nor
hear what was going on around her. 'Speak up, my child. What is it that you desire
from me?' My Lord Intef s tones of paternal love were becoming strained, and he
shook his daughter's hand to rouse her. 'Come, tell your father what he can do
to make this happy day complete.' My Lady Lostris stirred as though coming awake from
a dreadful dream. She looked about her and her tears welled up and threatened
to break over her quivering eyelids. She opened her mouth to speak, but what
came from her throat was the weak little cry of a wounded bird. She closed her
lips again and shook her head speechlessly. 'Come, child. Speak out.' My Lord Intef was having
difficulty sustaining an expression of paternal affection. 'Name your marriage
gift, and I will give it to you, whatever it is that you desire.' The effort that Lostris had to make was apparent to
me, even though I stood so far from her, but this time when she opened her
mouth her request rang out over our heads, clear as the music of the lyre.
There could not have been a soul in the crowd who did not hear every word of
it. 'For my gift give me the slave, Taita!' My Lord Intef reeled back a pace as though she had
thrust a dagger into his belly. He stared at her aghast, his mouth opening and
closing without a sound escaping. Only he and I knew the value of the gift that
Lostris had demanded. Not even he, with the store of wealth and treasure that
he had garnered over a lifetime, could afford such a payment. He recovered swiftly. His expression was once more
calm and benign, though his lips stretched tight. 'You are too restrained, my
darling daughter. A single slave is no fitting gift for Pharaoh's bride. Such
stinginess is not in my nature. I would rather you accepted a gift of real
value, five thousand rings of gold and—' 'Father, you have always been too generous with me,
but I want only Taita.' My Lord Intef smiled a white smile, white teeth,
white lips and white rage. While he still stared at Lostris I could see that
his mind was racing. I was the most valuable of all his possessions. It
was not simply my wide range of extraordinary talents that made up the full
measure of my worth to him. Even more, it was that I knew intimately every
convoluted thread of the intricate tapestry of his affairs. I knew every
informer and spy in his network, every person whom he had ever bribed and who
had bribed him. I knew which favours were outstanding on each account, which
favours remained to be settled, and which grudges were still to be paid off. I knew all his enemies, a long list; and I knew
those he counted his friends and allies, a much shorter list. I knew where
every nugget of his vast treasure was hidden, who were his bankers and his
agents and his nominees, and how he had concealed the ownership of great tracts
of land and stores of precious metals and gemstones in the legal labyrinth of
deeds and titles and servitudes. All of this was information that would delight
the tax-collectors and cause Pharaoh to revise his opinion of his grand vizier. I doubted that my Lord Intef himself could remember
and trace all his wealth without my assistance. He could not properly order and
control his sprawling, shadowy empire without me, for he had kept himself aloof
and separated from the most unsavoury aspects of it. He had preferred to send
me to take care of those details which, if discovered, might incriminate him. So it was that I knew a thousand dark secrets, and I
knew of a thousand fearful deeds, of embezzlement and extortion, of robbery and
bloodiest murder, all of which taken together could destroy even a man as
powerful as the grand vizier. I was indispensable. He could not let me go. And
.yet, before Pharaoh and the entire population of Thebes, he could not deny
Lostris her request. My Lord Intef is a man full of ire and hatred. I
have seen such rage in him that must have made Seth, the god of anger, start up
and take notice. But I had never seen such fury as now that his own daughter
had him cornered. 'Let the slave Taita stand forward,' he called, and
I saw that it was a ruse for him to gain a respite. I pushed my way as swiftly
as I was able to the foot of the wedding platform, to give him as little time
as possible to plan his next mischief. 'I am here, my lord,' I cried, and he stared down
at me with those deadly eyes. We have been together so long that he can speak
to me with a look almost as clearly as with the spoken word. He stared at me in
silence until my heart was racing and my fingers fluttered with fear, then at
last he said in soft, almost affectionate tones, 'Taita, you have been with me
since you were a child. I have come to regard you as a brother more than as a
slave. Still, you have heard my daughter's request. I am by nature a fair and
kind man. After all the years it would be inhuman of me to discard you against
your wishes. I know that it is unusual for a slave to be given a say in his own
disposal, but then your circumstances are indeed unusual. Choose, Taita. If you
wish to stay in your home, the only home you have ever known, then I cannot
find the heart to send you away. Not even at the request of my own daughter.'
He never took his eyes off me, those terrible yellow eyes. I am not a coward
but I am careful of my safety. I realized that I was staring into the eyes of
death, and I could not find my voice. I tore my gaze from his, and looked towards my Lady
Lostris. There was such appeal there, such loneliness and terror, that my own
safety counted for nothing. I could not desert her" now, not at any price
or under any threat. 'How can a poor slave deny the wish of Pharaoh's
wife? I am ready to do the bidding of my new mistress,' I cried out at the top
of my lungs, and I hoped that my voice had a manly ring to it and was not as
shrill as it sounded in my own ears. 'Come, slave!' my new mistress ordered. 'Take your
place behind me.' As I mounted the platform, I was forced to pass
close to > my Lord Intef. His white, stiff lips barely moved as he spoke:
for my ears alone. 'Farewell, my old darling. You are a dead; man.' I shuddered as though a poisonous cobra had slid
across my path and I hurried to take my place in the retinue of my mistress, as
though I truly believed that I could find safety in her protection. I STAYED CLOSE TO LOSTRIS DURING THE rest of the
ceremony and I waited on her personally at the wedding feast, hovering at her
elbow and trying to make her eat a little of the meats and fine fare that was
spread before her. She was so wan and sickly that I was certain that she had
eaten nothing in the last two days, not since her betrothal and the
condemnation of Tanus. In the end I succeeded in getting her to take a
little watered wine, but that was all. Pharaoh saw her drink and thought that
she was toasting him. He lifted his own gold chalice, and smiled at her over
the rim as he returned the toast, and the wedding guests cheered the couple
delightedly. 'Taita,' she whispered to me as soon as the king's
attention was diverted by the grand vizier who sat at his other hand, 'I fear
that I am going to vomit. I cannot stay here another moment. Please take me
back to my chamber.' It was an impudence and a scandal, and had I not
been able to adopt the role of surgeon, I could never have achieved it, but I
was able to creep on my knees to the king's side, and to whisper to him without
causing an undue comment amongst the wedding guests, most of whom were well
along in wine at this stage. As I grew to know him better, I found that Pharaoh
was a kindly man, and this was the first proof he gave me of it. He listened to
my explanations and then clapped his hands and addressed the guests. 'My bride
will go to her chamber now to prepare for the night ahead,' he told them, and
they leered and greeted the announcement with lewd comment and lascivious
applause. I helped my mistress to her feet, but she was able
to make her obeisance to the king and leave the banquet hall without my support.
In her bedchamber she threw up the wine she had drunk into the bowl that I held
for her, and then she collapsed upon the bed. The wine was all her stomach
contained and my suspicion that she had been starving herself was confirmed. 'I don't want to live without Tanus.' Her voice was
weak, but I knew her well enough to recognize that her will was as strong as
ever. Tanus is alive,' I tried to console her. 'He is
strong and young and will live for another fifty years. He loves you and he
promises to wait for you to the end of time. The king is an old man, he cannot
live for ever—' She sat up on the fur bedcover and her voice became
stern and determined. 'I am Tanus' woman and no other man shall have me. I
would rather die.' 'We all die in the end, mistress.' If only I could
distract her for the first few days of this marriage, I knew I could see her
through. But she understood me too well. 'I know what you are up to, but all your pretty
words will do you no good. I am going to kill myself. I order you to prepare a
draught of poison for me to drink.' 'Mistress, I am not versed in the science of
poison.' It was a forlorn attempt, and she crushed it effortlessly. 'Many is the time that I have seen you give poison
to a suffering animal. Do you not remember your old dog, the one with abscesses
in its ears, and your pet gazelle that was mauled by a leopard? You told me
that the poison was painless, that it was the same as going to sleep. Well, I
want to go to sleep and be embalmed and go on to the other world to wait fpr
Tanus there.’ I had to try other persuasion. 'But what about me,
mistress? You have only this day taken possession of me. How can you abandon
me? What will become of me without you? Have pity on me.' I saw her waver, and
I thought I had her, but she lifted her chin stubbornly. 'You will be all right, Taita. You will always be
all right. My father will take you back gladly after I am dead.' 'Please, my little one,' I used the childhood
endearment in a last attempt to cajole her, 'let us talk of this in the
morning. Everything will be different in the sunlight.' 'It will be the same,' she contradicted me. 'I will
be parted from Tanus, and that wrinkled old man will want me in his bed to do
horrid things to me.' Her voice was raised so that the other members of the
king's harem might hear every word. Fortunately most of them were still at the
wedding feast, but I trembled at the thought of her description of him being
relayed to Pharaoh. Her voice became shriller with the edge of hysteria
in it. 'Mix me the poison draught now, this instant, while I watch you do it. I
order you to do it. You dare not disobey me!' This command was so loud that
even the guards at the outer gates must be able to hear her, and I dared not
argue longer. 'Very well, my lady. I will do it. I must fetch my
chest of medicine from my rooms.' When I returned with the chest under my arm, she
was up from the bed and pacing around her chamber with glittering eyes in that
pale, tragic face. 'I am watching you. Don't try any of your tricks on
me now,' she warned me, as I prepared the draught from the scarlet glass
bottle. She knew that colour warned of the lethal contents. When I handed the bowl to her, she showed no fear,
and paused only to kiss my cheek. 'You have been both father and loving brother
to me. I thank you for this last kindness. I love you, Taita, and I shall miss
you.' She lifted the bowl in both hands as though it were
a wassail cup rather than a fatal potion. 'Tanus, my darling,' she toasted him with it, 'they
shall never take me from you. We shall meet again on the far side!' And she
drained the bowl at a swallow, then dropped it to shatter on the floor. At
last, with a sigh, she fell back upon the bed. 'Come, sit beside me. I am afraid to be alone when
I die.' Taken on her empty stomach, the effect of the
draught was very rapid. She had only time to turn her face to me and whisper,
'Tell Tanus again how much I loved him. Unto the portals of death, and beyond.'
Then her eyes closed and she was gone. She lay so still and pale that for a moment I was
truly alarmed, afraid that I had misjudged the strength of the powder of the
Red Shepenn which I had substituted for the essence of the deadly Datura Pod.
It was only when I held a bronze hand-mirror to her mouth that the clouded
surface reassured me she still breathed. I covered her gently, and tried to
convince myself that in the morning she would be resigned to the fact that she
was still alive, and that she would forgive me. At that moment there was a peremptory knock upon
the door of the outer chamber and I recognized the voice of Aton, the royal
chamberlain, demanding entrance. He was another eunuch, one of the special
brotherhood of the emasculated, so I could count him as a friend. I hurried
through to greet him. 'I have come to fetclTyour little mistress to the
king's pleasure, Taita,' he told me, in high girlish tones so incongruous with
such a large frame. He had been gelded before puberty. 'Is she ready?' 'There has been a small mishap,' I explained, and
led him through to see Lostris for himself. He puffed out his rouged cheeks with consternation
when he saw her condition. 'What can I tell Pharaoh?' he cried. 'He will have
me beaten. I will not do it. The woman is your responsibility. You must answer
to the king, and stand before his wrath.' It was not a duty that I relished, but Aton's
distress was real, and at least I had my medical status to afford me some
protection from the king's frustrated expectations. Reluctantly, I agreed to
accompany him to the royal bedchamber. However, I made sure that there was one
of the older and more reliable slave maids in attendance in my mistress's outer
chamber before I left her alone. Pharaoh had removed his crown and his wig. His head
was shaved as bare and white as an ostrich egg. The effect startled even me,
and I wondered how my mistress would have responded to the sight. I doubt that
it would have raised either her ardour or her opinion of him. The king seemed as startled to see me as I was to
see him. We stared at each other for a moment before I fell to my knees and
made my obeisance. 'What is this, Taita the slave? I sent for
another—' 'Merciful Pharaoh, on behalf of the Lady Lostris I
come to beg your understanding and indulgence.' I launched into a harrowing
description of my Lady Lostris' condition, larding it with obscure medical
terms and explanations that were intended to divert the royal appetite. Aton
stood beside me, nodding in emphatic corroboration of all I had to say. I am sure that it would not have worked with a
younger and more vigorous bridegroom, ready and rearing to get to the business,
but Mamose was an old bull. It would have been impossible to tally all the
lovely women who over the past thirty years or so had enjoyed his services. In
single file they would probably have encircled the city of Thebes of a hundred
gates, possibly more than once. 'Your Majesty,' Aton interrupted my explanations at
last, 'with your permission, I will fetch you another female companion for the
night. Perhaps the little Human with the unusual control of her—' 'No, no,' the king dismissed him. 'There will be
plenty of time for it when the child is recovered from her indisposition. Leave
us now, chamberlain. There is some other matter that I wish to discuss with the
doctor—I mean, with this slave.' As soon as we were alone the king lifted his shift
to display his belly. 'What do you think is the cause of this, doctor?' I
examined the rash that adorned his protuberant paunch, and found it to be an
infestation of the common ringworm. Some of the royal women washed less
frequently than is desirable in our hot climate. I have noted that filth and
the contagious itch go together. The king had probably contracted the infection
from one of them. 'Is it dangerous? Can you cure it, doctor?' Fear
makes commoners of us all. He was deferring to me now as would any other
patient. With his permission, I went to my quarters to fetch
my medicine chest, and when I returned, I ordered him to lie on the ornate gold
and ivory marquetry bed while I massaged an ointment into the inflamed red
circle of skin on his belly. The ointment was of my own concoction and would
heal the rash within three days, I assured him. 'In a great measure you are responsible for the
fact.that I have married this child who is your new mistress,' he told me as I
worked. 'Your ointment may cure my rash, but will your other treatment provide
me with a son?' he demanded. 'These are troubled times. I must have an heir
before I am another year older. The dynasty is in jeopardy.' We physicians are always reluctant to guarantee our
cures, but then so is the lawyer and the astrologer. While I procrastinated he
gave me the escape I was searching for. 'I am no longer a young man, Taita. You are a
doctor and I can tell you this. My weapon has been in many a fierce battle. Its
blade is no longer as keen as once it was. Of late it has failed me when I most
had need of it. Do you have something in that box of yours that would stiffen
the wilting stem of the lily?' 'Pharaoh, I am pleased that you have discussed this
with me. Sometimes the gooVwork in mysterious ways—' we both made the sign to
avert evil before I went on, 'your first congress with my virgin mistress must
be perfectly executed. Any faltering, any bending from our purpose, any failure
to raise on high the royal sceptre of your manhood, will frustrate our efforts.
There will be only one opportunity, the first union must be successful. If we
have to try again there will be the danger of your fathering yet another female.'
My medical grounds for this prognosis were rather insubstantial. Nevertheless,
we both looked grave, he graver than I did. I held up my forefinger. 'Had we made the attempt
tonight, and—' I said no more, but let my forefinger droop suggestively, and
shook my head. 'No, we are fortunate to have been given another chance by the
gods.' 'What must we do?' he demanded anxiously, and I was
silent for a long while, kneeling in deep thought beside his bed. It was difficult not to let my relief and satisfaction
become apparent. Within the first day of my mistress's marriage, I was already
working my way into a position of influence with the king, and I had been
offered a perfect excuse for keeping her maidenhead intact for at least a
little longer, long enough perhaps for me to be able to prepare her for the
brutal shock of her first act of procreation with a man whom she did <w>t
love and who was, indeed, physically distasteful to her. I told myself that
with clever management of the situation, I might be able to draw out this
period of grace indefinitely. 'Yes indeed, Your Majesty, I can help you, but it
will take some time. It will not be as easy as curing this rash.' My mind was
racing. I had to wring every drop out of this sponge. 'We will have to go on to
a very strict diet.' 'No more bull's balls, I beseech you, doctor.' 'I think you have had enough of those now. However,
we will need to warm youf blood and sweeten your generative fluids for the
fateful attempt. Goat's milk, warm goat's milk and honey three times a day, and
of course the special potions I will prepare for you from the horn of the
rhinoceros and the root of the mandrake.' He looked relieved. 'You are certain this will
work?' 'It has never failed before, but there is one other
measure that is essential.' 'What is that?' His relief evaporated, and he sat
up and peered at me anxiously. 'Complete abstinence. We must allow the royal
member to rest and regain its full strength and force once again. You must forsake
your harem and all its pleasures for a while.' I said this with the dogmatic
air of the physician that cannot be gainsaid, for it was the one sure way to
ensure that my Lady Lostris would remain untouched. However, I was worried by
what his reaction would be. He could conceivably have flown into a rage at the
thought of being denied his conjugal pleasures. He might have rejected me, and
I could have lost all the advantage that I had so newly won. But I had to take
the risk for the benefit of my mistress. I had to protect her just as long as I
was able. The king's reaction surprised me. He simply lay
back on his headrest and smiled complacently to himself. 'For how long?' he
asked quite cheerfully, and I was struck by the realization that my strictures
had come as a relief to him. For me, to whom the act of love with a beautiful
woman would always be an unattainable and elusive dream, it took an immense
effort to understand that Pharaoh was content to be relieved of a once
pleasurable duty that, by reason of being so often performed, had become
onerous. There must have been at least three hundred wives,
and concubines in his harem at that time, and some of those Asian women were
notorious for their insatiable appetites. I tried to sympathize with the effort
that it must require to act like a god night after night, and year after year.
The prospect did not daunt me as the actuality seemed to have wearied the king. 'Ninety days,' I said. 'Ninety days?' he repeated thoughtfully. 'Nine
Egyptian weeks of ten days each?' 'At least,' I said firmly. 'Very well.' He nodded without rancour and changed
the subject easily. 'My chamberlain tells me, doctor, that apart from
your medical skills, you are also one of the three most eminent astrologers in
this very Egypt of ours?' I wondered why my friend the chamberlain had
qualified his assertion. For the life of me I could not think who the other two
might be, but I inclined my head modestly. 'He flatters me, Your Majesty, but
perhaps I do have some little knowledge of the heavenly bodies.' 'Cast a horoscope for me!' he ordered, sitting up
eagerly. 'Now?' I asked with surprise. 'Now!' he agreed. 'Why not? For on your orders
there is nothing that I should rather be doing at this moment/ That unexpected
smile of his was really quite endearing, and despite what he meant to Tanus and
my mistress, I found myself liking him. 'I shall have to fetch some of my scrolls from the
palace library.' 'We have all night,' he pointed out. 'Fetch
whatever you need.' The exact time and date of the king's birth were
well documented and I had in the scrolls all the, observations of the movements
of the heavenly bodies made by fifty generations of astrologers before me.
While the king watched avidly, I made the first cast of the royal horoscope,
and before I had half finished it I saw the character of the man, as I had
observed it, perfectly endorsed by his stars. The great red wandering star,
that we know as the eye of Seth, dominated his destiny. It was the star of
conflict and uncertainty, of confusion and war, of sadness and misfortune, and
in the end of violent death. But how could I tell him all these things? I extemporized and put together a scantily veiled
resume of the well-documented facts of his life, and laced these with a few
less well-known details that I had gathered from my spies, one of whom was the
royal chamberlain. Then I followed with the usual assurances of good health and
long life that every client wants to hear. The king was impressed. 'You have all the skills
that your reputation made me expect.' "Thank you, Your Majesty. I am pleased that I
have been able to be of service.'. I began to gather up my scrolls and my
writing instruments preparatory to taking my leave. It was very late by now.
From the darkness beyond the palace walls I had already heard the first
cockerel crow. 'Wait, Taita. I have not given you permission to
leave. You have not told me what I really want to know. Will I have a son and
will my dynasty survive?' 'Alas, Pharaoh, those matters cannot be predicted by
the stars. They can give only the general inclination of your fate, and the
overall direction that your life will take, without making clear such details—' 'Ah, yes,' he interrupted me, 'but there are other
means of seeing into the future, are there not?' I was alarmed by the direction
in which his questions were leading, and I attempted to head him off, but he
was determined. 'You interest me, Taita, and I have made enquiry
about you. You are an adept of the Mazes of Ammon-Ra.' I was distressed. How
had he found this out? Very few knew of this esoteric gift of mine, and I
wanted it to remain thus. However, I could not blatantly deny it, so I remained
silent. 'I saw the Mazes hidden at the bottom of your
medicine chest,' he said, and I was relieved that I had not attempted to deny
my gift and been caught out in the lie. I shrugged with resignation, for I knew
what was coming. 'Work the Mazes for me, and tell me if I am to have
an heir and whether or not my dynasty will survive,' he ordered. A horoscope is one thing; it requires only a
knowledge of the configuration of the stars and their properties. Some little
patience, and the correct procedure will result in a fairly accurate
prediction. A divination by the Mazes of Am-mon-Ra is another matter entirely. It
requires an expenditure of the life-forces, a burning up of something deep
inside the seer that leaves him worn out and exhausted. These days I will go to lengths to avoid having to
exercise this gift. It is true that on rare occasions I can still be persuaded
to work the Mazes, but then for days thereafter I am spiritually and physically
depleted. My Lady Lostris, who knows of this strange power of mine, also knows
of the effect that it has upon me, and she has forbidden me, for my own sake,
to practise it, except occasionally on her behalf. However, a slave cannot deny a king, and with a
sigh I reached for the leather bag in the bottom of my chest that contained the
Mazes. I set the bag aside and prepared a mixture of the herbs that are
necessary to open the eyes of the soul, to enable them to look into the future.
I drank the potion, and then waited until the familiar but dreaded sensation of
rising out of my own body assailed me. I felt dreamy and far from reality as I
brought out the leather bag which contained the Mazes. The Mazes of Ammon-Ra consist of ten ivory discs.
Ten is the mystical number of the greatest potency. Each disc represents a
single facet of human existence, from birth to death and the hereafter. With my
own hands I had carved the symbols on the face of each of the Mazes. Each one
was a tiny masterpiece. By constantly handling and breathing upon them over the
years I had endowed them with part of my own life-force. I poured them from the bag and began to fondle
them, concentrating all my powers upon them. Soon they began to feel warm as
living flesh to my touch, and I experienced the familiar sensation of depletion
as my own strength flowed.from me into the ivory discs. I arranged the Mazes
face-down in two random stacks and invited Pharaoh to take up each pile in
turn, to rub them between his fingers and to concentrate all his attention upon
them at the same time as he repeated his questions aloud: 'Will I have a son?
Will my dynasty survive?' I relaxed completely and opened my soul to allow
the spirits of prophecy to enter. The sound of his voice began to penetrate
into my soul, deeper and deeper with each repetition, like missiles from a
slingshot striking upon the same spot. I began to sway slightly where I sat, the same way
that the cobra dances to the flute of the snake-charmer. The drug took its full
effect. I felt as though my body had no weight to it and that I was floating in
air. I spoke as if from a great distance and my voice echoed strangely in my
own head, as though I sat in a cavern below the surface of the earth. I ordered the king to breathe upon each stack and
then to divide it into halves, setting aside one half and retaining the other.
Again and again I made him split each pile and then combine the remainder,
until he was left with only two of the coin-shaped Mazes. For the last time he breathed upon them and then at
my instruction placed one in each of my hands. I held them tightly and pressed
them to my breast. I could feel my heart pounding against my clenched fists as
it absorbed the influence of the Mazes. I closed my eyes and from the darkness saw shapes
begin to emerge, and strange sounds filled my ears. There was no form or
coherence to them, it was all confusion. I felt dizzy, and my senses blurred. I
felt myself grow lighter still, until I seemed to float in space. I allowed
myself to be carried upwards as though I were a blade of dry grass caught in a
whirlwind, one of those dust devils of the Saharan summer. The sounds in my head became clearer, and the dark
images firmed. 'I hear a new-born infant cry.' My voice was
distorted, as though my palate had been riven at birth. 'Is it a boy?' Pharaoh's question throbbed in my
head, so that I felt rather than heard it. Then slowly my vision began to harden, and I looked
down a long tunnel through the darkness to a light at the far end. The ivory
Mazes in my hands were hot as embers from the hearth and seared the flesh of my
palms. In the nimbus of light at the end of the tunnel I
saw a child, lying in the bloody puddle of its own birth-waters, with the fat
python of the placenta still coiled upon its belly. 'I see a child,' I croaked. 'Is it a boy?' Pharaoh demanded from out of the
surrounding darkness. The infant wailed and kicked both legs in the air,
and I saw rising from between the chubby thighs a pale finger of flesh
surmounted by a cap of wrinkled skin. 'A boy,' I confirmed, and I felt an unexpected
tenderness towards this phantom of my mind, as though it were truly flesh and
blood. I reached out to it with my heart, but the image faded, and the birth
cry receded and was lost in the blackness. "The dynasty? What will become of my line?
Will it endure?' The king's voice reached me, and then was lost in a cacophony
of other sounds that filled my head—the sound of battle trumpets, the shouts of
men in mortal conflict, and the ring of bronze. I saw the sky above me, and the
air was dark with flights of arrows arcing overhead. 'War! I see a mighty battle that will change the
shape of the world,' I cried to make myself heard above the sounds of conflict
that filled my head. 'Will my line survive?' The king's voice was
frantic, but I paid it no heed, for there was a mighty roaring in my ears, like
the sound of the khamsin wind, or the waters of the Nile boiling through the great
cataracts. I saw a strange yellow cloud that obscured the horizon of my vision,
and the cloud was shot through with flashes of light, which I knew were the
reflection of the sun from weapons of war. 'What of my dynasty?' Pharaoh's voice tugged at my mind,
and the vision faded. There was a silence in my head and I saw a tree standing
upon the bank of the river. It was a great acacia in full leaf, and its
branches were heavy with fruit pods. On the topmost branch was perched a hawk,
the royal hawk, but even as I watched, the hawk changed shape and colour. It
was transformed into the'double crown of Egypt,' red and white, the papyrus and
the lotus of the two kingdoms entwined. Then, before my eyes, the waters of the
Nile rose and fell, and rose and fell again. Five times in all I saw the waters
flood. While still I stared with burning eyes, abruptly
the sk;; above the tree darkened with flying insects, and a dens« cloud of
locusts descended upon the tree. They covered ii completely. When they rose
again the tree was devastate* and bare of the last trace of green. Not a leaf
remained on the dry brown twigs. Then the dead tree toppled and fell
ponderously to earth. The fall shattered the trunk and thci crown was smashed
into pieces. The fragments turned to dust and were blown away on the wind.
Nothing remained but the wind and the driven sands of the desert. 'What is it that you see?' Pharaoh demanded, but it
all faded and I found myself once more seated on the floor o> the king's bedchamber.
I was gasping for breath, as though I had run a great distance, and salt sweat
scalded my eyesi and poured down my body in rivulets to soak the linen o) my
kilt and to form a pool on the tiles beneath me. I was shaking with a burning
fever and there was that familiar sicM and heavy feeling in the pit of my
stomach that I knew would be with me for days to come. Pharaoh was staring at me and I realized what a
haggard: and dreadful sight I presented to him. 'What did you see?' he
whispered. 'Will my line survive?' I could not tell him the truth of my vision, so I
invented: another to satisfy him. 'I saw a forest of great trees thali reached
to the horizon of my dream. There was no end ta their number and on top of each
tree there was a crown, the red and the white crown of the two kingdoms.' Pharaoh sighed and covered his eyes with his hands
fon a while. We sat in silence, he in the release that my lie had) given him,
and I in sympathy for him. At last I lied softly. 'The forest that I saw was
the line: of your descendants,' I whispered, to spare him. 'They reachi to the
boundaries of time, and each of them wears the crowni of Egypt.' He uncovered his eyes, and his gratitude and his
joy were; pathetic to watch. 'Thank you, Taita. I can see how the: divination
has taxed your strength. You may go now andl rest. Tomorrow the court will sail
for my palace on Elephantine Island. I will have a galley set aside for the
safe passage of you and your mistress. Guard her with your life, for she is the
vessel that contains the seeds of my immortality.' I was so weak that I had to use the frame of the
bed to lift myself to my feet. I tottered to the door and steadied myself
agaiiist the jamb. However, I was not so weakened that I could not think of my
duty to my mistress. 'There is the matter of the marriage sheet. The
populace will expect to have it displayed,' I reminded him. 'Both your
reputation and that of my mistress is at stake.' 'What do you suggest, Taita?' This soon he was
relying on me. I told him what must be done, and he nodded. 'See to it!' Carefully I folded the sheet that covered the royal
bed. It was of the finest linen, white as the high cirrus clouds of summer,
embroidered with the rare silk thread that the trade caravans occasionally
bring in from the East. I carried the folded sheet with me when I left the
king's bedchamber and made my way back through the still dark and silent palace
to the harem. My mistress was sleeping like a dead woman, and I
knew that with the amount of the-Red Shepenn I had given her, she would sleep
the day away and would probably only wake that evening. I sat beside her bed
for a while. I felt exhausted and depressed for the Mazes had drained my soul.
The images they had evoked still troubled me. I felt certain that the infant I
had seen was that of my mistress, but then how could the rest of my vision be
explained? There seemed to be no answer to the riddle, and I set the thought
aside for I still had work to do. Squatting beside Lostris' bed, I spread the
embroidered sheet upon the floor. The blade of my dagger was sharp enough to
shave the hair from my forearm. I picked out one of the blue rivers of blood
beneath the smooth skin on the inside of my wrist, and I pricked it with the
point of the dagger and let the dark slow blood trickle on to the sheet. When I
was satisfied with the extent of the stain, I bound up my wrist with a strip of
linen to staunch the bleeding, and bundled the soiled sheet. The slave girl was still in attendance in the outer
chamber. I ordered that Lostris was to be allowed to sleep undisturbed. Knowing that she would be well cared for, I was
content to leave her, and climb the ladder to the top of the outer wall of the
harem. The dawn was only just breaking, but already an
inquisitive crowd of old women and loiterers had gathered below the walls. They
looked up expectantly when I appeared. I made a show of shaking out the sheet before I
draped it over the ramparts of the outer wall. The bloodstain in the centre of
the cloud-white ground was the shape of a flower, and the crowd buzzed with
gossip at this badge of my mistress's virginity and her bridegroom's virility. At the rear of the crowd stood a figure taller than
those around him. His head was covered by a striped woolen shawl. It was only
when he threw this back and exposed his face and his head of red-gold hair that
I recognized him. 'Tanus!' I shouted. 'I must speak to you.' He looked up at me upon the wall, and his eyes were
filled with such pain as I wished never to see again. That stain upon the sheet
had destroyed his life. I also had known the agony of lost love and remembered
every detail of it even after all the long years. Tanus' heart wound was fresh
and bleeding still, more agonizing than any hurt that he had received on the
battlefield. He needed my help now, if he were to survive it.
'Tanus! Wait for me.' He threw the shawl over his head, covering his
face, and he turned from me. Unsteady as a drunkard, he stumbled away. 'Tanus!' I shouted after him. 'Come back! I must
talk to you.' He did not look round, but quickened his pace. By the time that I had climbed down from the wall
and run out of the main gates, he had disappeared into the maze of alleys and
mud huts of the inner city. I SEARCHED FOR TANUS HALF THE MORNING, but his
quarters were deserted and nobody had seen him in any of his customary haunts. At last I had to abandon the search, and to make my
wajfcback to my own rooms in the quarters of the slave boys. The royal flotilla
was preparing to sail for the south. I had still to assemble and pack my
possessions if my mistress and I were to be ready for the departure. I forced
aside the sense of gloom that the Mazes and my glimpse of Tanus had left me,
and I set about bundling up my possessions and breaking up the only home that I
had ever known. My animals seemed to sense that something untoward
was happening. They fretted and chirped and whined, each trying in his own way
to attract my attention. The wild birds hopped and fluttered on the paved
terrace outside, while in the corner nearest my bed, my beloved Saker falcons
stretched their wings and raised the feathers along their backs, and screeched
at me from their perches. The dogs and the cats and the tame gazelle crowded
around my legs, trying to brush against me, and hindered my efforts to pack my
possessions. In exasperation I noticed the jug of soured goat's
milk beside my bed. It is one of my favourite drinks, and the slave boys make
certain that the jug is always refilled. My animals also enjoy the thickened
milk, so to distract them I carried the jug out on to the terrace and filled
their clay drinking-bowls. They crowded around the bowls, pushing and shoving
each other, and I left them and went back to my task, closing the awnings of
rush matting to keep them out. It is curious how many possessions even a slave can
gather about him over a lifetime. The boxes and bundles were piled high against
one wall before I was at last finished. By this time my mood of depression and
weariness was almost prostrating, but I was still sufficiently alert to be
aware of the silence. I stood for a while in the centre of my room, listening
uneasily. The only sound was the jingle of the tiny bronze bells on the jesses
of my female falcon where she sat in the far corner and watched me with that intent,
implacable gaze of the raptor. The tiercel, smaller but more handsome than she,
was asleep on his own perch in the other corner, with the soft leather hood of
the rafter covering his eyes. None of my other pets made a sound. Not one of
the cats mewed or hissed at the dogs, nor did the wild birds chirrup or sing,
none of my puppies growled or tumbled over each other in boisterous play. I went to the rash awning and drew it aside. The sunlight
burst into the room and blinded me for a moment. Then my vision returned and I
cried out with horror. They were scattered upon the terrace and down into the
garden every bird and animal. They lay in the abandoned attitudes of death, every
one of them where he had fallen. I rushed out to them, calling my favourites by
name, kneeling to pick one of them up in my armsi and hugging the slack warm
body as I searched for signs of life., There was no flicker of it in any of
them, though I went to eachi of them. The birds were small and light in my
hand, their mar-velous plumage undimmed by death. I thought that my already heavy heart must now
burst: with the sheer weight of my grief. I knelt on the terrace with my family
scattered around me and I wept. It was some time before I could bring myself to
think about the cause of this tragedy. Then I stood up and went to one of the
empty bowls that lay on the tiles. They had licked it clean, but I sniffed at
it to try and fathom the nature of the poison that had been intended for me.
The odour of soured milk disguised any other smell; all I knew was that it had
been swift and deadly. I wondered who had placed the jug beside my bed,
but it did not matter whose hand had carried the vessel to me. I knew with
utter certainty who had given the order for it. 'Farewell, my old darling. You
are a dead man,' Lord Intef had told me, and he had not waited long to
transform the words into the deed. The anger that seized me was a form of madness. It
was aggravated by my unsteady state and sombre mood. I found that I was shaking
with a rage that I had never known before. I drew the little dagger from my
belt and before I realized what I was doing, I was rushing down the steps of
the terrace with the naked blade in my hand. I knew that at this time of the
morning Intef would be in his water-garden. I could no longer bear to think of
him as my Lord Intef. The memory of every outrage he had ever visited upon me,
every agony and every humiliation, was bright and clear in my mind. I was going
to kill him now, stab him a hundred times through that cruel and evil heart. I was in sight of the gate to the water-garden
before I regained my sanity. There were half a dozen guards at the gate, and
there would be as many more beyond. I would never get within dagger-thrust of
the grand vizier before they cut me down. I forced my flying feet to check and
turn back. I slipped the dagger into the jewelled leather sheath, and brought
my breathing under control. I walked slowly back to the terrace and gathered up
the pathetic bodies of my pets. I had planned to plant a row of sycamore trees
along the border of my garden. The holes to take them had already been dug. The
trees would never be planted now that I was leaving Kamak, and the pits would
serve as graves for my beloved creatures. It was the middle of the afternoon
before I had filled the last grave, but my rage was unabated. If I could not
yet have my full vengeance, at least I could give myself a foretaste of it. There was still a little of the sour milk left in
the jug beside my bed. I held the jug in my hands and tried to think of some
way in which I could get it to the grand vizier's kitchens. It would be so
fitting to pay him his own vile coin, although I knew in my heart that the idea
was futile. Lord Intef was far too cunning to be taken so easily. I myself had
helped him devise the system he used to keep himself secure from poison and
assassination. He could not be reached without much careful planning. What was
more, he would be especially on his guard now. I would have to be patient, but
that was impossible. Even if I could not kill him yet, I could exact some
lesser payment as a deposit against what I was determined must follow. Still carrying the fatal jug, I slipped out of one
of the side-doors of the boys' quarters into the street. I did not have to go
far to find a milkman surrounded by his flock of nanny-goats. While I waited he
stripped the rich milk from the swollen udders of one of them, topping the jug
to the brim. Whoever had prepared the poison had used enough to murder half the
citizens of Karnak. I knew that more than sufficient remained in the jug for my
purpose. One of the grand vizier's bodyguards loafed at the
door to Rasfer's chamber. The fact that he had him under guard proved to me
that Rasfer was still valuable to Lord Intef, and the loss of his personal
lieutenant would annoy if not seriously discommode him.
' The guard recognized me and waved me into the
sickroom that smelled like a sty. Rasfer lay on his filthy bed, basting in his
own sweat. However, I could tell at once that my surgery had been successful,
for he opened his eyes and cursed me weakly. He must also be so certain of his
own eventual recovery that he need no longer toady to me. 'Where have you been, you ball-less freak?' he
growled at me, hardening my resolve and ridding me of the last traces of any
pity that I might have felt for him. 'I have been in agony ever since you
drilled into my skull. What kind of physician are you—' There was much more in this style, which I
pretended to ignore as I unwound the soiled bandage from around his head. My
interest was purely academic as I examined the small wound that the trepan had
left in his scalp. It was another perfectly executed operation, and I felt a
certain professional regret that it would be wasted. 'Give me something for the pain, eunuch!' Rasfer
tried to seize the front of my tunic, but I was too quick for him and stepped
back out of his reach. I made a fuss of shaking a few crystals of harmless
salt from a glass vial into his drinking-bowl, and then topped it up with milk
from my jug. 'If the pain becomes too bad, this will relieve
it,' I told him as I set the bowl near to his hand. Even at this stage, I could
not bring myself to hand it to him directly. He heaved himself up on one elbow and reached for
the bowl to guzzle it down. Before his fingers touched it, I pushed it out of
his reach with my foot. At the moment I thought that this was merely a desire
to prolong the anticipation, and I felt satisfaction at his distress as he
whined at me, 'Good Taita, give me the potion. Let me drink. This pain in my
head will drive me mad.' 'First let's talk a while, good Rasfer. Did you
hear that the Lady Lostris asked for me as her parting gift from Lord Intef?' Even in his pain, he grinned at me. 'You are a fool
if you think he will let you go. You are a dead man.' "The very words Lord Intef used. Will you
mourn for me, Rasfer? Will you weep for me when I am gone?' I asked softly, and
he began to chuckle, then broke it off and glanced at the bowl. 'In my own way, I have always been rather fond of
you,’ he grunted. 'Now let me have the bowl.' 'How fond of me were you when you castrated me?' I
asked, and he stared up at me. 'Surely you do not still bear a grudge for that? It
was long ago, and besides, I could not disobey the orders of Lord Intef. Be
reasonable, Taita, let me have the bowl.' 'You laughed as you cut me. Why did you laugh? Did
you enjoy it so much?' He shrugged and then winced at the pain that the
movement caused him. 'I am a jovial man. I always laugh. Come now, old friend,
say you forgive me and let me have the bowl.' I nudged it towards him with my foot. He reached
out and seized it, his movements still uncoordinated. A few drops slopped over
the rim as he raised it greedily to his mouth. I didn't realize what I was about to do, until I
had leapt forward and struck the bowl out of his hands. It hit the floor
without shattering and rolled into the corner, splashing milk up on to the
wall. Rasfer and I stared at each other. I was appalled
by my own stupidity and my weakness. If ever a man deserved a death by the
agony of poison, it was this one. But then I saw again the contorted bodies of
my pets strewn across the terrace, and I knew why I had not been able to allow
Rasfer to drink. Only a fiend could commit such an act. I have too high a
regard for myself ever to descend to the ignominy of the poisoner. I saw understanding dawn in Rasfer's bloodshot
eyes. 'Poison,' he whispered. 'The bowl was poisoned.' 'It was sent to me by Lord Intef.' I don't know why
I told him this. Perhaps I was trying to excuse myself for the atrocity that I
had almost committed. I don't know why I was behaving so strangely. Maybe it
was still the aftereffects of working the Mazes. I staggered slightly as I
turned for the door. Behind me Rasfer began to laugh, softly at first
and then louder, until great gusty bellows of laughter seemed to shake the
walls. 'You are a fool, eunuch,' he roared after me as I
ran. 'You should have done it. You should have killed me, for now as surely as
I have a hole between my buttocks, I will kill you.' As I had expected, when at last I returned to her
chamber my Lady Lostris was still asleep. I settled at the foot of her bed,
intending to wait for her to wake on her own. However, the rigours and the
exertions of the past day and night had been too much for me. I slumped down
and fell asleep, curled like a puppy on the tiles. I WOKE UNDER ATTACK. SOMETHING struck the side of
my head such a painful blow that I was on my feet before I was properly awake.
The next blow took me across the shoulder and stung like the bite of a hornet. 'You cheated me!' my Lady Lostris screamed at me.
'You did not let me die.' She swung the fan again. It was a formidable weapon,
the bamboo handle was as long as twice the span of my arms, and the comb at its
head that held the fan of ostrich feathers was of solid silver. Fortunately she
was still groggy from the drug and from oversleeping, and her aim was erratic.
I ducked under the blow, and the momentum of it swung her around so that she
collapsed on the bed again. She dropped the fan and burst into tears. 'I wanted
to die. Why did you not let me die?' It was some time before I could approach her, and
put one arm around her to comfort her. 'Did I hurt you, Taita?' she asked. 'I
have never beaten you before.' 'Your first attempt was a very good one,' I
congratulated her ruefully. 'In fact you are so good at it that I do not think
you need practise it further.' Theatrically I rubbed the side of my head, and
she smiled through her tears. 'Poor Taita. I do treat you so badly. But you did
deserve it. You cheated me. I wanted to die and you disobeyed me.' I saw it was
time to change the subject. 'Mistress, I have the most remarkable news for you.
But you must promise to tell no one of it, not even your maids.' Not since she
had first learned to talk had she been able to resist a secret, but then what
woman can? The promise of one had always been enough to distract her, and it
worked yet again. Even with her heart broken and the threat of
suicide hanging over her, she sniffed back the last of her tears and ordered,
'Tell me!' Recently, I had accumulated a good store of secrets
to choose from, and I paused for a moment to make my selection. I would not
tell her of the poisoning of my pets, of course, nor of my glimpse of Tanus. I
needed something to cheer her rather than to depress her further. 'Last night I went to Pharaoh's bedchamber and I
spoke to him for half the night.' The tears rose to the surface of her eyes once
more, 'Oh, Taita, I hate him. He's an ugly old man. I don't want to have to—' I wanted no more in that vein, in moments she would
be weeping again, so I hurried on, 'I worked the Mazes for him.' Instantly I
had her complete attention. My Lady Los-tris is totally fascinated by my powers
of divination. If it were not for the deleterious effect that the Mazes have
upon my health, she would make me work them every single day. 'Tell me! What did you see?' She was riveted. No thought
of suicide now, all sadness forgotten. She was still so young and artless that
I felt ashamed of my trickery, even though it was for her own good. 'I had the most extraordinary visions, mistress. I
have never had such clear images, such depths of sight—' Tell me! I declare I will die of impatience if you
don't tell me immediately.' 'First you must swear secrecy. Not another soul
must ever know what I saw. These are affairs of state and dire consequence.' 'I swear. I swear.' 'We cannot take these matters lightly—' 'Get on with it, Taita. You are teasing me now. I
order you to tell me this very moment or, or,' she groped for a threat to
coerce me, 'or I shall beat you again.' 'Very well. Listen to my vision. I saw a great tree
upon the bank of the Nile. Upon the summit of the tree was the crown of Egypt.' 'Pharaoh! The tree was the king.' She saw it at
once, and I nodded. 'Go on, Taita. Tell me the rest of it.' 'I saw the Nile rise and fall five times.' 'Five years, the passing of five years!' She
clapped her hands with excitement. She loves to unravel the riddles of my
dreams. "Then the tree was devoured by locusts, and
thrown down and turned to dust.' She stared at me, unable to utter the words, so I
spoke for her. 'In five years Pharaoh will be dead, and you will be a free
woman. Free from your father's thrall. Free to go to Tanus, with no man to stop
you.' 'If you are lying to me, it will be too cruel to
bear. Please say it is true.' 'It is true, my lady, but there is more. In the
vision, I saw a new-born babe, a boy child, a son. I felt my love go out to the
infant, and I knew that you were the mother of the child.' 'The father, who was the father of my baby? Oh,
Taita, tell me please.' 'In the dream I knew with absolute certainty that
the father was Tanus.' This was the first deviation from the truth that I had
allowed myself, but once again I had the consolation of believing that it was
for her benefit. She was silent for a long time, but her face shone
with an inner glow that was all the reward I could ever ask for. Then at last
she whispered, 'I can wait for five years. I was prepared to wait all eternity
for him. It will be hard, but I can wait five years for Tanus. You were right
not to let me die, Taita. It would have been an offence in the face of the
gods.' My relief buoyed me up, and I now felt more
confident that I would be able to steer her safely through all that lay ahead. AT DAWN THE FOLLOWING DAY THE royal flotilla sailed
south from Karnak. As the king had promised, my Lady Lostris and all her
entourage were on board one of the small, fast galleys of the southern
squadron. I sat with my mistress on the cushions under the awning
on the poop that the captain had arranged especially for her. We looked back at
the lime-washed buildings of the city shining in the first tangerine tints of
the rising sun. 'I cannot think where he has gone.' She was
fretting over Tanus as she had a score of times since we had set. sail. 'Did
you look everywhere for him?' 'Everywhere,' I confirmed. 'I spent half the
morning scouring the inner city and the docks. He has disappeared. But I left
your message with Kratas. You can be sure Kratas will deliver it to him.' 'Five years without him, will they ever pass?' THE VOYAGE UP-RIVER PASSED PLEASANTLY enough in
long, leisurely days spent sitting on the poop-deck in conversation with my
mistress. We discussed every detail of our changed circumstances in great
depth, and examined all that we might expect and hope for in the future. I
explained to her alHhe complexities of life at the court, the precedent and the
protocol. I traced for her the hidden lines of power and influence, and I
listed all those whom it would be in our interest to cultivate and those whom
we could safely ignore. I explained to her the issues of the day, and how
Pharaoh stood on each of them. Then I went on to discuss with her the feeling
and the mood of the citizenry. In a large measure I was indebted to my friend
Aton, the royal chamberlain, for all this intelligence. It seemed that over the
last dozen years every ship that had come downriver from Elephantine Island to
Karnak had carried a letter from him to me full of these fascinating details,
and on its return to Elephantine Island had carried a golden token of my
gratitude back to my friend, Aton. I was determined that we would soon be at the
centre of the court and in the mainstream of power. I had not trained my
mistress all these years to see the weapons that I had placed in her armoury
rust with disuse. The sym of her many accomplishments and her talents was
already formidable, but I was patiently adding to it each day. She had a keen
and restless mind. Once I had helped her to throw off theblack mood that had
threatened to destroy her, she was, as always, open to my instruction. Every
chance I had, I fired up her ambition and her eagerness to take up the role I
had planned for her. I soon found that one of the most effective means
of enlisting her attention and cooperation was to suggest that all this would
be to the eventual benefit and advantage of Tanus. 'If you have influence at
court, you will be better able to protect him,' I pointed out to her. "The
king has set him an almost impossible task to fulfil. Tanus will need us if he
is to succeed, and if he fails only you will be able to save him from the
sentence that the king has placed upon him.' 'What can we do to help him carry out his task?' At
the mention of Tanus I immediately had all her attention. 'Tell me truly, will
any man be able to stamp out the Shrikes? Is it not too difficult a mission,
even for a man like Tanus?' The bandits that terrorized the Upper Kingdom
called themselves the Shrikes, after those fierce birds. Our Nile shrike is
smaller than a dove; a handsome little creature with a white chest and throat
and a black back and cap, it plunders the nests of other birds and makes a
grisly display of the pathetic carcasses of its victims by hanging them on the
thorns of the acacia tree. Its vernacular name is the Butcher Bird. In the beginning the bandits had used it as a
cryptic name to conceal their identity and to hide their existence, but since
they had grown so strong and fearless, they had adopted it openly and often
used the black and white feather of the Butcher Bird as their emblem. In the beginning they would leave the feather on
the doorway of a home they had robbed or on the corpse of one of their victims.
But in those days, so bold and so organized had they become that at times they
might send a feather to an intended victim as a warning. In most cases that was
all that was necessary to make the victim pay over a half of all he owned in
the world. That was preferable to having all of it pillaged, and having his
wives and daughters carried off and raped, and he and his sons thrown into the
burning ruins of then- home to boot. 'Do you think it possible that even with the power
of the hawk seal Tanus will be able to carry out the king's mission?' my mistress
repeated. 'I have heard that all the bands of the Shrikes in the whole of the
Upper Kingdom are controlled by one man, someone that they call the Akh-Seth,
the brother of Seth. Is that true, Taita?' I thought for a moment before I answered. I could
not yet tell her all I knew of the Shrikes, for if I did so, then I would be
forced to reveal how such knowledge had come into my possession. At this stage
that would not be much to her advantage, nor to my credit. There might be a
time for these disclosures later. 'I have also heard that rumour,' I agreed
cautiously. 'It seems to me that if Tanus were to find and crush this one man,
Akh-Seth, then the Shrikes would crumble away. But Tanus will need help that
only I can give him.' She looked at me shrewdly. 'How can you help him?'
she demanded. 'And what do you know about this business?' She is quick, and hard to deceive. She sensed at
once that I was hiding something from her. I had to retreat swiftly and to play
on her love of Tanus and her trust in me. 'For Tanus' sake, ask me no more now. Only give me
your permission to do what I can to help him complete the task that Pharaoh has
set him.' 'Yes, of course we must do all in our power. Tell
meliow I can help.' 'I will stay with you at the court on Elephantine Island
for ninety days, but then you must give me leave to go to him—' 'No, no,' she interrupted me, 'if you can be of
help to Tanus, you must go immediately.' 'Ninety days,' I repeated stubbornly. That was the period
of grace that I had won for her. Although I was torn between these two dear
children of mine, my first duty was to my mistress. I knew that I could not leave her alone at the
court without a friend or a mentor. I also knew that I had to be with her when
the king finally sent for her in the night. 'I cannot leave you yet, but don't wony. I have
left a message for Tanus with Kratas. They will be expecting me, and I have
explained to Kratas all that has to be done before I arrive back at Kamak.' I
would not tell her more, and there can be few as obtuse or as evasive as I can
be when I set myself to it. The flotilla sailed only during the day. Neither
the navigational skills of Admiral Nembet nor the comfort of the king and his
court would stand up to a night passage, so every evening we moored and a
forest of hundreds of tents sprang up on the river-bank. Always the royal
stewards chose the most congenial spot to pitch camp, usually in a grove of
palm trees or in the lee of a sheltering hillock, with a temple or a village
nearby from which we were able to draw supplies. The entire court was still in festive mood. Every
camp was treated as a picnic. There was dancing and feasting in the light of
the bonfires, while in the shadows the courtiers intrigued and flirted. Many an
alliance both political and carnal was struck during those balmy nights,
perfumed with the fruity aromas of the irrigated lands along the river and the
spicier desert airs blown in from further afield. I used every moment to the best advantage of both
my mistress and myself. Of course she was now one of the royal ladies, but
there were already several hundred of those, and she was still a very junior
wife. Lord Intef's foresight might change her future status, but only if she
bore Pharaoh a son. In the meantime it was up to me. Almost every evening after we had gone ashore,
Pharaoh sent for me, ostensibly to see to the cure of his ringworm, but in
reality t& review the preparations for begetting a male heir to the double
crown. While he watched with interest, I prepared my tonic for potency and
virility from grated rhinoceros horn and mandrake root, which I mixed with warm
goat's milk and honey. When he had taken this, I examined the royal member and
was delighted for the sake of my mistress to find that it possessed neither the
length nor the girth that one would have expected from a god. I was of the
opinion that my mistress, even in her virgin state, would be able to cope with
its modest dimensions without too much discomfort. Naturally I would do all in
my power to avoid the dread moment, but if I was unable to stave it off, then I
was determined to ease the passage to womanhood for her. Having found the king to be healthy if unremarkable
in these regions, I recommended a poultice of cornflour mixed with olive oil
and honey to be applied to the royal member at night before retiring, and then
I went on to deal with the ringworm. To the king's intense gratification my
ointment cured the condition within the three days that I had promised, and my
already considerable reputation as a physician was enhanced. The king boasted
of my accomplishment to his council of ministers, and within days I was in huge
demand throughout the court. Then, when it was known that I was not only a
healer but also an astrologer whom even the king consulted, my popularity
became boundless. Every,evening there came to our tents a succession
of messengers bearing expensive gifts for my mistress from this lady or that
lord and begging that she allow me to visit them for a consultation. We acceded
to only those with whom we wished to make better acquaintance. Once I was in
the tent of a powerful and noble lord, he with his kilt up around his waist
while I examined his haemorrhoids, it was a simple matter to extol my mistress
and bring her many virtues to the attention of my patient. The other ladies of the harem soon discovered that
my Lady Lostris and I sang a beautiful duet together, and that we could compose
the most intriguing riddles and tell even more amusing stories. We were in
demand throughout the court, and especially amongst the children of the harem.
This gave me special pleasure, for if there is anything I love more than
animals, it is small children. Pharaoh, who was responsible for our popularity in
the first place, soon had the increase of it reported to him. This further
spurred his interest in my mistress, if it were not already sufficiently
intense. At sailing time on many mornings she was summoned on board the royal
barge to spend the day in the king's company, while most evenings, at the royal
invitation, my mistress dined at the king's board, and regaled him and the
assembled company with her natural wit and childlike grace. Of course I was
always in discreet attendance. When the king made no move to send for her in
the night in order to force her to submit to those horrible but rather hazy
terrors she had conjured up,' her feelings towards him began to moderate. Beneath his glum exterior Pharaoh Mamose was a kind
and decent man. My Lady Lostris soon realized this, and like me, she began to
grow quite fond of him. Before we reached Elephantine Island she was treating
him like a favourite uncle, and quite unaffectedly would sit on his knee to
tell him a story, or would play throwing-sticks with him on the deck of the
royal barge, both of them flushed with the exertion and laughing like children.
Aton confided to me that he had never seen the king so gay. All this was watched and noted by the court, who
very soon recognized her as the king's favourite. Soon there were other
visitors to our tents in the evening, those who had a petition which they
wished my mistress to bring to Pharaoh's notice. The gifts they proffered were
even more valuable than those offered for my services. My mistress had rejected her father's gift in
favour of a single slave, so she had begun the journey southwards as a pauper,
dependent on my own modest savings. However, before the voyage was done she had
accumulated not only a comfortable fortune, but also a long list of favours
owed by her new rich and powerful friends. I kept a careful accounting of all
these assets. I am not so conceited that I should pretend that my
Lady Lostris would not have achieved this recognition without my help. Her
beauty and her cleverness and her sweet, warm nature must have made her a
favourite in any circumstances. I only suggest that I was able to make it
happen a little sooner and a little more certainly. Our success brought with it some drawbacks. As
always, there was jealousy from those who felt themselves displaced in
Pharaoh's favour, and there was also the matter of Pharaoh's mounting carnal
interest in my mistress. This was aggravated by the period of abstinence that I
had enforced upon him. One evening in his tent after I had administered
his rhinoceros horn, he confided in me, 'Taita, this cure of yours is really
most efficacious. I have not felt so virile since I was a young man, way back
before my coronation and my divinity. This morning when I awoke I had a
stiffening of the member which was so gratifying that I sent for Aton to view
it. He was mightily impressed and he wished forthwith to fetch your mistress.' I was thoroughly alarmed by this news, and I put on
my sternest expression and shook my head and sucked air through my teeth and
tut-tutted to show my disapproval. 'I am grateful for your good sense in not
agreeing to Aton's suggestion, Your Majesty. It could so easily have undone all
our efforts. If you want a son, then you must follow my regime meticulously.' This brought home to me the swift passage of time,
and how soon the ninety days of grace would be up. I began to condition my
mistress for that night which Pharaoh would soon insist upon. First I must prepare her mind, and I set about this
by pointing out to her that it was inevitable, and that if she wished to
outlive the king and eventually to go to Tanus, then she would have to submit
to the king's will. She was always a sensible girl. 'Then you will have to explain exactly what it is
he expects of me, Taita,' she sighed. I was not the best guide in this area. My
personal experience had been ephemeral, but I was able to outline the
fundamentals and to make it seem so commonplace as not to alarm her unduly. 'Will it hurt?' she wanted to know, and I hastened
to reassure her. 'The king is a kind man. He has much experience of
young girls. I am sure he will be gentle with you. I will prepare an ointment
for you that will make things much easier. I will apply it every night before
you retire. It will open the gateway. Think to yourself that one day Tanus will
pass through those same portals, and that you are doing this to welcome him and
no other.' I tried to remain the aloof physician and take no
sensual pleasure in what I had to do to help her. The gods forgive me, but I
failed in my resolution. She was so perfect in her womanly parts as to
overshadow the most lovely blossom that I had ever raised in my garden. No
desert rose ever bore petals so exquisite. When I smoothed the ointment upon
them they raised their own sweet dew, more oleaginous and silky to the touch
than any unguent that I could concoct. Her cheeks turned rosy and her voice was husky as
she murmure.d, 'Up until now, I thought that part of me was meant for only one
purpose. Why is it that when you do that, I long so unbearably for Tanus?' She trusted me so implicitly, and had so little
understanding of these unfamiliar sensations, that it required the exercise of
all my ethics as a physician to proceed with the treatment only as long as was
necessary. However, I slept only fitfully that night, haunted by dreams of the
impossible. AS WE SAILED DEEPER INTO THE SOUTH, so the belts of
green land on each side of the river narrowed. Now the desert began to squeeze
in upon us. In places brooding cliffs of black granite trod the verdant fields
under foot and pressed so close as to overhang the turgid waters of the Nile. The most forbidding of these narrows was known as
the Gates of Hapi, and the waters were whipped into a wild and wilful temper as
they boiled through the gap in the high cliffs. We made the passage of the Gates of Hapi, and came
at last to Elephantine, the largest of a great assembly of islands that were
strung through the throat of the Nile, where the harsh hills constricted its
flow and forced it through the narrows. Elephantine was shaped like a monstrous shark
pursuing the shoal of lesser islands up the narrows. On either side of the
river the encroaching deserts were distinct in colour and character. On the
west bank, the Saharan dunes were hot orange and savage as the Bedouin who were
the only mortals able to survive amongst them. To the east, the Arabian desert
was dun and dirty grey, studded with black hills that danced dreamlike in the
heat mirage. These deserts had one thing in common—both of them were killers of
men. What a delightful contrast was Elephantine Island,
set like a glistening green jewel in the silver crown of the river. It took its
name from the smooth grey granite boulders that clustered along its bank like a
herd of the huge pachyderms and also from the fact that the trade in ivory
brought down from the savage land of Cush beyond the cataract had for a
thousand years centred upon this place. Pharaoh's palace sprawled over most of the island,
and the wags suggested that he had chosen to build it here at the southernmost
point in his kingdom to be as far from the red pretender in the north as
possible. The wide stretch of water that surrounded the
island secured it from the attack of an enemy, but the remainder of the city
had overflowed on to both main banks. After great Thebes, west and east
Elephantine together made up the largest and most populous city in the Upper
Kingdom, a worthy rival to Memphis, the seat of the red pretender in the Lower
Kingdom. As at no other place in the whole of Egypt,
Elephantine Island was clad with trees. Their seeds had been brought down by
the river on a thousand annual floods, and they had taken root in the fertile
loams that had themselves been transported by the restless waters. On my last visit to Elephantine, when I had come
up-river to do a survey of the river gauges for my Lord Intef in his capacity
as Guardian of the Waters, I had spent many months on the island. With the
assistance of the head gardener, I had catalogued the names and natural
histories of all the plants in the palace gardens, so I was able to point them
out to my mistress. There were/Jews trees the like of which had never been seen
elsewhere in Egypt. Their fruits grew not upon the branch but on the main trunk,
and their roots twisted and writhed together like mating pythons. There were
dragon's blood trees whose bark, when cut, poured out a bright red sap. There
were Cushite sycamores and a hundred other varieties that spread a shady green
umbrella over the lovely little island. The royal palace was built upon the solid granite
that lay below the fertile soil and formed the skeleton of the island. I have
often wondered that our kings, the long line of phar-aohs of fifty dynasties
that stretches back over a thousand years, have each of them devoted so much of
his life and treasure to the building of vast and eternal tombs of granite and
marble, while in their lifetimes they have been content to live in palaces with
mud walls and thatched roofs. In comparison to the magnificent funerary temple
that I was building for Pharaoh Mamose at Karnak, this palace was a very modest
affair, and the dearth of straight lines and symmetry offended the instincts of
both the mathematician and the architect in me. I suppose the sprawling jumble
of red clay walls and roofs canted at odd angles did have a sort of bucolic
charm, yet I itched to get out my ruler and plumb-line. Once we had gone ashore and found the quarters that
had been set aside for us, the true appeal of Elephantine was even more
apparent. Naturally we were lodged hi the walled harem on the northern tip of
the island, but the size and the furnishings of our lodgings confirmed our
favoured position, not only with the king but with his chamberlain as well.
Aton had made the allocation, and he, like most others, had proved completely
defenceless against my mistress's natural charm, and was now one of her most
shameless admirers. He placed at our disposal a dozen spacious and airy
rooms with our own courtyard and kitchens. A side-gate in the main wall led
directly down to the riverside-and a stone jetty. That very first day I
purchased a flat-bottomed skiff which we could use for fishing and
water-fowling. I kept it moored at the jetty. As to the rest of our new home, however comfortable
it might have been, neither my mistress nor I was satisfied, and we immediately
set about improving and beautifying it. With the cooperation of my old friend
the head gardener, I laid out and planted our own private garden hi the
courtyard, with a thatched barrazza under which we could sit in the heat of the
day, and where I kept my Saker falcons tethered on their perches. At the jetty I set up a shadoof to lift from the
river a constant flow of water that I led through ceramic pipes to our own
water-garden with lily-ponds dnd fish-pools. The overflow from the pools
drained away in a narrow gutter. This gutter I directed through the wall of my
mistress's chamber, across a screened corner of the room and out the far side,
from whence it returned to the main flow of the Nile. I carved a stool of
fragrant cedar wood, with a hole through the seat, and placed this over the
gutter so that anything dropped through the bottom of the seat would be borne
away by the never-ending flow of water. My mistress was delighted with this
innovation and spent far more time perched upon the stool than was really
necessary to accomplish the business for which it was originally intended. The walls of our quarters were bare red clay. We
designed a set of frescoes for each room. I drew the cartoons and transposed
them on to the walls and then my mistress and her maids painted in the designs.
The frescoes were scenes from the mythology of the gods, with fanciful
landscapes peopled by wonderful animals and birds. Of course, I used my Lady
Lostris as my model for the figure of Isis, but was it any wonder that the
figure of Horus was central to every painting, or that on the insistence of my
mistress, he was depicted as having red-gold hair and that he looked amazingly
familiar? The frescoes caused a stir throughout the harem and
every one of the royal wives took turns to visit us, to drink sherbet and to
view the paintings. We had set a fashion, and I was prevailed upon to advise on
the redecoration of most of the private apartments in the harem, at a suitable
fee, of course. In this process we made many new friends amongst the royal
ladies and added considerably to our financial estate. Very soon the king heard about the decorations and
came in person to examine them. Lostris gave him the grand tour of her
chambers. Pharaoh noticed her new water-stool of which my mistress was so proud
that when the king asked her to demonstrate it for him she did so without
hesitation, perching upon it and giggling as she sent a tinkling stream into
the gutter. She was still so innocent as not to realize the
effect that this display had upon her husband. I could tell by his expression
that any attempt that I might make to delay him beyond the promised ninety days
was likely to be difficult. After the tour, Pharaoh sat under the barrazza and
drank a cup of wine while he actually laughed aloud at some of my mistress's
sallies. At last he turned to me. 'Taita, you must build me a water-garden and
a barrazza just like this— only much bigger, and whilst you are about it, you
can make a water-stool for me as well.' When at last he was ready to leave, he commanded me
to walk a little way alone with him, ostensibly to discuss the new
water-garden, but I knew better. No sooner had we left the harem than he was at
me. 'Last night I dreamed of your mistress,' he told
me, 'and when I awoke, I found that my seed had spilled out upon the sheets.
That has not happened to me since I was a boy. This little vixen of yours has
begun to fill my thoughts both sleeping and waking. I have no doubt that I can
make a son with her, and that we should delay no longer. What do you think,
doctor, am I not yet ready for the attempt?' 'I counsel you most strongly to observe the ninety
days, Majesty. To make the attempt before that would be folly.' It was
dangerous to label the king's desire as folly, but I was desperate to contain
it. 'It would be most unwise to spoil all our chances of success for so short a
period of time.' In the end I prevailed, and left him looking glummer than
ever. When I returned to the harem, I warned my mistress
of the king's intentions, and so thoroughly had I conditioned her to accept the
inevitable that she showed no undue distress. She was by this time completely
resigned to her role as the king's favourite, while my promise that there would
be a term to her captivity here on Elephantine Island made it easier for her to
bear. In all fairness, our sojourn on the island could not truly be described
as captivity. We Egyptians are the most civilized men on earth. We treat our
women well. I have heard of others, the Hurrians and the Cushites and the
Libyans, for example, who are most cruel and unnatural towards their wives and
daughters. The Libyans make of the harem a true prison in
which the women live their entire lives without sight of a living male apart
from the eunuchs and the children. They say that even male dogs and cats are
forbidden to pass through the gates, so great is their possessive frenzy. The Hurrians are even worse. Not only do they confine
their women and make them cover their bodies from ankle to wrist, but they
force them to go masked as well, even within the confines of the harem. Thus
only a woman's husband ever lays eyes upon her face. The primitive tribes of Cush are the worst of all
of them. When their women reach the age of puberty they circumcise them in the
most savage manner. They cut away the clitoris and me inner lips of the vagina
to remove the seat of sexual pleasure so that they may never be tempted to
stray from their husbands. This may seem so bizarre as to defy belief, but I
have seen the results of this brutal surgery with my own eyes. Three of my
mistress's slave girls were captured by the slavers only after they were
matured and had been subjected to the knife by their own fathers. When I
examined the gaping, scar-puckered pits they had been left with, I was
sickened, and my instincts as a healer were deeply offended by this mutilation
of that masterpiece of the gods, the human body. It has been my observation
that this circumcision does not achieve its object, for it seems to deprive the
victim of the most desirable female traits, and leaves her cold and calculating
and cruel. She becomes a sexless monster. On the other hand, we Egyptians honour our women
and treat them, if not as equals, at least with consideration. No husband may
beat his wife without recourse to the magistrate, and he has a legal duty to
dress and feed and maintain her in accordance with his own station in society.
A wife of the king, or of one of the nobles, is not confined to the harem, but,
if suitably escorted by her entourage, may walk abroad in city street or
countryside. She is not forced to hide her charms, but, according to the
fashion of the moment and her own whim, she may sit at her husband's
dinner-table with her face uncovered and her breasts bared, and entertain his
male companions with conversation and song. She may hold, in her own right, slaves and land and
fortune separately from the estate of her husband, although the children she bears
belong to him alone. She may fish, and fly hawks, and even practise archery,
although such masculine endeavours as wrestling and swordsmanship are forbidden
to her. There are, quite rightly, certain activities from which she is barred,
such as the practice of law and architecture, but a high-born wife is a person
of consequence, possessed of legal rights and dignity. Naturally it is not the
same for the concubine or for the wife of a common man. They have the same
rights as the bullock or the donkey. Thus my mistress and I were free to wander abroad
to explore the twin cities on each bank of the Nile and the surrounding
countryside. In the streets of Elephantine my Lady Lostris was very soon a
favourite, and the common people gathered round her to solicit her blessing and
her generosity. They applauded her grace and beauty, just as they had done in
her native Thebes. I was instructed by her always to carry a large bag of cakes
and sweetmeats from which she stuffed the cheeks of every ragamuffin we encountered
who seemed to her to require nourishing. Wherever we went, we seemed always to
be surrounded by a shrieking, dancing flock of children. My mistress always seemed happy to sit in the doorway
of a poor shanty with the housewife, or under a tree in the field of a peasant
fanner and listen to their woes and grievances. At the first opportunity she
would take these up with Pharaoh. Often he would smile indulgently and agree to
the redress that she suggested. So her reputation as a champion of the common
man was bom. When she passed through even the saddest, poorest quarters of the
city, she left smiles and laughter behind her. On other days we fished together from our little
skiff in the backwaters of the lagoons that the inundation of the Nile had
created, or we laid out decoys for the wild duck. I had made a special bow for
my mistress which was suited to her strength. Of course it was nothing like the
great bow, Lan-ata, that I had designed for Tanus, but it was adequate for the
water-fowl we were after. My Lady Lostris was a better marksman than most men I
have watched at the archery butts, and when she loosed an arrow it was very
seldom that I was not required to plunge overside and swim out to retrieve the
carcass of a duck or a goose. Whenever the king went out hawking, my mistress was
invited to attend. I would walk behind her with my Saker falcons on my arm, as
we skirted the edge of the papyrus beds. As soon as a heron rose with heavy
wing-beats from a hidden pool in the reeds, she would take one of the falcons
from me and kiss its hooded head. 'Fly fast and true, my beauty!' she would
whisper to it, and slip the rufter to unmask the fierce yellow eyes, and launch
the splendid little killer aloft. We would watch entranced as the falcon towered high
above the quarry, and then folded those sickle wings and stooped with a speed
that made the wind sing over his dappled plumage. The shock of impact carried
clearly to us over a distance of two hundred paces. A puff of pale blue
feathers was smeared across the darker blue of the sky, and then was carried
away like smoke on the river breeze. The falcon bound to its prey with hooked
talons to bring it smashing to earth. My mistress shrieked in triumph and ran
as fast as a boy to retrieve the bird, to lavish praise upon it and pamper it,
and then to feed it the severed head of the heron. I love all creatures of the water and the land and
the air. My mistress has the same feelings. Why is it then, I often wonder,
that both of us are so moved by these sports of the chase? I have puzzled over
it without finding an answer. Perhaps it is simply that man, and woman also,
are the earth's fiercest predator. We feel a kinship with the falcon, with his
beauty and his speed. The heron and the goose were given to the falcon by the
gods as his rightful prey. In the same way, man has been given dominance over
all other creatures on earth. We cannot deny these instincts with which the
gods have endowed us. From the earliest age, when she had first developed
the strength and the stamina to stay with us, I had allowed my Lady Lostris to
accompany Tanus and myself on our hunting and fishing forays. For, perhaps to
mask his hatred of his rival, Lord Harrab, my Lord Intef consented to my
hunting sorties with young Tanus. Years before, Tanus ancH had taken possession of a
deserted fisherman's shack which we had discovered on the fringe of the swamp
below Karnak. We had made this our secret hunting-lodge. It was only a short
distance from the shack to the edge of the true desert. So from this
comfortable base we had the options of fishing the lagoon or of wild-fowling or
of hawking that noble bird, the giant bustard, in the open desert. In the beginning Tanus had resented the intrusion
of this gawky nine-year-old girl, skinny and flat-chested as a boy, into our
private world. Soon, however, he had grown accustomed to her presence and even
found it convenient to have someone to run errands for him and perform the
irksome little chores around camp. Thus, little by little, Lostris had picked up the
lore and the wisdom of the outdoors, until she knew every fish and bird by its
proper name, and could wield a harpoon or a hunting-bow with equal skill. In
the end Tanus had become as proud of her as if it had been he who had invited
her to join us in the first place. She had been with us in the black rock hills above
the river valley on the day that Tanus had hunted the cattle-killer. The lion
was a scarred old male with a black mane that waved like a field of corn in the
wind as he walked, and a voice like the thunder of the heavens. We set my pack
of hounds upon him and followed them as they bayed the lion up from the paddock
beside the Nile where he had killed his last bullock. The dogs cornered him at
the head of a rocky defile. The lion fixed on us as soon as we came up and
brushed the dogs aside as he charged through them. As he came grunting and roaring towards us, my
mistress had stood unwavering, only a pace behind Tanus' left shoulder, with
her own puny little bow at full draw. Of course, it had been Tanus who had
killed the beast, sending an arrow from the great bow Lanata hissing down his
gaping throat, but we had bcJth seen Lady Lostris' courage displayed in full
measure. I think it was probably on that day that Tanus
first became aware of his true feelings for her, while for my mistress, the
hunt and the chase were for ever bound up with the images and memories of her
lover. She had remained ever since an avid huntress. She had learned from Tanus
and myself to respect and to love the quarry, but not to burden herself with
guilt when she exercised her god-given rights over the other creatures of the
earth, to use them as beasts of burden, to consume them as food, or to pursue them
as game. We may have dominance over the beasts, but in the
same way, all men and women are Pharaoh's cattle, and none may gainsay him.
Promptly on the ninetieth night the king sent Aton to fetch my mistress. BECAUSE OF OUR FRIENDSHIP AND HIS own feelings for
my mistress, Aton had given me ample warning before he came. I was able to make
my final preparations well in advance of his arrival. For the last time I
rehearsed my mistress in exactly what to say to the king and how to behave
towards him. Then I applied the ointment that I had reserved for this occasion.
It was not only a lubricant, but contained also the essence of a herb that I
use on other patients to deaden the pain of tooth-ache and other minor
afflictions. It had the property of numbing the sensitive mucous membranes of
the body. She was brave right up to the moment that Aton
appeared in the doorway of her chamber, and then her courage deserted her and
she turned to me with tears brimming against her lids. 'I cannot go alone. I am
afraid. Please come with me, Taita.' She was pale beneath the make-up that I
had applied so carefully, and a fit of shivering took hold of her so that her
small white teeth chattered together softly. 'Mistress, you know that is not possible. Pharaoh
has sent for you. This once I cannot help you.' It was then that Aton came to her aid. 'Perhaps
Taita could wait in the ante-chamber of the king's bedroom, with me. After all,
he is the royal physician, and his services may be needed,' he suggested in his
reedy voice, and my mistress stood on tiptoe to kiss his fat cheek. 'You are so kind, Aton,' she whispered, and he
blushed. My Lady Lostris held my hand tightly as we followed
Aton through the labyrinth of passages to the king's apartments. In the
ante-chamber she squeezed it hard, and then dropped my hand and went to the
doorway to the king's chamber. She paused and looked back at me. She had never
looked so lovely or so young and vulnerable. My heart was breaking, but I
smiled at her to give her courage. She turned from me and stepped through the
curtains. I heard the murmur of the king's voice as he greeted her and her soft
reply. Aton seated me on a stool at the low table, then
without a word set up the bao board between us. I played without attention, moving
the polished round stones in the cups carved into the wooden board, and Aton
won three quick games in succession. He had very seldom beaten me before, but I
was distracted by the voices from the room beyond, although they were too low
for me to catch the actual words. Then quite clearly I heard my mistress say, exactly
as I had coached her, 'Please, Your Majesty, be gentle with me. I beseech you,
do not hurt me,' and the appeal was so moving that ,even Aton coughed softly
and blew his nose upon his sleeve, while it was all I could do to restrain
myself from leaping to my feet and rushing through the curtain to drag her
away. For a while there was silence and then a single
high, sobbing cry that rent my soul, and once again silence. Aton and I sat hunched over the bao board, no
longer making any pretence at playing. I do not know how long we waited, but it
must have been in the last watch of the night when I heard at last the sound of
an old man's snores from beyond the curtain. Aton looked up at me and nodded,
then he rose ponderously to his feet. Before he reached the curtains, they parted, and my
mistress stepped through them and came directly to where I sat. 'Take me home,
Taita,' she whispered. Without thinking about it I picked her up in my
arms, and she hugged mexaround the neck and laid her head on my shoulder, just
like she used to as a little girl. Aton took up the oil lamp and lit the way
for us back to the harem. He left us at the door to my mistress's bedchamber. I
laid her on the bed, and while she drowsed I examined her gently. There was a
little blood, just a smear of it on those silken thighs, but it had staunched
itself. 'Is there any pain, my little one?' I asked softly,
and she opened her eyes and shook her head. Then quite unexpectedly she smiled at me. 'I don't
know what all the fuss was about,' she murmured. 'In the end, it was not much
worse than using your water-stool, and it didn't take much longer either.' And
she curled herself in a ball and fell asleep without another sound. I almost wept with relief. All my preparations and
the numbing herbs I had employed had seen her through without damage to either
her body or her sweet spirit. IN THE MORNING WE WENT OUT HAWKING as though nothing
untoward had happened, and my mistress mentioned the subject only once during
the day. As we picnicked on the bank of the river, she asked thoughtfully,
'Will it be the same with Tanus, do you think, Taita?' 'No, mistress. You and
Tanus love each other. It will be different. It will be the most wonderful
moment in your entire life,' I assured her. 'Yes, I know deep in my heart that is how it should
be,' she whispered, and involuntarily both of us looked northwards along the
sweep of the Nile, towards Kamak far.below the horizon. Although I knew well where my duty towards Tanus
lay, life on the island was so idyllic, and I so much enjoyed the exclusive
company of my mistress, that I delayed my departure with the excuse that she
still needed me. In truth, although Pharaoh sent for her night after night, my
mistress had a tough and resilient streak in her and was blessed with the
instinct of survival in full measure. Very swiftly she learned how to please
the king, but at the same time to remain untouched and emotionally unmoved by
it. She did not need me as much as Tanus did. Indeed, it was she who began to
nag me to leave her at Elephantine and to journey down-river once again. I procrastinated until one evening, after a full
day out in the field with the king, we returned late to the palace. I saw to it
that my mistress was bathed and her evening meal was laid out for her before I
went to my own rooms. As I entered my chamber the delicious odour of ripe
mangoes and pomegranates filled the air. In the centre of the floor stood a
large closed basket which I could tell was filled with these two favourite
fruits of mine. I was not surprised to find it there, for never a day passed
without gifts being sent to my mistress and me by someone seeking our favours. I wondered who it was this time, and my mouth
filled with saliva as another whiff of the fragrance filled my nostrils. I had
not eaten since noon. As I lifted the woven lid and reached for the reddest and
ripest of the pomegranates, the fruit spilled and rolled across the floor.
There was a sharp hissing sound and a great black ball of writhing coils and
gleaming scales flopped out of the basket and lashed out at my legs. I leaped backwards, but not fast enough. The open
jaws of the serpent struck the leather heel of my sandal with such force that I
very nearly lost my balance. A cloud of venom was released from the curved
fangs. The clear but deadly fluid drenched the skin of my ankle, but with
another leap, I managed to evade the second strike that followed immediately
upon the first. I threw myself back against the wall in the far corner of the
room. The cobra and I confronted each other across the
width of the floor. Half its body was coiled upon itself, but the front portion
of it was raised as high as my shoulder. Its hood was extended to display the
broad black and white bands which patterned it. Like some dreadful black lily
of death swaying upon its stem, it watched me with those glittering, beady
eyes, and I realized that it stood between me and the only door to the chamber. It is true that some cobras are kept as pets. They
are given the run of the household, and they keep down the numbers of rats and
mice that infest the building. They will drink milk from a jug andx become as
tame as kittens. There are others of these serpents that are trained by methods
of torment and provocation to become deadly tools of the assassin. I was in no
doubt as to which kind of cobra this was standing before me now. I sidled along the wall, trying to outflank it and
to reach safety. It launched itself at me, and the gape of its jaw was a pale
sickly yellow and tendrils of venom drooled from the tips of its fangs.
Involuntarily I yelled with terror as I sprang away from it and cowered in my
corner again. The serpent recovered swiftly from the strike, and reared
upright. It was still between me and the doorway. I knew that its poison sacs
were charged with sufficient venom to kill a hundred strong men. As I watched,
its lower body uncoiled slowly and it began to glide across the floor towards
me, its flaring head held high and those terrible, bright little eyes fastened
upon me. I have seen one of these snakes mesmerize a fowl so
that it made no move to escape at this sinuous approach, but lay before it with
a patent air of resignation. I was paralyzed in the same way, and found that I
could neither move nor cry out again as death glided towards me. Then suddenly I saw a movement beyond the swaying
cobra. My Lady Lostris appeared in the doorway, summoned by my first terrified
cry. I found my voice again, and I screamed at her, 'Be careful! Come no
closer!' She paid no heed to my warning as she took in the
scene at a glance. A moment's delay or hesitation on her part, and the serpent
would have struck at me for the third and last time. My mistress had been at
her dinner when she heard my cry for help. She stood now with a half-eaten
melon in one hand and a silver knife in the other, and she reacted with the
swift instinct of a true huntress. Tanus had taught her to forsake the awkward
double-jointed manner of throwing that is natural to the female, and she hurled
the melon she held with the force and aim of a trained javelineer. It struck
the cobra upon the back of its extended hood, and for a fleeting instant the
blow knocked it flat upon the tiled floor. Like the release of a war bow, the
serpent whipped erect and turned its dreadful head towards my mistress and then
sped at her across the room in full attack. I was released from my trance at last and started
forward to help her, but I was too slow. Using its tail as a fulcrum, the cobra
swung forward and aimed at her with its jaws so widely distended that venom
sprayed from its erect fangs in a fine, pale mist. My mistress leaped back,
agile and swift as a gazelle before the rush of the hunting cheetah. The cobra
missed its strike, and for an instant the impetus threw it flat at her feet,
extended to its full glistening, scaly length. I do not know what possessed her, but she had never
lacked in courage. Before the cobra could recover, she hopped forward again and
landed with both those neat little sandalled feet upon the back of its head,
pinning it to the tiles with her full weight. Perhaps she had expected to crush its spine, but
the snake was as thick as her wrist and resilient as the lash of Rasfer's whip.
Although its head was pinned, the rest of its long body whipped up and over and
coiled around her legs. A woman of lesser sense and nerve might have tried to
escape that loathsome embrace. If she had done so my mistress would have died,
for the instant the cobra's head was freed the death-strike would have
followed. Instead, she kept both feet planted firmly upon the
writhing serpent, spreading her arms to balance herself, and she screamed out,
'Help me, Taita!' I was, already halfway across the room, and now I
dived full length and thrust my hands into the coils of the serpent's body that
boiled around her legs. I groped along its sinuous length, down to where it
narrowed into the neck, and I seized it and locked both my hands around the
cobra's throat, with my fingers entwined. 'I have him!' I yelled, almost incoherent with my
own horror and loathing for this cold, scaly creature that struggled in my
grip. 'I have him! Get away from us! Stand clear!' My mistress leaped back obediently, and I came to
my feet clutching the creature with a frantic strength, trying to keep its
gaping jaws away from my face. The tail whipped back and wound around my
shoulders and my neck, threatening to strangle me as I clung to the head. With
this grip upon me the snake now had purchase, and its strength was terrifying.
I found that I could not hold it, even with both my fists locked around its
throat. It was gradually forcing its head free, drawing it inexorably back
through my fingers. I realized that the instant it broke out of my grip, it
would lash out at my unprotected face. 'I can't hold it!' I screamed, more to myself than
to Lady Lostris. I was holding it at arm's-length, but it was pulling itself
towards my face, drawing closer to my eyes every moment as waves of power
pulsed through it, contracting and tightening the coils around my throat,
forcing the head back through my fingers. Although my knuckles were white with the strength
of my grip, the cobra was so close to my face that I could see the fangs
flicking back and forth in the roof of its wide gaping jaws. The cobra was able
to erect or to flatten them at will. They were bony white needles, and pale,
smoky jets of venom spurted from -their tips. I knew that if even a droplet of
that poison entered my eyes, it would blind me, and the burning pain of it
might drive me half-mad. I twisted the snake's head away from my face so
that the spray of poison was discharged into the air, and I screamed again in
despair, 'Call one of the slaves to help me!' 'On the table!' my mistress spoke close beside me.
'Hold its head on the table!' I was startled. I had thought that she had obeyed
my order and run to find help, but she was at my side, and I saw that she still
brandished the silver table-knife. Carrying the cobra with me, I staggered across the
floor and fell to my knees beside the low table. With a supreme effort I
managed to force the snake's head down across one edge of the table, and to
hold it there. It gave my mistress a chopping-block against which to wield the
knife. She hacked at the base of the cobra's neck, behind the hideous head. The snake felt the first cut and redoubled its
struggles. Coil after coil of rubbery flesh lashed and contorted around my
head. Hissing bursts of air flew from its gape, almost deafening us, the awful
din mingling with the spurts of venom from its fangs. The little blade was sharp, and the scaly flesh
parted under it. Slippery, cool, ophidian blood welled up over my fingers, but
the blade bit down to the bone of the spine. With all her strength and with her
face contorted by the effort, my mistress sawed at the bone, but now my fingers
were lubricated by the cobra's blood. I felt the head slither out between them
and the serpent was free, but at the same moment the knife found the joint
between the vertebrae and slipped through, cleaving the spine. Dangling by a thread of-skin, the head was thrown
about loosely by the cobra's death-throes. Although almost severed from the body,
the fangs still flickered and oozed poison. The lightest touch would be enough
to drive them into my flesh. I tore at the body with frenzied, bloody fingers
and at last managed to unwind it from around my throat, and to hurl it to the
floor. As the two of us backed away to the door, the snake
continued its grotesque contortions, knotting itself and coiling into a ball,
scaly turns sliding over each other. 'Are you harmed, my lady?' I asked, without being
able to tear my eyes away from the death-throes of the carcass. 'Is there any
of the venom in your eyes or on your skin?' 'I am all right,' she whispered. 'And you, Taita?'
The tone of her voice alarmed me enough to make me forget my own distress, and
I looked at her face. The reaction from danger had already seized her, and she
was beginning to shake. Her dark green eyes were too large to fit that glassy
white face. I had to find some way to release her from the icy grip of shock. 'Well,' I said briskly, 'that takes care of
tomorrow evening's dinner. I do so love a nice piece of roast cobra.' For a moment she stared at me blankly and then she
let out a peal of hysterical laughter. My own laughter was no less wild and
unrestrained. We clung helplessly to each other and laughed until tears poured
down our cheeks. I WOULD NOT TRUST OUR COOK WITH IT, so I prepared
the cobra myself. I skinned and gutted it and stuffed it with wild garlic and
other herbs, together with a dollop of mutton fat from the tail of a prime ram.
Then I coiled it in a ball and wrapped ir\in banana leaves and covered the
whole bundle with a thick coating of wet clay. I built over the lump of clay a
hot fire which I kept burning all day. That evening when I cracked open the hard-baked
ball of clay, the aroma released by the succulent white flesh flooded our
mouths with saliva. There are those who have dined at my table who say they
have never eaten tastier food than that which I prepare, and who am I to
contradict my friends? I served the flaky fillets to my mistress with a
wine of five-palm quality that Aton had chanced upon in Pharaoh's store-rooms.
My Lady Lostris insisted that I sit with her under the barrazza in the
courtyard and share the meal. We agreed that it was better than the tail of
crocodile, or even than the flesh of the finest perch from the Nile. It was only when we had eaten our fill and sent the
rest of it to her slave maidens that we broached the matter of who it was that
had sent me the gift of the basket of fruit. I tried not to alarm my mistress, and made a joke of
it: 'It must have been somebody who does not like my singing! ' However, she
was not to be put off so easily. 'Don't play the clown with me, Taita. It is one
direction in which you have little talent. I think you know who it was, and I
think I do as well.' I stared at her, not sure how to deal with what I
suspected was coming. I had always protected her, even from the truth. I
wondered how far she had seen through me. 'It was my father,' she said with such finality
that there was no reply or denial I could give her. 'Tell me about him, Taita.
Tell me all the things I should know about him, but which you never dared tell
me.' It came hard at first. A lifetime of reticence
cannot be overcome in a moment. It was still difficult to realize that I was no
longer completely under the thrall-of Lord Intef. Deeply as I had always hated
him, he had dominated me body and soul since my childhood, and there persisted
a kind of perverse loyalty that made it difficult for me to speak out freely
against him. Weakly I attempted to fob her off with only the barest outlines of
her father's clandestine activities, but she cut across me impatiently. 'Come now! Don't take me for a fool. I know more
about my father than you ever dreamed. It is time for me to learn the rest of
it. I charge you straight, tell me everything.' So I obeyed her, and there was so much to tell that
the full moon was halfway up the sky before I was done. We sat in silence for a
long time afterwards. I had left out nothing, nor had I tried to deny or to excuse
my own part in any of it. 'No wonder he wantsyou dead,' she whispered at
last. 'You know enough to destroy him.' She was silent a little longer, and
then she went on, 'My father is a monster. How is it possible that I am any
different from him? Why, as his daughter, am I not also possessed by such
unnatural instincts?' 'We must thank all the gods that you are not. But
mistress, do you not despise me also for what I have done?' She reached across and touched my hand: 'You forget
that I have known you all my life, since the day that my mother died giving
birth to me. I know what you really are. Anything you did, you were forced to
do, and freely I forgive you for it.' She sprang to her feet and paced restlessly around
the lily pond before she returned to where I sat. 'Tanus is in terrible danger from my father. I
never realized just how much until this evening. He must be warned so that he
will be able to protect himself. You must go to him now, Taita, without
delaying another day.' 'Mistress—' I began, but she cut me off brusquely. 'No, Taita, I will not listen to any more of your
sly excuses. You will leave for Karnak tomorrow.' SO BEFORE SUNRISE THE NEXT MORNING I set out
fishing, alone in the skiff. However, I made certain that at least a dozen
slaves and sentries saw me leave the island. In a backwater of the lagoon I opened the leather
bag in which I had concealed a tom-cat that had befriended me. He was a sad old
animal riddled with mange and with agonizing canker in both ears. For some time
I had been steeling myself to give him release from his misery. Now I fed him a
lump of raw meat laced with Datura essence. I held him on my lap and stroked
him as he ate, and he purred contentedly. As soon as he slipped painlessly into
oblivion, I cut his throat. I sprinkled the blood over the skiff, and dropped
the carcass of the cat overboard where I knew that the crocodiles would soon
dispose of it. Then, leaving my harpoons and lines and other gear on board, I
pushed the skiff out into the slow current and waded through the papyrus beds
to hard ground. We had agreed that my mistress would wait until
nightfall before she raised the alarm. It would be noon tomorrow before they
found the blood-smeared skiff and concluded that I had been taken by a
crocodile or been murdered by a band of the Shrikes. Once I was ashore, I changed swiftly into the
costume I had brought with me. I had chosen to impersonate one of the priests
of Osiris. I would often ape their stilted gait and pompous manners for the
amusement of my mistress. It needed only a wig, a touch of make-up and the
correct costume to make the transformation. The priests are always on the move,
up and down along the river, travelling between one temple and another, begging
or rather demanding alms along the way. I would excite little interest, and my
disguise might help to discourage an attack by the Shrikes. On superstitious
grounds they were often reluctant to interfere with the holy men. I skirted the lagoon and entered the town of West
Elephantine through the poor quarter. At the docks I approached one of the
barge captains who was loading a cargo of corn in leather bags and clay jugs of
oil. With the right degree of arrogance I demanded free passage td Karnak in
the name of the god, and he shrugged and spat on the deck, but allowed me to
come aboard. All men are resigned to the extortions of the brotherhood. They
may despise the priests, but they also fear their power, both spiritual and
secular. Some say that the priesthood wields almost as much power as does
Pharaoh himself. The moon was full and the barge captain a more
intrepid mariner than Admiral Nembet. We did not anchor at night. With the
breeze and the full flood of the Nile behind us, we made a fair passage and on
the fifth day rounded the bend of the river and saw the city of Karnak lying
before us. My stomach was queasy as I went ashore, for this
was my town and every beggar and idler knew me well. If I were recognized, Lord
Intef would hear about it before I could reach the city gates. However, my
disguise held up, and I kept to the back alleys as I hurried in a purposeful
and priestly manner to Tanus' house near the squadron base. His front door was unbarred. I entered as though I
had the right, and closed the door securely behind me. The starkly furnished
rooms were deserted and when I searched diem, I found nothing to give me any
indication of his whereabouts. Tanus had obviously been gone for a long time,
possibly since my mistress and I had left Karnak. The milk in a jug by the
window had thickened and dried like hard cheese, and a crust of sorghum bread
on the plate beside it was covered with a blue mould. As far as I could see, nothing was missing; even
the bow Lanata still hung on its rack above his bed. For Tanus to have left
that was extraordinary. Usually it was like an extension of his body. I hid it
away carefully in a secret compartment below his sleeping-place, which I had
built for him when first he had moved into these lodgings. I wished to avoid
moving around the city in daylight, so I remained in Tanus' rooms for the rest
of that afternoon, occupying myself with cleaning up the dust and filth that
had accumulated. At nightfall I slipped out and went down to the
riverside. I saw immediately that the Breath ofHorus was at her moorings. She
had obviously been in action since last I had seen her, and had suffered battle
damage. Her bows were shattered and her timbers amidships had been scorched and
charred. I noted with a stir of proprietary pride that Tanus
had made the modifications to her hull that I had designed. The gilded metal
horn protruded from her bows, just above the water-line. From its battered
condition I surmised that it fiad done fierce execution amongst the fleets of the
red pretender. However, I could see that neither Tanus nor Kratas
was on deck. A junior officer whom I recognized had the watch, but I discarded
the idea of hailing him, and instead set out to tour the sailors' haunts around
the area of the docks. It says a great deal for the morals and the
sanctity of the priests of Osiris that I was welcomed in the dives and
whorehouses like an habitue. In one of the more respectable taverns I
recognized the impressive figure of Kratas. He was drinking and playing at dice
with a group of his brother officers. I made no move to approach him, but I
watched him across the crowded room. Meanwhile I fended off the advances of a
succession of pleasure-birds of both sexes who were progressively lowering
their tariffs in their efforts to tempt me out into the dark alleyway to sample
their well-displayed charms. None of them were in the least deterred by my
priestly collar of blue glass beads. When "Kratas at last gave his companions a
hearty goodnight and made his way out into the alley, I followed his tall
figure with relief. 'What is it you want from me now, beloved of the
gods?' he growled at me with scorn when I hurried up beside 'him. 'Is it my
gold or my bum-splitter you crave?' Many of the priests had taken
enthusiastically to this modern vogue for pederasty. Til take the gold,' I told him. 'You have more of
that than the other, Kratas.' He stopped dead in his tracks and stared at me
suspiciously. His bluff and handsome features were only a little flushed and
befuddled by liquor. 'How do you know my name?' He seized me by the
shoulder and dragged me into a lighted doorway, and studied my face. At last he
snatched the wig from off my head. 'By the piles between Seth's buttocks, it's you,
Taita!' he roared. 'I'd be obliged if you would refrain from shouting
out my name to all the world,' I told him, and he turned serious at once. 'Come! We'll go to my rooms.' Once we were alone, he poured two mugs of beer.
'Haven't you had enough of that?' I asked, and he grinned at me. 'We'll only know the answer to that in the morning.
How now, Taita! Don't be too strict with me. We have been down-river raiding
the red usurper's fleet for the past three weeks. Sweet Hapi, but that bow-horn
of yours works wonders. We cut up nearly twenty of his galleys and we chopped
the heads off a couple of hundred of his rascals. Although it was thirsty work,
not a drop of anything stronger than water has passed my lips in all that time.
Don't begrudge me a mouthful of beer now. Drink with me!' He raised his mug,
and I was also thirsty. I saluted him in return, but as I put the mug down
again, I asked, 'Where is Tanus?' He sobered instantly v 'Tanus has disappeared,' he
said, and I stared at him. 'Disappeared? What do you mean, disappeared? Did he
not lead the raid down-river?' Kratas shook his head. 'No. He's gone. Vanished. I
have had my men scour every street and every house in all of Thebes. There is
no sign of him. I tell you, Taita, I am worried, really worried.' 'When did you last see him?' 'Two days after the royal wedding, after the Lady
Lostris married the king, on the evening of the day that you sailed with the
royal flotilla for Elephantine. I tried to talk some sense into his thick head,
but he would not listen.'- 'What did he say?' 'He handed over the command of the Breath of
Horus and the entire squadron to me.' 'He could not do that, surely?' 'Yes, he could. He used the authority of Pharaoh's
hawk I nodded. 'And then? What did he do?' 'I have just
told you. He disappeared.' I sipped at the mug of beer as I tried to think it
out. Meanwhile Kratas went to the window and urinated through it It splashed
noisily into the street below and I heard a startled passer-by shout up at him,
'Careful where you spray, you filthy pig.’ Kratas leaned out and quite cheerfully offered to
crack his skull for him, and the man's grumblings receded rapidly. Chortling
with this small victory, Kratas came back to me and I asked, 'What mood was
Tanus in when he left you?' Kratas turned serious again. "The blackest and
most ugly temper I have ever witnessed. He cursed the gods and Pharaoh. He even
cursed the Lady Lostris and called her a royal whore.' I winced to hear it. Yet I knew that this was not
my Tanus speaking. It was the voice of despairing and hopeless love. 'He said that Pharaoh could carry out his threat to
have him strangled for sedition and he would welcome the release. No, he was in
terrible straits and there was nothing that I could do or say to comfort him.' 'That was all? He gave you no hint as to what he
intended?' Kratas shook his head and refilled his beer mug. 'What happened to the hawk seal?' I asked. 'He left it with me. He said he had no further use
for it. I have it safe aboard the Breath of Horus.' 'What of the other arrangements that I discussed
with you? Have you done what I asked?' He looked into his mug guiltily and muttered, 'I
began to make the arrangements, but after Tanus was gone, there seemed no point
to it. Besides, I have been busy down-river since then.' 'It is not like you, Kratas, to be so unreliable.'
I had found that with Kratas hurt disappointment was more effective man anger.
'My Lady Lostris was relying on you. She told me that she trusted you
completely. Kratas is a great rock of strength—those were her exact words.' I could see that it was working yet again, for
Kratas is also one of my mistress's ardent admirers. Even a hint of her
displeasure would move him. 'Damn you, Taita, you make me sound like a
weak-kneed idiot—' I kept silent, but silent can be more irksome than words.
'What in the name of Horus does the Lady Lostris want me to do?' 'Nothing more than I asked you to do before I left
for Elephantine,' I told him, and he slammed down his mug. 'I am a soldier. I cannot leave my duties and take
half the squadron to go off on some mad adventure. It was one thing when Tanus
had the hawk seal—' 'You have the hawk seal now,' I told him softly. He stared at me. 'I cannot use it without Tanus—' 'You are his lieutenant. Tanus gave you the hawk
seal to use. You know what to do with it. Do it! I will find Tanus and bring
him back, but you must be ready by then. There is desperate and bloody work
ahead, and Tanus needs you. Don't let him down, not again.' He flushed with anger at the jibe. Til make you
swallow those words.' he promised. 'And that will be the finest meal you could set for
me,' I told him. I love brave and honest men, they are so easily manipulated. I WAS UNCERTAIN AS TO HOW I WOULD make good my
promise to find Tanus, but I left Kratas to sleep off his debauch, and I went
out into the town again to try. Once more I made the rounds of every one of his
old haunts and questioned anyone who could possibly have seen him. I had no
illusions as to the risk I was taking in pursuing my enquiries about Tanus, or
as to just how flimsy was my disguise if I should run into anybody who knew me
well, but I' had to find him. I kept going through the night, until even the
shebeens and whorehouses along the waterfront had thrown out the last drunken
customers and doused their lamps. As the dawn broke over the river, I stood tired and
disconsolate on the bank of the Nile, and tried to think if there was some
possibility I had overlooked. A wild honking cry made me look up. High above me
a straggling skein of Egyptian geese was outlined against the pale gold and
coppery tonep of the eastern sky. Immediately they brought to my mind those
happy days that the three of us, Tanus and the Lady Lostris and myself, had
spent wild-fowling in the swamps. 'Fool!' I reviled myself. 'Of course that's it.' By this time they alleyways of the souk were filled
with a noisy, jostling crowd. Thebes is the busiest city in the world, no man
is idle here. They blow glass and work gold and silver, they weave flax and
throw pots. The merchant deals and haggles, the lawyer cants, the priest chants
and the whore swives. It is an exciting, flamboyant city and I love it. I forced my way through the throng and the hubbub
of banter and bargaining as the merchants and the farmers displayed-their wares
for the housewives and the bailiffs of the rich households. The souk stank
fulsomely of spices and fruits, of vegetables and fish and meats, some of which
were far from fresh. Cattle bellowed and goats bleated and added their dung to
the human contribution of excrement that trickled down the open gutters towards
old Mother Nile. I thought of buying an ass, for it would be a long
walk in this hottest season of the year, and there were some sturdy beasts on
offer. In the end I decided against such extravagance, not only on the grounds
of economy, for I knew that once I was out in the open countryside, an
expensive animal would certainly attract the attention of the Shrikes. For such
a prize they might overcome their religious scruples. Instead, I purchased only
a few handfuls of dates and a loaf of bread, a leather bag to carry these
provisions and a gourd water-bottle. Then I set out through the narrow streets
for the main gate of the city. I had not reached the gates when there was a
commotion in the street ahead of me and a detachment of the palace guards came
towards me, using their staves to force a passage through the market crowds.
Close behind them a half-dozen slaves carried an ornate and curtained litter at
a jog-trot. I was trapped against the clay-daub walls of one of the buildings
and though I recognized both the litter and the commander of the bodyguards, I
could not avoid a confrontation. Panic seized me. I might survive a casual scrutiny from
Rasfer, but I was certain that even under my disguise, my Lord Intef would know
me instantly. Standing beside me was an old slave woman with breasts like two
great amphorae of olive oil and a backside like a hippopotamus's. I wriggled
sideways until her bulk hid me. Then I settled my wig over my eyes and peeped
out from behind her. Despite my fears I felt a tingle of professional
pride that Rasfer was on his feet again so soon after my surgery. He led his
troop of bodyguards towards where I hid, but it was only when he drew almost
level that I noticed that one side of his face had collapsed. It was as though
his unlovely features had been modelled in wax and then held close to a naked
flame. This condition is often the consequence of even the most skilful
trepanning. The other half of his face was set in its customary scowl. If
Rasfer had been hideous before, now he should cause the children to cry and
their elders to make the sign against the evil eye when they looked upon him. He passed close by where I stood, and the litter
followed him. Through a chink in the embroidered curtains I caught a glimpse of
Lord Intef as he sprawled elegantly on pillows of pure silk imported from the
East that must have cost at least five gold rings each. His cheeks were freshly shaved and his hair was
dressed in formal ringlets. On top of his coiffure was set a cone of perfumed
beeswax that would melt in the heat and trickle over his scalp and down his
neck to cool and soothe his skin. One hand, the fingers stiff with jewelled
rings, lay languidly on the smooth brown thigh of a pretty little slave boy who
must have been a recent addition to his collection, for I did not recognize
him. I was taken off-guard by the strength of my own
hatred as I looked at my old master. All the countless injuries and
humiliations that I had suffered at his hands rushed back to torment me, and
these were aggravated by his most recent outrage. By sending the cobra to me he
had endangered the life of my mistress. If I had been able to forgive all else,
I would never be able to forgive him that. He began to turn his head in my direction, but
before our eyes could meet, I sank down behind the mountainous woman in, front
of me. The litter was borne away down the narrow alley, and as I stared after
it, I found that I was trembling just as I had after my struggle with the
cobra. 'Divine Horus, hear this plea. Grant me no rest
until he is dead and gone to his master, Seth,' I whispered, and I pushed my
way on towards the city gate. THE INUNDATION WAS AT ITS HEIGHT, and the lands
along the river were in the fecund embrace of the Nile. As she had done every
season from the beginning of time, she was laying down on our fields another
rich layer of black silt. When she receded again, those glistening expanses
would once more bloom with that shade of green that is peculiar to this very
Egypt. The rich silt and the sunshine would raise three crops to harvest before
the Nile poured over its banks once more to deliver its bounty. The borders of the flooded fields were hemmed with
the raised dykes that controlled the flood and also served as roadways. I
followed one of these footpaths eastward until I reached the rocky ground along
the foothills, then I turned southward. As I went, I paused occasionally to
turn over a rock beside the path, until I found what I was looking for. Then I
struck out with more determination. I kept a wary eye on the rough and broken ground on
my right-hand side, for that was just the type of terrain that would afford a
fine ambush for a band of Shrikes. I was crossing one of the rocky ravines that
lay across the pathway when I was hailed from close at hand. 'Pray for me, beloved of the gods!' My nerves were
so tightly strung that I had let out a startled cry and leapt in the air before
I could prevent it. A shepherd boy sat on the edge of the ravine just
above me. He was not more than ten years old, but he seemed as old as man's
first sin. I knew that the Shrikes often used these children as their scouts
and their sentinels. This grubby little imp looked perfect for that role. His
hair was matted with filth, and he wore a badly tanned goat's skin that I could
smell from where I stood. His eyes were as bright and as avaricious as those of
a crow as he ran them over me, assessing my costume and my baggage. 'Where are you headed, and what is your business,
good father?' he asked, and blew a long warbling note on his reed flute that
could have been a signal to somebody hidden further up the hillside. It took another few moments for my heart to steady
its wild pace, and my voice was a little breathless as I told him, 'You are
impertinent, child. What business is it of yours who I am or where I go?' Immediately he changed his demeanour towards me. 'I
am starved, gentle priest, an orphan forced to fend for myself. Don't you have
a crust for me in that big bag of yours?' 'You look well-nourished to me.' I turned away, but
he scrambled down the bank and danced beside me. 'Let me see in your bag, kind father,' he insisted.
'Alms, I beg of you, gentle sir.' 'Very well, you little ruffian.' Out of the bag I
brought a ripe date. He reached out for it, but before his fingers touched it,
I closed my hand and when I opened it again the date had been transformed into
a purple scorpion. The poisonous insect lifted its tail menacingly over its
head, and the boy screamed and fled back up the bank. At the top he paused only long enough to howl at
me, 'You are not a priest. You are one of the desert djinn. You are a devil,
not a man.' Frantically he made the sign against the evil eye and spat three
times on the ground, and then he raced away up the hill. I had captured the scorpion from under a flat rock
farther back along the path. Naturally, I had nipped the sting from the end of
its tail before slipping it into my bag in readiness for just such an
eventuality. The old slave who had taught me to read lips, had showed me a few
other tricks while he was about it. One of them was sleight-of-hand. At the shoulder of the next hill I paused to look
back. The shepherd boy was on the crest far above me, but he was not alone.
There were two men with him. They stood in a group looking down at me, and the
child was gesticulating vehemently. As soon as they saw I had spotted them, all
three of them disappeared over the skyline. I doubted they would want further
truck with a demon priest. I had not gone much farther when I saw movement on
the track ahead of me, and I stopped short and shaded my eyes against the
dazzle of the noonday sun. I was relieved to make out a small and
innocent-seeming party coming in my direction. I moved forward cautiously to
meet it, and as we drew together, my heart leaped as I thought I recognized
Tanus. He was leading a donkey. The doughty little animal was heavily burdened.
Atop the large bundle on its back sat a woman and a child, but it trotted on
gamely. I saw that the woman was herself heavily burdened, her belly swelling
out with her pregnancy. The child balanced behind her was a girl on the verge of
puberty. I was about to hail Tanus and hurry forward to meet
him, when I realized that I was mistaken and the man was a stranger. It was his
tall, broad-shouldered figure, the limber way he moved and the shining shock of
gold-blond hair that had deceived me. He was watching me suspiciously and had
drawn his sword. Now he pulled the donkey off the path and interposed himself
between me and the precious burden it carried. 'The blessings of the gods upon you, good fellow.'
I played out my role as priest, and he grunted and kept the point of the sword
aimed at my belly. No man trusted a stranger in this very Egypt of ours. 'You risk the life of your family on this road, my
friend. You should have sought out the protection of a caravan. There are
brigands in the hills.' I was truly worried for them. The woman seemed gentle
and decent, while the child was on the verge of tears at my warding. 'Pass on, priest!' the man ordered. 'Keep your
advice for those who value it.' 'You are kind, gentle sir,' the woman whispered.
'We waited a week at Qena for the caravan, and could not wait longer. My mother
lives at Luxor, and she will help with the birth of my baby.' 'Silence, woman!' her husband growled at her. 'We
want no truck with strangers, even though they wear the robes of the
priesthood.' I hesitated, trying to fathom if there was anything
that I could do for them. The girl was a pretty little thing with dark obsidian
eyes, and she had quite touched my heart. However, at that moment the husband urged
the donkey past where I stood, and with a helpless shrug, I watched them go. 'You cannot bleed for all of mankind,' I told
myself. 'Nor can you force your advice on those who reject it.' Without looking
back again, I went on northwards. It was late afternoon before I looked down on the
spur of rock that thrust out into the green swampland. Even from this
vantage-point it was impossible to pick out the shanty. It was hidden deep in
the papyrus beds, and the roof was of papyrus stems, so the concealment was
perfect. I ran down the path, leaping from rock to rock, until I reached the
edge of the water. This far from the main course of the Nile, the flood was not
so significant. I found our old dilapidated boat tied up at the
landing. It was half-flooded and I had to bale it out before committing it to
the water. I poled out cautiously along the tunnel through the papyrus. At low
ebb of the Nile the shanty stood on dry land, but now there was sufficient
water under the stilts that supported it to drown a standing man. There was an empty boat in better shape than mine
tied to one of the hut stilts. I moored mine beside it, climbed the rickety
ladder and peered into our old hunting-lodge. It consisted of a single room,
and the sunshine streamed in through the holes in the"thatched roof, but
no matter, for it never rains in Upper Egypt. The hut had not been in such disorder since the day
Tanus and I had first discovered it. Clothing and weapons and cooking-pots were
scattered around like the debris of a battlefield. The stink of liquor was even
more powerful than that of old food and unwashed bodies. Those unwashed bodies were lying on an equally
unwashed mattress in the far corner. I crossed the littered floor gingerly to
inspect them for signs of life, and at that moment the woman grunted and rolled
over. She was young and her naked body was full and enticing, with big round
breasts and a thatch of crisp curls at the base of her belly. However, even in
repose, her face was hard and common. I had no doubt that Tanus had found her
on the waterfront. I had always known him to be fastidious, and he was
never a drinking man. This creature and the empty wine jars that were stacked
against every wall were merely an indication of. how far he had been brought
down. I looked at him now as he slept, and hardly recognized him. His face was
mottled and bloated with drink and covered with un-trimmed beard. It was clear
that he had not shaved since last I had seen him outside the harem walls. At that moment the woman woke. Her eyes focused on
me and in a single catlike movement she was off the mattress and reaching for
the sheathed dagger hanging on the wall beside me. I snatched the weapon away
before she could reach it and offered her the naked point. 'Go!' I ordered softly. 'Before I give you
something in your belly that even you have never felt before.' She gathered up her clothes and pulled them on
hurriedly, all the while staring at me venomously. 'He has not paid me,' she said, once she was
dressed. 'I am sure you have already helped yourself
generously.' I gestured towards the door with the dagger. 'He promised me five rings of gold.' She changed
her tone and began to whine. 'I have worked hard for him these last twenty days
or more. I have done everything for him, cooked and kept his house, serviced
him and cleaned up his puke when he was drunk. I must be paid. I will not leave
until you pay me—' I seized her by a lock of her long black hair and
ushered her to the doorway. I helped her, still by means of her hair, into the more
dilapidated of the two boats. Once she had poled out of my reach, she turned
upon me such a stream of abuse that the egrets and other water-fowl were
frightened from the reed-beds around us. When I returned to where Tanus lay, he had not
moved. I checked the wine jars. Most of them were empty, but there were still
two or three that were full. I wondered how he had accumulated such a store of
liquor, and guessed that he had probably sent the woman back to Karnak to find
a ferryman to ship it out to him. There had been enough to keep the entire
corps of the Blue Crocodile Guards drunk for a season. Little wonder that he
was in such a condition. I sat beside his mattress for a while, letting my
sympathy for him run its full course. He had tried to destroy himself. I
understood that, and did not despise him for it. His love for my mistress was
such that without it he did not wish to continue living. Of course I was also angry with him for abusing
himself in such a fashion, and for succumbing to such self-indulgent folly.
However, even in this pitiful drink-sodden state, I could still find much that
was noble and admirable about him. After all, he was not alone in guilt. My
mistress had tried to take poison for the very same reason as he had tried to
destroy himself. I had understood and forgiven her. Could I do less for Tanus?
I sighed for these two young people who were all that I had in Me of any real
value. Then I stood up and got to work. Firstly, I stood over Tanus for a while, bolstering
my anger to the extent that I could be really harsh with him. Then I took him
by the heels and dragged him across the floor of the hut. He came half out of
his stupor and cursed weakly, but I took no notice of his protests and tumbled
him through the doorway. He plunged into the swamp head-first and raised a
mighty splash as he went under. I waited for him to come up and flounder about
groggily on the surface, still only half-conscious. I dropped in beside him, grabbed a double handful
of his hair and thrust his head back under-water. For a moment he struggled
only weakly and I was able to hold him under with ease. Then his natural
instincts of survival took over and he heaved up with all his old strength. I
was lifted clear of the surface and thrown aside like a twig in a storm. Tanus came out bellowing in the effort to draw
breath, and striking out blindly at his unseen adversary. One of those blows
would have stunned a hippopotamus, and I backed away hurriedly and watched him
from a distance. Coughing and choking, he floundered to the ladder
and hung upon it with his hair streaming into his eyes. He had obviously
swallowed so much water and sucked so much of it into his lungs that I felt a
tingle of alarm. My cure might have been a little too vigorous. I was just
about to go to his aid, when he opened his mouth wide and a foul mixture of
swamp water and rotten wine erupted out of him. I was astonished by the
quantity of it. He hung on to the ladder, gasping and gurgling for
breath. I swam to one of the stilts of the hut and waited until he had vomited
again before I told him, putting all the contempt 1 could muster into my voice,
'My Lady Lostris would be so proud to see you now.' He peered about with streaming eyes and focused on
me at last. 'Taita, damn you! Was it you that tried to drown me? You idiot, I
could have killed you.' 'hi your present condition the only damage you
could do would be to a jar of wine. What a sorry, disgusting sight you are!' I
climbed the ladder into the hut and left him in the water, shaking his head and
mumbling to himself. I set about tidying up the mess and the filth. It was some time before Tanus followed me up the
ladder and sat shamefacedly in the doorway. I ignored him-and went on with my
work, until at last he was forced to break the silence. 'How are you, old friend? I have missed you.' 'Others have missed you also. Kratas, for one. The
squadron has been fighting down-river. They could have found use for another
sword. My Lady Lostris, for another. She speaks of you every day, and holds her
love pure and true. I wonder what she would think of that trollop I chased out
of your bed?' He groaned and held his head. 'Oh, Taita, don't
speak your mistress's name. To be reminded of her is unbearable—' 'So broach another jug of wine and wallow in your
own filth and your self-pity,' I suggested angrily. 'I have lost her for ever. What would you have me
do then?' 'I would want you to have faith and fortitude, as
she has.' He looked up at me pitifully. Tell me about her,
Taita. How is she? Does she still think of me?' 'More is the pity,' I grunted disgustedly. 'She
thinks of little else. She holds herself ready for the day that you two are
brought together again.' 'That will never be. I have lost her for ever and I
don't want to go on living.' 'Good!' I agreed briskly. 'Then I'll not waste
further time here. I'll tell my mistress that you did not want to hear her
message.' I pushed past him, swarmed down the ladder and dropped into the
skiff. 'Wait, Taita!' he called after me. 'Come back!' 'To what purpose? You want to die. Then get on with
it. I'll send the embalmers out to pick up the corpse later.' He grinned with embarrassment. 'All right, I am
being a fool. The drink has fuddled my mind. Come back, I beg of you. Give me
the message from Lostris.' With a show of reluctance I climbed back up the
ladder, and he followed me into the hut, staggering only a little. 'My mistress bids me tell you that her love for you
is untouched by any of the things that have been thrust upon her. She is still
and will always be your woman.' 'By Horus, she puts me to shame,' he muttered. 'No,' I disagreed. 'Your shame is of your own
making.' He snatched his sword from the scabbard that hung
above the filthy bed and slashed out at the row of wine amphorae that stood
against the far wall. As each one burst, the wine poured out and trickled
through the slats of the floor. He was panting as he came back to me, and I scoffed
at him. 'Look at you! You have let yourself go until you are as soft and as
short of wind as an old priest—' 'Enough of that, Taita! You have had your say. Mock
me no more, or you will regret it.' I could see he was becoming as angry as I had
intended. My insults were stiffening him up nicely. 'My mistress would have you
take uj? the challenge thrown to you by Pharaoh so that you will still be alive
and a man of honour and worth in five years' time, when she is free to come to
-you.' I had his full attention now. 'Five years? What is
this about, Taita? Will there truly be a term to our suffering?' 'I worked the Mazes for Pharaoh. He will be dead in
five years from now,' I told him simply. He stared at me in awe and I saw a
hundred different emotions pursue each other across his features. He is as easy
to read as this scroll on which I write. "The Mazes!' he whispered at last. Once long
ago he had been a doubter, and had disparaged my way with the Mazes. That had
changed and he was now an even firmer believer in my powers than my mistress.
He had seen my visions become reality too often to be otherwise. 'Can you wait that long for your love?' I asked.
'My mistress swears that she can wait for you through all eternity. Can you
wait a few short years for her?' 'She has promised to wait for me?' he demanded. 'Through all eternity,' I repeated, and I thought
he might begin to weep. I could not have faced that, not watched a man like
Tanus in tears, so I went on hastily, 'Don't you want to hear the vision that
the Mazes gave me?' He thrust back the tears. 'Yes! Yes!" he
agreed eagerly, and so we began to talk. We talked until the night fell, and
then we sat in the darkness and talked some more. I told him the things that I had told my Lady
Lostris, all the details that I had kept from them both over the years. When I
came to the details of how his father, Pianki, Lord Harrab, had been ruined and
destroyed by his secret enemy, Tanus' anger was so fierce that it burned away
the last effects of the debauchery from his mind, and by the time the dawn
broke over the swamps, his resolve was once more clear and strong. 'Let us get on with this enterprise of yours, for
it seems the right and proper way.' He sprang to his feet and girded on his
sword scabbard. Although I thought it wise to rest a while and let him recover
fully from the effects of the wine, he would have no part of it. 'Back to Karnak at once!' he insisted. 'Kratas is
waiting, and the lust to avenge my father's memory and to lay eyes on my own
sweet love again burns like a fire in my blood.' ONCE WE HAD LEFT THE SWAMP, TANUS took the lead
along the rocky path, and I followed him at a run. As soon as the sun came up
above the horizon, the sweat burst out across his back and streamed down to
soak the waistband of his kilt. It was as though the rancid old wine was being
purged from his body. Although I could hear him panting wildly, he never paused
to rest or even moderated his pace, but ran on into the rising heat from the
desert without a check. It was I who pulled him up with a shout, and we stood
shoulder to shoulder and stared ahead. The birds had caught my attention. I had
picked out the commotioji of their wings from afar. 'Vultures,' Tanus grunted with ragged breath. 'They
have something dead amongst the rocks.' He drew his sword and we went forward
cautiously. We found the man first, and chased the vultures off
him in a flurrying storm of wings. I recognized him by the shock of blond hair
as the husband I had met on the road the previous day. There was nothing left
of his face, for he had lain upon his back and the birds had eaten the flesh
away to the bones of the skull. They had picked out his eyes, and the empty
sockets stared at the cloudless sky. His lips were gone and he grinned with
bloody teeth, as though at the futile joke of our brief existence upon this
earth. Tanus rolled him on to his stomach, and we saw at once the stab-wounds
in his back that had killed him. There were a dozen of these thrust through his
ribs. 'Whoever did this was making sure of the job,'
Tanus remarked, hardened to death as only a seasoned soldier can be. I walked on into the rocks and a buzzing black
cloud of flies rose from the dead body of the wife. I have never understood
where the flies come from, how they materialize so swiftly out of the searing
dry heat of the desert. I guessed that the wife had aborted while they were
busy with her. They must have left her alive after they had taken their
pleasure with her. With the last of her strength she had taken the infant
protectively in her arms. She had died like that, huddled against a boulder,
shielding her still-born infant from the vultures. I went on deeper into the broken ground, and once
again the flies led me to where the bandits had dragged the little girl. At
least one of them had summoned up the compassion to cut her throat after they
had finished with her, rather than let her bleed slowly to death. One of the flies settled on my lips. I brushed it
away and began to weep. Tanus found me still weeping. 'Did you know them?' he asked, and I nodded and cleared
my throat to answer. 'I met them on the road yesterday. I tried to
warn—' I broke off, for it was not easy to continue. I took a deep breath.
"They had a donkey. The Shrikes will have taken it.' Tanus nodded. His expression was bleak as he turned
away and made a rapid cast amongst the rocks. 222 'This way’, he called, and broke into a run,
heading out into the rocky desert. 'Tanus!' I yelled after him. 'Kratas is waiting—'
But he took not the least notice and I was left with no option but to follow
him. I caught up with him again when he lost the tracks of the donkey on a bad
piece of ground and was forced to cast ahead. 'I feel for that family even more than you do,' I
insisted. 'But this is folly. Kratas waits for us. We do not have time to
waste—' He cut me off without even glancing in my
direction, 'How old was that child? Not more than nine years? I always have
time to see justice done.' His face was cold and vengeful. It was clear to see
that he had recovered all his former mettle. I knew better than to argue
further. The image of the little girl was still strong and
clear in my mind. I joined him and we picked up the trail again. Now, with the
two of us cooperating, we went forward even more swiftly. Tanus and I had tracked gazelle and oryx, and even
lion, in this fashion and we had both become adept at this esoteric art. We
worked as a team, running on each side of the spurs that our quarry had left,
and signalling every twist or change in it to each other. Very soon our quarry
reached a rough track that led eastward from the river and still deeper into
the desert. They had joined it, and made our task of catching up with them that
much simpler. It was almost noon, and our water-bottles were
empty when at last we spotted them far ahead. There were five of them, and the
donkey. It was clear that they had not expected to be followed deep into the
desert which was their fastness, and they were moving carelessly. They had not
even taken the trouble to cover then- back-trail. Tanus pulled me down behind the shelter of a rock
while we caught our breath, and he growled at me, 'We'll circle out ahead of
them. I want to see their faces.' He jumped up and led me in a wide detour out to one
side of the track. We overtook the band of Shrikes, but well beyond then- line
of sight. Then we cut in again to meet the track ahead of them. Tanus had a
soldier's eye for ground, and set up the ambuscade unerringly. We heard them coining from afar, the clatter of the
don-key's hooves and the sing-song of their voices. While we waited for them, I
had the first opportunity to contemplate the prudence of my decision to follow
along so unquestion-ingly. When the party of Shrikes at last came into view I
was convinced that I had been over-hasty. They were as murderous-looking a bunch
of ruffians as I had ever laid eyes upon, and I was armed only with my little
jewelled dagger. Just short of where we lay, the tall, bearded
Bedouin who was obviously their leader stopped suddenly, and ordered one of the
men who followed him to unload the water-skin from the donkey. He drank first
and then passed it on to the others. My throat closed in sympathy as I watched
them swallow down the precious stuff. 'By Horus, look at the stains of the women's blood
on their robes. I wish I had Lanata with me now,' Tanus whispered, as we
crouched amongst the rocks. 'I could put an arrow through that one's belly and
drain the water from him like beer from the vat.' Then he laid a hand on my
arm. 'Don't move until I do, do you hear me? I want no heroics from you now,
mind.' I nodded vigorously, and felt not the slightest inclination to protest
against these very reasonable instructions. The Shrikes came on again directly to where we
waited. They were all heavily armed. The Bedouin walked ahead. His sword was strapped
between his shoulder-blades, but with the handle protruding up over his left
shoulder, ready to hand. He had the cowl of his woollen cloak drawn over his
head to protect him from the fierce sunlight. It impaired his side-vision and
he did not notice us as he passed close in front of us. Two others followed him closely, one of them
leading the donkey. The last two sauntered along behind the animal, engrossed
in a listless squabble over a piece of gold jewellery that they had taken from
the murdered woman. All their weapons were sheathed, except for the short,
bronze-headed stabbing spears carried by the last pair. Tanus let them all pass, and then he stood up
quietly and moved in. behind the last two men in the column. He appeared to move
casually, as the leopard does, but it was in reality only a breath before he
swung his sword at the neck of the man on the right. Although I had intended backing Tanus up to the
full, somehow my good intentions had not been translated into action, and I
still crouched behind my comforting rock. I justified myself with the thought
that I would probably only have hindered him if I had followed him too closely. I had never watched Tanus kill a man before.
Although I knew that it was his vocation and that he had, over the years, had
every opportunity to hone these gruesome skills, still I was astonished by his
virtuosity. As he struck, his victim's head leapt from its shoulders like a
desert spring-hare from its burrow, and the decapitated trunk actually took
another step before the legs buckled under it. As the blow reached the limit of
its arc, Tanus smoothly reversed the stroke. With the same movement he struck
back-handed at the next brigand. The second neck severed just as cleanly. The
head toppled off and fell free, while the carcass slumped forward with the
blood fountaining high in the air. The splash of blood and the weighty thump-thump of
the two disembodied heads striking the rocky earth alerted the other three Shrikes.
They spun about in alarm, and for a moment stared in bewildered disbelief at
the sudden carnage in their ranks. Then with a wild shout they drew their
swords and rushed at Tanus in a body. Rather than retreating before them, Tanus
charged them ferociously, splitting them apart. He swung to face the man he had
isolated from his mates, and his thrust ripped a bloody flesh-wound down the
side of his chest. The man squealed and reeled backwards. But before Tanus was
able to finish him off, the other two fell upon him from behind. Tanus was
forced to spin round to face them, and bronze clashed on bronze as he stopped
their charge. He held them off at sword's-length, engaging first one and then
the other, until the lightly wounded man recovered and came at him from his
rear. 'Behind you!' I yelled at him, and he whipped round
only just in time to catch the thrust on his own blade. Instantly the other two
were upon him again, and he was forced to give ground in order to defend
himself from all sides. His swordsmanship was breathtaking to watch. So swift
was his blade that it seemed that he had erected a glittering wall of bronze
around himself against which the blows of his enemies clattered ineffectually. Then I realized that Tanus was tiring. The sweat
streamed from his body in the heat, and his features were contorted with the
effort. The long weeks of wine and debauchery had taken their toll of what had
once been his limitless strength and stamina. He fell back before the next rush with which the
bearded Bedouin drove at him, until he pressed his back to one of the boulders
on the opposite side of the track from where I still crouched helplessly. With
the rock to cover his back, all three of his attackers were forced to come at
him from the front. But this was no real respite. Their attack was relentless.
Led by the Bedouin, they howled like a pack of wild dogs as they bayed him, and
Tanus' right arm tired and moved slower. The spear carried by the first man whom Tanus had
beheaded had fallen in the middle of the track. I realized that I must do
something immediately if I were not to watch Tanus hacked down before my eyes.
With a huge effort I gathered up my slippery courage, and crept from my
hiding-place. The Shrikes had forgotten all about me in their eagerness for the
kill. I reached the spot where the spear lay without any one of them noticing
me, and I snatched it up. With the solid weight of the weapon in my hands, all
my lost courage came flooding back. The Bedouin was the most dangerous of the three of
Tanus' adversaries, and he was also the closest to me. His back was towards me,
and his whole attention was on. the unequal duel. I levelled the spear and
rushed at him. The kidneys are the most vulnerable target in the
human back. With my knowledge of anatomy, I could aim my thrust exactly. The
spear-point went in a finger's-width to one side of the spinal column, all the
way in. The broad spear-head opened a gaping wound, and skewered his right
kidney with a surgeon's precision. The Bedouin stiffened and froze like a
temple statue, instantly paralysed by my thrust. Then, as I viciously twisted
the blade in his flesh the way Tanus had taught me, mincing his kidney to pulp,
the sword fell from his fist and he collapsed with such a dreadful cry that his
comrades were distracted enough to give Tanus his chance. Tanus' next thrust took one of them in the centre
of his chest, and despite his exhaustion it still had sufficient power in it to
fly cleanly through the man's torso and for the blood-smeared point to protrude
a hand-span from between his shoulder-blades. Before Tanus was able to clear
his blade from the clinging embrace of live flesh and to kill the last Shrike,
the survivor spun round and ran. Tanus took a few paces after him, then gasped, 'I'm
all done in. After him, Taita, don't let that murderous jackal get away.' There are very few men that can outrun me. Tanus is
the only one I know of, but he has to be on top form to do it. I put my foot in
the centre of the Bedouin's back and held him down as I jerked the spearhead
out of his flesh, and then I went after the last Shrike. I caught him before he had gone two hundred paces,
and I was running so lightly that he did not hear me coming up behind him. With
the edge of the spear-head I slashed the tendon in the back of his heel, and he
went down sprawling. The sword flew out of his hand. As he lay on his back
kicking and screaming at me, I danced around him, pricking him with the point
of the spear, goading him into position for a good clean killing thrust. 'Which of the women did you enjoy the best?' I
asked him, as I stabbed him in the thigh. 'Was it the mother, with her big
belly, or was it the little girl? Was she tight enough for you?' 'Please spare me!' he screamed. 'I did nothing. It
was the others. Don't kill me!' "There is dried blood on the front of your
kilt,' I said, and I stabbed him in the stomach, but not too deeply. 'Did the
child scream as loudly as you do now?' I asked. As he rolled over into a ball to protect his
stomach, I stabbed him in the spine, by a lucky chance finding the gap between
the vertebrae. Instantly he was paralysed from the waist down, and I stepped
back from him. 'Very well,' I said. 'You ask me not to kill you,
and I won't. It would be too good for you.' I turned away and walked back to join Tanus. The
maimed Shrike dragged himself a little way after me, his paralysed legs
slithering after him like a fisherman dragging a pair of dead carp. Then the
effort was too much and he collapsed in a whimpering heap. Although it was past
noon, the sun still had enough heat in it to kill him before it set. Tanus looked at me curiously as I came back to join
him. "There is a savage streak in you that I never suspected before.' He
shook his head in wonder. 'You never fail to amaze me.' He pulled the water-skin from the back of the
donkey and offered it to me, but I shook my head. 'You first You need it more
than I do.' He drank, his eyes tightly closed with the pleasure
of it, and then gasped, 'By the sweet breath of Isis, you are right I am soft
as an old woman. Even that little piece of sword-play nearly finished me.' Then
he looked around at the scattered corpses, and grinned with satisfaction. 'But
all in all, not a bad start on Pharaoh's business.' 'It was the poorest of beginnings,' I contradicted
him, and when he crooked an eyebrow at me I went on, 'We should have kept at
least one of them alive to lead us to the Shrikes' nest. Even that one', I
gestured towards the dying man lying out there amongst the rocks, 'is too
far-gone to be of any use to us. It was my fault. I allowed my anger to get the
better of me. We won't make the same mistake again.' We were halfway back to where we had left the
bodies of the murdered family before my true nature reasserted itself, and I
began bitterly to regret my callous and brutal treatment of the maimed brigand. 'After all, he was a human being, as we are,' I
told Tanus, and he snorted. 'He was an animal, a rabid jackal, and you did a
fine job. You have mourned him far too long. Forget him. Tell me, instead, why
we must make this detour back to look at dead men, instead of heading straight
for Kratas' camp.' 'I need the husband's body.' I would say no more
until we stood over the mutilated corpse. The pathetic relic was already
stinking in the heat The vultures had left very little flesh on the bones. 'Look at that hair,' I told Tanus. 'Who else do you
know with a bush' like that?' For a moment he looked puzzled, and then he
grinned and ran his fingers through his own dense ringlets. 'Help me load him on the donkey,' I ordered.
'Kratas can take him into Karnak to the morticians for embalming. We'll buy him
a good funeral and a fine tomb with your name on the walls. Then, by sunset
tomorrow, all of Thebes will know that Tanus, Lord Harrab perished in the
desert, and was half-eaten by the birds.' 'If Lostris hears of it—' Tanus looked worried. Til send a warning letter to her. The advantage we
will win by letting the world believe you dead will far outweigh any risk of
alarming my mistress.' KRATAS WAS CAMPED AT THE FIRST oasis on the caravan
road to the Red Sea, less than a day's march from Karnak. He had with him a
hundred men of the Blue Crocodile Guards, all of them carefully selected, as I
had commanded. Tanus and I reached the encampment in the middle of the night.
We had travelled hard and were close to exhaustion. We fell on our
sleeping-mats beside the camp-fire and slept until dawn. At first light, Tanus was up and mingling with his
men. Their delight at having him back was transparent. The officers embraced
him and the men cheered him, and grinned with pride as he greeted each of them
by name. At breakfast Tanus gave Kratas instructions to take
the putrefying corpse back to Karnak for burial and to make certain that the
news of his death was the gossip of all Thebes. I gave Kratas a letter for my
Lady Lostris. He would find a trustworthy messenger to carry it up-river to
Elephantine. Kratas selected an escort of ten men, and they
prepared to set off with the donkey and its odorous burden, back towards the
Nile and Thebes. 'Try to catch up with us on the road to the sea. If
you cannot, then you'll find us camped at the oasis of Gebel Nagara. We will
wait for you there,' Tanus shouted after him, as the detachment trotted out
ofVhe encampment. 'And remember to bring Lanata, my bow, when you return!' NO SOONER WAS KRATAS OUT OF SIGHT beyond the first
rise on the westerly road than Tanus formed up the rest of the regiment and led
us away in the opposite direction along the caravan road towards the sea. The caravan road from the banks of the river Nile
to the shores of the Red Sea was long and hard. A large, unwieldy caravan
usually took twenty days to make the journey. We covered the distance in four
days, for Tanus pushed us in a series of forced marches. At the outset, he and
I were probably the only ones of all the company who were not in superb
physical condition. However, by the time we reached Gebel Nagara, Tanus had
burned the excess fat off his frame and sweated out the last poisons from the
wine jar. He was once again lean and hard. As for myself, it was the first time that I had
ever made a forced march with a company of the guards. For the first few days I
suffered all the torments of thirst and aching muscles, of blistered feet and
exhaustion that the Ka of a dead man must be forced to endure on the road to
the underworld. However, my pride would not allow me to fall behind, apart from
the facMjiat to do so in this wild and savage landscape would have meant
certain death. To my surprise and pleasure, I found that after the first few
days, it became easier and easier to keep my place in the ranks of trotting
warriors. Along the way, we passed two large caravans moving
towards the Nile, with the donkeys bow-legged under their heavy loads of trade
goods, and escorts of heavily armed men far surpassing in number the merchants
and their' retainers who made up the rest of the company. No caravan was safe
from the depredations of the Shrikes unless it was protected by a force of
mercenaries such as these, or unless the merchants were prepared to pay the
crippling toll money that the Shrikes demanded to allow them free passage. When we met these strangers, Tanus pulled his shawl
over his head to mask his face and hide that golden bush of hair. He was too
distinctive a figure to risk being recognized and his continued existence being
reported in Karnak. We'did not respond to the greetings and questions that were
flung at us by these other travellers, but ran past them in aloof silence
without even glancing in their direction. When we were still a day's march from the coast, we
left the main caravan route and swung away southwards, following an ancient
disused track that had been shown to me some years previously by one of the
wild Bedouin whom I had befriended. The wells at Gebel Nagara lay on this old
route to the sea, and were seldom visited by humans these days, only by the
Bedouin and the desert bandits, if you can call these human. By the time we reached the wells, I was as slim and
physically fit as I had ever been in my life, but I lamented the lack of a
mirror, for I was convinced that this new energy and force that I felt within
myself must be reflected in my features, and that my beauty must be enhanced by
it. I would have welcomed the opportunity to admire it myself. However, there
seemed to be no dearth of others to admire it in my place. At the camp-fire in
the evenings, many a prurient glance was flashed in my direction, and I
received more than a few sly offers from my companions, for even such an elite
fighting corps as the guards was contaminated by the new sexual licence that
permeated our society. I kept my dagger beside me in the night and when I
pricked the first uninvited visitor to my sleeping-mat with the needle-point,
his yells caused much hilarity amongst the others. After that, I was spared any
further unwelcome attentions. Even once we had reached the wells, Tanus would
allow us little rest. While we waited for Kratas to catch up, he kept his men
exercising at arms, and at competitions of archery and wrestling and running. I
was pleased to see that Kratas had chosen these men strictly in accordance with
my instructions to him. There was not a single hulking brute amongst them.
Apart from Tanus himself, they were all small, agile men aptly suited to the
role that I planned for them. Kratas arrived only two days behind us. Taking into
account his return to Karnak and the time taken up by the tasks that Tanus had
set for him there, this meant that he must have travelled even more swiftly
than we had done. 'What held you up?' Tanus greeted him. 'Did you
find a willing maid on the way?' 'I had two heavy burdens to carry,' Kratas replied,
as they embraced. 'Your bow, and the hawk seal. I am glad to be rid of both of them.'
He handed over both the weapon and the statuette with a grin, delighted as ever
to be back with Tanus. Tanus immediately took Lanata out into the desert.
I went with him and helped him stalk close to a herd of gazelle. With these
fleet little creatures racing and leaping across the plain, it was an
extraordinary sight to watch Tanus bowl over a dozen of them at full run with
as many arrows. That night, as we feasted on grilled livers and fillets of
gazelle, we discussed the next stage of my plan. In the morning we left Kratas in command of the
guards, and Tanus and I set out alone for the coast. It was only half a day's
travel to the small fishing village which was our goal, and at noon we topped
the last rise and looked down from the hills on to the glittering expanse of
the sea spread below us. From this height we could see clearly the dark outline
ofthe coral reefs beneath the turquoise waters. As soon as we entered the village, Tanus called for
the headman, and so apparent from his bearing was Tanus' importance and
authority, that the old man came at a run. When Tanus showed him the hawk seal,
he fell to the earth in obeisance, as though it were Pharaoh himself who stood
before him, and beat his head upon the ground with such force that I feared he might
do himself serious injury. When I lifted him to his feet once more, he led us
to the finest lodgings in the village, his own filthy hovel, and turned his
numerous family out to make room for us. Once we had eaten a bowl of the fish stew that our
host provided and drunk a cup of the delicious palm wine, Tanus and I went down
to the beach of dazzling white sand and bathed away the sweat and the dust of
the desert in the warm waters of the lagoon that was enclosed by the jagged
barricade of coral that lay parallel to the shore. Behind us the harsh
mountains, devoid of the faintest green tinge of growing things, thrust up into
the aching blue desert sky. Sea, mountains and sky combined in a symphony of
grandeur that stunned the senses. However, I had little time to appreciate it
all, for the fishing fleet was returning. Five small dilapidated vessels with
sails of woven palm-fronds were coming in through the pass in the reef. So
great was the load of fish that each of them carried, that they seemed in danger
of foundering before they could reach the beach. I am fascinated by all the natural bounty that the
gods provide for us, and I examined the catch avidly as it was thrown out upon
the beach, and questioned the fishermen as to each of the hundred different
species. The pile of fish formed a glittering treasure of rainbow colours, and
I wished that I had my scrolls and paint-pots to record it all. This interlude was too brief. As soon as the catch
was unloaded, I embarked on one of the tiny vessels that stank so abundantly of
its vocation, and waved back at Tanus on the beach as we put out through the
pass in the reef. He was to remain here until I returned with the equipment
that we needed for the next part of my plan. Once again, I did not want him to
be recognized where I was going. His job now was to prevent any of the
fishermen or their families from sneaking away into the desert to a secret
meeting with the Shrikes, to report the presence in their village of a
golden-headed lord who bore the hawk seal. The tiny vessel threw up her bows at the first
strong scent of the sea, and the helmsman tacked across the wind and headed her
up into the north, running parallel to that dun and awful coast. We had but a
short way to go, and before nightfall the helmsman pointed over the bows at the
clustered stone buildings of the port of Safaga on the distant shore-line. FOR A THOUSAND YEARS SAFAGA HAD been the entrepot
for all trade coming into the Upper Kingdom from the East. Even as I stood in
the bows of our tiny craft, I could make out the shapes of other much larger
vessels on the northern horizon as they came and went between Safaga and the Arabian ports on the eastern shore of the narrow
sea. It was dark by the time that I stepped ashore on the
beach at Safaga, and nobody seemed to remark my arrival. I knew exactly where I
was going, for I had visited the port regularly on Lord Intefs nefarious
business. At this hour the streets were almost deserted, but the taverns were
packed. I made my way swiftly to the home of Tiamat the merchant. ; Tiamat was
a rich man and his home the largest in the old town. An armed slave barred the
door to me. 'Tell your master that the surgeon from Karnak who
saved his leg for him is here,' I ordered, and Tiamat himself limped out to
greet me. He was taken aback when he saw my clerical disguise, but had the good
sense not to remark on it, nor to mention my name in front of the slave. He
drew me into his walled garden, and as soon as we were alone he exclaimed, 'Is
it really you, Taita? I heard that you had been murdered by the Shrikes at
Elephantine.' He was a portly, middle-aged man, with an open,
intelligent face and a shrewd mind. Some years previously he had been carried
in to me on a litter. A party of travellers had found him beside the road,
where he had been left for dead after his caravan had been pillaged by the
Shrikes. I had stitched him together, and even managed to save the leg that had
already mortified by the time I first saw it. However, he would always walk
with a limp. 'I am delighted to see that the reports of your
death are premature,' he chuckled, and clapped his hands to have his slaves
bring me a cup of cool sherbet and a plate of figs and honeyed dates. After a decent interval of polite conversation, he
asked quietly, 'Is there anything I can do for you? I owe you my life. You have
only to ask. My home is your home. All I have is yours.' 'I am on the king's business,' I told him, and drew
out the hawk seal from under my tunic. His expression became grave. 'I acknowledge the
seal of Pharaoh. But it was not necessary to show it to me. Ask what you will
of me. I cannot refuse you.' He listened to all I had to say without another
word, and when I had finished, he sent for his bailiff and gave him his orders
in front of me. Before he sent the man away, he turned to me and said, 'Is
there anything that I have forgotten? Anything else you need at all?' 'Your generosity is without limits,' I told him.
'However, there is one other thing. I long for my writing materials.' He turned back to the bailiff. 'See to it that
there are scrolls and brushes and ink-pot in one of the packs.' After the bailiff had left, we sat on talking for
half the night. Tiamat stood at the centre of the busiest trading route in the Upper
Kingdom, and heard every rumour and whisper from the farthest reaches of the
empire, and from beyond the sea. I learned as much in those few hours in his
garden as I would in a month in the palace at Elephantine. 'Do you still pay your ransom to the Shrikes to
allow your caravans through?' I asked, and he shrugged with resignation. 'After what they did to my leg, what option do I
have? Each season then" demands become more exorbitant. I must pay over
one-quarter of the value of my goods to them as soon as the caravan leaves
Safaga, and half my profits once The goods are sold in Thebes. Soon they will
beggar us all, and grass will grow on the caravan roads, and the trade of the
kingdom will wither and die.' 'How do you make these payments?' I asked. 'Who
determines the amount, and who collects them?' 'They have then- spies here in the port. They watch
every cargo that is unloaded, and they know what each caravan carries when it
leaves Safaga. Before it even reaches the mountain pass, it will be met by one
of the robber chieftains who will demand the ransom they have set.' It was long past midnight before Tiamat called a
slave to light me to the chamber he had set aside for me. 'You will be gone before I rise tomorrow.' Tiamat
embraced me. 'Farewell, my good friend. My debt to you is not yet paid in full.
Call upon me again, whenever you have need.' The same slave woke me before dawn, and led me down
to the seafront in the darkness. A fine trading vessel of Tiamat's fleet was
moored inside the reef. The captain weighed anchor as soon as I came aboard. In the middle of the morning we crept in through
the pass in the coral and dropped anchor in front of the little fishing village
where Tanus stood on the beach to welcome me. DURING MY ABSENCE TANUS HAD MANAGED to gather
together six decrepit donkeys, and the sailors from Tiamat's ship waded ashore
carrying the bales that we had brought with us from Safaga, and loaded them on
to these miserable creatures. Tanus and I left the captain of the trading
vessel with strict orders to await our return, then, leading the string of
donkeys, we headed back, inland towards the wells at Gebel Nagara. Kratas' men had obviously suffered the heat and the
sand-flies and the boredom with poor grace, for they accorded us a welcome that
was out of keeping with the period that we had been absent. Tanus ordered
Kratas to parade them. The ranks of warriors watched as I unpacked the first
bale that we had brought in on the donkey train. Almost immediately their
interest gave way to mild amusement as I laid out the costume of a slave girl.
In its turn, this was replaced by a buzz of speculation and argument as the
bales yielded up a further seventy-nine* complete female costumes. Kratas and two of his officers helped me place one
of these on the sand in front of each guardsman, and then Tanus gave the order:
'Disrobe! Put on the dress in front of you!' There was a roar of protest and
incredulous hilarity, and k was only when Kratas and his officers passed down
the ranks with assumed expressions of sternness to reinforce the order, that
they began to obey it. Unlike our women who dress but lightly and often
leave their bosom bared and their legs free and naked, the women of Assyria
wear skirts that sweep the ground and sleeves that cover their arms to the
wrist. For reasons of misplaced modesty they even veil their faces when they
walk abroad, although perhaps these restrictions are placed upon them by the
possessive jealousy of their menfolk. Then again there is a wide difference
between the sunny land of Egypt and those more sombre climes where water falls
from the sky and turns solid white upon the moun-taintops, and the winds chill
the flesh and the bones of men like death. Once they had weathered the first shock of seeing
each other in'this outlandish apparel, the nien entered into the spirit of the
moment. Soon there were eighty veiled slave girls prancing and mincing about in
the long skirts that reached to their ankles, tweaking each other's buttocks
and casting exaggerated sheep's eyes at Tanus and his officers. The officers could no longer maintain their
gravity. Perhaps it is because of my peculiar circumstances that I have always
found the spectacle of men dressed as women to be vaguely repulsive, but it is
strange how few other men share my feelings of distaste, and it needs only some
hairy ruffian to don a skirt to reduce his audience to a state of incontinence. In the midst of this uproar, I congratulated myself
that I had insisted that Kratas choose only the smallest and slimmest men from
the squadron. Looking them over now, I was certain that they would be able to
carry through the deception. They would need only a little schooling in
feminine deportment. THE FOLLOWING MORNING OUR STRANGE caravan passed through
the little fishing village and wound its way down on to the beach, where the
trading vessel waited. Kratas and eight of his officers made up the escort.
Complete lack of any armed escort for such a valuable consignment would surely
have aroused suspicion. Nine armed men dressed in the motley garb of
mercenaries would be sufficient to allay this, but would not deter a large
raiding party of Shrikes. At the head of the caravan marched Tanus, dressed
in the rich robes and beaded head-dress of a wealthy merchant from beyond the
Euphrates river. His beard had grown out densely, and I had curled it for him
into those tight ringlets that the Assyrians favoured. Many of these Asians,
particularly those from the high mountainous regions further north, have the
same complexion and skin coloration as Tanus, so he looked the part I had
chosen for him. I followed close behind him. I had overcome my
aversion to wearing female garb, and donned the long skirts and veil, together
with the gaudy jewellery of an Assyrian wife. I was determined not to be
recognized when I returned to Safaga. The voyage was enlivened by the sea-sickness of
most of the slave girls and not a few of the officers, for they were accustomed
to sail on the placid waters of the great river. At one stage so many of them
were lining the rail to make their offerings to the gods of the sea, that the
ship took on a distinct list. We were all relieved to step on to the beach at
Safaga, where we caused much excitement The Assyrian girls were famous for their
skills on the love couch. It was said that some of them were capable of tricks
that could bring a thousand-year-old mummy back to life. It was obvious to
those who watched us come ashore that behind the veils our slave girls must be
images of feminine loveliness. A shrewd Asian merchant would not transport his
wares so far and at such expense, unless he was certain of a good price in the
slave-markets on the Nile. One of the Safaga merchants approached Tanus
immediately and offered to buy the entire bevy of girls on the spot, and spare
him the onerous journey across the desert with them. Tanus waved ffim away with
a scornful chuckle. 'Have you been warned of the perils of the journey
that you intend making?' the merchant insisted. 'Before you reach the Nile, you
will be forced to pay a ransom for your safe passage that will eat up most of
your profits.' 'Who will force me to pay?' Tanus demanded. 'I pay
only what I owe.' "There are those who guard the road,' the merchant
warned him. 'And even though you pay what they demand, there is no certainty
that they will let you pass unharmed, especially with such tempting goods as
you have with you. The vultures on the road to the Nile are so fat from feeding
on the carcasses of stubborn merchants that they can hardly fly. Sell to me now
at a good profit—' 'I have armed guards', Tanus indicated Kratas and
his small squad, 'who will be a match for any robbers we may meet.' And the
onlookers who had listened to the exchange tittered and nudged each other at
the boast. The merchant shrugged. 'Very well, my brave friend.
On my next journey through the desert, I will look for your skeleton beside the
road. I will recognize you by that blustering red beard of yours.' As he had promised me he would, Tiamat had forty
donkeys waiting for us. Twenty of them were laden with filled water-skins, and
the remainder with pack-saddles to carry the bales and bundles that we brought
ashore from the trading ship. I was anxious that we should spend as little time
as possible in the port, under all those prying eyes. It would take only a
single lapse by one of the slave girls to reveal his true gender, and we would
be undone. Kratas and his escort hurried them through the narrow streets,
keeping the bystanders at a distance, and making certain that the slave girls
kept thek veils in place and their eyes downcast, and that none of them
responded in gruff masculine tones to the ribald comment that followed us,
until we were out into the open country beyond the town. We camped that first night still within sight of
Safaga. Although I did not anticipate an attack until we were beyond the first
mountain pass, I was certain that we were already being watched by the spies of
the Shrikes. While it was still light, I made sure that our
slave girls conducted themselves as women, that they kept their faces and
bodies covered, and that when they went into the nearby wadi to attend to
nature's demands, they squatted in decorous fashion and did not uncouthly spray
their water while standing. It was only after darkness fell that Tanus ordered
the bundles carried by the donkeys to be opened and the weapons they contained
to be issued to the slave girls. Each of mem slept with his bow and his sword
concealed under his sleeping-mat. Tanus posted double sentries around the camp. After
we had inspected them and made sure that they were all well placed and fully
alert, Tanus and I slipped away, and in the darkness returned to the port of
Safaga. I led him through the dark streets to the house of Tiamat. The merchant
was expecting our arrival, and had a meal laid ready to welcome us. I could see
that he was excited to meet Tanus. 'Your fame proceeds you, Lord Harrab. I knew your
father. He was a man indeed,' he greeted Tanus. 'Although I have heard
persistent rumours that you died in die desert not a week since, and that even
at this moment your body lies with the morticians on the west bank of the Nile,
undergoing the ritual forty days of the embalming process, you are welcome in
my humble house.' While we enjoyed the feast he provided, Tanus
questioned him at length on all he knew of the Shrikes, and Tiamat answered him
freely and openly. At last Tanus glanced at me and I nodded. Tanus
turned back to Tiamat and said, 'You have been a generous friend to us, and yet
we have been less than honest with you. This was from necessity, for it was of
vital importance that no one should guess at our real purpose in mis endeavour.
Now I will tell you that it is my purpose to smash the Shrikes and deliver
their leaders up to Pharaoh's justice and wrath.' Tiamat smiled and stroked his beard. 'This comes as
no great surprise to me,' he said, 'for I have heard of the charge mat Pharaoh
placed upon you at the festival of Osiris. That and your patent interest in
those murderous bandits left little doubt in my mind. I can say only that I
will sacrifice to the gods for your success.' 'To succeed, I will need your help again,' Tanus
told him. 'You have only to ask.' 'Do you think that the Shrikes are as yet aware of
our caravan?' 'All of Safaga is talking about you,' Tiamat
replied. 'Yours is the richest cargo that has arrived this season. Eighty
beautiful slave girls will be worth at least a thousand gold rings each in
Karnak.' He chuckled and shook his head at the joke. 'You can be certain that
the Shrikes already know all about you. I saw at least three of their spies in
the crowd at the waterfront watching you. You can expect them to meet you and
make their demands even before you reach the first pass.' When we rose to take our leave, he walked with us
as far as his own door. 'May all the gods attend your endeavours. Not only
Pharaoh, but every living soul in the entire kingdom will be in your debt if
you can stamp out this terrible scourge that threatens to destroy our very
civilization, and drive us all back into the age of barbarism.' IT WAS STILL COOL AND DARK THE FOLLOWING morning
when die column started out. Tanus, with Lanata slung over his shoulder, was at
die head of die caravan, widi myself, in all my womanly grace and beauty,
following him closely. Behind us the donkeys were harnessed hi single file,
moving nose to tail down the middle of die well-beaten track. The slave girls
were hi double columns on die outer flanks of the file of donkeys. Their
weapons were concealed in die packs upon the backs of die animals. Any of die
men needed only to reach out to lay a hand upon die hilt of his sword. Kratas had split his escort into diree squads of
six men each, commanded by Astes, Remrem and himself. Astes and Remrem were
warriors of renown and more than deserving of dieir own commands. However, bodi
of diem had, on numerous occasions, refused promotion in order to remain with
Tanus. That was die quality of loyalty mat Tanus inspired in all who served
under him. I could not help thinking yet again what a pharaoh he would have
made. The escorts now slouched along beside die column,
making every attempt to forsake their military bearing. It would seem to die spies
who were certainly watching us from die hills that they were diere solely to
prevent any of die slaves from escaping. In north diey were fully occupied widi
preventing their charges from breaking into marching step and sounding off a
chorus of one of die rowdy regimental songs. 'You diere, Kernit!' I heard Remrem challenge one
of diem. 'Don't take such long steps, man, and swing that fat arse of yours a
little! Try to make yourself alluring.' 'Give me a kiss, captain,' Kernit called back, 'and
I'll do anything you say.' The heat was rising, and the mirage was beginning
to make die rocks dance. Tanus turned back to me. 'Soon I will call our first
rest-stop. One cup of water for each—' 'Good husband,' I interrupted him, 'your friends
have arrived. Look ahead!' Tanus turned back, and instinctively gripped die
stock of die great bow that hung at his side. 'And what fine fellows they are,
too!' At that moment our column was winding through the
first foothills below the desert plateau. On either hand we were walled in by
the steep sides of the rocky hills. Now three men stood in the track ahead of
us. The one who led them was a tall, menacing figure swathed in the woollen
robe of the desert traveller, but his head was bared His skin was very dark,
and deeply pitted with the scars of the smallpox. He had a nose that was hooked
like the beak of a vulture, and his right eye was an opaque jelly from the
blind-worm that burrows deep into the eyeball of its victims. 'I know the one-eyed villain,' I said softly, so that
Tanus alone could hear. 'His name is Shufti. He is the most notorious of the
barons of the Shrikes. Be wary of him. The lion is a gentle beast compared to
this one.' Tanus gave no sign of having heard me, but lifted
his right hand to show that it held no weapon, and called out cheerfully, 'May
all your days be scented with jasmine, gentle traveller, and may a loving wife
welcome you at your own front door when at last your journey is done.' 'May your water-skins stay filled and cool breezes
fan your brow when you cross the Thirsty Sands,' Shufti called back, and he
smiled. That smile was fiercer than a leopard's snarl, and his single eye
glared horribly. 'You are kind, my noble lord,' Tanus thanked him.
'I would like to offer you a meal and the hospitality of my camp, but I pray
your indulgence. We have a long road before us, and we must pass on.' 'Just a little more of your time, my fine
Assyrian.' Shufti moved forward to block the path. 'I have something which you
need, if you and your caravan are ever, to reach the Nile in safety.' He held
up a small object. 'Ah, a charm!' Tanus exclaimed. 'You are a
magician, perhaps? What manner of charm is this you are offering me?' 'A feather.' Shufti was still smiling. "The
feather of a shrike.' Tanus smiled, as though to humour a child. 'Very
well then, give me this feather and I'll delay you no longer.' 'A gift for a. gift. You must give me something in
return,' Shufti told him. 'Give me twenty of your slaves. Then, when you return
from Egypt, I will meet you on the road again and you will give me half the
profits from the sale of the other sixty.' 'For a single feather?' Tanus scoffed. "That
sounds like a sorry bargain to me.' "This is no ordinary feather. It is a shrike's
feather,' Shufti pointed out. 'Are you so ill-informed that you have never
heard of that bird?' 'Let me see this magical feather.' Tanus walked
towards him with his right hand outstretched, and Shufti came forward to meet
him. At the same time Kratas, Remrem and Astes wandered up inquisitively, as
though to examine the feather. Instead of taking the gift from his hand, suddenly
Tanus seized Shufti's wrist and twisted it up between his shoulder-blades. With
a startled cry, Shufti fell to his knees and Tanus held him easily. At the same
time Kratas and his men darted forward, taking the other two bandits by as much
surprise as their chief. They knocked the weapons out of their hands, and
dragged them to where Tanus stood. 'So, you little birds think to frighten Kaarik, the
Assyrian, with your threats, do you? Yes, my fine vendor of feathers, I have
heard of the Shrikes. I have heard that they are a flock of chattering,
cowardly little fledglings, that make more noise than a flock of sparrows.' He
twisted Shufti's arm more viciously, until the bandit yelled with pain and fell
flat on his face. 'Yes, I have heard of the Shrikes, but have you heard of
Kaarik, the terrible?' He nodded at Kratas, and quickly and efficiently they
stripped the three Shrikes stark naked and pinned them spread-eagled upon the rocky
earth. 'I want you to remember my name, and fly away like
a good little shrike when next you hear it,' Tanus told him, and nodded to
Kratas again. Kratas flexed the lash of his slave-whip between his fingers. It
was of the same type as Rasfer's famous tool, whittled from the cured hide of a
bull hippopotamus. Tanus held out his hand for it, and reluctantly Kratas
handed it over to him. 'Don't look so sad, slave-master,' Tanus told him.
'I'll let you have your turn later. But Kaarik, the Assyrian, always takes the
first spoonful from the pot.' Tanus slashed the whip back and forth through the
air, and it whistled like the wing of a goose in flight. Shufti squirmed where
he lay, and twisted his head around to hiss at Tanus, 'You are mad, you
Assyrian ox! Do you not. realize that I am a baron of the Shrike clan? You dare
not do this to me—' His naked back and buttocks were stippled with pox scars. Tanus lifted the whip on high, and then brought it
down in a full-armed stroke with all his weight behind it. He laid a purple
welt as fat as my forefinger across Shufti's back. So intense was the pain of
it that the bandit's entire body convulsed and the ah- hissed out of his lungs,
so that he could not scream. Tanus lifted the lash and then meticulously laid
another ridged welt exactly parallel to the first, almost, but not quite,
touching it. This time Shufti filled his lungs and let out a hoarse bellow,
like a buffalo bull caught in a pitfall. Tanus ignored his struggles and his
outraged roars, and worked on assiduously, laying on the strokes as though he
were weaving a carpet. When at last he was done, his victim's legs,
buttocks and back were latticed with the fiery weals. Not one of the blows had
overlaid another. The skin was intact and not a drop of blood had spilled out,
but Shufti was no longer wriggling or screaming. He lay with his face in the
dirt, his breath snoring in his throat, so that each exhalation raised a puff
of dust. When Remrem and Kratas released him, he made no effort to sit up. He
did not even stir. Tanus tossed the whip to Kratas. "The next one
is yours, slave-master. Let us see whdt a pretty pattern you can tattoo on his
back.' Kratas' strokes hummed with power, but lacked the
finesse that Tanus had demonstrated. Soon the bandit's back was leaking like a
flawed jar of red wine. The droplets of blood fell into the dust and rolled
into tiny balls of mud. Sweating lightly, Kratas was satisfied at last, and
he passed the whip to Astes as he indicated the last victim. 'Give that one something
to remind him of his manners, as well.' Astes had an even more rustic touch than Kratas. By
the time he had finished, the last bandit's back looked like a side of fresh
beef that had been cut up by a demented butcher. Tanus signalled the caravan to move forward,
towards the pass through the red rock mountains. We lingered a while beside the
three naked men. At last Shufti stirred and lifted his head, and
Tanus addressed him civilly. 'And so, my friend, I beg leave of you. Remember
my face, and step warily when you see it again.' Tanus picked up the fallen
shrike's feather and tucked it into his headband. 'I thank you for your gift.
May all your nights be cradled in the arms of lovely ladies.' He touched his
heart and lips in the Assyrian gesture of farewell, and I followed him up the
road after the departing caravan. I looked back before we dropped over the next rise.
All three Shrikes were on their feet, supporting each other to remain upright.
Even at this distance I could make out the expression on Shufti's face. It was
hatred distilled to its essence. 'Well, you have made certain that we will have
every Shrike this side of the Nile upon us, the moment we take our first step
beyond the pass,' I told Kratas and his ruffians, and I could not have pleased
them more, had I promised them a shipload of beer and pretty girls. FROM THE CREST OF THE PASS WE looked back at the
cool blue of the sea for the last time and then dropped down into that
sweltering wilderness of rock and sand that stood between us and the Nile. As we moved forward, the heat came at us like a
mortal enemy. It seemed to enter through our mouths and nostrils as we gasped
for breath. It sucked the moisture from our bodies like a thief. It dried out
our skin and cracked it until our lips burst open like over-ripe figs. The
rocks beneath our feet were hot, as though fresh from the pot-maker's kiln, and
they scalded and blistered our feet, even through the leather soles of our
sandals. It was impossible to continue the march during the hottest hours of
the day. We lay in the flimsy shade of the linen tents that Tiamat had
provided, and panted like hunting dogs after the chase. When the sun sank towards the jagged rock horizon,
we went on. The desert around us was charged with such a brooding nameless
menace that even the high spirits of the Blue Crocodile Guards were subdued.
The long slow column wound like a maimed adder through the black rock outcrops
and tawny lion-coloured dunes, following the ancient road along which countless
other travellers had passed before us. When night fell at last, the sky came alive with
such a dazzle of stars and the desert was lit so brightly that, from my place
at the head of the caravan, I could recognize the shape of Kratas at the tail,
although two hundred paces separated us. We marched on for half the night
before Tanus gave the order to fall out. Then he had us up before dawn and we
marched on until the heat-mirage dissolved the rocky outcrops around us and
made the horizon swim so that it seemed to be moulded from melting pitch. We saw no other sign of life, except that once a
troop of dog-headed baboons barked at us from the cliffs of a stark rock
tableland as we passed below them, and the vultures soared so high in the hot
blue sky that they appeared to be but dust motes swirling in slow and
deliberate circles high above us. When we rested in the middle of the day the
whirlwinds pirouetted and swayed with the peculiar grace of dancing houris
across the plains, and the cupful of water that was our ration seemed to turn
to steam in my mouth. 'Where are they?' Kratas growled angrily. 'By
Seth's sweaty scrotum, I hope these little birds will soon puff up their
courage and come in to roost.' Although they were all tough veterans and inured to
hardship and discomfort, nerves and tempers were wearing thin. Good comrades
and old friends began to snarl at each other for no reason, and bicker over the
water ration. 'Shufti is a cunning old dog,' I told Tanup. 'He
will gather his forces and wait for us to come to him, rather than hurry to
meet us. He will let us tire ourselves with the journey, and grow careless with
our fatigue, before he strikes.' On the fifth day I knew that we were approaching
the oasis of Gallala when I saw that the dark cliffs ahead of us were riddled
with the caves of ancient tombs. Centuries ago, the oasis had supported a
thriving city, but then an earthquake had shaken the hills and damaged the
wells. The water had dwindled to a few seeping drops. Even though the wells had
been dug deeper to reach the receding water, and the earthen steps reached down
to where the surface of the water was always in shade, the city had died. The
roofless walls stood forlorn in the silence, and lizards sunned themselves in
the courtyards where rich merchants had once dallied with their harems. Our very first concern was to refill the
water-skins. The voices of the men drawing water at the bottom of the well were
distorted by the echoes in the deep shaft. While they were busy, Tanus and I
made a swift tour of the ruined city. It was a lonely and melancholy place. In
its centre was the dilapidated temple to the patron god of Gallala. The roof
had fallen in and the walls were collapsing in places. It had but a single
entrance through the crumbling gateway at the western end. 'This will do admirably,' Tanus muttered as he
strode across it, measuring it with his soldier's eye for fortification and
ambuscade. When I questioned him on his intentions, he smiled and shook his
head. 'Leave that part of it to me, -old friend. The fighting is my business.' As we stood at the centre of the temple I noticed
the tracks of a troop of baboons in the dust at our feet, and I pointed them
out to Tanus. "They must come to drink at the wells,' I told him. That evening when we sat around the small, smoky
fires of dried donkey dung in the ancient temple, we heard the baboons again,
the old bull apes barking a challenge in the hills that surrounded the ruined
city. Their voices boomed back and forth along the cliffs, and I nodded at
Tanus across the fire. 'Your friend, Shufti, has arrived at last. His scouts
are in the hills up there watching us now. It is they who have alarmed the
baboons.' 'I hope you are right. My blackguards are close to
mutiny. They know mis is all your idea, and if you are wrong, I might have to
give them your head or your backside to appease them,' Tanus growled, and went
to speak to Astes at the neighbouring cooking-fire. Swiftly a new mood infected the camp as they
realized that the enemy was near. The scowls evaporated and the men grinned at
each other in the firelight, as they surreptitiously tested the edges of the
swords concealed beneath the sleeping-mats on which they sat. However, they
were canny veterans and they went through the motions of normal caravan life,
so as not to alert the watchers in the dark hills above us. At last we were all
bundled on our mats, and the fires died down, but none of us slept. I could
hear them coughing and fidgeting restlessly all around me in the dark. The long
hours drew out, and through the open roof I watched the great constellations of
the stars wheel in stately splendour overhead, but still the attack never came. Just before dawn, Tanus made his round of the
sentries for the last time, and then, on his way back to his place beside the
cooling ashes of last night's fire, he stopped by my mat for a moment and
whispered, 'You and your friends the baboons, you deserve each other. All of
you bark at shadows.' 'The Shrikes are here. I can smell them. The hills
are full of them,' I protested. 'All you can smell is the promise of breakfast,' he
grunted. He knows how I detest the suggestion that I am a glutton. Rather than
reply to such callow humour, I went out into the darkness to relieve myself
behind the nearest pfle of ruins. As I squatted there, a baboon barked again, the
wild, booming cry shattering the preternatural silences of that last and
darkest of the night-watches. I turned my head in that direction and heard,
faint and faraway, the sound of metal strike rock, as though a nervous hand had
dropped a dagger up there on the ridge, or a careless shield had brushed
against a granite outcrop as an armed man hurried to take up his station before
the dawn found him out. I smiled complacently to myself; there are few
pleasures in my life compared to that of making Tanus eat his words. As I
returned to my mat, I whispered to the men mat I passed, 'Be ready. They are
here,' and I heard my warning passed on from mouth to sleepless mouth. Above me the stars began to fade away, and the dawn
crept up on us as stealthily as a lioness stalking a herd of oryx. Then
abruptly I heard a sentry on the west wall of the temple whistle, a liquid
warble that might have been the cry of a nightjar except that we all knew better,
and instantly a stir ran through the camp. It was checked by the low but urgent
whispers of Kratas and his officers, 'Steady, the Blues! Remember your orders.
Hold your positions!' and not a man stirred from his sleeping-mat. Without rising, and with my shawl masking my face,
I turned my head slowly and looked up at the crests of the cliffs that stood
higher than the temple walls. The shark's-tooth silhouette of the granite hills
began to alter most subtly. I had to blink my eyes to be certain of what I was
seeing. Then slowly I turned my head in a full circle, and it was the same in
whichever direction I looked. The skyline all about us was picketed with the
dark and menacing shapes of armed men. They formed an unbroken palisade around
us through which no fugitive could hope to escape. I knew then why Shufti had delayed his retaliation
so long. It would have taken him all this time to gather together such an army
of thieves. There must be a thousand or more of them, although in the poor light
it was not possible to count their multitudes. We were outnumbered at least ten
to one, and I felt my spirits quail. It was poor odds, even for a company of
the Blues. The Shrikes stood as still as the rocks around
them, and I was alarmed at this evidence of their discipline. I had expected
them to come streaming down upon us in an untidy rabble, but they were behaving
like trained warriors. Their stillness was more menacing and intimidating than
any wild shouting and brandishing of weapons would have been. As the light strengthened swiftly, we could make
them out more clearly. The first rays of the sun glanced off the bronze of
their shields and their bared sword-blades, and struck darts of light into our
eyes. Every one of them was muffled up, a scarf of black wool wound around each
head so that only their eyes showed in the slits, eyes as malevolent as those
of the ferocious blue sharks that terrorize the waters of the sea we had left
behind us. The silence drew out until I thought that my nerves
might tear and my heart burst with the pressure of blood within it. Then
suddenly a voice rang out, shattering the dawn silence and echoing along the
cliffs. 'Kaarik! Are you awake?' I recognized Shufti then, despite the scarf that
masked him. He stood in the centre of the west wall of the cliff, where the
road cut through it. 'Kaarik!' he called again. 'It is time for you to pay what
you owe me, but the price has risen. I want everything now. Everything!' he
repeated, and flung aside the scarf so that his pock-marked features were
revealed. 'I want everything you have, including your stupid and arrogant
head.' Tanus rose from his mat and threw aside his
sheepskin rug. "Then you will have to come down and take % from me,' he
shouted back, and drew his sword. Shufti raised his right arm, and his blind eye
caught the light and gleamed like a silver coin. Then he brought his arm down
abruptly. At his signal, a shout went up from the ranks of
men that lined the high ground, and they lifted their weapons and shook them to
the pale yellow dawn sky. Shufti waved them forward and they streamed down the
cliffs in a torrent into the narrow valley of Gallala. Tanus raced to the centre of the temple court where
the ancient inhabitants had raised a tall stone altar to their patron Bes, the
dwarf god of music and drunkenness. Kratas and his officers ran to join him,
while the slave girls and I crouched on our mats and covered our heads, wailing
with terror. ' Tanus leaped up on to the altar, and went down on
one knee as he flexed the great bow Lanata. It took all of his strength to
string it, but when he stood erect again it shimmered in its coils of silver
electrum wire, as though it were a living thing. He reached over his shoulder
and drew an arrow from the quiver on his back and faced the main gateway
through which the horde of Shrikes must enter. Below the altar, Kratas had drawn up his men into a
single rank, and they also had strung their bows and faced the entrance to the
square. They made a pitifully small cluster around the altar, and I felt a lump
rise in my throat as I watched them. They were so heroic and undaunted. I would
compose a sonnet in their honour, I decided on a sudden impulse, but before I
could find the first line, the head of the mob of bandits burst howling through
the ruined gateway. Only five men abreast could climb the steep
stairway into the opening, and the distance to where Tanus stood on the altar
was less than forty paces. Tanus drew and let his first arrow fly. That single
arrow killed three men. The first of them was a tall rogue dressed in a short
kilt, with long greasy tresses of hair streaming down his back. The arrow took
him in the centre of his naked chest and passed through his torso as cleanly as
though he were merely a target cut from a sheet of papyrus. Slick with the blood of the first man, the arrow
struck the man behind him in the throat. Although the force of it was
dissipating now, it still went through his neck and came out behind him, but it
could not drive completely through. The fletchings at the back of the shaft
snagged in his flesh, while the barbed bronze arrow-head buried itself in the
eye of the third man who had crowded up close behind him. The two Shrikes were
pinned together by the arrow, and they staggered and thrashed about in the
middle of the gateway, blocking the opening to those who were trying to push
then-way past them into the courtyard. At last the arrow-head tore out of the
third man's skull, with the eye impaled .upon the point. The two stricken men
fell apart, and a throng of screaming bandits poured over them into the square.
The small band around the altar met them with volley after volley of arrows,
shooting them down so that then- corpses almost blocked the opening, and those
coming in from behind were forced to scramble over the mounds of dead and
wounded. It could not last much longer, the pressure of
warriors from behind was too great and their numbers too overwhelming. Like the
bursting of an earthen dyke unable to stem the rising flood of the Nile, they
forced the opening, and a solid mass of fighting men poured into the square and
surrounded the tiny band around the altar of the god Bes. It was too close quarters for the bows now, and
Tanus and his men cast them aside and drew their swords. 'Horus, arm me!' Tanus
shouted his battle-cry, and the men around him took it up, as they went to
work. Bronze rang on bronze as the Shrikes tried to come at them, but they had
formed a ring around the altar, facing outwards. No matter from which side they
came, the Shrikes were met by the point and the deadly sword-play of the
guards. The Shrikes were not short of courage, and they pressed in serried
ranks around the altar. As one of them was cut down, another leaped into his
place. I saw Shufti in the gateway. He was holding back
from the fray, but cursing his men and; ordering them into the thick of it with
horrid howls of rage. His blind eye rolled in its socket as he exhorted them,
'Get me the Assyrian alive. I want to kill him slowly and hear him squeal. The bandits completely ignored the women who
cowered on their sleeping-mats, their heads covered, waiting and screeching
with terror. I wailed with the best of them, but the struggle in the centre of
the yard was too uncomfortable for my liking. By this time, there were over a
thousand men crowded into the confined space. Choking in the dust, I was kicked
and pummelled by the sandalled feet of the battling horde, until I managed to
crawl away into a corner of the wall. One of the bandits turned aside from the fighting
and stooped over me. He tore the shawl away from my face and for a moment
stared into my eyes. 'Mother of Isis,' he breathed, 'you are beautiful!' He was an ugly devil with gaps in his teeth and a
scar down one cheek. His breath stank like a sewerage gutter as he lusted into
my face. 'Wait until this business is over. Then I'll give you something to
make you squeal with joy,' he promised, and twisted my face up to his. He
kissed me. My natural instinct was to pull away from him, but I
resisted it and returned his kiss. I am an artist of the love arts, for I
learned my skills in the boys' quarters of Lord Intef. My kisses can turn a man
to water. I kissed him with all my skill, and he was
transfixed by it. While he was still paralysed, I slipped my dagger from its
sheath beneath my blouse and slid the point through the gap between his fifth
and sixth ribs. When he screamed, I muffled the sound with my own lips and
clasped him lovingly to my breast, twisting the blade in his heart until, with
a shudder, he relaxed completely against me, and I let him roll over on his
side. I looked around me quickly. In the few moments that
it had taken me to dispose of my admirer, the plight of the small group of
guards around the altar had worsened. There were gaps in their single rank. Two
men were down and Amseth was wounded. He had switched his sword into his left
hand, while the other arm hung bleeding at his side. With a rush of relief I saw that Tanus was still
untouched, still laughing with the savage joy of it all as he plied the
sword.'But he had left it too late to spring the trap, I thought. The eitee
band of Shrikes were crowded into the square and bafying around him like hounds
around a treed leopard. Withiri' moments he and his gallant little band must be
cut down. Even as I watched, Tanus killed another of them
with a straight thrust through the throat, and then he jerked his blade free of
the clinging flesh and stepped back. He threw back his head and let loose a
bellow that rang from the crumbling walls around us. 'On me, the Blues!' On the instant every one of the cringing slave
girls leapt up and flung aside their trailing robes. Their swords were already
bared and they fell upon the rear of the robber horde. The surprise was
complete and overwhelming. I saw them kill a hundred or more before their
victims even realized what they were about, and could rally to meet them. But
when they did turn to face this fresh attack, they exposed their backs to Tanus
and his little band. They fought well, I'll give them that, though I am
sure it was terror, rather than courage, that drove them on. However, their
ranks were too close-packed to allow them free play with the sword, and the men
they faced were some of the finest troops in Egypt, which is to say the entire
world. For a while yet they held on. Then Tanus bellowed
again from the midst of the turmoil. For a moment I thought it was another
command, then I realized that it was the opening bar of the battle hymn of the
guards. Though I had often heard it spoken in awe that the Blues always sang
when the battle was at its height, I had never truly believed it possible. Now
all around me the song was taken up by a hundred straining voices: We are the Breath of Horus, hot as the desert wind, we are the reapers of men— Their swords beat an accompaniment to the words,
like the clangour of hammers on the anvils of the underworld. In the face of
such arrogant ferocity the remaining Shrikes wavered, and then suddenly it was
no longer a battle, but a massacre. I have seen a pack of wild dogs surround and tear
into a flock of sheep. This was worse. Some of the Shrikes threw down their
swords and fell to their knees begging quarter. There was no mercy shown them.
Others tried to reach the gateway, but guardsmen waited for them there, sword
in hand. I danced on the fringes of the fighting, screaming
across at Tanus, trying to make myself heard in the uproar, 'Stop them. We need
prisoners.' Tanus could not hear me, or more likely he simply
ignored my entreaties. Singing and laughing, with Kratas at his left hand and
Remrem on the other, he tore into them. His beard was soaked with the spurted
blood of those he had killed, and his eyes glittered in the running red mask of
his face with a madness I had never seen in them before. Joyous Hapi, how he
thrived on the heady draught of battle! 'Stop it, Tanus! Don't kill them all!' This time he
heard me. I saw the madness fade, and he was once more in control of himself. 'Give quarter to those who plead for it!' he
roared, and the guards obeyed him. But in the end, out of the original
thousand, fewer than two hundred Shrikes grovelled unarmed on the bloody stone
flags and pleaded for their lives. For a while I stood dazed and uncertain on the
fringe of this carnage, and then from the corner of my eye I caught a furtive
movement. Shufti had realized that he could not escape
through the gateway. He threw down his sword and darted to the east wall of the
court, close to where I stood. This was the most ruined section, where the wall
was reduced to half its original height. The tumbled mud-bricks formed a steep
ramp, and Shufti scrambled up it, slipping and falling, but rapidly nearing the
top of the wall. It seemed that I was the only one who had noticed his flight. The
guards were busy with their other prisoners, and Tanus had his back turned to
me as he directed the mopping-up of the shattered enemy. Almost without thinking, I stooped and picked up
half ai mud-brick. As Shufti topped the wall, I hurled the brick up at him with
all my strength. It thumped against the back off his skull with such force that
he dropped to his knees, and! then the treacherous pile of loose rubble gave
way beneath) him and he came sliding back down in a cloud of dust to) land at
my feet, only half-conscious. I pSunced upon him where he lay, straddling his
chest,, and I firessed the point of my dagger to his throat. He stared! up at
me, his single eye still glazed with the crack I hadl dealt him. 'Lie still,' I cautioned him, 'or I will gut you
like a fish." I had lost my shawl and head-dress, and my hair
hadl come down on to my shoulders. He recognized me then,, which was no
surprise. We had met often, but in differentt circumstances. 'Taita, the eunuch!' he mumbled. 'Does Lord Intef
know what you are about?' 'He will find out soon enough,' I assured him, andi
pricked him until he grunted, 'but you will not be the one to enlighten him.' Without removing the point from his throat, I
shouted to two of the nearest guards to take him. They flipped him on to his
face and bound his wrists together with linen twine before they dragged him
away. Tanus had seen me capture Shufti, and he strode
across to me now, stepping over the dead and wounded. 'Good throw, Taita! You
have forgotten nothing that I taught you.' He clapped me on the back so hard
that I staggered. 'There is plenty of work for you still. We've lost four men
killed, and there are at least a dozen wounded.' 'What about their camp?' I asked, and he stared at
me. 'Whatcamp?' 'A thousand Shrikes did not spring up from the
sands like desert flowers. They must have pack-animals and slaves with them.
Not far from here, either. You must not let them escape. Nobody must escape to
tell the tale of today's battle. None of them must be allowed to carry the news to
Karnak that you are still alive.' 'Sweet Isis, you are right! But how will we find
them?' It was obvious that Tanus was still bemused with battle lust. Sometimes
I wondered what he would do without me. 'Back-track them,' I told him impatiently. 'A
thousand pairs of feet will have trodden a road for us to follow back to where
they came from.' His expression cleared, and he hailed Kratas across
the length of the temple. 'Take fifty men. Go with Taita. He will lead you to
their base-camp.' 'The wounded—' I began to protest. I had enjoyed
enough fighting for one day, but he brushed my objections aside. 'You are the
best tracker I have. The wounded can wait for your care, my ruffians are all as
tough as fresh buffalo steaks, very few of them will die before you return.' FINDING THEIR CAMP WAS AS SIMPLE AS I had made it
sound. With Kratas and fifty men following me closely, made a wide cast
around the city, and behind the first line of hills I picked up the broad track
that they had made as they came in and deployed to surround us. We followed it
back at a trot, and had covered less than a mile before we topped a rise and
found the camp of the Shrikes in the shallow valley below us. Their surprise was complete. They had left fewer
than twenty men to guard the donkeys and women. Kratas' men overran them at the
first rush, and this time I was too late to save any prisoners. They spared
only the women, and once the camp was secure, Kratas let his men have them as
part of the traditional reward of the victors. The women seemed to me to be a more comely
selection than I would have expected in such company. I saw quite a few pretty
faces amongst them. They submitted to the rituals of conquest with a remarkably
good grace. I even heard some of them laughing and joking as the guardsmen
threw dice for them. The vocation of camp-follower to a band of Shrikes could
not be considered the most delicate calling, and I doubted that any of these
ladies were blushing virgins. One by one, they were led by their new owners
behind the cover of the nearest clump of rocks, where their skirts were lifted
without further ceremony. New moon follows the death of the old, spring
follows winter, none of the ladies showed any signs of mourning for their
erstwhile spouses. Indeed, it seemed probable that new and perhaps lasting
relationships were being struck up here on the desert sand. For myself, I was more interested in the
pack-donkeys and what they carried. There were over a hundred and fifty of
theses ;and most of them were sturdy animals in prime condition which would
fetch good prices in the market at Karnak or Safaga. I reckoned that I should
be entitled to at least a centurion's share when the prize money was divided
up. After all, I had already dispensed large amounts of my own savings in the
furtherance of this enterprise, and should be entitled to some compensation. I
would speak seriously to Tanus about it, and could expect his sympathy. His is
a generous spirit. By the time we returned to the city of Gallala,
leading the captured pack-animals laden with booty and followed by a straggle
of women who had attached themselves quite naturally to their new menfolk, the
sun had set. One of the smaller ruined buildings near the wells
had been turned into a field hospital. There I worked through the night, by the
light of torch and oil lamp, sewing together the wounded guardsmen. As always,
I was impressed by their stoicism, for many of their wounds were grave and
painful. None the less, I lost only one of my patients before dawn broke.
Amseth succumbed to loss of blood from the severed arteries in his arm. If I
had attended to him immediately after the battle, instead of going off into the
desert, I might have been able to save him. Even though the responsibility
rested with Tanus, I felt the familiar guilt and sorrow in the face of a death
that I might have prevented. However, I was confident that my other patients
would heal swiftly and cleanly. They were all strong young men in superb
condition. There were no wounded Shrikes to attend. Their
heads had been lopped off where they lay on the battlefield. As a physician, I
was perturbed by this age-old custom of dealing with the wounded enemy, yet I
suppose there was logic in it. Why should the victors waste their resources on
the maimed vanquished, when it was unlikely they would have any value as
slaves, and, if left alive, might recover to fight against them another day? I worked all night with only a swallow of wine and
a few mouthfuls of food taken with bloody hands to sustain me, and I was almost
exhausted, but there was to be no rest for me yet. Tanus sent for me as soon as
it was light THE UNWOUNDED PRISONERS WERE BEING held in the
temple of Bes. Their wrists were bound behind their backs, and they were
squatting in long lines along the north wall, with the guards standing over
them. As soon as I entered the temple, Tanus called me to
where he stood with a group of his officers. I was still in the dress of an
Assyrian wife, so I lifted my blood-splattered skirts and picked my way across
the floor littered with the debris of the battle. 'There are thirteen clans of Shrikes—isn't that
what you told me, Taita?' Tanus asked, and I nodded. 'Each clan with its own
baron. We have Shufti. Let's see if you recognize any of the other barons
amongst this gathering of the fair and gentle people.' He indicated the
prisoners with a chuckle, and took my arm to lead me down the ranks of
squatting men. I kept my face veiled so that none of the prisoners
could recognize me. I glanced at each face as I passed, and recognized two of
them. Akheku was head of the southern clan that preyed on the lands around
Assoun, Elephantine and the first cataract, while Setek was from further north,
the baron of Kom-Ombo. It was clear that Shufti had gathered together
whatever men he could find at such short notice. There were members of all the
clans amongst those that we had captured. As I identified their leaders with a
tap on the shoulder, they were dragged away. When we reached the end of the line Tanus asked,
'Are you sure that you missed none of them?' 'How can I be sure? I told you that I never met all
of the barons.' Tanus shrugged. 'We could not hope to catch every
little bird with one throw of the net. We must count ourselves fortunate that
we have taken as many as three so soon. But let us look at the heads. We might
be lucky enough to find a few more amongst them.' This was a gruesome business that might have
affected a more delicate stomach than mine, but human flesh, both dead and
living, is my stock-in-trade. While we sat at our ease on the steps of the
temple enjoying our breakfast, the severed heads were displayed to us, held up
one at a time by the blood-caked hair, tongues lolling from between slack lips,
and dull eyes powdered with dust staring into the other world whither they were
bound. My appetite was as healthy as ever, for I had eaten
very little during the last two days. I devoured the delicious cakes and fruits
that Tiamat had provided, while I pointed out those heads I recognized. There
was a score or so of common thieves that I had encountered during the course of
my work for Lord Intef, but only one more of the barons. He was Nefer-Temu of
Qena, a lesser member of the ghastly brotherhood. "That makes four of them,' Tanus grunted with
satisfaction, and ordered Nefer-Temu's head to be placed on the pinnacle of the
pyramid of skulls that he was erecting in front of the well of Gallala. 'So now we have accounted for four of them. We must
find the other nine barons. Let us begin by putting the question to our
prisoners.' He stood up briskly, and I hastily gulped down the remains of my
breakfast and followed him reluctantly back into the temple of Bes. Although I was the one who had made clear to Tanus
the necessity of having informers from within the clans, and indeed it was I
who had suggested how we should recruit them, still now that the time to act
upon my suggestion had arrived, I was stricken with remorse and guilt. It was
one thing to suggest ruthless action, but another thing entirely to stand by
and watch it practised. I made a feeble excuse that the wounded men in the
makeshift hospital might need me, but Tanus brushed it away cheerfully. 'None
of your fine scruples now, Taita. You will stay with me during the questioning
to make certain that you overlooked none of your old friends on your first
inspection.' The questioning was swift and merciless, which I
suppose was only appropriate to the character of the men we were dealing with. To begin with, Tanus sprang up on to the storie
altar of Bes, and, with the hawk seal in one hand, he looked down on the ranks
of squatting prisoners with a smile %at must have chilled them, even though
they sat in the full rays of the desert sun. 'I am the bearer of the hawk seal of Pharaoh
Mamose, and I speak with his voice,' he told them grimly, as he held the
statuette high. 'I am your judge and your executioner.' He paused and let his
gaze pass slowly over their upturned faces. As each of them met his eyes, they
dropped their own. Not one of them could hold firm before his penetrating
scrutiny. 'You have been taken in the act of pillage and
murder. If there is one of you who would deny it, let him stand before me and
declare his innocence.' He waited while the impatient shadows of the
vultures, circling in the sky above us, criss-crossed the dusty courtyard.
'Come now! Speak up, you innocents.' He glanced upwards at the circling birds
with their grotesque pink bald heads. 'Your brethren grow impatient for the
feast. Let us not keep them waiting.' Still none of them spoke or moved, and Tanus
lowered the hawk seal. 'Your actions, which all here have witnessed, condemn
you. Your silence confirms the verdict. You are guilty. In the name of the divine
Pharaoh, I pass sentence upon you. I sentence you to death by beheading. Your
severed heads will be displayed along the caravan routes. All law-abiding men
who pass this way will see your skulls grinning at them from the roadside, and
they will know that the Shrjke has met the eagle. They will know that the age
of lawlessness has passed from the land, and that peace has returned to this
very Egypt of ours. I have spoken. Pharaoh Mamose has spoken.' Tanus nodded, and the first prisoner was dragged
forward and forced to his knees before the altar. 'If you answer three questions truthfully, your
life will be spared. You will be enlisted as a trooper in my regiment of the
guards, with all the pay and privileges. If you refuse to answer the questions,
your sentence will be carried out immediately,' Tanus told him. He looked down on the kneeling prisoner sternly.
'This is the first question. What clan do you belong to?' The condemned man made no reply. The blood oath of
the Shrikes was too strong for him to break. 'This is the second question. Who is the baron that
commands you?' Tanus asked, and still the man was silent. 'This is the third and the last question. Will you
lead me to the secret places where your clan hides?' Tanus asked, and the man
looked up at him, hawked in his throat and spat. His phlegm spattered yellow
upon the stones. Tanus nodded to the guardsman who stood over him with the
sword. The stroke was clean and the head toppled on to the
steps at the foot of the altar. 'One more head for the pyramid,' Tanus said
quietly, and nodded for the next prisoner to be brought forward. He asked the same three questions, and when the
Shrike answered him with a defiant obscenity, Tanus nodded. This time the
headsman mistimed the blow and the corpse flopped about with the neck only
half-severed. It took three more strokes before the head bounced down the
steps. Tanus lopped twenty-three heads, I was counting
them to distract myself from the waves of debilitating compassion that assailed
me, until the first of the condemned men broke down. He was young, not much
more than a boy. In a shrill voice he gabbled out the replies before Tanus
could actually pose the three questions to him. 'My name is Hui. I am a blood-brother of the clan
of Basti the Cruel. I know his secret places, and I will lead you to them.'
Tanus smiled with grim satisfaction and gestured for the lad to be led away.
'Care for him well,' he warned his gaolers. 'He is now a trooper of the Blues,
and your companion-in-arms.' After the defection of one of them, it went more
readily, although there were still many who defied Tanus. Some of them cursed
him, while others laughed their defiance at him until the blade swept down, and
their bravado ended with their very last breath that burst from the severed
windpipe in a crimson gust. I was filled with admiration for those who, after a
base and despicable life, at the end chose to die with some semblance of
honour. They laughed at death. I knew #iat I was not capable of that quality of
courage. Offered that choice, I am certain that I would have responded as some
of the weaker prisoners did. 'I am a member of the clan of Ur,' one confessed. 'I am of the clan of Maa-En-Tef, who is baron of
the west bank as far as El Kharga,' said another, until we had informers to
lead us to the strongholds of every one of the remaining robber barons, and a
shoulder-high pile of recalcitrant heads to add to the pyramid beside the well. ONE OF THE MATTERS TO WHICH TANUS and I had given
much thought was the disposal of the three robber barons we had already
captured, and the score of informers we had gleaned from the ranks of the
condemned Shrikes. ___ We knew that the influence of the Shrikes was so
pervasive that we dared not keep our captives in Egypt. There was not a prison
secure enough to prevent Akh-Seth and his barons from reaching them, either to
set them free by bribery or force, or to have them silenced by poison or some
other unpleasant means. We knew that Akh-Seth was like an octopus whose head
was hidden, but whose tentacles reached into every facet of our government and
into the very fabric of our existence. This was where my friend Tiamat, the merchant of
Saf-aga, came into my reckoning. Matching now as a unit of the Blue Crocodile
Guards, and not as a slave caravan, we returned to the port on the Red Sea in
half the time that it had taken us to reach Gallala. Our captives were hustled
aboard one of Tiamat's trading vessels that was waiting for us in the harbour,
and the captain set sail immediately for the Arabian coast, where Tiamat
maintained a secure slave-compound on the small off-shore island of Jez Baquan,
run by his own warders. The waters around the island were patrolled by packs of
ferocious blue sharks. Tiamat assured us that no one who had attempted escape
from the island had ever avoided both the vigilance of the warders and the
appetites of the sharks. Only one of our captives was not sent to the
island. He was Hui from the clan of Basti the Cruel, the same youngster who had
been the first to capitulate to the threat of execution. During the march to
the sea, Tanus had kept the lad close to him and had turned all the
irresistible force of his personality upon him. By this time Hui was his
willing slave. This special gift of Tanus' to win loyalty and devotion from the
most unlikely quarters never failed to amaze me. I was sure that Hui, who had
buckled so swiftly under the threat of execution, would now willingly lay down
his worthless life for Tanus. Under Tanus' spell, Hui poured out every detail
that he could remember of the clan to which he had once sworn a blood-oath. I
listened quietly, with my writing-brush poised, as Tanus questioned him and I
recorded all he had to tell us. We learned that the stronghold of Basti the Cruel
was in the fastness of that awful desert of Gebel-Umm-Bahari, on the summit of
one of the flat-topped mountains that was protected by sheer cliffs on every
side. Hidden and impregnable, but less than two days' march from the east bank
of the Nile and the busy caravan routes that ran along its banks, it was the
perfect nest for the raptor. "There is one path to the top, cut like a
stairway from the rock. It is wide enough for only one man to climb at a time,'
Hui told us. "There is no other way to the summit?' Tanus
asked, and Hui grinned and laid his finger along his nose in a conspir-atory
gesture. 'There is another route. I have used it often, to
return to the mountain after I had deserted my post to visit a lady Mend. Basti
would have had me killed if he had known I was missing. It is a dangerous
climb, but a dozen godd men could make it and hold the top of the cliff while
the main force came up the pathway to them. I will lead you up it, Akh-Horus.' It was the first time that I heard the name.
Akh-Horus, the brother of the great god Horus. It was a good name for Tanus.
Naturally, Hui and our other captives could not know Tanus' real identity. They
knew only in their simple way that Tanus must be some kind of god. He looked
like a god and he fought like a god, and he invoked the nametrf Horus in the
midst of battle. So, they had reasoned, he must be the brother of Horus. Akh-Horus! It was a name that all Egypt would come
to know well in the months ahead. It would be shouted from hilltop to hilltop.
It would be carried along the caravan routes. It would travel the length of the
river on the lips of the boatmen, from city to city, and from kingdom to
kingdom. The legend would grow up around the name, as the accounts of his deeds
were repeated and exaggerated at each telling. Akh-Horus was the mighty warrior who appeared from
nowhere, sent by his brother Horus to continue the eternal struggle against
evil, against Akh-Seth, the lord of the Shrikes. Akh-Horus! Each time the people of Egypt repeated
the name, it would fill their hearts with fresh hope. All that was in the future as we sat in the garden
of Tia-mat the merchant. Only I knew how hot Tanus was for Basti, and how eager
to lead his men into the Gebel-Umm-Bahari to hunt him down. It was not only
that Basti was the most rapacious and pitiless of all the barons. There was
much more to it than that. Tanus had a very personal score to settle with that
bandit. From me, Tanus had learned that Basti had been the
particular instrument that Akh-Seth had used to destroy the fortune of Pianki,
Lord Harrab, Tanus' father. 'I can lead you up the cliffs of Gebel-Umm-Bahari,'
Hui promised. 'I can deliver Basti into your hands.' Tanus, was silent awhile in the darkness as he
savoured that promise. We sat and listened to the nightingale singing at the
bottom of Tiamat's garden. It was a sound totally alien from the evil and
desperate affairs that we were discussing. After a while Tanus sighed and
dismissed Hui. 'You have done well, lad,' he told him. 'Fulfil
your promise, and you will find me grateful.' Hui prostrated himself, as though before a god, and
Tanus nudged him irritably with his foot. 'Enough of that nonsense. Away with
you now.' This recent, unlooked-for elevation to the godhead
embarrassed Tanus. No one could ever accuse him of being either modest or
humble, but he was at least a pragmatist, with noi false illusions of his own
station; he never aspired to become either a pharaoh or a divine, and he was
always short with any servility or obsequious behaviour from those around him. As soon as the lad was gone, Tanus turned back to
me. 'So often I lie awake in the night and consider all that you have told me
about my father. I ache in every fibre of my body and soul for revenge against
the one who drove him into penury and disgrace and hounded him to his death. I
can barely restrain myself. I am filled by the desire to abandon this devious
way that you have devised of trapping Akh-Seth. Instead, I long to seek him out
directly, and tear out his foul heart with my bare hands.' 'If you do that, you will lose everything,' I said.
'You know that well. Do it my way and you will restore not only your own
reputation, but that of your noble father into the bargain. My way, you will
retrieve the estate and the fortune that was stolen from you. My way will not
only give you your full measure of revenge, but will also lead you back to
Lostris and the fulfilment of the vision that I divined for the pah- of you in
the Mazes of Ammon-Ra. Trust me, Tanus. For your sake and the sake of my
mistress, trust me.' 'If I don't trust you, then who can I trust?' he
asked, and touched my arm. 'I know you are right, but I have always lacked
patience. For me the swift and direct road has always been easiest.' 'For the time being, put Akh-Seth out of your mind.
Think only of the next step along the devious way that we must travel together.
Think of Basti the Cruel. It was Basti who destroyed your father's trade
caravans as they returned from the East. For five seasons, not one of the
caravans of Lord Harrab ever returned to Karnak. They were all attacked and
looted along the road. It was Basti who destroyed your father's copper-mines at
Sestra and murdered the engineers, and their slave workers. Since then those
rich veins of ore have lain untapped. It was Basti who systematically pillaged
your father's estates along the Nile, who slaughtered his slaves in the fields
and burned the crops, until in the end, only weeds grew in Lord Harrab's
fields, and he was forced to sell them at a fraction of their real worth.' 'All that may be true, but it was Akh-Seth who gave
Basti his orders.' 'No one will believe that. Pharaoh will not believe
that, unless he hears Basti confess it,' I told him impatiently. 'Why are you
always so stubborn? We have gone over this a hundred times. The barons first,
and then at last the head of the snake, Akh-Seth.' 'Yours is the voice of wisdom, I know it. But it is
hard to bear the waiting. I long for my revenge. I long to cleanse the stain of
sedition and treason from my honour, and I long—oh, how I long for Lostris!' He leaned across and clasped my shoulder with a
grip that made me wince. 'You have done enough here, old friend. I could never
have accomplished so much without you. If you had not come to find me, I might
still be sodden with drink and lying in the embrace of some stinking whore. I
owe you more than I can ever repay, but I must send you away now. You are
needed elsewhere. Basti is my meat, and I don't need you to share the feast
with me. You will not be coming with me to Gebel-Umm-Bahari. I am sending you
back where you belong—where I also belong, but where I cannot be—at the side of
the Lady Lostris. I envy you, old friend, I would give up my hope of
immortality to be going to her in your place.' I protested most prettily, of course. I swore that
all I wanted was another chance at those villains, and that I was his companion
and that I would be seriously aggrieved if he would not give me a place at his
side in the next campaign. All the time I was secure in the knowledge that when
Tanus set his mind on a course of action he was adamant and could not easily be
dissuaded, except very occasionally by his friend and adviser, Taita the slave. The truth was that I had enjoyed my fill of wild
heroics and people trying to kill me. I was not by nature a soldier, not some
insensitive clod of a trooper. I hated the rigours of campaigning in the
desert. I could not bear another week of heat and sweat and flies without even
a glimpse of the sweet green waters of Mother Nile. I longed for the feel of
clean linen against my freshly bathed and anointed skin. I missed my mistress
more than I could express in mere words. Our quiet, civilized life in the
painted rooms on the Island Of Elephantine, our music and long, leisurely
conversations together, my pets and my scrolls, all these exerted an
irresistible draw upon me. Tanus was right, he no longer needed me, and my
place was with my mistress. However, to acquiesce too readily to his orders
might lower his opinion of me, and I did not want that either. At last I allowed him to convince me, and,
concealing my eagerness, I began my preparations for my return to Elephantine. TANUS HAD ORDERED KRATAS BACK TO Karnak, to
assemble and bring up reinforcements for the expedition into the desert of
Gebel-Umm-Bahari. I was to travel under his protection as far as Karnak, but
taking leave of Tanus was not a simple matter. Twice when I had already left
the house of Tiamat to join Kratas where he waited for me on the outskirts of
the town, Tanus called me back to give me another message to take to my
mistress. 'Tell her that I think of her every hour of every
day!' 'You have already given me that message,' I protested. 'Tell her that my
dreams are filled with images of her lovely face.' 'And that one also. I can recite them by heart.
Give me something new,' I pleaded. 'Tell her that I believe the vision of the Mazes,
that in a few short years we will be together—' 'Kratas is waiting for me. If you keep me here, how
can I deliver your message?' 'Tell her that everything I do is for her. Every
breath I draw is for her—' he broke off, and embraced me. 'The truth is, Taita,
I doubt I can live another day without her.' 'Five years will pass like that single day. When
next you meet her, your honour will be restored and you will once more stand
high in the land. She can only love you the more for that.' He released me. 'Take good care of her until I am
able to assume that joyous duty from you. Now, away vyjth you. Speed to her
side.' "That has been my intention this hour past,' I
told him wryly, and made good my escape. With Kratas at the head of our small detachment, we
made the journey to Karnak in under a week. Fearful of discovery by Rasfer or
Lord Intef, I spent as little time in my beloved city as it took me to find
passage on one of the barges heading southwards. I left Kratas busily
recruiting from amongst the elite regiments of Pharaoh's guards the thousand
good men that Tanus had demanded, and I went aboard the barge. We had the north wind in our sails all the way, and
we tied up at the wharf of East Elephantine twelve days after leaving Thebes. I
was still dressed in the wig and garb of the priesthood, and nobody recognized
me as I came ashore. For the price of a small copper ring I hired a
felucca to take me across the river to the royal island, and it put me down at
the steps that led up to the water-gate to our garden in the harem. My heart
pounded against my ribs as I bounded up the stairs. I had been away from my
mistress far too long. It was at times such as these that I realized the full
strength of my feelings for her. I was certain that Tanus' love was but a light
river breeze in comparison to the khamsin of my own emotions. One of Lostris' Cushite maidens met me at the gate,
and tried to prevent me from entering. 'My mistress is unwell, priest. There is
another doctor with her at this moment. She will not see you.' 'She will see me,' I told her, and stripped off my
wig. 'Taita!’ she squealed, and fell to her knees,
frantically making the sign to ward off evil. 'You are dead. This is not you,
but some evil apparition from beyond the grave.' I brushed her aside and hurried to my mistress's
private quarters, to be met at the doors by one of those priests of Osiris who
consider themselves physicians. 'What are you doing here?' I demanded of him,
appalled that one of these quacks had been anywhere near my mistress. Before he
could answer, I bellowed at him, 'Out! Get out of here! Take your spells and
charms and filthy potions, and don't come back.' He looked as though he were prepared to argue, but
I placed my hand between his shoulder-blades and gave him a running start
towards the gate. Then I rushed to my mistress's bedside. The odour of sickness filled the chamber, sour and
strong, and a wild grief seized me as I looked down at the Lady Lostris. She
seemed to have shrunk in size, and her skin was pale as the ashes of an old
camp-fire. She was asleep or in a coma, I could not be certain which, but there
were dark, bruised shadows beneath her closed eyelids. Her lips had that dry
and crusty look that filled me with dread. I drew back the linen sheet that covered her and
beneath it she was naked. I stared in horror at her body. The flesh had melted
off her. Her limbs were thin as sticks and her ribs and the bones of her pelvis
stuck out through the unhealthy skin, like those of drought-stricken kine.
Tenderly, I placed my hand in her armpit to feel for the heat of fever, but her
skin was cool. What kind of disease was this, I fretted. I had not encountered
any like it before. Without leaving her side, I yelled for her slave
girls, but none of them had the courage to face the ghost of Taita. In the end
I had to storm into their quarters and drag one of them whimpering from under
her bed. 'What have you done to your mistress to bring her
to this pass?' I kicked her fat backside to focus her attention on my question,
and she whined and covered her face, so as not to have to look upon me. 'She will not eat. Barely a mouthful in all these
weeks. Not since the mummy of Tanus, Lord Harrab was laid in his tomb in the
Valley of the Nobles. She has even lost the child of Pharaoh that she was
carrying in her womb. Spare me, kind ghost, I have done you no harm.' I stared down at her in bewilderment for a moment,
until I realized what had happened. My message of comfort to the Lady Lostris
had never been delivered. Intuitively I guessed that the messenger whom Kratas
had dispatched from Luxor to carry my letter to my mistress, had never reached
Elephantine. He had probably become one more victim of the Shrikes, just
another corpse floating down the river with an empty purse and a gaping wound
in his throat. I hoped that my letter had fallen into the hands of some
illiterate thief, and not been taken to Akh-Seth. There was no time to worry about
that now. I rushed back to my mistress's side and fell on my
knees beside her bed. 'My darling,' I whispered, and stroked her haggard brow.
'It is me, Taita, your slave.' She stirred slightly and mumbled something I could
not catch. I realized that there was little time to spare; she was far-gone. It
was over a month since Tanus' purported death. If the slave girl had spoken the
truth, and she had indeed taken no food in all that time, then it was a wonder
that she was still alive. I leaped up again and ran to my own rooms. Despite
my 'demise' nothing had been changed, and my medicine chest was in the alcove
where I had left it. With it in my arms, I hurried back to my mistress. My
hands were shaking as I lit a twig of the scorpion bush from the flame of the
oil lamp beside her bed, and held the glowing end under her nose. Almost
immediately she gasped and sneezed and struggled to avoid the pungent smoke. 'Mistress, it is I, Taita. Speak to me.' She opened her eyes and I saw the dawn of pleasure in
them swiftly extinguished by the fresh realization of her bereavement. She held
out her thin, pale arms to me, and I took her to my breast. 'Taita,' she sobbed softly. 'He is dead. Tanus is
dead. I cannot live without him.' 'No! No! He is alive. I come directly from him with
messages of love and devotion from him to you.' 'You are cruel to mock me so. I know he is dead.
His tomb is scaled—' 'It was .a, subterfuge to mislead his enemies,' I
cried. 'Tanus lives. I swear it to you. He loves you. He
waits for you.' 'Oh, that I could believe you! But I know you so
well. You will lie to protect me. How can you tormept me with false promises? I
hate you so—*' She tried to break from my arms. 'I swear it. Tanus is alive.' 'Swear on the honour of the mother you never knew.
Swear on the wrath of all the gods.' She hardly had the strength to challenge
me. 'On all these I swear, and on my love and duty to
you, my mistress.' 'Can it be?' I saw the strength of hope flow back
into her, and a faint flush of color bloom in her cheeks. 'Oh, Taita, can it
truly be?' 'Would I look so joyful, if it were not? You know I
love him almost as much as you do. Could I smile thus, if Tanus were truly
dead?' While she stared into my eyes, I launched into a
recitation of all that had occurred since I had left her side so many weeks
ago. I excluded only the details of the condition in which I had discovered
Tanus hi the old shack in the swamps, and the female company I had found him
keeping. She said not a word, but her eyes never left my
face as she devoured my words. Her pale face, almost translucent with
starvation, glowed like a pearl as she listened to my account of our adventures
at Gallala, of how Tanus led the fighting like a god, and of how he sang with
the wild joy of battle. 'And so you see, it is true. Tanus is alive,' I
ended, and she spoke for the first time since I had begun. 'If he is alive, then bring him to me. I will not
eat a mouthful until I set my eyes upon his face once more.' 'I will bring him to your side as swiftly as I can
send a messenger to him, if that is what you wish,' I promised, and reached for
the polished bronze mirror from my chest. I held the mirror before her eyes, and asked
softly, 'Do you want him to see you as you are now?' She stared at her own gaunt, hollow-eyed image. 'I will send for him today, if you order it. He
could be here within a week, if you really want that.' I watched her straggle with her emotions. 'I am
ugly,' she whispered. 'I look like an old woman.' 'Your beauty is still there, just below the
surface.' 'I cannot let Tanus see me like this.' Feminine
vanity had triumphed over all her other emotions. 'Then you must eat.' 'You promise,' she wavered, 'you promise that he is
still alive, and that you will bring him to me as soon as I am well again?
Place your hand on my heart and swear it to me.' I could feel her every rib and her heart fluttering
like a trapped bird beneath my fingers. 'I promise,' I said. 'I will trust you this time, but if you are lying I
will never trust you again. Bring me food!' As I hurried to the kitchen, I could not help but
feel smug. Taita, the crafty, had got his own way yet again. I mixed a bowl of warm milk and honey. We would
have to begin slowly, for she had driven herself to the very edge of
starvation. She vomited up the contents of the first bowl, but was able to keep
down the second. If I had delayed my return by another day, itmight have been
too late. SPREAD BY THE CHATTERING SLAVE GIRLS, the news of
my miraculous return from the grave swept through the island like the smallpox. Before nightfall Pharaoh sent Aton to fetch me to
an audience. Even my old friend Aton was ——— strained and reserved in my
presence. He leaped away nimbly when I tried to touch him, as though my hand
might pass through his flesh like a puff of smoke. As he led me through the
palace, slaves and nobles alike scurried out of my path, and inquisitive faces
watched me from every window and dark comer as we passed. Pharaoh greeted me with a curious mixture of
respect and nervousness, most alien to a king and a god. 'Where have you been, Taita?' he asked, as though
he did not really want to hear the answer. I prostrated myself at his feet. 'Divine Pharaoh,
as you yourself are part of the godhead, I understand that you ask that
question to test me. You know that my lips are sealed. It would be sacrilege
for me to speak of these mysteries, even to you. Please convey to the other
deities who are your peers, and particularly to Anubis, the god of the cemeteries,
that I have been true to the charge laid upon me. That I have kept the oath of
silence imposed upon me. Tell them that I have passed the test that you set
me.' His expression glazed as he considered this, and he
fidgeted nervously. I could see him forming question after question, and then
discarding each of them in turn. I had left him no opening to exploit. In the end he blurted out lamely, 'Indeed, Taita,
you have passed the test I set you. Welcome back. You have been missed.' But I
could see that all his suspicions were confirmed, and he treated me with that
respect due to one who had solved the ultimate mystery. I crawled closer to him and dropped my voice to a
whisper. 'Great Egypt, you know the reason I have been sent back?' He looked mystified, but nodded uncertainly. I came
to my feet and glanced around suspiciously, as though I expected to be
overlooked by supernatural forces. I made the sign against evil before I went
on, 'The Lady Lostris. Her illness was caused by the direct influence of—' I
could not say the name, but made the horn sign with two fingers, the sign of
the dark god, Seth. His expression changed from confusion to dread, and
he shivered involuntarily and drew closer to me, as if for protection, as I
went on, 'Before I was taken away, my mistress was already carrying in her womb
the treasure of the House of Mamose when the Dark One intervened. Due to her
illness, the son she was bearing you has been aborted from her womb.' Pharaoh looked distraught. 'So that is the reason
that she miscarried,' he began, and then broke off. I picked up my cue smoothly. 'Never fear, Great
Egypt, I have been sent back by forces greater than those of the Dark One to
save her, so that the destiny that I foresaw in the Mazes of Ammon-Ra may run
its allotted course. There will be another son to replace the one that was
lost. Your dynasty will still be secured.' 'You must not leave the side of the Lady Lostris
until she is well again.' His voice shook with emotion. 'If you save her and she
bears me another son, you may ask from me whatever you wish, but if she dies—'
he stopped as he considered what threat might impress one who had already
returned from beyond, and in the end let it trail away. 'With your permission, Your Majesty, I shall go to
her this instant.' 'This instant!'he agreed.'Go! Go!' MY MISTRESS'S RECOVERY WAS SO SWIFT that I began to
suspect that I had unwittingly invoked some force beyond my own comprehension,
and I felt a superstitious awe at my own powers. Her flesh filled out and firmed almost as I ———
watched. Those pitiful empty sacs of skin swelled into plump, round breasts
once again, sweet enough to make the stone image of the god Hapi which stood at
the doorway to her chamber burn with envy. Fresh young blood suffused the chalk
of her skin until it glowed once more, and her laughter tinkled like the
fountains of our water-garden. Very soon it was impossible to keep her to her bed.
Within three weeks of my return to Elephantine, she was playing games of toss
with her handmaidens, dancing about the garden and leaping high to reach the
inflated bladder above the heads of the others, until, fearful that she might
overtax her returning strength, I confiscated the ball and ordered her back to
her chamber. She" would obey me only after we had struck another bargain,
and I had agreed to sing with her, or teach her the most arcane formulas of the
bao board which would allow her to enjoy her first victory over Aton, who was
an addict of the game. Aton came almost every evening to enquire about my
mistress's health on behalf of the king, and afterwards to play the board-game
with us. Aton seemed to have decided at last that I was not a dangerous ghost,
and although he treated me with a new respect, our old friendship survived my
demise. Each morning my Lady Lostris made me repeat my
promise to her. Then she would reach for her mirror and study her reflection
without the faintest trace of vanity, assessing every facet of her beauty to
determine if it was ready yet to be looked upon by Lord Tanus. 'My hair looks like straw, and there is another
pimple coming up on my chin,' she lamented. 'Make me beautiful again, Taita.
For Tanus' sake make me beautiful.' 'You have done the damage to yourself, and then you
call for Taita to make it better,' I grumbled, and she laughed and threw her
arms around my neck. 'That's what you are here for, you old scallywag.
To look after me.' Each Evening when I mixed a tonic for her and
brought the steaming bowl to her as she prepared for sleep, she would make me
repeat my promise to her. 'Swear you will bring Tanus to me, just as soon as I
am ready to receive him.' I tried to ignore the difficulties and the dangers
that this promise would bring upon us all. 'I swear it to you,' I repeated
dutifully, and she lay back against the ivory headrest and went to sleep with a
smile upon her face. I would worry about fulfilling my promise when the time
came. FROM ATON, PHARAOH HAD A FULL REPORT of Lostris'
recovery and came in person to visit her. He brought her a new necklace of gold
and lapis lazuli in the form of an eagle and sat until evening, playing
word-games and setting riddles with her. When he was ready to leave, he called
me to walk with him as far as his chambers. 'The change in her is extraordinary. It is a
miracle, Taita. When can I take her to bed again? Already she seems
well enough to bear my son and heir.' 'Not yet, Great Egypt,' I assured him vehemently.
'The slightest exertion on the part of my mistress might trigger a relapse.' He
no longer questioned my word, for now I spoke with all the authority of the
once dead, although his previous awe of me had worn a little thin with
familiarity. The slave girls also were becoming accustomed to my
resurrection, and were able to look at my face without having to make the sign.
Indeed, my return from the underworld was no longer the most popular fare of
the palace gossips. They had something else to keep them busy. This was die
advent of Akh-Horus into the lives and consciousness of every person living in
the land along the great river. The first time I heard the name Akh-Horus whispered
in the palace corridors, I did not immediately place it. The garden of Tiamat
beside the Red Sea seemed so remote from the little world of Elephantine, and I
had forgottetfcthe name that Hui had bestowed on Tanus. When, howeva, I heard
the accounts of the extraordinary deeds ascribed to this demi-god, I realized
who they were speaking about. In a fever of excitement, I ran all the way back to
the harem and found my mistress in the garden, besieged by a dozen visitors,
noble ladies and royal wives, for she had so far recovered from her illness as
to resume once more her role as court favourite. I was so wrought up that I forgot my place as a
mere slave, and to be rid of .them I was quite rude to the royal ladies. They
flounced out of the garden squawking like a gaggle of offended geese, and my
mistress rounded on me. "That was unlike you. What on earth has come over
you, Taita?' 'Tanus!' I said the name like an incantation, and
she forgot all her indignation and seized both my hands. 'You have news of Tanus! Tell me! Quickly, before I
die of impatience.' 'News? Yes, I have news of him. What news! What extraordinary
news. What unbelievable news!' She dropped my hands and picked up her formidable
silver fan. 'Stop your nonsense this instant,' she threatened me with it. 'I'll
not put up with your teasing. Tell me, or I swear you'll have more lumps on
your head than a Nubian has fleas.' 'Come! Let's go where nobody can hear us.' I led
her down to the jetty and handed her into our little skiff. Out in the middle
of the river we were safe from the flapping ears that lurked behind each corner
of the palace walls. "There is a fresh, clean wind blowing through
the land,' I told her. 'They call this wind Akh-Horus.' 'The brother of Horus,' she breathed it with
reverence. 'Is this what they call Tanus now?' 'None of them know it is Tanus. They think he is a
god.' 'He is a god,' she insisted. 'To me, he is a god.' 'That is how they see
it also. If he were not a god, how then would he know where the Shrikes are
skulking, how else would he march unerringly to their strongholds, how would he
know instinctively where they are waiting to wayr lay the incoming caravans,
and to surprise them in their own ambuscades?' 'Has he accomplished all these things?' she
demanded in wonder. 'These deeds and a hundred others, if you can
believe the wild rumours that are flying about the palace. They say that every
thief and bandit in the land runs in terror of his life, that the clans of the
Shrikes are being shattered one by one. They say that Akh-Horus sprouted wings,
like those of an eagle, and flew up the inaccessible cliffs of Gebel-Umm-Bahari
to appear miraculously in the midst of the clan of Basti the Cruel. With his
own hands, he hurled five hundred of the bandits from the top of the cliffs—' 'Tell me more!' She clapped her hands, almost
capsizing the skiff in her enthusiasm. "They say that at every crossroads and beside
every caravan route he has built tall monuments to his passing.' 'Monuments?
What monuments are these?' 'Piles of human skulls, high pyramids of skulls. The
heads of the bandits he has slain, as a warning to others.' My mistress shuddered with delicious horror, but
her face still shone. 'Has he killed so many?' she demanded. 'Some say he has slain five thousand, and some say
fifty thousand. There are even some who say one hundred thousand, but I think
those must be exaggerating a little.' 'Tell me more! More!' "They say he has already captured at least six
of the robber barons—' 'And chopped off their heads!' she anticipated me
with ghoulish relish. 'No, they say that he has not killed them, but
transformed them into baboons. They say he keeps them in a cage for his
amusement.' 'Is all of this possible?' she giggled. 'For a god, anything is possible.' 'He is my god. Oh, Taita, when will you let me see
him?' 'Soon,' I promised. 'Your beauty burns up brighter
every day. Soon it will be fully restored.' 'In the meantime you must gather every story and
every rumour of Akh-Horus and bring them to me.' She sent me to the shipping wharf every day to
question the crews of the barges coming down from theg north for news of Akh-Horus. 'They are saying now that nobody has ever seen the
face of Akh-Horus, for he wears a helmet with a visor that covers all but his
eyes. They say also that in the heat of battle the head of Akh-Horus bursts
into flame, a flame that blinds his enemies,' I reported to her after one such
visit. 'In the sunlight I have seen Tanus' hair seem to
burn with a heavenly light,' my mistress confirmed. On another morning I could tell her, "They say
that he can multiply his earthly body like the images in a mirror, that he can
be in many" different places at one time, for on the same day he can be
seen in Qena and Kom-Ombo, a hundred miles apart.' 'Is that possible?' she asked, with awe. 'Some say this is not true. They say that he can
cover these great distances only because he never sleeps. They say that in the
night hours he gallops through the darkness on the back of a lion, and in the
day he soars through the sky on the back of an enormous white eagle to fall
upon his enemies when they least expect it.' "That could be true.' She nodded seriously. 'I
do not believe about the mirror images, but the lion and the eagle might be
true. Tanus could do something like that. I believe it.' 'I think it more likely that everybody in Egypt is
eager to set eyes upon Akh-Horus, and that the desire is father to the act.
They see him behind every bush. As to the speed of his travels, well, I have
marched with the guards and I can vouch for—' She would not allow me to finish,
but interrupted primly. "There is no romance in your soul, Taita. You
would doubt that the clouds are the fleece of Osiris' flocks, and that the sun
is the face of Ra, simply because you cannot reach up and touch them. I, for my
part, believe Tanus is capable of all these things.' Which assertion put an end
to the argument, and I hung my head in submission. IN THE AFTERNOONS THE TWO OF US RESUMED our old
practice of strolling through the streets and the market-places. As before her
illness, "rny mistress was welcomed by an adoring populace, and she stopped
to speak with all of them, no matter their station or their calling. From
priests to prostitutes, none was immune to her loveliness and her unfeigned
charm. Always she was able to turn the conversation to
Akh-Horus, and the people were as eager as she was to discuss the new god. By
this time he had been promoted in the popular imagination from demi-god to a
full member of the pantheon. The citizens of Elephantine had already begun a
subscription for the building of a temple to Akh-Horus, to which my mistress
had made a most generous donation. A site for the temple had been chosen on the bank
of the river opposite the temple of Horus, his brother, and Pharaoh had made
the formal declaration of his intention to dedicate the building in person.
Pharaoh had every reason to be grateful. There was a new spirit of confidence
abroad. As the caravan routes were made secure, so the volume of trade between
the Upper Kingdom and the rest of the world blossomed. Where before one caravan had arrived from the East,
now four made a safe crossing of the desert, and as many set out on the return
journey. To supply the caravan masters, pack-donkeys were needed in their
thousands, and the farmers and breeders drove them into the cities, grinning at
the expectation of the high prices they would receive. Because it was now safe to work the fields furthest
from the protection of the city walls, crops were planted where for decades
only weeds had grown, and the farmers, who had been reduced to beggars, began
to prosper again. The oxen drew the sledges piled high with produce along the
roads that were now protected by the legions of Akh-Horus, and the markets were
filled with fresh produce. Some of the profits of the merchants and the
land-owners from these ventures were spent in the building of new villas in the
countryside, where it was once more deemed safe to take their families to live.
Artisans and craftsmen, who had walked the streets of Thebes and Elephantine
seeking employment for their skills, were suddenly in demand, and used their
wages to buy not only the necessities of life but luxuries for themselves and
their families. The markets were thronged. The volume of traffic up and down the Nile swelled
dramatically, so that more craft were needed, and the new keels were laid down
in every shipyard. The captains and crews of the river boats and the shipyard
workers spent their new wealth in the taverns and pleasure-houses, so that the
prostitutes and the courtesans clamoured for fine clothes and baubles, and the
tailors and the jewellers thrived and built new homes, while their wives
prowled the markets with gold and silver in their purses, looking for
everything from new slaves to cooking-pots. Egypt was coming to life again, after being
strangled for all these years by the depredations of Akh-Seth and the Shrikes. As a result of all this, the state revenues
burgeoned, and Pharaoh's tax-collectors circled above it all with as much
relish as the vultures above the corpses of the bandits that Akh-Horus and his
legions were strewing across the countryside. Of course, Pharaoh was grateful. So were my mistress and I. At my suggestion, the
two of us invested in a share of a trading expedition that was setting out
eastwards into Syria. When the expedition returned six months later, we found
that we had made a profit of fifty times our original investment. My mistress
bought herself a string of pearls and five new female slaves to make my life
miserable. Prudent as always, I used my share to acquire five plots of prime
land on the east bank of the river, and one of (the law scribes drew up the
deeds and had them registered in the temple books. THEN CAME THE DAY THAT I HAD BEEN dreading. One
morning my mistress studied her reflection in the mirror with even more
attention than usual, and declared that she was ready at last. In all fairness,
I had grudgingly to agree that she had never looked more lovely. It was as
though all she had suffered recently had tempered her to a new resilience. The
last traces of girlishness, uncertainty, and puppy fat had evaporated from her
features, and she had become a woman, mature and composed. 'I trusted you, Taita. Now prove to me that I was
not silly to do so. Bring Tanus to me.' When Tanus and I had parted at Safaga, we had been
unable to agree on any sure method of exchanging messages. 'I will be on the march every day, and who can tell
where this campaign will lead me. Do not let the Lady Lostris worry if she does
not hear from me. Tell her I will send a message when my task is completed. But
tell her that I will be there when the fruits of our love are ripe upon the
tree, and are ready for plucking.' Thus it was that we had heard nothing of him other
than the wild rumours of the wharves and bazaars. Once again it seemed that the gods had intervened to
save me, this time from the wrath of my Lady Lostris. There was a fresh rumour
in the market-place that day. A caravan coming down the northern road had
encountered a recently erected pyramid of human heads at the roadside not two
miles beyond the city walls. The heads were so fresh that they were stinking
only a little and had not yet been cleaned of flesh by the crows and vultures. 'This means only one thing,' the gossips told each
other. "This means that Akh-Horus is in the nome of Assoun, probably within
sight of the walls of Elephantine. He has fallen upon the remnants of the clan
of Akheku, who have been skulking in the desert since their baron had his head
hacked off at Gallala. Akh-Horus has slaughtered the last of the bandits, and
piled their heads at the roadside. Thanks be to the new god, the south has been
cleared of the dreaded Shrikes!' This was news indeed, the best I had heard in
weeks, and I was in a fever to take it to my mistress. I pushed my way through
the throng of sailors and merchants and fishermen on the wharf to find a
boatman to take me back to the island. Somebody tugged at my arm, and I shrugged the hand
away irritably. Despite the new prosperity sweeping the land, or perhaps
because of it, the beggars were more demanding than ever. This one was not so
easily put off, and I turned back to him, angrily raising my staff to drive him
off. 'Do not strike an old friend! I have a message for
you from one of the gods,' the beggar whined, and I stayed the blow and gaped
at him. 'Hui!' My heart soared as I recognized the sly grin
of the erstwhile robber. 'What are you doing here?' I did not wait for a reply
to my fatuous question, but went on swiftly, 'Follow me at a distance.' I led him to one of the pleasure-houses in a narrow
alley beyond the harbour that provided rooms to couples, of the same or of
mixed gender. They rented the rooms for a short period measured by a
water-clock set at the door, and charged a large copper ring for this service.
I paid this exorbitant fee and the moment we were alone, I seized Hui by his
ragged cloak. 'What news of your master?' I demanded, and he
chuckled with infuriating insolence. 'My throat is so dry I can hardly speak.' Already
he had adopted all the swagger and insolent panache of a trooper of the Blues.
How quickly a monkey learns new tricks! I shouted for the porter to bring up a
pot of beer. Hui drank like a thirsty donkey, then lowered the pot and belched
happily. 'The god Akh-Horus sends greetings, to you and to
another whose name cannot be mentioned. He bids me tell you that the task is
completed and that all the birds are in the cage. He reminds you that it lacks
only a few months to the next festival of Osiris and it is time to write a new
script for the passion play for the amusement of the king.' 'Where is he? How long will it take for you to
return to him?' I demanded eagerly. 'I can' be with him before Ammon-Ra, the sun god,
plunges beyond the western hills,' Hui declared, and I glanced through the window
at the sun which was halfway down the sky. Tanus was lying up very close to the
city, and I rejoiced anew. How I longed to feel his rough embrace, and hear
that great booming laugh of his! Grinning to myself in anticipation, I paced up and
down the filthy floor of the room while I decided on the message that I would
give Hui to take back to him. IT WAS ALMOST DARK WHEN I STEPPED ashore on our
little jetty and hurried up the steps. One of the slave girls was weeping at
the gate, and rubbing her swollen ear. 'She struck me,' the girl whimpered, and I saw that
her dignity had suffered more than her ear. not refer to the Lady Lostris as
"she",' I scolded her. 'Anyway, what have you to complain of? Slaves
are there to be struck.' None the less, it was unusual for my mistress to
lift a hand to anyone in her household. She must indeed be in a fine mood, I
thought, and slowed my pace. Proceeding warily now, I arrived just as another
of the girls fled weeping from the chamber. My mistress appeared in the doorway
behind her, flushed with anger. 'You have turned my hair into a hay-stack—' She saw me then and broke off her tirade. She
rounded on me with such gusto that I knew that I was the true object of her
ire. 'Where have you been?' she demanded. 'I sent you to
the harbour before noon. How dare you leave me waiting so long?' She advanced
upon me with such an expression that I backed off nervously. 'He is here,' I told.her hastily, and then dropped
my voice so that none of the slave girls could hear me. 'Tanus is here,' I
whispered, 'the day after tomorrow I will make good my promise to you.' Her mood swung in a full circle and she leaped up
to throw her arms around my neck, then she went off to find her offended girls
and to comfort them. AS PART OF HIS ANNUAL TRIBUTE THE vassal king of
the amorites had sent Pharaoh a pair of trained hunting cheetahs from his
kingdom across the Red Sea. The king was eager to run these magnificent
creatures against the herds of gazelle that abounded in the desert dunes of the
west bank. The entire court, including my mistress, had been commanded to
attend the course. We sailed across to the west bank in a fleet of
small river craft, white sails and bright-coloured pennants fluttering. There
was laughter and the music of lute and sistrum to accompany us. The annual
flooding of the great river would begin within days, and this expectation,
together with the prosperous new climate of the land, enhanced the carnival
mood of the court. My mistress was in a gayer mood than any of them,
and she called merry greetings to her friends in the other boats as our felucca
cut through the green summer waters at such a rate as to deck our bows with a
lacy white garland of foam and leave a shining wake behind us. It seemed that I was the only one who was not happy
and carefree. The wind had a harsh, abrasive edge to it, and was blowing from
the wrong quarter. I kept glancing anxiously at the western sky. It was
cloudless and bright, but there was a brassy sheen to the heavens that was
unnatural. It was almost as though another sun was dawning from the opposite
direction to the one we knew so well. I put aside my misgivings and tried to enter into
the spirit of the outing. I failed in this, for I had more than the weather to
worry about. If one part of my plan went awry, my life would be in danger, and
perhaps other lives more valuable than mine would be at risk. I must have shown all this on my face, for my
mistress nudged me with her pretty painted toe and told me, 'So glum, Taita?
Everyone who looks at you will know that you are up to something. Smile! I
command you to smile.' When we landed on the west bank, there was an army
of slaves waiting for us there. Grooms holding splendid white riding donkeys
from the royal stables, all caparisoned with silk. Pack-donkeys laden with
tents and rugs and baskets of food and'wine, and all the other provisions for a
royal picnic. There was a regiment of slaves in attendance, some to hold
sun-shades above the ladies, others to wait upon the noble guests. There were
clowns and acrobats and musicians to entertain them, and a hundred huntsmen to
provide the sport. The cheetah cage was loaded on a sledge drawn by a
team of white oxen, and the court gathered around the vehicle to admire these
rare beasts. They did not occur naturally in our land, for they were creatures
of the open grassy savannah, and there was none of this type of terrain along
the river. They were the first that I had ever seen, and my curiosity was so
aroused that for a while I forgot my other worries and went up as close to the
cage as I could push through the crowd without jostling or treading on the toes
of some irascible nobleman. They were the most beautiful cats that I could
imagine, taller and leaner than our leopards, with long, clean limbs and
concave bellies. Their sinuous tails seemed to give expression to their mood.
Their golden hides were starred with rosettes of deepest black, while from the
inner corner of each of their eyes, a line of black was painted down the cheek
like a runnel of tears. This, with their regal bearing, gave them a tragic and
romantic air that I found enchanting. I longed to own one of these creatures,
and I decided on the moment to put the thought into the mind of my mistress.
Pharaoh had never refused one of her whims. Too soon for my liking, the barque carrying the
king across the river arrived on the west bank, and with the rest of the court
we hurried to the landing to greet him. Pharaoh was dressed in light hunting garb and for once
seemed relaxed and happy. He stopped beside my mistress and while she made a
ritual obeisance, he enquired graciously about her health. I was filled with
dread that he might decide to keep her by his side throughout the day, which
would have upset all my arrangements. However, the hunting cheetah caught his
attention and he passed by without giving my mistress any order to follow. We lost ourselves in the throng and made our way to
where a donkey was being held for my Lady Lostris. While I helped her to mount,
I spoke quietly to the groom. When he told me what I wanted to hear, I slipped
a ring of silver into his hand, and it disappeared, as though by magic. With one slave leading her and another holding a
sunshade over her, my mistress and I followed the king and the sledge out into
the desert. With frequent stops for refreshment, it took us half the morning to
reach the Valley of the Gazelles. On the way we passed at a distance the
ancient cemetery of Tras which dated from the time of the very first pharaohs.
Some of the wise men said that the tombs had been carved from the cliff of
black rock three thousand years ago, although how they reached this conclusion
I could not tell. Without making it obvious, I studied the entrances of the
tombs keenly as we passed. However, from so far off I could make out no trace
of recent human presence around them, and I was unreasonably disappointed. I
kept glancing back, as we went on. The Valley of the Gazelles was one of the royal
hunting preserves, protected by the decrees of a long line of pharaohs. A
company of royal gamekeepers was permanently stationed in the hills above the
valley to enforce the king's proclamation reserving all the creatures in it to
himself. The penalty for hunting here Without the royal authority was death by
strangulation. The nobles dismounted on the crest of one of these
hills overlooking the broad brown valley. With despatch the tents were set up
to give them shade, and jars of sherbet and beer were broached to slake the
thirst of their journey. I made certain that my mistress and I secured a
good vantage-point from which to watch the hunt, but one from which we could
also withdraw discreetly without attracting undue attention to ourselves. In
the distance I could make out the herds of gazelle through the wavering watery
mirage on the floor of the valley. I pointed them out to my mistress. 'What do they find to eat down there?' my Lady
Lostris asked. 'There is not a trace of green. They must eat stones, for there
are enough of those.' 'Many of those are not stones at all, but living
plants,' I told her. When she laughed in disbelief, I searched the rocky ground
and. plucked a handful of those miraculous plants. "They are stones,' she insisted, until she
held one in her hand and crushed it. The thick juice trickled over her fingers,
and she marvelled at the cunning of whatever god had devised this deception.
"This is what they live on? It does not seem possible.' We could not continue this conversation, because
the hunt was beginning. Two of the royal huntsmen opened the cage and the
hunting cheetahs leaped down to earth. I expected them to attempt to escape,
but they were tame as temple cats and rubbed themselves affectionately against
the legs of then- handlers. The cats uttered a strange twittering sound, more
like a bird than a savage predator. Along the far side of the brown, scorched valley
bottom I could make out the line of beaters, their forms tiny and distorted by
distance and mirage. They were moving slowly in our direction, and the herds of
antelope were beginning to drift ahead of them. While the king and his huntsmen, with the cheetahs
on leash, moved down the slope towards the valley bottom, we and the rest of
the court remained on the crest. The courtiers were already placing wagers with
one another, and I was as eager as any of them to watch the outcome of the
hunt, but my mistress had her mind on other matters. 'When can we go?' she whispered. 'When can we
escape into the desert?' 'Once the hunt begins, all their eyes will be upon
it. That will be our opportunity.' Even as I spoke, the wind that had blown us
across the river and cooled us on the march suddenly dropped. It was as though
a coppersmith had opened the door of his forge. The air became almost too hot
to breathe. Once again I looked to the western horizon. The sky
above it had turned a sulphurous yellow. Even as I watched, the stain seemed to
spread across the heavens. It made me uneasy. However, I was the only one in
the crowd who seemed to notice this strange phenomenon. Although the hunting party was now at the bottom of
the hill, it was still close enough for me to observe the great cats. They had
seen the herds of gazelle which were being driven slowly towards them. This had
transformed them from affectionate pets into the savage hunters they truly
were. Their heads were up, intent and alert, ears pricked forward, leaning
against the leash. Their concave bellies were sucked in, and every muscle was
taut as a bowstring drawn to full stretch. My mistress tugged at my skirt, and whispered
imperatively, 'Let us be gone, Taita,' and reluctantly I began to edge away
towards a clump of rocks that would cover our retreat and screen us from the
rest of the company. The bribe of silver to the groom had procured for us a donkey
that was now tethered out of sight amongst the rocks. As soon as we reached it,
I checked that it carried what I had ordered, the water-skin and the leather
bag of provisions. I found that they were all in order. I could not restrain myself, and I pleaded with my
mistress, 'Just one moment more.' Before she could forbid it, I scrambled to
the top of the rocky outcrop and peeped down into the valley below. The nearest antelope were crossing a few hundred
paces in front of where Pharaoh held the pair of cheetahs on the leash. I was
just in time to watch him slip them and send them away. They started out at an
easy lope, heads up, as if they were studying the herds of daintily trotting
antelope to select their prey. Suddenly the herds became aware of their rapid
approach, and they burst into full flight. Like a flock of swallows they
skimmed away across the dusty plain. The cats stretched out their long bodies, reaching
far ahead with their forepaws and then whipping their hindquarters through,
doubling their lean torsos before stretching out again. Swiftly they built up
to the top of their speed, and I had never seen an animal so swift. Compared to
them, the herds of gazelle seemed suddenly to have run into swampy ground and
to have had their flight impeded. With effortless elegance, the two cats
overhauled the herd, and ran past one or two stragglers before they caught up
with the victims of their choice. The panic-stricken antelopes tried to dodge the
deadly rush. They leaped high and changed direction in mid-air, twisting and
doubling back the moment their dainty hooves touched the scorched earth. The
cats followed each of the convolutions with graceful ease, and the end was
inevitable. Each of them bore one of die gazelle to earth in a
sliding, tumbling cloud of dust, and then crouched over it, jaws clamped across
the windpipe to strangle it-while the gazelle's back legs kicked out
convulsively, and then at last stiffened into the rigor of death. I found myself shaken and breathless with the
excitement of it all. Then my mistress's voice roused me. 'Taita! Come down
immediately. They will see you perched up there.' And I slid down to rejoin
her. Although I was still wrought up, I boosted her into
the saddle and led the donkey down into the dead ground where we were out of
sight of the company on the hilltop behind us. My mistress could not sustain
her irritation with me for very long, and when I slyly mentioned Tanus' name
again she forgot it entirely, and urged her mount on towards the rendezvous. Only after I had placed another ridge behind us and
was certain that we were well clear of the Valley of the Gazelles, did I head
back directly towards the cemetery of Tras. In the still, hot air, the sound of
our donkey's hooves clinked and crackled on the stones as though it were
passing over a bed of broken glass. Soon I felt the sweat break out upon my
skin, for the air was close and heavy with a feeling of thunder. Long before we
reached the tombs, I told my mistress, 'The air is dry as old bones. You should
drink a little water—' 'Keep on! There will be plenty of time to drink
your fill later.' 'I was thinking only of you? mistress,' I
protested. 'We must not be late. Every moment you waste will
give me that much less with Tanus.' She was right, of course, for we would have
little enough time before we were missed by the others. My mistress was so
popular that many would be looking to enjoy her company once the hunt was over
and they were returning to the river. As we drew closer to the cliffs, so her eagerness increased
until she could no longer abide the pace of her mount. She leaped off its back
and ran ahead to the next rise. 'There it is! That is where he will be waiting
for me," she cried, and pointed ahead. As she danced on the skyline, the wind came at us like
a ravening wolf, howling amongst the hills and canyons. It caught my mistress's
hair and spread it like a flag, snapping and tangling it around her head. It
lifted her skirts high above her slim brown thighs, and she laughed and
pirouetted, flirting with the wind as though it were her lover. I did not share
her delight. I turned and looked back and saw the storm coming
out of the Sahara. It towered into the sullen yellow heavens, dun and awful,
billowing upon itself like surf breaking on a coral reef. The wind-blown sand
scoured my legs and I broke into a run, dragging the donkey behind me on its
lead. The wind thrusting into my back almost knocked me off my feet, but I
caught my mistress. 'We must be quick,' I shouted above the wind. 'We
must reach the shelter of the tombs before it hits us.' High clouds of sand blew across the sun, dimming it
until I could look directly at it with my naked eye. All the world was washed
with that sombre shade of ochre, and the sun was a dull ball of orange. Flying
sand raked the exposed skin of our limbs and the backs of our necks, until I
wound my shawl around my mistress's head to protect her, and led her forward by
the hand. Sheets of driven sand engulfed us, blotting out our
surroundings, so that I feared I had lost direction, until abruptly a hole
opened in the curtains of sand, and I saw the dark mouth of one of the tombs
appear ahead of us. Dragging my mistress with one hand and our donkey with the
other, I staggered into tne shelter of the cave. The entrance-shaft was carved
from the solid rock. It led us deep into the hillside, and then made a sharp
turn before entering the burial chamber where once the ancient mummy had been
laid to rest. Centuries before, the grave-robbers had disposed of the embalmed
body and all its treasures. Now all that remained were the faded frescoes upon
the stone walls, images- of gods and monsters that were ghostly in the gloom. My mistress sank down against the rock wall, but
her first thoughts were for her love. 'Tanus will never find us now,' she cried
in despair, and I who had led her to safety was hurt by her ingratitude. I
unsaddled our donkey and heaped the load in a comer of the tomb. Then I drew a
cup of water from the skin and made her drink. 'What will happen to the others, the king and all
our friends?' she asked, between gulps from the cup. It was her nature to think
of the welfare of others, even in her own predicament. 'They have the huntsmen to care for them,' I told
her. "They are good men and know the desert.' But not well enough to have
anticipated the storm, I thought grimly. Although I sought to reassure her, I
knew it would go hard with the women and children out there. 'And Tanus?' she asked. 'What will become of him?'
Tanus especially will know what to do. He is like one of the Bedouin. You can
be sure he will have seen the storm coming.' 'Will we ever get back to the river? Will they ever
find us here?' At last she thought of her own safety. 'We will be safe here. We have water enough for
many days. When the storm blows itself out, we will find our way back to the
river.' Thinking of the precious water, I carried the bulging skin further into
the tomb, where the donkey would not trample it. By now it was almost completely
dark, and I fumbled with the lamp that the slave had provided from the pack,
and blew upon the smouldering wick. It flared and lit the tomb with a cheery
yellow light. While I was still busy with the lamp and my back
was turned to the entrance, my mistress screamed. It was a sound so high and
filled with such mortal terror that I was struck with equal dread, and the
courses of my blood ran thick and slow as honey, although my heart raced like
the hooves of the flying gazelle. I spun about and reached for, my dagger, but
when I saw the monster whose bulk filled the doorway, I froze without touching
the weapon on my belt. I knew instinctively that my puny blade would avail us
not at all against whatever this creature might be. In the feeble light of the lamp the form was
indistinct and distorted. I saw that it had a human shape, but it was too large
to be a man, and the grotesque head convinced me that this was indeed that
dreadful crocodile-headed monster from the underworld that devours the hearts
of those who are found wanting on the scales of Thoth, the monster depicted on
the walls of the tomb. The head gleamed with reptilian scales, and the beak was
that of an eagle or a gigantic turtle. The eyes were deep and fathomless pits
that stared at us implacably. Great wings sprouted from its shoulders.
Half-furled, they flapped about the towering body like those of a falcon at
bate. I expected the creature to launch itself on those wings and to rend my
mistress with brazen talons. She must have dreaded this as much as I, for she
screamed again as she crouched at the monster's feet. Then suddenly I realized that the creature was not
winged, but that the folds of a long woollen cape, such as the Bedouin wear,
were flogging on the wind. While we were still frozen by this horrible
presence, it raised both hands and lifted off the gilded war helmet with the
visor fashioned like the head of an eagle. Then it shook its head and a mass of
red-gold curls tumbled down on to the broad shoulders. 'From the top of the eliff I saw you coming through
the storm,' it said in those dear familiar tones. My mistress screamed again, this time with wildly
ringing joy. 'Tanus!' She flew to him, and he gathered her up as though
she were a child and lifted her so high that her head brushed the rock roof.
Then he brought her down and folded her to his chest. From the cradle of his
arms, she reached up with her mouth for his, and it seemed that they might
devour each other with the strength of their need. I stood forgotten in the shadows of the tomb.
Although I had conspired and risked so much to bring them together, I cannot
bring myself to write down here the feelings that assailed me as I was made
reluctant witness to their rapture. I believe that jealousy is the most ignoble
of all our emotions, and yet I loved the Lady Lostris as well as Tanus did, and
not with the love of a father or of a brother, either. I was a eunuch, but what
I felt for her was the love of a natural man, hopeless of course, but all the
more bitter because of that. I could not stay and watch them and I began to
slink from the tomb like a whipped puppy, but Tanus saw me leaving and broke
that kiss which was threatening to destroy my soul. 'Taita, don't leave me alone with the wife of the
king. Stay with us to protect me from this terrible temptation. Our honour is
in jeopardy. I cannot trust myself, you must stay and see that I bring no shame
to the wife of Pharaoh.' 'Go,' cried my Lady Lostris from his arms. 'Leave
us alone. I'll listen to no talk of shame or honour now. Our love has been too
long denied. I cannot wait for the prophecy of the Mazes to run its course.
Leave us alone now, gentle Taita.' I fled from the chamber as though my life was in danger.
I might have run out into the storm and perished there. That way I would have
found surcease, but I was too much of a coward, and I let the wind drive me
back. I stumbled to a corner of the shaft where the wind could no longer harry
me, and I sank to the stone floor. I pulled my shawl over my head to stop my
eyes and my ears, but although the storm roared along the cliff, it could not
drown the sounds from the burial chamber. For two days the storm blew with unabated ferocity.
I slept for part of that time, forcing myself to seek oblivion, but whenever I
awoke, I could hear them, and the sounds of their love tortured me. Strange
that I had never known such distress when my mistress was with the king—but
then on the other hand not so strange, for the old man had meant nothing to
her. This was another world of torment for me. The
cries, the groans, the whispers tore at my heart. The rhythmic sobs of a young
woman that were not those of pain threatened to destroy me. Her wild scream of
final rapture was more agonizing to me than the cut of the gelding-knife. At last the wind abated and died away, moaning at
the foot of the cliffs. The light strengthened and I realized that it was the
third day of my incarceration in the tomb. I roused myself and called to them,
not daring to enter the inner chamber for fear of what I might discover. For a
while there was no .reply, and then my mistress spoke in a husky, bemused voice
that echoed eerily down the shaft. 'Taita, is that you? I thought that I had
died in the storm and been carried to the western fields of paradise.' ONCE THE STORM HAD DROPPED, WE HAD little time
remaining. The royal huntsmen would already be searching for us. The storm had
given us the best possible excuse for our absence. I was sure that the
survivors of the hunting party would be scattered across these terrible hills.
But the search-party must not discover us in the company of Tanus. On the other hand, Tanus and I had barely spoken
during these last days, and there was much to discuss. Hastily we made our
plans, standing in the entrance to the shaft. My mistress was quiet and composed as I had seldom
seen her before. No longer the irrepressible chatterbox, she stood beside
Tanus, watching his face with a new serenity. She reminded me of a priestess
serving before the image of her god. Her eyes never left his face, and
occasionally she reached out to touch him, as if to reassure herself that it
was truly he. When she did this, Tanus broke off whatever he was
saying and gave all his attention to those dark green eyes. I had to call him
back to the business we still had not completed. In the presence of such
manifest adoration, my own feelings were base arid mean. I forced myself to
rejoice for them. It took longer to finish our business than I deemed
wise, but at last I embraced Tanus in farewell and urged the donkey out into
the sunlight that was filtered by the fine yellow dust that still filled the
air. My mistress lingered, and I waited for her in the valley below. Looking back, I saw them emerge from the cave at
last. They stood gazing at each other for a long moment without touching, and
then Tanus turned and strode away. My mistress watched until he was gone from
her sight, then she came down to where I waited. She walked like a woman in a dream. I helped her to mount, and while I adjusted the
saddle girth, she reached down and took my hand. 'Thank you,' she said simply. 'I do not deserve your gratitude,' I demurred. 'I am the happiest creature in all the world.
Everything that you told me of love is true. Please rejoice for me, even
though—' she did not finish, and suddenly I realized that she had read my
innermost feelings. Even in her own great joy, she grieved that she had caused
me pain. I think I loved her more in that moment than I had ever done before. I turned away and took up the reins, and led her
back towards the Nile. ONE OF THE ROYAL HUNTSMEN SPIED US from a far
hilltop, and hailed us heartily. 'We have been searching for you at the king's command,'
he told us, as he hurried down to join us. 'Was the king saved?' I asked. 'He is safe in the
palace on Elephantine Island, and he has commanded that the Lady Lostris be
brought to him directly she is found.' As we set foot on the palace jetty, Aton was there,
puffing out his painted cheeks with relief and fussing over my mistress. 'They
have found the bodies of twenty-three unfortunates who perished in the storm,'
he told us with ghoulish relish. 'All were certain that you would be found dead
also. However, I prayed at the temple of Hapi for your safe return.' He looked
pleased with himself, and I was annoyed that he tried to claim the credit for
her survival for himself. He allowed us only time enough to wash hastily and
anoint our dry skin with perfumed oil, before he whisked us away to the
audience with the king. Pharaoh was truly moved to have my mistress
returned to him. I am sure he had come to love her as much as any of the
others, and not merely for the promise of immortality that he saw in her. A
tear tangled in his eyelash and smeared the paint on his cheek as she knelt
before him. 'I thought you were lost,' he told her, and would
have embraced her, had etiquette permitted it. 'Instead I find you prettier and
livelier than ever.' Which was true, for love had gilded her with its special
magic. 'Taita saved me,' she told Pharaoh. 'He guided me
to a shelter and protected me through all those terrible days. Without him I
would have perished, like those other poor souls.' 'Is this true, Taita?' Pharaoh demanded of me
directly, and I assumed my modest expression, and murmured, 'I am but a humble
instrument of the gods.' He smiled at me, for I knew he had become fond of
me also. 'You have rendered us many services, oh humble instrument. But this is
the most valuable of them all. Approach!' he commanded, and I knelt before him. Aton stood beside him, holding a small cedar-wood
box. He lifted the lid and proffered it to the king. From the case Pharaoh
lifted out a gold chain. It was of the purest unalloyed gold, and bore the
marks of the royal jewellers to attest its weight of twenty deben. The king held the chain over my head and intoned,
'I bestow upon you the Gold of Praise.' He lowered it on to my shoulders, and
the oppressive weight was a delight to me. This decoration was the highest mark
of royal favour, usually reserved for generals and ambassadors, or for high
officials such as Lord IntefV I doubted that ever in the history of this very
Egypt had the gold chain been placed around the neck of a lowly slave. That was not the end of the gifts and awards that
were to be bestowed upon me, for my mistress was not to be outdone. That
evening while I was attending her bath, she suddenly dismissed her slaves and,
standing naked before me, she told me, 'You may help me to dress, Taita.' She
allowed me this privilege when she was especially well pleased with me. She
knew just how much I enjoyed having her to myself in these intimate
circumstances. Her loveliness was covered only by the glossy
tresses of her sable hair. It seemed that those days she had spent with Tanus
had filled her with a new quality of beauty. It emanated from deep within her.
A lamp placed inside an alabaster jar will shine through the translucent sides;
in the same way, the Lady Lostris seemed to glow. 'I never dreamed that such a poor vessel as this
body of mine could contain such joy.' She stroked her own flanks as she said it
and looked down at herself, inviting me to do the same. 'All that you promised
me came to pass while I was with Tanus. Pharaoh has bestowed the Gold of Praise
upon you, it is fitting that I also show my appreciation to you. I want you to
share my happiness in some way.' 'Serving you is all the reward I could wish for.'
'Help me to dress,' she ordered, and lifted her hands above her head. Her
breasts changed shape as she moved. Over the year I had watched them grow from
tiny immature figs into these round, creamy pomegranates, more beautiful than
jewels or marble sculptures. I held the diaphanous nightdress over her, and
then let it float down over her body. It covered her, but did not obscure her
loveliness, in the same way that the morning mist decks the waters of the Nile
in the dawn. 'I have commanded a banquet, and sent invitations
to the royal ladies.' 'Very well, my lady. I shall see to it.' 'No, no,
Taita. The banquet is in your honour. You will sit beside me as my guest.' This was as shocking as any of the wild schemes she
had thought up recently. 'It is not fitting, mistress. You will offend against
custom.' 'I am the wife of Pharaoh. I set the customs.
During the banquet I will have a gift for you, and I will present it to you in
the sight of all.' 'Will you tell me what this gift is?' I asked, with
some trepidation. I was never sure of what mischief she would dream up next. 'Certainly I will tell you what it is.' She smiled
mysteriously. 'It is a secret, that's what it is.' EVEN THOUGH I WAS THE GUEST OF HONOUR, I could not
leave the arrangements for the banquet to cooks and giggling slave girls. After
all, the reputation of my mistress as a hostess was at stake. I was at the
market before dawn to procure the finest, freshest produce from the fields and
the river. I promised Aton that he would be invited, and he opened the king's
wine cellar and let me make my selection. I hired and rehearsed the best
musicians and acrobats in the city. I sent out the slaves to gather hyacinth
and lily and lotus from the banks of the river to augment the masses of blooms
that already decorated our garden. I had the weavers plait tiny arks of reeds
on which I floated coloured glass lamps and set them adrift on the ponds of our
water-garden. I set out leather cushions and garlands of flowers for each
guest, and jars of perfumed oil to cool them in the sultry night and drive away
the mosquitoes. At nightfall the royal ladies began to arrive in
all their frippery and high fashion. Some of them had even shaved their heads
and replaced their natural hair with elaborate wigs woven from the hair which
the wives of the poor were forced to sell, in order to feed their brats. This
was a fashion I abhorred and I vowed to do all in my power to prevent my
mistress from succumbing to such folly. Her lustrous tresses were amongst my
chief delights, but when it comes to fashion, even the most sensible woman is
not to be trusted. When, at the insistence of my mistress, I seated
myself on the cushion beside her, rather than taking my usual position behind
her, I could see that many of our guests were scandalized by such indecorous
behaviour, and they whispered to each other behind their fans. I was just as
uncomfortable as they were, and to cover my embarrassment, I signalled the
slaves to keep the wine cups filled, the musicians to play, and the dancers to
dance. The wine was robust, the music rousing, and the
dancers were all male. They gave ample proof of their gender, for I had ordered
them to perform in a state of nature. The ladies were so enchanted by this
display that they soon forgot their decent outrage, and did justice to the
wine. I had no doubt that many of the male dancers would not leave the harem
before dawn. Some of the royal ladies had voracious appetites, and many had not
been visited by the king in years. In this convivial atmosphere my mistress rose to
her feet and called (for the attention of her guests. Then she commended me to
them in terms so extravagant that even I blushed. She went on to relate amusing
and touching episodes from the lifetime we had spent together. The wine seemed
to have softened the attitude of the women towards me, and they laughed and
applauded. A few of them even wept a little with wine and sentiment. At last my mistress commanded me to kneel before
her, and as I did so, there was a murmur of comment. I had chosen to wear a
simple kilt of the finest linen, and the slave girls had dressed my hair in the
fashion that best suited me. Apart from the Gold of Praise around my throat, I
wore no other ornament. In the midst of such ostentation, my simple style was
striking. With regular swimming and exercise I had kept the athletic body which
had first attracted Lord Intef to me. In those years I was in my prime. I heard one of the senior wives murmur to her
neighbour, 'What a pity he has lost his jewels. He would make such a diverting
toy.' This evening I could ignore the words that in other circumstances would
have caused me intense pain. My mistress was looking very pleased with herself.
She had succeeded in keeping me ignorant of the nature of her gift. Usually she
was not so adroit as to be able to outwit me. She looked down on my bowed head
and spoke slowly and clearly, wringing the utmost enjoyment from the moment. 'Taita the slave. For all the years of my life you
have been a shield over me. You have been my mentor and my tutor. You have
taught me to read and to write. You have made clear to me the mysteries of the
stars and the arcane arts. You have taught me to sing and to dance. You have
shown me how to find happiness and contentment in many things. I am grateful.' The royal ladies were once more beginning to become
restive. They had never before heard a slave praised in such effusive terms. 'On the day of the khamsin you did me a service
that I must reward. Pharaoh has bestowed the Gold of Praise upon you. I have my
own gift for you.' From under her robe she took a roll of papyrus
secured with a coloured thread. 'You knelt before me as a slave. Now rise to
your feet as a free man.' She held up the papyrus. 'This is your deed of manumission,
prepared by the scribes of the court. From this day forward, you are a free
man. I lifted my head for the first time and stared at
her in disbelief. She pressed the roll of papyrus into my numbed fingers, and
smiled down at me fondly. 'You did not expect this, did you? You are so
surprised that you have no words for me. Say something to me, Taita. Tell me
how grateful you are for this boon.' Every word she spoke wounded me like a poisoned
dart. My tongue was a rock in my mouth as I contemplated a life without her. As
a freed man, I would be excluded from her presence for ever. I would never
again prepare her food, nor attend her bath. I would never spread the covers
over her as she prepared for sleep, nor would I rouse her in the dawn and be at
her side when first she opened those lovely dark green eyes to each new day. I
would never again sing with her, or hold her cup, or help her to dress and have
the pleasure of gazing upon all her loveliness. I was stricken, and I stared at her hopelessly, as
one whose life had reached its end. 'Be happy, Taita,' she ordered me. 'Be happy in
this new freedom I give you.' 'I will never be happy again,' I blurted. 'You have
cast me off. How can I ever be happy again?' Her smile faded away, and she stared at me in
perturbation. 'I offer you the most precious gift that it is in my power to
give you. I offer you your freedom.' I shook my head. 'You inflict the most dire
punishment upon me. You are driving me away from you. I will never know
happiness again.' 'It is not a punishment, Taita. It was meant as a
reward. Please, don't you understand?' 'The only reward I desire is to remain at your side
for the rest of my life.' I felt the tears welling up from deep inside me, and
I tried to hold them back. 'Please, mistress, I beg of you, don't send me away
from you. If you have any feeling towards me, allow me to stay with you.' 'Do not weep,' she commanded. Tor if you do, then I
will weep with you, in front of all my guests.' I truly believe that she had
not, until that moment, contemplated the consequences of this misplaced piece
of generosity that she had dreamed up. The tears broke over my lids and
streamed down my cheeks. 'Stop it! This is not what I wanted.' Her own tears
kept mine good company. 'I only thought to honour you, as the king has honoured
you.' I held up the roll of papyrus. 'Please let me tear
this piece of foolery to shreds. Take me back into your service. Give me leave
to stand behind you, where I belong.' 'Stop it, Taita! You are breaking my heart.' Loudly
she snuffled up her tears, but I was merciless. 'The only gift I want from you is the right to
serve you for all the days of my life. Please, mistress, rescind this deed.
Give me your permission to tear it.' She nodded vigorously, blubbering as she used to do
when she was a little girl who had fallen and grazed her knees. I ripped the
sheet of papyrus once and then again. Not satisfied with this destruction, I
held the fragments to the lamp flame and let them burn to crispy black curls. 'Promise me that you will never try to drive me
away again. Swear that you will never again try to thrust my freedom upon me.' She nodded through her tears, but I would not
accept that. 'Say it,' I insisted. 'Say it aloud for all to hear.' 'I promise to keep you as my slave, never to sell
you, nor to set you free," she whispered huskily through the tears, and
then a beam of mischief shone out of those tragic dark green eyes. 'Unless, of
course, you annoy me inordinately, then I will summon the law scribes immediately.'
She put out a hand to lift me to my feet. 'Get up, you silly man, and attend to
your duties. I swear my cup is empty.' I resumed my proper position behind her, and
refilled the cup. The tipsy company thought it all a bit of fun that we had
arranged for their amusement, and they clapped and whistled and threw flower
petals at us to show their appreciation. I could see that most of them were
relieved that we had not truly flouted decorum, and that a slave was still a
slave. My mistress lifted the wine cup to her lips, but
before she drank, she smiled at me over the rim. Though her eyes were still wet
with tears, that smile lifted my spirits and restored my happiness. I felt as
close to her then as ever I had in all the years. THE MORNING AFTER THE BANQUET AND my hour of
freedom, we woke to find that during the night the river had swollen with the
commencement of the annual flood. We had no warning of it until the joyous
cries of the watchmen down at the .——— port aroused us. Still heavy with wine,
I left my bed and ran down to the riverside. Both banks were already lined with
the populace of the city. They greeted the waters with prayers and songs and
waving palm-fronds. The low waters had been the bright green of the
verdigris that grows on bars of copper. The waters of the inundation had
flushed it all away, and now the river had swollen to an ominous grey. During
the night it had crept halfway up the stone pylons of the harbour, and soon it
would press against the earthworks of the embankment. Then it would force its
way into the mouths of the irrigation canals that had been cracked and dry for
so many months. From there it would swirl out and flood the fields, drowning
the huts of the peasants, and washing away the boundary markers between the
fields. The surveying and replacement of the boundaries
after each flood was the responsibility of the Guardian of the Waters. Lord
Intef had multiplied his fortune by favouring the claims of the rich and the
generous when the time came round each year to reset the marker stones. From upstream echoed the distant rumble of the
cataract. The rising flood overwhelmed the natural barrages of granite that
were placed in its path, and, as it roared through the gorges, the spray rose
into the hard blue sky, a silver column that could be seen from every quarter
of the nome of Assoun. When the fine mist drifted across the island, it was
cool and refreshing on our upturned faces. We delighted in this blessing, for
it was the only rain we ever knew in our valley. Even as we watched, the
beaches around our island were eaten up by the flood. Soon our jetty would be
submerged, and the river would lap at the gates of our garden. Where it would
stop was a question that could only be calculated by a study of the levels of
the Milometer. On those levels hung prosperity or famine for the whole land and
every person in it. I hurried back to find my mistress and to prepare
for the ceremony of the waters, in which I would play a prominent role. We
dressed in our finest and I placed my new gold chain around my neck. Then, with
the rest of our household and the ladies of the harem, we joined the
spontaneous procession to the temple of Hapi. Pharaoh and all the great lords of Egypt led us.
The priests, plump with rich living, were waiting for us on the temple steps.
Their heads were shaven, their pates shining with oil, and their eyes
glittering with avarice, for the king would sacrifice lavishly today. Before the king the statue of the god was carried
from the sanctuary, and decked with flowers and fine crimson linen. Then the
statue was drenched in oils and perfume while we sang psalms of praise and
thanks to the god for sending down the flood. Far to the south, in a land that no civilized man
had ever visited, the god Hapi sat on top of his mountain and from two pitchers
of infinite capacity he poured the holy waters into his Nile. The water from
each pitcher was of a different colour and taste; one was bright green and
sweet, the other grey and heavy with the silt which flooded our fields each
season and charged them with new life and fertility. While we sang, the king made sacrifice of corn and
meats and wine and silver and gold. Then he called out his wise men, his
engineers and his mathematicians, and bade them enter the Nilometer to begin their
observations and their calculations. In the time that I had belonged to Lord Intef, I
had been nominated as one of the keepers of the water. I was the only slave in
that illustrious company, but I consoled myself by the fact that very few
others wore the Gold of Praise, and that they treated me with respect. They had
worked with me before, and they knew my worth. I had helped to design the
Milometers that measured the flow of the river, and I had supervised the
building of them. It was I who had worked out the complex formula to determine
the projected height and the volume of each flood from the observations. Our way lit by flickering torches of pitch-dipped
rushes, I followed the high priest into the mouth of the Nilometer, a dark
opening in the rear wall of the sanctuary. We descended the incline shaft, the
stone steps slippery with slime and the effusions of the river. From under our
feet, one of the deadly black water cobras slithered away, and with a furious
hiss plunged into the dark water that had already risen halfway up the shaft. We gathered on the last exposed step and by the
light of the torches studied the marks that my masons had chiselled in the
walls of the shaft. Each of the symbols had values, both magical and empirical,
allotted to it. We made the first and most crucial reading together
with extreme care. Over the following five days we would take it in turns to
watch and record the rising waters, and time the readings with the flow, of a
water-clock. From samples of the water, we would estimate the amount of silt it
bore, and all these factors would influence our final conclusions. When the
five days of observation were completed, we embarked on a further three days of
calculations. These covered many scrolls of papyrus. Finally, we were ready to
present our findings to the king. On that day Pharaoh returned to the temple in
royal state, accompanied by his nobles and half the population of Elephantine
to receive the estimates. As the high priest read them aloud, the king began
to smile. We had forecast an inundation of almost perfect proportions. It would
not be too low, to leave the fields exposed and baking in the sun, depriving
them of the rich black layer of silt so vital to their fertility. Nor would it
be so high as to wash away the canals and earthworks, and to drown the villages
and cities along the banks. This season would bring forth bountiful harvests
and fat herds. Pharaoh smiled, not so much for the good fortune of
his subjects, but for the bounty that his tax-collectors would gather in. The
annual taxes were computed on the value of the flood, and this year there would
be vast new treasures added to the store-rooms of his funerary temple. To close
the ceremony of the blessing of the water in the temple of Hapi, Pharaoh announced
the date of the biennial pilgrimage to Thebes to participate in the festival of
Osiris. It did not seem possible that two years had passed since my mistress
had played the part of the goddess in the last passion of Osiris. I had as little sleep that night as when I had kept
vigil in the shaft of the Nilometer, for my mistress was too excited to seek
her own couch. She made me sit up with her until dawn, singing and laughing and
repeating those stories of Tanus to which she never tired of listening. In eight days the royal flotilla would sail
northwards on the rising flood of the Nile. When we arrived, Tanus, Lord Harrab
would be waiting for us in Thebes. My mistress was delirious with happiness. THE FLOTILLA THAT ASSEMBLED IN THE harbour roads of
Elephantine was so numerous that it seemed to cover the water from bank to
bank. My mistress remarked jokingly that a man might cross the Nile without
wetting his feet by strolling over the bridge of hulls. With pennants and flags
flying from every masthead, the fleet made a gallant show. We and the rest of
the court had already embarked on the vessels that had been allotted to us, and
from the deck we cheered the king as he descended the marble steps from the
palace and went aboard the great, state barge. The moment he was safely
embarked, a hundred horns sounded the signal to set sail. As one, the fleet
squared away and pointed their bows into the north. With the rush of the river
and the banks of oars driving us, we bore away. There had been a different spirit abroad in the'
land since Akh-Horus had destroyed the Shrikes. The inhabitants of every
village we passed came down to the water's edge to greet their king. Pharaoh
sat high on the poop, wearing the cumbersome double crown, so that all might
have a clear view of him. They waved palm-fronds and shouted, 'May all the gods
smile on Pharaoh!' The river brought down to them not only their king, but also
the promise of its own benevolence, and they were happy. Twice during the days that followed, Pharaoh and
all his train went ashore to inspect the monuments that Akh-Horus had raised to
his passing at the crossroads of the caravan routes. The local peasants had
preserved these gruesome piles of skulls as sacred relics of the new god. They
had polished each skull until it shone like ivory, and bound the pyramids with
building clay so that they would stand through the years. Then they had built
shrines over them and appointed priests to serve these holy places. At both these shrines my mistress left a gold ring
as an offering, joyously accepted by the self-appointed guardians. It was to no
avail that I protested this extravagance. My mistress often lacked the proper
respect for the wealth that I was so painstakingly amassing on her behalf.
Without my restraining hand, she would probably have given it all away to the
grasping priesthood and the insatiable poor, smiling as she did so. On the tenth night after leaving Elephantine, the
royal entourage camped on sTpleasant promontory above a bend in the river. The
entertainment that evening was to include one of the most famous story-tellers
in the land, and usually my mistress loved a good story above most other
pleasures. Both she and I had been looking forward to this occasion and
discussing it avidly since leaving the palace. It was therefore to my surprise
and bitter disappointment that the Lady Lostris declared herself too fatigued
and out of sorts to attend the story-teller. Although she urged me to go, and
take the rest of our household with me, I could not leave her alone when she
was unwell. I gave her a hot draught and I slept on the floor at the end of her
bed, so that I could be near if she needed me during the night. I was truly worried in the morning when I tried to
wake her. Usually she would spring from her bed with a smile of anticipation,
ready to seize and devour the new day, a glutton for the joy of living.
However, this morning she pulled the covers back over her head and mumbled,
'Leave me to sleep a .little longer. I feel as heavy and dull as an old woman.' "The king has decreed an early start. We must
be aboard before the sun rises. I will bring you a hot infusion that will cheer
you.' I poured boiling water over a bowl of herbs that I had picked with my own
hands during the most propitious phase of the last moon. 'Do stop fussing,' she grumped at me, but I would
not let her sleep again. I prodded her awake and made her drink the tonic. She
pulled a face. 'I swear you are trying to poison me,' she complained, and then,
without warning and before I could do anything to prevent it, she vomited
copiously. Afterwards she seemed as shocked as I was. We both
stared at the steaming puddle beside her bed in consternation. 'What is wrong with me, Taita?' she whispered. 'Nothing
like this has ever happened to me before.' Only then did the meaning of it all dawn on me. "The khamsin!' I cried. "The cemetery of
Tras! Tanus!' She stared at me blankly for a moment, and then her
smile lit the gloom of the tent like a lamp. 'I am making a baby!' she cried. 'Not so loud, mistress,' I pleaded. 'Tanus' baby! I am carrying Tanus' son.' It could
not be the king's infant, for I had successfully kept him from her bed since
her starvation sickness and her miscarriage. 'Oh, Taita,' she purred, as she lifted her
nightdress and inspected her flat, firm belly with awe. 'Just think of it! A
little imp just like Tanus growing inside of me.' She palpated her stomach
hopefully. 'I knew that such delights as I discovered in the tomb of Tras could
not pass unremarked by the gods. They have given me a memory that will last all
my lifetime.' 'You race ahead,' I warned her. 'It may be only a
colic. I must make the tests before we can be sure.' 'I need no test. I know it in my heart and in the
secret depths of my body.' 'We will still do the tests,' I told her wryly, and
went to fetch the pot. She perched upon it to provide me with the first water
of her day, and I divided this into two equal parts. The first portion of her urine I mixed with an
equal part of Nile water. Then I filled two jars with black earth and in each
of them planted five seeds of dhurra corn. I watered one jar with pure Nile
water, and the other with the mixture that my mistress had provided. This was
the first test. Then I hunted amongst the reeds in the lagoon near
the camp and captured ten frogs. These were not the lively green and yellow
variety with leaping back legs, but slimy, black creatures. Their heads are not
separated from their sluggish, fat bodies by a neck, and their eyes sit on top
of the flat skull, so that the children call them sky-gazers. I placed five of each of the sky-gazers in two
separate jars of river water. To the one I added my mistress's intimate
emission and I left the other unadulterated. The following morning, in the
privacy of my mistress's cabin on board the galley, we removed the cloth with
which I had covered the jars and inspected the contents. The com watered by the Lady Lostris had thrown tiny
green shoots, while the other seeds were still inert. The five sky-gazers who
had not received my mistress's blessing were barren, but the other more
fortunate five had each laid long silvery strings which were speckled with
black eggs. 'I told you so!' my mistress chirruped smugly,
before I could give my official diagnosis. 'Oh, thanks to all the gods! No more
beautiful thing has happened to me in all my life.' 'I will speak to Aton immediately. You will share
the king's couch this very night,' I told her grimly, and she stared at me in
bewilderment. 'Even Pharaoh who believes most things I tell him,
will not believe that you were impregnated by the seeds blown in on the khamsin
wind. We must have a foster-father for this little bastard of ours.' Already I
considered the infant ours, and not hers alone. Though I tried to conceal it
behind my levity, I was every bit as delighted with her fecundity as she was. 'Don't you ever call him a bastard again,' she
flared at me. 'He will be a prince.' 'He will be a prince only if I can find a royal
sire for him. Prepare yourself. I am going to see the king.' 'LAST NIGHT I HAD A DREAM, GREAT Egypt,' I told
Pharaoh. 'It was so amazing that to confirm it I worked the Mazes of Ammon-Ra.' Pharaoh leaned forward eagerly, for he had come to
believe in my dreams and the Mazes as much as any of my other patients. 'This
time it is unequivocal, Majesty. In my dream the goddess Isis appeared and
promised to counter the baleful influence of her brother Seth, who so cruelly
deprived you of your first son when he struck down the Lady Lostris with the
wasting disease. Take my mistress to your bed on the first day of the festival
of Osiris, and you will be blessed with another son. That is the promise of the
goddess.' 'Tonight is the eve of the festival.' The king
looked delighted. 'In truth, Taita, I have been ready to perform this pleasant
duty all these past months, had you only allowed me to do so. But you have not
told me what you saw in the Mazes of Ammon-Ra.' Again he leaned forward
eagerly, and I was ready for him. 'It was the vision as before, only this time it was
stronger and more vivid. The same endless forest of trees growing along the
banks of the river, each tree crowned and imperial. Your dynasty reaching into
the ages, strong and unbroken.' Pharaoh sighed with satisfaction. 'Send the child
to me.' When I returned to the tent, my mistress was waiting for me. She had
prepared herself with good grace and humour. 'I shall close my eyes and imagine that I am back
in the tomb of Tras with Tanus,' she confided, and then giggled saucily.
'Although to imagine the king as Tanus is to imagine that the tail of the mouse
has become the trunk of the elephant.' Aton came to fetch her to the king's tent soon
after the king had eaten his dinner. She went with a calm expression and a firm
step, dreaming perhaps of her little prince, and of his true father who waited
for us in Thebes. BELOVED THEBES, BEAUTIFUL THEBES OF the hundred
gates—how we rejoiced as we saw it appear ahead of us, decorating the broad
sweep of the river-bank with its temples and gleaming walls. My mistress sang out with excitement as each of the
familiar landmarks revealed itself to us. Then, as the royal barge put in to
the wharf below the palace of the grand vizier, the joy of home-coming went out
of both of us, and we fell silent. The Lady Lostris groped for my hand like a
little girl frightened by tales of hob-goblins, for we had seen her father. Lord Intef with his sons, Menset and Sobek, those
two thumbless heroes, stood at the head of the great concourse of the nobles
and the city fathers of Thebes that waited upon the quay to greet the king.
Lord Intef was as handsome and suave as I had imagined him in my nightmares,
and I felt my spirits quail. 'You must be vigilant now,' the Lady Lostris
whispered to me. "They will seek to have you out of their way. Remember
the cobra.' Not far behind the grand vizier stood Rasfer.
During our absence he had obviously received high promotion. He now wore the
head-dress of a Commander of Ten Thousand and carried the golden whip of rank.
There had been no improvement in his facial muscles. One side of his face still
sagged hideously and saliva dribbled from the corner of his mouth. At that
moment he recognized me, and grinned at me with half his face across the narrow
strip of water. He lifted his golden whip in ironic greeting. 'I promise you, my lady, that my hand will be upon
my dagger and I will eat nothing but fruit that I have peeled with my own hands
while Rasfer and I are in Thebes together,' I murmured, as I smiled at him and
returned his salute with a cheery wave. 'You are to accept no strange gifts,' my mistress
insisted, 'and you will sleep at the foot of my bed, where I can protect you at
night. During the day you will stay at my side, and not go wandering off on
your own.' 'I will not find that irksome,' I assured her, and
over the following days I kept my promise to her and remained under her
immediate protection, for I was certain that Lord Intef would not jeopardize
his connection to the throne by putting his daughter in danger. Naturally, we were often in the company of the
grand vizier, for it was his duty to escort the king through all the ceremonies
of the festival. During this time, Lord Intef played the role of loving and
considerate father to the Lady Lostris, and he treated her with all the
deference and consideration due to a royal wife. Each morning he sent her
gifts, gold and jewels and exquisite little carvings of scarabs and godlets in
ivory and precious woods. Despite my mistress's orders, I did not return these.
I did not wish to warn the enemy, and besides, the gifts were valuable. I sold
them discreetly and invested the proceeds in stores of corn held for us in the
granaries of trustworthy merchants in the city, men who were my friends. In view of the expected harvest, the price of com
was the lowest it had been for ten years. There was only one direction it could
go, and that was up, although we might have to wait a while for our profits.
The merchants gave me receipts in the name of my mistress which I deposited in
the archives of the law courts. I kept only a fifth part to myself, which I
felt was a very moderate commission. This gave me some secret pleasure whenever I caught
Lord Intef watching me with those pale leopard's eyes. That look left me in no
doubt that his feelings towards me had not moderated. I remembered his patience
and his persistence when dealing with an enemy. He waited at the centre of his
web like a beautiful spider, and his eyes glittered as he watched me. I
remembered the bowl of poisoned milk and the cobra, and despite all my
precautions, I was uneasy. Meanwhile the festival rolled on with all the
ceremony and tradition, as it had for centuries past. However, this season it
was not Tanus' Blues but another squadron that hunted the river-cows in the
lagoon of Hapi, while another company of actors played out the passion in the
temple of Osiris. Because Pharaoh's decree was observed and the version of the
play was mine, the words were as powerful and moving. However, this new Isis
was not as lovely as my mistress had portrayed her, nor was Horus as noble or
striking as Lord Tanus. On the other hand, Seth was winsome and lovable in
comparison to the way that Rasfer had played him. The day after the passion, Pharaoh crossed the
river to inspect his temple, and on this occasion he kept me close at hand
throughout the day. On numerous occasions he openly consulted me on aspects of
the works. Of course I wore my golden chain whenever it was proper to do so.
None of this was missed by Lord Intef, and I could see him musing on the favour
the king showed to me. I hoped that this might further serve to protect me from
the grand vizier's vengeance. Since I had left Thebes, another architect had been
placed in charge of the temple project. It was perhaps unfair that Pharaoh
should expect this unfortunate to be able to maintain the high standards that I
had set, or to push the work forward at the same pace. 'By the blessed mother of Horus, I wish you were
still in charge here, Taita,' Pharaoh muttered. 'If she would part with you, I
would buy you from your mistress, and keep you here in the City of .the Dead
permanently to supervise the work. The cost seems to have doubled since this
other idiot took over from you.' 'He is a naive young man,' I agreed. 'The masons
and the contractors will steal his testicles from him and he will not notice
that they are missing.' 'It is my balls mat they are stealing,' the king
scowled. 'I want you to go over the bill of quantities with him and show him
where we are being robbed.' I was of course flattered by his regard, and there
was nothing spiteful in my pointing out to Pharaoh the lapses of taste that the
new architect had perpetrated when he redesigned the pediment to my temple
facade, or the shoddy craftsmanship that those rogues in the guild of masons
had been able to slip past him. The pediment was permeated with the decadent
Syrian style that was all the rage in the Lower Kingdom, where the common
tastes of the low-bom red pretender were corrupting the classical traditions of
Egyptian art. As for the workmanship, I demonstrated to the king
how it was possible to slip a fragment of papyrus between the joints of the
stone blocks that made up the side-wall of the mortuary temple. Pharaoh ordered
both the pediment and the temple wall to be torn down, and he fined the guild
of masons five hundred deben of gold to be paid into the royal store-rooms. Pharaoh spent the rest of that day and the whole of
the next reviewing the treasures in the store-rooms of the funerary temple.
Here at least he could find very little to complain of. In the history of the
world never had such wealth been assembled in one place at one time. Even I,
who love fine things, was soon jaded by the abundance of it, and my eyes were
pained by the dazzle of gold. The king insisted that the Lady Lostris remain at
his side all this time. I think that his infatuation with her was slowly turning
into real love, or as close a facsimile of it as he was capable of. The
consequence of his affection for her was that when we returned across the river
to Thebes, my mistress was exhausted, and I feared for the child she was
carrying. It was too soon to tell the king of her condition and to suggest that
he showed her more consideration. It was less than a week since she had
returned to his couch, and such an early diagnosis of pregnancy even from me
must arouse his suspicion. To him she was still a healthy and robust young
woman, and he treated her that way. THE FESTIVAL ENDED, AS IT HAD FOR CENTURIES past,
with the assembly of the people in the temple of Osiris to hear the
proclamation from the throne. On the raised stone dais in front of the sanctuary
of Osiris, Pharaoh was seated on his tall throne so that all the congregation
could have a clear view of him. He wore the double crown and carried the crook
and the flail. This time there was an alteration to the usual layout of the
temple, for I had made a suggestion to the king which he had been gracious
enough to adopt. Against three walls of the inner temple he had ordered the
erection of timber scaffolding. These rose in tiers halfway up the massive
stone walls, and provided seating for thousands of the notables of Thebes from
which they had a. privileged and uninterrupted view of the proceedings. I had
suggested that these stands be decorated with coloured bunting and palm-fronds,
to disguise their ugliness. It was the first time that these structures were
built in our land. Thereafter, they were to become commonplace, and they were
built at most public functions, along the routes of royal processions and
around the fields of athletic games. To this day they are known as Taita
stands. There had been much bitter competition for seats
upon these stands, but as their designer, I had been able to procure the very
best for my mistress and myself. We were directly opposite the throne and a
little above the height of the king's head, so we had a fine view of the whole
of the inner courtyard. I had provided a leather cushion stuffed with
lamb's-wool for the Lady Lostris and a basket of fruits and cakes, together
with jars of sherbet and beer, to sustain us during the interminable ceremony. All around us were assembled the noblest in the
land, lords and ladies decked-oat in high fashion. The generals and admirals
carrying their.golden whips and proudly flaunting the honours and standards of
their regiments, the guild masters and the rich merchants, the priests and the
ambassadors from the vassal states of the empire, they were all here. In front of the king extended the courts of the
temple, one opening into another like the boxes in a children's puzzle-game,
but such was the layout of the massive stone walls that the gates were all
perfectly aligned. A worshipper standing in the Avenue of Sacred Rams outside
the pylons of the main gate could look through the inner gates and clearly see
the king on his high throne almost four hundred paces away. All the courts of the temple were packed with the
multitudes of the common people, and the overflow spilled out into the sacred
avenue and the gardens beyond the temple walls. Though I had lived almost my
entire life in Thebes, I had never seen such a gathering. It was not possible
to count their numbers, but I estimated that there must have been two hundred
thousand assembled that day. From them rose such' a hubbub of sound that I felt
myself but a single bee in the vast humming hive. Around the throne was gathered a small group of the
highest dignitaries, their heads at the level of Pharaoh's feet. Of course one
of these was the high priest of Osiris. During the past year the old abbot had
left this transitory world of ours and set off on his journey through the
underworld to the western fields of the eternal paradise. This new abbot was a
younger, firmer man. I knew that he would not be so easily manipulated by Lord
Intef. In fact, he had collaborated with me in certain unusual arrangements for
today's ceremony that I had put in hand while supervising the erection of the
Taita stands. However, the most impressive figure in the group,
rivalling Pharaoh himself, was the grand vizier. Lord Intef drew all eyes. He
was tall and stately in bearing, handsome as a legend. With the heavy chains of
the Gold of Praise lying weightily upon his chest and shoulders, he was like a
figure from the myth of the pantheon. Close behind him loomed the hideous shape
of Rasfer. Lord Intef opened the ceremony in the traditional
manner by stepping into the clear space before the throne and beginning the
address of welcome to the king from the twin cities of Thebes. As he spoke, I
glanced sideways at my mistress, and even though I shared her loathing, I was
shocked by the expression of anger and hatred that she made no attempt to
conceal, and that she directed openly at her own father. I wanted to warn her
to make it less obvious to all about her, but I knew that in doing so, I might
merely draw further attention to her burning antagonism. The grand vizier spoke at length, listing his own
accomplishments and the loyal service he had rendered Pharaoh in the year past.
The crowd murmured and rustled with boredom and discomfort. The heat was rising
from so many bodies, and the rays of the sun beating down into the crowded
courts were trapped within the temple walls. I saw more than one woman in the
press swoon and collapse. When at last Lord Intef finished speaking, the high
priest stepped into his place. While the sun made its noon overhead, he
reported to the king on the ecclesiastical affairs of Thebes. As he spoke, the
heat and the stench increased; perfume and fragrant oils could no longer
disguise the odour of hot, unwashed bodies and running sweat. There was no
escape from the crowd to attend urgent bodily functions. Men and women simply
squatted where they stood. The temple began to stink like a sty or a public
latrine, I handed my mistress a silk kerchief drenched in perfume which she
dabbed to her nose. There was a sigh of relief when at last the high
priest ended his address with a blessing on the king in the name of the god
Osiris, and, with a deep bow, retreated to his place behind the grand vizier.
For the first time since it had begun to assemble before dawn that morning, the
crowd fell completely silent. The boredom and discomfort was forgotten, and
they craned forward eagerly to hear Pharaoh speak. The king rose to his feet. I wondered at the old
man's fortitude, for he had sat all this time like a statue. He spread his arms
in benediction, and at that moment the hallowed chalice of custom and tradition
was shattered by an event that plunged the entire congregation—priests, nobles
and commoners—into consternation. I was one of the few in the crowd who was not
surprised by what followed, for I had done more than my share to arrange it
all. The great burnished capper doors to the sanctuary
swung open. There seemed to be no human agency to the movement, it was as
though the doors opened of their own accord. A gasp, a sigh of expelled breath passed like a
wind through temple courts, and rustled the densely packed ranks as though they
were the leaves of a tamarind tree. Then suddenly a woman screamed, and
immediately a groan of superstitious horror shook them all. Some fell to their knees,
some lifted their hands above their heads in terror, others covered their faces
with their shawls so that they should not be struck blind by looking on sights
that were not for mortal eyes. A god strode out through the sanctuary doors, a
tall and terrifying god, whose cloak swirled about his shoulders as he moved.
His helmet was crowned with a plume of egret's feathers, and his features were
grotesque and metallic, half-eagle and half-man, with a hooked beak and dark
slits for eyes. ' Akh-Horus!' screamed a woman, and she collapsed
in a dead faint upon the stone flags. 'Akh-Horus!' the cry was taken up. 'It is the god!'
Row after row, they fell upon their knees in the attitude of reverence. Those
on the high tiers of stands knelt and many of them made the sign to avert
misfortune. Even the group of nobles around the throne went down. In all the
temple only two persons remained on their feet. Pharaoh posed on the steps of
his throne like a painted statue; and the grand vizier of Thebes stood tall and
arrogant. Akh-Horus stopped in front of the king and looked
up at him through those slitted eyes in the bronze mask, and even then Pharaoh
never flinched. The king's cheeks were painted dead white, so I could not tell
whether he blanched, but there was a glitter in his eyes that may have been
either religious ecstasy, or terror. 'Who are you?' Pharaoh challenged. 'Are you ghost
or man? Why do you disturb our solemn proceedings?' His voice was strong and
clear. I could detect no tremor in it, and my admiration for him was enhanced.
Weak and aging and gullible perhaps, but still the old man had his full share
of courage. He could face up to man or god and stand his ground like a warrior. Akh-Horus answered him in a voice that had
commanded regiments in the desperate din of battle, a voice that echoed amongst
the stone pillars. 'Great Pharaoh, I am a man, not a ghost. I am your man. I
come before you in response to your command. I come before you to account to
you for the duty that you laid upon me in this place on this very day of Osiris
two years ago.' He lifted the helmet from his head, and the fiery
curls tumbled down. The congregation recognized him instantly. A shout went up
that seemed to rock the foundations of the temple. 'Lord Tanus! Tanus! Tanus!' It seemed to me that my mistress screamed the
loudest of them all, fairly deafening me, who sat so close beside her. 'Tanus! Akh-Horus! Akh-Horus!' The two names
mingled and crashed against the temple walls like storm-driven surf. 'He has risen from his tomb! He has become a god
amongst us!' It did not abate until suddenly Tanus drew the
sword from his scabbard and held it aloft in an unmistakable command for
silence. This was obeyed, and in the silence he spoke again. 'Great Egypt, do I have your permission to speak?' I think by now the king could no longer rely on his
powers of speech, for he made a gesture with crook and flail, and then his legs
seemed to give way beneath him and he dropped back on his throne. Tanus addressed him in ringing tones that carried to
the outer court. 'Two years ago you charged me with the destruction of those
viperous nests of murderers and robbers who were threatening the life of the
state. You placed in my trust the royal hawk seal.' From under his cloak, Tanus drew out the blue statuette
and placed it on the steps of the throne. Then he stepped back and spoke again. 'In order better to carry out the king's orders, I
pretended my own death and caused the mummy of a stranger to be sealed in my
tomb.' 'Bak-Her!' shouted a single voice, and they took up
the cry until Tanus once more commanded silence. 'I led a thousand brave men of the Blues into the
deserts and the wild places and sought out the Shrikes in their secret
fortresses. There we slew them in their hundreds and piled their severed heads
at the roadside.' 'Bak-Her!' they screamed. 'It is true. Akh-Horus
has done all these things.' Once again Tanus silenced them. 'I broke the power of the barons. I slaughtered
their followers without mercy. In all this very Egypt of ours there remains
only one who still calls himself a Shrike.' Now at last they were silent, gobbling up every
word he said, fascinated and intent. Even Pharaoh could not hold his impatience
in check. 'Speak, Lord Tanus, whom men now know as Akh-Horus. Name this man. Give
me his name so that he may come to know the wrath of Pharaoh.' 'He hides behind the name of Akh-Seth,' Tanus
roared. 'His deeds of infamy rank with those of his brother, the dark -'Give me his true name,' Pharaoh commanded, rising
once more to his feet in his agitation. 'Name this last of all the Shrikes!' Tanus drew out the moment. He looked around the
temple slowly and deliberately. When our eyes met, I nodded so slightly that
only he saw the movement, but his gaze passed on without a pause and he looked
towards the open doors of the sanctuary. The attention of all the congregation was so fixed
upon Lord Tanus that they did not at first see the file of armed men that
issued swiftly and silently from the sanctuary. Although they wore full armour
and carried their war shields, I recognized most of them under the helmets.
There were Remrem and Astes and fifty other warriors of the Blues. Swiftly,
they formed up around the throne like a royal bodyguard, but, without making it
obvious, Remrem and Astes moved up behind Lord Intef. As soon as they were in
position, Tanus spoke again. 'I will name this Akh-Seth for you, Divine Pharaoh.
He stands unashamedly in the shadow of your throne.' Tanus pointed with his
sword. "There he is, wearing the Gold of Praise about his traitor's
throat. There he stands, Pharaoh's sole companion who has turned your kingdom
into a playground for murderers and bandits. That is Akh-Seth, governor of the
nome of Thebes, grand vizier of the Upper Kingdom.' An awful hush fell upon the temple. There must have
been ten thousand or more in the congregation who had suffered grievously at
Lord Intef's hands and who had every reason to hate him, but not a voice spoke
out in jubilation or in triumph against him. All knew just how terrible was his
wrath, and just how certain his retribution. I could smell the stink of their
fear in the air, thick as the incense smoke. Every one of them understood that
even Tanus' reputation and his mighty deeds were not sufficient for his
unproven accusation to prevail against such a person as Lord Intef. To show joy
or open agreement at this stage would be mortal folly. In that hush Lord Intef laughed. It was a sound
full of disdain, and with a dismissive gesture he turned his back upon Tanus
and spoke directly to the king. 'The desert sun has burned his brain. The poor
lad has gone mad. There is not a single word of truth in all his ravings. I
should be angry, but instead I am saddened that a warrior of reputation has fallen
so low.' He held out both hands to Pharaoh, a dignified and loyal gesture. 'All
my life I have served Pharaoh and my people. My honour is so invulnerable that
I see no need to defend myself against these wild rantings. Without fear I
place my trust in the wisdom and justice of the divine king. I let my deeds and
my love of Pharaoh speak, in place of my tongue.' I saw the confusion and indecision on the king's
painted face. His lips trembled and his brow was furrowed, for he was not
blessed with a swift and incisive mind. After a moment he opened his mouth to
speak, but before he could utter any fateful or irredeemable judgement, Tanus
lifted his sword again and pointed beyond the throne to the open doors of the
sanctuary. Through the doors came another procession of men so
unusual that Pharaoh gaped at them with his mouth still open. Kratas led, with
his visor raised and a sword in his right hand. Those who followed him wore
only loin-cloths, and their heads and feet were bare. Their arms were bound behind
their backs, and they shuffled like slaves on their way to the auction block. I was watching Lord Intef s face, and I saw the
shock assail him and force him to flinch, as though he had received a blow in
the face. He had recognized the captives, but he had obviously believed that
they were long dead, and their skulls grinning at the roadside. He darted a
sideways glance at the small sacristy door in the wall that was almost hidden
by the hanging linen bunting. It was his only escape from the crowded inner
court, but Remrem moved one pace to his right and blocked his path to the
doorway. Lord Intef looked back at the throne and lifted his chin in a
confident and defiant gesture. The six bound captives lined up before the throne and
then, at a quiet order from Kratas, dropped to their knees and bowed their
heads. 'Who are these creatures?' Pharaoh demanded, and
Tanus stood over the first of them, seized his bound wrists and hauled him to
his feet. The captive's skin was studded with the old healed scars of the
smallpox and his blind eye reflected the light like a silver coin. "The divine Pharaoh asks who you are,' Tanus
said softly. 'Reply to the question.' 'Great Egypt, I am Shufti,' he said. 'I was once a
baron of the Shrikes before Akh-Horus scattered and slew my clan at the city of
Gallala.' 'Tell the king who was your overlord,' Tanus
insisted. 'Akh-Seth was my overlord,' Shufti replied. 'I
swore a blood-oath of allegiance to Akh-Seth, and I paid a bounty of
one-quarter of all my plunder to him. In return Akh-Seth gave me immunity from
the forces of law, and provided me with information on my intended victims.' 'Point out to the king the man you know as
Akh-Seth,' Tanus ordered, and Shufti shuffled forward until he faced Lord Intef.
He filled his mouth with spittle and spat it on to the grand vizier's gorgeous
uniform. "This is Akh-Seth,' he cried. 'And may the worms feast on his
guts!' Kratas dragged Shufti to one side and Tanus lifted
the next captive to his feet. 'Tell the king who you are,' he ordered. 'I am Akheku, and I was a baron of the Shrikes, but
all my men are killed.' 'Who was your overlord? To whom did you pay your
bounty?' Tanus demanded. 'Lord Intef was my overlord. I paid my bounty into
the coffers of the grand vizier.' Lord Intef stood proud and aloof, showing no
emotion as these accusation were hurled at him. He offered no defence as, one
after the other, the barons were dragged before him and each made the same
declaration. 'Lord Intef was my overlord. Lord Intef is
Akh-Seth.' The silence of the multitudes in the temple was as oppressive as the
heat. They watched in horror, or in silent hatred, or in confusion and
disbelief. However, not one of them dared yet to speak out against Lord Intef,
or to show emotion until Pharaoh had first spoken. The last of the barons was brought forward to
confront the grand vizier. He was a tall, lean man with stringy muscles and
sun-blasted skin. There was Bedouin blood in his veins, for his eyes were black
and his nose beaked. His beard was thick and curling, and his expression
arrogant. 'My name is Basti.' He spoke more clearly than any of the others.
'Men call me Basti the Cruel, though I know not the reason why.' He grinned
with a raffish hangman's humour. 'I was a baron of the Shrikes until Akh-Horus
destroyed my clan. Lord Intef was my overlord.' This time he was not dragged away as the others had
been. Tanus spoke to him again. 'Tell the king. Did you know Pianki, Lord
Harrab, who in former times was a nobleman of Thebes?' 'I knew him well. I had dealings with him.' 'What were these dealings?' Tanus asked, with death
in his voice. 'I plundered his caravans. I burned his crops in
the fields. I raided his mines at Sestra, and I slew the miners in such amusing
fashion that no others ever came to work the copper there. I burned his villas.
I sent my men into the cities to speak evil of him, so that his honesty and his
loyalty to the state were tarnished. I helped others to destroy him so that in
the end he drank the poisonous Datura seed from his own cup.' I saw the hand of Pharaoh that held the royal flail
shake as he listened, and one of his eyelids twitched in a manner that I had
noticed before-when he was sore distressed. 'Who was it that ordered these things?' 'Lord Intef commanded these things and rewarded me
with a takh of pure gold.' 'What did Lord Intef hope to gain from this
persecution of Lord Harrab?' Basti grinned and shrugged. 'Lord Intef is grand
vizier, while Pianki, Lord Harrab is dead. It seems to me Lord Intef achieved
his purpose.' 'You acknowledge that I have offered you no
clemency in return for this confession? Do you understand that death awaits
you?' 'Death?' Basti laughed. 'I have never been afraid of
that. It is the flour of the loaf I bake. I have fed it to countless others, so
now why should I be afraid to feast on it myself?' Was he fool or brave man, I
wondered, as I listened to the boast. Either way, I could find neither pity nor
admiration for him in my heart. I remembered that Pianki, Lord Harrab had been
a man like his son, and that is where my pity and my admiration lay. I saw the merciless expression in the eyes of
Tanus. I knew that he shared my feelings, and his grip upon the hilt of his sword
tightened until his fingers turned as white as those of a drowned man. 'Take him away!' he grated. 'Let him await the
king's pleasure.' I saw him compose himself with an effort, then he turned back
to face the king. He went down on one knee before him. 'I have done all that you asked of me, Divine
Mamose, god and ruler of Kemit. I wait for you to command me further.' His
dignity and his grace closed up my throat so that I could not swallow. It took
an effort to compose myself. The silence in the temple persisted. I could hear
my mistress's laboured breathing beside me and then I felt her take my hand and
squeeze it with a strength that threatened to crack my finger-bones. At last Pharaoh spoke, but with dismay I heard the
doubt in his voice, and I sensed intuitively that he did not want any of this
to be true. He had trusted Lord Intef so deeply for so long that it shook the
foundations of his faith. 'Lord Intef, you have heard the accusations against
you. How say you to them?' 'Divine Pharaoh, are these indeed accusations? I
thought them merely the fantasies of a young man driven insane with envy and
jealousy. He is the son of a convicted criminal and a traitor. Lord Tanus'
motives are plain to see. He has convinced himself that the traitor Pianki might
have become grand vizier in my place. In some perverse fashion, he holds me
responsible for his father's downfall.' With a wave of his hand he dismissed Tanus. It was
so skilfully done that I saw the king waver. His doubts were growing stronger.
For a lifetime he had implicitly trusted Lord Intef, and it was difficult for
him to adjust his thinking. He wanted to believe in his innocence. 'What of the accusations of the barons?' Pharaoh
asked at last. 'What reply do you make to them?' 'Barons?' Lord Intef asked. 'Must we flatter them
with such a title? By their own testimony they are criminals of the basest
kind—murderers, thieves, violators of women and children. Should we look for
truth in them any more than we should look for honour and conscience in the beasts
of the field?' Lord Intef pointed to them, and they were indeed half-naked and
bound like animals. 'Let us gaze upon them, Divine Majesty. Are these not the
kind of men that can be bribed or beaten into saying anything for the sake of
then-own skins? Would you take the word of one of these against a man who has
served you faithfully all his life?' I saw the small, involuntary nod of the king's head
as he accepted the reasoning of the man he had looked upon as a friend, the man
upon whom he had heaped trust and rewards. 'All you say is true. You have always served me
without vice. These rogues are strangers to truth and honour. It is possible
that they may have been coerced.' He vacillated, and Lord Intef sensed his
advantage. 'So far I have had only words thrown at me. Surely
there must be some other evidence to support such mortal charges against me? Is
there one person in this very Egypt who will bring evidence against me, real
evidence and not mere words? If there is, let him come forward. Then I will
answer this charge. If there is no one who has this evidence, then I have
nothing to answer to>' His words troubled Pharaoh deeply, I could see
that. He gazed about the hall as if seeking the evidence that Lord Intef
demanded, and then he obviously reached a decision. 'Lord Tanus, what proof do you have of these
things, apart from the words of murderers and criminals?' 'The beast has covered his tracks well,' Tanus
admitted, 'and he has taken cover in the densest thicket where it is difficult
to come at him. I have no further evidence against Lord Intef, but there may be
some other who does, somebody who will be inspired by what he has heard here
today. I beg you, Royal Egypt, ask your people if there is not one of them who
can bring forth anything to help us here.' 'Pharaoh, this is provocation. My enemies will be
emboldened to come out of the shadows where they lurk to attack me,' cried Lord
Intef in vehement protest, but Pharaoh silenced him with a brusque gesture.
'They will bear false witness against you at their peril,' he promised, and
then addressed the congregation. 'My people! Citizens of Thebes! You have heard the
accusations made against my trusted and well-beloved grand vizier. Is there one
of you who can provide the proof that Lord Tanus lacks? Can any of you bring
forward evidence against the Lord Intef? If so, I charge you to speak.' I was standing before I realized what I had done,
and my voice was so loud in my own ears that it startled me. 'I am Taita, who was once the slave of Lord Intef,'
I shouted, and Pharaoh looked across at me and frowned. 'I have aught that I
wish to show Your Majesty.' 'You are known to us, Taita the physician. You may
approach.' As I left my seat on the stand and went down to
stand before the king, I looked across at Lord Intef and I missed my step. It
was as though I had walked into a stone wall, so tangible was his hatred. 'Divine Egypt, this thing is a slave.' Lord Intef's
voice was cold and tight. "The word of a slave against a lord of the
Theban circle, and a high officer of the state—what mockery is this?' I was still so conditioned to respond to his voice
and to succumb to his word, that my resolve wavered. Then I felt Tanus' hand on
my arm. It was only a brief touch, but it manned and sustained me. However, Lord
Intef had noticed the gesture, and he pointed it out to the king. 'See how this slave is in the thrall of my accuser.
Here is another one of Lord Tanus' trained monkeys.' Lord In-tef's voice was once
more smooth as warm honey. 'His insolence is unbounded. There are penalties
laid down in the law codes—' Pharaoh silenced him with a gesture of his flail.
'You presume on our good opinion of you, Lord Intef. The codes of law are mine
to interpret or amend. In them there are penalties laid down for the high-born
as well as the common man. You would be well advised to remember that.' Lord Intef bowed in submission and remained silent,
but suddenly his face was haggard and drawn as he realized his predicament. Now the king looked down at me. 'These are unusual
circumstances, such as allow of unprecedented remedy. However, Taita the slave,
let me warn you that if your words should prove frivolous, should they lack proof
or substance, the strangling-rope awaits you.' That threat and the poisonous bane of Lord Intef s
gaze upon me made me stutter. 'While I was the slave of the grand vizier, I was
his messenger and his emissary to the barons. I know all these men.' I pointed
to the captives that Kratas held near to the throne. 'It was I who carried Lord
Intef's commands to them.' 'Lies! More words, lacking proof,' Lord Intef
called out, but now the edge of desperation was in his voice. 'Where is the
proof?' 'Silence!' the king thundered with sudden ferocity.
'We will hear the testimony of Taita the slave.' He was looking directly at me,
and I drew breath to continue. 'It was I who carried the command of Lord Intef to
Basti the Cruel. The command was to destroy the estate and the fortune of
Pianki, Lord Harrab. At that time I was the confidant of Intef, I knew that he
desired the position of grand vizier to himself. All these things that Lord
Intef commanded were accomplished. Lord Harrab was destroyed, and he was deprived
of Pharaoh's favour and love, so that he drank the Datura cup. I, Taita, attest
all these things.' 'It is so.' Basti the Cruel lifted his bound arms
to the throne. 'All that Taita says is the truth.' 'Bah-Her!' shouted the barons. 'It is the truth.
Taita speaks the truth.' 'Still these are only words,' the king mused. 'Lord
Intef has demanded proof. I, your Pharaoh, demand proof.' 'For half my lifetime I was the scribe and the
treasurer of the grand vizier. I kept the record of his fortune. I noted his
profits and his expenses on my scrolls. I gathered in the bounty that the
barons of the Shrikes paid to Lord Intef, and I disposed of all this wealth.' 'Can you show me these scrolls, Taita?' Pharaoh's
expression shone like the full moon at the mention of treasure. Now I had his
avid attention. 'No, Majesty, I cannot do so. The scrolls remained
always in the possession of Lord Intef.' Pharaoh made no effort to conceal his chagrin, his
face hardened towards me, but I went on doggedly, 'I cannot show you the scrolls,
but perhaps I can lead you to the treasure that the grand vizier has stolen
from you, and from the people of your realm. It was I who built his secret
treasuries for him, and hid within them the bounty that I gathered from the
barons. It was in these store-rooms that I placed the wealth that Pharaoh's
tax-collectors never saw.' The king's excitement rekindled, hot as the coals
on the coppersmith's forge. He leaned forward intently. Although every eye in
the temple was fastened upon me, and the nobles were crowding forward the
better to hear each word, I was watching Lord Intef without seeming to look in
his direction. The burnished copper doors of the sanctuary were tall mirrors in
which his reflection was magnified. Every nuance of his expression and every
movement he made, however slight, was clear to me. I had taken a fatal risk in assuming that his
treasure still remained in the secret places where I had stored it for him. He
might have moved it at any time during the past two years. Yet moving such
quantities of treasure would have been a major work and the risk of doing so as
great as letting it rest where it lay. He would have been forced to take others
into his trust, and that was not easy for Lord Intef to do. He was by nature a
suspicious man. Added to which was the fact that, until recently, he had
believed me dead, and my secret with me. I calculated that my chances were evenly balanced,
and I risked my life on it. Now I held my breath as I watched Lord Intef's
reflection in the copper doors. Then my heart raced and my spirits soared on
the wings of eagles. I saw from the pain and panic in his expression that the
arrow I had fired at him had struck the mark. I had won. The treasure was where
I had left it. I knew that I could lead Pharaoh to the plunder and the loot
that Lord Intef had gathered up over his lifetime. But he was not yet defeated. I was rash to believe
it would be so easily accomplished. I saw him make a gesture with his right
hand that puzzled me, and while I dallied, it was almost too late. In my triumph, I had forgotten Rasfer. The signal
that Lord Intef gave him was a flick of the right hand, but Rasfer responded
like a trained boar-hound to the huntsman's command to attack. He launched
himself at me with such sudden ferocity that he took all of us by complete
surprise. He had only ten pace's to cover to reach me, and his sword rasped
from its scabbard as he came. There were two of Kratas' men standing between us,
but their backs were turned to him, and Rasfer barged into them and knocked
them off their feet, so that one of them sprawled across the stone flags in
front of Tanus and blocked his path when he tried to spring to my aid. I was on
my own, defenceless, and Rasfer threw up his sword with both hands to cleave
through my skull to my breast-bone. I lifted my hands to ward off the blow, but
my legs were frozen with shock and terror, and I could not move or duck away
from the hissing blade. I never saw Tanus throw his sword. I had eyes for
nothing but the face of Rasfer, but suddenly the sword was in the air. Terror
had so enhanced my senses that time seemed to pass as slowly as spilled oil
dribbling from the jar. I watched Tanus' sword turning end over end, spinning
slowly on its axis, flashing at each revolution like a sheet of summer
lightning, but it had not completed a full turn when it struck, and it was the
hilt and not the point that crashed into Rasfer's head. It did not kill him,
but it snapped his head over, whipping his neck like the branch of a willow in
the wind, so that his eyes rolled back blindly in their sockets. Rasfer never completed the blow he aimed at me. His
legs collapsed under him and he fell in a pile at my feet. His sword flew from
his nerveless fingers, spinning high in the air, and then fell back. It pegged
into the side of Pharaoh's throne, and quivered there. The king stared at it in
shocked disbelief. The razor edge had touched his arm, and split the skin. As
we all watched, a line of ruby droplets oozed from the shallow wound, and
dripped on to Pharaoh's cloud-white linen kilt. Tanus broke the horrified silence. 'Great Egypt,
you saw who gave the signal for this beast to attack. You know who was to blame
for endangering your royal person.' He leaped over the downed guardsman and
seized Lord Intef by the arm, twisting it until he fell to his knees and cried
out with pain. 'I did not want to believe this of you.' Pharaoh's
expression was sorrowful as he looked down on his grand vizier. 'I have trusted
you all my life, and you have spat upon me.' 'Great Egypt, hear me!' Lord Intef begged on his
knees, but Pharaoh turned his face away from him. 'I have listened to you long enough.' Then he
nodded to Tanus. 'Have your men guard him well, but show him courtesy, for his
guilt is not yet fully proven.' Finally Pharaoh addressed the congregation. 'These
are strange and unprecedented events. I adjourn these proceedings to consider
fully the evidence that Taita the slave will present.to me. The population of
Thebes will assemble once again to hear my judgement in this same place at noon
tomorrow. I have spoken.' WE ENTERED THROUGH THE MAIN DOORWAY to the audience
hall of the grand vizier's palace. Pharaoh paused at the threshold. Although
the wound from Rasfer's sword was slight, I had bandaged it with linen and
placed his arm in a sling. Pharaoh surveyed the hall slowly. At the far end of
the long room stood the grand vizier's throne. Carved from a solid block of
alabaster, it was hardly less imposing than Pharaoh's own in the throne room at
Elephantine. The high walls were plastered with smooth clay and on this
background were painted some of the most impressive frescoes that I had ever
designed. They transformed the huge room into a blazing garden of delights. I
had painted them while I was Lord Intef's slave, and even though they were my
own creations, they still gave me a deep thrill of pleasure when I looked upon
them. I have no doubt that these works alone, without
consideration of any other of my achievements, would support my claim to the
title of the most significant artist in the history of our land. It was sad
that I who had created them was now to demolish them. It detracted from the
triumph of this tumultuous day. I led Pharaoh down the hall. For once we had dispensed
with all protocol, and Pharaoh was as eager as a child. He followed me so
closely that he almost trod upon my heels, and his royal train fell in as
eagerly behind him. I led them to the throne wall and we stopped below
the huge mural depicting the sun god, Ammon-Ra, on his daily journey across the
heavens. Even in his excitement, I could see the reverent expression in the
king's eyes as he looked up at the painting. Behind us, the great hall was half-filled with the
king's train, the courtiers and the warriors and the noble lords, to say
nothing of the royal wives and concubines who would rather have given up all
their rouges and paint-boxes of cosmetics than miss such an exciting moment as
I had promised them. Naturally, my mistress was in the forefront. Tanus marched
only a pace behind the king. He and his Blues had taken over the duties of the
royal bodyguard. The king turned back to Tanus now. 'Have your men
bring forward the Lord Intef!' Treating him with elaborate and icy courtesy,
Kratas led Intef to face the wall, but he interposed himself between the
prisoner and the king and stood with his naked blade at the ready. 'Taita, you may proceed,' the king told me, and I
measured the wall, stepping out exactly thirty paces from the furthest corner
and marking the distance with the lump of chalk that I had brought with me for
the purpose. 'Behind this wall lie the private quarters of the
grand vizier,' I explained to the king. 'Certain alterations were made when
last the palace was renovated. Lord Intef likes to have his wealth close at
hand.' 'Sometimes you are garrulous, Taita.' Pharaoh was
less than captivated by my lecture on the palace architecture. 'Get on with it,
fellow. I am aflame to see what is hidden here.' 'Let the masons approach!' I called out, and a
small band of these sturdy rogues in their leather aprons came down the aisle
and dropped their leather tool-bags at the foot of the throne wall. I had
summoned them across the river from their work on Pharaoh's tomb. The white
stone-dust in their hair gave them an air of age and wisdom that few of them
deserved. I borrowed a wooden set-square from their foreman,
and with it marked out an oblong shape on the clay-plastered wall. Then I
stepped back and addressed the,master mason. 'Gently now! Damage the frescoes as little as you
can. They are great works of art.' With their wooden mallets and their chisels of
flint, they fell upon the wall, and they paid little heed to my strictures.
Paint and plaster flew in clouds as slabs of the outer wall were stripped away
and thumped to the marble floor. The dust offended the ladies and they covered
their mouths and noses with their shawls. Gradually from under the layer of plaster emerged
the outline of the stone blocks. Then Pharaoh exclaimed aloud and, ignoring the
flying dust, he drew closer, and peered at the design that appeared from
beneath the plaster skin. The regular courses of stone blocks were marred by an
oblong of alien-coloured stone that followed almost exactly the outline I had
chalked upon the outer layer of plaster. "There is a hidden door in there,' he cried.
'Open it immediately!' Under the king's urging, the masons attacked the
sealed doorway with a will, and once they had removed the keystone, the other
blocks came out readily. A dark opening was revealed, and Pharaoh, who had by
now taken charge of the work, called excitedly for torches to be lit. 'The entire space behind this wall is a secret
compartment,' I told Pharaoh, while we waited for the torches to be brought to
us. 'I had it constructed on Lord Intef's orders.' When the torches were brought, Tanus took one of
them and lit the king's way into the gaping secret door. The king stepped
through, and I was the next to enter after him and Tanus. It was so long since I had last been in there that
I looked around me'with as much interest as the others. Nothing had changed in
all that time. The chests and casks of cedar and acacia wood were stacked
exactly as I had left them. I pointed out to the king those cases to which he
should first devote his attention, and he ordered, 'Have them carried out into
the audience hall.' 'You will need strong men to carry them,' I
remarked drily. They are rather heavy.' It took three of the biggest men of the Blues to
lift each case and they staggered out through the jagged opening in the wall
with them. 'I have never seen these boxes before,' Lord Intef
protested, as the first of them was carried out and laid on the dais of the
grand vizier's throne. 'I had no knowledge of a secret chamber behind the wall.
It must have been built by my predecessor, and the cases placed there at his
command.' 'Your Majesty, observe the seal on this lid.' I
pointed it out to him and the king peered at the clay tablet. 'Whose seal is this?' he demanded. 'Observe the ring on the left forefinger of the
grand vizier, Majesty,' I murmured. 'May I respectfully suggest that Pharaoh
match it to the seal on this chest?' 'Lord Intef, hand me your ring if you please,' the
king asked with exaggerated courtesy, and the grand vizier hid his left hand
behind his back. 'Great Egypt, the ring has been on my finger for
twenty years. My flesh has grown around it and it cannot now be removed.' 'Lord Tanus.' The king turned to him. 'Take your
sword. Remove Lord Intef's finger and bring it to me with the ring upon it.'
Tanus smiled cruelly as he stepped forward to obey, half-drawing his blade. 'Perhaps I am mistaken,' Lord Intef admitted with
alacrity. 'Let me see if I cannot free it.' The ring slipped readily enough
from his finger, and Tanus went down on one knee to hand it to the king. Pharaoh bent studiously over the chest and made the
comparison of ring to seal. When he straightened up again his face was dark
with anger. 'It is a perfect match. This seal was struck from
your ring, Lord Intef.' But the grand vizier made no reply to the accusation.
He stood with his arms folded and his- expression stony. 'Break the seal. Open the chest!' Pharaoh ordered,
and Tanus cut away the clay tablet and prised up the lid with his sword. The king cried out involuntarily as the lid fell
away and the contents were revealed, 'By all the gods!' And his courtiers
crowded forward without ceremony to gaze into the chest, exclaiming and
jostling each other for a better view. 'Gold!' The king scooped both hands full with the
glittering yellow rings, and then let them cascade back between his fingers. He
kept a single ring in his hand and held it close to his face to study the mint
marks upon it. 'Two deben weight of fine gold. How much will this case contain,
and how many cases are there in the secret store-room?' His question was
rhetorical, and he was not expecting an answer, but I gave him a reply
nevertheless. 'This case contains—' I read the manifest that I
had inscribed on the lid so many years before. 'It contains one takh and three
hundred deben of pure gold. As to how many cases of gold, if my memory serves
me well, there should be fifty-three of gold and twenty-three of silver in this
store. However, I have forgotten exactly how many chests of jewellery we hid
here.' 'Is there no one I can trust? You, Lord Intef, I
treated as my brother. There was no kindness that you did not receive from my
hands, and this is how you have repaid me.' AT MIDNIGHT THE CHANCELLOR AND THE chief inspector
of the royal taxes came to the king's chamber where I was changing the dressing
on his injured arm. They presented their final tally of the amount of the
treasure and Pharaoh read it with awe. Once again, his emotions warred with
each other, outrage vying with euphoria at this staggering windfall. 'The rogue was richer than his own king. There is
no punishment harsh enough for such evil. He has cheated and robbed me and my
tax-collectors.' 'As well as murdering and plundering Lord Harrab
and tens of thousands of your subjects,' I reminded him, as I secured the
bandage on his arm. It was perhaps impudent of me. However, he was by now so
deep in my debt that I could risk it. 'That too,' he agreed readily enough, my sarcasm
wasted upon him. 'His guilt is deep as the sea and high as the heaven. I will
have to devise a suitable punishment. The strangler's rope is too kind for Lord
Intef.' 'Majesty, as your physician, I must insist that you
rest now. It has been a day that has taxed even your great strength and
endurance.' 'Where is Intef? I cannot rest until I am assured
that he is well taken care of.' 'He is under guard in his own quarters, Majesty. A
senior captain and a detachment of the Blues have that duty.' I hesitated
delicately. 'Rasfer is also under guard.' 'Rasfer, that ugly drooling animal of his? The one
who tried to kill you in the temple of Osiris? Did he survive the crack that
Lord Tanus gave him?' 'He is well if not happy, Pharaoh,' I assured him.
'Did Your Majesty know that Rasfer is the one who, so long ago, used the
gelding-knife upon me?' I saw the beam of pity in the king's eye, as I blurted
it out. 'I will deal with him as I deal with his master,'
Pharaoh promised. 'He will suffer the same punishment as Lord Intef. Will that
satisfy you, Taita?' 'Your Majesty is just and omniscient.' I backed out
of his presence and went to find my mistress. She was waiting for me and, although it was after
midnight and I was exhausted, she would not let me sleep. She was far too
overwrought, and she insisted that for the rest of the night I sit beside her
bed and listen to her chatter about Tanus and other topics of lesser
importance. DESPITE THE DEARTH OF SLEEP, I WAS bright and
clear-headed when I took my place in the temple of Osiris the following
morning. If anything, the congregation was even larger than
it had been the day before. There was not a ___ soul in Thebes who had not
heard of the downfall of the grand vizier, and who was not eager to witness his
ultimate humiliation. Even those of his underlings, who had most prospered
under his corrupt administration, now turned upon him, like a pack of hyena who
devour their leader when he is sick and wounded. The barons of the Shrikes were led before the
throne in their rags and bonds, but when Lord Intef entered the temple, he wore
fine linen and silver sandals. His hair was freshly curled, his face painted,
and the chains of the Gold of Praise hung around his neck. The barons knelt before the king, but even when one
of the guards pricked him with the sword, Lord Intef refused to bend the knee,
and the king made a gesture for the guard to desist. 'Let him stand!' the king ordered. 'He will lie in
his tomb long enough.' Then Pharaoh rose and stood before us in all his
grandeur and his rage. This once he seemed a true king, as the first of his
dynasty had been, a man of might and force. I, who had come to know him and his
weaknesses so well, found that I was overcome with a sense of awe. 'Lord Intef, you are accused of treason and murder,
of brigandage and piracy, and of a hundred other crimes no less deserving of
punishment. I have heard the supported testimony of fifty of my subjects from
all walks and stations of life, from lords and freemen and slaves. I have seen the
contents of your secret treasury wherein you hid your stolen wealth from the
royal tax-collectors. I have seen your personal seal upon the treasure chests.
By all these matters your guilt is proven a thousand times over. I, Mamose the
eighth of that name, Pharaoh and ruler of this very Egypt, hereby find you
guilty of all the crimes of which you are accused, and deserving of neither
royal clemency nor mercy.' 'Long live Pharaoh!' shouted Tanus, and the salute
was taken up and repeated ten times by the people of Thebes. 'May he live for
ever!' When silence fell, Pharaoh spoke again. 'Lord
Intef, you wear the Gold of Praise. The sight of that decoration on the breast
of a traitor offends me.' He looked across at Tanus. 'Centurion, remove the
gold from the prisoner.' Tanus lifted the chains from Lord Intef's neck and
carried them to the king. Pharaoh took the gold in his two hands, but when
Tanus started to withdraw, he stayed him with a word. "The name Lord Harrab was tarnished with the slur
of treason. Your father was hounded to a traitor's death. You have proven your
father's innocence. I rescind all sentences passed against Pianki, Lord Harrab,
and posthumously restore to him all his honours and titles that were stripped
from him. Those honours and titles descend to you, his son.' 'Bak-Her!' shouted the congregation. 'May Pharaoh
live for ever! Hail, Tanus, Lord Harrab!' 'In addition to those titles which now come down to
you as your inheritance, I bestow upon you new distinction. You have carried
out my charge to you. You have destroyed the Shrikes and delivered their
overlord to justice. In recognition of this service to the crown, I bestow upon
you the Gold of Valour. Kneel, Lord Harrab, and receive the king's favour.' 'Bak-Her!' they cried, as Pharaoh placed the
jangling gold chains, that had so recently belonged to Lord Intef, but to which
he had now added the star pendant of the warrior's decoration, about Tanus'
neck. 'Hail, Lord Harrab!' As Tanus withdrew, Pharaoh turned his attention
back to the prisoners. 'Lord Intef, you are deprived of your title as a lord of
the Theban circle. Your name and rank will be erased from all the public
monuments, and from your tomb that you have prepared in the Valley of the
Nobles. Your estates and all your possessions, including your illicit treasure,
are forfeited to the crown, except only those estates that once belonged to
Pianki, Lord Harrab, and which by fell means have come into your possession.
These are now returned in their entirety to his heir, my goodly Tanus, Lord
Harrab.' 'Bak-Her! Pharaoh is wise! May he live for ever!'
the people cheered wildly, and beside me my mistress was weeping unashamedly,
but then so were half the royal women. Very few of them could resist that
heroic figure whose golden hair seemed to dim the chains upon his breast. Now the king took me by surprise. He looked
directly at where I sat beside my mistress. 'There is one other who has done
the crown loyal service, the one who revealed the whereabouts of the stolen treasure.
Let the slave, Taita, stand forth.' I went down to stand before the throne, and the
king's voice was gentle. 'You have suffered unspeakable harm at the hands of
the traitor Intef and his henchman Rasfer. You have been forced by them to
commit nefarious deeds and capital crimes against the state, by conniving with
bandits and robbers and by concealing your master's treasure from the royal
tax-collectors. However, these were not crimes of your own inspiration. As a
slave, you were forced to the will of your master. Therefore I absolve you from
all guilt and liability. I find you innocent of any crime, and I reward you for
your service to us with a bounty of two takhs of fine gold to be paid out of
the treasure confiscated from the traitor, Intef.' A murmur of astonishment greeted this announcement,
and I gasped aloud. It was a staggering amount. A fortune to match those of all
but the wealthiest lords in the land, enough to buy -great tracts of the most
fertile land along the river, and to furnish magnificent villas upon that land,
to buy three hundred strong slaves to work the land, enough to fit out a fleet
of trading vessels and send them to the ends of the earth to bring back more
treasure. It was a sum large enough to boggle even my imagination, but the king
had not finished. 'As a slave, this bounty will be paid not to you,
but to your mistress, the Lady Lostris, who is a junior wife of Pharaoh.' I
should have guessed that Pharaoh would keep it in the family. I, who for a fleeting moment had been one of the
richest men in Egypt, bowed to the king and returned to my place beside my
mistress. She squeezed my hand to console me, but in truth I was not unhappy.
Our destinies were so entwined that I was a part of her, and I knew that we
would never again want for any material thing. I was already planning how I
would invest my mistress's fortune for her. At last the king was ready to pass sentence on the
line of prisoners, though he looked only at Intef as he spoke. 'Your crimes are unparalleled. No punishment before
meted out is harsh enough to fit your case. This then is the sentence I pass
upon you. At dawn on the day after the end of the festival of Osiris, you will
be marched through the streets of Thebes, bound and naked. While you still live
you will be nailed by your feet to the main gate of the city, with your heads
hanging downwards. You will be left there until your bones are picked clean by
the crows. Then your bones will be taken down and ground to powder and cast
into Mother Nile.' Even Intef paled and swayed on his feet as he
listened to the sentence. By dispersing their earthly bodies so that they could
never be embalmed and preserved, Pharaoh was condemning the prisoners to
oblivion. For an Egyptian there could be no harsher punishment. They were being
denied for all eternity the fields of paradise. WHEN MY MISTRESS EXPRESSED HER DETERMINATION to
attend the executions and to watch her father being nailed upside-down to the
main gate, I do not think that she truly realized the horror of what she would
witness. I was equally determined that she should not be there to see it. There
had never been a sadistic streak in her. I believe that her decision was
influenced by the fact that most of the other royal women were going to enjoy
the diverting spectacle, and that Tanus would be in command of the execution.
She would never pass up an opportunity to gaze at him, even from a distance. In the end I persuaded her only by employing the
most poignant argument in my arsenal. 'My lady, such cruel sights as these will
certainly affect your unborn son. Surely you do not wish to blight his young
unformed mind.' 'That is not possible,' she faltered for the first
time in our argument. 'My son could know nothing of it.' 'He will see through your eyes, and the screams of
his dying grandfather will pass through the walls of your stomach and enter his
tiny ears.' It was an evocative choice of words, and they had the effect I was
striving for. She thought about it at length, and then sighed.
'Very well then, but I shall expect you to bring me back a full description of
it all. You are not to miss a single detail. Especially I will want to know
what the other royal wives were wearing.' Then she grinned at me wickedly to
prove that she had not been totally gulled by my arguments. 'You can whisper it
all to me, so the child sleeping in my belly cannot overhear us.' At dawn on the day of the execution the gardens of
the palace were still shrouded in darkness when I left the harem. I hurried
through the water-gardens, and the stars were reflected in the black surfaces
of the ponds. As I approached the wing of the palace where Lord Intef was being
held in his own quarters, I saw the blaze of torches and lamps lighting the
windows, and heard the frantic yelling of orders and invective from within. I knew instantly that something was seriously
amiss, and I broke into a run. I was almost speared by the guard at the door to
Lord Intef's private quarters, but he recognized me at the last moment before
he skewered me, and lifted his weapon and let me pass. Tanus was in the centre of the ante-chamber. He was
roaring like a black-maned lion in a trap, and aiming blows with his clenched
fists at whoever came within range. Even though he had always had a stormy
temper, I had never before seen him so incapacitated by rage. He seemed to have
lost the power of reason or of articulate speech. His men, those mighty heroes
of the Blues, cowered away from him, and the rest of the palace wing was in an
uproar. I went straight up to him, ducked under another
wild punch, and shouted in his face, 'Tanus! It is I! Control yourself! In the
name of all the gods, are you mad?' He almost struck me, and I saw him wrestle with his
emotions and at last take control of them. 'See what you can do for them.' He pointed at the
bodies that were scattered about the ante-chamber as though a battle had raged
through it. With horror I recognized that one of them was
Khetkhet, a senior captain of the regiment and a man I respected. He was curled
in the corner clutching his stomach, with such agony etched on his rigid
features that I hoped never to see again. I touched his cheek and the skin was
cold and dead. I shook my head, 'He is past all help that I can
give him.' I lifted his eyelid with my thumb and gazed into his dead eye, then
I leaned forward and smelled his mouth. The faint musty odour of mushrooms on
it was dreadfully familiar. 'Poison.' I stood up. 'The others will be the
same.' There were five of them curled on the tiles. 'How?' asked Tanus, in a tone of forced calm, and I
picked up one of the bowls piled on the low table from which they had obviously
eaten their dinner, and I sniffed it. The smell of mushrooms was stronger. 'Ask the cooks,' I suggested. Then, in a sudden access
of anger, I hurled the bowl against the wall. The crumpled bodies reminded me
of my pets who had died the same death, and Khetkhet had been my friend. I took a deep breath to calm myself before I asked,
'No doubt your prisoner has escaped?' Tanus did not reply, but led me through
into the grand vizier's bedchamber. Immediately I saw the painted panel that
had been removed from the far wall of the empty room, and the opening behind
it. 'Did you know that there was a secret passage?'
Tanus demanded coldly, and I shook my head. 'I thought I knew all his secrets, but I was
wrong.' My voice was resigned. I think that in my heart I had known all along
that we would never bring Intef to justice. He was a favourite of the dark gods
and enjoyed their protection. 'Has Rasfer escaped with him?' I asked, and Tanus
shook his head. 'I have him locked in the arsenal with the barons.
But Intef's two sons, Menset and Sobek, have disappeared. Almost certainly they
were the ones who arranged this murder of my men, and their father's escape.'
Tanus had full control of that wild temper of his once more, but his anger was
still there beneath it. 'You know Intef so well, Taita. What will he do? Where
will he go? How can I catch him?' 'One thing I know, he will have made plans against
such a day as this. I know he has treasure stored for him in the Lower Kingdom,
with merchants and lawyers there. He has even had commerce with the false
pharaoh. I think that he sold military information to him and his generals. He
would receive a friendly welcome in the north.' 'I have already sent five fast galleys to the
north, with orders to search all vessels that they overtake,' Tanus told me. 'He has friends across the Red Sea,' I said. 'And
he has sent treasure to merchants in Gaza on the shores of the northern sea, to
be held for him. He has had dealings with the Bedouin. Many of them are in his
pay. They would help him to cross the desert.' 'By Horus, he is like a rat with a dozen
escape-routes to his hole,' swore Tanus. 'How can I cover all of them?' 'You cannot,' I said. 'And now Pharaoh is waiting
to witness the executions. You will have to report this to him.' 'The king will be angry, and with good reason. By
allowing Intef to escape, I have failed in my duty.' But Tanus was wrong. Pharaoh accepted the news of
Intef's escape with remarkable equanimity. I cannot fathom the reason for this,
except perhaps that the vast quantity of treasure he had acquired so
unexpectedly had mellowed him. Deep in his heart he may still have cherished
some sneaking affection for his grand vizier. On the other hand, Pharaoh was a
kindly man, and may not have truly relished the prospect of watching Lord Intef
being nailed to the city gates. It is true he showed some passing annoyance, and
spoke of justice being cheated, but all the time we were in his presence, he
was surreptitiously studying the manifest of the treasure. Even when Tanus
admitted his responsibility for the prisoner's escape, Pharaoh brushed it
aside. "The fault lies with the captain of the guard,
and he has already been sufficiently punished from the poison bowl that Intef
provided for him. You have sent galleys and troops in pursuit of the fugitive.
You have done all that can be expected of you, Lord Harrab. It remains only for
you to carry out my sentence on these other criminals.' 'Is Pharaoh ready to witness the execution?' Tanus
asked, and Pharaoh looked about him for an excuse to remain with his manifests
and tax-collectors' reports. 'I have much to do here, Lord Tanus. Proceed
without me. Report to me when the sentences have been carried out.' SO GREAT WAS THE PUBLIC INTEREST IN the executions
that the city fathers had erected a Taita stand in front of the main gates.
They charged a silver ring for a seat upon it. There was no lack of customers,
and the stand was packed to capacity. The crowds who could not find a seat upon
it overflowed out into the fields beyond the walls. Many of them had brought
beer and wine to make a celebration of it, and to toast the barons on their
way. Very few of them had not suffered from the ravages of the Shrikes, and
many of them had lost husbands or brothers or sons to them. Stark naked and bound together, as Pharaoh had
ordered, the condemned men were led through the streets of Kamak. The crowd
lined their way and hurled dung and filth at them as they passed, screaming
insults and shaking their fists. The children danced ahead of the procession
singing bits of doggerel made up on the spur of the moment: Nails in my tooties, bare bum to the sky, I am a baron, and that's how I die. Obedient to my mistress's wishes, I had taken up a
place on the stand to watch the sentence carried out. In truth I had no eyes
for the clothing and jewellery of the women of fashion around me when the
prisoners were at last led through the open gates. I looked instead at Rasfer
and I tried to revive and inflate my hatred for him. I forced myself to recite
every cruel and wicked act that he had ever committed against me, to relive the
agony of the lash and the knife that he had inflicted upon me. Yet there he
stood with his white belly sagging almost to his knees, with excrement in his
hair and filth streaking his face and running down his grotesque body. It was
difficult to hate him as much as he deserved. He saw me on the stand and he grinned up at me. The
paralysed muscles on one side of his face made it only half a grin, a sardonic
grimace, and he called, 'Thank you for coming to "wish me godspeed,
eunuch. Perhaps we will meet again in the fields of paradise, where I hope to
have the pleasure of cutting off your balls once again.' That taunt should have made it easier for me to
hate him, but somehow it failed, although I called back to him, 'You are going
no further than the mud in the river bottom, old friend. The next catfish that
I roast on the spit I will call Rasfer.' He was the first prisoner to be lifted on to the
wooden gate. It took three men on the parapet of the wall, straining on the
rope, while at the same time, four more shoved from below. They held him there as
one of the regimental armourers climbed the ladder beside him with a
stone-headed mallet in his fist. There were no more jokes from Rasfer when the first
of the thick copper nails was driven through the flesh and bones of his huge,
callused feet. He roared and swore and twisted in the grip of the men who held
him, and the crowd cheered and laughed and urged on the sweating armourer. It
was only when the nails had been driven home and the hammerman had climbed down
to admire his handiwork that the flaws in this novel form of punishment became
evident. Rasfer howled and roared, swinging upside-down, with the blood
trickling slowly down his legs. The hang of his pendulous paunch was reversed,
and the huge hairy bunch of his genitalia flapped against his belly-button. As
he twisted and struggled, the nails slowly 'ripped through the web of flesh
between his toes, until finally they tore entirely free. Rasfer fell back to
earth and flopped around like a beached fish. The spectators loved the show,
and howled with mirth at his antics. Encouraged by the spectators, his executioners
lifted him back on to the gate, and the armourer with his hammer climbed back
up the ladder to drive in more nails. In order to pin Rasfer more securely and
to prevent him struggling, Tanus ordered his hands as well as his feet to be
nailed to the gate. This time it was more successful. Rasfer hung head
down, his limbs spread like some monstrous star-fish. He was no longer
bellowing, for the mass of intestines in his belly were sagging down and
pressing on his lungs. He struggled for every breath he drew, and had none over
for shouting. One at a time, the other condemned men were lifted
on to the gate and nailed there, and the crowd hooted and applauded. Only Basti
the Cruel made no sound and gave them poor sport. As the day wore on, the sun beat down upon the
crucified victims, and the heat grew steadily stronger. By noon the prisoners
were so weak with pain and thirst and loss of blood that they hung as quietly
as the carcasses on butchers' hooks. The spectators began to lose interest and
drifted away. Some of the barons lasted longer than the others. Basti went on
breathing all that day. Only as the sun was setting did he take one deep
shuddering breath and finally hang inert. Rasfer was the toughest of them all.
Long after Basti was gone, he hung on. His face was filled with dark blood so
it swelled to twice its normal size. His tongue protruded from between his
lips, like a thick slice of purple liver. Once in a while he would utter a deep
groan and his eyes would flutter open. Every time this happened, I shared his
agony. The last of my hatred for him had long ago shrivelled and died, and I
was racked with pity, as I would have been for any other tortured animal. The crowd had long ago dispersed, and I sat alone
on the empty stand. Not attempting to hide his disgust at such a brutal duty
thrust upon him by the royal command, Tanus had stood to his post until sunset.
Then finally he had handed over the death watch to one of his captains, and
strode back into the city, leaving us to our vigil. There were only the ten guards below the gate,
myself on the stand and a few beggars lying like bundles of rags at the foot of
the wall. The torches on either side of the gate guttered and flickered in the
night breeze off the river, casting an eerie light over the macabre scene. Rasfer groaned again, and I could stand it no
longer. I took a jar of beer from my basket and climbed down to speak to the
captain. Wejoiew each other from the desert, and he laughed and shook his head
at my request. 'You are a soft-hearted fool, Taita. The bastard is so far-gone,
he is not worth worrying about,' he told me. 'But I will look the other way for
a while. Be quick about it.' I went to the gate, and Rasfer's head was on a
level with my own. 1 called his name softly, and his eyes fluttered open. I had
no way of telling how much he understood, but I whispered, 'I have a little
beer to wet your tongue. He made a soft gulping sound in his throat. His
eyes were looking at me. If he still had feeling, I knew his thirst must be a
torment of hell. I dribbled a few drops from the jar over his tongue, careful
not to let any of it run back into his nose. He made a weak and futile effort
to swallow. It would have been impossible, even if he had been stronger; the
liquid ran out of the corners of his mouth and down his cheeks into the
dung-caked hair. He closed his eyes, and that was the moment I was
waiting for. I slipped my dagger out of the folds of my shawl. Carefully I
placed the point behind his ear, and then with a sharp movement drove it in to
the hilt. His back arched in the final spasm, and then he relaxed into death. I
drew out the blade. There was very tittle blood, and I hid the dagger in my
shawl and turned away. 'May dreams of paradise waft you through the night,
Taita,' the captain of the guard called after me, but I had lost my voice and
could not reply. I never thought that I would weep for Rasfer, and maybe I
never did so. Perhaps I wept only for myself. AT PHARAOH'S COMMAND THE RETURN of the court to
Elephantine was initially delayed for a month. The king had his new treasure to
dispose of and was in buoyant mood. In all the time I had known him, I had
never seen him so happy and contented. I was pleased for him. By this time I
held the old man in real and warm affection. Some nights I sat up late with him
and his scribes, going over the accounts of the royal treasury, which now
emitted a decidedly rosy glow. At other times, I was summoned by Pharaoh to
consultations on. the alterations to the mortuary temple and the royal tomb
that he was now better able to afford. I calculated that at least half of the
recently revealed treasure would go into the tomb with Pharaoh. He selected all
the finest jewellery from Intef's hoard and sent almost fifteen takhs of
bullion to the goldsmiths in his temple, to be turned into funerary objects. Nevertheless, he found time to send for Tanus to
advise him on military matters. He had now recognized Tanus as one of the
foremost generals in his army. I was present at some of these meetings. The threat
from the false pharaoh in the Lower Kingdom was ever-present and preyed on all
our minds. Such was Tanus' favour with the king that he was able to make the
most of these fears and to persuade Pharaoh to divert a small part of Inters
treasure to the building of five new squadrons of war galleys, and to
re-equipping all the guards regiments with new weapons and sandals—although he
was unable to persuade the king to make up the arrears in pay for the army.
Many of the regiments had not been paid for the last half-year. Morale in the
army was much boosted by these reinforcements, and every soldier knew whom to
thank for them. They roared like lions and raised their clenched right fists in
salute, when Tanus inspected their massed formations. Most times when Tanus was summoned to the royal
audience, my mistress found some excuse to be present. Although she had the
good sense to keep in the background on these occasions, she and Tanus directed
such looks at each other that I feared they might scorch the false beard of the
Pharaoh. Fortunately nobody but myself seemed to notice these flashing messages
of passion. Whenever my mistress knew that I was to see Tanus
in private, she burdened me with long and ardent messages for him. On my return
I carried his replies which matched hers in length and fire. Fortunately these
outpourings were highly repetitive, and memorizing them was not a great
hardship. My Lady Lostris never tired of urging me to find
some subterfuge by which she tod Tanus might be alone together once more. I
admit that I feared enough for my own skin and for the safety of my mistress
and our unborn child, not to devote all my energies and ingenuity to satisfying
this request of hers. Once when I did tentatively approach Tanus with my
mistress's invitation to a meeting, he sighed and refused it with many
protestations of love for her. "That interlude in the tombs of Tras was sheer
madness, Taita. I never intended to compromise the Lady Lostris' honour, but
for the khamsin, it would never have happened. We cannot take that risk again.
Tell her that I love her more than life itself. Tell her our time will come,
for the Mazes of Ammon-Ra have promised it to us. Tell her I will wait for her
through all the days of my life.' On receiving this loving message, my mistress
stamped her foot, called her true love a stubborn fool who cared nothing for
her, broke a cup and two bowls of coloured glass, hurled a jewelled mirror
which had been a gift from the king into the river, and finally threw herself
on the bed where she' wept until suppertime. APART FROM HIS MILITARY DUTIES, which included
supervising the building of the new fleet of galleys, Tanus, these days, was
much occupied with the reorganization of his father's estates that he had at
last inherited. On these matters he consulted me almost daily. Not
surprisingly, the estates had never been preyed upon by the Shrikes while they
belonged to Lord Intef, and accordingly they were all prosperous and in good
repair. Thus Tanus had become overnight one of the most wealthy men in the
Upper Kingdom. Although I tried my best to dissuade him, he spent much of this
private fortune in making up the arrears in pay to his men and in re-equipping
his beloved Blues. Of course his men loved him all the more for this
generosity. Not content with these profligate expenditures,
Tanus sent out his captains, Kratas and Remrem and Astes, to gather up all the
crippled and blinded veterans of the river wars who now existed by begging in
the streets of Thebes. Tanus installed this riff-raff in one of the large
country villas that formed part of his inheritance, and although slops and
kitchen refuse would have been too good for them, he fed them on meat and
corn-cakes and beer. The common soldiers cheered Tanus in the streets and drank
his health in the taverns. When I told my mistress of Tanus' mad
extravagances, she was so encouraged by them that she immediately spent
hundreds of deben of the gold that I had earned for her, in buying and
equipping a dozen buildings which she turned into hospitals and hostels for the
poor people of Thebes. I had already earmarked this gold for investment in the
corn market, and though I wrung my hands and pleaded with her, she could not be
moved. Needless to say, it was the long-suffering slave
Taita who was responsible for the day-to-day management of this latest folly of
his mistress, although she visited her charity homes every day. Thus it was
possible for any loafer and drunkard in the twin cities to scrounge a free meal
and a comfortable bed from us. If that was not enough, they could have their
bowl of soup served to them by my mistress's own fair hand, and their running
sores and purging bowels treated by one of the most eminent physicians in this
very Egypt. I was able to find a few young unemployed scribes
and disenchanted priests who loved people more than gods or money. My mistress
took them into her employ. I led this little band on nocturnal hunts through the
back alleys and slum quarters of the city. Nightly we gathered up the street
orphans. They were a filthy, verminous bunch of little savages, and very few of
them came with us willingly. We had to pursue and catch them like wild cats. I
received many lusty bites and scratches in the process of bathing their
filth-encrusted little bodies and shaving their hair that was so thick with
lice and nits that it was impossible to drag a comb through it. We housed them in one of my mistress's new hostels.
Here the priests began the tedious process of taming them, while the scribes
started on the long road of their education. Most of our captives escaped
within the first few days, and returned to the gutters where they belonged.
However, some of them stayed on in the hostel. Their slow transformation from
animals to human beings delighted my mistress and gave me more pleasure, than I
had suspected could ever come from such an unlikely source. All my protests against the manner in which my
mistress was wasting our substance were in vain, and I vowed that if I were to
be embalmed and laid in my tomb before my allotted time, the blame would surely
rest entirely with these two young idiots whom I had taken under my wing, and
who rewarded me by consistently ignoring my best advice. Needless to say, it was my mistress and not me whom
the widows and the cripples blessed and presented with their pitiful little
gifts of wilting wild flowers, cheap beads and tattered scraps of papyrus
containing poorly written texts from the Book of the Dead. As she walked
abroad, the common people held up their brats for her blessing and tried to
touch the hem of her skirt as though it were some religious talisman. She
kissed the grubby babies, a practice which I warned her would endanger her health,
and she scattered copper pieces to the loafers with as much care as a tree
drops its autumn leaves. 'This is my city,' she told me. 'I love it and I
love every person in it. Oh, Taita, I dread the return to Elephantine. I hate
to leave my beautiful Thebes.' 'Is it the city you hate to leave?' I asked. 'Or is
it a certain uncouth soldier who lives here?' She slapped me, but lightly. 'Is there nothing you hold sacred, not even love
that is pure and true? For all your scrolls and grand language, you are at
heart a barbarian.' THUS THE DAYS PASSED SWIFTLY FOR all of us, until
one morning I consulted my calendar and discovered that over two months had
passed since my Lady Lostris had resumed her marital duties on Pharaoh's couch.
Although she still showed no evidence of her condition, it was time to apprise
the king of his great good fortune, his approaching paternity. When I told my
mistress what I intended, only one matter engaged her consideration. She made
me promise that before I discussed it with the king, I must first tell Tanus
that he was the true father of the child she was carrying. I set out to fulfil
my promise that very afternoon. I found Tanus at the shipyards on the west bank
of the river, where he was swearing at the shipwrights and threatening to throw
them into the river to feed the crocodiles. He forgot his anger when he saw me,
and took me on board the galley that they had launched that morning. Proudly,
he showed me the new pump to remove water from the bilges, if the ship should
ever be damaged in battle. He seemed to have forgotten that I had designed the
equipment for him, and I had to remind him tactfully. 'Next you will want me to pay you for your ideas,
you old rogue. I swear you are as stingy as any Syrian trader.' He clapped me on
the back, and led me to the far end of the deck where none of the sailors could
overhear us. He dropped his voice. 'How goes it with your mistress? I dreamed about
her again last night. Tell me, is she well? How are those little orphans of
hers? What a loving heart she has, what beauty! All of Thebes adores her. I hear her name spoken
wherever I go, and the sbund of it is as sharp as a spear thrust in my chest.' "There will soon be two of her for you to
love,' I told him, and he stared at me with his mouth agape like a man suddenly
bereft of his senses. 'It was much more than just the khamsin that struck that
night in the tombs of Tras.' He seized me in a hug so powerful that I could not
breathe. 'What is this riddle? Speak plainly, or I shall throw you into the
river. What are you saying, you old scallywag? Don't juggle words with me!' "The Lady Lostris is carrying your child. She
sent me to tell you so that you should be the first to know it, even before the
king,' I gasped. 'Now set me free before I am permanently damaged.' He released
me so suddenly, that I almost fell overboard. 'My child! My son!' he cried. It was amazing how
both of them had made that immediate assumption of the poor little mite's
gender. "This is a miracle. This is a direct gift from Horus.' It was
clear to Tanus in that moment that no other man in the history of the world had
ever fathered an infant. 'My son!' he shook his head in wonder. He was
grinning like an idiot. 'My woman and my son! I must go to them this very
moment.' He set off down the deck, and I had to run to catch him. It took all
my powers of persuasion to prevent him from storming the palace and bursting
into the royal harem. In the end, I led him to the nearest riverside tavern to
wet the baby's head. Fortunately a gang of off-duty Blues was already drinking
there. I ordered and paid for a butt of the tavern's best wine and left them to
it. There were men from some of the other regiments in the tavern, so there
would probably be a riot later, for Tanus was in a rumbustious mood and the
Blues never needed much encouragement to fight. I went directly from the tavern to the palace, and
Pharaoh was delighted to see me. 'I was about to send for you, Taita. I have
decided that we have been too niggardly with the entrance-gates to my temple. I
want something grander—' 'Pharaoh!' I cried. 'Great and Divine Egypt! I have
wonderful tidings. The goddess Isis has kept her promise to you. Your dynasty will be eternal. The prophecy of the
Mazes> of Ammon-Ra will be fulfilled. The moon of my mistress; has been
trodden under the hooves of the mighty bull off Egypt! The Lady Lostris is
bearing your son!' For once all thought of funerals and
temple-building was driven from Pharaoh's mind, and, like Tanus, his very first
instinct was to go to her. Led by the king, we rushed through the palace
corridors, a solid stream of nobles and courtiers turbulent as the Nile in
spate, and my mistress was waiting for us in the garden of the harem. With the
natural wiles of the female, she had composed the setting perfectly to show off
hert loveliness to full effect. She was seated on a low bench with flower-beds
around her and the broad river behind her. For ai moment I thought the king
might throw himself to his knees; in front of her, but even the prospect of
immortality could nott cause him to forget his dignity to that extent. Instead, he showered her with congratulations and
compliments and earnest enquiries after her health. All the while: his
fascinated gaze was fastened on her belly from which i the miracle would in the
fullness of time emerge. Finally he; asked her, 'My dear child, is there
anything that you lack: for your happiness? Is there anything I can do to make
you more comfortable during this trying time in your life?' I was filled once more with admiration for my
mistress. She would have made a great general or corn trader, for her sense of
timing was impeccable. 'Your Majesty, Thebes is the city of my birth. I cannot
be truly happy anywhere else in Egypt. I beg you in your generosity and
understanding to allow your son to be born here in Thebes. Please do not make
me return to Elephantine.' I held my breath, the siting of the court was an
affair of state. To remove from one city to another was a decision which
affected the lives of thousands of citizens. It was not one to be made on the
light whim of a child not yet sixteen years of age. Pharaoh looked amazed at the request, and scratched
his false beard. *You want to live in Thebes? Very well, then, the court will
move to Thebes!' He turned to me. 'Taita, design me a new palace.' He looked
back at my mistress. 'Shall we site it there, on the west bank, my dear?' He
pointed across the river. 'It is cool and pretty on the west bank,' my
mistress agreed. 'I shall be very happy there.' 'On the west bank, Taita. Do not stint yourself in
the design. It must be a fitting home for the son of Pharaoh. His name will be
Memnon, the ruler of the dawn. We will call it the Palace of Memnon.' With such simple ease my mistress saddled me with a
mountain of labour, and accustomed the king to the first of many such demands
in the name of the child in her womb. From this moment on, Pharaoh was not
disposed to deny her aught that she asked for, whether it was titles of honour
for those she loved or liked, alms for those she had taken under her
protection, or rare and exotic dishes that were fetched for her from the ends
of the empire. Like a naughty child, I think that she enjoyed testing the
limits of this new power she wielded over the king. She had never seen snow, though she had heard me
speak of it from my fragmentary childhood memories of the mountainous land
where I had been born. My mistress asked for some to be brought to her to cool
her brow in the heat of the Nile valley. Pharaoh immediately commanded a
special athletics games to be held, during which the hundred fastest runners in
the Upper Kingdom were selected. They were despatched to Syria to bring back
snow to my mistress in a special box of my design, which was intended to prevent
it melting. This was probably the only one of all her whims that remained
unsatisfied. All we received back from those far-off mountain peaks was a damp
patch in the bottom of the box. In all other things she was fully accommodated. On one
occasion she was present when Tanus presented a report to the king on the order
of battle of the Egyptian fleet. My mistress sat quietly in the background
until Tanus had finished and taken his leave, then she remarked quietly, 'I
have heard it said that Lord Tanus is the finest general we have. Don't you
think it may be wise, divine husband, to promote him to Great Lion of Egypt and
place him in command of the northern corps?' Once again I gasped at her
effrontery, but Pharaoh nodded thoughtfully. 'That same thought had already occurred to me, my
dear, even though he is still so young for high command.' The following day, Tanus was summoned to a royal
audience, from which he emerged as Great Lion of Egypt and the commander of the
northern wing of the army. The ancient general who had preceded him was palmed
off with a substantial pension and relegated to a sinecure in the royal
household. Tanus now had three hundred galleys and almost thirty thousand men
under his command. The promotion meant that he stood fourth in the army lists,
with only Nem-bet and a couple of old dodderers above him. 'Lord Tanus is a proud man,' the Lady Lostris
informed me, as if I were completely ignorant of this fact. 'If you should ever
tell him that I had any hand in his promotion, I shall sell you to the first
Syrian trader I come upon,' she threatened me ominously. All this time her belly, once so smooth and
shapely, was distending gradually. With all my other work I was obliged to
relay daily bulletins on this progression, not only to the palace, but also to
army headquarters, northern command. I BEGAN WORK ON THE CONSTRUCTION of the Palace of
Memnon five weeks after Pharaoh had given me the original instructions, for it
had taken me that long to draw up the final plans. Both my mistress and the
king agreed that my designs exceeded their expectations, and that it would be
by far the most beautiful building in the land. On the same day that the work began, a blockade
runner who had succeeded in bribing his way past the fleets of the red
pretender in the north docked in Thebes with a cargo of cedar wood from Byblos.
The captain was an old friend of mine and he had interesting news for me. Firstly, he told me that Lord Intef had been seen
in the city of Gaza. It was said that he was travelling in state with a large
bodyguard towards the East. He must therefore have succeeded in crossing the
Sinai desert, or he had found a vessel to carry him through the mouth of the
Nile and thence east along the coast of the great sea. The captain had other news that at the time seemed
insignificant, but which was to change the destiny of this very Egypt and of
all of us who lived along the river. It seemed that a new and warlike tribe had
come out of an unknown land to the east of Syria, carrying all before them.
Nobody knew much about these warrior people, except that they seemed to have
developed a form of warfare that had never been seen before. They could cross
vast distances very swiftly, and no army could stand against them. There were always wild rumours of new enemies about
to assail this very Egypt. I had heard fifty like this one before, and thought
as little of this one as I had of all the others. However, the captain was
usually a reliable source, and so I mentioned his story to Tanus when next we
met. 'No one can stand against this mysterious foe?'
Tanus smiled. 'I would like to see them come against my lads, I'll show them
what the word invincible truly means. What did you say they are called, these
mighty warriors who come like the wind?' 'It seems that they call themselves the Shepherd
Kings,' I replied, 'the Hyksos.' The name would not have slid over my tongue so
smoothly if I understood then what it would mean to our world. "The shepherds, hey? Well, they will not find
my rascals an easy flock to herd? Jie dismissed them lightly, and was much more
interested in my news of Lord Intef. 'If only we could be certain of his true
whereabouts, I could send a detachment of men to arrest him, and bring him back
to face up to justice. Wherever I walk on the estates that once belonged to my
family, I feel the spirit of my father beside me. I know he will never rest
until I avenge him.' 'Would that it were so easy.' I shook my head.
'Intef is as cunning as a desert fox. I don't think we will ever see him in
Egypt again.' As I said this, the dark gods must have chuckled to themselves. AS MY MISTRESS'S PREGNANCY ADVANCED, I was able to
insist that she limited her many activities. I forbade her to visit the
hospitals or the orphanage, for fear of infecting herself and her unborn infant
with the vermin and the diseases of the poor. During the heat of the day I made
her rest under the barrazza that I had built in the water-garden for the grand
vizier. When she protested at the boredom of this enforced inactivity, Pharaoh
sent his musicians to the garden to entertain her, and I was persuaded to leave
my work on the Palace of Memnon to keep her company, to tell her stories and to
discuss Tanus' latest exploits with her. I was very strict with her diet, and allowed her no
wine or beer. I had the palace gardeners provide fresh fruits and vegetables
each day, and I carved all the fat off her meat, for I knew that it would make
the child in her belly sluggish. I prepared each of her meals myself and every
night when I saw her to her bedchamber, I mixed a special potion with herbs and
juices that would strengthen her infant. Of course, when she suddenly declared that she must
have a stew made from the liver and kidneys of a gazelle, or a salad of larks'
tongues or the roasted breast of the wild bustard, the king immediately sent a
hundred of his huntsmen into the desert to procure these delicacies for her. I
refrained from telling Lord Tanus of these strange cravings of my mistress, for
I dreaded to learn that rather than prosecuting the war against the false
pharaoh, the northern army had been sent into the desert to hunt gazelle or
larks or bustard. As the day of her confinement approached, I lay
awake at night worrying. I had promised the king a prince, but he was not
expecting his heir to arrive so expeditiously. Even a god can count the days
from the first of the festival of Osiris. There was nothing that I could do if
the child turned out to be a princess, but at least I could prepare Pharaoh for
her early arrival. Pharaoh had now conceived an interest in the
subject of pregnancy and parturition, which temporarily rivalled his obsession
with temples and tombs. I had to reassure him almost daily that the Lady
Lostris' rather narrow hips were no obstacle to a normal birth, and that her
tender age, far from being prejudicial, was highly favourable to a successful
conclusion to our enterprise. I took the opportunity to inform him of the
interesting but little-known fact that many of the great athletes, warriors and
sages of history had been prematurely exposed to the light of day. 'I believe, Your Majesty, that it's rather like the
case of the sluggard who lies too long abed, and thus wastes his energy, while
the great men are invariably early risers. I have noticed that you, Divine
Pharaoh, are always about before sunrise. It would not surprise me to learn
that you were also a premature birth.' I knew that he was not, but naturally he
could not now contradict me. 'It would be a most propitious circumstance if this
prince of yours should imitate his sire, and start early from his mother's
womb.' I hoped that I had not belaboured my point, but the king seemed
convinced by my eloquence. In the end, the child cooperated most handsomely by
overstaying its allotted term by almost two weeks, and I did nothing to hurry
it along. The time span was so close to the normal that no tongues could wag,
but Pharaoh was blessed with the premature birth that he had come to believe
was sd desirable. It was no surprise to me that my mistress began her
labour at a most inconvenient hour. Her waters broke in the third watch of the
night. She was not in the habit of making matters too easy for me. At least
this gave me the excuse of dispensing with the-services of a midwife, for I had
little faith in those hags with the black, dried blood crusted under their
long, ragged fingernails. Once she had begun, my Lady Lostris carried it off
with her usual despatch and aplomb. I had barely time to shake myself fully
awake, scrub my hands in hot wine and bless my instruments in the flame of the
lamp, before she grunted and said quite cheerfully, 'You had better take
another look, Taita. I think something is happening.' Although I knew it was
much too soon, I humoured her. One glance was enough, and I shouted for her
slave girls. 'Hurry, you lazy strumpets! Fetch the royal wives!' 'Which ones?' The first girl to answer my call
tottered into the room half-naked and half-asleep. 'All of them, any of them.' No prince could inherit
the double crown unless his birth had been witnessed, and it was formally
attested that no exchange had taken place. The royal women began to arrive just as the child
revealed itself for the first time. My lady was seized by an overpowering convulsion,
and then the crown of the head appeared. I had dreaded that it might be
surmounted by a shock of red-gold curls, but what I saw was a thick dark pelt
like that of one of the river otters. It was much later that the colour would
change and the red would begin to sparkle in the black locks, like points of
polished garnets, and then only when the sun shone upon it. 'Push!' I called to my mistress. 'Push hard!' And
she responded lustily. The young bones of her pelvis, not yet tempered to
rigidity by the years, spread to give the infant fair passage, and the way was
well oiled. The child took me unawares. It came out like a stone from a
sling-shot, and the tiny, slippery body almost flew from my hands. Before I had a good hold on it, my mistress struggled
up on her elbows. Her hair was plastered to her scalp with sweat and her
expression was desperate with anxiety. 'Is it a boy? Tell me! Tell me!' The roomful of royal ladies crowding around the bed
were witness to the very first act the child performed, as it entered this
world of ours. From a penis as long as my little finger, the Prince Memnon, the
first of that name, shot a fountain almost as high as the ceiling. I was full
in the path of this warm stream, and it drenched me to the skin. 'Is it a boy?' my mistress cried again, and a dozen
voices answered her together. 'A boy! Hail, Memnon, the royal prince of Egypt!' I could not speak yet, for my eyes burned not only
with royal urine, but with tears of joy and relief as his birth cry rang out,
angry and hot with temper. He waved his arms at me and kicked out so strongly
that I almost lost my grip again. As my vision cleared I was able to make out
the strong, lean body and the small, proud head with the thick pelt of dark
hair. I LOST COUNT LONG AGO OF HOW MANY infants I have
birthed, but there had been nothing in my experience to prepare me for this. I
felt all the love and devotion of which I was capable crystallized into that
moment. I knew that something which would last a lifetime, and which would grow
stronger with each passing day, had begun. I knew that my life had taken
another random turn, and that nothing would ever be the same again. As I cut the cord and bathed the child, I was
filled with a sense of religious awe such as I had never known in the sanctuary
of any one of Egypt's manifold gods. I feasted my eyes and my soul upon that
perfect little body and upon the red and wrinkled face in which the signs of
strength and stubborn courage were stamped as clearly as upon the features of
his true father. I laid him in his mother's arms, and as he found
and latched on to her swollen nipple like a leopard on to the throat of a
gazelle, my mistress looked up at me. I could not speak, but then there were no
words that could frame what passed silently between us. We both knew. It had
begun, something so wonderful that as yet neither of us could fully comprehend
it. I left her to the joy of her son and went to report
to the king. I was in no hurry. I knew that the news would have been carried to
him long since. The royal ladies are not renowned for their reticence. He was
probably on his way to the harem at this very moment. I dawdled in the water-garden, possessed by a
dreaming sense of unreality. The dawn was breaking, and the sun god, Ammon-Ra,
showed the tip of his fiery disc above the eastern hills. I whispered a prayer
of thanks to him. As I stood with my eyes uplifted, a flock of the palace
pigeons circled above the gardens. As they turned, the rays of the sun caught
their wings and they flashed like bright jewels in the sky. Then I saw the dark speck high above the circling
flock, and even at that distance I recognized it immediately. It was a wild
falcon, come out of the desert. It folded back its sharp wings and began its
stoop. It had chosen the leading bird in the flock, and the dive was deadly
accurate and inexorable. It struck the pigeon in a burst of feathers, like a
puff of pale smoke, and the bird was dead in the air. Always a falcon will bind
to its prey and drop to earth with it gripped in its talons. This, time that did not happen. The falcon killed
the pigeon and then opened his talons and released it. The shattered carcass of
the bird fell free, and, with a harsh scream, the falcon circled over my head.
Three times it circled and three times it uttered that thrilling, warlike call.
Three is one of the most potent magical numbers. From all these things I
realized that this was no natural occurrence. The falcon was a messenger, or
even the god Horus in his other form. The carcass of the pigeon fell at my feet, droplets
of its warm blood splattered my sandals. I knew that it was a token from the
god. A sign of his protection, and patronage for the infant prince. I
understood also that it was a charge to me. The god was commending him to my
care. I took the dead pigeon in my hands, and lifted it
to the sky. 'Joyfully I accept this trust that you have placed upon me, oh
Horus. Through all the days of my life I will be true to it.' The falcon called again, one last wild shriek, and
then it banked away and on quick, stabbing wing-beats, flew out across the wide
Nile waters and disappeared into the wilderness, back towards the western
fields of paradise where the gods live. I plucked a single wing-feather from the pigeon.
Later I placed it under the mattress of the prince's cot, for good luck. PHARAOH'S JOY AND PRIDE IN HIS HEIR were unbounded.
He declared a nativity feast in his honour. For one entire night the citizens
of Upper Egypt sang and danced in the streets, and gorged on the meat and wine
that Pharaoh provided, and they blessed the Prince Memnon with every bowlful
that went down their gullets. The fact that he was the son of my Lady Lostris,
whom they loved, made the occasion of his birth all the more joyous. So young and resilient was my mistress that within
days, she was well enough to appear before the full court of Egypt, bearing her
infant at her breast. Seated on the lesser throne below that of the king, she
made a picture of lovely young motherhood. When she opened her robe and lifted
out one of her milk-swollen breasts and before the assembled court gave the
infant suck, they cheered her so loudly as to startle the infant. He spat out
the nipple and roared at them in scarlet-faced outrage, and the nation took him
to its heart. 'He is a lion,' they declared. 'His heart is pumped
up with the blood of kings and warriors.' Once the prince had been quieted again, and his
mouth stopped up with the nipple, Pharaoh rose to address us, his subjects. 'I acknowledge this child to be my issue and the
direct line of my blood and succession. He is my first-born son, and shall be
Pharaoh after me. To you noble lords and ladies, to all my subjects, I commend
the Prince Memnon.' The cheers went on and on, for no one amongst them
wanted to be the first to fall silent and bring his loyalty into question. During all of this I stood with other servants and
slaves of the royal household in one of the upper galleries which overlooked
the hall. By craning my head, I was able to pick out the tall figure of Lord
Tanus. He was standing in the third rank below the throne with Nembet and the
other military commanders. Although he cheered with the rest of them, I could
read the expression on his broad, open face that he strove to disguise. His son
was claimed by another and it was beyond his power to prevent it. Even I, who
knew and understood him so well, could only guess at what agony he was
suffering. When at last the king ordered silence and he had
their attention once more, he continued, 'I commend to you also the mother of
the prince, the Lady Lostris. Know all men that she sits now closest to my
throne. From this day forward she is elevated to the rank of chief consort and
the senior wife of Pharaoh. From henceforth, in name she will become Queen
Lostris, while in precedence and preferment she ranks after the king and his
prince alone. Furthermore, until the prince has reached the age of his
majority, Queen Lostris shall act as my regent and, when I am unable to do so, she
will stand at the head of the nation in my stead.' I did not think there was a soul in all the Upper
Kingdom who did not love my mistress, except perhaps some of the royal wives
who had been unable to provide the king with a male heir, and who now found
themselves outranked by her and superseded in the order of precedence. All the
rest showed their love in the acclaim with which they greeted this
pronouncement. To end the ceremony of the naming of Pharaoh's heir,
the royal family left the hall. In the main courtyard of the palace, Pharaoh
mounted the sledge of state, and with Queen Lostris seated at his side and the
prince in her arms, they were drawn by the span of white bullocks down the
Avenue of Rams to the temple of Osiris to make sacrifice to the god. Both sides
of the sacred avenue were lined a hundred deep by the citizens of Thebes. With
a mighty voice they demonstrated their devotion to the king and their love for
the queen and her new-born prince. That night, as I waited on her and the child, she
whispered to me, 'Oh, Taita, did you see Tanus in the crowd? What a day of
mixed joy and sorrow this has been. I could have wept for my love. He was so
tall and brave, and he had to watch and listen when his son was taken from him.
I wanted to jump to my feet in all that throng and cry out, "This is the
son of Tanus, Lord Harrab, and I love them both." ' 'I am pleased for the sake of all of us, Your
Majesty, that for once you were able to restrain that wayward tongue of yours.' She giggled. 'It is so strange to have you call me
that— Your Majesty—it makes me feel like an impostor.' She transferred the
prince from one breast to the other, and at the movement he released from both
ends of his tiny body a double blast of air which in volume and resonance was
truly imperial. 'It is apparent that he was conceived in a
wind-storm,' I remarked drily, and she giggled again and then immediately
afterwards sighed dolefully. 'My darling Tanus will never share these intimate moments
with us. Do you realize that he has not yet held Memnon in his arms, and it is
possible he never will? I think I am about to cry again.' 'Restrain yourself, mistress. If you weep, it might
sour your milk.' A warning which was untrue but effective in bending her to my
will. She sniffed back her tears. 'Is there no way that we can let Tanus enjoy our
baby as we do?' I thought about it for a while and then made a
suggestion which caused her to cry out with pleasure. As if to endorse what I
had said, the prince broke resounding wind once more. The very next day when Pharaoh came to visit his
son, the queen put my suggestion into effect. 'Dear and divine husband, have
you given thought to selecting official tutors for Prince Memnon?' Pharaoh laughed indulgently. 'He is still only an
infant. Should he not first learn to walk and talk, before he is instructed in
other skills?' 'I think his tutors should be appointed now, so
they can grow to know him, and he them.' 'Very well.' The king smiled, and took the child on
to his knee. 'Who do you suggest?' 'For his schooling we need one of our great
scholars. Some person who understands all the sciences and mysteries.' The king's eyes twinkled. 'I cannot think of one
who answers that description,' and he grinned at me. The child had altered
Pharaoh's disposition; since Memnon's birth, he had become almost jovial, and
for a moment I expected him to wink at me. However, his new, congenial attitude
to life did not extend quite that far. The queen continued, unruffled by this exchange,
"Then we need a soldier well versed in the warlike arts, and the exercise
of arms to train him as a warrior. He should, I think, be young and of good
breeding. Trustworthy, of course, and loyal to the crown.' 'Who do you suggest for that position, my dear?
Very few of my soldiers answer to all those virtues.' I do not think there was
any guile or malice in Pharaoh's question, but nevertheless my mistress was no
fool. She inclined her head gracefully and said, "The king is wise, and
knows who, from all his generals, best suits that role.' At the very next assize the king announced the
prince's tutors. The slave and physician, Taita, was to be responsible for
Memnon's schooling and deportment. This surprised very few, but there was a
buzz of comment when the king went on, 'For his training in arms and in
military tactics and strategy, the Great Lion bf Egypt, Lord Harrab, shall
henceforth be responsible.' Accordingly it became the duty of Lord Harrab, when
he was not on campaign, to wait upon the prince at the beginning of each week. While my mistress waited for her quarters in the
new palace that I was building across the river to be -completed, she had moved
from the harem into a wing of the grand vizier's palace that overlooked the
water-garden I had built for her father. This was in accordance with her new
status as the senior wife and consort. The weekly audience that Prince Memnon
held for his official tutors took place under the barrazza, with Queen Lostris
in attendance. Very often there was a score of other officials or courtiers
present, and occasionally Pharaoh himself arrived with all his train, so we
were under considerable constraint. However, once in a while there were just the four
of us present. On the very first occasion that we had such privacy, Queen
Lostris placed the prince in his father's arms for the first time and I was
witness to the incoherent joy with which Tanus looked down into the face of his
son. Memnon rose to the occasion by puking down the front of his father's uniform,
but even then Tanus would not relinquish him. From then onwards we reserved any special event in
the child's life for when Tanus was with us. Tanus fed him his first spoonful
of gruel, and the prince was so startled by this unaccustomed fare that he screwed
up his face and spat the offending mess down his chin. Then he howled loudly
for his mother's milk to wash the taste from his mouth. Queen Lostris took him
on her lap and while Tanus watched fascinated, she gave him the breast.
Suddenly Tanus reached across and tweaked the nipple from the tiny mouth. This
amused everybody but the prince and me. Memnon was outraged at this cavalier
treatment and made that fact known, while I was shocked. I imagined the king
arriving unexpectedly to find the Great Lion of Egypt with a right royal
handful which he seemed in no hurry to relinquish. When I quite rightly protested, my mistress told,
me, 'Don't be such a prim old woman, Taita. We are only having a little
innocent fun.' 'Fun, yes. However, there is some doubt as to the
innocence of it,' I muttered, for I had seen both their faces light up at the
intimate touch, and sensed their mutual passion like thunder in the air. I knew
that they could not restrain themselves for much longer, and that even Tanus'
sense of duty and honour must in the end succumb to so great a love as theirs. That very evening I visited the temple of Horus and
made a generous sacrifice. Then I prayed and asked the god, 'May the prophecy
of the Mazes be not too long delayed, for they cannot help themselves. It will
mean death and disgrace to all of us.' Sometimes it is best for men not to attempt to
interfere with destiny. Our prayers can be answered in ways which we do not
expect and do not welcome. I WAS PHYSICIAN TO THE PRINCE, BUT IN truth he had
little need of my medical skills. He was blessed with his father's rude and
abundant health, and precocious strength. His appetite and digestion were
Ђxemplary. Anything placed in his mouth was devoured with leonine voracity, and
promptly re-emerged from his nether end in the desired shape and consistency. He slept without interruption and woke bellowing
for food. If I showed him a finger, he would watch it move from side to side
with those huge dark eyes, and the moment it came within range, he would seize
it and attempt to haul himself into a sitting position. In this he succeeded
sooner than any other child that I had attended. He raised himself and crawled
at the age when others had only begun to sit up. He took his first tottering
step when others would only begin to crawl. Tanus was present on that remarkable day. He had
been on campaign for the past two months, for the forces of the red usurper had
captured Asyut. That city was the pivot on which our northern defences turned, and
Pharaoh had ordered Tanus down-river with all his fleet to retake the city.
Much later I heard from Kratas just how terrible had been the fighting, but in
the end Tanus breached the walls and was at the head of his beloved Blues when
they broke in. They drove the pretender from the city and back
beyond his own borders with bloody losses. Tanus sailed back to Thebes and the gratitude of
the kingdom. Pharaoh laid another chain upon his shoulders, the Gold of Valour,
and made up the back-pay of all the troops who had helped him achieve this
victory. Tanus came almost directly from the king to the
barrazza in the water-garden where we were waiting for him. While I stood guard
at the gateway, Tanus and my mistress embraced with all the fire that had
burned up so brightly while they had been apart. At last I had to separate
them, for that embrace could lead in only one direction. 'Lord Tanus,' I called sharply, 'Prince Memnon
grows impatient.' Reluctantly they drew apart, and Tanus went to where the
infant sprawled naked on a robe of jackal skins that I had spread for him in
the shade. Tanus went down on one knee before him. 'Greetings, Your Royal Highness. I bring you
tidings of the triumph of our arms—' Tanus mocked him lovingly, and Memnon gave
a happy shout as he recognized his father, and then the sparkling gold chain
caught his eye. With a mighty heave he hoisted himself to his feet. He took
four lurching steps, seized the chain and clung to it with both hands. All of us applauded this feat, and, supporting
himself by the chain, Memnon beamed about him, accepting this praise as his
due. 'By the wings of Horus, he has as sharp an eye as
you do for the yellow metal, Taita,' Tanus laughed. 'It is not the gold that draws him, but the winning
of it,' my mistress declared. 'One day he too will wear the Gold of Valour upon
his chest.' 'Never doubt it!' Tanus swung the boy high, and
Memnon shrieked with pleasure and kicked his legs to urge Tanus to further
rough play. Thus, for Tanus and me, the child's advances seemed
to mark the change of seasons, just as surely as did the rise and fall of the
river. On the other hand my mistress's life revolved around those hours spent
alone with the child and the man. Each interval between Tanus' visits seemed
too long for my mistress to support, each visit too short for her to bear. THE INUNDATION OF THAT SUMMER WAS as benevolent as
any that we had forecast at the ceremony of the waters in Elephantine. When the
flood receded, the fields glistened under their new coat of black mud. In their
turn, they were soon obliterated by the dense green stands of corn and fruit.
By the time the prince took his first upright step the granaries of Egypt were
brimming, and the larders of even the poorest of her subjects were filled. On
the west bank the Palace of Memnon was taking shape, and the war in the north
was running in our favour. The gods smiled on Pharaoh and all his realm. The only discontent in all this was that the two
lovers, though close enough to touch, were cleaved apart by a gulf wider than
the valley in which we lived. Each of them on separate but numerous occasions
taxed me with the prophecy of the Mazes of Ammon-Ra, as though I were
personally responsible for the fulfilment of the dream visions. It was in vain
to protest that I was merely the mirror in which the future was reflected, and
not the one who moved the stones on the bao board of destiny. The old year died,"~and the river began to
rise once more, completing the endless cycle. This was the fourth flood that
the Mazes had foretold. I, as much as any of them, expected my vision of the
Mazes to be fulfilled before the end of the season. When this did not happen,
both my mistress and Tanus taxed me severely. 'When will I be free to go to Tanus?' Queen Lostris
sighed. 'You must do something, Taita.' 'It is not me, but the gods, whom you must
question. I can pray to them, but that is all I can do.' Then another year passed without any change in our
circumstances, and even Tanus was bitter. 'So much faith I have placed in you
that I have based my future happiness on your word. I swear to you, Taita, that
if you do not do something soon—' He broke off and stared at me. The threat was
all the more forceful for not being spoken. Yet another year drifted past, and even I began to
lose faith in my own prophecy. I came to believe that the gods had changed
their minds, or that what I had seen was my own wishful fantasy. In the end Prince Memnon was almost five years old
and his mother twenty-one, when the messenger came flying wild-eyed from the
north, in one of our scouting galleys. "The Delta had fallen. The red pretender is
dead. The Lower Kingdom is in flames. The cities of Memphis and Avaris are
destroyed. The temples are burned to the ground and the images of the gods
thrown down,' he shouted to the king, and Pharaoh replied 'It is not possible.
I long to believe this despatch, but I cannot. How could this thing come to
pass without our knowledge? The usurper was possessed of great force, for more
than fifteen years we have been unable to overthrow him. How has this been
accomplished in a day, and by whom?' The messenger was shaking with fear and exhaustion,
for his journey had been onerous, and he knew how the bearers of disastrous
tidings were treated in Thebes. 'The red pretender was destroyed with his sword
still in the scabbard. His forces were scattered before the war trumpets could
sound the alarm.' 'How was this accomplished?' 'Divine Egypt, I know not. They say that a new and
terrible enemy has come out of the East, swift as the wind, and no nation can
stand before his wrath. Though they have never seen him, our army is in full
retreat from the northern borders. Even the bravest will not stay to face him.' 'Who is this enemy?' Pharaoh demanded, and for the
first time we heard the fear in his voice. 'They call him the Shepherd King. The Hyksos.' Tanus and I had jested with that name. We would
never do so again. . PHARAOH CALLED HIS WAR COUNCIL into secret conclave.
It was only long afterwards that I learned from Kratas all that transpired in
those deliberations. Tanus, of course, would never break his oath of secrecy,
not even to me or my mistress. But I was able to worm it out of Kratas, for
that lovable, brawling oaf was not proof against my wiles. Tanus had promoted Kratas to the rank of Best of
Ten Thousand, and had given him the command of the Blue Crocodile Guards. The
bond between them was still as solid as a granite stele. Thus, as a regimental
commander, Kratas was entitled to a seat on the war council, and although at
his lowly rank he was not called upon to speak, he faithfully relayed all that
was said, to me and my mistress. The council was divided between the ancients,
headed by Nembet, and the new blood of which Tanus was the leader.
Unfortunately the final authority lay with the old men, and they forced their
archaic views upon the others. Tanus wanted to draw our main forces back from the
frontier and to set up a series of deep defences along the river. At the same
time, he intended sending forward scouting and reconnaissance parties to assess
and study the nature of the mysterious enemy. We had spies in all of the
northern cities, but for some unknown reason no reports from them had as yet been
received. Tanus wanted to gather these in and stiMy them, before he deployed
his main force to battle. 'Until we know what we are facing, we cannot devise
the correct strategy to meet it,' he told the council. Nembet and his faction countered any of Tanus'
suggestions. The old admiral had never forgiven Tanus for his humiliation on
the day he saved the royal barge from destruction. His opposition to Tanus was
based on principle rather than on reason or logic. 'We will not yield a cubit of our sacred soil. To
suggest it is cowardice. We will meet the enemy and destroy him wherever we
find him. We will not dance and flirt with him like a gaggle of village
maidens.' 'My lord!' roared Tanus, incensed by the suggestion
of cowardice. 'Only a fool, and an old fool at that, will make a decision
before he knows the facts. We have no scrap of intelligence to act upon—' It was in vain. The seniority of the three generals
above Tanus on the army lists prevailed in the end. Tanus was ordered north immediately, to steady and
rally the retreating army. He was to hold the frontier, and make his stand on
the boundary stones. He was forbidden to make a strategic withdrawal to the
line of hills before Asyut, which was the natural defensive line, and from
which the city walls provided a second line of defence. He would have the fleet
and the northern army corps under his direct command, with three hundred
warships to provide the transport, and to command the river. In the meantime, Nembet would bring in the rest of
the army, even those regiments on the southern border with Gush. The black
threat from the African interior must be ignored now in the face of this more
pressing danger. As soon as they were assembled, Nembet would rush these
reinforcements northwards to join up with Tanus. Within a month, there would be
an invincible army of sixty thousand men and four hundred galleys lying before
Asyut. In the meantime, Tanus must hold the frontier at all costs. Nembet ended with a strict injunction. 'Lord Harrab
is further ordered to hold all his forces on the border. He is not to indulge
in raids or scouting forays to the north.' 'My Lord Nembet, these orders blindfold me, and
bind my sword-arm. You are denying me the means of conducting this campaign in
a prudent and efficient manner,' Tanus protested in vain. Nembet sneered with
the satisfaction of having forced his authority upon his young rival, and in
having gained a measure of retribution. On such petty human emotions pivots the
destiny of nations. Pharaoh himself announced his intention of taking
his rightful place at the head of his army. For a thousand years the pharaoh
had been present on the field whenever the decisive battles of history had been
fought out. Although I had to admire the king's courage, I wished he had not chosen
this moment to demonstrate it. Pharaoh Mamose was no warrior, and his presence
would do little to enhance our chances of victory. There might be some
bolstering of morale when the troops saw him in the van, but on balance he and
his train would be a greater hindrance than assistance to Lord Tanus. The king would not travel northwards to the
battle-front alone. His entire court would attend him, including his senior
wife and his son. The queen must have her retinue and Prince Memnon his tutors,
and so I would be going north to Asyut and the battle-front. Nobody knew nor understood this enemy. I felt that
my mistress and the prince were being placed in unnecessary danger. On the
other hand, the safety of a slave was of no account, except to the slave himself.
I slept little the night before we sailed northwards on the flood of the river
for Asyut and the battle-front. THE FARTHER NORTH WE SAILED, THE more numerous and
troublesome were the rumours and reports coming down from the front to feed
upon our contentment and confidence, like locusts upon the standing crops.
Often during the voyage, Tanus came aboard our vessel, ostensibly to discuss
these with me. However, on each visit he spent some time with the prince and
his mother. I have never held with the custom of women
following the army into battle. In times of peace or war, they are a marvellous
distraction—even a warrior of Tanus' calibre could be diverted from his main
purpose. All his mind should have been on the task ahead, but when I told him
so, he laughed and clapped my shoulder. "They give me a reason to fight. Don't worry,
old friend, I shall be a lion defending his cub.' Soon we encountered the first elements of the
retreating army, straggling groups of deserters who were looting the villages as
they fled southwards along the banks of the river. With very little ceremony
and no hesitation at all, Tanus beheaded several hundred of them and had their
heads spiked on spears and planted along the bank as an example and a warning.
Then he gathered up the others and regrouped them under reliable officers.
There were no further desertions and the troops stood to the colours with a new
spirit. Our flotilla came to the walled city of Asyut,
overlooking the river. In defiance of his orders from Nembet, Tanus left a
small strategic reserve of five thousand men here under the command of Remrem.
Then we sailed on northwards to take up our positions on the border, there to
await the approach of the mysterious Shepherd King. The fleet lay at anchor across the river in its
battle formations, but the vessels were under skeleton crews. The fighting men
were disembarked with the main body of infantry and deployed upon the east bank
of the river. I prevailed upon Pharaoh to allow my mistress and
the prince to remain on board the large and comfortable barge that had brought
them here. It was cooler and healthier out on the water, and their escape would
be swifter if our army met with any reverse of arms. The king went ashore with the army, and set up his
camp on the higher ground above the inundated fields. There was a deserted
village here; years ago the peasants had fled from this disputed border with
the false pharaoh. There were always foraging troops and bloody little
skirmishes hereabouts, and the farmers had given up any attempts to work these
fertile but dangerous fields. The name of the derelict village was Abnub. The flood of the Nile had begun to subside some
weeks prior to our arrival at Abnub, and although the irrigation canals were
still running strongly, and the fields were morasses of black mud, the main
waters had retreated back between the permanent banks of the Nile. Within the restrictions placed upon him by Nembet,
Tanus set about preparing to meet the threat. The regiments encamped in their
order of battle. Astes commanded the fleet on the river, Tanus himself had the
centre with his left flank anchored on the Nile, while Kratas had the right
wing. The desert stretched to the eastern horizon, dun
and forbidding. No army could survive out in that burning, waterless waste. It
was our right flank, secure and impregnable. All that we knew of the Hyksos was that he had come
overland, and that he possessed no fleet of his own. Tanus expected to meet him
on land, and to fight an infantry engagement. Tanus knew that he could prevent
the Hyksos from crossing the river, and so he should be able to bring him to
battle on the field of his own choice. Ideally, this would not have been at
Abnub, but Nembet had made that decision for him. The village of Abnub stood on a low ridge with open
untended fields around it. At least it commanded a good view, and the enemy
would be under our observation long before it could engage and drive in our
pickets. Tanus had thirty thousand of the finest troops in
Egypt under his command. I had never seen such a large force. Indeed, I doubt
that an army of this size had ever before been assembled in the valley of the
Nile. Soon Nembet would arrive with another thirty thousand. Then it would be
the greatest army in history. I went with Tanus to inspect them, and the troops'
morale had soared since he had taken command in person. Perhaps the presence of
Pharaoh in the camp had also helped to steady them. They cheered Tanus as he
strode along their massed ranks, and I felt much encouraged and relieved at the
multitudes of their host, and the spirit in them. I could not imagine an enemy powerful enough to
overwhelm us. There were twelve thousand archers with polished leather helmets
and padded leather breastplates that would stop an arrow, except if it were
fired at very short range. There were eight thousand heavy spearmen, with long
shields of hippo-skin as tough and hard as bronze. The ten thousand swordsmen
in leopard-skin caps were also armed with sling-shots, the stones from which
could split a skull at fifty paces. I felt more confident with each day that passed, as
I watched Tanus exercising these huge masses of armed men. Yet it worried me
that we still knew so little about the Hyk-sos and the forces that he
commanded. I pointed out to Tanus that the war council had forbidden him to
send land forces forward to reconnoitre, but had said nothing of vessels being
used for this purpose. 'You should have been a law scribe,' Tanus laughed,
'you can make words dance to any tune you play.' But he ordered Hui to take a
single squadron of fast galleys northwards as far as Minieh, or until he
encountered the enemy. This was the same Hui whom we had captured at Gallala,
and who had been one of Basil's Shrikes. Under Tanus' favour, that young rogue
had advanced swiftly, and now commanded a squadron of galleys. Hui had strict orders to avoid action and to report
back within four days. Dutifully, he returned on the fourth day. He had reached
Minieh without seeing another ship or encountering any resistance. The villages
along the river were all deserted, and the town of Minieh itself had been
sacked and was in flames. Hui had, however, captured a handful of deserters
from the false pharaoh's shattered army. These were the first persons we had
questioned who were actual eye-witnesses of the Hyksos invasion. However, none
of them had ever stood to engage and actually fight the Shepherd King. They had
all fled at his first approach. Their reports were therefore so far-fetched and
garbled as to be completely incredible. How could we believe in the existence of an army
that sailed across the open desert on ships that were as swift as the wind?
According to our informants, the dust-clouds that hung over this strange fleet
were so tall as to obscure their numbers and to strike terror into any army
that watched their advance. 'These are not men,' the prisoners reported, 'they
are fiends from the underworld, and they ride on the devil winds out of the
desert.' Having questioned the prisoners carefully, and
finding that even hot coals on their heads could not make them alter their
stories, Tanus ordered their summary execution. He did not want these wild
tales circulating and spreading despondency amongst our forces who had only
recently regained their courage. ON THE TENTH DAY OF WAITING AT ABNUB, we received
word that Nembet was at last on his way with reinforcements, and that he
expected to reach Asyut within the next two weeks. The effect on the men was
marvellous to behold. They were transformed at a stroke from sparrows to
eagles. Tanus issued an extra ration of beer and meat to celebrate the news,
and the cooking-fires were a field of stars upon the plain before Abnub. The
luscious odour of burning mutton fat filled the night, and the sound of
laughter and singing only died away in the final watches. I had left my mistress on board the barge with her
son, and had come ashore in response to a summons from Tanus. He wanted me to
attend the final war council with his regimental commanders. 'You are always a
well of ideas and wisdom, you old rascal. Perhaps you can tell us how to sink a
fleet of ships that comes sailing over dry land?' Our deliberations went on until after midnight, and
for once I was able to contribute very little of value. It was too late to
return to the ship that night, so Tanus gave me a straw mattress in the corner
of his tent. I awoke before dawn, as was my habit, but Tanus was gone from his
bed, and beyond the coarse linen wall of the tent, the camp was already astir.
I felt guilty of indolence, and hastened out to watch the dawn breaking over
the desert. I climbed the hill behind the camp. From there I
looked first towards the river. The blue smoke from the cooking-fires was
smeared out across the surface, mingling with the streamers of river mist. The
riding lamps on board the ships were reflected in the "dark waters. It was
still too dark and far to pick out the vessel upon which my mistress lay. I turned then towards the east and saw the light
bloom over the desert with the nacreous glow of pearly oyster-shells. The light
hardened and the desert was soft and lovely, the hillocks and dunes shaded with
mauve and soft purple. In the limpid air the horizons seemed close enough to
touch with an outstretched hand. Then I saw the cloud suspended on the horizon
beneath the unblemished aquamarine sheen of the sky. It was no larger than the
end of my thumb, and my gaze wandered past it and then drifted back to it. I
felt no initial alarm, for I had to stare at it for a while before I realized
that it was moving. 'How strange,' I murmured aloud. 'The beginning of
the khamsin, perhaps.' But it was out of season, and there had been no charging
of the air with those malevolent forces which herald the desert storms. The
morning was cool and balmy. Even as I pondered it, the distant cloud spread and
grew taller. The base of the cloud was upon the earth, not suspended above it,
and yet it was too swift and wide to be of any earthly origin. A flock of birds
might move that fast, locusts may rise that thickly to the skies, but this was
neither of these things. The cloud was ochre-yellow, but at first I could
not believe it was dust. I have watched herds of scimitar-horned oryx galloping
through the dunes in their hundreds upon their annual migrations, but they had
never raised a dust-cloud such as this. It might have been the smoke from a
fire, but there was nothing out there in the desert to burn. It had to be dust,
and yet I still could not wholly believe it. . Swiftly it grew, and drew ever
closer, while I stared in wonder and in awe. Suddenly I saw reflected light twinkle at the base
of the towering cloud. Instantly I was transported back to the vision of the
Mazes of Ammon-Ra. This was the same scene. The first had been fantasy, but
this was reality. I knew that those beams of light were shot from war armour
and from blades of polished bronze. I started to my feet, and alone upon the
hilltop I shouted to the wind a warning that nobody heard. Then I heard the war trumpets sounding in the camp
below me. The pickets on the heights had at last seen the approaching
dust-cloud and sounded the alarm. The sound of the trumpets was a part of my
vision. Their urgent warning shrilled in my ears and threatened to split my
skull, it thrilled my blood and chilled my heart. I knew from my vision that on
this fateful day a dynasty would fall and the locusts from the East would
devour the substance of this very Egypt. I was filled with dread, and with
terror for my mistress and the child that was part of the dynasty. The camp below me was a tumult of men running to
arms. Their armour glinted and their spear-heads sparkled as they brandished
them on high. They were bees from the overturned hive, massing and swarming in
disarray. The shouts of the sergeants and the rallying cries of the captains
were almost drowned by the braying horns. I saw Pharaoh carried from his tent in the centre
of a knot of armed men. They hustled him up the slope of the hill to where his
throne was set amongst the rocks, overlooking the plain and the wide sweep of
the river. They lifted him to the throne and placed the crook and the flail in
his hands and the tall double crown upon his head. Pharaoh sat like a marble
statue with an ash-white face, while below him his regiments fell into their
battle formations. Tanus had trained and exercised them well, and out of the
confusion of the first alarm, order swiftly emerged. I ran down the hill to be near the king, and so
rapid was the response of Lord Tanus' divisions that by the time I reached the
foot of his throne, his army lay upon the plain like a coiled serpent to meet
the menace of that boiling yellow dust-cloud that swept down upon it. Kratas stood with his division on the right flank.
I could recognize his tall figure on the first slope of the hill. His
regimental officers were grouped around him, their plumes nodding and waving in
the light morning breeze from the river. Tanus and his staff were directly
below me, close enough for me to overhear their conversation. They discussed
the advance of the enemy in cool, academic tones, as though this were a sandbox
problem at an officers' training course. Tanus had disposed his force in the classical
formations. His heavy spearmen formed the front ranks. Their shields were
interlocked and the spears' butts grounded. The bronze spear-heads sparkled in
the early sunlight, and the men's demeanour was calm and grave. Drawn up behind
them were the archers. Their bows were strung and ready. Behind each man stood
his quiver boy with bundles of spare arrows. During the battle they would
gather up the expended arrows of the enemy to replenish their own bundles. The
swordsmen were in reserve, light and quick troops that could rush in to stop a
breach or to exploit a weak point in the enemy formations. The moves of any battle were like those of the bao
board. There were classic openings with set defences that had been developed
over the centuries. I had studied these and written three of the definitive
scrolls on military tactics that were the prescribed reading of officers
training in Thebes. Now, reviewing Tanus' dispositions, I could find no
fault in them, and my confidence soared. How could an enemy preVail against this
mighty host of trained and battle-hardened veterans, and their brilliant young
general, who had never lost a battle? Then I looked once more beyond our ranks at that
ominous, rolling yellow cloud, and my confidence wavered. This was something
beyond military tradition, beyond the experience of any general in all our
long, proud history. Were these mortal men that we were facing, or, as rumour
suggested, were they fiends? When I stared into the swirling clouds, they were
now so close that I could make out dark shapes in the dun and gloomy veils of
dust. My skin crawled with a kind of religious horror as I recognized the
shiplike shapes that our prisoners had warned us of. But these were smaller and
swifter than any vessel that had ever been launched on water, swifter even than
any creature that had ever moved upon the surface of the earth. It was difficult to follow one of these shapes with
the eye, for they were ethereal and quick as moths in the light of a lantern.
They wheeled and wove and disappeared in the moving clouds, so that when they
reappeared, it was impossible to tell whether it was the same or another like
it. There was no way to count their numbers, or even to guess at what followed
the first ranks of their advance. Behind them, the dust-cloud extended back to
the horizon from which they had come. Although our own ranks stood firm and steady in the
sunlight,! could sense the wonder and trepidation that gripped them all. The
studied conversation of Tanus' officers had dried up, and they stood in silent
awe and watched the enemy deploy before us. Then I realized that the dust-cloud was no longer
advancing upon us. It hung in the sky, and gradually began to settle and clear,
so that I was able dimly to make out the stationary vehicles in the vanguard.
But I was now so confused and alarmed that I could not tell whether there were
a thousand of them or more. We would learn later that this hiatus was always
part of the Shepherd King's attack plan. I did not know it then, but during
this lull they were regrouping and watering and gathering themselves for the
final advance. A terrible stillness had fallen on our ranks. It
was so profound that the whisper of the breeze was loud through the rocks and
the wadis of the hill on which we stood. The only movement was the flutter and
swirl of our battle standards at the head of each division. I saw the Blue
Crocodile banner waving in the centre of our line, and I took comfort from it. Slowly, the dust-clouds subsided and row after row
of the Hyksos' craft were revealed to us. They were still too distant to make
out details, but I saw that those in the rear were much larger than those
leading their army. It seemed to me that they were roofed over with sails of
cloth or leather. From these I saw that men were unloading what looked like
large water jars and carrying them forward. I wondered what men could consume
such large quantities of water. Everything these foreigners did was a puzzle
and made no sense to me. The silence and the waiting drew out until every
muscle and nerve in my body screamed out with the -strain. Then suddenly there
was movement again. From the front ranks of the Hyksos formations some
of these strange vehicles started towards us. A murmur went up from our ranks
avwe saw how fast they were moving. After that short period of rest, they
seemed to have doubled their speed. The range closed and another cry went up
from our host as we realized that these vehicles were each being drawn by a
pair of extraordinary beasts. They stood as tall as the wild oryx, with the same
stiff, upstanding mane along the crest of their arched necks. They were not
horned like the oryx, but their heads were more gracefully formed. Their eyes
were large and their nostrils flared. Their legs were long and hoofed. Striding
out with a peculiar daintiness, they seemed merely to brush the surface of the
desert. Even now, after all these years, I can recapture
the thrill of gazing at a horse for the first time. In my mind the beauty of
the hunting cheetah paled beside these marvellous beasts. At the same time we
were all filled with fear of them, and I heard one of the officers near me cry
out, 'Surely these monsters are killers, and eaters of human flesh! What
abomination is this that is visited upon us?' A 'stirring of horror ran through our formations,
as we expected these beasts to fall upon us and devour us, like ravening lions.
But the leading vehicle swung away and sped parallel to our front rank. It
moved on spinning discs, and I stared at it in wonder. For the first few
moments I was so stunned by what I was looking at that my mind refused to
absorb it all. If anything, my first sight of a chariot was almost as moving as
the horses that drew it. There was a long yoke-pole between the galloping pair,
connected to what I later came to know as the axle. The high dashboard was
gilded with gold leaf and the side-panels were cut low to allow the archer to
shoot his arrows to either side. All this I took in at a glance, and then my whole
attention focused on the spinning discs on which the chariot sailed so smoothly
and swiftly over the rough ground. For a thousand years we Egyptians had been
the most cultured and civilized men on earth; in the sciences and the religions
we had far outstripped all other nations. However, in all our learning and
wisdom we had conceived nothing like this. Our sledges churned the earth on
wooden runners that dissipated the strength of the oxen that dragged them, or
we hauled great blocks of stone over wooden rollers without taking the next
logical step. I stared at the first wheel I had ever seen, and
the simplicity and the beauty of it burst in upon me like lightning flaring in
my head. I understood it instantly, and scorned myself for not having
discovered it of my own accord. It was genius of the highest order, and now I
realized that we stood to be destroyed by this wonderful invention in the same
way as it must have annihilated the red usurper in the Lower Kingdom. The golden chariot sped across our front, just out
of bowshot. As it drew opposite us, I dragged my gaze from those miraculously
spinning wheels and the fierce and terrifying Creatures that drew them, and I
looked at the two men in the cockpit of the chariot. One was clearly the
driver. He leaned out over the dashboard and he seemed to control the galloping
team by means of long plaited cords of leather attached to their heads. The
taller man who stood behind him was a king. There was no doubting his imperial
bearing. I saw instantly that he was an Asian, with amber skin
and a hooked, aquiline nose. His beard was black and thick, cut square across
his breastplates, curled and intricately plaited with coloured ribbons. His
body armour was a glittering skin of bronze fish-scales, while his crown was
tall and square; the gold was embossed with images of some strange god and set
with precious stones. His weapons hung on the side-panel of the chariot, close
to his hands. His broad-bladed sword in its leather and gold scabbard had a
handle of ivory and silver. Beside it, two leather quivers bulged with arrows,
and each shaft was fletched with bright feathers. Later I would come to know
how the Hyksos loved gaudy colours. The king's bow on its rack beside him was
of an unusual shape that I had never seen before. It was not the simple, clean
arc of our Egyptian bows; on the Hyksos bow, the upper and lower limbs recurved
at the tips. As the chariot flew down our line, the king leaned
out and planted a lance in the earth. It was tipped with a crimson pennant, and
the men around me growled in perturbation. 'What is he doing? What purpose does
the lance serve? Is it a religious symbol, or is it a challenge?' I gaped at the fluttering pennant, but my wits were
dulled by all that I had seen, it meant nothing to me. The chariot sped on, still
just out of bowshot, and the crowned Asian planted another lance, then wheeled
and came back. He had seen Pharaoh on his throne and he halted below him. The
horses were lathered with sweat, it foamed on their flanks like lace. Their
eyes rolled ferociously and their nostrils flared so that the pink mucous
lining was exposed. They nodded their heads on long, arched necks and their
manes flew like the tresses of a beautiful woman in the sunlight. The Hyksos greeted Pharaoh Mamose, Son of Ra,
Divine Ruler of the Two Kingdoms, May He Live For Ever, with contempt. It was a
laconic and ironic wave of a mailed hand, and he laughed. The challenge was as
clear as if it had been spoken in perfect Egyptian. His mocking laughter
floated across to us, and the ranks of our army growled with anger, a sound
like far-off thunder in the summer air. A small movement below me caught my attention, and
I looked down just as Tanus took one step forward and flung up the great bow
Lanata. He loosed an arrow and it rose in a high arcing trajectory against the
milky-blue sky. The Hyksos was out of range to any other bow, but not to
Lanata. The arrow reached its zenith and then dropped like a stooping falcon,
full at the centre of the Asian king's chest. The watching multitude gasped
with the length and power and aim of that shot. Three hundred paces it flew,
and at the very last moment the Hyksos threw up his bronze shield and the arrow
buried its head in the centre of the target. It was done with such contemptuous
ease that we were all amazed and confounded. Then the Hyksos seized his own strangely shaped bow
from the rack beside him. With one movement he nocked an arrow, and drew and
let it fly. It rose higher than Tanus had reached, and it sailed over his head.
Fluting like the wing of a goose, it dropped towards me. I could not move and
it might have impaled me without my attempting to avoid it, but it passed my
head by an arm's-length and struck the base of Pharaoh's throne behind me. It
quivered in the cedar strut like an insult, and the Hyksos king laughed again
and wheeled his chariot and sped away, back across the plain, to rejoin his own
host. I knew then that we were doomed. How could we stand
against these speeding chariots, and the recurved bows that so easily outranged
the finest archer in our ranks? I was not alone in my dreadful expectations. As
the squadrons of chariots began their final fateful evolutions out on the plain
and sped towards us hi waves, a moan of despair went up from the army of Egypt.
I understood then how the forces of the red pretender had been scattered
without a struggle, and the usurper had died with his sword still in its
scabbard. On the run, the flying chariots merged into columns
four abreast and came directly at us. Only then did my mind clear, and I
started down the slope at full pelt. Panting, I reached Tanus' side and shouted
at him, 'The pennant lances mark the weak points in our line! Their main strike
will come through us there and there!' Somehow the Hyksos had known our battle order, and
had recognized the laps in our formation. Their king had planted his pennants
exactly between our divisions. The idea of a spy or a traitor occurred to me
even then, but in the urgency of the moment I thrust it aside, and it was for
the moment forgotten. Tanus responded to my warning instantly, and
shouted an order for our pickets to race forward and seize the pennants. I
wanted him to move them, so that we could receive the enemy thrust on our
strongest front, but there was no time for that. Before our pickets could reach
and throw down the markers, the spear-head of flying chariots bore down upon
them. Some of our men were shot down with arrows from the bouncing, swerving
chariots. The aim of the enemy charioteers was uncanny. The survivors turned and raced back, trying to
regain the illusory safety of our lines. The chariots overhauled them
effortlessly. The drivers controlled the galloping, plunging teams of horses
with a lover's touch. They did not run their victims down directly, but swerved
to pass them at the length of less than a cubit. It was only then that I
noticed the knives. They were curved outwards from the spinning hub of the
wheels like the fangs of some monstrous crocodile. I saw one of our men struck squarely by the
whirling blades. He seemed to dissolve in a bright cloud of blood. One of his
severed arms was thrown high in the air and the bleeding chunks of his
mutilated torso were dashed into the rocky earth as the chariot flew on without
the least check. The phalanx of chariots was still aimed directly at the lap in
our front line, and though I heard Kratas yelling orders to reinforce it, it
was far too late. The column of chariots crashed into our defensive
wall of shields and spears, and tore through it as though it were as insubstantial
as a drift of river mist. In one instant our formation, that had stood the
assault of the finest Syrian and Human warriors, was cleaved and shattered. The horses spurned our strongest and heaviest men
under their hooves. The whirling wheel-knives hacked through their armour and
lopped off heads and limbs, as though they were the tenderest shoots of the
vine. From the high carriages the charioteers showered arrows and javelins into
our tightly packed ranks, then they tore on through the breach they had forced,
passing entirely through our formations, fanning out behind us and driving at
full tilt along our rear files, still hurling their missiles into our
unprotected rear. When our troops turned to face this assault on
their rear, another phalanx of racing chariots crashed into them from the open
plain. The first assault split our army in twain, dividing Tanus from Kratas on
the right wing. Then those that followed so swiftly cut up the two halves into
smaller, isolated groups. We were no longer a cohesive whole. Little bands of
fifty and a hundred men stood back-to-back and fought with the courage of the
doomed. Across the plain on wings of swirling dust,
the-Hyksos came on endlessly. Behind the light two-wheeled chariots followed
the heavy four-wheeled war carts, each carrying ten men. The sides of the carts
were screened with sheep fleeces. Our arrows slapped ineffectually into the
thick, soft wool, our swords could not reach the men in the high body of the
carts. They shot their points down into us and broke up the confused masses of
our fighting men into scattered knots of terrified survivors. When one of our
captains rallied a few men to counter-attack them, the war carts wheeled away
and stopped out of range. With their awful recurved bows, they broke up our
gallant charges, and the moment we wavered, they came rolling back upon us. I was intensely aware of the moment when the
conflict ceased to be a battle and became nothing more than a massacre. The
remains of Kratas' division out on our right flank had fired the last of their
arrows. The Hyksos had picked out their captains by their plumed helmets and
shot nearly every one of them down. The men were disarmed and lead-erless. They
broke into rout. They threw down their weapons and ran for the river. But it
was not possible to outrun a Hyksos chariot. The broken troops ran into Tanus' division below
the hillock, and tangled with it. With their panicking, struggling masses they
clogged and smothered what little resistance Tanus was still capable of
offering. The terror was infectious and the centre of our line broke and tried
to fly, but the deadly chariots circled them, like wolves around the flock. In all that chaos, in the bloody shambles and the
tumult of defeat, only the Blues stood firm around Tanus and the Crocodile
standard. They were a little island in the torrent of defeated men, even the
chariots could not break them up, for, with the instinct of a great general,
Tanus had gathered them and pulled them back into the one patch of rocks and
gulleys where the Hyksos could not cqme at them. The Blues were a wall, a
bulwark around the throne of Pharaoh. Because I had been at the king's side, I
was in the centre of this ring of heroes. It was difficult to keep my feet, for
all around me men struggled and surged, washed back and forth by the waves of
battle, like seaweed clinging to a rock in the full stream of tide and surf. I saw Kratas fight his way through from the
shattered right whig to join us. His plumed helmet attracted the Hyk-sos arrows
and they flew around his head thickly as locusts, but he came through
unscathed, and our ring opened for him. He saw me, and he laughed with huge
delight. 'By Seth's steaming turds, Taita, this is more fun than building
palaces for little princes, is it not?' He was never famous for his repartee,
was Kratas, and I was too busy staying on my feet to bother with a reply. He and Tanus met close to the throne. Kratas
grinned at him like an idiot. 'I'd not have missed this for all Pharaoh's
treasure. I want one of those Hyksos sledges for myself.' Neither was Kratas
one of Egypt's greatest engineers. Even now he still believed that the chariots
were some type of sledge. That was as far as his imagination reached. Tanus tapped the side of his helmet with the flat
of his sword in greeting, and although his tone was light, his expression was
grim. He was a general who had just lost a battle and an army, and an empire. 'Our work here is finished for today,' he told
Kratas. 'Let us see if these Hyksos monsters can swim as well as they run. Back
to the river!' Then, shoulder-to-shoulder, the two of them shoved their way
through the ranks towards the throne where I still stood. I could see over their heads, over the periphery of
our little defensive ring, out over the plain where our broken army was
streaming away towards the river, still harried by the squadrons of chariots. I saw the golden chariot of the Hyksos king wheel
out of formation and cleave its way towards us, trampling our men under the
flying hooves and chopping them up with the glittering wheel-knives. The driver
brought the horses to a rearing, plunging halt before he reached the barrier of
rocks which, protected us. Balancing easily on the footplates, the Hyksos drew
his recurved bow and aimed at me, or so it seemed. Even as I ducked, I realized
that the arrow was not meant for me. It shrieked over my head and I turned to
watch its flight. It struck Pharaoh high in the chest, and buried half its
length in his flesh. Pharaoh gave a hoarse cry and tottered on his high
throne. There was no blood, for the shaft had plugged the wound, but the
feathers were a pretty scarlet and green. Pharaoh slid sideways and collapsed
forward towards me, and I opened my arms to receive him. His weight bore me to
my knees, so I did not see the Hyksos king's chariot wheel away, but I heard
his mocking laughter receding as he dashed back across the plain to lead the
slaughter. Tanus stooped over me as I held the king. 'How
badly is he struck?' he demanded. 'He is killed,' the reply rose to my lips
unthinkingly. The angle of entry and the depth of the wound could mean that
only one outcome was possible, but I choked off the words before they were
spoken. I knew that our men would lose heart if Great Egypt was slain. Instead
I said, 'He is hard hit. But if we carry him back aboard the state barge, he
may recover.' 'Bring me a shield here!' Tanus roared, and when it
came we gently lifted Pharaoh on to it. There was still no blood, but I knew
his chest was filling like a wine jar. Quickly, I felt for the head of the
arrow, but it had not emerged from his back. The point was still buried deep
within the cage of his ribs. I snapped off the protruding shaft, and covered
him with his linen shawl. 'Taita,' he whispered. 'Will I see my son again?' 'Yes, Mighty Egypt, I swear it to you.' 'And my dynasty will survive?' 'Even as the Mazes of Ammon-Ra have foretold.' 'Ten strong men here!' Tanus bellowed. They crowded
around the makeshift litter, and lifted the king between them. 'Form the tortoise! Close up on me, the Blues!'
With interlocking shields, the Blues formed a wall around the king. Tanus raced to the Blue Crocodile which still waved
in our midst and tore it from its pole. He wound it around his waist and
knotted the ends across his belly. 'If the Hyksos want this rag, they had better come
and take it from me,' he shouted, and his men cheered this piece of foolish
bravado. 'All together now! Back to the ships! At the
double!' The moment we left the shelter of our little rocky
redoubt, the chariots came at us. 'Leave the men!' Tanus had found the key. 'Kill
then-beasts! ' As the first chariot bore down upon us, Tanus flexed Lanata. His
bowmen drew with him, and they all fired on his example. Half our arrows flew wide, for we were running over
uneven ground and the archers were winded. Others struck the bodywork of the
leading chariot, and the shafts snapped or pegged into the wood. Still other
arrows rattled off the bronzed plates that covered the chests of the horses. Only one arrow flew hard and true. From the great
bow Lanata it sang with the wind in its feathers, and struck the offside horse
in the forehead. The creature went down like a rockslide, tangling the traces
and dragging its team-mate down in a cloud of dust and kicking hooves. The
charioteers were hurled from the cockpit as the carriage somersaulted, and the
other chariots veered away to avoid the wreckage. A jubilant shout went up from
our ranks, and our pace picked up. This was our first success in all that
dreadful day, and it manned and encouraged our little band of Blues. 'On me, the Blues!' Tanus roared, and then,
incredibly, he began to sing. Immediately the men around him shouted the
opening chorus of the regimental battle hymn. Their voices were strained and
rough with thirst and effort, and there was little tune or beauty to it, but it
was a sound to lift the heart and thrill the blood. I threw back my head and
sang with them, and my voice soared clear and sweet. 'Horus bless you, my little canary,' Tanus laughed
at me, and we raced for the river. The chariots circled us with the first
wariness to their manoeuvres that they had demonstrated all that day. They had
seen the fate of their comrade. Then three of them swung across the front of
our tortoise, and in vee-formation charged at us head-on. 'Shoot at the heads of the beasts!' Tanus shouted,
and led them with an arrow that brought another horse crashing to its knees.
The chariot overturned and was smashed to pieces on the stony ground, and the
other vehicles in the formation veered away. As our formation passed the shattered chariot, some
of our men ran out to stab the squealing horses that were trapped in the
wreckage. Already they hated and feared these animals with an almost superstitious
dread, which was reflected in this vindictive piece of cruelty. They killed the
fallen charioteers also, but without the same rancour. With two of their chariots destroyed, the Hyksos
seemed reluctant to attack our little formation again, and we were rapidly
approaching the morass of muddy fields and flooded irrigation ditches that
marked the river-bank. I think that at that stage I was the only one of us who
realized that the wheeled enemy could not follow us into the swamp. Although I ran beside the king's litter, I could
see, through the gaps in our ranks, the dying acts of the battle that were
being played out around us. Ours was the only surviving detachment that still
showed any cohesion. The rest of the Egyptian army was a formless and terrified
rabble streaming across the plain. Most of them had thrown aside their weapons.
When one of the chariots drove at them, they dropped to their knees and held up
their hands in supplication. The Hyksos showed them no quarter. They did not
even waste arrows upon them but swung in close to chop them to tatters with the
spinning wheel-knives, or to lean out of the cockpit with the lance and cut
them down, or to smash in their skulls with the stone-headed maces. They
dragged the victim behind them, still spiked on the lance, until the barbed
spear-head disengaged, and only then did they leave the crumpled corpse lying
in their dust. I had never seen such butchery. I had never read of
anything like it in all the accounts of ancient battles. The Hyksos slaughtered
our people in their thousands and their tens of thousands. The plain of Abnub
was like a field of dhurra corn after the reapers had been through it with
their scythes. Our dead were piled in drifts and windows. For one thousand years our armies had been
invincible and our swords had triumphed across the world. Here on the field of
Abnub an age had come to an end. In the midst of this carnage the Blues sang,
and I with them though my eyes burned with tears of shame. The first irrigation ditch was just ahead when
another chariot formation swung out on our flank and came driving hard at us,
three abreast. Our arrows fell all about them, but they came on with the horses
blowing hard through gaping red mouths and with the drivers screaming
encouragement at them. I saw Tanus shoot twice, but each time his arrows were
deflected or were cheated by the erratic swerve and bounce of the chariots. The
formation thundered into us and broke the tortoise of interlocking shields. Two of the men carrying Pharaoh's litter were cut
to shreds by the wheel-knives, and the wounded king was tumbled to the earth. I
dropped to my knees beside him and covered him with my own body to protect him
from the Hyksos lances, but the chariots did not linger. It was then-concern
never to allow themselves to become entangled or surrounded. They raced on and
clear before our men could reach them with the sword. Only then did they wheel
and regroup, and come back. Tanus reached down and hauled me to my feet. 'If
you get yourself killed, who will be left to compose a hero's ode to us?' he
scolded trie, then he shouted for men. Between them they picked up the king's
litter and ran with it for the nearest ditch. I could hear the squeal of the chariot wheels
bearing down on us, but I never looked back. In ordinary circumstances I am a
strong runner, but now I outdistanced the litter-bearers as though their feet
were chained to the earth. I attempted to hurdle the ditch, but it was too wide
for me to cross in a single leap, and I landed knee-deep in the black mud. The
chariot that was following me struck the bank of the ditch and one of its
wheels shattered. The body of the vehicle toppled into the ditch and almost
crushed me, but I managed to throw myself aside. Swiftly the Blues stabbed and hacked the horses and
men as they lay helplessly in the mud, but I took the moment to wade back to
the chariot. The up-ended wheel was still spinning in the air. I
placed my hand upon it as I studied it, and let it rotate beneath my fingers. I
stood there only as long as it took me to draw three'deep breaths, but at the
end of that time I had learned as much about wheel construction as any Hyksos,
and had the first inkling of the improvements I could make to it. 'By Seth's melodious farts, Taita, you'll have us all
killed, if you start daydreaming now!' Kratas yelled at me. I shook myself and seized one of the recurved bows
from the rack on the side of the chariot body and an arrow from the quiver. I
wanted to examine these at my leisure. Then I waded across the ditch with them
in my hand, just as the squadron of chariots came thundering back, running
parallel to the ditch and firing their arrows down amongst us. The men carrying the king were a hundred paces
ahead of me, and I was the last of our little band. Behind me the charioteers
roared with frustration that they were unable to follow us, and they shot their
arrows around me as I ran. One of them struck my shoulder, but the point failed
to penetrate and the shaft glanced away. It left a purple bruise which I only
discovered much later. Although I had started from so far behind them, I
caught up with the litter-bearers by the time we reached the main bank of the
Nile. The river-bank was crowded with the survivors of the battle. Nearly all
of these were weaponless and very few were unwounded. They were all driven by a
single desire, to return as swiftly as possible to the ships that had brought
them down-river from Thebes. Tanus singled me out and called me to him as the
litter-bearers came up. 'I place Pharaoh in your hands now, Taita. Take him on
board the royal barge and do all you can to save his life.' 'When will you come aboard?' I asked him. 'My duty is here, with my men. I must save all of
them mat I can, and get them embarked.' He turned from me and strode away,
picking out the captains and commanders from amongst his beaten rabble, and
shouting his orders. I went to the king and knelt beside the Utter. He
was still alive. I examined him briefly and found that he hovered on the edge
of consciousness. His skin was as clammy-cold as that of a reptile, and his
breathing was shallow. There was only a thin rime of blood around that
arrow-shaft which had seeped up from the wound, but when I laid my ear to his
chest I heard the blood bubbling in his lungs with each breath he drew, and a
thin red snake of it crawled from his mouth down his chin. I knew that whatever
I could do to save him, I must do quickly. I shouted for a boat to take him out
to the barge. The litter-bearers lifted him into the skiff, and I
sat in the bilges beside him as we sculled out to where the great state barge
lay anchored in the main flow of the current. THE KING'S SUITE CROWDED THE SHIP'S side to watch
us approach. There was a gaggle of the royal women and all those courtiers and
priests who had taken no part in the fighting. I recognized my mistress
standing amongst them as we drew closer. Her face was very anxious and pale,
and she held her young son by his hand. As soon as those on board the barge looked down
into our skiff and saw the king on his litter, with the blood on his face that
I had been unable to wipe away, a terrible cry of alarm and mourning went up
from them. The women keened and wailed, and the men howled with despair, like
dogs. Of all the women> my mistress stood closest at
hand as the king was lifted up the ship's side and his Utter laid on the deck.
As the senior wife, hers was the duty to attend him first. The others gave her
space as she stooped over him and wiped the mud and the blood from his haggard
face. He recognized her, for I heard him breathe her name and ask for his son.
My mistress called the prince to him, and he smiled softly and tried to raise
his hand to touch the boy, but he did not have the strength, and the hand
dropped back to his side. I ordered the crew to carry Pharaoh to his
quarters, and my mistress came to me quickly and asked low and urgently, 'What
of Tanus? Is he safe? Oh, Taita, tell me that he is not slain by this dreadful
enemy!' 'He is safe. Nothing can harm him. I have given you
the vision of the Mazes. All this was foreseen. But now I must go to the king,
and I will need your help. Leave Memnon with his nursemaids, and come with me.' I was still black and crusted with river mud, and
so was Pharaoh, for he had fallen in the same ditch as I had. I asked Queen
Lostris and two of the other royal women to strip and bathe him and lay him on
fresh white linen sheets, while I returned to the deck to bathe in buckets of
river water that the sailors hauled up over the side. I never operate in filth,
for I have found by experience that for some reason it affects the patient
adversely and favours the accumulation of the morbid humours. While I was thus occupied, I was watching the east
bank where our broken army was huddled behind the protection of ditch and
swamp. This sorry rabble had once been a proud and mighty force, and I was
filled with shame and fear. Then I saw the tall figure of Tanus striding
amongst them, and wherever he moved, the men stood up out of the mud, and
reassembled into the semblance of military discipline. Once I even caught the
sound of ragged and unconvincing cheers on the wind. If the enemy should send their infantry through the
swamps now, the slaughter and the rout would be complete. Not a man of all our
mighty army would survive, for even Tanus would be able to offer little
resistance. However, although I peered anxiously into the east, I could make
out no sign of infantry shields in phalanx or the sparkle of advancing
spear-heads at the shoulder-slope. There was still that terrible dust-cloud hanging
over the plain of Abnub, so the chariots were at work out there, but without
enemy infantry falling upon him, Tanus could still salvage some little comfort
out of this dreadful day. It was a lesson I was to remember, and which stood us
in good stead in the years ahead. Chariots might win the battle, but only the
foot-soldiers could consolidate it. The battle out there on the river-bank was now
entkely Tanus' affair, while I had another battle to fight with death in the
cabin of the state barge. 'WE ARE NOT ENTIRELY WITHOUT HOPE,' I whispered to
my mistress, when I returned to the king's side. 'Tanus is rallying his troops,
and if any man alive is capable of saving this very Egypt from the Hyksos, he
is the one.' Then I turned to the king, and for the moment all else was
forgotten but my patient. As is often my way, I murmured my thoughts aloud as
I examined the wound. It was less than an hour, measured by a water-clock,
since the fateful arrow had struck, and yet the flesh around the broken-off
stub'of the shaft was swollen and empurpled. 'The arrow must come out. If I leave the barb in
there, he will be dead by tomorrow's dawn.' I had thought the king could no
longer hear me, but as I spoke, he opened his eyes and looked directly into
mine. 'Is there a chance that I will live?' he asked. 'There is always a chance.' I was glib and
insincere. I heard it in my own voice, and the king heard it also. "Thank you, Taita. I know you will strive for
me, and I absolve you now from all blame, if you should fail.' This was
generous of him, for many physicians before me have felt the strangling-rope as
punishment for letting the life of a king slip through their fingers. "The head of the arrow is deeply lodged. There
will be a great deal of pain, but I will give you the powder of the Red
Shepenn, the sleeping-flower, to still it.' 'Where is my senior wife, Queen Lostris?' he asked,
and my mistress replied immediately, 'I am here, my lord.' 'There is aught that I would say. Summon all my
ministers and my scribes, that my proclamation may be witnessed and recorded.'
They crowded into the hot little cabin and stood in silence. Then Pharaoh reached out to my mistress. 'Take my
hand, and listen to my words,' he ordered, and she sank down beside him and did
as she was ordered, while the king went on speaking in a soft and breathless
whisper. 'If I should die, Queen Lostris will stand as
regent for my son. I have learned in the time that I have known her that she is
a person of strength and good sense. If she were not, I would not have laid
this charge upon her.' 'Thank you, Great Egypt, for your trust,' Queen
Lostris murmured low, and now Pharaoh spoke directly to her, although every
person in the cabin could hear him. 'Surround yourself with wise and honest men.
Instruct my son in all the virtues of kingship that you and I have
discussed.'You know my mind on all these matters.' 'I will, Majesty.' 'When he is old enough to take up the flail and the
crook, do not attempt to withhold it from him. He is my lineage and my
dynasty.' 'Willingly I shall do what you order, for he is not
only the son of his father, but my son also.' 'While you rule, rule wisely and care for my people.
There will be many who seek to wrest the emblems of kingship from your
grasp—not only this new and cruel enemy, (his Hyksos, but others who stand even
closer to your throne. But you must oppose them all. Keep the double crown
intact for my son.' ‘Even as you say, divine Pharaoh.' The king fell silent for a while and I thought that
he had slipped over the edge into unconsciousness, but suddenly he groped for
the hand of my mistress again. 'There is one last charge I have for you. My tomb
and my temple are incomplete. Now they are threatened, as is all my realm, by
this terrible defeat that we have suffered. Unless my generals can stop them,
these Hyksos will sweep on to Thebes.' 'Let us petition the gods that it does not come to
pass,' my mistress murmured. 'I charge you most strictly that you will see me
embalmed and interred with all my treasure in accordance with the strictest
protocols of the Book of the Dead.' My mistress was silent. I think that she realized even
then just what an onerous charge this was that Pharaoh had laid upon her. His grip upon her hand tightened until his knuckles
turned white, and she winced. 'Swear this to me on your own life and hope for
immortality. Swear it before my ministers of state and all my royal suite.
Swear it to me in the name of Hapi, your patron god, and on the names of the
blessed trinity, Osiris and Isis and Horus.' Queen Lostris looked across at me with a piteous
appeal in her eyes. I knew that once she had given it, she would honour her
word at all and any cost to herself. In this, she was like her lover. She and
Tanus were bound by the same code of chivalry. I knew also that those close to
her must expect to pay the same price. An oath to theking now might one day return
to burden us all, Prince Memnon and the slave Taita included. And yet there was
no manner in which she could gainsay the king as he lay upon his death-bed. I
nodded to her almost imperceptibly. Later I would examine the finer points of
this oath, and like a law scribe I would mould it a little closer to reasonable
interpretation. 'I swear on Hapi, and on all the gods,' Queen
Lostris said, softly but clearly, and there would be a hundred times in the
years ahead when I would wish she had not done so. The king sighed with satisfaction and let her hand
slip from his. 'Then I am ready for you, Taita. And for whatever fate the gods
have decreed. Only let me kiss my son once more.' While they brought our fine young prince to him, I
drove the crowd of nobles from the cabin with little ceremony. Then I prepared
a draught of the Red Shepenn for him and made it as strong as I dared, for I
knew that pain could undo all my best efforts and destroy my patient as swiftly
as a slip of my scalpel. When he had drunk it all, I waited for the pupils
of his eyes to contract to pinpoints, and for the lids to droop over them. Then
I sent the prince away with his nursemaids. ON LEAVING THEBES I HAD EXPECTED TO have to deal
with arrow wounds, so I had brought my spoons with me. I had designed this
instrument myself, although there was a quack in Gaza and another in Memphis
who both claimed it was their invention. I blessed the spoons and my scalpels
in the lamp flame, and then washed my hands in hot wine. 'I do not think it is wise to use one of your
spoons when the head of the arrow is so deep and so near the heart,' my
mistress told me as she watched my preparations. There are occasions when she
speaks as though the student had outpaced the master. 'If I leave the arrow, it will certainly mortify. I
will have killed him just as surely as if I had chopped his head off his
shoulders. This is the only way that I will have a chance of saving him.' For a moment we looked into each other's eyes, and
we spoke without words. This was the vision of the Mazes of Ammon-Ra. Did we
wish to avoid the benevolent consequences to ourselves? 'He is my husband. He is Pharaoh.' My mistress took
my hand to emphasize her words. 'Save him, Taita. Save him, if you can.' 'You know that I will,' I answered. 'Do you need me to help you?' She had assisted me
so very often before. I nodded my assent, and stooped over the king. There were three ways that I might have attempted
to withdraw the arrow. The first would be to pluck it out. I have heard of a
surgeon in Damascus who bends down the supple branch of a tree and attaches
this to the shaft When lie releases the branch, the arrow is whipped out of the
living flesh by the strength of the sapling. I have never tried such brutal
treatment for I am convinced that very few men would survive it. The second method would be to push the arrow
through the limb or the torso until the barbed head emerges on the far side. To
achieve this, it can be driven along its original path with a mallet, like a
nail through a plank. Then the barb is sawn off and the shaft drawn free. This
treatment is almost as brutal as the first. My method is the Taita spoon. I have named the
spoon after myself in all modesty, for the claims of those others are spurious,
and posterity needs to be informed of my genius. Firstly, I examined the Hyksos arrow that I had
salvaged along with the bow from the overturned chariot. I was surprised to
find that the arrow-head was of worked flint rather than of bronze. Of course,
flint is cheaper and easier to pro-sure in quantity, but I have seldom known a
general who tries |o economize when setting out to seize a kingdom. This flint
i«sow-head spoke eloquently of the Hyksos' limited resources, and suggested a
reason for his savage attack upon :: this very Egypt. Wars are fought for land
or wealth, and it seemed that the Hyksos was short of both these commodities. I had to hope that the arrow-head buried in
Pharaoh's breast was of the same shape and design. I matched a pair of my
spoons to the razor-edged piece of stone. My spoons are of various sizes, and I
selected a pair that enclosed the head snugly, masking the wicked barbs with
smoothly polished metal. By this time, the drug had worked its full magic,
and Pharaoh lay unconscious upon his cloud-white linen sheets, with the
snapped-off arrow standing out as far as my forefinger from the skin, which was
wrinkled with age and covered with the frosted curls of his body hain I laid my
ear on his chest once more and heard his breath sigh and gurgle in his lungs. Satisfied
that he still lived, I greased the spoons that I had selected with mutton fat,
to lubricate their entry into the wound. I laid the spoons close at hand and
took up one of my keenest scalpels. I nodded to the four strong guards that Queen
Lostris had selected for me while I was busy with my preparations, and they
took hold of Pharaoh's wrists and ankles and held him down firmly. Queen
Lostris sat at the king's head and placed the wooden tube from my medical chest
between his lips and deep back into his throat. This would keep his windpipe
clear and open. It would also prevent him from biting or swallowing his own
tongue, or grinding his teeth together and snapping them off, when the pain
assaulted him too fiercely. 'First I have to enlarge the wound around the shaft
to enable me to reach the head of the arrow,' I muttered to myself, and I
pressed the point of the scalpel down along the line of the shaft. Pharaoh's
whole body stiffened, but the men held him down remorselessly. I worked swiftly, for I have learned that speed is
crucial in an operation of this nature, if the patient is to survive. I opened
a slit on each side of the shaft. The human skin is tough and elastic and would
inhibit the entry of the spoons, so I had to get through it. I dropped the knife and took up the pair of
lubricated spoons. Using the arrow-shaft as a guide, I eased them deeper and
deeper into the wound, until only the long handles' still protruded. By this time Pharaoh was writhing and twisting in
the grip of his restrainers. Sweat was pouring from every pore of his skin, and
running back over his shaven skull with its stubble of thin grey hair. His
screams rang through the tube in his mouth, and reverberated through the hull
of the barge. I had taught myself to ignore the agonized distress
of my patients, and I slid the spoons deeper into the widely distended mouth of
the wound until I felt them touch the flint of the arrow-head. This was the
delicate part of the operation. Using the handles like a pair of tweezers, I
levered the spoons apart and worked them over the arrow-head. When I felt them
close of their own accord, I hoped that I had entirely enclosed the coarse
flint and masked the barbs. I took a careful grasp of the handles of the spoons
and of the reed shaft of the arrow, and pulled back on them all together. If
the barbs were still free, they would have immediately snagged in Pharaoh's
flesh and resisted my pull. I could have shouted aloud with relief as I felt it
all begin ter yield. Still, the suction of the wet and clinging flesh was
considerable, and I had to use all my strength to draw the shaft. Pharaoh's agony was dreadful to hear and behold, as
the mass of reed and stone and metal was dragged through his chest. The Red
Shepenn drug had long ago ceased to be of any effect, and the pain was raw and
savage. I knew I was doing fearful damage, and I could feel tissue and sinew
tearing. My own sweat ran down into my eyes and burned and
half-blinded me, but I never released my pull until suddenly the blood-smeared arrow
came free in my hands and I staggered backwards across the cabin and crashed
into the bulkhead. I leaned against it for a moment, exhausted with the effort.
I watched the dark, half-congealed blood trickle and spurt from the wound for a
long moment, before I could rally myself and stagger back to stem it. , I
smeared the wound with precious myrrh and crystallized honey, and then bound it
up tightly with clean linen bandages. As I worked, I recited the incantation
for the binding Up of wounds: I bind thee up, oh creature of Seth. I stop up thy mouth. Retreat before me, red tide. Retire before me, red flower of death. I banish you, oh red dog of Seth. This was the recitation for a bleeding wound caused
by blade or arrow. There are specific verses for all types of wound, from burns
to those inflicted by the fangs or claws of a lion. Learning these is a large
part of the training of a physician. I am never certain in my own mind as to
just how efficacious these incantations are; however, I believe that I owe it
to my patients to employ any possible means at my disposal for their cure. In the event, Pharaoh seemed much easier after the
bind-ing-up, and I could leave him sleeping in the care of his women and go
back on deck. I needed the cool river airs to revive me, for the operation had
drained me almost as much as it had Pharaoh. By this time it was evening, and the sun was
settling wearily upon the stark western hills and throwing its last ruddy glow
over the battlefield. There had been no assault by the Hyksos infantry, and
Tanus was still bringing off the remains of his vanquished army from the
river-bank to the galleys anchored in the stream. I watched the boatloads of wounded and exhausted
men passing our anchored barge, and I felt a deep compassion for them, as I did
for all our people. This would be for ever the most dire day in our history.
Then I saw that the dust-cloud of the Hyksos chariots was already beginning to
move southwards towards Thebes. The clouds were incarnadined by the sunset to the
colour of blood. It was for me a sign, and my compassion turned to dread. IT WAS DARK BY THE TIME THAT TANUS himself came
aboard the state barge. In the light of the torches he looked like one of the
corpses from the battlefield. He was pale with fatigue and dust. His cloak was
stiff with dried blood and mud, and there were dark, bruised shadows under his
eyes. When he saw me, his first concern was to ask after Pharaoh. 'I have removed the arrow,' I told him. 'But the
wound I is deep and near the heart. He is very weak, but if he survives three
days, then I will be able to save him.' 'What of your mistress and her son?' He always
asked this, whenever we met. 'Queen Lostris is tired, for she helped me with the
operation. But she is with the king now. The prince is as bonny as ever and
sleeps now with his nurses.' I saw Tanus reel on his feet, and knew that he was
close to the end of even his great strength. 'You must rest now—' "t
began, but he shook off my hand. 'Bring lamps here,' he ordered. 'Taita, fetch your
writing-brushes and ink-pots and scrolls. I must send a warning to Nembet, lest
he walk into the Hyksos trap even as I did.' So Tanus and I sat half that night on the open
deck, and this was the despatch for Nembet that he dictated to me: I greet you Lord Nembet, Great Lion of Egypt,
Commander of the Ra division of the army of Pharaoh. May you live for ever! Know you that we have encountered the enemy Hyksos
at the plain of Abnub. The Hyksos in his strength and ferocity is a terrible
foe, and possessed of strange, swift craft that we cannot resist. Know you further that we have suffered a defeat and
that our army is destroyed. We can no longer oppose the Hyksos. Know you further that Pharaoh is gravely wounded
and in danger of his life. We urge you not to meet the Hyksos in an open
field, for his craft are like the wind. Therefore take refuge behind walls of
stone, or wait aboard your ships, to turn the enemy aside. The Hyksos has no ships of his own, and it is by
means of our ships alone that we may prevail against him. We urge you to await our coming before committing
your forces to battle. I call the protection of Horus and all the gods
down upon you. It is Tanus, Lord Harrab, Commander of the Ptah division
of the army of Pharaoh, who speaks thus. I wrote out four copies of this message, and as I
completed each, Tanus called for messengers to carry them to the Lord Nembet,
Great Lion of Egypt, who was advancing from the south to reinforce us. Tanus sent
two fast galleys speeding up-river, each with a fair copy of the despatches.
Then he put his best runners ashore on the west bank, the opposite side of the
river from the Hyksos army, and sent them off to find Nembet. 'Surely one of your scrolls will win through to
Nembet. You can do no more until morning,' I reassured him. 'You must sleep
now, for if you destroy yourself, then all of Egypt is destroyed with you.' Even then he would not go to a cabin, but curled on
the deck like a dog, so that he could be instantly ready for any new emergency.
But I went to the cabin to be near my king " and to give comfort to my
mistress. I was on deck again before the first glimmer of
dawn. I arrived to hear Tanus giving orders to burn our fleet. It was not for
me to question this decision, but he saw me gape incredulously at him, and when
the messengers had been sent away he told me brusquely, 'I have just received
the roll-call from my regimental commanders. Of the thirty thousand of my men
who stood yesterday on the plain of Abnub to meet the chariots of the Hyksos,
only seven thousand remain. Five thousand of those are wounded, and many will
still die. Of those who are unwounded, very few are sailors. I am left with
only sufficient men to work half our j fleet. I must abandon the rest of our
ships, but I cannot let them fall into the hands of the Hyksos.' They used bundles of reeds to start the fires, and
once they were set, they burned fiercely. It was a sad and terrible sight to
watch, even for me and my mistress, who were not sailors. For Tanus it was far
worse. He stood alone in the bows of the state barge, with despair and grief in
every line of his face and in the set of those wide shoulders, as hewatched his
ships bum. For him they were living things, and beautiful. Before all the court my mistress could not go to
his side where she belonged, but she took my hand surreptitiously, and the two
of us mourned for Tanus and for all Egypt as we watched those gallant craft
burn like torches. The roaring pillars of flame from each vessel were sullied
with black smoke, but still their ruddy light rivalled the approach of the
sunrise. At last Tanus gave the order to his hundred
remaining galleys to weigh anchor, and our little fleet, laden with wounded and
dying men, turned back into the south. Behind us, the smoke from the funeral pyre of our
fleet stood high into the early morning sky, while ahead of us fee yellow
dust-cloud stretched taller and wider along the east bank of the Nile as the
chariot squadrons of the Hyksos drove deeper into the Upper Kingdom, towards
helpless Thebes and all her treasures. It seemed that the gods had turned their backs on
Egypt and deserted us completely, for the wind, which usually blew so strongly
from the north at this season of the year, died away completely, and then
sprang up again with re--newed vigour from the south. Thus we were forced to
contend with both current and wind, and our ships were deeply laden with their
cargoes of wounded. We were slow and heavy in the water, with the depleted
crews slaving at the oars. We could not keep pace with the Hyksos army, and it
drew away from us inexorably. I was absorbed with my duties as physician to the
king. However, on every other vessel in the fleet, men whom I could have saved
were dying in their scores. Every time that I went on deck for a little fresh air and a short
break from my vigil at the bedside of Pharaoh, I saw corpses being thrown over
the side of the other galleys near us. At each splash there was a swirl of crocodiles beneath the
surface. Those awful reptiles followed the fleet like vultures. Pharaoh rallied strongly, and on the second day I
was able to feed him a small bowl of broth. That evening he asked to see the
prince again, and Memnon was brought to him. Memnon was already at the age when he was as
restless as a grasshopper and as noisy as a flock of starlings. Pharaoh had
always been good with the boy, if inclined to over-indulgence, and Memnon
delighted in his company. Already he was a beautiful boy, with clean, strong limbs
and his mother's skin and great dark green eyes. His hair was curled like the
pelt of a new-born black lamb, but in the sunlight, it was sparked with the
flames of Tanus's ruddy mop. Pharaoh's delight in Memnon was even more poignant
than usual. The child and the promise that he had wrung from my mistress were
his hope of immortality. Against my wishes he kept the child with him until
after.sunset. I knew that Memnon's boundless energy and his demands for
attention were tiring the king, but I could not intervene until it was time for
the prince's supper and he was led away by his nurses. My mistress and I stayed on at the king's bedside,
but he fell almost instantly into a death-like sleep. Even without his white
make-up, he was as pale as the linen sheets on which he lay. The next day was the third since the wounding, and
therefore the most dangerous. If he could survive this day, then I knew I could
save him. But when I woke in the dawn the cabin was thick with the musky stench
of corruption. When I touched Pharaoh's skin, it burned my fingers like a
kettle from the hearth. I called for my mistress, and she came stumbling
through from her alcove behind the curtain where she slept. 'What is it, Taita?' She got no further, for the
answer was plain upon my face. She stood beside me as I unbound the wound. The
binding-up is a high art of the surgeon's skills, and I had sewn the linen
bandages hi place. Now I snipped the threads that held them and peeled them
away. 'Merciful Hapi, pray for him!' Queen Lostris gagged
at the stench. The crusted black scab that corked the mouth of the wound burst
open, and thick green pus poured out in a slow and viscous stream. 'Mortification!' I whispered. This was the
surgeon's nightmare, this evil humour that struck upon the third day and spread
through the body like winter fire in the dry papyrus beds. 'What can we do?' she asked, and I shook my head. 'He will be dead before nightfall,' I told her, but
we waited beside his bed for the inevitable. As the word spread through the
ship that Pharaoh was dying, so the cabin filled with priests and women and
courtiers. We waited hi silence. Tanus was the last to arrive, and he stood at the
back of the throng with his helmet under his arm, in the position of respect
and mourning. His gaze rested not on the death-bed, but upon Queen Lostris. She
kept her face averted from his, but I knew that she was aware of him in every
fibre of her body. She covered her head with an embroidered linen
shawl, but above the waistband of her skirt, she was naked. Since Ihe prince
had been weaned, her breasts had lost their heavy burden of milk. She was as
slim as a virgin, and childbirth had not scarred her bosom or her supple belly
with silver lines of striae. Her skin was as smooth and unblemished as though
it had been freshly anointed with perfumed oil. I laid wet cloths upon
Pharaoh's burning body in an attempt to cool the fever, but the heat evaporated
the moisture and I was forced to change them at short intervals. Pharaoh tossed
about restlessly and cried out in delirium, haunted by all the terrors and
monsters of the other world, who waited to receive him. At times he recited snatches from the Book of the
Dead. From childhood the priests had taught him to memorize the book that was
the key and the map through the shades to the far fields of paradise: The crystal path has twenty-one turnings. The narrow way is thin as the blade of bronze. The goddess who guards the second pylon is treacherous and her ways are devious. Lady of flame, whore of the universe, with the mouth of a lioness, your vagina swallows men up, they are lost in your milky dugs. Gradually his voice and his movements became weaker,
a little after the sun had made its noon, he gave one t shuddering sigh and was
still. I stooped over him and : for the life-throb in his throat, but there was
none, and skin was cooling under my touch. 'Pharaoh
is dead,' I said softly, and closed the lids over his staring eyes. 'May he
live for ever!' The mourning cry went up from all who were
assembled there, and my mistress led the royal women in the wild ululation of
grief. It was a sound mat chilled me and made invisible insects crawl upon my skin,
so I left the cabin as soon as I was able. Tanus followed me out on to the deck
and seized my arm. 'You did all in your power to save him?' he
demanded roughly. 'This was not another of your devices?' I knew that this unkind treatment of me was an expression
of his own guilt and fear, so I was gentle in my reply. 'He was slain by the
Hyksos arrow. I did all that was in my power to save him. It was the destiny of
the Mazes of Am-mon-Ra, and there is no guilt or fault in any of us.' He sighed and placed one strong arm around my
shoulders. 'I had not foreseen any of this. I thought only of my love for the
queen and for our son. I should rejoice that she is free, but I cannot. Too
much is lost and destroyed. All of us are merely grains of dhurra corn in the
grinding-mill of the Mazes.' "There will be a time of happiness for all of
us hereafter," I reassured him, although I had no basis for this claim.
'But there is still a sacred duty on my mistress, and through her, on you and
me also.' And I reminded him of the oath that Queen Lostris had sworn to the
king, that she would preserve his earthly body and give it proper burial to
allow his Ka to move on to the fields of paradise. 'Tell me how I can help in this,' Tanus replied
simply, 'but remember that the Hyksos is sweeping through the Upper Kingdom
ahead of us, and I cannot guarantee that Pharaoh's tomb will not be violated.' "Then, if needs be, we must find another tomb
for him. Our first concern must be to preserve his body. In this heat it will
be decaying and crawling with maggots before the sun sets. I am not skilled in
the embalmer's art, but I know of only one way in which we can keep our trust.' Tanus sent his sailors down into the barge's hold,
and they swung up one of the huge clay jars of pickled olives from our stores.
Then, under my instructions, he emptied the jar and refilled it with boiling
water. While the water was still hot, he mixed into it three sacks of the
finest-quality sea salt. Then he filled four smaller wine jars with the same brine
and set them all out on the deck to cool. In the meantime I was working alone in the cabin.
My mistress had wanted to help me. She felt that it was part of her duty to her
dead husband, but I sent her away to care for the prince. I slit open Pharaoh's corpse down his left flank
from ribs to hip-bone. Through this opening I removed the contents of chest and
belly, freeing them along the diaphragm with the knife. Naturally, I left his
heart in place, for this is the organ of life and intelligence. I left the
kidneys also, for these are the vessels of water and represent the sacred Nile.
I packed the cavity with salt and then sutured it closed with cat-gut. I did
not have an embalming-spoon to push up through the nostrils and remove that
soft yellow mush from the gourd of the skull, so I left it in place. In any
event, it was of no importance. The viscera I divided into its separate parts:
liver, lungs, stomach and entrails. I washed out the stomach and intestines
with brine, which was a loathsome task. When this was done, I took the opportunity to
examine the king's lungs minutely. The right lung was healthy and pink, but the
left lung had been pierced by the arrow, and had collapsed like a punctured
bladder. It was filled with rotten black blood and pus. I was amazed that trie
old man had lived so long with such an injury. I felt that I was absolved. No
physician could have saved him, and there was no fault or failure in my
treatment. At last I ordered the sailors to bring in the
cooled jars of brine. Tanus helped me to fold Pharaoh's body into the foetal
position and we placed him in the olive vat. I made certain that he was
completely immersed in the strong brine. We packed his viscera into the smaller
Canopic wine jars. We sealed all the jars with pitch and wax, and lashed them
securely into the reinforced compartment below decks in which the king stored
his treasure. I think Pharaoh must have been content to rest thus, surrounded
by gold and bars of silver. I had done my best to help my mistress make good her
vow. In Thebes I would hand the king's body over to the embalmers, if the
Hyksos had not arrived there first, and if the city and its inhabitants still
existed by the time we reached it. WHEN WE REACHED THE WALLED CITY of Asyut, it was apparent
that the Hyksos had left only a small force to invest it, and had continued
southwards with their main army. Even though it was merely a detachment with
less than a hundred chariots, the Hyksos besiegers were far too strong for us
to attack them with our decimated army. Tanus' main aim was to rescue Remrem and his five
thousand, who were within the city walls, and then to push on up-river to join
forces with Lord Nembet and his thirty thousand reinforcements. Anchored out in
the main stream of the river, secure from attack by those deadly chariots,
Tanus was able to signal his intentions to Remrem on the city walls. Years before, I had helped Tanus draw up a system
of signals, using two coloured flags by means of which he could spell out a
message to any other within sight, across a valley, from peak to peak, or from
city wall to plain and river. With the flags Tanus was able to warn Remrem to
be ready for us that night. Then, under cover of darkness, twenty of our
galleys raced into the beach below the city walls. At the same moment, Remrem
threw open the side-gates, and, at the head of his regiment, fought his way
through the Hyksos pickets. Before the enemy were able to harness their horses,
Remrem and all his men were safely embarked. Immediately, Tanus signalled the rest of the
flotilla to weigh anchor. He abandoned the city of Asyut to sack and plunder,
and we bore on upstream under oars. For the rest of that night, whenever we
looked back over the stern, we saw the flames of the burning city lighting the
northern horizon. 'Let those poor bastards forgive me,' Tanus
muttered to me. 'I had no choice but to sacrifice them. My duty lies south of
here in Thebes.' He was soldier enough to make the hard choice
without flinching, but man enough to grieve bitterly over it. I admired him
then as much as I loved him. REMREM TOLD US THAT OUR SIGNAL frigates had sailed
past Asyut the previous day, and that by now the despatches that I had drawn up
on Tanus' behalf must be in Lord Nembet's hands. Remrem was also able to give us some intelligence
and news of the Hyksos, and his sweep to the south. Remrem had captured two
Egyptian deserters and traitors who had gone over to the enemy and who had
entered Asyut to spy on the defenders. Under torture they had howled like the
jackals they were, and before they died, had told Remrem much about the Hyksos
that was of value and interest to us. The Hyksos king, whom we had so disastrously
encountered on the plain of Abnub, was named Salitis. His tribe was of Semitic
blood and originally a nomadic and pastoral people who had lived in the Zagros
mountains near Lake Van. In this my first impression of these terrible Asians
was confirmed. I had guessed at their Semitic origins from their features, but
I wondered how a pastoral people had evolved such an extraordinary vehicle as a
wheeled chariot, and where they had found that marvellous animal that we
Egyptians now spoke of as a horse, and feared as though it were a creature from
the underworld. In other areas it seemed that the Hyksos were a
backward people. They were unable to read or write, and their government was a
harsh tyranny by their single king and ruler, this bearded Salitis. We
Egyptians hated him and feared him even more than we did those wild creatures
that drew his chariot. The chief god of the Hyksos was named Sutekh, the
god of storms. It needed no deep religious instruction to recognize in him our
own dreaded Seth. Their choice of god was fitting, and their behaviour did the
god honour. No civilized people would burn and plunder and
murder as they did. The fact that we torture traitors cannot be weighed in the
same scale as the atrocities committed by these barbarians. It is a truth that I have often observed, that a
nation chooses its gods to suit its own nature. The Philistines worship Baal,
and cast live infants into the fiery furnace that is his mouth. The black
Cushite tribes worship monsters and creatures from the underworld with the most
bizarre rituals. We Egyptians worship just and decent gods who are benevolent
towards mankind and make no demands for human sacrifice. Then the Hyksos have
Sutekh. It seemed that Remrem's captives were not the only
Egyptian traitors travelling with the enemy host. With a hot coal in his anus,
one of Remrem's captives had told of some great Egyptian lord from the Upper
Kingdom who sat upon King Salitis' war council. When I heard this, I remembered
how I had wondered at the knowledge that the Hyksos had displayed of our order
of battle upon the plain of Abnub. I had guessed then at the presence of a spy
among them who knew our secrets. If any of this was true, then we must expect that
the enemy knew all our strengths and weaknesses. They must know the plans and
defences of all our cities. Especially they would know of that rich treasure
that Pharaoh had accumulated in his funerary temple. 'Perhaps this explains the haste with which King
Salitis is driving on towards Thebes,' I suggested to Tanus. 'We can expect
them to attempt a crossing of the Nile at the first opportunity that presents
itself to them.' And Tanus cursed bitterly. 'If Horus is kind, he will deliver this traitorous
Egyptian lord into my hands.' He punched his fist into the palm of his other
hand. 'We must prevent Salitis from crossing the river, our ships are the only
advantage that we hold over him. I must exploit them to full advantage.' He stamped about the deck, and looked up at the
sky. 'When will this foul wind swing back into the north? Every hour the
enemy's chariots draw farther ahead of us. Where is Nembet's fleet? We must
join our forces and hold the river-line.' THAT AFTERNOON ON THE POOP-DECK OF the royal barge
the state council of Upper Egypt convened before the throne. The high priest of
Osiris represented the spiritual body, Lord Merseket: the chancellor stood for
the temporal body of the: state, and Tanus, Lord Harrab stood for the military
authority. Between them the three lords lifted Queen Lostris
to the throne of this very Egypt, and placed her son upon her lap. While every
man and woman on board the barge raised their voices in a loyal salute, the
other ships of the fleet sailed past, and even the wounded soldiers dragged
themselves to the rail to cheer the new regent and the young heir to the great
throne of Egypt. The high priest of Osiris strapped the false beard
of the kingship upon my mistress's chain, and it did nothing to detract from
her beauty and manifest womanhood. Lord Merseket bound the lion's tail around
her waist and settled the tall red and white crown upon her brow. Finally, Tanus
mounted the throne to place the crook and golden flail to her hands. Now Memnon
saw the shining toys that Tanus carried towards him, and reached out to snatch
them from him. 'A king indeed! He knows the crook is his by
right,' Tanus applauded proudly, and the court roared their approval of this
precocious behaviour. I think this was the first time that any of us had
laughed since that dreadful day on the field of Abnub. It seemed to me that the
laughter was a catharsis, and that it marked a new beginning for all of us. Up
until that moment we had been overwhelmed by the shock of defeat and the loss
of Pharaoh. But now, as the great lords of Egypt went forward one at a time to
kneel before the throne on which sat this lovely young woman and her royal child,
a fresh spirit sprang up in all of us. We were rescued from the apathy of
despair, and our will to fight and to endure was resuscitated. Tanus was last
of all of them to kneel before the throne and swear his allegiance. As she
looked down upon him, Queen Lostris' adoration for him was so evident that it
suffused her lovely face and shone like the sunrise from those dark green eyes.
I was amazed that no other in all that throng seemed aware of it. That evening after the sun had set, my mistress
sent me to the bridge of the state barge with a message for the commander of
her armies. She summoned him to a council of war in the main cabin. This time
Tanus dared not refuse her, for he had very recently sworn an oath of
obedience. This extraordinary war council of which I was the
only witness had barely begun, before the new regent of Egypt imperiously
banished me from the cabin, and sent me to guard the door and turn away all
other visitors. The last glimpse that I had of them as I drew the heavy curtain
was as they fell into each other's arms. So great was their need, and so long
had they been denied, that they rushed at each other like deadly enemies
joining in mortal combat, rather than lovers. The happy sounds of this engagement persisted for
most of the night, and I was relieved that we were not at anchor but driving on
up-river in haste to join with Lord Nembet. The clunk and swish of the oars,
the boom of the drum setting the stroke and the chants of the rowers on their
benches almost drowned out the tumult in the royal cabin. When he came to the poop-deck at the change of the
night-watch, Tanus had the smile and the satisfied air of a general who had
just won a famous victory. My mistress followed him on deck shortly afterwards,
and she glowed with a new and ethereal beauty that startled even me, who was
accustomed to her loveliness. For the rest of that day she was loving and kind
to all around her, and found numerous occasions to consult the commander of her
army. Thus Prince Memnon and I were able to spend most of the day together, a
circumstance that suited both of us very well. With the prince's dubious assistance I had already
started carving a series of wooden models. One of these was a chariot and wooden
horses. Another was a wheel on an axle that I was experimenting with. Memnon stood on tiptoe to watch the wheel spin
smoothly on its miniature hub. 'A solid disc is too heavy, don't you agree, Mem?
See how swiftly it loses momentum and slows down.' 'Give it to me!' he demanded, and snatched at the
spinning disc. It flew form his chubby "fingers, dashed to the deck and
shattered into four almost equal segments. 'You are a Hyksos ruffian,' I told him sternly,
which he seemed to take as a great compliment, and I went down on my knees to
gather up my poor model. The broken segments still lay in a circular
pattern, and, before my hand touched them, I had a strange aberration of
vision. In the eye of my mind, the solid segments of wood became spaces, while the
cracks between them appeared solid. 'Sweet Breath of Horus! You've done it,
Mem.' I hugged him. 'A rim supported by struts from the hub! When you are
Pharaoh, what other miracles will you perform for us?' Thus did the Prince Royal, Memnon the first of that
name, Ruler of the Dawn—with just a little help from his friend— conceive of
the spoke wheel. Little did I dream then that one day the two of us together
would ride to glory upon it. WE CAME UPON THE FIRST OF THE EGYPTIAN dead before
noon. He came floating down the river with his bloated belly buoying him up,
and his face gazing blankly at the sky. There was a black crow perched upon his
chest. It picked out his eyes and threw back its head to swallow them one at a
time. In silence we stood at the ship's rail and watched
the dead man float serenely by. 'He wears the kilt of the Lion Guards,' Tanus said
quietly. 'The Lions are the spear-head of Nembet's army. I
pray to Horus that there will be no others following this one down the river.' But there were. Ten more, then a hundred. More and
still more, until the surface of the river from bank to bank was carpeted by
floating corpses. They were thick as the leaves of the water-hyacinth which
clog the irrigation canals in summer. At last we found one who still lived. He was a
captain of the Lion Guards who had been seconded to Nembet's staff. He clung to
a mat of floating papyrus stems in the current. We fished him from the water and I attended to his
wounds. The head of a stone mace had shattered the bones of his shoulder and he
would never use that arm again. When he had recovered sufficiently to speak, Tanus
squatted beside his mattress. 'What of Lord Nembet?' 'Lord Nembet is slain, and all his staff with him,'
the captain told him hoarsely. 'Did Nembet not receive my despatch warning him of
the Hyksos?' 'He received it on the eve of the battle, and he
laughed as he read it.' 'Laughed?' demanded Tanus. 'How could he laugh?' 'He said that the puppy was destroyed—forgive me,
Lord Tanus, but that was what he called you—and now sought to cover his
stupidity and cowardice with spurious messages. He said that he would fight the
battle in the classic manner.' "The arrogant old fool,' Tanus lamented. 'But
tell me the rest of it.' 'Lord Nembet deployed upon the east bank, with the
river at his back. The enemy fell upon us like the wind, and drove us into the
water.' 'How many of our men escaped?' Tanus asked softly. 'I believe that I am the only one of those who went
ashore with Lord Nembet who survived. I saw no other left alive. The slaughter
upon the river-bank was beyond my power to describe to you.' 'All our most famous regiments decimated,' Tanus
mourned. 'We are left defenceless, except for our ships. What happened to
Nembet's fleet? Was it anchored in midstream?' 'Lord Nembet anchored the greater part of the
fleet, but he beached fifty galleys in our rear.' 'Why would he do that?' Tanus stormed. 'The safety
of the ships is the first principle of our standard battle plan.' 'I do not know Lord Nembet's mind, except he may
have kept them at hand to re-embark our troops expeditiously, should your
warning have proved justified.' 'What then is the fate of our fleet? Nembet lost
our army, but did ,he save the ships?' Tanus' tone was rough with anger and
distress. 'Of the ships that were anchored in midstream, most
are scuttled and burned by the skeleton crews. I saw the flames and the smoke
even from where I lay on my papyrus float. A few of the others cut the
anchor-lines and fled south towards Thebes. I shouted to the crews as they
sailed past me, but so great was their terror that they would not heave-to and
pick me from the water.' 'The fifty ships that lay upon the beach—' Tanus
broke off and drew a deep breath before he finished the question. 'What has
become of the squadron that was beached?' 'It has fallen into the hands of the Hyksos.' The
captain trembled as he answered, for he dreaded Tanus' anger. 'I looked back as
I drifted with the current, and I saw the enemy swarming aboard the galleys on
the beach.' Tanus stood up and strode to the bows. He stared
upstream from where the corpses and the scorched and blackened planks of
Nembet's fleet still drifted down upon the steady green flow of the river. I
went to stand at his side, to be ready to halter his rage when it came. 'So the proud old fool has sacrificed his life, and
the lives of all his men, simply to spite me. They should build a pyramid to
his folly, for Egypt has never seen the like of it.' 'That is not all his folly,' I murmured, and Tanus
nodded grimly. 'No, not all his folly. He has given the Hyksos the
means to cross the river. Sweet milk of Isis' breast, but once they are across
the Nile we are truly finished.' Perhaps the goddess heard him call her name, for at
that moment I felt the wind that had blown so long into our faces veer. Tanus
felt it also. He spun on his heel and roared an order to his officers on the
poop-deck. "The wind turns fair. Make a general signal to
the fleet. Set all sail. Relieve the men at the oars every hour by the
water-clock. Drummers, increase the beat to flank speed. Make all haste
southwards.' The wind settled strongly into the north. Our sails
filled and stiffened like the bellies of pregnant women. The drums gave the
rowers the stroke, and we breasted the flow of the river as the whole
battle-fleet raced southwards. 'All thanks to the goddess for this wind,' Tanus
shouted. 'Divine Isis, let us be in time to catch them on the water.' THE STATE BARGE WAS SLOW AND UNGAINLY. She began
falling astern of the fleet. It seemed that the fates has intervened once more,
for Tanus' old galley that he had loved so well, the Breath ofHorus, was
sailing close to us in the formation. She was under a new captain now, but she was still
a formidable little vessel, built for speed and attack. The sharp bronze
ramming-horn protruded from her bows, just above the water line. Tanus hailed
her alongside the barge and transferred his Blue Crocodile standard into her,
taking over the command from her new captain. My place was with my mistress and the prince. I am
not certain how I found myself on board the Breath ofHorus, standing on the
poop beside Tanus, as we tore along upstream. Sometimes I am guilty of folly
almost as monumental as that recently demonstrated by Lord Nembet. I remember
only that as soon as the state barge began to fall away astern, I began
bitterly to regret my impetuosity. I thought of telling Tanus that I had
changed my mind, and asking him to put about and drop me once more on the deck of
the barge. But after one glance at his face, I decided that I would rather face
the Hyksos again. From the deck of the Breath of Horus, Tanus
issued his orders. By flag and voice-hail, they were passed from vessel to
vessel. Without slackening the pace of our advance, Tanus redeployed the fleet.
He gathered up the galleys around him, as he forged his way to the head of the
flotilla. The wounded and those no longer fit to fight were transferred
to the slower vessels which fell back to keep pace with the state barge. The
faster galleys in the van were cleared for action. They were manned mostly by
Remrem's fresh troops whom we had relieved from the siege of Asyut. They were
spoiling for a chance to avenge the disgrace of Abnub. Tanus hoisted the Blue
Crocodile standard at his masthead of the Breath of Horus, and they
roared with the lust of battle. How swiftly he had been able to stiffen their
spirit since that bloody defeat! The signs of Nembet's recent catastrophe became
ever more obvious with each league that we covered. The corpses and wreckage
and all the flotsam of war were stranded in the papyrus beds on each side of
the river. Then, at last, in the sky ahead of us we saw once again the dust of
the chariots mingling with the smoke from the cooking-fires of the Hyksos camp. 'It is as I had hoped,' Tanus exulted. 'They have
halted their headlong advance on Thebes, now that Nembet has presented them
with the means of crossing the river. But they are not sailors, and they will
have difficulty embarking their men and chariots. If Horus is kind, we will
arrive in time to help them on their way.' In extended battle order we swept around the last
wide bend of the river, and we found the Hyksos before us. By one of those
happy freaks of war, we had arrived precisely at the moment that they were
fully committed to the crossing of the Nile. There were the fifty captured galleys straggling
across the river in the most lubberly fashion. The sails and sheets were in a
tangle and every oarsman was keeping his own stroke. The paddles were splashing
and crab-catching. The steering of each vessel was shaky and erratic,
completely out of phase with the ships around it. We could see that most of the Hyksos manning the
decks were in full bronze armour. Clearly they had not realized just how
difficult it is to swim in that state of dress. They stared at us in
consternation as we bore down upon them. Now at last the roles were reversed.
We were in our element, and they were flying in the wind like a torn sail. I had a few moments to study the enemy, as we
closed. The vast bulk of the Hyksos army was still upon the east bank. They had
gone into bivouac, and they were so numerous that their encampment stretched
away to the foothills of the desert, as far as I could see from the deck of the
Breath of Horus. King Salitis was sending only a small force across
the river. Almost certainly they were under orders to race down the west bank
and to capture the funerary temple of Pharaoh Mamose, before we were able to
remove the treasure. We bore down rapidly on the convoy of Hyksos ships,
and I shouted to Tanus above the beat of the drums and the bloodthirsty cheers
of our rascals, "They have taken their horses across already. Look over
there!' Almost unprotected, except for a few armed guards,
there was a huge herd of these terrible animals gathered on the west bank. I
guessed there were several hundred of them; even at this distance, we could
make out their long, flowing manes and tails streaming in the strong north
wind. They were a disturbing sight to us. Some of the men around me shuddered
and swore with loathing of them. I heard one of them mutter darkly, 'The Hyksos
feed those monsters of theirs on human flesh, like tame lions or jackals. That
is the reason for this slaughter. They must have food for them. We can only
guess how many of our comrades are already in their bellies.' I could not contradict him, and I even had a queasy
feeling in my guts that he might be speaking the truth. I turned my attention
from those beautiful but gory monsters to the galleys in the stream ahead of
us. 'We have caught them taking the chariots and the
men over,' I pointed out to Tanus. The decks of Nembet's captured vessels were
piled high with chariots and equipment, and crowded with the Hyksos charioteers
who were being ferried across. As they realized their predicament, some of the
Hyksos tried to turn and run back for the east bank. They collided with the
ships that followed them, and locked together, they drifted helplessly on the
current. Tanus laughed savagely to see their confusion, and
shouted into the wind, 'General signal. Increase the beat to attack speed.
Light the fire-arrows.' The Hyksos had never experienced an attack with
fire-arrows, and at the thought of what was coming, I laughed with Tanus, but
nervously. Then suddenly I stiffened and my laughter choked off. !Tanus!' I seized his arm. 'Look! Look at the
galley dead ahead! On the poop. There is our traitor.' For a moment Tanus did not recognize the tall,
stately figure at the rail of the galley, for he wore fish-scale armour and a
tall Hyksos war helmet. Then abruptly he roared with anger and outrage, 'Intef!
Why did we not guess it was him?' 'I see it so clearly now. He has guided Salitis to
this very Egypt. He went east and deliberately tempted the Hyksos with accounts
of the treasures of Egypt.' My outrage and hatred matched those of Tanus. Tanus threw up the bow Lanata and loosed an arrow,
but the range was long and the point glanced off Lord Intef's armour. I saw his
head jerk round at the shock, and he looked across the water directly at us. He
singled us out, Tanus and myself, and for a moment I thought I saw fear in his
eyes. Then he ducked out of sight below the gunwale of the galley. Our leading squadron flew into the pack of confused
and milling shipping. With a tearing crunch, our bronze ramming-horn struck
Intef's galley amidships, and I was thrown off my feet by the impact. When I
struggled up again, the oarsmen had already backed water, and with another
rending screech of timbers we disengaged from the stricken ship. At the same time, our archers were pouring a heavy
rain of fire-arrows into her. The heads were bound with pitch-soaked papyrus
stems that burned like comets, each leaving a trail of sparks and smoke as they
flew into the sails and top hamper. The north wind fanned the flames and they
leaped up the rigging with a fiendish exuberance. The waters flooded in through the gaping hole we
had ripped in her belly, and she listed over sharply. The sails caught fire and
burned with startling rapidity. The heat singed my eyelashes even at that
distance. The heavy mainsail, burning fiercely, fluttered down over the deck, trapping
the crew and crowded charioteers beneath it. Their screams shrilled in our ears
as their hair and clothing burst into flames. I remembered the plain at Abnub
and felt no pity as they leaped in flames from the ship's side and were drawn
under by the weight of their armour. Only a swirl of ripples and a lingering
puff of steam marked where each of them had disappeared. All down the line, the Hyksos galleys were burning
and sinking. They had neither the experience nor the skill to counter our
attack, and they were as helpless as we had been before the assault of their
chariots. Our ships backed off and charged again, crushing in their hulls and
sending torrents of flaming arrows into them. I was watching the first galley that we had
attacked, seeking another glimpse of Lord Intef. She was almost gone when
suddenly he reappeared. He had thrown off his helmet and his armour, and wore
only a linen breech clout. He balanced easily on the gunwale of the sinking
ship, and then, as the flames reached out to embrace him, he joined his hands
above his head and dived overboard. He was a son of the Nile, at home in her waters. He
knifed through the surface, and came up a minute later and fifty paces from
where he had struck, with his long wet hair sleeked back, so that he looked
like a swimming otter. "There he goes!' I screamed at Tanus. 'Run the
swine under.' Instantly Tanus gave the order to turn the Breath
of Ho-rus, but quick as the helmsman was on the steering-oar, she was slow to
come around. Meanwhile, Lord Intef slipped through the water like a fish,
reaching out overarm for the east bank and the protection of his Hyksos allies. 'Swing hard!' Tanus signalled his starboard bank of
oars, and they thrust the bows around. As soon as we were on line with the
swimmer; JTanus gave the order to pull together, and we shot in pursuit. By now
Lord Intef was far ahead and close in to the bank, where five thousand Hyksos
archers waited with their long recurved bows strung and ready to give him
covering fire. 'Seth piss on them!' Tanus yelled in defiance. 'We
will take Intef out from under their noses.' And he drove the Breath of
Horus directly at them, bearing down upon the lone swimming figure. As we came within range of the shore, the Hyksos
loosed a volley at us that darkened the sky, and their arrows fell in a
whistling cloud around us. They dropped so thickly that the deck soon bristled
with them like the quills in a goose's wing, and some of our sailors were
struck and fell writhing and bleeding from their benches. But we were already close on Intef, and he looked
back over his shoulder and I saw the terror in his face as he realized he could
not escape our sharp prow. I ignored the arrows and ran to the bows to scream
down at him, 'I hated* you from the first day we met. I hated every loathsome
touch. I want to watch you die. You are evil! Evil!' He heard me. I saw it in his eyes, and then his
dark gods intervened yet again. One of the sinking Hyksos galleys drifted down
upon us, spouting fire and smoke. If she had touched us we would have gone up
with her in a tower of flame. Tanus was forced to put the steering-oar over,
and to signal urgently for his oarsmen to back-water. The burning galley
drifted between the shore and where we lay heaved-to. Lord Intef was hidden from
my view, but when the burning galley was past, I saw him again. Three brawny
Hyksos charioteers were dragging him from the water and up the steep bank. He paused at the top of the bank and looked back at
us, and then disappeared from sight, leaving me trembling with rage and
frustration. Our men were still being struck down by the falling arrows, so
Tanus gave the order, and we wheeled away and sped back to join in the
destruction of those few vessels of the convoy that were still afloat. As the last of these listed over and then rolled on
to her back, the green Nile waters poured into her and quenched the flames in a
hissing cloud of steam. Our archers leaned over the side and shot the few
surviving Hyksos who splashed weakly on the surface. Immediately they were all drowned, Tanus turned his
attention to the west bank and to the small party of the enemy and the herd of
horses that were stranded there. As our galley sped in to the shore, the Hyksos
herders scattered and ran, but our men leaped ashore, sword in hand, and raced
after them! The Hyksos were charioteers, and accustomed to riding into battle.
Our lads were foot-soldiers and trained to run. Like a pack of hounds after a
jackal, our men isolated and surrounded them. They hacked them down and left a
hundred bleeding corpses scattered across the green fields of standing dhurra
corn. I had jumped ashore behind the first wave of our
troops. I had serious business in mind. There was no point in making models and
designing chariots without a means of driving the spoked wheels that I had seen
in my imagination. It required an enormous act of courage on my part
to start towards that herd of terrible creatures that the Hyksos herders had
abandoned close to the water's edge. Each step was an effort of will, for there
were many hundreds of them, and they were obviously restless and alarmed by the
shouting and the running of men and the clash of arms. I was certain that at
any moment they would rush at me like wounded lions. I imagined them gobbling
my still warm and twitching flesh, and my courage evaporated and I could go no
closer. From a distance of a hundred paces, I stood staring in dreadful
fascination at these savage predators, but I was poised to turn and rush back
to the safety of the galley at the first sign of an attack. This was the first opportunity that I had been
given to study these animals. They were mostly of a dun colour, but with subtle
shadings of bay and chestnut and roan. One or two of them were as black as
Seth. They stood as tall as a man, with a full barrel-chest, and long necks
that arched gracefully. Their manes were like the tresses of a beautiful woman,
and their hides glowed in the sunlight, as though they had been burnished. One of those nearest to me threw back its head and
rolled its upper lip, and I recoiled as I saw the great square white teeth that
lined its jaw. It kicked its hind-legs and emitted such a terrifying neighing
sound that I turned and started back towards the ship with some alacrity. Then a hoarse yell from one of our soldiers near me
arrested my cowardly retreat. 'Kill the Hyksos monsters!' 'Kill the monsters!' The cry was taken up by the
others. 'No!' I screamed, and my concern for my own safety
was forgotten. 'No! Save the horses. We need them.' My voice was lost in the angry war-cry of our
troops, as they rushed at the herd of horses, with their shields raised and
their swords still dripping with the blood of the herders. Some of the men
paused to nock arrows to the bow and fire them into the herd. 'No!' I cried, as a glossy black stallion reared
and screamed, with an arrow standing out of his withers. 'No! Please, no!' I cried again, as one of the
sailors ran in with a light war-axe and hacked through the fetlock joint of a young
mare. She was crippled by the blow and could not escape the next stroke of the
axe that caught her between the ears and dropped her kicking in the dust. 'Leave them! Leave them!' I pleaded, but the arrows
brought down a dozen of the animals, and the swords and axes maimed and killed
a dozen more before the herd broke under the assault, and three hundred horses
bolted and went galloping out in a mass across the dusty western plain towards
the desert. I shaded my eyes to watch them go, and it seemed to
me that part of my heart went with them. When they had disappeared, I ran to
protect and tend to those animals that were left maimed and arrowed amongst the
papyrus beds. But the soldiers were ahead of me. So great was their fury that
they gathered around the fallen carcasses. In a frenzy of hatred, they plunged
their blades into the unresisting flesh and hacked at the broken heads. A little to one side stood an isolated clump of
papyrus reeds. Behind this, and screened from the rampaging soldiers, stood the
black stallion that I had first seen hit by an arrow. He was sorely struck and
staggering as he limped forward, the arrow deep in his chest. Without thought
for my own safety, I ran towards him, and then stopped as he turned to face me. Only then did I realize my danger. Here was a
wounded beast that, like a lion in the same straits, must surely charge at me.
The stallion and I stared at each other, and I felt fear fall away like a
discarded cloak from my shoulders. His eyes were huge and swimming with pain. Gentle
eyes, beautiful eyes that made my heart swell with pity. He made a soft,
fluttering sound, and limped towards me. I held out my hand and touched his
muzzle and it felt like warm Arabian silk. He came directly to me, and pressed
his forehead to my chest in a gesture of trust and appeal that was almost
human. I knew that he was asking for my help. Instinctively I flung my arms around his neck and
embraced him. I wanted more than anything in my life at that moment to save
him, but from his nostrils warm blood trickled down my chest. I knew he was hit
through the lungs and that he was dying. He was far beyond any help that I
could give him. 'My poor darling. What have those stupid, ignorant
bastards done to you?' I whispered. Dimly in my distress and spiritual agony, I
realized that my life had changed again, and that this dying creature had made
that change. Somehow I seemed to sense that, in the years ahead, wherever I
left my footsteps in the African earth, the hoof-prints of a horse would lie
beside them. I had found another great love to fill my days. The stallion made that fluttering sound once more
and his breath was warm on my skin. Then his legs collapsed under him and he
fell heavily on his side and lay gasping air into his punctured lungs. Bright
red bubbles frothed from the wound in his chest. I went down beside him, and
lifted that noble head into my lap and waited with him until he died. Then I
stood up and went back to where the Breath ofHorus was beached. It was difficult to see my way, for my own hot
tears blinded me. Once again I cursed myself for a soft and sentimental fool,
but that never did much to help me brace myself. I was always so vulnerable to
suffering in another creature, human or otherwise, especially in one that was
noble and beautiful. 'Damn you, Taita! Where have you been?' Tanus
railed at me as I scrambled aboard. 'There is a battle raging. The whole army
cannot wairaround while you have another of your famous daydreams.' Yet for all
his bluster, he had not deserted me. TANUS WOULD NOT EVEN HEAR ME OUT, but cut brusquely
across my request for leave to follow the herd of runaway horses out into the
desert, and for men to go with me. 'I want no truck with those foul and unholy
creatures!' he shouted at me. 'I only regret that my men let them escape and
that they did not slaughter the lot of them. Let us hope that the lions and the
jackals make good that default.' I realized then that he hated them as much as
did the most ignorant lout in his regiments. 'Were you there on the plain of Abnub?' I do not
usually indulge in loud argument, but his intransigence infuriated me. 'Or was
that some other dull-witted oaf standing beside me? Did you not see the future
charge at you on hooves and wheels and chop your men to jackal-food? Do you not
understand that without chariot and horse, you and this Egypt we know are
finished?' This amicable discussion was taking place on the
poop-deck of the Breath ofHorus. Tanus' officers were silent and stiff with
shock to hear a slave address a Great Lion of Egypt and the commander of all
her armies as a dull-witted oaf. However, I was past all restraint and I rushed
on. 'The gods have given you this wonderful gift. Three
hundred horses placed in your hands! I will build you the chariots to go with them.
Are you so blind that you cannot see it?' 'I have my ships!' Tanus roared back at me. 'I
don't need these foul man-eating beasts. They are an abomination in the face of
decent men and all benevolent gods. They are creatures of Seth and Sutekh, and
I want no part of them.' Too late I realized that I had pushed Tanus into a
position from which he could not retreat. He was a clever and intelligent man,
until his pride hamstrung his reason. I moderated my tone and made my voice
mellifluous. 'Tanus, please listen to me. I have held the head
of one of these animals in my hands. They are strong, but strangely gentle.
Their eyes shine with the intelligence of a faithful dog. They do not eat
meat—' 'How could you tell that from one brief touch?' he
sneered at me, still proud and affronted. "The teeth,' I answered. 'They do not possess
the fangs or claws of a carnivore. Pigs are the only hoofed creatures that eat
flesh, and these are no pigs.' I saw him waver at last, and I pressed my
advantage. 'If that is not enough, look then at the stores that the Hyksos have
brought across the river. Do they need that mountain of fodder to feed a pride
of meat-eating lions?' 'Meat or fodder, I will not argue further. You have
heard my decision. We will let those cursed horses perish in the wilderness.
That is my decision, and it is final.' He stamped away, but I muttered under my
breath, 'Final, is it? We will see about that.' There have been very few occasions when I have not
been able to have my own way with my mistress, and hers was now the highest
authority in this very Egypt. I went to her that very evening, as soon as the
royal barge came once more under the protection of the war galleys. Without the knowledge of her commander and lover, I
showed her the tiny working model of a chariot with the miniature carved horses
in the traces, which I had crafted for her. Queen Lostris was enchanted by it.
Naturally she had never seen the squadrons of war chariots in full flight, and
had not conceived for them the same hatred as had the bulk of her army. Having
captured her full attention with the model chariot, I then described the death
of the stallion in such harrowing detail that both of us were reduced to tears.
She can resist my tears as little as I am able to resist hers. 'You must go immediately and rescue these
marvellous animals from the desert. When you have them, I order you to build a
squadron of chariots for my armies,' she cried. If Tanus had spoken to her before I had the chance
to persuade her, I doubt that she would have given that order, and the history
of our world would have been very different. As it was, Tanus was furious with
my deception, and we came as close to a permanent rift in our relationship as
we ever had in all the year. It was fortunate that I had been summarily ordered
ashore by Queen Lostris, and was able to escape the full force of his wrath. I
had only a few hours in which to gather around me a few helpers, and the chief
of these was the most unlikely of them all. I had never taken to Hui, the Shrike whom we had
captured at Gallala and who had commanded one of the galleys which Tanus had
scuttled at Abnub. He was now a captain without a ship, and a man looking for a
reason to go on. He sought me out as soon as rumour of my mission spread
through the fleet. 'What do you know about horses?' he challenged me,
which was a question I was not prepared to answer at that moment. 'Obviously not as much as you do?' I made it a
cautious question. 'I was once a syce,' he boasted, in his usual
endearing fashion. 'And what creature is that?' 'A groom, one who cares for horses,' he replied,
and I stared at him in amazement. 'Where did you ever see a horse before that bloody
day at Abnub?' I demanded. 'As an infant my parents were killed, and I was
captured by a tribe of barbarians who roamed .the plains far to the east, a
year's travel beyond the Euphrates river. My captors were people of the horse
and, as a child, I lived each day with those animals. Mare's milk was my food
and I slept beneath the horses' bellies for shelter in the night, for a slave
was not allowed into the tents of the tribe. When I escaped from slavery, it
was upon the back of my favourite stallion. He carried me fast and far. But he
died long before we reached the Euphrates.' Thus Hui was with me when a galley set down my
small party of reluctant horse-catchers upon the west bank. Sixteen men were
all that I could recruit, and most of them were the dregs and riff-raff of the
army. Tanus had seen to it that none of his best men would join me. He could
not countermand the word of the regent of all Egypt, but he made it as
difficult as he could for me to carry out her orders. At Hui's suggestion, I had equipped my men with
light linen ropes and bags of crushed dhurra corn. All of them, except Hui and
myself, were terrified to the point of incontinence by the mere thought of the
creatures that we had set out to follow. When I woke in the morning after our
first night's camp, I found that every single one of these stalwarts had
disappeared, and I never saw them again. 'We will have to turn back,' I despaired. 'There is
nothing we can do alone. Lord Tanus will be pleased. This was exactly what he
knew would happen.' 'You are not alone,' Hui pointed out cheerfully.
'You have me.' This was the first time that my feelings began to warm towards
the young swaggerer. We divided the load of ropes and the leather bags of
crushed corn, and we went on. By this time the tracks of the horses were three
days old, but they had stayed together in a single herd and so had beaten a
road that was easy to follow. Hui assured me that the herd instinct was strong
amongst them, and that with such lush grazing along the river-bank, they would
not have wandered far. He was certain they would not have gone out into the
desert, as I had feared that they might. 'Why would they do that? There is no food or water
for them out there.' And in the .end Hui proved right. With the coming of the Hyksos, the peasants had
deserted their farms and gone into the shelter of the walled towns. The fields
were untended and the com half-grown. We found the herd before noon the second
day. It was spread out and grazing peacefully in one of the fields. Even after
my experience with the wounded stallion, I was still rather nervous of these
mysterious creatures. 'It will surely be a difficult and dangerous matter
to capture a few of them,' I confided in Hui, seeking his reassurance and
advice. At this stage, the notion of capturing all three hundred horses had not
even occurred to me. I would have been satisfied with twenty, and delighted
with fifty of them. I imagined that we would be forced to run each of them down
and bind it with the ropes we had brought with us for that purpose. 'I have heard that you have the reputation of being
a very clever slave,' Hui grinned at me, cocky and delighted by his superior
understanding of the subject. 'Clearly, it is a reputation that is
ill-founded.' He showed me how to twist and braid a halter from
the ropes. We made a dozen of these before he was satisfied. Then each of us
armed himself with one of these and a leather sack of crushed corn, and we
started towards the grazing herd. Following Hui's example, we never walked
directly towards them, but strolled obliquely at a leisurely pace past the
animals in the fringe of the herd. 'Slowly now,' Hui cautioned me, when they flung up
then-heads and studied us with that peculiarly frank and almost childlike gaze
that I would come to know so well. 'Sit down.' We sank into the standing corn and remained
motionless, until the horses started feeding again. Then we moved forward until
they became restless once more. 'Down,' Hui ordered, and when we were crouched in
the corn, he went on, 'They love the sound of a gentle voice. When I was a
child, I sang to my horses to quieten them. Watch this!' He started to sing a
refrain in a strange language, which I presumed was the barbaric tongue of his
childhood captors. Hui's voice was as melodious as the squawking of
crows squabbling over the rotting carcass of a dead dog. The nearest horses
stared at us curiously. I laid my hand on Hui's arm to quieten him. I was
certain that the herd must find his efforts at song as distressing as I did. 'Let me try,' I whispered. I sang the lullaby that
I had composed for my prince. Sleep, little Mem, who rules the dawn, sleep, little prince, who will rule the world, rest that curly head, filled with wondrous dreams, rest those arms, make them strong for sword and
bow. One of the mares closest to us took a few steps
towards me, and when she stopped, she made that same soft fluttery sound with
her lips. She was inquisitive, and I sang on softly and seductively. She had a
foal at her heels, a lovely little bay-coloured creature with an appealing head
and pricked-up ears. With my special feeling for and understanding of
birds and animals, I was already beginning to recognize the desirable points of
breed in these new animals. I was learning swiftly and instinctively how to
deal with them. I was no longer completely reliant on Hui to instruct me. Still singing gently, I scooped up a handful of the
crushed cornmeal and held it out to the mare. I could see at once that she had
been hand-fed before, and that she understood my offer. She blew noisily
through wide nostrils, and took another few paces towards me. Even now I can
remember the thrill that almost stopped the beating of my heart when she took
the last pace up to me, and delicately lowered her muzzle into my hand to taste
the white meal. It powdered her whiskers as she ate, and I laughed with the joy
and excitement of it. She made no effort to pull away from me as I slipped my
other arm around her neck and laid my cheek softly against hers to inhale the
strange, warm smell of her hide. 'The halter,' Hui reminded me softly, and I slipped
it over her head, as he had shown me. 'She is yours,' Hui said. 'And I am hers,' I replied without thinking, but it
was true. We had captured each other. The rest of the herd had watched all this. As soon
as the halter was on the mare, they settled down and trustingly allowed Hui and
me to walk freely amongst them. They came to eat from the hand and allowed us
to lift their hooves and stroke their necks and massive shoulders. All this seemed to me at the time to be miraculous,
but after only a little consideration I realized that it was quite natural.
They were accustomed from birth to being handled and petted, to being fed and
harnessed. They had lived always with the close and constant presence of man.
The true miracle came later, when I realized that they recognized affection,
and that they were able to return it in full measure. Hui had selected and haltered one of the other
mares, all the time lecturing me and displaying his learning and experience in
matters equine. I was in such a euphoric mood that for once his bumptiousness
did not annoy me. 'Very well,' he said at last, 'we will mount up
now.' And to my utter astonishment he placed both hands on his mare's back,
drew himself up and flung one leg over her, to sit astride her back. I gawked
at him in disbelief, expecting the mare to react violently; $o rear up and dash
Hui to earth, or, at the very least, to seize his naked leg in those powerful
white teeth and drag him from his perch. She did none of these things, but
stood quietly and subserviently. 'Hi up, my darling!' he called to her, and dug his
heels into her ribs. The mare started forward obediently; and when he urged her
on again she broke into a trot and then a gallop. Hui guided her effortlessly
in a manner that was not then apparent to me. Horse and rider traced out
elegant patterns of movement across the field, and then circled back to where I
stood. 'Come up, Taita. Try a gallop!' I could see that he
was expecting me to refuse, and it was that which made me overcome my reluctance.
I would not allow the little whip-persnapper to have the better of me. My first attempt at mounting up was unsuccessful,
but the mare stood stoically, and Hui laughed. 'She has a great deal to teach
you. You should call the poor animal Patience.' I did not see the humour of it
then, but the name stuck and the mare was Patience from then onwards. 'Pull yourself higher before you swing your leg
over, and be careful not to trap your balls under you when you come down,' Hui
counselled, and then howled with laughter. 'And that's a piece of advice that
you need not worry about. My guess is that you would love still to have a pair
of those to sit on!' All the warm feelings I was beginning to have
towards Hui cooled again at that sally, and I threw myself on to the mare's
back and clung with both hands around her neck, in fear of broken limbs and
cracked skull. 'Sit up straight!' Hui began my instruction, and
Patience assisted me with her sweet and forgiving nature. I surprised myself by thinking of these creatures
in human terms, but over the following days as we rode south towards Thebes, I
discovered that they could be stupid or clever, suspicious or trusting, dour or
mischievous, friendly or aloof, brave or timid, nervous or phlegmatic,
long-suffering or impatient, surprising or predictable—in short, as close to
man in temperament as any creature that walks on four legs. The more I learned
about them, the more I wanted to learn. The longer I spent working with them,
the more I grew to love them. I rode ahead on Patience, her foal at heel. The
herd trailed after us compliantly, all three hundred and sixteen of them. Hui
brought up the rear to sweep up any stragglers. With each league we covered, I
became more confident and proficient upon Patience's back, and the rapport
between us became firmer. The mare became an extension of my own body, but so
much swifter and stronger than my own feeble limbs. It felt so natural and
right to be astride that broad and sturdy back that I was amazed that so few
others were willing to share the experience with me. Perhaps it was not only the terror that had struck
them so devastatingly on the plain of Abnub, but also the words and attitude of
Tanus, Lord Harrab that affected the regiments of our army. Whatever the
reason, I could find no Egyptian who would mount upon the back of a horse,
except Hui and, very much later, Prince Memnon. Of course, they learned to
husband and breed the horse and care for him. Under my tutelage they became
dexterous and dashing charioteers, but I never saw a man of them mounted on
horseback, save only myself and Hui and the prince. When the chariots that I
would design with their light, spoked wheels swept all before them, and made
Egypt the master of this creation, Tanus never followed our example, and I
never heard him express a kind sentiment towards those willing and brave
animals who dragged him into battle. Even in later years, when the horse was commonplace
through all our realm, it was considered somehow indecent and obscene to mount
them. When the three of us rode past astride, many of the common people spat on
the ground three times and made the sign against the evil eye. ALL THAT WAS IN THE FUTURE AS I LED my herd up the
west bank of the river towards Thebes, and we arrived to the gratitude of my
mistress, and to a gruff and unenthusiastic welcome from the commander-in-chief
of the Egyptian armies. 'Just keep those evil brutes out of my sight,'
Tanus told me. He still had norforgiven me for going above him to my mistress. In fairness to him, he had more than enough excuse
for his evil temper. The safety of the state and our nation were in the direst
jeopardy. There had never been a time in our history when our civilization was
so threatened by the barbarian. Already Asyut was lost, and the whole east bank of
the river as far as Dendera. Completely undaunted and undeterred by the naval
reverse that Tanus had inflicted upon him, King Salitis with his chariots had
swept on and surrounded the walled city of Thebes. Those walls should have withstood siege for a
decade, but that reckoned without the baleful presence of Lord Intef in the
camp of the enemy. It transpired that while still grand vizier of the Upper
Kingdom, he had secretly ordered the construction of a concealed passage
beneath the city walls. Even I who knew most of his other secrets had never
suspected this, and Lord Intef had murdered the workmen who had carried out
this construction, so that he alone was aware of its existence. I have no idea
why he should have constructed the tunnel in the first place, except that his
devious mind was much given towards such devices. The palace was riddled with
trap-doors and concealed corridors, like the warren of a rabbit or the lair of
a desert fox. When Lord Intef disclosed its existence to him,
King Salitis sent a small party of his best men through the secret passage, and
once within the walls, they stormed the unsuspecting Egyptian guards on the
main gate, slaughtered them and threw the gates wide. The main Hyksos horde
poured into the city, and within days of the siege commencing, the city was
lost and half her inhabitants massacred. From the west bank where Tanus now had his
headquarters in the half-built Palace of Memnon, we could see the burnt and
blackened roofs of those buildings in the city across the river that the Hyksos
had put to the torch. Each day we watched the dust-clouds of their chariots, as
they raced up and down the far bank, and the glint of their spearheads at the
shoulder-slope, as they prepared for the battle that all of us knew was coming. With his sadly depleted fleet, Tanus had thus far
managed to hold the river-line, and during my absence had beaten back another
attempt by the Hyksos to get across the Nile in strength. However, our defences
were thinly spread, for we had to guard a great sweep of the river, while the
Hyksos could make a crossing at any point they chose. We learned from our spies
on the east bank that they had commandeered every single craft they could lay
hands on, from barge to skiff. They had captured many of our boatmakers, and
had them at work in the boatyards of Thebes. Of course, we could be sure that
Lord Intef would give them pertinent advice in all these matters, for he must
have been every bit as eager as the barbarian Salitis to seize Pharaoh's
treasure. The crews of our galleys stood to arms every watch
of the day and night, and Tanus only slept when he could, which was not often.
Neither my mistress nor I saw much of him, and when we did, he was haggard and
short-tempered. Every night saw the arrival on the west bank of
many hundreds of refugees. Of both sexes and all ages, they crossed the Nile in
an odd assortment of rafts and small craft. Many of the stronger ones even swam
the wide stretch of water. All of them were desperate to escape the Hyksos
terror. They brought us horror-stories of rapine and plunder, but also detailed
and up-to-date news of Hyksos movements. Of course we welcomed these people, they were
countrymen and relatives, but their numbers strained our resources. Our main
granaries had all been in Thebes, and most of the herds of cattle and sheep had
fallen into the hands of the enemy. Queen Lostris gave me the responsibility of
gathering up all the supplies of grain and the herds on the west bank. I drew
up lists and rosters for rationing our supplies of meat and grain. Fortunately,
the date palms were in full bearing, and the supply of fish from the river was
inexhaustible. The Hyksos could never starve us out. My mistress had also appointed me Master of the Royal
Horse. There was no intense competition for this appointment, particularly as
no pay or privileges were attached to it. I made Hui my deputy, and he managed,
by means of bribes, threats and blackmail, to recruit a hundred grooms to help
him care for our little herd. Later we would train them as our first
chariot-drivers. It was no hardship for me to make time every day to
visit our makeshift stables in the necropolis. The mare Patience always came
running to greet me, and I carried corn-cakes for her and her foal. Often I was
able to sneak Prince Mem-non away from his mother and his nurses and carry him
into the stables on my shoulders. He squealed with excitement as soon as he saw
the horses. I held the prince on my lap as Patience and I
galloped along the riverbank, and he made clucking noises and rocked his little
backside, imitating the way in which I urged Patience to a harder gallop. I
made certain that the route we followed on these rides would never cross Tanus'
path. He had still not forgiven me, and if he had seen his son on the back of a
cursed horse, I knew that I would have been in physical danger. I also spent a great deal of my time in the armoury
workshop of Pharaoh's funerary temple, where I had the assistance of some of
the finest craftsmen in the world to help me build my first chariot. It was
here, while working on the design of these vehicles, that I conceived devices
that were to become our first line of defence against the Hyksos chariots.
These were simply long wooden staves sharpened at both ends, and with the
points fire-hardened. Each of our infantrymen would carry ten of these in a
bundle upon his back. At the approach of a squadron of cavalry, the staves were
planted in the earth at an angle, with the points at the level of the horses'
chests. Our men took up their positions behind this barrier of wicked spears,
and fired their arrows over them. When I demonstrated these to Tanus, he threw his
arm around my shoulders for the first time since our quarrel over the horses,
and said, 'Well, at least you have not turned senile on me yet,' and I knew
that I had been at least partially forgiven. The ground that I had gained with him here was
almost completely lost over the affair of the Taita chariot. My workmen and I at last completed the first
chariot. The dashboard and sides were of split bamboo, woven into bas-ketwork.
The axle was of acacia wood. The hubs were of hand-forged bronze, greased with
mutton fat, and the spoked wheels were bound with bronze rims. It was so light
that two charioteers could lift it between them, and carry it over broken
ground where the horses could not pull it. Even I realized that it was a
masterpiece, and the workmen called it the Taita chariot. I did not object to
the name. Hui and I harnessed up two of our best horses,
Patience and Blade, and took the Taita chariot for its first gallop. It took us
some time to learn how to control the rig, but we learned swiftly, and the
horses were bred to this and showed us the way. In the end, we were flying
across the ground, and hurtling through tight turns at full gallop. When we drove back into the stables, flushed with
excitement and jubilant with our achievement, both of us were convinced that our
chariot was swifter and handier than any that the Hyksos could send against us.
We tested and modified this creation of mine for ten full days, working by
lamplight in the armoury until the late watches of every night, before I was
satisfied that I could show it to Tanus. Tanus came to the stables with surly reluctance,
and balked at climbing up into the cockpit of the chariot behind me. 'I trust this contraption of yours as much as I
trust those cursed brutes who tow it,' he grumbled, but I was persuasive, and
at last he stepped up gingerly on to the footplate and we were off. At first I kept the horses to an easy trot, until I
felt him relaxing and, despite himself, beginning to enjoy the exhilarating
ride. Then I pushed them into a canter. 'See the speed of it. You can be upon
the enemy before he knows you are there,' I exulted. Tanus laughed for the first time, and I was
encouraged. 'With your ships you rule the river. With this chariot you rule the
land. Between the two, you rule the world. Nothing can stand against you.' I
was careful not to disparage his beloved ships, or to make unfavourable
comparisons. 'Is this your best speed?' he shouted in the wind
and the pounding of hooves. 'With a fair wind, Breath of Horus is faster
than this.' Which was a lie and a challenge. 'Hold on to the sides and take a deep breath,' I
warned him. 'I am going to take you up where the eagles fly,' and I let
Patience and Blade go. No man has ever travelled faster. The wind seared
our eyes, and the tears pouring from them were blown back into our hair. 'Sweet breath of Isis!' Tanus shouted with
excitement. "This is—' I never knew what he thought this was. Tanus never
finished his sentence, for at that instant our off-wheel hit a rock and the rim
exploded. The chariot capsized and somersaulted, and both
Tanus and I were thrown high and clear. I struck the hard earth with a force
that should have crippled me, but I was so concerned with how Tanus would be
affected by this little mishap, and how my dreams and plans would be dashed,
that I felt no pain. I bounded to my feet and saw Tanus crawl to his
bleeding knees twenty paces beyond me. He was coated heavily with dust and
seemed to have lost the skin from one half of his face. He tried to maintain
his dignity as he pushed himself upright and staggered back to the wrecked
chariot, but he was limping heavily. He stood for a long minute gazing down at the
shattered ruins of my creation, and then abruptly he let out a roar like a wounded
bull, and launched such a mighty kick at it that it flipped over again, as
though it were a child's toy. He turned on his heel without even a glance in my
direction and limped away. I did not see him again for a week, and when we did
meet, neither of us mentioned the chariot. I think that might have been the end of the matter,
and we would never have assembled our first chariot squadron, if it had not
been for the fact that the stubbornness of my mistress's pride surpassed even
that of her lover. She had given me the original order, and would not now
retract it. When Tanus tried to inveigle her into doing so, he merely made my
position stronger. Hui and I rebuilt the chariot within three days, and another
identical to it. By the time the embalmers in the funerary chapel
had completed the ritual seventy days of royal mummification, we had our first
squadron of fifty chariots, and had trained drivers for them. SINCE WE HAD RETURNED TO THE PALACE of Memnon from
our defeat at the battle of Abnub, my mistress had been occupied with the
business of state thrust upon her by the regency. Long hours were spent with
her ministers and advisers. It was now that the initial training which I had
given her in the Palace of Elephantine was to bear fruit. I had taught her to
pick her way unerringly through the labyrinth of power and influence/She was
just twenty-one years of age, but she was a queen, and ruled like one. Very occasionally she encountered a problem which
particularly vexed or perplexed her. Then she sent for me. I would drop my work
in the armoury or the stables or in the small scribery that she had set aside
for me just down the corridor from her audience chamber, and I would rush to
her side. On occasion I spent days sitting below her throne
and steering her through some troublesome decisions. Once again, my ability to
read the lips of men without hearing their words stood us in good stead. Some
nobleman at the back of the audience never realized, as he plotted or schemed
with his neighbour, that I was relaying his exact words to my mistress. She
swiftly acquired a reputation of sagacity and prescience. Neither of us enjoyed
much rest during these dark and worrisome days. Even though our days were full, our nights were
long. Those interminable councils of war and of state lasted well past
midnight. No sooner was one crisis averted, than another loomed before us. Each
day the Hyksos threatened us more directly, and Tanus' hold on the river-line
weakened. Slowly, a sense of doom and despair permeated all
of us. Men smiled little and never laughed out loud. Even the play of the
children was muted and subdued. We had only to look across the river, and the
enemy was there, gathering himself, growing stronger each day. After seventy days, the mummification of Pharaoh
was completed. My early efforts in preserving the king's body had been highly
successful, and the grand master of the guild of embalmers had commended me in
the presence of my mistress. He had found no evidence of decay when he removed
the king's corpse from the olive jar, and even his liver, which is the part
most subject to mortification, was well preserved. Once the king had been laid out on the diorite slab
in his mortuary chapel, the grand master had inserted the spoon up his nostril
and scooped out the curdled contents of his skull which the pickle had hardened
to the consistency of cheese. Then, still in the foetal position, the king was
placed in the bath of natron salt with only his head left uncovered by the
harsh fluid. When he was removed from the bath thirty days later, all the fatty
tissue had dissolved, and the outer layers of the skin had peeled off, except
for that of the head. They laid him upon the mottled stone slab once
again and straightened him into an extended position. He was wiped and dried,
and his empty stomach was filled with linen pads soaked in resins and wax and
then sutured closed. Meanwhile, his internal organs were desiccated and placed
in their milk-coloured alabaster Canopic jars, which were then sealed. For the remaining forty days, the body of the king
was allowed to dry out thoroughly. The doors of the chapel had been aligned
with the direction of the warm, dry prevailing winds, so that they blew over
the funeral slab. By the end of the ritual period of seventy days, Pharaoh's
body was as dry as a stick of firewood. His nails, which had been removed before he was
soaked in the natron bath, were replaced and fixed in position on his fingers
and toes with fine threads of gold wire. The first layer of pure white linen bandages
was wound into place around his body, leaving his head and neck exposed. The
binding was meticulous and intricate, with the bandages crossing and
criss-crossing each other in elaborate patterns. Under the bindings were laid
charms and amulets of gold and precious stones. The bandages were then soaked
with lacquer and resins that dried to a stony hardness. Now it was time for the ceremony of
Opening-the-Mouth, which traditionally was performed by the dead pharaoh's next
of kin. Memnon was too young to take this part, so his regent was called in his
stead. My mistress and I went to the chapel together in
the gloom of dawn, and we were witnesses as the linen sheet that covered the
king was drawn aside. Pharaoh's head was miraculously preserved. His eyes were
closed and his expression was serene. The embalmers had rouged and painted his
face, and he looked better in death than he had in life. While the high priest of Ammon-Ra and the grand
master of the guild of embalmers prepared the instruments for the ceremony, we
sang the Incantation against Dying for the Second Time. He is the reflection and not the mirror. He is the music and not the lyre. He is the stone and not the chisel that forms it. He will live for ever. He will not die a second time. Then the high priest handed my mistress the golden
spoon and led her by the hand to the funeral slab. Queen Lostris stooped over the body of Pharaoh and
laid the spoon of life upon his painted lips. I open thy lips that thou
mayest speak once more, I open thy nostrils that
thou mayest breathe. She intoned the words and then touched his eyelids
with the spoon. I open thy eyes that thou
mayest behold once more the glory of this world,
and the nether-world of the gods where you shall dwell from
this day forward. She touched the spoon to his bandaged chest. I quicken your heart, so that you may live for
ever. You shall not die a second time. You shall live for ever! Then we waited while the embalmers bound up
Pharaoh's head in the neat swathes of bandages and painted them with resin.
They moulded the resin-wet bandages to the shape of his face beneath them.
Finally, they placed over his blind bandaged face the first of the four funeral
masks. This was the same funeral mask that we had watched
being fashioned fron\ pure gold. While he was still alive, Pharaoh had posed
for the sculptor, so the mask was amazingly lifelike. The eyes of shining
rock-crystal and obsidian seemed to gaze upon me with all the humanity that the
man beneath the mask had once possessed. The cobra head of the uraeus rose from
the noble brow, regal and mystical. Then the wrapped mummy was placed in the golden
inner coffin, which was sealed, and this went into the second golden coffin
with another death-mask embossed upon the lid. Half the treasure recovered from
Lord Intef's hoard had gone to make up that enormous weight of precious metal
and jewels. There were seven coffins in all, including the
massive stone sarcophagus standing upon the golden sledge, which waited ready
to carry Pharaoh along the causeway to his tomb in the gaunt hills. But my
mistress refused to give her sanction for this to happen. 'I have given my sacred vow. I cannot place my
husband in a tomb that may be plundered by the Hyksos barbarians. Pharaoh will lie here until I am able to make good
my promise to him. I will find a secure tomb in which he may lie through
eternity. I have given my word that no one will disturb his rest.' THE WISDOM OF QUEEN LOSTRIS' DECISION to delay the
entombment was proved three nights later. The Hyksos made a determined effort
to cross the river, and Tanus barely succeeded in turning them back. They made
the attempt on an unguarded stretch of the river two miles north of Esna. They
swam their horses across in a mass, and then followed with an armada of small
boats which they had carried overland from Thebes in order to conceal their
intentions from us. They actually succeeded in making a beachhead on
the west bank before Tanus could rush his galleys to the spot, but he arrived
before they could unload their chariots and harness the horses to them. Tanus
destroyed their boats with the chariots still on board, and he then had almost
three thousand Hyksos stranded on our side of the river. Their horses scattered
and bolted away into the night when Tanus' troops made their first charge. Without their chariots the Hyksos were on even
terms with our troops, but they had no means of escape and they fought with
grim determination. In numbers they were almost evenly matched, for Tanus had
managed to bring up only one full regiment. The rest of his army was thinly
spread along the west bank. The fighting was bloody and ferocious, confused by
the darkness which was lit only by the burning vessels that Tanus had fired on
the beach. It was only by the wildest coincidence, or by
another nudge from the gods, that Hui and I had brought our little squadron of
fifty chariots and fledgling charioteers to Esna on training manoeuvres. In
truth, we had driven these twenty miles from Thebes principally to escape from
Tanus' disapproval and interference. We were encamped in the sacred grove of tamarind
trees beside the temple of Horus at Esna. I was exhausted after a long day of
galloping and manoeuvring at high speed. On return to our encampment, Hui had
produced a jar of remarkably palatable wine, and I had been somewhat
intemperate in my sampling of it. I was dead asleep when Hui staggered into my
tent and shook me awake. 'There are fires burning on the bank of the river
downstream,' he told me, 'and when the wind shifts, you can hear the sound of
cheering, and a little while ago I thought I heard many voices singing the
battle hymn of the Blues. I think there is a fight going on down there.' I was as unsteady on my feet as he was, and
reckless with wine, as I shouted for him to rouse the camp and harness the
horses. We were all still novices, and it was almost dawn by the time we had
caught the horses and put them in the traces. In the chilly drift of the river
mist and the gloomy shiver of dawn, we trotted along the north road in column
of route, two chariots abreast. I was driving the lead chariot, while Hui had
command of the rear-guard. Our fifty chariots had been reduced to thirty by the
previous day's exercises, for I had not yet succeeded in perfecting my spoked
wheels. They had an alarming tendency to fly to pieces when driven at speed,
and almosMialf my force was out of action. The passage of the wind over my bare chest made me
shiver again, and counteracted the bravado of the wine. I was beginning to hope
that Hui had been mistaken, when suddenly from far ahead there came that
unmistakable chorus of shouting and cheering, and the clank and clash of bronze
on bronze that could mean only one thing. Once you have heard them, the sounds
of battle are not readily forgotten or mistaken. The rough farmer's track we
were following along the river-bank took a turn to the left. As we came through
it, the field lay open before us. The sun was just above the horizon, and it had
turned the surface of the river into a shimmering sheet of beaten copper that
was painful to the eye. The ships of Tanus' squadron lay just off-shore,
crowding in close to, in an attempt to bring the archers on the decks in range
of the Hyksos, and to cut off any retreat across the river. The stranded Hyksos regiment was making a stand in
the centre of a field of knee-high green corn. They had formed a circle, facing
outwards, shoulder to shoulder, with their shields locked together and their
spears thrust forward. As we came into view, they had just repulsed another
attempt by Tanus' troops to break their circle. The Egyptian regiment was
pulling back to regroup, leaving their dead and wounded scattered around the
periphery of the enemy circle. I am no soldier, although I have written scrolls on
the conduct of war. I had accepted the rank of Commander of the Royal Horse,
thrust upon me by my mistress, with the deepest reluctance. I had intended
simply to perfect my chariot, train the first squadron, and then hand it over
to Hui or some other person more suited to the warlike professions. I was cold and still half-drunk as I heard my voice
giving the order to deploy in arrow-head formation. It was the evolution that
we had practised the previous day, and the chariots that followed mine flared
out on either side with reasonable proficiency. I was acutely aware of the
sound of hooves in the soft earth and the creak of the chariot harness, the
squeal of the wheels turning on their metal-lined hubs, and the rattle of
javelins as my charioteers drew their darts from the quivers. I looked left and
right, reviewing our little squadron drawn up in the shape of an arrow-head
with my chariot at the apex. It was a formation I had copied from the Hyksos. I
drew a deep breath. 'Squadron will advance!' I screamed, and my voice
shrilled with fear. 'At the gallop, forward!' I had only to lift my left hand that held the
traces, and Patience and Blade bounded forward. I was almost thrown over
backwards, but I grabbed at the dashboard with my free hand, and we went
straight at the Hyksos circle. Beneath me the chariot leaped and jolted over the
lumpy ploughed earth, and I looked over the plunging hindquarters of my horses
and saw the wall of Hyksos shields, glittering and impenetrable in the early
sunlight, drawing closer with every stride we took. On either side of me, men were howling and cheering
to hide their terror, and I howled with them, like a pariah dog at full moon.
The horses were snorting and neighing, and suddenly Patience lifted the long
plume of her tail and began to fart in rhythm and in time to her own stride.
This struck me as immoderately funny. My howls of terror turned to screams of
laughter. The helmet that I had borrowed from Hui was too large for me. It
bounced off my head and the wind flung my hair out behind me. Patience and Blade were the fastest pair in the
squadron, and our chariot pulled ahead of the rest of the formation. I tried to
slow our charge by hauling back on the traces, but Patience would have none of
it. Her glee was evident, she was as excited as any of us, and she straightened
her neck and ran away with me. We tore through the retiring lines of Egyptian
infantry coming back from the failed assault on the Hyksos circle, and they
scattered out of our path and gawked at us in astonishment. 'Come on!' I howled with laughter. 'We will show
you the way!' They turned and followed us back towards the enemy at the run.
Behind me, I heard the trumpeters sounding the charge, and the braying horns
seemed to spur our horses. Out on my right I saw Tanus' battle standard waving,
and recognized his crested helmet standing taller than the other men around
him. 'What do you think of my cursed brutes now?' I
yelled at him, as we tore pa§t, and Patience farted again, bringing on fresh
gales of my nervous laughter. The chariot on my left was running almost level
with me, and then its near-side wheel burst under the strain and it went flying
end over end, throwing the charioteers, and bringing the horses down screaming.
The rest of us tore on without a check. . The first rank of the enemy was now so close that I
could see their eyes staring at me over the top edge of their shields. Their
arrows hissed around my ears. I could make out clearly the figures of beasts
and demons embossed on their tall metal helmets, see the beads of sweat
glittering in their plaited and beribboned beards, hear their chanted war-cry—
and then we were into them. My horses leaped together into the' barrier of
shields and it shattered before the weight and fury of our charge. I saw a man
tossed head-high, and heard his bones crackle like kindling in the fire. On the
footplate behind me, my javel-ineer was making deadly practice. I had chosen
him as the best from amongst all my recruits, and he proved my choice now, as
he stood firm and hurled his darts down into the enemy. In succession the following chariots tore into the
gap' we had opened, and we hardly checked as we raced through, breaking out
through the far side of the Hyksos circle, then wheeling in pods of three and
coming back at them. Tanus seized the moment and threw his infantry into
the breach that we had torn open. The Hyksos formation broke up into knots of
struggling men. These in turn disintegrated, and the Hyksos panicked and ran
for the river. The moment they came within range, the archers on the decks of
our galleys sent clouds of arrows over them. Ahead of me there was an isolated pocket of Hyksos
warriors still fighting back-to-back, and holding off our men. I swerved the
chariot and drove at them in full gallop. Before I reached them, my right wheel
burst asunder, the light carapace of the chariot flipped over, and I soared
free and then, with a gut-tearing lurch, fell back to earth. My head struck
first, and my eyes filled with stars and meteors of bright light. Then there
was only darkness. Iwoke again under the awning on the deck of Tanus'
flagship. I found myself lying on a sheepskin mattress, with Tanus leaning over
me. As soon as he saw that I was conscious, he masked the expression of concern
and worry that had twisted his features. 'You crazy old fool.' He forced a grin at me.
'What, in the name of Horus, were you laughing about?' I tried to sit up, but my head ached abominably and
I groaned, then clutched his arm as it all came back to me. 'Tanus, the enemy horses that swam across last
night—I must have them.' 'Don't worry that battered head of yours'. I have
already sent Hui to gather them up,' he assured me. 'If I am to have five
hundred of those contraptions of yours for my new chariot division, I will need
a thousand of those cursed brutes to pull them. However, those new-fangled
wheels of yours ' are more dangerous than a regiment of Hyksos. I will not ride
with you again until you do something about them.' For a moment it did not penetrate my aching skull,
then I realized that it had happened. Tanus had quashed his pride, and given in
to me. My orphan chariot squadron was at last to be part of the standing army,
and he would give me the men and gold to build five hundred more. He would even
ride with me again, if only I could fix my wheels. But what truly filled me with joy was that he had
forgiven me at last, and we were friends once more. THE SUCCESS OF MY CHARIOTS AT ESNA, and the feeling
of confidence that it instilled in us all, were short-lived. Secretly, I had
expected and dreaded what would happen next. It was the enemy's logical move,
and both Salitis and Lord Intef should have made it much earlier. We knew that
when he swept through the Lower Kingdom, Salitis had captured most of the fleet
of the red pretender intact. Those ships were lying abandoned in the docks of
Memphis and Tanis in the Delta. However, there must be droves of renegade
Egyptians from the usurper's navy available to Salitis, and even if that were
not the case, it would certainly be possible to recruit enough mercenary Syrian
sailors in Gaza and Joppa, and the other ports along the eastern coast of the
great sea, to man several hundred of these galleys and transports. I had realized that this must happen, but I had
refrained from warning either Tanus or my mistress of the likelihood, for I did
not wish to add to the feeling of gloom, and heighten the despondency of our
people. I had searched my heart for a counter to this move when Salitis and
Intef made it, but there was none that I could think of. Therefore, since I
could do nothing to allay these fears, I thought it best to keep them to
myself. When it finally happened, and our spies on the east
side of the river opposite Asyut warned us of the approach of this fleet from
the Delta, Tanus rushed his own ships northwards to meet them. His fleet was
superior in every way to the one which Salitis and Intef had assembled, but the
battle they fought lasted for almost a week before Tanus destroyed or drove
them back into the Delta. However, Salitis had brought his transports up
behind the screen of fighting galleys, and while the river battle still raged,
he was able to embark almost two full regiments of horse and chariot, and ferry
them intact to our side of the river, without our galleys being able to reach
them. These regiments comprised nearly three hundred of
Salitis' fast war chariots, his elite divisions which he led himself. At last
he had turned our flank. There was nothing to stop him now, as his chariots
came bowling southwards along our side of the river. All our galleys could do
was to ny to keep pace with the dust-cloud he threw up, as he raced for the
funerary temple of Mamose and all its treasures. QUEEN LOSTRIS CALLED HER WAR COUNCIL when the news
of the Hyksos crossing reached us in the Palace of Memnon. She addressed her
first question to Tanus. 'Now that he is across the river, can you check the
barbarian?' 'I can slow him down, perhaps,' he replied frankly. 'We have
learned a great deal about him. We can wait for him behind walls of stone, or
behind barriers of the sharp staves that Taita has equipped us with. But
Salitis need not give battle. His chariots are so fast that he can swing around
our positions as he did at Asyut. No, I cannot stop him.' Queen Lostris looked at me. 'Taita, what about your
chariots? Can they not give battle to the Hyksos?' 'Your Majesty, I have forty chariots that I can
send in to meet him. He has three hundred. My chariots are swifter than those
of Salitis, but my men cannot match his in skill and training. There is also
the matter of the wheels. I have not perfected them. Salitis will overwhelm and
destroy us very easily. If I am given the time and the material, I can build new
and better chariots with wheels that do not burst, but I cannot replace the
horses. We dare not risk the horses. They are our only hope for eventual
victory.' While we thus debated, another messenger arrived,
this time from the south. He had fled to us on the current and the wind, so his
news was only a day old. Tanus ordered him into the council chamber, and the
messenger fell to his knees before Queen Lostris. 'Speak, fellow,' Tanus invited him. 'What do you
have to tell us?' The messenger stuttered in fear of his life,
'Divine Majesty, while our fleet was busy at Asyut, the barbarian made another
crossing at Esna. They swam the horses over as they did before, but this time
there were none of our galleys ready to turn back their boats. Two Hyksos
regiments are across. Their horses are in the traces and they are coming on a
cloud of dust, swiftly as the flight of the swallow. They will be here in three
days.' None of us spoke until Tanus had sent the man away
with orders that he be fed and cared for. The messenger, who had expected to be
killed, kissed Queen Lostris' sandals. When we were alone, Tanus said softly, 'Salitis has
four regiments across the river. Six hundred chariots. It is over.' 'No!' my mistress's voice shook with the force of
her denial. "The gods cannot desert this very Egypt now. Our civilization
cannot perish. We have too much to give to the world.' 'I can fight on, of course,' Tanus agreed. 'But in
the end it will all be the same. We cannot prevail against their chariots.' My mistress turned back to me. 'Taita, I have not
asked you before, because I know how dearly it costs you. But I must ask you
now before I make the final decision. I ask you to work the Mazes of Ammon-Ra
for me. I must know what the gods require of us.' I bowed my head in acquiescence, and whispered, 'I
will fetch my chest.' THE SITE THAT I CHOSE FOR THE DIVINATION was the
inner sanctuary of the shrine to Horus in the half-completed Palace of Memnon.
The shrine had not yet been dedicated to the god, and his image had not yet
been set up, but I was certain that Horus had already cast his benevolent
influence over the building. My mistress sat before me with Tanus at her side,
and watched in fascination as I drank the witches' potion to open the eyes of
my soul, my Ka, the little bird-like creature that lives in the heart of every
one of us, and which is our alter ego. I laid the ivory Mazes before them and asked both
Queen Lostris and Tanus to stroke and handle them, to endow them with their
spirit and the spirit of the nation that they represented, this very Egypt. As
I watched them divide the stacks of ivory counters, I felt the drug in my blood
grow stronger, and the beat of my heart slowed as the little death crept over
me. I took up the two remaining Mazes from the last
stack, and I held them to my breast. They began to grow hot against my skin,
and my instinct was to draw back from the darkness that I felt coming over me.
Instead, I surrendered to it and let it carry me away. I heard my mistress's voice, as though from a great
distance. 'What will become of the double crown? How can we resist the
barbarian?' The visions began to form before my eyes, and I was
carried up into the days that were still to come, and I saw events that had not
yet come to pass. The morning sunlight was streaming through the
aperture in the roof and striking the altar of Horus, when at last I returned
from the far journey of the Mazes. I was shaken and nauseated with the effect
of the hallucinatory drug, giddy and trembling with the memories of the strange
sights that I had seen. My mistress and Tanus had stayed with me during the
long night. Their anxious faces were the first things that I saw on my return,
but they were still so distorted and wavering that I thought they were part of
the vision. 'Taita, are you all right? Speak to us. Tell us
what you saw.' My mistress was concerned. She could not hide the guilt she felt
at having forced me to enter the Mazes of Ammon-Ra once more. "There was a serpent.' My voice still echoed strangely
in my own ears, as though I stood apart. 'A great green serpent that crawled
through the desert.' I saw the puzzled expression on their faces, but I
had not yet considered the meaning of it all myself, so I could give them no
guidance. 'I am thirsty,' I whispered. 'My throat is dry and
my tongue like a stone covered with moss.' Tanus fetched a jar of wine and poured it into the
bowl for me, and I drank greedily. Tell us of the serpent,' my mistress demanded, as
soon as I lowered the bowl. 'There was no end to its sinuous body, and it
shimmered green in the sunlight. It crawled through a strange land, in which
lived tall naked men and strange and wonderful beasts.' 'Could you see the head or the tail of the
serpent?' my mistress asked, and I shook my head. 'Where were you? Where did you stand?' she
insisted. I had forgotten how keenly she enjoyed my visions, and what pleasure
she took in interpreting them. 'I was riding upon the back of the serpent,' I
answered. 'But I was not alone.' 'Who was with you?' 'You were at my side, mistress, and Memnon with
you. Tanus was on my other hand, and the serpent carried us all.' "The Nile! The serpent was the river,' she
cried triumphantly. 'You foresaw voyage that we were making upon the river.' 'Which way?' Tanus demanded. He was as rapt as she
was. 'Which way did the river run?' I made an effort to recall every detail. 'I saw the
sun rise on my left hand.' 'South!' he cried. 'Into Africa,' said my mistress. 'At last I saw the heads of the serpent ahead of
us. The body of the serpent was bifurcated, and on each branch was a head.' 'Does the Nile have two branches?' my mistress
wondered aloud. 'Or is there some deeper meaning to the vision?' 'Let us hear the rest of what Taita has to tell
us,' Tanus stopped her speculation. 'Continue, old friend.' 'Then I saw the goddess,' I went on. 'She sat upon
a high mountain. Both the heads of the serpent worshipped her.' My mistress could not restrain herself. 'Which of the
goddesses did you see? Oh, tell me quickly who it was.' 'She had the bearded head of a man but the breasts
and the pudenda of a woman. From her vagina she spurted out two great streams
of water into the open mouths of the double-headed serpent.' 'It is the goddess Hapi, the river god,' Queen
Lostris whispered. 'She generates the river within herself, and pours it out to
flow through the world.' 'What else did the vision show you?' Tanus
demanded. "The goddess smiled at us, and her face shone
with love and benevolence. She spoke in a voice'that was the sound of the wind
and the sea. The sound of thunder on the peaks of far-away mountains.' 'What did she say to us?' Queen Lostris asked in
awe. 'She said, "Let my child come to me. I will
make her strong so that she will prevail and my people will not perish in the
face of the barbarian." * I repeated the words that still beat like a drum
in my head. 'I am the child of the river goddess,' said my
mistress simply. 'At birth I was dedicated to her. Now she summons me, and I
must go to the place where she dwells at the end of the Nile.' 'This is the same voyage that Taita and I
contemplated once before,' Tanus mused. 'And now the goddess commands it. We
cannot refuse her.' 'Yes, we must go, but we will come back,' my
mistress vowed. 'This is my land, this very Egypt. This is my city, this
beautiful Thebes of the hundred gates. I cannot leave them for ever. I will
return to Thebes. This I swear and I call upon the goddess Hapi to witness my
oath. We shall return!' THE DECISION TO FLY TO THE SOUTH, UP above the
cataracts into the wild and unexplored land beyond, was one that Tanus and I
had made once before. The first time had been to escape the wrath and vengeance
of Pharaoh. Now we were flying from an even more merciless foe. It was almost
as though the gods were determined that we should undertake this voyage, and
that they would not be denied. There was little time for us to make our
preparations for such a fateful departure. The Hyksos were coming down on us
from two directions, and our pickets reported that their cohorts would be in
view from the roof of the Palace of Memnon within three days at the very
latest. Tanus placed Kratas in charge of half his available
force and sent him to meet King Salitis who was driving hard from Asyut in the
north and was likely to be the first column to reach the necropolis and the
palace. Kratas had orders to fight a running battle. Using the staves and
defending every fortified position, he was to delay Salitis as long as was
possible, without risking being cut off or overwhelmed. When he could hold them
no longer, he was to evacuate his men on to the galleys. Tanus himself took the other half of our army and
moved south to fight another delaying battle against the Hyksos division coming
at us from Esna. While they were thus engaged, my mistress was to
embark our people and all their possessions aboard the remaining ships of our
fleet. My mistress delegated this duty to Lord Merkeset, but of course she made
me his assistant. Lord Merkeset was not «nly well into his dotage, but had
recently taken to himself a sixteen-year-old wife. He was not, therefore, of
much use either to himself or to me. The entire planning and execution of the
evacuation fell squarely on my shoulders. However, before I could turn my mind to this, I had
to take care of my horses. Even at this early stage I realized with stark
clarity that they were the key to our survival as a, nation and a civilized
people. With those animals that we had captured at Esna, we now had several
thousand in our herd. I split this herd into four parts so that they could more
readily find grazing on the march. Further, the smaller herds would throw up
less dust, and it would be easier for them to avoid the Hyksos scouts. I sent Hui and my charioteers and grooms south with
these herds towards Elephantine, with orders to avoid the river-bank down which
the Hyksos chariots were advancing and to keep inland, closer to the edge of
the desert. Once the horses were despatched, I could turn my
attention to the humans. I realized that we were limited by the number of ships
available as to how many of our people were able to accompany us on the long
voyage. I was certain that almost every Egyptian wanted to be part of the
exodus. The cruelty and ferocity of the Hyksos were evident in every city they
burned and in every atrocity that they inflicted on our people. All the unknown
dangers of the African wilderness were preferable to these bloodthirsty monsters
who were racing down upon us in their chariots. In the end I calculated that we could accommodate
only twelve thousand souls aboard the escaping fleet, and I reported this to my
mistress. 'We will have to be ruthless in those we select and
those we leave behind,' I told her, but she would not listen to my advice. 'These are my people. I would give up my own place
rather than leave one of them to the Hyksos.' 'But, Majesty, what about the old and the decrepit?
The sick and the very young?' 'Every citizen will be given the choice of coming
with us. I will not leave a greybeard or a beggar, a day-old infant or a leper.
They are my people, and if they cannot go, then Prince Memnon and I will stay
with them.' Of course, she mentioned the prince to make doubly certain of her
victory over me. The ships would be gunwale-deep under this great
weight of humanity, but I had no choice. Still, I had some satisfaction in
first embarking all the most useful and creative citizens. I chose men from
every trade and profession, masons and weavers, coppersmiths and potters,
tanners and sail-makers, scribes and artists, shipbuilders and carpenters, all
of them leaders in their particular discipline. These I saw safely on board the
waiting transports. It gave me a particular pleasure to allocate the most
uncomfortable berths in the most squalid vessels to the priesthood and the law
scribes, those blood-sucking fleas on the healthy body of the state. When all of these were boarded, I allowed the
rabble to come swarming on to the wharf below the temple. As a result of my mistress's intransigence, I had
to be careful in choosing what cargo we would load. There would be no room for
idle fripperies. I gathered up the weapons and tools and the raw materials that
we would need to build up another fcivilization in the unknown lands. For the
rest of the cargo I tried in every way to reduce weight and bulk. For instance,
rather than grain and fruits, I loaded the seeds of every desirable plant in
clay jars sealed with pitch and wax. Every deben-weight of cargo that we loaded in our
holds meant that something else must be left behind. Our voyage might last ten
years or a lifetime. The road would be hard. We knew that the great cataracts
lay ahead of us. We dared not burden ourselves with anything but the most
essential, but then there remained my mistress's promise to Pharaoh. There was
barely room for the living—how much space could we afford to give over to the
dead? 'I gave my vow to the king as he lay dying,' my
mistress insisted. 'I cannot leave him here.' 'Your Majesty, I will find a secure hiding-place
for the king's body, an unmarked grave in the hills where no man will find him.
When we return to Thebes, we will exhume him, and give him the royal burial
that you promised him.' 'If I break my vow, the gods will desert us and our
voyage will be doomed. The, body of the king must go with us.' One glance at her expression warned me that there
would be no profit in further argument. We opened the massive granite
sarcophagus and lifted out the six inner coffins. Even these were so bulky that
it would have needed a galley to carry them alone. I made a decision without consulting Queen Lostris.
I had the workmen remove only the two innermost golden coffins. These we
covered with a thick linen canvas shroud which we stitched over them as
protection. The size and weight were thus reduced to acceptable proportions,
and we stowed these two canvas-covered coffins in the hold of the Breath of
Horus. The bulk of Pharaoh's treasure, all the gold and
silver and the precious stones, was packed into cedar-wood boxes. I ordered the
goldsmiths to strip the bullion from the discarded coffins and from the wooden
frame of the great funeral sledge, and melt it down into bars. I was secretly
delighted to be the instrument of destruction of that tasteless monstrosity.
The treasure chests and the bars of bullion were carried down to the wharf and
loaded on board the waiting ships. I distributed these so that every ship
carried at least one chest or a stack of bullion bars. In this way, the risk
that the entire treasure could be lost at a single stroke of misfortune was
greatly reduced. There was much of the funerary treasure that we
could not take with us, all the furniture and the statuary, the ceremonial
armour and the boxes of ushabti statues, and of course the ungainly framework
of the hearse from which I had stripped the gold. Rather than have it fall into
the hands of the Hyksos, we piled all of this in the temple courtyard, and I
personally hurled a burning torch OH top of the mountain of treasure, and
watched it burn to ashes. All this was done in dreadful haste, and before the
last ship was loaded the lookouts on the roof of the palace shouted the warning
that the dust-clouds of the Hyksos chariots were in sight. Within the hour, our
exhausted and battle-weary troops who, under command of Tanus and Kratas, had
been fighting the long grim rear-guard action, began to pull back into the
necropolis, and to embark on the waiting galleys. I met Tanus as he came up on to the causeway at the
head of a squad of the guards. So far, by dint of courage and sacrifice, he and
his men had managed to win a few extra days for us to complete the evacuation.
They could do no more, and the enemy was driving them in. When I waved and called his name, Tanus saw me and
shouted over the heads of the crowd, 'Queen Lostris and the prince? Have they
gone aboard the Breath of Horus?' I forced my way through the throng to his side. 'My
mistress will not leave until all her people are on board the ships. She
ordered me to take you to her as soon as you arrived. She is waiting for you in
her quarters in the palace.' He looked at me aghast. 'The enemy are pressing us
hard. Queen Lostris and the prince are more precious than all this rabble. Why
did you not force her?' I laughed. 'She is not an easy lady to force. You
should know that as well as I do. She will leave none of her people to the
Hyksos.' 'Seth blast that woman's pride! She will get all of
us killed.' But his harsh words were belied by the expression of pride and
admiration on his dusty, sweat-streaked face, and he grinned at me. 'Well, if
she will not come on her own, we shall have to go and fetch her.' We pushed our way through the long lines of
passengers, laden with bundles of their possessions and carrying their infants,
that were streaming down to the dock to go aboard the ships. As we hurried
along the causeway, Tanus pointed over the battlements at the ominous clouds of
dust bearing down upon us from both directions. 'They are moving faster than I had believed
possible. They have not even halted to water their horses. Unless we speed up
the embarkation, they will catch us with half our people still ashore,' he said
grimly, and pointed down on to the wharf below us. The wharf was wide enough to allow only two vessels
to come alongside at one time. The masses of refugees clogged the causeway and
congested the entrance gates to the dock. Their weeping and lamentation added
to the confusion, and at that moment someone at the rear of the column
screamed, "The Hyksos are here! Run! Save yourselves! The Hyksos are
here!' The panic spread through the crowd and it surged
forward mindlessly. Women were crushed against the stone gates, and children
were trampled under foot. All order and control were breaking down, decent and
dignified citizens and disciplined soldiers were being reduced to a desperate
mob struggling for survival. I had to use the sharpened stave I carried to force
a way through them, as Tanus and I fought our way back towards the palace. At
last we broke out of the crowd and ran to the palace gates. The halls and corridors were empty and deserted
except for a few looters who were picking through the empty rooms. They ran
when they saw Tanus. He was a dreadful sight, gaunt and dusty and battle-worn,
with a ruddy stubble of beard covering his jaw. Ahead of me, he burst into the
private quarters of the queen, and we found her chamber unguarded and the door
standing wide. We rushed through it. My mistress sat alone on the terrace under the
spreading vine, with Prince Memnon on her lap. She was pointing out to him the
fleet of ships on the Nile below the terrace, and the two of them were
enthusing over the spectacle. 'Look at the pretty ships.' Queen Lostris stood up smiling when she saw us, and
Memnon slid off her lap and ran to Tanus. Tanus swung him up on to his shoulder, and then
embraced my mistress with his free hand. 'Where are your slaves? Where are Aton and Lord
Merseket?' Tanus demanded. 'I sent them to the ships.' 'Taita says that you refused to go yourself. He is
very angry with you, and rightly so.' 'Forgive me, dear Taita.' Her smile could light my
life, or break my heart. 'Rather beg the forgiveness of King Salitis,' I
suggested stiffly. 'He will be here soon enough.' I seized her arm. 'Now that
this rude soldier of yours has at last arrived, can we please go to the ships?' We hurried from the terrace and back through the
palace corridors. We were entirely alone, even the looters and the thieves had
disappeared like rats into their holes. The only one of us who was completely
unconcerned was Prince Memnon. For him it was another jolly game. Sitting
astride Tanus' shoulders, he dug in his heels and shouted, 'Hi up!' as he had
learned from me when we were riding Patience. We raced across the palace gardens to the stone
staircase that led up on to the causeway. That was the shortest way to the
temple dock. As we hurried along the causeway, I realized that circumstances
had changed drastically in the time that had passed since we had left to fetch
my mistress and the prince from the palace. Ahead of us the causeway was
deserted, the last of the refugees had gone on board the ships in the dock.
Beyond the stone battlements I could see their masts moving slowly down the
canal towards the open river. With a hollow feeling in the pit of my stomach, I
realized that we were the last persons left ashore, and that we still had half
a mile to cover before we reached the empty dock. All of us stopped together,
and watched the last galleys sail away. 'I told the captain to wait,' I groaned, 'but with
the Hyksos so close, their only concern is with then1 own safety.' 'What can we do now?' my mistress breathed, and
even Memnon's happy cries dried up. 'If we can reach the river-bank, surely Remrem or
Kratas will see us and send in a skiff to pick us up?' I suggested, and Tanus
agreed immediately. 'This way! Follow me!' he cried. 'Taita, see to
your mistress.' I took her arm to help her along, but she was as
strong and agile as a shepherd boy and ran easily at my side. Then suddenly I
heard the horses, and the squeal of chariot wheels. The sounds were
unmistakable and terrifyingly near at hand. Our own horses had left three days ago, and must be
well on their way to Elephantine by this time. Our own chariots were dismantled
and loaded in the holds of the departing fleet. The chariots I heard now were
still out of sight below the wall of the causeway, but we knew to whom they
belonged. 'The Hyksos!' I said softly, and we stopped in a tight
little group. 'It must be one of their advance scouting parties.' 'It sounds like only two or three of their
chariots,' Tanus agreed, 'but that is enough. We are cut off.' 'It seems that we have left it a little late,' said
my mistress with a calmness that I knew was feigned, and she looked at Tanus
and myself with complete trust. 'What do you suggest now?' Her effrontery flabbergasted me. Her obstinacy was
entirely responsible for our predicament. If she had followed my urging we
would all of us have been on the Breath of Horus and making our way
up-river to Elephantine by this time. Tanus held up his hand for silence, and we stood
and listened to the sounds of the enemy chariots driving along the pathway at
the foot of the wall. The closer they came, the more certain it became that
this was only a small advance party. Suddenly the sounds of turning wheels stopped, and
we heard the horses blowing and stamping, then men's voices speaking a harsh
and guttural tongue. They were just below us, and Tanus made another urgent
signal for silence. Prince Memnon was not accustomed to restraint, nor to
keeping the peace against his inclinations. He also had heard and recognized
the sounds. 'Horses!' he shouted in his usual high and ringing
tones. 'I want to see the horses.' There was an instant outcry. Hyksos voices shouted
orders, and weapons rattled in their scabbards. Then heavy footfalls pounded
upon the stone staircase as a party of the enemy came dashing up on to the
causeway. Their tall helmets appeared above the stone
balustrade just ahead of us, and then the rest of them came into view. There
were five of them in a body and they rushed up at us with drawn swords, big men
with fish-scale shirts of mail and brightly coloured ribbons in their beards.
But one of them was taller than the rest. I did not recognize him at first, for
he had grown a beard and decorated it with ribbons in the Hyksos fashion, and
the visor of his helmet hid half his face. Then he shouted in that voice that I
would never forget, 'So it's you, young Harrab! I killed the old dog, and now I
will kill his puppy!' I should have known that Lord Intef would be the
very first of them to come sniffing like a hungry hyena after Phar-aoh's
treasure. He must have raced ahead of the main Hyksos division to be the first
into the funerary temple. Despite his boast, he did not rush to meet Tanus, but
waved the band of Hyksos charioteers forward to do the job for him. Tanus swept Prince Memnon from his shoulders and
tossed him to me as though he were a doll. 'Run!' he ordered. 'I will buy you a little time
here.' He rushed the Hyksos while they were still bunched on the staircase and
had no room to wield their swords. He killed the first one cleanly, with that
thrust through the throat which he always performed so skilfully. 'Don't stand there gawking,' he shouted over his
shoulder. 'Run!* I was not gawking, but with the child clutched to
my chest, I knew how futile was his command. Burdened as I was, I would never
reach the river-bank. I stepped to the parapet of the causeway and
glanced over. There were two Hyksos chariots parked directly below me, with the
horses blowing and stamping in the traces. Only one man had been left to hold
them, while his companions rushed up the staircase. He stood at the heads of
the two teams and his whole attention was fixed on his charges. He had not seen
me on the causeway above his head. Still clutching Memnon, I threw my legs over the
parapet and pushed myself outwards. The prince shrieked with alarm as we
dropped. From the top of the causeway to where the Hyksos charioteer stood was
four times the height of a tall man. I might easily have broken a leg in the
fall, except that I landed neatly on the unsuspecting Hyksos's head. The impact
broke his neck; clearly I heard the vertebrae snap, and he crumpled under us,
breaking our fall. I scrambled to my feet, with Memnon howling in
outrage at this rough treatment, but there was more of it to follow. I dropped
him into the cockpit of the nearest chariot and looked up at my mistress. She
was peeping over the parapet high above me. 'Jump!' I shouted. 'I will catch you!' She never
even hesitated, but flung herself over the edge so promptly that I was not yet
braced to receive her. She came hurtling down on top of me, witirher short
skirts blowing up and exposing those long sleek thighs. She hit me squarely and
knocked the wind out of my lungs. We went down together in a heap. I scrambled up wheezing for breath, and dragged her
to her feet. I shoved her roughly over the footplate of the chariot and shouted
at her, 'See to Memnon!' She grabbed him just as he tried to escape from the
cockpit of the chariot. He was still howling with anger and fright. I had to
scramble over the top of them to reach the reins and take control of the horses. 'Hang on tight!' The pair of horses responded
instantly to my hands, and I wheeled the whole rig smartly under the wall. One
wheel bounced over the body of the man that I had killed with my fall. 'Tanus!' I screamed. 'This way!' High above us he jumped up on to the parapet, and
balanced there easily, exchanging parry and thrust with the group of
charioteers who bayed around him, like hounds around a treed leopard. Tump, Tanus, jump!' I yelled, and he stepped out
over the edge of the stone wall and let himself drop. With his cloak billowing
around his head and shoulders, he landed astride the back of the off-side
horse. His sword jerked out of his hand and clattered on the hard earth, and
Tanus threw both arms around the animal's neck. 'Hi up!' I called to the pair, and whipped the end
of the reins around their hindquarters. They surged forward into a full gallop.
I steered them across the pathway and into the open fields that led down to the
river-bank. I could see the sails of our fleet out there in midstream, and I
could even recognize the pennant of the Breath ofHorus flying amongst the
forest of masts. We had half a mile to go to reach the bank, and I glanced over
my shoulder. Lord Intef and his men had rushed down the staircase.
Even as I watched, they were climbing up into the other chariot. I cursed
myself that I had not disabled it. It would have taken only a moment to cut the
traces and chase away the horses, but I had been in a panic to get my mistress
and the prince away. Now Lord Intef was coming after us. His chariot had
not covered a hundred paces before I realized that it was faster than the one I
was driving. Tanus' weight on the back of the off-side horse was hampering its
gallop; he was a heavy man and he still clung to its neck with both arms. He
seemed frozen with terror. I think that this was the first time that I had ever
seen him truly afraid. I have seen him stand firm and shoot down a charging
lion with his bow, but the horse terrified him. I tried to ignore the following chariot, and I
looked ahead and concentrated all my newly acquired skill on piloting us over
the open cultivated fields and through the maze of irrigation canals and
ditches to the bank of the Nile. The Hyksos chariot was heavy and unwieldy,
compared to my Taita vehicle. The solid wooden wheels with their glinting and
turning knives around the rims bit deeply into the clay loam of the ploughed
lands, and all that bronze armour and Ornamentation on the dashboard and
side-frames weighed us down. The horses must have been driven hard before I
took control of them. They were lathered with sweat and white froth dripped
from their muzzles. We had not covered half the distance to the
river-bank when I heard the shouts of the Hyksos charioteer closing with us,
and the pounding of hooves. I glanced back to see them not three lengths
behind. The driver was lashing the horses with a whip of knotted leather tails
and yelling at them in that coarse and ugly language. Beside him, Lord Intef
was leaning out eagerly over the dashboard. His ribboned beard was streaming
back on either side of his jaw, and his handsome features were lit by the
rapture of the hunter. He shouted at me, and his voice carried over the
sounds of the two labouring teams of horses. 'Taita, my old darling, do you
still love me? I want you to prove it once more before you die.' And he
laughed. 'You are going to kneel in front of me and die with your mouth full.'
My skin prickled with insects' feet of horror at the image his words conjured
up. There was an irrigation ditch ahead of us, and I
swerved to run alongside it, for the sides were deep and sheer. The Hyksos
chariot followed us round, gaining on us with every stride. 'And you, my lovely daughter, I will give you to the
Hyksos soldiers to play-with. They will teach you a few tricks that Harrab
forgot to show you. I don't need you, now that I have your brat.' Queen Lostris
clutched the prince closer to her chest and her face was pale and set. I understood Lord Intef's design immediately. A
child of the royal blood of Egypt, even as a satrap of the Hyksos, would
command the loyalty of all our people. Prince Mem-non was the puppet through
which King Salitis and Lord Intef intended to rule the two kingdoms. It was an
ancient and effective device of the conqueror. I pushed my horses to their
utmost, but they were tiring and slowing, and Lord Intef closed with us so
swiftly that he no longer needed to shout to make himself heard. 'Lord Harrab, this is a pleasure long delayed. What
shall we do with you? I wonder. First, you and I will watch the soldiers
entertain my daughter—' I tried to stop my ears to his filth, but his voice was
insidious. I was still gazing ahead, concentrating on the
rough and dangerous ground, but from the corner of my eye I saw the heads of
the Hyksos pair draw level with our vehicle. Their manes flowed back, and their
eyes were wild as they tore up beside us at full gallop. I looked back at them. The burly Hyksos archer on
the footplate behind Intef nocked an arrow to his short recurved bow. The range
was so short that even from the bouncing and leaping platform, he could not
miss hitting one of us. Tanus was out of the fight. He had dropped his
sword. He was still clinging to the neck of the horse on the side furthest from
the overtaking chariot. I had only my little dagger, and Queen Lostris was down
on her knees trying to shield the prince with her own body. It was only then that I realized the mistake that
the Hyksos driver had made. He had pushed his team of horses into the gap
between us and the deep irrigation ditch. He had left himself no room to
manoeuvre. The archer lifted his bow and drew the fletchings
of the arrow to his lips. He aimed at me. I was looking into his eyes over the
barbed flint of the arrow-head. His brows were black and dense and bushy, his
eyes as dark and implacable as those of a lizard. The Hyksos horses were
running level with the hub of my near-side wheel, and I gathered my reins and
swerved towards them. The flashing bronze knives that stood out of my
wheel-rims buzzed softly as they spun towards the legs of the horses. The Hyksos driver shouted with consternation as he
realized his error. His horses were trapped between the ditch and those cruel
knives. The blades were less than a hand-span from the knees of the big bay
stallion running nearest to me. At that same instant, the Hyksos archer loosed his
arrow, but my sudden swerve had beaten him also. The arrow seemed to fly quite
slowly towards my head, but this was an illusion produced by my terror. In
reality it flashed like a beam of sunlight over my shoulder, the flint edge
touched my ear, and a drop of blood dripped from the grazed skin on to my
chest. The other driver had tried to counter my swerve by
turning away from me, but now his far wheel was running along the lip of the
irrigation ditch. It was crumbling away beneath the bronze-bound rim, and the
chariot lurched and teetered on the edge. I gathered my horses and swung them again, turning
into the other chariot. My wheel-blades hacked into the legs of the nearest
horse, and the poor beast squealed with agony. I saw pieces of skin and hair
fly into the air above the sideboard of my chariot, and I steeled myself to the
whinnying cry of the horse, and turned hard into him again. This time blood and
bone chips flew in a mush from the broken legs, and the horse went down,
kicking and squealing, pulling his team-mate down with him. The Hyksos chariot
went over the edge of the ditch. I saw the two passengers in the cockpit thrown
clear, but the driver was carried over and crushed beneath the capsized truck
and the heavy, spinning wheels. Our own chariot was now tearing along dangerously
close to the edge of the ditch, but I managed to gather the horses and bring
them back in hand. 'Whoa!' I slowed them, and turned to look back. A
cloud of dust hung over the ditch where the Hyksos chariot had disappeared. I
brought my team down to a trot. The river-bank was two hundred paces ahead, and
nothing stood hi our way to safety. I turned for one last look behind me. The Hyksos
archer, who had fired his arrow'at me, lay in a crumpled and broken heap where
he had been thrown. Lord Intef lay a little further from the edge of the ditch.
I truly believe I might have left him there if he had not stirred, but at that
moment he sat up and then pushed himself unsteadily to his feet. Suddenly all my hatred of him came back to me with
such force and clarity that my mind seethed with it. It was. as though a vein
had burst behind my eyes, for my vision darkened, and was glazed over with the
reddish sheen of blood. A savage, incoherent cry burst from my throat, and I
wheeled the horses in a tight circle until we were headed back towards the
causeway. Lord Intef stood directly in my path. He had lost
his helmet and his weapons in the fall, and he seemed half-dazed, for he swayed
upon his feet. I whipped the horses up into a gallop once more, and the heavy
wheels rumbled forward. I aimed the chariot directly at him. His beard was
dishevelled and the ribbons in it sullied with dust. His eyes also were dull
and bemused, but as I drove the horses down on him, suddenly they cleared and
his head came up. 'No!' he shouted, and began to back away, throwing
out his hands towards me as if to fend off the massive carriage and the running
horses. I aimed directly for him, but at the last moment, his dark gods
defended him one last time. As I was right upon him, he threw himself to one
side. I had seen him staggering and I had supposed that he was weak and
helpless. Instead, he was quick and nimble as a jackal pursued by the hounds.
The chariot was heavy and unwieldy, and I could not turn it swiftly enough to
follow his side-step and dodge. I missed him and went on by. I wrestled with the
reins, but the horses carried me on a hundred paces before I could get them
under control and swing the heavy vehicle round again. By the time we came
around, Intef was running for the shelter of the ditch. If he reached it, he
would be safe— I realized that. I swore bitterly as I drove the team after him. It was then that his gods finally abandoned him. He
had almost reached the ditch, but he was looking back over his shoulder at me,
and he was not watching his footing. He ran into a patch of clay clods, hard as
rocks, and his ankle turned under him. He fell heavily but rolled back on to
his feet like an acrobat. He tried to run again, but the pain in his broken
ankle brought him up. He hobbled a pace or two and then tried to hop forward
towards the ditch on one leg. 'You are mine at last!' I screamed at him, and he
spun around to face me, balanced on one leg as I drove the chariot down on him.
His face was pale, but those leopard eyes blazed up at me with all the
bitterness and hatred of his cruel and twisted soul. 'He is my father!' my mistress cried at my side,
holding the prince's face to her bosom so that he would not see it. 'Leave him,
Taita. He is of my blood.' I had never disobeyed her in my life, this was the
first time. I made no move to check the horses, but gazed into Lord Intef's
eyes, for once without fear. At the very end, he almost cheated me again. He
flung himself sideways, and such were his agility and his strength that he
twisted himself clear of the truck and the wheels of the chariot, but he could
not quite avoid the wheel-knives. One of the spinning blades hooked in the
fish-scale links of his coat of mail. The point of the Joufe tore through the
armour and hooked in the flesh of his belly. The knife was spinning and his
entrails snagged and wrapped around it, so that his guts were drawn out of him,
as though he was one of those big blue perch from the river being disembowelled
by a fishwife on the market block. He was towed along behind us by the slippery ropes
of his own entrails, but he fell slowly behind as more coils and tangles of his
gut were torn from his open stomach cavity. He clutched at them with both
hands, as they were stripped out of him, but they slid through his fingers like
some grotesque umbilical cord that bound him to the turning wheel of the chariot. His screams were a sound that I wish never to hear
again as long as I live. The echoes of them still sometimes haunt my
nightmares, so that in the end he inflicted his last cruelty upon me. I have
never been able to forget him, as I would so dearly have wished. When at last the gruesome rope by which he was
being dragged across the black earth snapped, he was left lying in the centre
of the field. At last those cries of his were stilled, and he lay without
movement. I pulled up the horses and Tanus slid down off the.
back of his mount and came back to the chariot. He lifted my mistress and the
prince down and held them close to his chest. My mistress was weeping. 'Oh, it was so terrible! Whatever he did to us, he
was still my father.' 'It's all right now,' Tanus hugged her. 'It's all
over now.' Prince Memnon was peering back over his mother's
shoulder at the sprawling figure of his grandfather with all the fascination
that children have with the macabre. Suddenly he piped up in that ringing
treble, 'He was a nasty man.' 'Yes,' I agreed softly, 'he was a very nasty man.' 'Is the nasty man dead now?' 'Yes, Mem, he is dead. Now we can all sleep better
at nights.' I had to drive the horses hard along the river-bank
to catch up with our departing flotilla, but at last I drew level with Kratas'
galley, and he recognized us in the unfamiliar vehicle. Even across that wide
stretch of water, his astonishment was apparent. Later he told me that he had
believed we were safely aboard one of the leading ships of the flotilla. I turned the horses loose before I left the
chariot. Then we waded out into the water to reach the small boat which Kratas
sent in to pick us up. THE HYKSOS WOULD NOT LET US GO that easily. Day
after day, their chariots pursued our flotilla down both banks of the Nile as
we fled southwards. Whenever we looked back over the stern of the Breath
of Horus, we saw the dust of the enemy columns following us. Very often the
dust was mingled with the darker clouds of smoke that rose from the towns and
villages on the river-banks which the Hyksos burned as they sacked them. As we
passed each of the Egyptian towns, a flock of small craft sailed out to join
our fleet, so that our armada increased in numbers with each day that passed. There were times, when the wind was unfavourable,
that the columns of chariots overhauled us. Then we saw then-cohorts gleaming
on the banks on either side of us, and heard their harsh but futile jeers and
challenges ring out across the water. However, eternal Mother Nile gave us her
protection, as she had over the centuries, and they could not reach us out on
the stream. Then the wind would veer back into the north and we drew ahead of
them once more, and the dust-clouds fell back on to the northern horizon. "Their horses cannot keep up this chase much
longer,' I told Tanus on the morning of the twelfth day. 'Don't be too smug about it. Salitis has the lure
of the treasure of Pharaoh Mamose and the legitimate heir to the double crown,'
Tanus replied simply. 'Gold and power have a marvellous way of stiffening a
man's resolve. We have not seen the last of the barbarian yet.' The next morning the wind had changed again, and
the chariots slowly gained upon us once more, and overtook the leading ships of
our flotilla just as we approached the Gates of Hapi, the first of the granite
walls that constricted the river below Elephantine. Between them the Nile
narrowed to less than four hundred paces across from bank to bank, and the
black granite cliffs rose almost sheer on each side. The flow of the current
was full against us as it swirled through the Gates of Hapi, so that our speed
bled off and Tanus ordered fresh men to the rowing-benches. 'I think you are right, Taita. This is where they
will be waiting,' he told me grimly, and then almost immediately afterwards he
pointed ahead. 'There they are.' Leading the fleet, the Breath of Horus was
just entering the gates, so we had to throw our heads back to look up the
cliff-faces. The figures of the Hyksos archers high up on the rocky ledges were
foreshortened by the angle, so that they appeared as grotesque dwarfs. 'From that height they could shoot their arrows
clear across from bank to bank,' Tanus muttered. 'We will be in easy range for
most of this day. It will be hard on all of us, but more especially on the
women and the children.' It was even worse than Tanus expected. The first
arrow, fired at our galley from the cliffs above us, left a trail of smoke
against the blue vault of the sky as it arced down and struck the water only a
cubit ahead of our bows. 'Fire-arrows,' Tanus nodded. 'You were right once
again, Taita. The barbarian does learn quickly.' 'It's easy enough to teach an ape new tricks.' I
hated the Hyksos as much as any man in the fleet. 'Now let us see if your bellows can pump water into
a ship as well as they pump it out,' Tanus said. I had anticipated this attack with fire and so, for
the last four days, I had been working on those galleys that Tanus had fitted
with the water-pumps which I had designed for him. Now, as each of our vessels
came up, Tanus ordered the captain to lower his sails, and we pumped water over
the decks and soaked the rigging. Leather buckets were filled and placed ready
upon the decks, and then one of the galleys escorted the ship into the
granite-lined gut of the river and the rain of Hyksos fire-arrows. It took two full days to get the flotilla through,
for the cliffs blanketed the wind. It was hot and still in the gap, and each
ship had to be rowed all the way against the current The arrows fell upon us in
pretty, sparking parabolas, rapping into the masts and the decks. Each of them
started its own blaze that had to be quenched by the bucket chains or by the
leather hoses of the pumps on the escort galley. There was no way for us to
retaliate against this attack, for the archers were high up on the cliff-faces.
They were well out of range of our own less powerful bows. When Remrem led a
shore party to dislodge them from their perches, they were able to fire down on
his men and drive them back into the boats with heavy losses. Those vessels that won through were all scarred
with black scorched patches. Many others were less fortunate. The flames aboard
them had beaten the buckets and the pumps and engulfed them. They had to be cut
free and left to drift down on the current, causing pandemonium amongst the
rest of the fleet coming up into the gap. In most cases we managed to take the
crew and passengers off before the flames were out of hand, but with some we
were too late. The screams of the women and the children in the heart of the
flames were enough to stop the blood in my heart. I am left for ever with an
image from that dreadful day of a young woman leaping from the deck of a
burning barge with her long hair wreathed in flames, like a wedding garland. We lost over fifty ships in the Gates of Hapi.
There were mourning banners flying on every ship as we sailed on towards
Elephantine, but at least the Hyksos seemed to have exhausted themselves and
their horses in this long chase southwards. The dust-clouds no longer
besmirched our northern horizon, and we had a respite in which to mourn our
dead and repair our vessels. However, none of us believed that they had given up
entirely. In the end, the lure of Pharaoh's treasure must prove too much to
resist. CONFINED AS WE WERE TO THE DECK OF the galley,
Prince Memnon and I spent much time together sitting under the awning on the
poop-deck. There he listened avidly to my stories, or watched me design and
whittle the first model of a new bow for our army, based on the Hyksos recurved
type. He had by now learned the old trick of asking questions to keep my
attention focused upon him. 'What are you doing now, Tata?' 'I am making a new bow.' 'Yes, but why?' 'All right, I will tell you. Our own single-curve
bows, apart from lacking the same power and carry, are too long to be used from
the chariot.' He listened gravely. Even when he was an infant I had tried never
to indulge in baby-talk with him, and I always addressed him as an equal. If
sometimes he did not understand, at least he was happy with the sound of my
voice. 'I am now totally convinced that our future lies
with the horse and chariot, I am sure that Your Royal Highness agrees with me.'
I looked up at him. 'You love horses too, don't you, Mem?' He understood that well enough. 'I love horses,
especially Patience and Blade,' he nodded vehemently. I had already filled three scrolls with my musings
and diagrams of how I conceived these military assets could be used to best
advantage. I wished that I was able to discuss these in detail with Tanus, but
the Great Lion of Egypt's interest in matters equine was grudging and
superficial. 'Build the cursed things if you must, but don't
keep chattering about them,' Tanus told me. The prince was a much more receptive audience, and
while I worked, we conducted these long discussions, which were only much later
to bear their full harvest. As a companion, Memnon's first choice was always
Tanus, but I was not far behind in his affections, and we spent long, happy
hours in each other's company. From the very first he was an exceptionally
precocious and intelligent child, and under my influence he developed his gifts
more swiftly than any other I had ever instructed. Even my mistress at the same
age had not been as quick to learn. I had made Memnon a toy bow of the design I was
studying, and he mastered it almost immediately and could soon, shoot one of
his tiny arrows the full length of the galley's deck, much to the agitation of
the slave girls and nursemaids who were usually his targets. None of them dared
bend over when the prince was armed with his bow, he seldom missed an inviting
pair of feminine buttocks at under twenty paces. After his bow, his favourite toy was the miniature
chariot and horse that I had carved for him. I had even made the tiny figure of
a charioteer to stand in the cockpit, and reins for him to drive the pair. The
prince promptly named the mannikin Mem, and the horses were christened Patience
and Blade. He crawled tirelessly up and down the deck, pushing the chariot in
front of him, making appropriate horsey noises and uttering cries of 'Hi up!'
and 'Whoa!' For such a small boy he was always aware of his
surroundings. Those sparkling dark eyes missed very little of what was
happening around him. It was no surprise to me when he was the first of any of
the crew of the Breath of Horns to spot the strange figure far ahead of us on
the right bank of the river. 'Horses!' he shrieked, and then moments later,
'Look, look! It is Hui!' I rushed up to where he stood in the bows, and my
heart soared as I realized that he was right. It was Hui astride Blade coming
down the river-bank to meet us at a full gallop. 'Hui has got the horses through to Elephantine. I
forgive him all his other sins and stupidities. Hui has saved my horses.' 'I am very proud of Hui,' said the prince gravely,
imitating my words and intonation so exactly that my mistress and all those
around us burst out laughing. WE WERE GIVEN A RESPITE ONCE WE reached
Elephantine. There had been no sign of the pursuing chariots for so many days
that a new optimism spread through the fleet and the city. Men started speaking
of abandoning the flight to the south, and of remaining here below the
cataracts to build up a new army with which to oppose the invader. I never allowed my mistress to be seduced by this
spirit of confidence which was rooted in such shallow soil. I convinced her
that my vision of the Mazes had shown us the true path and that our destiny
still lay to the south. In the meantime, I continued my preparations for the
voyage unabated. I think that by this time, it was the adventure itself that
had cast its spell over me, even more than the necessity of running from the
Hyksos. I wanted to see what lay beyond the cataracts, and
in the nights after a full day's work in the docks, I sat up into the late
watches in the palace library, reading the accounts of men who had taken that
first step into the unknown before us. They wrote that the river had no end, that it ran
on to the very ends of the earth. They wrote that after the first cataract,
there was another more formidable, one that no man or ship could ever surmount.
They said that to voyage from the first cataract to the next was a full year of
travel, and still the river ran on. I wanted to see it. More than anything in my life I
wanted to see where this great river, that was our life, began. When at last I fell asleep in the lamplight over
the scrolls, I saw again in my dream the vision of the welcoming goddess seated
on a mountain-top, with the twin spouts of water gushing from her great vagina.
Although I had slept but little, I awoke with the dawn, refreshed and excited,
and I rushed back to the docks to continue the preparations for the journey. I was fortunate in that most of the ropes for our
shipping were woven and braided in the sail-yards here in Elephantine. Thus I
had the pick of the finest linen cables at my disposal. Some of these were as
thick as my finger, and others as thick as my thigh. With them I filled every
available space in the holds of the ships not already crammed with stores. I
knew just how desperately we would need these, when we came to the cataracts. It was not surprising that here in Elephantine
those of our company with faint hearts and weak resolve made themselves known.
The rigours of the flight from Thebes had convinced many of these that the
compassion and mercy of the Hyksos were preferable to a continuation of the
voyage into the burning southern deserts where even more savage men and beasts
awaited them. When, Tanus heard that there were so many thousands
of these citizens anxious to desert from the fleet, he roared, 'Damned traitors
and renegades! I know what to do with them.' And he expressed his intention of
turning his legions upon them, and driving them back on board the ships. At first he had my mistress's support in this. Her
motives were very different from his. She was concerned only with the welfare
of her subjects, and her vow that she would leave none of them to the Hyksos
terror. I had to spend half the night arguing with both of
them before I could convince them that we were better off without reluctant
passengers. In the end, Queen Lostris issued a decree that any person who
wished to remain in Elephantine might do so, but she added a neat little touch
of her own to the proclamation. This was read aloud in every street of the
city, and upon the docks where our ships lay. I, Queen Lostris, regent of this very Egypt, mother
of Prince Memnon, the heir to the double crown of the two kingdoms, now deliver
to the people of this land my solemn promise. I make oath before the gods
and call upon them to witness it. I swear to you that on the majority of the
prince, I shall return with him to this city of Elephantine, here to elevate
him to the throne of Egypt and place the double crown upon his brow that he may
cast out the oppressor and rule over you with justice and in mercy all the days
of his life. It is I, Queen Lostris,
regent of this very Egypt, who speaks thus. This act and declaration increased one hundredfold
the love and the loyalty that the common people felt towards my mistress and
the prince. I doubt that in all our history mere had ever been a ruler so
cherished as was she. When the lists were drawn up of those who would
come with us beyond the cataracts, I was not surprised to see that it comprised
most of those whose loyalty and skills we most valued. Those who wished to stay
in Elephantine were the ones we were happiest to lose, including most of the
priesthood. However, time would prove that those who remained
behind us in Elephantine were of great value to us also. During the long years
of the exodus they kept alive the flame in the hearts of the people, the memory
of Prince Memnon and the promise of Queen Lostris to return to them. Gradually, through all the long, bitter years of
the Hyksos tyranny, the legend of the return of the prince spread through the
two kingdoms. In the end, all the people of Egypt, from the first cataract to
the seven mouths of the Nile in the great Delta, believed that he would come
back, and they prayed for that day. HUI HAD MY HORSES WAITING FOR ME ON the fields of
the west bank, below the orange dunes hard by the river. The prince and I
visited them every day, and although he was growing heavier, Memnon rode upon
my shoulder to have a better view over the herd. By now Memnon knew all his
favourites by name, and Patience and Blade came to eat corn-cakes from his hand
when he called them. The first time he rode upon her back without my hand to
steady him, Patience was as gentle with him as she was with her own foal, and
the prince shouted out loud with the thrill of cantering alone around the
field. Hui had learned a great deal about the management of the herds on the
march, and using this knowledge, we planned in detail for their welfare on the
next stage of the journey. I also explained to Hui the role that I wished the
horses to play in the passage of the cataracts, and set him and the charioteers
and grooms to work plaiting and splicing harness. At the very first opportunity, Tanus and I went
up-river to scout the cataract. The water was so low that all the islands were
exposed. The channels between them were so shallow that in places it was
possible for a man to wade through without the water covering his head. The cataracts extended for many miles, a vast
confusion of shining, water-worn granite boulders and serpentine streams that
wriggled and twisted their way between them. Even I was daunted and discouraged
by the task that lay ahead of us, while Tanus was his usual brutally
straightforward self. 'You won't be able to push a skiff through here
without ripping the belly out of it. What will you do with a heavily laden
galley? Carry it through on the back of one of your cursed horses?' he laughed,
but without the least trace of humour. We started back to Elephantine, but before I
reached the city, I had made up my mind that the only way forward was to
abandon the ships and go on overland. The hardships that this course would
bring down upon us were difficult to imagine. However, I reckoned that we might
be able to rebuild the flotilla on the river-banks above the cataracts. When we returned to the palace on Elephantine
Island, Tanus and I went directly to the audience chamber to report to Queen
Lostris. She listened to everything that we told her, and then shook her head. 'I do not believe that the goddess has deserted us
so soon,' and she led us and all her court to the temple of Hapi on the south
tip of the island. She made a generous sacrifice to the goddess, and
we prayed all that night and asked for the guidance of Hapi. I do not believe
that the favour of the gods can be bought by cutting the throats of a few goats
and placing bunches of grapes upon the stone altar, nevertheless, I prayed with
all the fervour of the high priest, although by dawn my buttocks ached
hideously from the long vigil on the stone benches. As soon as the rays of the rising sun struck
through the doors of the sanctuary and illuminated the altar, my mistress sent
me down the shaft of the Nilometer. I had not reached the bottom step before I
found myself ankle-deep in water. Hapi had listened to our prayers. Although it was
weeks early, the Nile had begun to rise. THE VERY DAY AFTER THE WATERS BEGAN to rise, one of
our fast scouting galleys that Tanus had left to watch the movements of the
Hyksos cohorts came speeding up-river on the wings of the north wind. The
Hyksos were on the march again. They would be in Elephantine within the week. Lord Tanus left immediately with his main force to
prepare for the defence of the cataracts, leaving Lord Merkeset and myself to
see to the embarkation 6f our people. I was able to prise Lord Merkeset off the
belly of his young wife just long enough for him to sign the orders which I had
prepared for him so meticulously. This time we were able to avoid the chaos and
panic that had overtaken us at Thebes, and the fleet prepared to sail for the
tail of the cataracts in good order. Fifty thousand Egyptians lined both banks of the
river, weeping and singing psalms to Hapi and waving palm-fronds in farewell as
we sailed away. Queen Lostris stood in the bows of the Breath ofHorus with the
little prince at her side, and both of them waved to the crowds on the bank as
they passed slowly up-river. At twenty-one years of age, my mistress was at the
zenith of her beauty. Those who gazed upon her were struck with an almost
religious awe. That beauty was echoed in the face of the child at her side, who
held the crook and the flail of Egypt hi his small, determined hands. 'We will return,' my mistress called to them, and
the prince echoed her, 'We will return. Wait for us. We will return.' The legend that would sustain our blighted and
oppressed land through its darkest times was born that day on the banks of the
mother river. WHEN WE REACHED THE TAIL OF THE cataract the
following noon, the rock-studded gorge had been transformed into a smooth green
chute of rushing waters. In places it tumbled and growled in white water and
froth, but it had not yet unleashed its full and terrible power. This was the
moment in the life-cycle of the river most favourable to our enterprise. The
waters were high enough to allow our ships through without grounding in the
shallows, but the flood was not yet so wild and headstrong as to hurl them back
and dash them to driftwood on the granite steps of the cataract. Tanus himself managed the ships, while Hui and I,
under the nominal command of Lord Merkeset, managed the shore party. I placed
the jovial old man, with a large jar of the very best wine on his one hand and
his pretty little sixteen-year-old wife on the other, under a thatched shelter
on the high ground above the gorge. I ignored the garbled and contradictory
orders that the noble lord sent down to me from time to time over the ensuing
days, and we got on with the business of the transit of the first cataract. The heaviest linen lines were laid out upon the
bank, and our horses were harnessed in teams of ten. We found out quickly
enough that we were able to bring forward ten teams at a time—one hundred
horses—and couple them to the main ropes. Any greater numbers were
unmanageable. In addition to the horses, we had almost two
thousand men upon the secondary ropes and the guide-lines. Horses and men were
changed every hour so that the teams were always fresh. At every dangerous turn
and twist of the river, we stationed other parties upon the bank, and on the
exposed granite islands. These were all armed with long poles to fend the hulls
off the rocks as they were dragged through. Our men had been born on the river-banks and
understood men- boats and the moods of the Nile better than they did their own
wives'. Tanus and I arranged a system of hom signals between the ships and the
shore party that functioned more smoothly even than I had hoped. On board the vessels, the sailors were also armed
with poles to punt themselves forward and to fend off the bows. They sang the
ancient river shanties as they worked, and the Breath ofHorus was the first to
make the attempt. The sound of song and the cries of the horse-handlers mingled
with the muted thunder of the Nile waters as we hauled her forward and she
thrust her bows into the first chute of smoothly racing waters. The green waters piled up against her bows, but
their thrust was unable to overcome our determination and the strength of two
thousand men and one hundred straining horses. We dragged the Breath ofHorus up
the first rapid, and we cheered when she glided into the deep green pool at the
head. But there were six miles still to go. We changed
the men and horses and dragged her bows into the next tumbling, swirling
stretch of broken water in which the rocks stood like the heads of gigantic
hippopotami ready to rip out her frail timbers with fangs of granite. There
were six miles of these hellish rapids to negotiate, with death and disaster
swirling around every rock. But the ropes held, and the men and the horses
plodded on and upwards in relays. My mistress walked along the bank beside the teams
of sweating men. She looked as fresh and cool as a flower, even in the baking
sunlight, and her laughter and banter gave them fresh purpose. She sang the
working songs with them, and I joined with her in the chorus. We made up fresh
words as we went along. The men laughed at the saucy couplets and hauled on the
ropes with renewed strength. Prince Memnon rode on the back of Blade, in the
leading team of horses. Hui had tiei a rope around the horse's chest behind the
front legs to give him a hand-hold, because Memnon's legs were still too short
to afford him a firm grip, and stuck out at an undignified angle on each side
of Blade's broad back. The prince waved back proudly at his father on the
poop-deck of the galley. When at last we broke out into the deep, unruffled
flow of the main river above the rapids, the working chant of the boatmen
turned to a hymn of praise to Hapi, who had seen us through. Once my mistress had gone back on board the galley,
she called for the master mason. She ordered him to cut an obelisk from the
granite massif that hemmed in the gorge. While we laboured to bring the rest of
the fleet through the gorge, the masons worked with fire and chisel to lift a
long, slender column of mottled stone from the mother lode. When they had freed
it from the matrix, they chiselled the words that my mistress dictated to them,
using the pharaonic hieroglyphics in which her name and that of the prince were
enclosed in the royal cartouche. AS WE PROCEEDED WITH THE TRANSIT OF the cataract,
we became more expert with each pace we gained against the river. It had taken us a full day to bring the Breath
of Horus up the rapids. Within the following week we were making the
transit in half that time, and we had five or six vessels in the gorge
simultaneously. It was almost a royal procession with one galley coming up
behind the other, stem to stern. Ten thousand men and nearly a thousand horses
were in the traces at any one time. There were over a hundred vessels moored along the
bank in the quiet, deep green reach of the Nile above the rapids, when the
Hyksos fell upon us once more. King Salitis had been delayed by his sack and
plunder of the city of Elephantine, and he had not realized immediately that we
had continued on up-river with the great bulk of Pharaoh's treasure in the
holds of our galleys. Everything that he knew about the river, all that his
spies and Lord Intef had been able to tell him, had convinced him that the
cataracts were a barrier that could not be navigated. He had wasted all that
time in the city of Elephantine before setting after us again. He had ransacked the city and the palace on the
island; he had paid informers and tortured captives in an attempt to learn what
had become of the treasure and the prince. The citizens of Elephantine had
served their prince well. They had held out against the Hyksos in order to give
our flotilla a chance to complete the transit. Of course, it could not last indefinitely, and at
last some poor soul broke under the torture of the tyrant. King Salitis
harnessed up his horses yet again and came storming after us into the gorge of
the cataract. However, Tanus was well prepared to meet him. Under
his command, Kratas and Remrem and Astes had made their dispositions with care.
Every single man who could be spared from the work of hauling the ships through
the gorge was sent back to help defend it. The terrain was our greatest ally. The gorge was
steep and rocky. The path along the bank was narrow and twisted with the broken
ground crowding down upon it. At every turn of the river there rose high bluffs
and cave-riddled cliffs, each of them a natural fortress for us to exploit. In the confines of the gorge the chariots were
unable to manoeuvre. They were unable to leave the river and make a detour
around the gorge through the open desert. There was neither water nor fodder
for their horses out there in the sandy wastes, and the going was soft and
treacherous. Their heavy chariots would have bogged down and been lost in the
trackless desert, before they could reach the river again. There was no
alternative for them, they were forced to come at us in single file along the
narrow river-bank. On the other hand, Kratas had been given ample
grace in which to improve the natural defences of the ground by building stone
walls in the most readily defensible places. He positioned his archers in the
cliffs above these obstacles, and set up man-made rock-slides on the high
ground overlooking the pathway. As the Hyksos vanguard came up the gorge, they were
met with a downpour of arrows from stone-walled redoubts on the high ground
above them. Then, when they dismounted from their chariots and went forward to
clear the stone barriers that had been placed across the track, Kratas yelled
the order and the wedges were knocked from under the rock-slides balanced on
the lip of the precipice. The landslides came tumbling and rolling down upon
the Hyksos, sweeping men and horses and chariots off the bank into the surging
green waters of the Nile. Standing on the top of the cliff with Kratas, I
watched their heads go bobbing and spinning through the cascades, and heard
their faint and desperate cries echoing from the cliffs, before the weight of
their armour pulled them below the surface and the river overwhelmed them. King Salitis was tenacious. He sent still more of
his legions forward to clear the pathway, and others to climb up the cliffs and
dislodge our troops from the heights. The Hyksos' losses in men and horses were
frightful, while we were almost unscathed. When they laboured up the cliffs in
their heavy bronze armour, we rained our arrows down upon them. Then, before
they could reach our positions, Kratas ordered our men to fall back to the next
prepared strong-point. There'could be only one outcome to this one-sided
encounter. Before he had fought his way halfway up the gorge, King Salitis was
forced to abandon the pursuit. Tanus and my mistress were with us on the
cliff-tops when the Hyksos began their retreat back down the gorge. They left
the path strewn with the wreckage of then- chariots and cluttered with
abandoned equipment and the detritus of their defeat. 'Sound the trumpets!' Tanus gave the order, and the
gorge echoed to the mocking fanfare that he sent after the retreating Hyksos
legions. The last chariot in that sorry cavalcade was the gilded and embossed
vehicle of the king himself. Even from our perch on top of the precipice, we
could recognize the tall and savage figure of Salitis, with his high bronze
helmet and his black beard flowing back over his shoulders. He raised his bow,
that he held in his right hand, and shook it at us. His face was contorted with
frustration and rage. We watched him out of sight. Then Tanus sent our
scouts after them to follow them back to Elephantine, in case this was a ruse,
a false withdrawal. In my heart I knew that Salitis would not come after us
again. Hapi had fulfilled her promise, and offered us her protection once more. Then we turned, and followed the pathway made by
the wild goats along the precipice, back to where the flotilla was moored. THE MASONS HAD FINISHED WORK ON the obelisk. It was
a shaft of solid granite three times the height of a man. I had marked out the
proportions and the shape of it upon the mother rock before the masons had made
their first cut. Because of this, the lines of the monument were so elegant and
pleasing that it appeared to be much taller, once it was set on the summit of
the bluff above the last wild stretch of the cataract, overlooking the scene of
our triumph. All our people gathered below it, as Queen Lostris dedicated the
stone to the goddess of the river. She read aloud the inscription that the
masons had engraved upon the polished stone. I, Queen Lostris, Regent of Egypt and widow of
Pharaoh Mamose, the eighth of that name, mother of the Crown Prince Memnon, who
shall rule the two kingdoms after me, have ordained the raising of this
monument. This is the mark and covenant of my vow to the
people of this very Egypt, that I shall return to them from the wilderness
whence I have been driven by the barbarian. This stone was placed here in the first year of my
rule, the nine-hundredth year after the building of the great pyramid of Pharaoh
Cheops. Let this stone stand immovable as the pyramid until
I make good my promise to return. Then, in sight of all the people, she placed the
Gold of Valour upon the shoulders of Tanus and Kratas and Remrem and Astes, all
those heroes who had made possible the transit of the cataract. Then, last of all, she called me to her, and as I
knelt at her feet, she whispered so I alone might hear, 'How could I forget
you, my dear and faithful Taita? We could never have come this far without your
help,' she touched my cheek lightly, 'and I know how dearly you love these
pretty baubles.' And she placed around my neck the heavy Gold of Praise. I
weighed it later at thirty deben, five deben heavier than the chain that
Pharaoh had bestowed upon me. On the way back down the side of the gorge, I
walked beside my mistress to hold the sun-shade of ostrich feathers over her
head, and she smiled at me more than once. Each smile was more precious to me
than the heavy chain upon my shoulders. The following morning we went back on board the
Breath of Horns and turned our bows once more towards the south. The long
voyage had begun. WE FOUND THAT THE RIVER HAD changed its mien and
character. It was no longer the broad and serene presence that had comforted
and sustained us all our lives. This was a sterner, wilder being. There was
little gentleness and compassion in its spirit. It was narrower and deeper. The land on each side of it was steeper and more
rugged, and the gorges and nullahs were crudely gouged from the harsh earth.
The brooding and darkling cliffs frowned down upon us with furrowed brows. In some places the bottom lands along the banks
narrowed down so that the horses and cattle and sheep had to pass in single
file along the crude track that the wild goats had trodden between the cliffs
and the water. In other places the track disappeared completely, as the bluffs
and the cliffs pushed boldly into the flood of the Nile. Then there was no way
forward for our herds. Hui was forced to drive them into the river and swim
them across the green expanse of water to the far bank, where the cliffs had
retreated and left the way open for them to pass. As the weeks wore on, we saw little sign of any
human presence. Once, our scouts found the worm-eaten hull of a crude dugout
canoe washed up on a sand-bank, and upon the bottom land an abandoned cluster
of huts. The sagging roofs were thatched with reeds and the sides were open.
There were the remains of fish-smoking racks and the ashes of the fires, but
that was all. Not a shard of pottery or a bead to hint at who these people
might be. We were anxious to make our first contact with the
tribes of Cush, for we needed slaves. Our entire civilization was based on the
keeping of slaves, and we had been able to bring very few of them with us from
Egypt. Tanus sent his scouts far ahead of the fleet, so that we might have good
warning of the first human habitations in ample time to organize our
slave-catchers. I found no irony in the fact that I, a slave myself, spent so
much of my time and thought in planning the taking of other slaves. All wealth can be counted in four commodities, land
and gold and slaves and ivory. We believed that the land that lay ahead of us
was rich in all of these. If we were to grow strong enough to return and drive
the Hyksos from our very Egypt, then we must discover this wealth in the
unexplored land to which we were sailing. Queen Lostris sent out her gold-finders into the
hills along the river as we passed. They climbed up through the gorges and the
dry nullahs, scratching and digging in every likely spot, chipping fragments
off the exposed reefs of quartz and schist, crushing these to powder, and
washing away the dross in a shallow clay dish, hoping always to see the
gleaming precious tail remaining in the bottom of the dish. The royal huntsmen went out with them to search for
game with which to feed our multitudes. They searched also for the first sign
of those great grey beasts who carry the precious teeth of ivory in their
monstrous heads. I made vigorous enquiry through the fleet for any man who had
ever seen one of these elephant alive, or even dead. Though their teeth were a
commonplace throughout the civilized world, there was not a single man who
could help me in my enquiries. I felt a strange and unaccountable excitement at
the thought of our first encounter with these fabulous beasts. There was a host of other creatures inhabiting this
wild land, some of them familiar to us and many that were strange and new. Wherever reeds grew upon the river-bank, we found
herds of hippopotami lying like rounded granite boulders in the shallows. After
long and erudite theological debate, it was still uncertain whether these
beasts above the cataract belonged to the goddess; as did those below, or
whether they were royal game belonging to the crown. The priests of Hapi were
strongly of one persuasion, and the rest of us, with an appetite for the rich
fat and tender flesh of these animals, were of the opposite opinion. It was entirely by coincidence that at this point
the goddess Hapi chose to appear to me in one of my celebrated dreams. I saw
her rise from *he green waters, smiling beneficently, and place in my
mistress's hand a tiny hippopotamus no bigger than a wild partridge. As soon as
I awoke, I lost no time in relaying the substance of this weird and thrilling
dream to the regent. By now my dreams and divination were accepted by my
mistress, and therefore by the rest of our company, as the manifest will and
law of the gods. That evening we all feasted on luscious river-cow
steaks grilled on the open coals on the sand-bank against which the ships had
moored. My reputation and popularity, which were already high throughout the
fleet, were much enhanced by this dream. The priests of Hapi alone were not
carried along by the general warmth of feeling towards me. The river teemed with fish. Below the cataract, our
people had fished the river for a thousand years and longer. These waters were
untouched by man or his nets. We drew from the river shining blue perch heavier
than the fattest man in our company, and there were huge catfish, with
barbellate whiskers as long as my arm, that were too strong and weighty to be
captured in the nets. With a flick of their great tails they ripped the linen
threads as though they were the fragile webs of spiders. Our men hunted them in
the shallows with spears, as though they were river-cows. One of these giants
could feed fifty men with rich yellow flesh that dripped fat into the
cooking-fires. In the cliffs above the river hung the nests of
eagles and vultures. From below they appeared like masses of driftwood, and the
droppings of the huge birds painted the rocks beneath them with streaks of
shining white. The birds floated above us on wide pinions, circling and swaying
on the heated air that rose from the black rocks of the gorge. From the heights, flocks of wild goats watched us
pass with regal and disdainful mien. Tanus went out to hunt them on their airy
crags, but it was many weeks before he succeeded in bringing back one of these
trophies. They had the eyesight of vultures and the agility of the blue-headed
rock lizards that could run effortlessly up a vertical wall of granite. One of these old rams stood as tall as a man's shoulder.
His beard flowed from his chin and throat to sweep the rock on which he posed.
His horns curled upon themselves from mighty crenellated bases. When Tanus
finally brought him down, it was with an arrow shot across a gorge a hundred
paces deep, from peak to pinnacle of these rugged hills. The goat dropped into
the gulf and twisted over and over in the air before it hit the rocks below. Because of my passionate interest in all wild
things, after he had skinned out and butchered the carcass, Tanus carried the
head and the horns home for me. It took all his vast strength to bring down
such a burden from those murderous crags. I cleaned and bleached the skull and
set it up on the bows of our galley as a figurehead, as we sailed on into the
unknown. THE MONTHS PASSED, AND BELOW OUR keels the river
began to dwindle away as the inundation abated. As we passed the sheer
headlands, we could see the height of the river measured upon the cliff where
all the previous inundations had left their watermarks. At night Memnon and I sat up on deck as late as his
mother would allow us, and together we studied the stars that illuminated the
firmament of the sky with a milky radiance. I taught him the name and the
nature of each of these fiery points of light and how they affected the destiny
of every man born under them. By watching the heavenly bodies, I was able to
determine that the river was no longer taking us directly into the south, but
that we were veering towards the west. These observations stirred up another heated
controversy amongst the scholars and the wise men of our company. 'The river is taking us directly to the western
fields of paradise,' suggested the -priests of Osiris and Ammon-Ra. 'It is a
ruse of Seth. He wishes to confuse and confound us,' argued the priests of
Hapi, who up until now had exerted undue influence over our councils. Queen
Lostris was a child of their goddess, and it had been generally accepted by
most of us that Hapi was the patron of our expedition. The priests were angry
to see their position weakened by this wayward perambulation of the river.
'Soon the river will turn south once more,' they promised. It always appalls me
to watch how unscrupulous men manipulate the wishes of the gods to coincide
with their own. Before the matter could be resolved, we came to the
second cataract. This was as far as any civilized man had ever
ventured, and not one of them had reached further. When we scouted and surveyed
the cataract, the reason for this was abundantly evident. These rapids were
more extensive and formidable than those we had already negotiated. Over a vast area, the stream of the Nile was split
by several massive Islands and hundreds of smaller ones. It was low-water now,
and at most places the bed of the river was exposed. A maze of rock-strewn
canals and branches extended for miles ahead of us. We were awed by the
grandeur and menace of it. 'How do we know that there is not another cataract,
and men another, guarding the river?' those who were easily discouraged asked each
other. 'We will expend our strength and in the end find ourselves trapped
between the rapids without the strength to advance or retreat. We should turn
back now, before it is too late,' they agreed amongst themselves. 'We will go on,' decreed my mistress. 'Those who
wish to turn back now, are free to do so. However, there will be no vessels to
carry them nor horses to draw them. They will return on their own, and I am
certain the Hyksos will bid them a hearty welcome.' There were none who accepted her magnanimous offer.
Instead, they went ashore on the fertile islands that choked the course of the
river. The spray from the rapids during the flood, and the
water filtering up through the soil during low ebb, had transformed these
islands into verdant forests, in stark contrast to the dry and terrible deserts
on either bank. Springing from seeds brought down by the waters from the ends
of the earth, tall trees, of a kind that none of us had ever seen before, grew
on the silt that Mother Nile had piled up on the granite foundation of the
islands. We could not attempt a transit of these rapids
until the Nile brought down her next inundation and gave us sufficient depth of
water for our galleys. That was still many months away. Our farmers went ashore and cleared land to plant
the seeds that we had brought with us. Within days the seed had sprouted, and
in the hot sunlight the plants seemed to grow taller under our eyes. Within a
few short months the dhurra corn was ready to be harvested, and we were gorging
on the sweet fruits and vegetables that we had missed so much since leaving
Egypt. The muttering amongst our people died away. In fact these islands were so attractive, and the
soil so fertile, that some of our people began to talk about settling here
permanently. A delegation from the priests of Ammon-Ra went to the queen and
asked for her permission to erect a temple to the god on one of the islands. My
mistress replied, 'We are travellers here. In the end we will return to Egypt.
That is my vow and promise to all my people. We will build no temples or other
permanent habitation. Until we return to Egypt we will live as the Bedouin, in
tents and huts.' I NOW HAD AT MY DISPOSAL THE TIMBER from those
trees we had felled upon the islands. I was able to experiment with these and
to explore their various properties. There was an acacia whose wood was resilient and
strong. It made the finest spokes for my chariot wheels of any material which I
had so far tested. I put my carpenters and weavers to work on reassembling the
chariots that we had brought with us, and building new-ones from the woods and
bamboos that grew on the islands. The flat bottom lands were several miles wide on
the left bank below the cataract. Soon our squadrons of chariots were training
and exercising upon these smooth and open plains once more. The spokes of the
wheels still broke under hard driving, but not as frequently as they once had.
I was able to entice Tanus back on to the footplate; however, he would not ride
with any driver but myself. At the same time, I was able to complete the first
successful recurved bow upon which I had been working since we had left
Elephantine. It was made from the same composite materials as was Lanata, wood
and ivory and hom. However, the shape was different. When it was unstrung, the
upper and lower limbs were curved out and away from the archer. It was only
when the weapon was strung that they were forced back into the familiar bow
shape, but the tension in the stock and the string was multiplied out of all proportion
to the much shorter length of the bow. At my gentle insistence, Tanus finally agreed to
shoot the bow at a series of targets that I had erected upon the east bank.
After he had shot twenty arrows he said little, but I could see that he was
astonished by the range and accuracy of it. I knew my Tanus so well. He was a
conservative and a reactionary to the marrow of his bones. Lanata was his first
love, both the woman and the bow. I knew it would be a wrench for him to
acknowledge a new love, so I did not pester him for an opinion, but let him
come to it in his own time. It was then that our scouts came in to report a
migration of oryx from out of the desert. We had seen several small herds of
these magnificent animals since we had passed the first cataract. Usually they
were grazing upon the river-bank, but they fled back into the desert as our
ships sailed towards them. What our scouts reported now was a massive movement
of these animals such as took place only very occasionally. I had witnessed it just
once before. With the freak occurrence of a thunderstorm in the desert
fastnesses once in twenty years or so, the flush of green grass that sprang
from the wet earth would attract the scattered herds of oryx from hundreds of
miles around. As they moved towards the fresh grazing grounds,
the herds amalgamated into one massive movement of animals across the desert.
This was happening now, and it offered us the chance of a change of diet and
the opportunity to run our chariots in earnest. For the first time, Tanus showed a real interest in
my chariots, now that there was game to pursue with them. As he took his place
on the footplate of my vehicle, I noticed mat it was the new recurved bow that
he hung on the rack, and not his faithful old Lanata. I said not a word, but
shook up the horses and headed them towards the gap irt the hills mat offered
us a route out of the narrow valley of the Nile and gave access to the open
desert. We were fifty chariots in the squadron, followed by
a dozen heavy carts with solid wheels that carried sufficient fodder and water
for five days. We trotted in column of route, two vehicles abreast, and with
three lengths between the files. This had already become our standard
travelling formation. To keep down the weight, we were stripped to
loin-cloths, and all our men were in superb physical condition from long months
of work on the rowing-benches of the galleys. Their muscled torsos were all
freshly oiled and gleamed in the sunlight, like the bodies of young gods. Each
chariot carried its brightly coloured recognition pennant on a long, whippy
bamboo rod. We made a brave show as we came up the goat track through the
hills. When I looked back down the column, even I, who never was a soldier, was
affected by the spectacle. I did not clearly recognize the truth then, but the
Hyksos and the exodus had forced a new military spirit upon the nation. We had
been a race of scholars and traders and priests, but now, with the
determination of Queen Lostris to expel the tyrant, and led by Lord Tanus, we
were fast becoming a warlike people. As we led the column over the crest of the hills,
and the open desert lay ahead of us, a small figure stepped out from behind the
last pile of rocks where it had been lying in ambush. 'Whoa!' I reined down the horses. 'What are you
doing out here so far from the ships?' I had not seen thexprince since the previous
evening, and had believed that he was safe with his nursemaids. To come across
him here on the edge of the desert was a shock, and my tone was outraged. At
that time he was not quite six years of age, but he had his toy bow over his
shoulder and a determined expression on his face that mirrored that of his
father, when Tanus was in one of his most intractable moods. 'I am coming on the hunt with you,' said Memnon. 'No, you are not,' I contradicted him. 'I am
sending you back to your mother this very instant. She will know how to deal
with small boys who sneak out of the camp without telling their tutors where
they are going.' 'I am the crown prince of Egypt,' declared Memnon,
but his lip trembled despite this weighty declaration. 'No man durst forbid me.
It is my right and my sacred duty to lead my people in time of need.' We had now moved on to dangerous ground. The prince
knew his rights and his responsibilities. It was I who had taughf them to him.
However, in all truth, I had not expected him to exercise them so soon. He had
made it an affair of royal protocol, and it was difficult, even impossible, to
argue with him. Desperately I sought for an escape. 'Why did you not ask me before?' I was merely
bidding for time. 'Because you would have gone to my mother,' he said
with simple honesty, 'and she would have supported you, as she always does.' 'I can still go to the queen,' I threatened, but he
looked back into the valley where the ships were small as toys, and he grinned
at me. We both knew that I could not order the entire squadron to drive all
that way back. 'Please let me come with you, Tata,' he changed his
tune. The little devil was attacking me on all fronts. I found it impossible to
resist him when he exerted all his charm. Then I was struck with inspiration.
'Lord Harrab is the commander of this expedition. You must ask him.' The relationship between these two was a strange
one. Only three of us—the two parents and myself—were aware of Memnon's true
paternity. The prince himself thought of Tanus as his tutor and the commander
of his armies. Although he had come to love Tanus, he still held him in
considerable awe. Tanus was not the type of man that a small boy, even a
prince, would trifle with. The two of them looked at each other now. I could
see Memnon was pondering his best plan of attack, while I could feel Tanus
trembling with the effort of holding back his laughter. 'Lord Harrab,' Memnon had decided on the formal
approach, 'I wish to come with you. I think it will be a very useful lesson for
me, After all, one day I will have to lead the army.' I had taught him logic
and dialectic. He was a student to be proud of. 'Prince Memnon, are you giving me an order?' Tanus
managed to cover his amusement with a horrific scowl, and I saw tears begin to
well up in the prince's eyes. He shook his head miserably. 'No, my lord.' He was
a small boy once more. 'But I would very much like to come hunting with you,
please.' 'The queen will have me strangled,' said Tanus,
'but hop up here in front of me, you little ruffian.' The prince loved Tanus to call him a ruffian. It
was a term that he usually reserved for the men of his old Blues regiment, and
it made Memnon feel that he was one of them. He let out a yelp of glee and
almost tripped over his own feet in his haste to obey. Tanus reached down and
caught his arm. He swung him up and placed him securely between us on the
footplate. 'Hi up!' Memnon shouted to Patience and Blade, and
we drove out into the open desert, but not before I had sent a messenger back
to the fleet with a message for the queen to tell her that the prince was safe.
No lioness could be as fierce as my mistress in the care of its cub. When we struck the migration road, it was a broad
swathe of churned sand many hundreds of yards wide. The hooves of the oryx are
broad and splayed to cover the soft desert sands. They leave a distinctive
track, the shape of a Hyksos spear-head. Many thousands of the huge antelope
had passed this way. 'When?' Tanus asked, and I dismounted to examine
the trail. I took Memnon down with me, for I never missed an opportunity to
instruct him. I showed him how the night breeze had eroded the spoor, and how
small insects and lizards had superimposed their own tracks over those of the
herd. "They passed here yesterday evening at
sunset,' I gave my opinion, and had it endorsed by the prince. 'But they are
travelling slowly. With luck we can catch them before noon.' We waited for the wagons to come up. We watered the
horses, and then went on, following the broad trodden road through the dunes. Soon we found the carcasses of the weaker animals
that had succumbed. They were the very young and the oldest, and now the crows
and the vultures squawked and squabbled over their remains, while the little
red jackals slunk around the fringes, hoping for a mouthful. We followed the broad road until at last we saw the
thin filtering of dust upon the southern horizon, and we quickened our pace.
When we topped a line of rugged hills whose crests danced in the heat-mirage,
we saw the herds spread out below us. We had reached the area where the
thunderstorm had broken weeks before. As far ahead as we could see, the desert had
been transformed into a garden of flowers. The last rains might have fallen here a hundred
years ago. It seemed impossible, but the seeds of that harvest had lain
sleeping all that time. They had been burned and desiccated by sun and desert
wind, while they waited for the rains to come once again. For any who doubted
the existence of the gods, this miracle was proof. For any man who doubted that
life was eternal, this held out the promise of immortality. If the flowers
could survive thus, then surely the soul of man, which is infinitely more
wonderful and valuable, must also live for ever. The landscape below us was painted with shades of
soft greens, the contours and the outlines of the hills were picked out with
sweeps of darker green. This formed a background to the wonderful rainbow of
colour that lit the earth. The flowers grew in banks and drifts. The blooms of
each variety seemed to seek the company of their own kind, as do the herds of
antelope and the flocks of birds. The orange-coloured daisies grew in pools and
lakes together, those with white petals frosted entire hillsides. There were
fields of blue gladiolus, scarlet lilies and yellow ericas. Even the wiry brush plants in the gorges and
nullahs, that had seemed seared and dried as mummies of men dead a thousand
years, were now decked in fresh robes of green, with wreaths of yellow blooms
crowning their ancient blasted heads. Lovely as it now was, I knew that it was
ephemeral. Another month and the desert would triumph again. The flowers would wither
on the stem, and the grass would turn to dust and blow away on the furnace
blasts of the winds. Nothing would remain of this splendour except the seeds,
tiny as grains of sand, waiting out the years with a monumental patience. 'Such beauty should be shared with the one you
love,' Tanus breathed in awe. 'Would that the queen were with me now!' That Tanus had been so moved by it proved the glory
of the spectacle. He was a soldier and a hunter, but for once he gave no
thought to the quarry, but gazed upon the spectacle with a religious awe. It was a shout from Kratas in one of the following
chariots that roused us from this reverie of beauty. 'By Seth's stinking
breath, there must be ten thousand of them down there.' The oryx were spread out to the green silhouette of
the farther hills. Some of the old bulls were solitary, keeping all others
away, but the rest of them were in herds of ten or a hundred, and some of the
herds were beyond count. They were merely huge tawny stains, like cloud shadow
upon the plains. It seemed to me that every oryx in all of Africa was gathered
here. We watered the horses again before the hunt began.
This gave me a chance to go forward and to gaze down upon this great concourse
of living things. Of course, I took Mem-non with me, but when I tried to lead
him by the hand he disentangled his fingers from my grip. 'Don't hold my hand
in front of the men, Tata,' he told me solemnly. 'They will think I am still a
baby.' As we stood on the sky-line, the nearest animals
raised their heads and regarded us with mild curiosity. It occurred to me that
they had probably never before seen a human being, and that they detected no
danger in our presence. The oryx is a magnificent creature, standing as
tall as a horse, with the same full, flowing, dark tail that sweeps the ground.
Its face is painted with intricate whorls and slashes of black upon a pale,
sand-coloured mask. A stiff, dark mane runs down the neck, enhancing the
horse-like appearance, but its horns are like those of no other animal created
by the gods. They are slim and straight and tipped like the dagger on my belt.
Almost as long as the animal that bears them is tall, they are formidable
weapons. Whereas all other antelope are meek and inoffensive, preferring flight
to aggression, the oryx will defend itself even against the attack of the lion. I told Memnon of their courage and their powers of
endurance, and explained how they could live their entire lives without
drinking water from pool or river. "They take then-water from the dew, and
from the desert roots and tubers which theyidig out of the earth with their
hooves.' He listened avidly, for he had inherited the love
of the chase in his father's blood, and I had taught him to revere all wild things. 'The true huntsman understands and respects the
birds and the animals that he hunts,' I told him, and he nodded seriously. 'I want to be a true huntsman and a soldier, just
like Lord Tanus.' 'A man is not born with such gifts. He must learn
them, in the same way that you must learn to be a great and just ruler.' I felt a pang of regret when Tanus called to me
that the horses were watered, and I looked back to see the charioteers mounting
up. I would have preferred to spend the rest of that day with my prince
watching the royal show upon the plains below me. I went back reluctantly to
take up the reins and to drive our chariot back to the head of the column. On the footplates of the other chariots, the
archers had their bows strung, and the fever of the hunt gripped every man.
They were like hounds on a short leash with the scent in their nostrils. 'Ho, Lord Tanus!' Kratas shouted across to us. 'A
wager on the outcome?' Before Tanus could reply, I murmured, 'Take one for
me. The old braggart has never shot from the back of a flying chariot.' 'Clean kills only,' Tanus called back to him. 'Any
animal with another man's arrow in it, not to count.' Every archer marked the
shaft of his arrow with his own motif, so that he might claim it later. Tanus'
mark was the Wadjet, the wounded Eye of Horus. 'One gold deben for each oryx
with your arrow in it.' 'Make it two,' I suggested. 'One for me.' I am not
a gambling man, but this was not a gamble. Tanus had his new recurved bow, and
I was the best charioteer in the whole of our army. We were still novices, but I had studied the
Hyksos' use of the chariot. Every evolution that their squadrons had performed
on that terrible day on the plain of Abnub was graven on my memory. To me this
was not merely a hunt for meat and sport, but practice and training for the
much greater game of war. We had to learn to run our formations to the very
best advantage and to control them in the full flight and confusion of battle,
while circumstances changed with every movement of the enemy, and every chance
and hazard of war. As we trotted down on to the plain, I gave the
first signal, and the column split into three files. Smoothly we opened up like
the petals of a lily. The flankers curled out like the horns of a bull to
surround the quarry, while my column in the centre deployed into line abreast,
with three chariot lengths between our wheel-hubs. We were the chest of the
bull. The horns would hold the enemy while we came up and crushed him in our
savage embrace. Ahead of us, the scattered herds of gazelle threw
up their heads and gazed at us with the first stirring of alarm. They began to
drift away, gathering up their fellows as they passed, small herds combining
into larger, the way that a single boulder rolling down the slope will bring
down the landslide. Soon the entire plain was alive with moving oryx. They
cantered with a peculiar rocking motion, and dust rose in a pale mist and hung
over their swaying backs. Their long, dark tails swished from side to side. I held my own squadron down to a walk. I did not
want to tire the horses too soon with a long, stern chase. I was watching the
denser, taller dust-clouds thrown up by the two flanking columns circling
swiftly out on each side of the herd. At last they came together far ahead, and the ring
was closed. The herds of oryx slowed down as they found their escape-route
blocked. They began to mill in confusion as those in the lead turned back and
ran into the ranks that followed. Obedient to my orders, once the flanking columns
had completed the encircling movement, they also slowed to an easy walk, and
turned in towards the centre of the circle. We had the huge herd of oryx in our
fist, and slowly we closed our grip upon them. Most of the bewildered animals
came to a halt, uncertain in which direction to run. Every way they gazed, they
saw the lines of chariots bearing down upon them. Closer we came, at a steady walk, and our horses
were still fresh and eager to run. They had sensed the excitement, and threw
their heads, fighting with the traces, snorting and rolling their eyes until
the whites showed. The oryx herd began to move again, but in no definite
direction. They milled upon themselves, making uncertain dashes in one
direction before coming up short and then swinging around and rushing back
again. I was pleased with the control and discipline of
our squadrons. They held their formations rigidly, without bunching up and
leaving gaps in the ranks. The signals that I gave were repeated down the line
and acted upon instantly. We were at last becoming an army. Soon we would be
able to meet any foe on favourable terms, even the Hyksos veterans who had
spent their entire lives on the footplate of a chariot. I reached behind me and took Prince Memnon by the
arm. I drew him forward and placed him against the dashboard. I wedged him
there with my own body, and he gripped the front panel. Now Tanus had both
hands free to shoot his bow, and the prince was safe. 'Let me take the reins, Tata. I will drive,' Memnon
pleaded. I had let him drive before, so he meant it seriously, though he was
barely tall enough to see over the dashboard. I dared not laugh at him, for he
took himself very seriously. 'Next time, Mem. This time just watch and learn.' At last we were less than a hundred paces from the
nearest oryx, the pressure was too great for them to tolerate. Led by one
scarred old cow, a hundred of them charged straight at our line in a mass. At
my signal we shortened Our line until we were running hub to hub, a solid wall
of horses and men, and the trumpeters sounded the charge. I lashed my team into
a full gallop and we raced headlong to meet them. Tanus was firing past my right shoulder. I could
watch each of his arrows fly out across the closing gap. This was the first
time he had shot from a running chariot, and his first three arrows flew wide
of the mark, as the chariot careered into the herd of racing oryx. But he was a
master archer, and he adjusted his aim swiftly. His next arrow took the old
cow, who was still leading the charge, full in the chest. It must have split
her heart, for she went down, nose into the sand, and rolled over her own head.
The animals following her swerved out on either side of her, offering Tanus
broadside targets. It was fascinating to watch his next two arrows curl away
and fall behind the racing oryx. The temptation is always to shoot directly at a
running target, and not at the place in the empty air ahead of it, where it
will be when the arrow reaches it. This calculation of forward aim is further complicated
by the movement of the chariot in relation to the target. I was trying to give
him the easiest shot by turning the chariot with the run of the game. All the
same, I was not surprised when two more of Tanus' arrows missed behind the
target. Then, like the master of the bow that he is, he
adjusted his aim, and the following arrow plunged feathers-deep into the chest
of the next oryx. He killed three more with three arrows, while all around us
the hunt disintegrated into the wild confusion of battle, and dust obscured all
but the closest glimpses of running chariots and racing animals. I was driving close behind a pair of oryx,
overhauling them slowly, when the flying hooves of one of them threw up a chip
of sharp flint the size of the last joint of my thumb. Before he could duck, it
struck Memnon on the forehead, and when he looked up at me I saw the blood
trickling from the shallow cut above his eye. 'You are hurt, Mem,' I cried, and started to rein
down the horses. 'It is nothing,' he told me, and used the corner of
his shawl to mop the blood. 'Don't stop, Tata! Keep after them. Kratas will
beat us, if you don't.' So I drove on into the dust, and beside me Tanus'
bow sang its awful song, and the prince yipped and yelped with excitement like
a puppy the first time that it chases a rabbit. Some of the oryx broke free of our lines and
escaped into the open desert, while others were turned back into the trap. Men
shouted with excitement and triumph, horses whinnied, and the oryx snorted and
bellowed as the arrows slapped into them and brought them crashing down in a
tangle of flying hooves and scimitar horns. All around us was the thunder of
hooves and wheels, and we were immersed in the yellow fog of dust. There is a limit to how long even the finest and
most willing team of horses can be driven at full gallop. When finally I reined
Patience and Blade down to a walk, the dust had caked like mud in the sweat
that lathered their flanks, and they hung their heads with exhaustion. Slowly, the dust-clouds that had obscured the field
drifted aside and dissipated. The field was a terrible sight. Our squadron was scattered over the entire plain. I
counted five chariots whose wheels had shattered during the chase, and the
up-ended vehicles looked like the broken toys of a petulant giant. The injured
men lay on the sandy earth beside their shattered chariots, with their comrades
kneeling over them as they tended their wounds. Even those chariots that had survived undamaged
were halted. The horses were blown and exhausted. Their flanks heaved as they
strained for breath, and the white froth dripped from their muzzles. Each one
of them was soaked with sweat, as though it had swum across the river. The game was scattered upon the field in the same
disorder and lack of purpose or design. Many of the great beasts were dead, and
their carcasses lay stretched out on their sides. Many others were crippled and
maimed. Some stood with their heads hanging. Others limped away through the
dunes with slow and halting gait. Each arrow-shaft left a dark stain of wet
blood upon the pale, roan-coloured hide. This was the pitiful end to every hunt, when the
heat and excitement have cooled and the wounded game has to be gathered up and
put out of its misery. Near us I saw one old bull oryx sitting on his
paralysed haunches with his front legs stiff in front of him. The arrow that
had crippled him stood out so high from his back that I knew that die point had
severed his spine. I took the second bow from the rack on the side-panel of our
chariot, and I jumped down from the footplate to the ground. As I walked
towards the crippled bull, he swung his head to watch me. Then he made one last
courageous effort, and dragged his crippled back legs as he came at me. He
slashed those long black horns at me, but his eyes swam with the tears of
mortal agony. I was forced to drive two arrows deep into the cavity of his
chest before he gave one last groan and rolled over on to his side, kicked once
convulsively, and was still. When I climbed back into the chariot, I glanced at
the prince's face. His eyes were wet with tears and his blood-smeared face was
crumpled into an expression of pity for the oryx. He turned his face away from
me, so that I could not see his tears, but I was proud of them. He who lacks
compassion for the game he pursues is no true huntsman. I took his curly head in my hands and turned his
face back to me. Gently, I cleaned the wound on his forehead and bandaged it
with a strip of linen. We camped that night upon the plain of flowers, and
their sweet perfume scented the darkness, and overlaid the smell of
fresh-spilled blood. There was no moon, but the stars filled the entire
sky. The hills were bathed in their silver luminosity. We sat late at the
camp-fires and feasted on the livers and hearts of oryx roasted on the coals.
To begin with, the prince sat between Tanus and me at the fireside, but the
officers and men vied for his attention. He had stolen all their hearts, and at
their invitation he moved easily from one group to the next. They mended their
language and banter to fit his ears, and the prince was at ease in their
company. They made a great fuss of his bandaged head. 'Now
you are a real soldier,' they, told him, 'just like one of us.' And they showed
him their own scars. 'You did the right thing by allowing him to come
with us,' I told Tanus, as we both watched him proudly. "This is the best
training any young cadet can ever have.' 'The men love him already,' Tanus agreed. "There
are two things that a general needs. One is luck and the other is the devotion
of his troops.' 'Memnon must be allowed to go out with every
expedition, just as long as it is not too dangerous,' I decided, and Tanus
chuckled. 'I leave you to convince his mother of that. There
are some things that are beyond my powers of persuasion.' On the other side of the camp-fire, Kratas was
teaching Memnon the expurgated version of the lyrics of the regimental marching
songs. The prince had a sweet, clear voice, and the men clapped the time, and
came in on the chorus. They protested loudly and rudely when at last I tried to
send Memnon to the bed I had prepared for him under the body of the chariot,
and even Tanus supported them. 'Let the boy stay with us a little longer,' he
ordered, and it was well after midnight when at last I was able to roll the
prince in my sheepskin rug. 'Tata, will I ever be able to shoot the way that
Lord Tanus does?' he asked sleepily. 'You will be one of the great generals of our very
Egypt, and one day I will carve an account of your victories on obelisks of
stone, so that all the world will know of them.' He thought about that for a while and then sighed.
'When will you make me a real bow, not just a baby's toy?' 'As soon as you can draw it,' I promised. 'Thank you, Tata. I should like that.' And he went
to sleep as suddenly as I would blow out the flame of a lamp. WE RETURNED IN TRIUMPH TO THE fleet, the wagons loaded
with the salted and sun-dried meat of the oryx herd. I had expected my mistress
to tax me severely for having abducted the prince. I had prepared my defence
and was determined to place the blame squarely on the broader shoulders of Lord
Harrab. However, her censure was milder than I had
anticipated. She told Memnon that he was a wicked child for having caused her
worry, and then hugged him until he was in danger of suffocation. When she
turned to me, I launched into a long explanation of Tanus' role in the affair,
and the valuable training and experience that the prince had received, but she
seemed to have dismissed the entire episode. 'When did you and I last go
fishing together?' she asked. 'Fetch your fishing-spears, Taita. We will take
one of the skiffs. Just the two of us on the river, the way we used to be in
the old days.' I knew that we would do little fishing. She wanted
me alone on the water where we could not be overheard. Whatever was troubling
her was of serious importance. I paddled downstream on the shrunken and slow green
waters until the bend of the river and the high rocky bluff hid us from the
fleet. All my attempts at conversation had failed, so I put aside my paddle and
took up my lute. I strummed and sang the tunes she loved best, and waited for
her to speak. At last she looked up at me, and her eyes were
filled with a strange mixture of joy and worry. 'Taita, I think I am going to have another baby.' I can think of no reason why this statement should
have surprised me so. After all, every night since we had left Elephantine, she
and the commander of her army had been locked in secret conclave, while I kept
guard at the door of her cabin. Nevertheless, I was so alarmed that my hand
froze on the lute strings and the song died in my throat. It was some moments
before I could regain my voice. 'My lady, did you use the infusion of herbs that I
prepared for you?' I asked diffidently. 'At times I did, but at others I forgot.' She
smiled shyly. 'Lord Tanus can be a very impatient man. Besides which, it is so
unromantic to fiddle with pots and jars, when there are better and more urgent
things waiting to be done.' 'Things like making babies who have no royal father
to claim them.' 'It is rather serious, isn't it, Taita?' I struck a chord on the rate while I framed a
reply. 'Rather serious? Oh, I think that is the wrong word. If you give birth
to a bastard, or if you take a husband, then you will be obliged to relinquish
the regency. That is the custom and the law. Lord Merkeset would be the next in
line as regent, but there will be covert warfare amongst all the nobility for
the position. Without your protection as regent, the prince would be in great
danger. We would be torn by internecine strife—' I broke off, and shuddered at
the prospect of it. 'Tanus could become regent in my stead, and then I
could marry him,' she suggested brightly. 'Don't think I have not thought of that before,' I
told her sombrely. 'It would be the solution to all our difficulties. But then
there is Tanus.' 'If I ask him, he will do it gladly, I am sure of
that,' she smiled with relief, 'and I will be his wife. We need no longer play
these shams and subterfuges to be alone together.' 'I wish it were that easy. But Tanus will never
agree. He cannot—'' 'What is this silliness?' The first sparks of anger
lit her eyes, and I hurried on. 'That night at Thebes, the night that Pharaoh sent
men to arrest Tanus on charges of sedition, we tried to force Tanus to declare
for the crown. Kratas and all his officers swore their support, and that of all
the army. They wanted to march on the palace and place Tanus on the throne.' 'Why did Tanus not agree to them? He would have
been a fine king, and it would have saved all of us so much heartache.' 'Tanus spurned their offer. He declared that he was
not a traitor, and that he would never mount the throne of Egypt.' "That was long ago. Things have all changed,'
she cried with exasperation. 'No, they have not changed. Tanus swore an oath
that day, and he called on the god Horus to witness it. He swore that he would
never take the crown.' 'But it no longer counts. He can go back on that
oath.' 'Would you go back on an oath that you had sworn in
the sight of the god Horus?' I demanded, and she looked away and hung her head. 'Would you?' I insisted, and she shook her head
reluctantly. 'No,' she whispered, 'I could not.' 'The same code of honour binds Tanus. You cannot
call upon him to do what you dare not do yourself,' I explained gently. 'Of
course, we can put it to him, but you and I both know what his reply must
surely be.' "There must be something that you can do?' She
looked at me with that blind trust that angered me. Whenever she had run
herself into the deepest danger, she simply turned to me and said, 'There must be
something that you can do?' "There is something, but you will not agree to
it, any more than Tanus will agree to wear the crown.' 'If you care anything for me, you will not even
suggest it.' She understood me immediately, and recoiled from me as though I
had struck her. 'I would rather die myself than kill this miracle of love that
Tanus has placed in my womb. The child is him and me and our love. I could
never murder all of that.' "Then, Your Majesty, there is nothing more
that I can suggest to you.' She smiled at me with such sublime trust and
confidence that it took my breath away. 'I know you will think of something, my
darling Taita. You always do.' And so I had a dream. I RELATED MY DREAM BEFORE A FULL SESSION of the
council of state called by the regent of this very Egypt. Queen Lostris and Prince Memnon were seated upon
the throne high on the poop-deck of the Breath of Horus. The galley was
moored to the west bank of the Nile. The members of the council were seated
upon the beach below her. Lord Merkeset and the nobility represented the
secular arm of the state. The high priests of Ammon-Ra and Osiris and Hapi
represented the sacred arm. Lord Harrab and fifty of his senior officers stood
for the military. I stood upon the opemdeck below the throne and
faced this distinguished gathering. I had taken even greater pains than usual
with my appearance. My make-up was subtle and cunning. My hair was dressed with
fragrant oils, and coiled in the fashion that I had made popular. I wore the
two chains of the Gold of Praise around my neck, and my chest and arms were
shaped and hardened by chariot-driving. I must have presented an extraordinary
figure of beauty to them, for many of them gaped at me, and I saw the lust in
the eyes of those whose inclinations ran in that direction. 'Your Majesties,' I made the low salutation to the
pair upon the throne, and Prince Memnon grinned at me cheekily. His head was
still bandaged, although it was no longer necessary. He was so proud of his war
wound that I had let him keep it on. I frowned at him, and he adjusted his
expression to be more in keeping with the occasion. 'Your Majesties, last night I dreamed a strange and
wonderful dream which I feel it is my duty to relate. I beg your leave to
speak.' Queen Lostris replied graciously, 'Every person in
this company is aware of the sacred gift that you have. The prince and I know
that you are able to see into the future, and to divine the will and the wishes
of the gods through dreams and visions. I command you now to speak of these
mysteries.' I bowed again and turned to face the council. 'Last night I slept at the door to the royal cabin,
as is my duty. Queen Lostris lay alone upon her couch, and the prince slept in
his alcove beyond her bed.' Even Lord Merkeset leaned forward and held his
cupped hand behind his good ear, the other being stone-deaf. They all loved a
good story and a fruity prophecy. 'In the third watch of the night I awoke, and there
was a strange light glowing throughout the ship. I felt a cold wind blowing
upon my cheek although every door and porthole was closed.' My audience stirred with interest. I had struck the
right ghostly tone. "Then I heard footsteps echoing through the
hull, slow and majestic footsteps, such as never were made by mortal man.' I
paused dramatically. 'These weird and eerie sounds came from the hold of the
galley.' I paused again for them to absorb this. 'Yes, my lords, from the hold where the gold coffin
of Pharaoh Mamose, the eighth of that name, lies awaiting burial.' Some of my audience shuddered with awe, while
others made the sign against evil. "These footsteps drew closer to where I lay at
the queen's door. The heavenly glow of light grew stronger, and while I
trembled, a figure appeared before me. It was the shape of a man, but it was
not human, for it glowed like the full moon and its face was a divine
reincarnation of the king as I had known him, yet altered and filled with all
the terrible divinity of his godhead.' They were rapt and silent. Not a man stirred. I
searched their faces for any sign of incredulity, but I found none. Then suddenly a child's voice broke the silence, as
the prince cried out high and clear, 'Bak-Her! It was my father. Bak-Her! It
was Pharaoh!' They took up the cry, 'Bak-Her! It was Pharaoh. May
he live for ever!' I waited for the silence, and when it returned I
let it draw out to the point where they were almost overwhelmed by the
suspense. 'Pharaoh came towards me, and I could not move. He
passed me and entered the cabin of Her Gracious Majesty, Queen Lostris. Though
I could neither move nor utter a sound, I saw all that came to pass. While the
queen still slept, the divine pharaoh mounted upon her in all his splendour,
and he took his husbandly pleasure with her. Their bodies were joined as man and
woman.' There was still no sign of disbelief on any face. I
waited for the full effect of my words and then I went on, 'Pharaoh rose from
the bosom of the sleeping queen, and he looked upon me and he spoke thus.' I am able to mimic the sound of other men's voices
so faithfully that others believe they hear the one I am imitating. I spoke now
in the voice of Pharaoh Mamose. 'I have endowed the queen with my godhead. She has
become one with me and the gods. I have impregnated her with my divine seed.
She who has known no man but me, will bear a child of my royal blood. This will
be a sign to all men that she enjoys my protection, and that I will watch over
her still.' I bowed once more to the royal pair upon the throne.
'Then the king passed back through the ship, and entered once more his golden
coffin where he now rests. That was all my vision.' 'May Pharaoh live for ever!' shouted Lord Tanus, as
I had coached him, and the cry was taken up. 'Hail, Queen Lostris! May she live for ever! Hail,
the divine child she bears! May all her children live for ever!' That night when I prepared to retire, my mistress
called me to her, and she whispered, 'Your vision was so vivid and you told it
so well that I shall not be able to sleep lest Pharaoh come again. Guard the
door well.' 'I dare say there may be one bold and importunate
enough to disturb your royal slumber, but I doubt that it will be Pharaph
Mamose. If some rascal does come to take advantage of your kind and loving
nature, what should I do?' 'Sleep soundly, dear Taita, and stop your ears.'
Her cheeks glowed pink in the lamplight as she blushed. Once again my premonition of future events was
proved accurate. That night there came a secret visitor to my mistress's cabin,
and it was not the ghost of Pharaoh. I did what Queen Lostris had ordered. I
stopped my ears. THE NILE FLOODED ONCE AGAIN, REMINDING us that
another year had passed. We had reaped the corn that we had planted upon the
islands, and we gathered in our herds. We broke down the chariots and packed
them on the open decks of the galleys. We rolled up the tents and stowed them
in the holds. Finally, when all was ready for our departure, we laid out the
ropes upon the bank and put every able-bodied man and horse into the traces. It took us almost a month of heart-breaking labour
to make the transit of this fearsome cataract. We lost sixteen men drowned, and
five galleys broken and chewed to splinters by the fangs of black rock. But at
last we were through, and we set sail upon the smooth flow of the river above
the rapids. As the weeks turned to months, the Nile described a
slow and majestic bend beneath our keels. Since leaving Elephantine, I had
charted the course of the river. I had used the sun and the stars to give me
direction, but I had come upon a great difficulty in measuring the distance
that we travelled. At first I had ordered one of the slaves to walk along the
bank and count every pace he took, but I knew that this method was so
inaccurate that it would set all my calculations to nought. The solution came to me one morning while we were
out on chariot manoeuvres. I watched my right-hand wheel turning, and realized
that each revolution of the rim made an exact measure of the ground that it had
covered. Thereafter a chariot followed the bank of the river. One wheel had a
flag on the rim, and a reliable man sat on the footplate and made a mark on a
scroll for each time the flag came around. Each evening I calculated the direction and
distance we had travelled during the day, and marked it up on my chart. Slowly,
the design and shape of the river made itself clear to me. I saw that we had
made a vast loop out into the west, but that now the river had turned back into
the south, as the priests of Hapi had predicted. I showed my findings to Tanus and the queen. Many
nights we sat late in the royal cabin, discussing the course of the river and
how it would affect our plans to return to Egypt. It seemed that every mile
along the river that we travelled, far from dimming my mistress's
determination, served but to enhance the force of the vow she had made to
return. 'We will build no temple nor palace of stone in the
wilderness,' she ordered. 'We will set up no monument or obelisk. Our sojourn
here is transitory. We will build no cities, but will live in our ships, or
under tents and huts made of grass and reeds. We are a caravan on a journey
that in the end will take us back to the city of my birth, beautiful Thebes of
a hundred gates.' In private she counselled me, 'Keep your charts
well, Taita. I trust you to find the easy way home for us.' So our river caravan journeyed onwards, and the
desert on either hand changed its face with every mile, and yet in the end was
unchanged. We who sailed upon the river had become a close-knit
community, almost an itinerant city without walls or permanent structure. Life
burgeoned and faded. Our numbers increased, for most of those who had come with
us from Elephantine were in the full bloom of life, and the women were
fruitful. Young couples married upon the river-bank, and broke the jar of Nile
water between them. Children were born, and we watched them grow. Some of our old people died, and there were
accidents and dangers that took toll of the younger ones. We embalmed them and
dug tombs for them in the wild hills and left them to their slumber, and went
onwards. We observed the festivals and prayed to our gods.
We feasted and fasted in the correct season, and danced and sang and studied
the sciences. I held lessons for the older children upon the deck of the
galley, and Memnon was the prize of all my students. Before the year had run out, and whHe the course of
the river still ran southwards, we came upon the third cataract that bestrode
the course of the Nile. Once again we went ashore and cleared the land and
planted our crops, while we waited for the Nile to rise and help us through. IT WAS HERE AT THE THIRD GREAT CATARACT that
another joy came to fill my life to overflowing. In a linen tent upon the bank of the river, I
attended my mistress in her labour, and brought forth into this world the
Princess Tehuti, the acknowledged daughter of the long-dead Pharaoh Mamose. In my eyes Tehuti was beautiful as only a miracle might
be. Whenever I had the opportunity, I sat beside her cot and examined her tiny
feet and hands with wonder and awe. When she was hungry and waited for her
mother's nipple, I would sometimes place my little finger in her mouth for the
pleasure of feeling her chewing on it with her bald gums. The river rose at last and allowed us to make the
transit of the third cataract. We sailed onwards, and almost imperceptibly the
river turned back into the east, describing a vast loop beneath our keels. Before the year was out it was necessary for me to
dream another of my famous dreams, for my mistress had once more suffered a
virgin pregnancy that could only be explained by supernatural means. The ghost
of the dead phar aoh had been on the prowl again. My mistress was huge with child when we reached the
fourth great cataract of the river. This chute of tumbling waters and rocks
like the teeth of crocodiles was even more formidable than those that had come
before, and there was much despondency in our company. When they thought that
no one could overhear them they complained to each other, 'We are beset by
these infernal rock barriers. The gods have placed them across the river to
prevent us going onwards.' I read their lips as they huddled together on the
bank of the river. None of them realized that I was able to understand what
they said without hearing their words. 'We will be trapped behind these terrible rapids,
and we will never be able to return down-river. We should turn back now, before
it is too late.' Even at the councils of state, I saw the words on
the lips of some of the great lords of Egypt who sat at the back of the
gathering and spoke to each other in muted tones. 'If we go on, we shall all
die in this desert, and our souls will wander eternally through it without
rest.' There was an element amongst the young nobility
that was both arrogant and headstrong. They were fostering discontent, and
hatching insurrection. I knew that we had to act swiftly and with resolution,
when I saw the Lord Aqer say to one of his henchmen, 'We are in the hands of
this woman, this little harlot of a dead king, when what we really need is a
strong man to lead us. There must be some way we can rid ourselves of her.' Firstly, with the help of my old friend Aton, I ferreted
out the names of all the malcontents and potential traitors. It did not
surprise me that at the head of this list was this same Lord Aqer, the eldest
son of Lord Merkeset, on whose lips I had read those traitorous sentiments.
Aqer was an angry young man with inflated ideas of his own worth and
importance. I suspected that he had the gall to see a vision of himself seated
upon the throne of the two kingdoms with the double crown upon his head. When I explained to Tanus and my mistress what I
thought must be done, they called a full and solemn state council on the
river-bank. Queen Lostris opened the conclave. 'I know very
well how you pine for your own land, and how you weary of this long voyage. I
share with you every dream of Thebes.' I saw Aqer exchange meaningful glances with his
cronies, and had my suspicions strengthened. 'However, citizens of Egypt, nothing is as bad as
it seems. Hapi has watched over our expedition, as he promised. We are much
closer to Thebes than any one of you can imagine. When we return to our beloved
city, we will not have to retrace our same weary footsteps. We will not have to
face once again the dangers and the hardships of those hellish cataracts that
block the course of the river.' There was a stirring through her audience, and
whispers of doubt and disbelief. Aqer laughed, not loud enough to cross the
borders of respect and propriety, nevertheless my mistress singled him out. 'I
see, Lord Aqer, that you question my word?' 'By no means, Your Majesty. I curse such a disloyal
thought.' Aqer made a hasty retreat. He was not yet strong enough, nor sure
enough of his support, to force a confrontation. I had caught him out before he
was prepared. 'My slave, Taita, has plotted the course of the
river that we have covered in these last years,' Queen Lostris went on. 'You
have all seen the chariot with the flagged wheel that has measured the ground,
and Taita has studied the heavenly bodies to find the direction of our journey.
I order him now to arise before the council and reveal to us his calculations.' Prince Memnon had helped me to trace copies of my
chart on to twenty new scrolls. At nine years of age, the prince was already a
fine pen-man. I passed these out to all the senior nobles, so that they might
follow my lecture more clearly. I drew their attention to the almost circular
course that we had followed since we had left Elephantine. Their astonishment was evident. Only the priests
had some prior knowledge of what had occurred, they also studied the stars and
had some expertise in navigation. But even they were taken aback by the extent
of the river's loop. This was not surprising, since the copies of the map that
I showed them were not entirely accurate. I had taken certain liberties with
the facts for the benefit of Aqer and his faction, and made the distance across
the bight seem shorter than my calculations suggested was the case. 'My lords, as you can see by these charts, since we
left the second cataract we have travelled very nearly a thousand miles, but we
stand now not much more than a few hundred miles from the point of our
departure.' Kratas rose to his feet to ask a question that I
had placed in his mouth before the meeting began. 'Does this mean that it
should be possible to take this short cut across the desert and reach the
second cataract in the same time as it takes to travel from Thebes to the Red
Sea and return? I have made that journey several times.' I turned to him. 'I was your companion on that same
journey. Ten days in each direction it took us, and we did not have horses
then. The crossing of this narrow strip of desert would be no more onerous. It
means that from here one could be back in the city of Elephantine within a few
short months, and it would be necessary to transit only the first cataract at Assoun.' There was a buzz of comment and amazement. The maps
were passed from hand to hand and scrutinized avidly. The entire mood of the
assembly changed, as I watched. There was a pathetic eagerness amongst all of
them to accept my theory. This unexpected proximity to home and the land they
knew cheered all of them. Only Aqer and his friends were out of countenance.
He had been deprived of the top dice in the game he was playing. As I had hoped
he would do, he rose angrily to his feet now to put the next question to me. 'How accurate are this slave's scribblings?' His
tone was offensive and his expression haughty. 'It is a simple matter to make a
few pen-strokes on a scroll, but when those are turned into miles of sand and
rock, it is another matter entirely. How will this slave prove that these wild
theories of his are fact?' 'My lord Aqer has come to the very heart of the
matter,' my mistress intervened pleasantly, 'and, in so doing, has proven his
astute grasp of the problem that faces us. I intend to send an expedition of
good men to cross the neck of the desert and to open up our return route to the
north, the road home to beautiful Thebes.' I saw Aqer's expression change suddenly as he
caught the slant of the queen's speech and realized the trap that had been set
for him. He sat down again hurriedly, and tried to appear remote and
disinterested. However, my mistress continued remorselessly, 'I was undecided
as to who was best suited to lead this expedition, but now Lord Aqer has, by
his perception and understanding, proposed himself for this vital task. Is that
not the case, my lord?' she asked sweetly, and then went on smoothly before he
could refuse. 'We are grateful to you, Lord Aqer. You are to have
whatever'men and equipment you require. I command that you make your departure
before the next full moon. The moon will make it easier for you to travel
during the night, and so avoid the heat of the day. I will send with you men
who are able to navigate by the stars. You could win through to the second cataract
and be back here before the end of the month, and, if you succeed, I will place
the Gold of Praise upon your shoulders.' Lord Aqer stared at her with open mouth, and he was
still sitting rigid with shock on his stool after all his companions had dispersed.
I fully expected him to find some excuse to back out of the task that we had
tricked him into, but in the end he surprised me by coming to me to ask for my
advice and help in arranging the scouting party. It seemed that I might have
misjudged him, and that now he had been given some worthwhile mission, there
was a chance that he would change from a trouble-maker to a useful member of
the company. I selected some of our best men and horses for him
and gave him five of our most sturdy carts, which could carry water-skins that,
if used sparingly, would last them for thirty days. By the time the full moon
came around, Aqer was quite cheerful and optimistic, and I felt guilty about
having minimized the distance and the hazards of the journey. When the expedition set out, I went a short way
into the desert with them to point them on the right road, and then I stood
alone and watched them merge into the silvery moonlit wastes, aimed at that set
of stars we call the Lute which marks the northern horizon. I thought of Aqer every day over the weeks that
followed while we lay below the fourth cataract, and I hoped that the map I had
given him was not as inaccurate as I feared it was. At least the immediate
threat of a rebellion had disappeared with him into the north. While we waited, we planted our crops on the
cleared islands and the river-banks. However, the lie of the land was steeper
than at the other sites lower down the river. It was more difficult to raise
the water to irrigate our crops, and I could see that the quantity and the
quality of the harvest must suffer in consequence. Naturally, we had set up the traditional shadoofs
on their long, counter-balanced arms to lift the water from the river. These were
worked by a slave who swung the clay pot at the end of the arm into the water
and then lifted and spilled it into the irrigation ditch on the bank. It was a
slow and back-breaking task. When the bank was high, as it was here, it was
also an extremely wasteful method of collecting water. Each evening Memnon and I drove our chariot along
the river-bank, and I was troubled by the paucity of the harvest that we
watched growing there. We had many thousands of mouths to feed, and cornmeal
was still the staple of our diet. I foresaw a time of famine, unless we were
able to bring more water to the fields. I do not know what made me think of the wheel for
this purpose, except that the science of the wheel had by this time become an
obsession and a passion in my life. I was still plagued by the problem of the
bursting of the wheels of our chariots. My dreams were filled with turning and
spinning and shattering wheels, wheels with bronze knives on the rim or with
flags to measure the distance run. Large wheels and small, the images haunted
me and troubled my sleep. I had heard from one of the priests of Hapi that
some varieties of timber can be made harder and more resilient by soaking them
in water for a long period, so I was driven to experiment with this idea. As we
were lowering one of the chariot wheels into the river for this purpose, the
current playing on the rim began to turn the wheel on its hub. I watched this
idly, but as the wheel sank lower in the water, the movement ceased, and I
thought no more about it. Some days later, one of the small boats crossing
between the islands capsized, and the two men in it were swept into the rapids
and drowned. Memnon and I watched this tragedy from the bank, and we were both
distressed by it. I took the opportunity to warn the prince once more of the
danger and the power of the river. 'It is so strong that it will even turn the wheel
of a chariot.' 'I don't believe you, Tata. You are saying that to
frighten me. You know how I love to swim in the river.' So I arranged an exhibition for him, and we were
both duly impressed by the wheel turning, seemingly of its own accord, when it
was dipped into the running water. 'It would go faster, Tata, if it had paddles fixed
around the rim,' Memnon gave his opinion at last, and I stared at him in
wonder. He was a little over ten years old at the time, and yet he saw all
things with a fresh and enquiring eye. By the time the full moon came around again, we had
built a wheel driven by the river which lifted the water in a series of small
baked-clay jars and spilled it into a canal lined with clay tiles at the top of
the high Nile bank. Even with her big belly, my mistress came ashore to watch
this wondrous contraption. She was delighted by it. 'You are so clever with the things you do with
water, Taita,' she told me. 'Do you remember the water-stool you built for me
at Elephantine?' 'I could make another for you now, if only you
would allow us to live in a decent home like civilized people.' Tanus was similarly impressed with the water-wheel,
though of course he would not show it. Instead, he grinned at me. 'Very clever, but when will it burst like one of
your famous chariot wheels?' he demanded, and Kratas and those other military
oafs thought that was hugely funny. Thereafter, whenever a chariot wheel broke,
they said that it had 'gone Tata', the pet name that the prince called me. Despite this levity, the fields of dhurra soon grew
dense and green in the loamy soil on the high banks, and the ears of golden
corn drooped heavily in the bright Nile sunlight. This was not the only harvest
that we gathered in at the fourth cataract. Queen Lostris gave birth to another
little royal princess. If anything, the infant was more exquisite than her
elder sister. It was passing strange that Princess Bekatha was
born with a cap of golden-red curls. Her divine and ghostly father, Pharaoh
Mamose, had been of swarthy cast, and her mother's hair was dark as the wing of
the black eagle. No one could think of any reason for this aberrant coloration,
but all agreed how pretty it was. Princess Bekatha was two months old when the Nile
began to rise once more, and we made our preparation for the transit of the
fourth cataract. By now we were experienced in what had become an annual
labour, and we had learned every trick and artifice to beat the rapacious
river. WE HAD NOT YET BEGUN THE TRANSIT, when there was
tremendous excitement in the encampment. I heard the shouting and the cheering
from the far bank of the river where Prince Mem-non and I were inspecting the
horses and making certain that all was ready for the ascent of the cataract. We hurried back to the boats and crossed to the
east bank, to find the camp in an uproar. We pushed our way through the crowds
who were all waving palm-fronds and singing the songs of welcome and honour. At
the centre of all this we found a small caravan of battered wagons and skeletal
horses, and a band of lean, travel-hardened veterans, burned black by the sun
and tempered by the desert. 'Seth damn you and that map of yours, Taita,' Lord
Aqer shouted at me from the leading wagon. 'I don't know which of you lies
worst. It was almost twice as far as you promised us.' 'Did you truly reach the north side of the river
loop?' I shouted back at him, hopping with excitement and trying to fight my
way through the crowd. "There and back!' he laughed, mightily pleased
with his accomplishment. 'We camped at the second cataract and dined on fresh
fish from the Nile. The road back to Thebes is open.' My mistress ordered a feast to welcome back the
travellers, and Lord Aqer was the man of the day. At the height of the
celebration, Queen Lostris placed the Gold of Praise around his neck, and
promoted him to the rank of Best of Ten Thousand. My gorge rose to see the
fellow preen and strut. As if that was not enough, she gave him command of the
fourth division of chariots, and issued him a warrant that would entitle him to
one hundred feddan of prime land on the river-bank when we returned to Thebes. I thought all this a little excessive, especially the
gift of so much land which must come out of my mistress's own estate. After
all, Aqer had been on the brink of mutiny, and though his achievement had been
laudable, it was I who had proposed and planned the expedition. In the
circumstances, it seemed to me that another gold chain for the poor slave Taita
might not have been out of place. Nevertheless, I had to applaud my mistress's
cunning and statesmanship. She had transformed Lord Aqer, who had been
potentially one of her most dangerous enemies, into an ardent and loyal
adherent who would prove his value to her many times in the years ahead. She
had a way with all men, and was gaining in statecraft each day. The taming of Lord Aqer and the discovery of the
route across the bight had secured our rear, and we could go on above the
fourth cataract with high spirits and brave heart. WE HAD NOT TRAVELLED MORE THAN A month before we
realized how our fortunes had changed and how the goddess had made good her
promise. It was clearer each day that we had come through
the worst. The desert was behind us at last, and the broad, smooth flow of the
river turned into the south once more and carried us into a land such as none
of us had seen before. It was here that for the first time many of our
company witnessed the miracle of rain. Although of course I had seen it in the
Lower Kingdom, they had never seen water fall from the sky. The rain beat down
into our upturned and astonished faces, while the thunder rolled across the heavens
and the lightning blinded us with its white fire. These copious and regular rains engendered a new
and exciting landscape, the like of which we could only wonder at. On either
bank of the Nile, as far as we could see from the deck of the leading galley,
stretched a broad savannah grassland. This magnificent plain, rich with grazing
for our horses, set no boundaries to the range of our chariots. We could drive
out at will, with no dunes or rocky hills to block our progress. This was not the only blessing that the goddess had
bestowed. There were trees. In the narrow valley that was bur home, there might
once have been forests, no man could tell. But they had fallen centuries before
to the appetite and axes of man. Wood was to us Egyptians a rare and treasured
commodity. Each stick of it had to be carried in by ship or on the back of
beasts of burden, from far and foreign lands. Now, wherever we looked, we saw great trees. They
grew, not in the same dense forests that we had found on the islands in the cataracts,
but in lofty groves with broad grassy spaces between the majestic trunks. There
was timber enough upon these plains to rebuild all the fleets of all the
nations on all the seas of the worlds. More than that, there was enough to
rebuild the cities of all the civilized world, and to roof and furnish every
room in them. After that there would still be enough left over to burn as fuel
over the centuries to come. We who all our lives had cooked our food on bricks
made from the dung of our animals, stared around us in wonder. This was not the only treasure that we found for
our taking in this legendary land of Cush that we had reached at last. I saw them first in the distance and thought that
they were monuments of grey granite. They stood upon the yellow grass plains
and in the shade beneath the spreading branches of the acacia groves. Then, as
we watched in perplexity, these great rocks began to move. 'Elephants!' I had never seen one before, but they
could be nothing else. The cry was taken up by those on the deck around me. 'Elephants! Ivory!' These were riches that Pharaoh
Ma-mose, with all his funerary treasure, could not have dreamed of. Wherever we
looked, the vast herds stood. 'There are thousands of them.' Tanus gazed around
him, the passion of the huntsman beginning to dawn in his eyes. 'Just look at
them, Taita. There is no end to their numbers.' The plains were thronged with living creatures, not
only the herds of elephant. There were antelopes and gazelle, some of which we
knew, and others that we had never seen or heard of before. We would come to
know all of them well in the future, and find names for their abundant and
diverse species. Oryx mingled with herds of purple waterbuck whose
horns curved like the bow that I had built for Tanus. There were spotted
giraffe with necks that reached to the top branches of the acacia trees. The
horns that grew from the snouts of the rhinoceros were as tall as a man and as
sharp as his spear. The buffalo wallowed in the mud at the river's edge. They
were huge bovine beasts, black as Seth's beard, and every bit as ugly. We would
soon learn the malevolence behind that melancholy stare with which they
regarded our passing, and the menace of those drooping black horns. 'Unload the chariots from the holds,' Tanus roared
with impatience. 'Put the horses into the traces. The hunt is on!' If I had known the danger that we were riding into,
I would never have allowed Prince Memnon to mount the footplate behind me as we
drove out on our first elephant hunt. To us who knew no better, they appeared
such docile brutes, slow and clumsy and stupid. Surely they would be easy game. Tanus was bristling with impatience to go out
against this new quarry, and he would not wait for all four divisions of our
chariots to be reassembled. As soon as the first division of fifty vehicles was
ready, he gave the order to mount up. We shouted challenges to the other
drivers, and made our wagers on the outcome of the hunt as the long columns of
chariots rolled out through the groves along the river-bank. 'Let me drive, Tata,' the prince demanded. 'You
know I drive as well as you do.' Although he was a natural horseman with gentle
hands and an instinctive way with his team, and he practised the art almost
every day, the prince's boast was unfounded. He certainly was not as good a
charioteer as I was, no man in the army could make that claim, certainly not a
scamp of eleven years. 'Watch me and learn,' I told him sternly, and when
Memnon turned to Tanus, he supported me for once. 'Taita is right. This is something none of us has
done before. Keep your mouth closed and your eyes open, boy.' Ahead of us a small herd of these strange grey
beasts were feasting on the seed-pods that had fallen from the top branches of
the trees. I studied them with avid curiosity as we approached at a trot. Their
ears were enormous, and they fanned them out and turned to face us. They lifted
their trunks high, and I guessed that they were taking up our scent. Had they
ever smelled a man or a horse before, I wondered. There were small calves with them, and the mothers
gathered them into the centre of the herd and stood guard over them. I was
touched to see this maternal concern, and I had the first inkling then that
these animals were not as slow and stupid as they appeared to be. "These
are all females,' I called over my shoulder to Tanus on the footplate. 'They
have young at heel, and their ivory is small and of little value.' 'You are right.' Tanus pointed over my shoulder.
'But look beyond them. Those two must surely be bulls. See how tall they stand
and how massive is their girth. Look how their tusks shine in the sun.' I gave the signal to the chariots that followed us,
and we veered away from the breeding herd of cows and calves. We ran on, still
in column, through the acacia grove towards those two great bulls. As we drove
forward, we were forced to swerve around the branches that had been torn from
the trees, and to dodge the trunks of giant acacia that had been uprooted. As
yet we knew nothing of the unbelievable strength of these creatures, and I
called back to Tanus, 'There must have been a great storm through this forest
to wreak such destruction.' It did not even occur to me then that the elephant
herds were responsible; they seemed so mild and defenceless. The two old bulls we had selected had sensed our
approach and turned to face us. It was only then that I realized the true size
of them. When they spread their ears they seemed to block out the sky, like a
dark grey thundercloud. 'Just look at that ivory!' Tanus shouted. He was
unperturbed, and concerned only with the trophy of the chase, but the horses
were nervous and skittish. They had picked up the scent of this strange quarry,
and they threw their heads up and crabbed in the traces. It was hard to control
them and keep them running straight. "That one on the right is the biggest,'
squeaked Memnon. 'We should take him first.' The pup was every bit
as keen as his sire. 'You heard the royal command,' Tanus laughed. 'We
will take the one on the right. Let Kratas have the other, it's good enough for
him.' So I raised my fist and gave the hand-command that
split the column into two files. Kratas wheeled away on our left with
twenty-five chariots following him in line astern, while we ran on straight at
the huge grey beast that confronted us with the yellow shafts of ivory, thick
as the columns of the temple of Horus, standing out from his vast grey head. 'Go hard at him!' Tanus shouted. 'Take him before
he turns to run.' 'Hi up!' I called to Patience and Blade, and they
opened up into a gallop. We both expected the huge animal to run from us as
soon as he realized that we menaced him. No other game we had ever hunted had
stood to receive our first charge. Even the lion runs from the hunter until he
is wounded or cornered. How could these obese animals behave differently? 'His head is so big, it will make a fine target,'
Tanus exulted, as he nocked an arrow. 'I will kill him with a single shaft,
before he can escape. Run in close under that long, ridiculous nose of his.' Behind us the rest of our column was strung out in
single file. Our plan was to come in and split on each side of the bull, firing
our arrows into him as we passed, then wheeling around and coming back in classic
chariot tactics. We were right on the bull now, but still he stood
his ground. Perhaps these animals were every bit as dull-witted as they looked.
This would be an easy kill, and I sensed Tanus' disappointment at the prospect
of such poor sport. 'Come on, you old fool!' he shouted contemptuously.
'Don't just stand there. Defend yourself!' It was as though the bull heard and understood the
challenge. . He threw up his trunk and loosed a blast of sound that stunned and
deafened us. The horses shied wildly, so that I was thrown against the
dashboard with a force that bruised my ribs. For a moment I lost control of the
team, and we swerved away. Then the bull squealed again, and he ran. 'By Horus, look at him come!' Tanus roared with
astonishment, for the beast was not running from us, but directly at us, in a
furious charge. He was swifter than any horse, and nimble as an angry leopard
set upon by the hounds. He kicked up bursts of dust with each long flying
stride, and was on us before I could get the horses under control again. I looked up at him, for he towered directly over
us, reaching out with his trunk to pluck us from the cockpit of the chariot,
and I could not believe the size of him, nor the fury in those eyes. They were not
the eyes of an animal, but those of an intelligent and alert human being. This
was no porcine sloth, but a courageous and terrible adversary that we had
challenged in our arrogance and ignorance. Tanus got off a single arrow. It struck the bull in
the centre of his forehead, and I expected to see him collapse as the bronze
point pierced the brain. We did not know then that the brain of the elephant is
not situated where you would expect it to be, but is far back in the
mountainous skull and protected by a mass of spongy bone that no arrow can
penetrate. The bull did not even check or swerve. He merely
reached up with his trunk and -gripped the shaft of the arrow with the tip, as
a man might do with his hand. He pulled the shaft from his own flesh and threw
it aside and came on after us, reaching out towards us with the blood-smeared
trunk. Hui in the second chariot of our line saved us, for
we were defenceless against the old bull's fury. Hui came in from the side,
lashing his horses and yelling like a demon. His archer from the footplate
behind him fired an arrow into the bull's cheek a hand's-span below the eye,
and that pulled his attention from us. The elephant wheeled to chase after Hui, but he was
at full gallop and raced clean away. The next chariot in line was not so
fortunate. The driver lacked Hui's skill, and his turn away was inept. The bull
lifted his trunk high and then swung it down like an executioner's axe. He struck the near-side horse across the back, just
behind the withers, and broke its spine so cleanly that I heard the vertebrae
shatter like a brittle potsherd. The maimed horse went down and dragged its
teammate down with it. The chariot rolled over and the men were hurled from it.
The elephant placed one forefoot on the body of the fallen charioteer and, with
its trunk, plucked off his head and tossed it aloft like a child's ball. It
spun in the air spraying a bright feather of pink blood from the severed neck. Then the next chariot in line tore in, distracting
the bull from his victim. I pulled up my horses at the edge of the grove, and
we stared back aghast at the carnage of our shattered squadron. There were
broken chariots scattered across the field, for Kratas out on the left had
fared no better than we had. The two great bull elephants bristled with
arrow-shafts, and the blood streamed down their bodies, leaving wet streaks on
their dusty grey hide. However, the wounds had not weakened them, but seemed
only to have aggravated their fury. They rampaged through the grove, smashing up
the capsized chariots, stamping the carcasses of the horses under those massive
padded feet, throwing the bodies of screaming men high in the air and trampling
them as they fell back to earth. Kratas raced up alongside us, and shouted across at
us, 'By the itching crabs in Seth's crotch, this is hot work! We have lost
eight chariots in the first charge.' 'Better sport than you expected, Captain Kratas,'
Prince Memnon yelled back at him. He would have done better to keep his opinion
to himself, for up until that moment we had forgotten about the boy in the
confusion. Now, however, both Tanus and I rounded on him together. 'As for you, my lad, you have had enough sport for
one day,' I told him firmly. 'It's back to the fleet with you, and that right
swiftly,' agreed Tanus, and at that moment an empty chariot cantered by. I do
not know what had happened to the crew, they had probably been thrown from the
cockpit or been plucked out of it bodily by one of the infuriated beasts. 'Catch those horses!' Tanus ordered, and when the
empty chariot was brought back to us, he told the prince, 'Out you get. Take
that chariot back to the beach and wait there for our return.' 'My Lord Tanus,' Prince Memnon drew himself to his
full height, reaching as high as his father's shoulder, 'I protest—' 'None of your royal airs with me, young man. Go
back and protest to your mother, if you must.' He lifted the prince with one
hand and dropped him into the vacant cockpit of the other vehicle. 'Lord Tanus, it is my right—' Memnon made one last
despairing attempt to remain in the hunt. 'And it is my right to wrap the scabbard of my
sword around your royal backside, if you are still here when I look around
again,' said Tanus, and turned his back on him. Both of us put the boy out of
our minds. 'Gathering ivory is not quite as easy as picking up
mushrooms,' I remarked. 'We will have to think up a better plan than this.' 'You cannot kill these creatures by shooting them
in the head,' Tanus growled. 'We will go in again and try an arrow through the
ribs. If they have no brain in their skull, then surely they have lungs and a
heart.' I gathered up the reins, and lifted the heads of
the team, but I could feel that Patience and Blade were as nervous as I was at
the prospect of returning to the field. None of us had enjoyed our first taste
of elephant hunting. Til go at him head-on,' I told Tanus, 'and then
turn out to give you a broadside shot into his ribs.' I put the horses into a trot, and then gradually pushed
up their speed as we entered the acacia grove. Dead ahead of us our bull
rampaged over the ground that was littered with the wreckage of overturned
chariots and the bodies of dead men and broken horses. He saw us coming and let
out another of those terrible squeals that chilled my blood, and the horses
flicked their ears and shied again. I gathered them up with the reins and drove
them on. The bull charged to meet us, like a landslide of
rock down a steep hillside. He was a terrible sight in his rage and his agony,
but I held my team steady, not yet pushing them to the top of their speed.
Then, as we came together, I lashed them up and yelled them into a full, mad
gallop. At the same moment I swung out hard left, opening the bull's flank. At a range of less than twenty paces, Tanus fired
three arrows in quick succession into his chest. All of them went in behind the
shoulder, finding the gaps between the ribs, and burying themselves full-length
in the seared grey skin. The bull squealed again, but this time in mortal
agony. Though he reached out for us, we raced clear of the stretch of his
trunk. I looked back and saw him standing in our dust, but when he bellowed
again, the blood spurted from the end of his trunk, like steam from a kettle. "The lungs,' I shouted. 'Good work, Tanus. You
have hit him through the lungs.' 'We have found the trick of it now,' Tanus exulted.
'Take us back. I will give him another one through the heart.' I wheeled about and the horses were still strong
and willing. 'Gome on, my beauties,' I called to them. 'One more
time. Hi up!' Though he was mortally struck, the old bull was
still far from death. I would learn just how tenacious of life these
magnificent beasts were, but now he charged to meet us once again with a
courage and splendour that filled me with reverence. Even in the heat of the
hunt and terror for my own safety, I felt shame at the torture we were
inflicting on him. Perhaps it was because of this that I let the
horses go in very close. Out of respect for him, I wanted to match his courage
with my own. When it was almost too late, I swung my horses out of the charge,
meaning to pass him just out of reach of that wicked trunk. Just then the off-side wheel of the chariot burst
under us. There was that giddy moment as I somersaulted through the air like an
acrobat, but this was not the first time I had been thrown, and I had learned
to fall like a cat. I rode the shock and let myself roll twice. The earth was
soft and the grass as thick as a mattress. I came up on my feet unhurt and with
my wits still all about me. I saw at a glance that Tanus had not come through
as well as I had. He was sprawled flat out and unmoving. The horses were up, but anchored by the dead weight
of the broken chariot. The bull elephant attacked them. Blade was nearest to
him and he broke my darling mare's back with a single blow of the trunk. Blade
went down on her knees screaming, and Patience was still linked to her. The
bull thrust one thick tusk through Blade's chest and jerked his head up, lifting
the kicking and struggling animal high in the air. I should have run then, while the bull was so
distracted, but Patience was still unhurt. I could not leave her. The elephant
was turned half-away from me, his own ears, spread like a ship's sail, blanketed
me from his view, and he did not see me run in. I snatched Tanus' sword from
the scabbard on the rack of the capsized chariot, and darted to Patience's
side. Although the great bull was dragging her along by
the leather harness that attached her to Blade, and although the blood from the
other horse splashed over her neck and shoulders, she was still unhurt. Of
course, she was wild with terror, squealing and kicking out with both back
legs, so that she almost cracked my skull as I darted up behind her. I ducked
as her hooves flew past my head and grazed my cheek. I hacked at the rawhide tackle that pinned her to
the drive-shaft of the chariot. The sword was sharp enough to shave the hair
from my head, and the leather split under that bright edge. Three hard strokes,
and Patience was free to run. I snatched at her mane- to pull myself up on to
her back, but she was so terror-struck that she bounded away before I could
find a grip. Her shoulder crashed into me and sent me spinning away. I was
thrown heavily to the ground, under the side of the wrecked chariot. I struggled up to see Patience dashing off through
the grove; she ran with a free and light stride, so I knew she was unhurt. I
looked for Tanus next. He lay ten paces away from the chariot, face down
against the earth, and I thought he was dead, but at that moment he raised his
head and looked around at me with a bewildered and groggy expression. I knew
that any sudden movement might draw the bull elephant's attention to him, and I
willed him to lie still. I dared not utter a sound, for the enraged animal was
still standing over me. I looked up at the bull. Poor Blade was impaled
upon his tusk, and the rawhide traces were entangled with his trunk. The bull
started to move off, dragging the battered chariot with him. He was attempting
to dislodge the weight of Blade's dangling carcass from his tusk. The point of
the tusk had ripped open the horse's belly, and the stink of the stomach
contents mingled with the reek of blood and the elephant's peculiar rank and
gamey odour. Stronger than all that, the stench of the sweat of my own fear
filled my nostrils. I made sure that the bull's head was still turned
away from me, before I pushed myself up and ran doubted-over to where Tanus
lay. 'Up! Get up!' I croaked in a hoarse whisper, and I tried to lift him to
his feet, but he was a heavy man and still only half-conscious. Desperately I
looked back at the bull. He was moving away from us, still dragging the whole
tangle of broken equipment and the dead horse with him. I draped Tanus' arm around my neck and put my
shoulder into his armpit. With all my strength I managed to lever him to his
feet, and he hung against me unsteadily. I swayed under his weight. 'Brace up!'
I whispered urgently. 'The bull will spot us at any moment.' I tried to drag Tanus along with me, but he took
only one pace before he gave a groan and fell back against me. 'My |:, leg,' he
grunted. 'Can't move. Knee gone. Twisted the | cursed thing.' The full realization of our predicament struck me then,
as I it had not before. My old sin of cowardice overwhelmed me once more, and
the strength went out of my own legs. 'Get out of it, you old fool,' Tanus grated in my
ear. 'Leave me. Run for it!' The elephant lifted his head and shook it in the
same way that a dog shakes the water from its ears after it has swum back to
the shore. Those vast leathery ears slapped and rat-| tied against his own
shoulders, and Blade's crushed carcass slid off the tusk and was hurled aside
as if it were no heavier I than a dead rabbit. The strength of the elephant
bull was I past all belief. If he could toss the weight of horse and | chariot
so easily, what might he do with my own frail body? 'Run, for the love of
Horus, run, you fool!' Tanus urged |. me, and tried to push me away, but some
strange obstinacy prevented me from leaving him, and I hung on to his shoul-|
der. Afraid as I was, I could not leave him. The bull had heard the sound of Tanus' voice and he
swung around with those ears flaring wide open like the mainsail of a fighting
galley. He stared full at us, and we were less than fifty paces from him. I did not know then, as I would learn later, that
the eyesight of the elephant is so poor that he is almost blind. He relies
almost entirely on his hearing and his sense of smell. Only movement attracts
him, and if we had stood still he would not have seen us. 'He has seen us,' I gasped, and I dragged Tanus
with me, forcing him to hop on his good leg beside me. The bull saw the
movement and he squealed. I shall never forget that sound. It deafened and
stunned me, sending us both reeling so that we staggered together and almost
fell. Then the bull charged straight at us. He came with long, driving strides, and his ears
flapped about his head. Arrows bristled from the great weathered forehead, and
blood streamed down his face like tears. Each time he squealed, the lung blood
spurted in a cloud from his trunk. As tall as a cliff, and as black as death,
he came at us in full charge. I could see every seam and crease in the folded
skin around his eyes. The lashes of his eyes were thick as those of a beautiful
girl, but such a glare of rage shone through them that my heart turned to a
stone in my chest, and weighed down my legs so I could not move. The passage of time seemed to slow down, and I was
overcome with a sense of dreamlike unreality. I stood and watched death bear
down upon us with a slow and stately deliberation, and could make no move to
avoid it. 'Tata!' A child's voice rang in my head, and I knew
that it was a delusion of my terror. 'Tata, I am coming!' In total disbelief I swung my head away from the
vision of death before me. Across the open ground of the grove a chariot was
tearing towards us at full gallop. The horses were stretched out and their
heads were going like the hammers on a coppersmith's anvil. Their ears were
laid back, and their nostrils flared wide open, pink and wet. I could see no
driver at the reins. 'Get ready, Tata!' Only then did I see the neat
little head, barely showing above the dashboard. The reins were gripped in two
small fists, the knuckles white with tension. 'Mem,' I cried, 'go back! Turn back!' The wind blew his hair out in a cloud behind his
head, and the sunlight struck ruby sparks from the thick dark curls. He came on
without a pause or check. 'I'll thrash the little ruffian for disobeying me,'
growled Tanus, as he teetered on one leg. We had both of us forgotten our own
danger. 'Whoa!' Memnon cried, and brought the team down
from a full gallop. He wheeled the carriage into such a sharp turn that the
inside wheel stopped dead and swivelled on its rim. He had cut in front of the
two of us, shielding us for an instant from the charging bull, and as the
chariot spun about there was a moment when it was standing still. It was
beautifully done. I heaved my shoulder up under Tanus' armpit and
threw him sprawling on the footplate. The very next instant I hurled myself
headlong on top of him. As I landed, Memnon gave the horses their heads, and we
bounded forward so sharply that I was almost jerked backwards off the platform,
but I grabbed at the side-panel and steadied myself. 'Go, Mem,' I screamed, 'for all you're worth!' 'Hi-up!' Memnon screamed. 'Yah hah!' The chariot careered
away with the frightened horses driven to full flight by the enraged squeals of
the charging bull close behind. All three of us stared back over the tail-board.
The head of the bull hung over us, seeming to fill all my vision. The trunk
reached out for us, so close that each time the bull squealed, the bloody cloud
sprayed over us and speckled our upturned faces, so that we looked like the
victims of some horrible plague. We could not draw clear of his rush, and he was
unable to overtake us. Matched in speed, we went racing through the glade with
the great bloody head hanging over us as we cowered on the floorboards of the
bouncing chariot. It needed only one small mistake from our driver to send us
into a hole or rip our wheels off against a stump of a fallen tree, and the
bull would have been upon us in an instant. But the prince handled the traces
like a veteran, picking his route through the grove with a cool hand and
practised eye. He sent the chariot careening through the turns on one wheel, within
an ace of capsizing, holding off the bull's mad charge. He never faltered once,
and then suddenly it was all over. One of the arrows buried in the bull's chest had
worked itself in deeper and sliced open the heart. The elephant opened his
mouth wide, and a flood of bright blood shot up his throat and he died in his
tracks. His legs went out from under him and he came down with a crash that
jarred the earth under us, and lay upon his side with one long curved tusk
thrust up in the air as if in a last defiant and regal gesture. Memnon pulled in the horses, and Tanus and I
stumbled down out of the carriage and stood together staring back at that
mountainous carcass. Tanus clung to the side of the chariot to favour his
damaged leg, and slowly turned back to look at the boy who did not know he was
his father. 'By Horus, I have known some brave men in my time,
but none of them better than you, lad,' he said simply, and then he lifted
Memnon in his arms and hugged him to his chest. I did not see much more of it, for those
everlasting and tedious tears of mine blotted out my vision. Even though I knew
myself for a sentimental fool, I could not staunch them. I had waited too long
to see this happen, to watch the father embrace his son.v -. I only managed to regain control of my errant
emotions when I heard the faint sound of distant cheers. What none of us had
realized was that the chase had taken place in full view of the fleet. The Breath
of Horus lay close in against the bank of the Nile, and I could see the
slim figure of the queen upon the high poop. Even at this distance her face
looked pale and her expression set. THE GOLD OF VALOUR IS THE WARRIOR'S prize, higher
in honour and in esteem than the Gold of Praise. It is only ever worn by
heroes. We gathered on the deck of the galley, those
closest to the queen and the commanders of all the divisions of her army.
Stacked against the mast, the tusks of the elephants were on display like the
spoils of war, and the officers wore all their regimental finery. The standard-bearers
stood to attention behind the throne, and the trumpeters blew a fanfare as the
prince knelt before the queen. 'My beloved subjects!' the queen spoke out clearly.
'Noble officers of my council, generals and officers of my army, I commend to
you the crown prince, Memnon, who has found favour in my sight and in the sight
of you all.' She smiled down on the eleven-year-old boy who was being treated
like a victorious general. 'For his courageous conduct in the field, I command
that he be received into the regiment of the Blue Crocodile Guards, with the
rank of subaltern of the second class, and I bestow upon him the Gold of
Valour, that he may wear it with pride and distinction.' The chain had been especially forged by the royal
goldsmiths to fit the neck of a boy of Memnon's age, but with my own hands I
had sculpted the tiny golden elephant that was suspended from the chain. It was
perfect in every detail, a miniature masterpiece with garnet chips for eyes and
real ivory tusks. It looked well as it hung against the smooth, unblemished
skin of the prince's chest. I felt my tears coming on again as the men cheered
mv beautiful prince, but I fought them back with an effort." I was not the
only one who was wallowing in sentiment like a wart-hog in a mud bath; even
Kratas and Remrem and Astes, for all their hardbitten and cavalier attitudes
which they usually cultivated so assiduously, were grinning like idiots, and I
swear I saw more than one pair of wet eyes in their ranks. In the same way as
his parents, the boy had a way with the affections and loyalties of men. Every
officer of the Blues came forward at the end to salute the prince and embrace
him gravely as a comrade-in-arms. That evening, as we drove together along the bank
of the Nile in the sunset, Memnon suddenly reined in the horses and turned to
me. 'I have been called to my regiment. I am a soldier at last, so you must
make me my own bow now, Tata.' 'I will make you the finest bow that any archer has
ever drawn,' I promised. He considered me gravely for a while, and then he
sighed, 'Thank you, Tata. I think this is the happiest day of all my life.' The
way he said it made eleven years seem like hoary old age. The next day after the fleet had moored for the
night, I went to look for the prince and found him alone upon the bank in a
spot that was hidden from casual observation. He had not seen me, so I could
observe him for a while. He was stark naked. Despite my warnings about currents
and crocodiles, it was obvious that he had been swimming in the river, for his
hair was sopping wet upon his shoulders. However, I was puzzled by his
behaviour, for he had selected two large round stones from the beach and was
holding one of these in each hand, raising and lowering them in some strange
ritual. 'Tata, you are spying on me,' he said suddenly,
without turning his head. 'Do you want something from me?' 'I want to know what you are doing with those
stones. Are you worshipping some strange new Cushite god?' 'I am making my arms strong so that I can draw my
new bow. I want it to have a full draw-weight. You are not to fob me off with
another toy, Tata, do you hear?' THERE WAS ONE MORE CATARACT across the river, the
fifth and what would later prove to be the penultimate that we would encounter
upon our voyage. However, this was not the same barrier to our progress that
the other four had been. With the change in the surrounding terrain, we were no
longer restricted to the course of the river. While we waited for the Nile to rise again, we
planted our crops as usual, but we were able to send out our chariots to range
far and wide across the savannah. My mistress despatched expeditions southwards
to pursue the elephant herds and bring back the ivory. Those vast herds of the magnificent grey beasts
that had greeted us so trustingly when first we had sailed into Cush, were now
flown and scattered. We had hunted them ruthlessly wherever we found them, but
these sage creatures learned their lesson well and right swiftly. When we arrived at the fifth cataract, we found the
herds grazing in the groves on either bank. The elephant were in their
thousands, and Tanus ordered the chariots into action immediately. We had
refined our tactics of hunting them and we had learned how to avoid the losses
that those first two bulls had inflicted upon us. At the fifth cataract, on the
very first day, we killed one hundred and seven elephant, for the loss of only
three chariots. The following day there was not a single elephant
in sight from the decks of the ships. Although the chariots pursued the herds,
following the roads they had left through the forest as they fled, it was five
days before they caught up with them again. Very often now the hunting expeditions returned to
our encampment below the cataract after being out for many weeks on end without
having found a single elephant or gathered a single tusk. What had seemed to us
at first to be an endless supply of ivory had proved an illusion. As the L
prince had remarked on that very first day, elephant-hunting was not as simple
as it first seemed. However, those chariots ranging southwards did not
return entirely empty-handed. They had found something even more valuable to us
than ivory. They had found men. I had not left the encampment for several months
for I had been involved in the eternal experimentation with my chariot wheels.
It was at this period that I at last found the solutions to the problem which
had plagued me from the very beginning, and which had been such a source of
amusement and ridicule to Tanus and his military cronies—the occasional failure
of some of my designs. In the end, it was not a single answer, but a
combination of factors, beginning with the material from which the spokes of
the wheels were made. I now had an almost unlimited selection of various types
of wood to work with, and ' the horn of oryx and rhinoceros which we hunted
close to our settlement, and which, unlike the elephant herds, did not move
away after being harassed. I found that soaking the red heartwood of the
giraffe acacia rendered it so hard that it would turn the edge of the sharpest
bronze axe-head. I compounded this wood with layers of horn and bound it all up
together with bronze wire, very much in the same fashion as I had done with the
bowstock of Lanata. The result was that at last I had a wheel that could be
driven to the utmost over any type of terrain without collapsing. When Hui and
I had completed the first ten chariots with these new wheels, I challenged Kratas
and Remrem, who were the most notoriously heavy-handed and destructive drivers
in all the army, to try to smash them up. The wager that we agreed on was ten
deben of gold a side. This was a game much to the liking of those two overgrown
children, and they entered into the spirit of it with boyish gusto. For weeks
thereafter, their raucous cries and the sound of pounding hooves rang through
the groves on the banks of the Nile. By the time their limit was up, Hui came
to me complaining bitterly that they had worn out twenty teams of horses.
However, it was some consolation to him that we had won the wager. Our new
wheels had stood the most stringent test. 'If you had given us a few days more,' Kratas
groused as he handed over his gold with a marked lack of sporting grace, 'I
know I would have managed another Tata.' And he treated us to a pantomime which
he thought amusing and which was supposed to suggest a shattering wheel and a
somersaulting driver. 'You are a gifted clown, brave Kratas, but I have
your gold.' I jingled it under his nose. 'All you have is a tired old jest that
has gone sour on you.' It was then that the scouting expedition, led by
Lord Aqer, that had gone out to find elephant, came back with the news that
instead they had found human habitation further to the south. We had expected to come across the tribes as soon
as we passed the first cataract. For centuries the land of Cush had produced
slaves. These had been captured by their own people, probably in tribal warfare,
and carried down with other commodities of trade—ivory and ostrich feathers and
rhinoceros horn and gold dust—to the outposts of our empire. Queen Lostris'
saucy black handmaidens were natives of this land and had come to her from the
slave-markets in Elephantine. I still cannot explain why we had not found people
before this. Perhaps they had been driven back by wars and slave raids,' in the
same way as we had scattered the elephant herds. They may have been wiped out
by famine or plague, it was impossible to say. Up until now we had found scant
evidence of human presence. However, now that we had finally caught up with
them, the excitement was an epidemic in our company. We needed slaves more even
than we needed ivory or gold. Our whole civilization and way of life was based
upon the system of slave ownership, a system that was condoned by the gods and
sanctified by ancient usage. We had been able to bring very few of our own
slaves with us from Egypt, and now it was imperative for our survival and growth
as a nation that we capture more to replace those we had been forced to
abandon. Tanus ordered a full-scale expeditionary force to
be sent out immediately. He would lead it himself, for we were uncertain what
we would find up-river. Apart from those taken as prisoners of war, we
Egyptians had always purchased our slaves from foreign traders, and this was
the first time in centuries, as far as I knew, that we were forced to resort to
catching our own. It was sport as new to us as elephant-hunting, but at least
this time we did not expect our quarry to be either docile or dull-witted. Tanus would still not ride with any other driver
than me, and even Kratas' and Remrem's unsuccessful efforts to destroy them had
not yet convinced him of the virtue of my new chariots. We led the column, but
the second chariot in line was driven by the youngest subaltern of the Blues,
the crown prince, Memnon. I had chosen the two very best charioteers to act
as crew for Memnon. His own weight was so light that the chariot could carry an
extra man, and the prince's strength had not developed sufficiently for him to
be able to lift his end of the chariot when it was necessary to dismount and
carry it over the obstacles that could not be driven over. He needed that extra
man to help him. The first villages we came across were on the
river-bank, three days' travel above the cataract. They were groups of
miserable grass shelters too rudimentary to be called huts. Tanus sent scouts
forward to reconnoitre, and then in the dawn we surrounded them with a single
swift rush. The people that stumbled out of these crude
shelters were too dazed and shocked to offer any resistance, or even attempt to
run from us. They clung together and chattered and gaped at the ring of
chariots and shields that we had thrown around them. 'A fine catch!' Tanus was delighted as we looked
them over. The men were tall and lean, with long, slim limbs. They towered over
most of the men in our ranks; even Tanus seemed short in comparison as we
walked amongst them, sorting them into groups as a farmer might apportion his
herds. 'There are some really good specimens,' he
enthused. 'Look at that beauty.' He had picked out a young man of exceptional
physique. 'He would fetch ten rings of gold on the slave-market at Elephantine
on any day.' Their women were strong and healthy. Their backs
were straight and their teeth were white and even. Every mature female carried
an infant on her hip and led another by the hand. Yet they were the most primitive peoples I had ever
encountered. Neither men nor women wore a shred of clothing, and they left
their pudenda shamelessly bared, though the younger girls wtire. a single
string of beads made from the shells of ostrich eggs around their waist. I
could see at once that the mature women had all been circumcised in the most
brutal fashion. Later I learned that either a flint knife or a sliver of bamboo
was used for this operation. Their vaginas were scarred and deformed into open
pits, and then infibulated with slivers of bone or ivory. The younger girls had
not yet suffered this mutilation, and I determined that this custom would be
outlawed in the future. I was certain that I could rely on the support of my
mistress in this. Their skins were so dark that their naked bodies
appeared purple in the early sunlight, the colour of an over-ripe black grape.
Some of them had smeared themselves with a paste of ashes and white clay, on
which they had daubed crude patterns with their fingertips. They had dressed
their hair with a mixture of ox-blood and clay into a tall, shiny helmet which
exaggerated their already impressive height. One thing that struck me immediately was that there
were no old people among them. I learned later that it was their custom to
break the legs of the elderly with their war clubs and leave them on the bank
of the river as a sacrifice to the crocodiles. They believed that the
crocodiles were reincarnations of their dead ancestors, and that by feeding
them, the victim became a part of this process. They had forged no metal artefacts. Their weapons
were wooden clubs and sharpened sticks. The potter's art had eluded them and
their vessels were the gourds of wild plants. They planted no crops, but lived
on the fish they caught in basket-traps, and on the herds of stunted long-horned
cattle , which were their most prized possessions. They bled them from a vein
in the neck and mixed the blood with milk warm from the udder, and drank the
curdled mess with the utmost relish. When I studied them over the months that followed,
I found that they could neither read nor write. Their only musical instrument
was a drum hollowed from a tree-trunk, and their songs were the grunting and
braying of wild animals. Their dances were flagrant parodies of the sexual act
in which ranks of naked men and women approached each other, stamping and
grinding their hips until they met. When this happened, the imitation was
transformed into reality, and the most licentious debaucheries were enacted. When Prince Memnon questioned me as to what right
we had to capture these people and take possession of them like cattle, I told
him, 'They are savages, and we are civilized people. As a father has a duty to
his son, it is our duty to lift them from their brutish state, and to show them
the true gods. Their part of the bargain is that they repay us with their
labour.' Memnon was a bright lad, and after I had explained it to him he never
again questioned the logic or the morality of it. At my suggestion, my mistress had allowed two of
her black hand-maidens to accompany the expedition. My personal relationship
with these little hussies had not been entirely untroubled, but now they
rendered invaluable service. Both these girls had childhood memories of the
time before their capture, and they retained a rudimentary knowledge of the
language of these tribes of Cush. This was just sufficient for us to begin the
process of taming our captives. As a musician, I have an ear tuned to the
sounds of the human voice; added to this, I have also a natural linguistic
ability. Within a very few weeks I was able to speak the
language of the Shilluk, which was what these people were called. Their language was as primitive as their customs
and their way of life. Their entire vocabulary did not exceed five hundred
words, which I recorded on my scrolls and taught to the slave-masters and to
the army instructors whom Tanus appointed over the fresh-caught slaves. For
among these people Tanus had found his infantry regiments to complement the
chariot divisions. This first raid gave us no real warning of the true
warlike nature of the Shilluk. It had all gone too easily, and we were
unprepared for what followed when we swept down on the next straggle of
villages. By this time the Shilluk had been alerted, and they were ready to
meet us. They had driven away their cattle herds and hidden
their women and children. Naked and armed only with wooden clubs, they came in
their hordes against our chariots and recurved bows and swords, with a courage
and tenacity that surpassed belief. 'By the putrid wax in Seth's ear-hole,' Kratas
swore with delight after we had driven back another charge, 'every one of these
black devils is a soldier born.' 'Trained and armed with bronze, these Shilluk will
stand out against any other foot-soldiers in the world,' Tanus agreed. 'Leave
the bows on the racks. I want as many of them as we can catch alive.' In the end, Tanus ran them to exhaustion with the
chariots, and only when they fell to their knees with even their extraordinary
stamina and reckless courage totally expended, could the slave-masters put the
ropes on them. Tanus selected the best of them for his infantry
regiments, and he learned their language as readily as I did. The Shilluk soon
looked upon him as a god to replace their crocodiles, and Tanus came to love
them almost as much as I loved my horses. In the end it was no longer necessary
to catch the Shilluk like animals. These marvellously tall and willowy spearmen
came out of their hiding-places in the reeds and bushy gulleys of their own
accord, to seek Tanus out and to beg to be allowed to join his regiments. Tamis armed them with long bronze-tipped spears and
shields made from elephant Viide, and he uniformed them in kilts of wild-cat
tails and head-dresses of ostrich feathers. His sergeants drilled them in all
the classic evolutions of war, and we learned swiftly to integrate these
tactics with those of the chariots. Not all the Shilluk were selected for the army. The
others proved to be indefatigable oarsmen on the rowing-benches of the galleys,
and dedicated herdsmen and grooms, for they were born to tend their herds. We very soon learned that their hereditary enemies
were the tribes that lived further to the south, the Dinka and the Mandari.
These other tribes were even more primitive, and lacked the righting instincts
of our Shilluk. Nothing pleased Tanus' new Shilluk regiments better than to be
sent south with their Egyptian officers and supported by the chariots against
their ancient foes. They rounded up the Dinka and Mandari in their thousands.
We used them for the heavy unskilled work. None of them came in willingly, as
some of our Shilluk had done. ONCE WE HAD BROUGHT THE FLEET UP through the fifth
cataract, the entire land of Cush lay open to us. With our Shilluk now to guide
us, the fleet sailed on up-river, while our chariot divisions ranged widely
along each bank, and returned with more ivory and fresh levies of slaves. Soon
we reached a wide river-course that joined the main flow of the Nile from the
east. The flow of this river was restricted to a sullen trickle down its
shrunken pools. However, the Shilluk assured us that in its season this river,
which we named the Atbara, would become a raging torrent, and its waters would
augment the annual flood of the Nile. Queen Lostris despatched an expedition of
gold-seekers, with Shilluk guides, to follow the Atbara as far as they were
able. The fleet sailed on southwards, hunting and slave-raiding along the way. I worried to see it, and tried to prevent it, but
so often these days Prince Memnon's chariot was at the head of one of these
flying columns. Naturally, he was supported by good men, I could at least see
to that, but there was constant hazard and danger out there in the African
bush, and he was still only a boy. I felt he should spend more time with me and his
scrolls studying on the deck of the Breath of Horus, rather than
disporting himself with the likes of Kratas and Remrem. Those two hooligans had
as little concern for the prince's safety as they had for their own. They egged
him on with wagers and challenges and extravagant praise for his more daring
feats. He was soon as much of a dare-devil as any of them, and when he returned
from these forays, he took great pleasure in horrifying me with accounts of his
escapades. When I protested to Tanus, he merely laughed. 'If
he is to wear the double crown one day, he must learn to spurn danger and lead
men.' My mistress agreed with Tanus in the training of Memnon. I had to content
myself with making the most of what time I still had to be alone with my
prince. At least I had my two little princesses. They were
a wonderful consolation. Tehuti and Bakatha grew more enchanting each day, and
I was their slave in more than name alone. Because of our peculiar
circumstances I was closer to them than their true father could be. The first
word that Bakatha ever said was 'Tata', and Tehuti refused to sleep unless I
first told her a story. She pined when I was obliged to leave the fleet on
other business. I think that this was the most happy period of my life. I felt
that I was at the centre of my family, and solid in the affections of all of
them. The fortunes of our nation were almost as bright as
my own. Soon one of our gold-seekers returned from the expedition up the Atbara
river. He knelt before Queen Lostris and laid a small leather bag at her feet.
Then, at her bidding, he opened the neck of the bag and poured from it a stream
of gleaming pebbles. Some of these were as small as grains of sand, and others
as large as the end of my thumb. All of them shone with that peculiar radiance
that cannot be mistaken. The goldsmiths were summoned and they worked with
their furnaces and clay crucibles, and finally declared these nuggets to be
veritable gold of an extraordinary purity. Tanus and I rode back up the Atbara
to the site where this gold had been discovered. I helped to plan the methods
that were used to mine the gravel-beds in the water-course of the river in
which the gold had been trapped. We used thousands of Mandari and Dinka slaves to
scoop out basketloads of gravel and carry these up to the sluices that the
masons had carved out of the granite slopes in the hills above the river. To take back to my mistress I sketched pictures of
the long lines of naked black slaves, their wet skins gleaming in the sunlight,
toiling up the hillside, each with a heavy basket balanced on his head. When we
left the miners hard at work and went back to rejoin the fleet, we carried with
us five hundred deben of newly smelted gold rings. WE ENCOUNTERED YET ANOTHER CATARACT on our voyage
southwards. This was the sixth and final set of rapids, but this transit proved
swifter and easier than any of the others. Our chariots and wagons were able to
detour around the rapids, and so at last we reached the mystical confluence of
two mighty rivers that between them became the Nile we knew and loved so well. 'This is the place that Taita saw in his vision of
the Mazes of Ammon-Ra. Here Hapi lets her waters flow and mingle. This is the
sacred site of the goddess,' Queen Lostris declared. 'We have completed our
voyage. It is at this place that the goddess will strengthen us for the return
to Egypt. I name it Qebui, the Place of the North Wind, for it is that wind
which blew us here.' 'It is a propitious place. Already the goddess has
shown her favour by providing us with slaves and gold,' the great lords of the
state council agreed. 'We should voyage no further.' 'It remains only to find a site for the tomb of my husband,
Pharaoh Mamose,' Queen Lostris decreed. 'Once the tomb is built and Pharaoh
sealed in it, then my vow will have been fulfilled and it will be time to
return in triumph to our very Egypt. Only once that has been done can we go up
against the Hyksos tyrant and drive him from our motherland.' I think that I was one of the very few of all our
company who was not happy and relieved by this decision. The others were
consumed by home-sickness and weary of the long years of travel. I, on the
other hand, had been stricken by a malady even more pernicious, that of
wanderlust. I wanted to see what lay beyond the next bend of the river and over
the crest of the next hill. I wanted to go on and on, to the very end of the
world. Therefore I was delighted when my mistress chose me as the one to seek
out the site of the royal tomb, and ordered Prince Memnon to escort me on this
expedition with his squadron of chariots. Not only would I be able to indulge
this new appetite of mine for travel, but I would once more have the undiluted
pleasure of the prince's company. At fourteen years of age, Prince Memnon was placed
in command of the expedition. This was not exceptional. There have been
pharaohs in our history who commanded great armies in battle when they were no
older. The prince took his responsibilities on this his first independent
command most seriously. The chariots were made ready, and Memnon inspected each
horse and vehicle personally. We had two spare teams of horses for each
chariot, so that these could be changed and rested regularly. Then the two of us deliberated at great length and
in even greater detail as to which direction we should follow in our search for
the ideal site for the king's tomb. This should be in some rugged and
uninhabited area not readily accessible to grave-robbers. There must be a cliff
into which the tomb with all the subsidiary passages could be cut. There was no area that we had come upon since we
had entered the land of Cush that satisfied these requirements. We reviewed
what we knew of the land behind us and tried to divine what lay ahead. Where we
stood now at Qebui, the meeting-point of the two rivers, was the loveliest
place we had visited on all the long voyage. It seemed that all the birds of the air had
gathered here, from tiny jewelled kingfishers to stately blue cranes, from
whistling flocks of duck that darkened the sun in their multitudes to plovers
and lapwings that scurried along the water's edge, pausing only to ask the
plaintive question, 'Pee-wit? Pee-wit?' In the silvery acacia groves and out on
the open savannah, the herds of antelope grazed in their countless millions. It
was almost as though this seat of the goddess was sacred to all degrees of
life. The waters below the juncture of the rivers roiled with shoals of fish,
while in the sky above the white-headed fish eagles turned slow circles against
the startling blue of the African sky and uttered their weird, yelping chant. Each of these twin rivers expressed a different
character and mood, just as two infants sprung from the same womb can vary in
every detail of body and mind. The right-hand branch was slow and yellow,
greater in volume than the other, but not so assertive. The eastern branch was
a murky grey-blue, an angry, overbearing flood that shoved its twin aside when
they met, refusing to mingle its waters, crowding the other against the bank
and retaining its own turbid character for many miles down-stream before
sullenly allowing itself to be absorbed by the gentler yellow stream. 'Which river must we follow, Tata?' Memnon
demanded, and I sent for the Shilluk guides. 'The yellow river comes out of a vast and pestilent
swamp that has no end. No man can enter there. It is a place of crocodiles and
hippopotamus and stinging insects. It is a place of fever where a man might
lose his way and wander for ever,' the Shilluk told us. 'What of the other river?' we asked. "The dark river comes out of the sky, down
cliffs of stone that rise up into the clouds. No man can climb the dreadful
gorges.' 'We will follow the dark left-hand fork,' the
prince decided. 'In those rocky places we will find a resting-place for my
father.' So we journeyed into the east until we saw the
mountains rise on the horizon. They formed a blue rampart so tall and
formidable as to surpass anything that we had ever seen or believed possible.
Beside these great mountains, the hills we had known in the Nile valley were
like the scratching of little birds in the sand-banks of the river. Each day as
we journeyed towards them they climbed higher into the heavens and dwarfed all
the world below. 'No man can go up there,' Memnon marvelled.
"That must be the abode of the gods.' We watched the lightning play upon the mountains,
flickering and flaring inside the tumbling banks of cloud that blanketed the peaks
from our view. We listened to the thunder growling like a hunting lion amongst
the gorges and the sheer valleys, and we were awestruck. We ventured no further than the foothills of this
terrible range, and then the cliffs and gorges barred our way and turned our
chariots back. In these foothills we found a hidden valley with vertical sides
of stone. For twenty days the prince and I explored this wild place, until at
last we stood before a black cliff-face and Memnon spoke quietly. 'This is
where my father's earthly body will rest for all eternity.' He stared up at the
sheer stone with a dreamy and mystical expression. 'It is as though I can hear
his voice speaking in my head. He will be happy here.' So I surveyed this place and marked out the cliff,
driving bronze pegs into the cracks in the rock, setting out the direction and
the angle of the entrance passage for the masons who would come to begin this
work. When this was done, we extricated ourselves, from the maze of valleys and
snarling gorges, and returned down the Nile to the meeting-place of the rivers,
where our fleet lay. WE WERE CAMPED ON THE GREAT PLAINS only a few days'
travel from Qebui when I was awakened in the night by the eerie grunting cries
and the sound of a moving mass of animals that seemed to come from the darkness
all around us. Memnon ordered the trumpeter to blow the call to arms, and we
stood to, within the circle of chariots. We threw wood on the watch-fires and
stared out into the night. In the flicker of the flames we saw a dark flood,
like the spate of the Nile, streaming past us. The eerie honking cries and the
snorting sounds were almost deafening, and the press of animals in this throng
was so heavy that they bumped into the outer ring of chariots, and some of the
vehicles were thrown over on their sides. It was not possible to rest in this
uproar, and we stood to arms all the rest of that night. The flood of living
creatures never abated in all that time. When dawn lit the scene, we were presented with the
most extraordinary spectacle. In every direction as far as the eye could see,
the plains were covered with a carpet of moving animals. They were all
travelling in the same direction, trudging onwards with a strange fatalistic
determination, heads hanging, shrouded in the dust of their own passage,
uttering those weird, mournful cries. Every so often, some section of this
endless herd took fright, for no reason, and tossed up their heels. They
cavorted and snorted and chased each other in aimless circles, like whirlpools in
the surface of a smoothly flowing river. Then they would settle back into the
same plodding gait and follow the swarms ahead of them into the hazy distance. We stood and stared in amazement. Every animal in
this vast concourse was of the same species, and each individual was identical
in every respect to the next. They were all of a dark purplish hue, with a
shaggy-maned dewlap and horns shaped like the crescent moon. Their heads were
misshapen, with ugly bulbous noses, while their bodies sloped back from high
shoulders to spindly hindquarters. When at last we harnessed the chariots and resumed
our own journey, we passed through this living sea of animals like a fleet of
galleys. They opened to allow us passage, streaming by on either hand so close
that we could reach out and touch them. They were completely unafraid, and
stared at us with dull, incurious eyes. When it was time for the midday meal, Memnon strung
his bow and killed five of these antelope with as many arrows. We skinned and
butchered the carcasses as their fellows streamed by us at arm's-length.
Despite the animals' strange appearance, their flesh, when grilled on the coals
of an open fire, was as good to eat as any wild game I had tasted. 'This is another gift from the gods,' Memnon
declared. 'As soon as we rejoin the main army, we will send out an expedition
to follow these herds. We will be able to smoke enough meat to feed all our
armies and our slaves from now until these beasts come again next year.' From our Shilluk guides we learned that this
incredible migration was an annual occurrence as the herds moved from one
grazing-ground to another, several hundred miles apart. The Shilluk called
these beasts gnu, in imitation of their strange honking cry. 'This will be a
never-ending supply, one that is replenished each year,' I informed the prince. None of us was then able to foresee the
catastrophic events which would flow from this visitation of the ungainly gnu.
I might have been warned by the manner in which they threw up their heads and
snorted without reason, or by the discharge of mucus from the nostrils of some
of these beasts, that I noticed as they streamed past us. However, I gave
little thought to this behaviour, and judged them to be mild and harmless
creatures who could bring us nothing but great benefit. As soon as we reached the twin rivers, we reported
the migration of gnu to Queen Lostris, and she agreed with Prince Memnon's
suggestion. Assisted by Kratas and Rem-rem, she put him in command of a column of
two hundred chariots, supported by wagons and several thousand Shilluk. She
ordered him to slaughter as many gnu as could be cut up and smoked for army
rations. I did not accompany the expedition, for the role of
butcher's assistant was not to my fancy. However, we could soon see the smoke
from the fires, on which the meat was curing, darkening the horizon, and before
many more days had passed, the wagons started to return, each one loaded high
with blackened slabs of cured meat. Exactly twenty days from our first encounter with
the gnu herds, I was sitting under a shady tree on the bank of the Nile,
playing bao with my old and dear friend Aton. As a small indulgence to myself
and out of deference to Aton, I had opened one of the precious jars of three-palm
quality wine that remained from the stock which I had brought from Egypt. Aton
and I played and haggled as old friends do, and sipped the wine with deep
appreciation. We had no means of knowing that catastrophe was
rushing down upon us to overwhelm us all. On the contrary, I had every reason
to be pleased with myself. The previous day I had completed the drawings and
plans for the building of Pharaoh's tomb, in which I had incorporated several
features to deter and frustrate the depredations of any grave-robber. Queen
Lostris had approved these plans and appointed one of the master masons as the
overseer. She told me that I might requisition all the slaves and equipment
that I needed. My mistress was determined that she would not stint in making
good her vow to her dead husband. She would build him the finest tomb that my
genius could design. I had just won the third successive board of bao
from Aton and was pouring another jar of the truly excellent wine, when I heard
the beat of hooves and looked up to see a horseman coming at full gallop from
the direction of the chariot lines. When he was still at a distance I
recognized Hui. Very few others rode astride, and certainly not at such a
headlong pace. As he raced towards where we sat, I saw the expression on his
face, and it alarmed me so that I stood up abruptly enough to spill the wine
and upset the bao board. 'Taita!' he screamed at me from a hundred yards.
'The horses! Sweet Isis have mercy on us! The horses!' He reined down his mount, and I swung up behind him
and seized him around the waist. 'Don't waste time talking,' I shouted in his
ear. 'Ride, fellow, ride!' I went to Patience first. Half the herd was down,
but she was my first love. The mare lay upon her side with her chest heaving.
She was old now, with grey hairs frosting her muzzle. I had not used her in the
traces since the day that Blade had been killed by the elephant bull. Although
she no longer pulled a chariot, she was the finest brood mare in all our herds.
Her foals all inherited her great heart and vivid .intelligence. She had just
weaned a beautiful little colt who stood near her now, watching her anxiously. I knelt beside her. 'What is it, my brave darling?'
I asked softly, and she recognized my voice, and opened her eyes. The lids were gummed with mucus. I was appalled by
her condition. Her neck and throat were swollen to almost twice their normal
girth. A vile-smelling stream of yellow pus streamed from her mouth and
nostrils. The fever was burning her up, so that I could feel the heat radiate
from her, as though from a campfire. She tried to rise when I stroked her neck, but she
was too weak. She fell back, and her breath gurgled and wheezed in her throat.
The thick, creamy pus bubbled out of her nostrils, and I could hear that she
was drowning in it. Her throat was closing, so that she had to battle for each
breath. She was watching me with an almost human expression
of trust and appeal. I was overcome with a sense of helplessness. This
affliction was beyond my previous experience. I slipped the snowy-white linen
shawl from my shoulder and used it to mop the streaming pus from her nostrils.
It was a pathetically inadequate attempt, for as fast as I wiped it away, fresh
trickles of the stinking stuff poured from her. 'Taita!' Hui called to me. 'Every one of our
animals has been stricken by this pestilence.' Grateful for the distraction, I
left Patience and went through the rest of the herd. Half of them were down
already, and those still upright were mostly staggering or beginning to drool
the thick yellow pus from their mouths. 'What must we do?' Hui and all the charioteers
appealed to me. I was burdened with their trust. They expected me alone to
avert this terrible disaster, and I knew that it was beyond my powers. I knew
of no remedy, and could not think of even the most drastic and unlikely
treatment. I stumbled back to where Patience lay, and wiped
away the latest flood of stinking discharge from her muzzle. I could see that
she was sinking away swiftly. Each breath she drew now was a terrible struggle.
My grief weakened me, and I knew that in my helplessness I would soon melt into
tears and be of no further use to any of them, neither horses nor men. Somebody knelt beside me, and I looked up to see
that it was one of the Shilluk grooms, a willing and likely fellow whom I had
befriended and who now looked upon me as his master. 'It is the sickness of the
gnu,' he told me in his simple language. 'Many will die.' I stared at him, as what he said began to make
sense in my muddled mind. I remembered the snorting, drooling herds of
slate-coloured animals darkening the plains with their numbers, and how we had
thought it a gift of the benevolent gods. "This sickness kills our cattle when the gnu
come. Those that live through it are safe. They are never sick again.' 'What can we do to save them, Habani?' I demanded,
but he shook his head. "There is nothing to be done.' I was holding Patience's head in my arms when she
died. The breath choked away in her throat and she shuddered and her legs stiffened
and then relaxed. I let out a low moan of grief and was on the very edge of the
abyss of despair, when I looked up and through my tears saw that Patience's
colt was down, with the yellow slime bubbling up from his throat. In that moment my despair was replaced with a
burning anger. 'No!' I shouted. 'I will not let you die also.' I ran to the foal's side and shouted to Habani to
bring leather buckets of hot water. With a linen cloth I bathed the colt's
throat in an attempt to reduce the swelling, but it had no effect. The pus
still poured from his nostrils, and the hot skin of his neck stretched out as
the flesh ballooned like a bladder filling with air. 'He is dying.' Habani shook his head. 'Many will
die.' 'I will not let it happen,' I swore grimly, and
sent Hui to the galley to fetch my medicine chest. By the time he returned, it was almost too late.
The colt was in extremis. His breath was choking out of him and I could feel
his strength draining away under my frantic hands. I felt for the ridged rings
of his windpipe at the juncture of his throat and his chest. With one shallow
cut through the skin I exposed the white sinewy pipe, and then I pressed the
point of my scalpel into it and pierced the tough sheath. Immediately air
hissed through the aperture and I saw the colt's chest swell as his lungs
inflated. He began to breathe again to a steady and even rhythm, but I saw
almost immediately that the puncture-wound in his throat was closing again with
blood and mucus. In frantic haste I hacked a length of bamboo from
the framework of the nearest chariot, and I cut a hollow tube from the end of
it and pushed this into the wound. The bamboo tube held the wound open and the
colt relaxed his struggles as the air sucked and blew unimpeded through it. 'Hui!' I yelled for him. 'I will show you how to
save them.' Before night fell, I had trained a hundred or more
of the charioteers and grooms to perform this crude but effective surgery, and
we worked on through the night by the wavering, uncertain light of the oil
lamps. There were over thirteen thousand horses in the
royal herds by this time. We could not save them all, although we tried. We
worked on, with the blood from the severed throats caking black up to our elbows.
When exhaustion overcame us, we fell on a bale of hay and slept for an hour and
then staggered up and went back to work. Some of the horses were not as badly affected by
this pestilence, which I had named the Yellow Strangler. They seemed to have an
in-born resistance to its ravages. The discharge from their nostrils was no
more copious than I had seen in the gnu herds, and many of these remained on
their feet and threw off the disease within days. Many others died before we were able to open the windpipe,
and even some of those, on which we had successfully operated, died later from
mortification and complication of the wound which we had inflicted. Of course,
many of our horses were out on expeditions into the plains and beyond my help.
Prince Memnon lost two out of every three of his steeds and had to abandon his
chariots and return to the Qebui rivers on foot. In the end we lost over half our horses, seven
thousand dead, and those that survived were so weakened and cast down that it
was many months before they were strong and fit enough to pull a chariot.
Patience's colt survived and replaced his old dam in my affections. He took the
right-hand trace in my chariot, and was so strong and reliable that I -called
him Rock. 'How has this pestilence affected our hopes of a
swift return to Egypt?' my mistress asked me. 'It has set us back many years,' I told her, and
saw the pain in her eyes. 'We lost most of our best-trained old horses, those
like Patience. We will have to breed up the royal herds all over again, and
train young horses to take their places in the traces of the chariots.' I waited for the annual migration of the gnu the
following year with dread, but when it came and their multitudes once more
darkened the plains, Habani was proved correct. Only a few of our horses
developed the symptoms of the Yellow Strangler, and these in a mild form that
set them back for only a few weeks before they were strong enough to work
again. What struck me as strange was that the foals born
in the period after the first infection of the Yellow Strangler, those who had
never been exposed to the actual disease, were as immune as their dams who had
contracted a full dose. It was as though the immunity had been transferred to
them in the milk that they sucked from their mother's udder. I was certain that
we would never again have to experience the full force of the plague. MY MAJOR DUTY NOW, LAID UPON ME BY my mistress, was
the construction of Pharaoh's tomb in the mountains. I was obliged to spend
much of my time in that wild and forbidding place, and I became fascinated by
those mountains and all their moods. Like a beautiful woman, the mountains were
unpredictable, sometimes remote and hidden in dense moving veils of clouds that
were shot through with lightning and riven with thunder. At other times they
were lovely and seductive, beckoning to me, challenging me to discover all
their secrets and experience all their dangerous delights. Although I had eight thousand slaves to prosecute
the task, and the unstinted assistance of all our finest craftsmen and artists,
the work on the tomb went slowly. I knew it would take many years to complete
the elaborate mausoleum which my mistress insisted we must build, and to
decorate it in a fashion fit for the Lord of the Two Kingdoms. In truth there
was no point in hurrying the work, for it would take as long to rebuild the
royal horse herds and train the Shilluk infantry regiments until they were a
match for the Hyksos squadrons against which they would one day be matched. When I was not up in the mountains working at the
tomb, I spent my time at Qebui, where there were myriad different tasks and
pleasures awaiting me. These ranged from the education of my two little
princesses to devising new military tactics with Lord Tanus and the prince. By this time it was clear that, whereas Memnon
would one day command all the chariot divisions, Tanus had never outgrown his
first distrust of the horse. He was a sailor and an infantryman to the bone,
and as he grew older, he was ever more conservative and traditional in his use
of his new Shilluk regiments. The prince was growing into a dashing and
innovative charioteer. Each day he came to me with a dozen new ideas, some of
them farfetched, but others quite brilliant. We tried them all, even the ones
that I knew were impossible. He was sixteen years old when Queen Lostris
promoted him to the rank of Best of Ten Thousand. Now that Tanus rode with me so seldom, I slowly
took over the role of Memnon's principal driver. We developed a rapport which
became almost instinctive, and which extended to our favourite team of horses,
Rock and Chain. When we were on the march, Memnon still liked to drive, and I
stood on the footplate behind him. However, as soon as we engaged in action, he
would toss me the reins and seize his bow or his javelins from the rack. I
would take the chariot into the fray and steer it through the evolutions we had
dreamed up together. As Memnon matured and his strength increased, we
began to win some of the prizes at the games and the military tattoos that were
a feature of our lives at Qebui. First, we triumphed in the flat races where
our team of Rock and Chain could display its paces to the full; then we began
to win the shooting and javelin contests. Soon we were known as the chariot
that had to be beaten before anyone could claim the champion's ribbon from
Queen Lostris. I remember the cheers as our chariot flew through
the final gate of the course, myself at the traces and Memnon on the footplate
hurling a javelin right and left into the two straw-filled dummies as we
passed, then the mad dash down the straight, with the prince howling like a
demon and the long wind-blown plait of his hair standing out behind his head,
like the tail of a charging lion. Soon there were other encounters in which the
prince began to distinguish himself, and those without any assistance from me.
'Whenever he strode past the young girls, with the Gold of Valour gleaming on
his chest and the champion's ribbon knotted into his plait, they giggled and
blushed and slanted their eyes in his direction. Once I entered his tent in
haste with some important news for him, only to come up short as I found my
prince well mounted and oblivious to all but the tender young body and the
pretty face beneath him. I withdrew silently, a little saddened that the age of
his innocence was past. Of all these pleasures, none for me could compare
with those precious hours that I was still able to spend with my mistress. In
this her thirty-third year she was in the very high summer of her beauty. Her
allure was enhanced by her sophistication and her poise. She had become a queen
indeed, and a woman without peer. All her people loved her, but none of them as much
as I did. Not even Tanus was able to surpass me in my devotion to her. It was
my pride that she still needed me so much, and relied upon me and my judgement
and my advice so trustingly. Notwithstanding the other blessings that I had to
adorn my existence, she would ever be the one great love of my life. I SHOULD HAVE BEEN CONTENTED AND replete, but there
is a restlessness in my nature that was exacerbated by this new wanderlust that
had come to plague me. Whenever I paused from my labours at Pharaoh's tomb, and
looked up at them, the mountains beckoned me. I began to make short excursions
into their lonely gorges, often alone but sometimes with Hui or some other
companion. Hui was with me when I first saw the herds of wild
ibex high above us in the lofty crags of the mountain. They were of a species
we had never seen before. They stood twice as tall as the wild goats that we
knew from the Nile valley, and some of the old billy-goats carried such a mass
of curling horn that they seemed as monstrous as some fabulous beast. It was Hui who carried reports of these huge ibex
back to the twin rivers where the fleet lay at Qebui, and within the month,
Lord Tanus arrived at the valley of the king's tomb, with his bow over his
shoulder and Prince Memnon at his side. The prince was fast becoming as ardent
a huntsman as his father, and was every bit as eager for the chase. As for
myself, I welcomed the chance to explore those fascinating highlands in such
company. We had meant to venture only as far as the first
line of peaks, but when we climbed to their crest, we were presented with a
vista that was breathtaking. We saw other mountains against the sky that were
shaped like flat-topped anvils, and were the tawny colour of lions. They
dwarfed the peaks on which we stood and lured us onwards. The Nile climbed in concert with us up through
precipitous valleys and dark gorges that churned its waters to gleaming white.
We could not always follow its course, but in places were forced to climb above
it and follow giddy goat-tracks across the face of a frowning mountain. Then, when we had been lured deep into its maw, the
mountain loosed its full fury upon us. We were one hundred men in our company, with ten
pack-horses to carry our provisions. We were camped in the depths of one of
these fathomless gorges, with the fresh trophies of Tanus' and Memnon's latest
hunt laid out upon the rocky floor for our appraisal and admiration. These were
two goat's heads, the largest we had seen in all our travels, so heavy in horn
that it took two slaves to lift one of them. Suddenly it began to rain. In our Egyptian valley it may rain once in twenty
years. None of us had ever imagined anything even remotely like the rain that
fell upon us now. First, dense black clouds roofed over the narrow
strip of sky that showed between the cliffs that walled us in, so that we were
plunged from sunny noon into deep twilight. A cold wind raced down the valley
and chilled our bodies and our spirits. We huddled together in dismay. Then lightning lanced from the sombre belly of the
clouds and shattered the rocks around us, filling the air with the smell of
sulphur and sparks struck from flint. Thunder burst upon us, magnified as it
rolled from cliff to cliff, and the earth jumped and trembled beneath our feet. Then the rain fell. It did not come down upon us in
the form of drops. It was as though we stood under one of the cataracts of the
Nile when the river was in full flood. There was no longer ah- to breathe,
water filled our mouths and our nostrils so that we felt that we were drowning.
The rain was so thick that we could see only the blurred outline of the man who
stood an arm's-length away. It battered us so that we were thrown down and
cringed beneath the nearest rock for shelter. Still it assaulted all the senses
and stung our exposed skin like a swarm of angry hornets. It was cold. I had never known such cold, and we
were covered only with our thin linen shawls. The cold sucked the force out of
my limbs, and we shivered until our teeth clattered together in our mouths, and
we could not still them even though we bit down with all the strength of our
jaws. Then, above the sound of the falling rain, I heard
a new sound. It was the sound of water which had become a ravening monster.
Down the narrow valley where we lay swept a wall of grey water. It stretched
from cliff to cliff, and carried everything before it. I was caught up in it and tumbled end over end. I
felt life being beaten out of me as I was thrown against the rocks, and icy
water filled my throat. Darkness overwhelmed me, and I thought that I was dead. I have a vague recollection of hands dragging me
from the flood, and then I was wafted away to some dark and distant shore. The
voice of my prince called me back. Before I could open my eyes I smelled
wood-smoke, and felt the warmth of the flames on one side of my body. 'Tata, wake up! Speak to me.' The voice was
insistent, and I opened my eyes. Memnon's face floated before me, and he smiled
at me. Then he called over his shoulder, 'He is awake, Lord Tanus.' I found that we were in a rock cave and that
outside, the night had fallen. Tanus came across from the smoky fire of damp
wood and squatted beside the prince. 'How are you, old friend? I don't think you have
broken any bones.' I struggled into a sitting position, and gingerly
tested every part of my body before I replied, 'My head is cracked through, and
every limb aches. Apart from that, I am cold and hungry.' 'You will live then,' Tanus chuckled, 'though a
while ago I doubted any of us would. We have to get out of these cursed
mountains before something worse happens. It was madness ever to venture into a
place where the rivers come out of the sky.' 'What about the others?' I asked. Tanus shook his head. "They are all drowned.
You were the only one that we were able to drag from the flood.' 'What about the horses?' 'Gone,' he grunted. 'All gone.' 'Food?' 'Nothing,' Tanus replied. 'Even my bow is lost in
the river. I have only the sword at my side and the clothes on my body.' AT DAWN WE LEFT OUR ROCK SHELTER and started back
down that treacherous valley. At the foot of the gorge we found the bodies of
some of our men and the horses strewn upon the rocks where they had been
stranded when the flood receded. We scavenged amongst the rocks and scree, and we
managed to recover some of our stores and equipment. To my great joy I found my
medicine chest still intact, though flooded with water. I laid out the contents
on a rock, and while they dried, I fashioned a sling from a leather harness to
carry the chest upon my back. In the meantime, Memnon had cut strips of meat from
the carcass of one of the horses and grilled them over another fire of
driftwood. When we had eaten our fill, we saved the rest of the meat, and set
out on the return. The journey slowly descended into nightmare as we
scaled steep rocky slopes and dropped into the gorges beyond. There seemed to
be no end to this terrible wilderness, and our bruised feet in open sandals
protested each step. At night we shivered miserably around a smoky little fire
of driftwood. By the second day we all knew that we had lost the
way, and that we were wandering aimlessly. I was certain that we were doomed to
die in these terrible mountains. Then we heard the river and, as we topped the
next saddle between peaks, we found the infant Nile winding through the depths
of the gorge below us. That was not all. On the banks of the river we saw a
collection of coloured tents, and amongst them moved the shapes of men. 'Civilized men,' I said immediately, 'for those
tents must be of woven cloth.' 'And those are horses,' Memnon agreed eagerly,
pointing out the animals tethered on the lines beyond the encampment. 'There!' Tanus pointed. 'That was the flash of
sunlight off a sword-blade or a spear-head. They are metal-workers.' 'We must
find out who these people are.' I was fascinated by what tribe could live in
such an inhospitable land. 'We will get our throats cut,' Tanus growled. 'What
makes you believe these mountaineers are not as savage as the land in which
they live?' Only later would we come to know these people as Ethiopians. 'Those are magnificent horses,' Memnon whispered.
'Our own are not so tall, or so sturdy. We must go down and study them.' The
prince was a horseman above all else. 'Lord Tanus is right.' His warning had aroused my usual
prudent nature, and I was ready to counsel caution. These might be dangerous
savages, with but the trappings of civilized men.' We sat upon the shoulder of the mountain and
debated, for a while longer, but in the end curiosity got the better of all three
of us and we crept down through one of the ravines to spy upon these strangers. As we drew closer, we saw that they were tall,
well-built people, probably more robust in stature than we Egyptians are. Their
hair was thick and dark and curled profusely. The men were bearded, and we are
clean-shaven. They wore full-length robes, probably woven of wool, and brightly
coloured. We go bare-chested and our kilts are usually pure white in colour.
They wore soft leather boots, as opposed to our sandals, and a bright cloth
wound around their heads. The women we saw working amongst the tents were
unveiled and cheerful. They sang and called to each other in a language I had
never heard before, but their voices were melodious as they drew water, or
squatted over the cooking-fires, or ground corn on the millstones. One group of men was playing a board-game that,
from where I hid, looked very much like bao. They were wagering and arguing
over the play of the stones. At one stage, two of them leapt to their feet and
drew curved daggers from their belts. They confronted each other snarling and
hissing, like a pair of angry tom-cats. At that stage a third man, who had been sitting
alone, rose to his feet and stretched, like a lazy leopard. He sauntered across
and, with his sword, knocked up the daggers. Immediately the two protagonists
subsided and slunk away. The peace-maker was clearly the chief of the party.
He was a tall man, with the wiry frame of a mountain goat. He was goat-like in
other ways. His beard was as long and thick as that of an ibex ram, and his
features were coarse and goaty; he had a heavy, hooked nose and a wide mouth
with a cruel slant to it. I thought that he probably stank like one of the old
rams that Tanus had shot from the cliff-face. Suddenly I felt Tanus grip my arm, and he whispered
in my ear, 'Look at that!' This chieftain wore the richest apparel of any of
them. His robe was striped in scarlet and blue and his earrings were stones
that glowed like the full moon. But I could not see what had excited Tanus. 'His sword,' Tanus hissed. 'Look at his sword.' I studied it for the first time. It was longer than
one of our weapons and the pommel was obviously of pure gold filigree-work, of
a delicacy that I had never seen before. The hand-guard was studded with
precious stones. It was a masterpiece that clearly had occupied some master
craftsman his lifetime. This was not what had captured Tanus' attention,
however. It was the blade. As long as the chief's own arm, it was made of a
metal that was neither yellow bronze nor red copper. In colour it was a strange
silvery glittering blue, like the living scales of a Nile perch taken fresh
from the river. It was inlaid with gold, as if to highlight its unique value. 'What is it?' Tanus breathed. 'What metal is that?' 'I do not know.' The chief resumed his seat in front of his tent,
but now he laid the sword across his lap, and, with a phallus-shaped piece of
volcanic rock, began lovingly to stroke the edge of the blade. The metal
emitted a ringing thrill of sound to each touch of the stone. No bronze ever
resounded like that. It was the purr of a resting lion. 'I want it,' Tanus whispered. 'I will never rest
until I have that sword.' I gave him a startled glance, for I had never heard
such a tone in his voice. I saw that he meant what he said. He was a man struck
with a sudden overpowering passion. 'We cannot remain here longer,' I told him softly.
'We will be discovered.' I took his arm, but he resisted. He was staring at the
weapon. 'Let us go to look at their horses,' I insisted,
and at last he allowed me to draw him away. I led Memnon by the other hand. At
a safe distance we circled the camp, and crept back towards the horse-lines. When I saw the horses close up, I was struck with a
passion as fierce as Tanus had conceived for the blue sword. These were a
different breed from our Hyksos horses. They were taller and more elegantly
proportioned. Their heads were noble and their nostrils wider. I knew those
nostrils were the mark of stamina and good wind. Their eyes were situated
further forward in the skull and were more prominent than those of our animals.
They were great soft eyes, shining with intelligence. 'They are beautiful,' whispered Memnon at my side.
'Look at the way they hold their heads and arch their necks.' Tanus longed for the sword, we coveted the horses
with a passion that equalled his. 'Just one stallion like that to put to our mares,'
I pleaded to any god who was listening. 'I would exchange my hope of eternal
life for a single one.' One of the foreign grooms glanced in our direction,
then said something to the fellow beside him and began to walk in our
direction. This time I had no need to insist, and all three of us ducked down
behind the boulder that sheltered us and crawled away. We found a secure
hiding-place further down-river, amongst a tumbled heap of boulders, and
immediately launched into one of those discussions in which all spoke together
and none listened. 'I will go in and offer him a thousand deben of
gold,' Tanus swore, 'I must have that sword.' 'He would kill you first. Did you not see him
stroke it as though it was his first-born son?' 'Those horses!' marvelled Memnon. 'I never dreamed
of such beauty. Horus must have beasts like that to draw his chariot.' 'Did you see those two fly at each other?' I
cautioned. "They are savage men, and bloodthirsty. They would rip out your
guts before you opened your mouth to utter a word. Besides, what do you have to
offer in return? They will see we are destitute beggars.' 'We could steal three of their stallions tonight
and ride them down on to the plain,' Memnon suggested, and though the idea had
appeal, I told him sternly, 'You are the crown prince of Egypt, not a common
thief.' He grinned at me. 'For one of those horses, I would
cut throats like the worst footpad in Thebes.' As we debated thus, we were suddenly aware of the
sound of voices approaching along the river-bank from the direction of the
foreign camp. We looked about for better concealment and hid away. The voices drew closer. A party of women came into
view and they stopped below us at the water's edge. There were three older
women, and a girl. The women wore robes of a drab hue, and cloths of black
around their hair. I thought that they were servants or nursemaids. It did not
occur to me then that they were gaolers, for they treated the girl with unusual
deference. The girl was tall and slim, so that when she
walked, she moved like a papyrus stem in the Nile breeze. She wore a short robe
of rich wool, striped in yellow and sky blue, which left her knees bared.
Though she wore short boots of soft stitched leather, I could see that her legs
were lithe and smooth. The women stopped below our hiding-place, and one
of the older women began to disrobe the girl. The other two filled the clay
jars that they had carried down on their heads with water from the Nile. The
river was still swollen with flood-water. No one could safely enter that icy
torrent. It was clear that they intended bathing the girl from the jars. One of the women lifted the girl's robe over her
head and she stood naked at the water's edge. I heard Memnon gasp. I looked at
him and saw that he had forgotten entirely about stealing horses. While two of the women poured the water from the
jars over the girl, the third woman wiped her down with a folded cloth. The
girl held her hands above her head and circled slowly to allow them to wet
every part of her body. She laughed and squealed at the cold, and I saw tiny
goose-bumps rise around her nipples, which were the rich ruby of polished
garnets, mounted like jewels on the peak of each smooth, round breast. Her hair was a dark bush of tight curls, her skin
was the colour of the heart-wood of the acacia, when it has been buffed and
oiled to a high patina. It was a rich, ruddy brown, that glowed in the high
sunlight of the mountains. Her features were delicate, her nose narrow and
chiselled. Her lips were soft and full, but without any thickness. Her eyes
were large and dark, slanted above high cheek-bones. Her lashes were so thick
that they tangled together. She was beautiful. I have only known one other
woman who was more so. Suddenly she said something to the women with her.
They stood aside, and she left them and climbed on those long naked legs
towards us. But before she reached our hiding-place, she stepped behind a
boulder that shielded her from her companions, but left her full in our view.
She glanced around quickly, but did not see us. The cold water must have
affected her, for she squatted quickly and her own water tinkled on the rock
beneath her. Memnon groaned softly. It was instinctive, not
intentional, a sound of longing so intense as to have become agony. The girl
sprang to her feet and stared directly at him. Memnon was standing a little to
one side of Tanus and me. While we were concealed, he was full in her view. The two of them stared at each other. The girl was
trembling, her dark eyes enormous. I expected her to run or scream. Instead,
she looked back over her shoulder in a conspiratorial gesture, as if to make
certain that the women had not followed her. Then she turned back to Memnon
and, in a soft sweet voice, asked a question, at the same time holding out her
hand to him in a gesture of appeal. 'I do not understand,' Memnon whispered, and spread
his own hands in a gesture of incomprehension. The girl stepped up to him and repeated the
question impatiently, and when Memnon shook his head, she seized his hand and'
shook it. In her agitation, her voice rose as she demanded something of him. 'Masara!' One of her attendants had heard her.
'Masara!' It was obviously the girl's name, for she made a gesture of silence
and caution to Memnon and turned to go back. However, the three women had all started up the
slope after Masara. They were chattering with alarm and agitation, and they
came round the side of the boulder in a pack and stopped when they saw Memnon. For a moment nobody moved, and then all three women
screamed in unison. The naked girl seemed poised to run to Memnon's side, but
as she started forward, two of the women seized her; all four of them were
screaming now, as the girl struggled to be free. 'Time to go home,' Tanus jerked my arm, and I was
after him in a bound. From the direction of the camp came the shouts of
many men aroused by the screams of the women. When I paused to look back, I saw
them coming over the ridge in a body. I saw also that Memnon had not followed
us, but had leaped forward to the girl's assistance. They were all big women and held the girl hard,
redoubling their screams. Although Masara was trying desperately to pull free,
Memnon could not get her away from them. 'Tanus!' I yelled. 'Memnon is in trouble.' We turned back and between us grabbed him and
hauled him away. He came reluctantly. 'I will come back for you,' he shouted to
the girl, looking back over his shoulder as we ran with him between us. 'Be
brave. I will come back for you.' When somebody tells me nowadays that there is no
such thing as love at first sight, I smile quietly to myself and think of the
day that Memnon first saw Masara. We had lost time in the struggle to get Memnon
away, and our pursuers were already pressing us hard as we took to one of the
goat-tracks and ran for the crest of the slope. An arrow flitted past Memnon's shoulder and
clattered against the rocks beside the path. It spurred us to greater speed. We were in single file along the narrow path.
Memnon led us and Tanus followed him. I was last in the file, and, burdened by
the heavy medicine chest on my back, I began to fall further behind. Another
arrow passed over our heads, and then the third struck the pack on my back with
a force that made me stagger. But the chest stopped the arrow that would
otherwise have transfixed my body. 'Come on, Taita,' Tanus shouted back at me. 'Throw
off that cursed box of yours, or they will have you.' He and Memnon were fifty paces ahead of me and
drawing away, but I could not discard my precious chest. At that moment the
next arrow struck, and this time I was not so fortunate. It hit me in the leg,
in the fleshy part of the thigh, and I went tumbling across the path and fell
hard. I rolled into a sitting position and looked with
horror at the reed shaft of the arrow that protruded from my leg. Then I looked
back at our pursuers. The bearded chieftain in the striped robe led them, and
he had outdistanced his own men by a hundred paces. He was coming up the track
in a series of great elastic bounds, covering the ground as swiftly as one of
the ibex rams that he resembled in so many other ways. 'Taita!' Tanus called back at me. 'Are you all
right?' He had paused on the brow of the slope, and was looking back anxiously.
Memnon had crossed over and was out of sight. 'I am arrowed!' I yelled back. 'Go on and leave me.
I cannot follow.' Without a moment's hesitation, Tanus turned back,
and came leaping down towards where I lay. The Ethiopian chieftain saw him
coming and bellowed a challenge. He . drew the glittering blue sword and
brandished it as he came on up the hillside. Tanus reached the spot where I sat, and tried to
lift me to my feet. 'It's no use. I am hard hit. Save yourself,' I told him,
but the Ethiopian was almost upon us. Tanus dropped my arm, and drew his own
sword. The two of them came together, going for each other
in a murderous rush. I was not in any doubt as to the outcome of this duel, for
Tanus was the strongest and most skilled swordsman in all Egypt. When he killed
the Ethiopian, we would all be doomed, for we could expect no mercy from his
henchmen. The Ethiopian swung first with a full-blooded
overhand cut at Tanus' head. It was an imprudent stroke to aim at a swordsman
of his opponent's calibre. I knew that Tanus' response would be a parry in the
line of the head and a natural riposte, with all the momentum of his shoulder
behind it, that would drive the point through the chieftain's beard and into
his throat. It was one of Tanus' favourite strokes. The two blades met, but there was no ringing clash.
The blue blade hacked clean through Tanus' yellow bronze, as though it were a wand
of green willow. Tanus was left with the hilt in his hand and a finger's-length
remaining from that once long and deadly bronze blade. Tanus was stunned by the ease with which the
Ethiopian had disarmed him, and he was slow to defend himself from the next
stroke that followed like a thunderbolt. He leaped backwards just in time, but
the blue point opened a long, shallow cut across the bulging muscles of his
naked chest, and the blood came swiftly. 'Run, Tanus!' I screamed. 'Or he will kill us
both.' The Ethiopian went for him again, but I was lying
in the middle of the narrow path. He was forced to leap over me to get at
Tanus. I seized him around the knees with both arms, and brought him down on
top of me in a snarling, thrashing heap. The Ethiopian was trying to drive the point of the
blue sword into my belly, as I lay under him, and I twisted so violently aside
that both of us rolled off the path and began to slide away down the steep
slope of loose scree. As we rolled more swiftly, gathering momentum, I had one
last glimpse of Tanus peering down over the edge of the path, and I screamed in
a despairing wail, 'Run! Take care of Memnon!' The shale and loose scree were as treacherous as
swamp quicksands, and gave no anchor or purchase. The Ethiopian and I were
flung apart, but both of us were carried to the edge of the torrent. I was
battered and hammered to the edge of consciousness, and lay there groaning
until rough hands dragged me to my feet, and blows and harsh curses rained upon
my head. The chieftain stopped them from killing me and
throwing my body into the river. He was covered with dust, as I was, and his
robe was torn and filthy from the fall, but the blue sword was still gripped in
his right fist and he snarled at his men. They began to drag me away towards
the encampment, but I looked around me desperately and saw my medicine chest
amongst the rocks. The leather harness had snapped, and it had come off my
back. 'Bring that,' I ordered my captors with as much
force and dignity as I could muster, and pointed to the chest. They laughed at
my insolence, but the chieftain sent one of his men to retrieve it. Two men were obliged to support me, for the shaft
in my thigh was beginning to cause me crippling pain. Every pace back to the
camp was agony, and when they reached it, they threw me roughly to the ground
in the open space in the centre of the ring of tents. Then they argued long and fiercely. It was obvious
that they were puzzling over my origins and my motives, and trying to decide
what they should do with me. Every once in a while, one of them would stand
over me and kick me in the ribs, while he shouted questions at me. I lay as
quietly as I could, so as not to provoke further violence. There was a distraction when the party that had
pursued Tanus and Memnon returned empty-handed. There was more shouting and
arm-waving as bitter recriminations and insults were exchanged. I was cheered
by the thought that the two of them had got clean away. After a while my captors remembered me, and they
came back to vent their frustration on me with more kicks and blows. In the end
their chieftain called them off, and ordered them not to torment me further.
After that, most of them lost interest in me and wandered away. I was left
lying on the bare ground, covered with dirt and bruises, with the arrow still
lodged in my flesh. The Ethiopian chieftain resumed his seat in front
of the largest tent, which was clearly his own, and while he stropped the edge
of his sword, he regarded me with a steady but inscrutable expression.
Occasionally he exchanged a few low words with one of his men, but it seemed
that my immediate danger was past. I judged my moment carefully, and then addressed
him directly. I pointed to my medicine chest, which had been thrown against one
of the tents, and I made my voice mild and placatory. 'I need my chest. I must
tend this wound.' Although the chieftain did not understand the
words, he understood my gestures. He ordered one of his men to bring the chest
across to him. He made them set it down in front of him and opened the lid. He
unpacked the chest methodically, examining each separate item. Anything that
particularly caught his attention he held up, and asked a question to which I
tried to give an answer with signs. He seemed satisfied that, apart from my scalpels,
the chest contained no dangerous weapon. I am not sure if he realized at this
stage that these were medical items. However, with signs I showed him what I
needed to do, pointing to my leg and making a pantomime of pulling the arrow.
He stood over me with the sword in his hand, and made it clear that he would
lop off my head at the first sign of treachery, but he allowed me to use my
instruments. The arrow had entered at an angle and position
which made it awkward for me to reach. In addition to this, the pain that I
inflicted upon myself, as I used the Taita spoons to trap and mask the barbs
that were buried deep in my flesh, brought me more than once to the point of
fainting away. I was panting and drenched in sheets of sweat when
at last I was ready to draw the arrow-head. By this time I had an audience of
half the men in camp. They had returned to crowd around me and watch my surgery
with garrulous interest. I took a firm hold on the handles of the spoons,
placed a wooden wedge between my teeth and bit down on it hard, and drew the
clamped arrow-head out of the wound. There were shouts of wonder and amazement
from my audience. Obviously none of them had ever seen a barb drawn with such
ease and with so little damage to the victim. They were impressed even further
when they watched the skill and dexterity with which I laid on the linen
bandages. In any nation and in any culture, even the most
primitive, the healer and the physician have a special place of honour and esteem.
I had demonstrated my credentials in the most convincing manner, and my status
in the Ethiopian camp was drastically altered. At the orders of the chief, I was carried to one of
the tents and laid on a straw mattress. My medicine chest was placed at the
head of my bed, and one of the women brought me a meal of corn-bread and
chicken stew and thick sour milk. In the morning, when the tents were struck, I was
placed in a pole-litter behind one of the horses in the long caravan, and
pulled along the rough and precipitous tracks. To my dismay, I saw from the
angle of the sun that we were headed back into the fastness of the mountains,
and I feared that I was lost to my own people, probably for all time. The fact
that I was a physician had probably saved my life, but it had also placed such
value on me that I would never be turned free. I knew that I was now a slave in
more than name alone. DESPITE THE JOLTING OF THE LITTER, MY leg began to heal
cleanly. This further impressed my captors, and soon they were bringing to me
any member of the band who was sick or injured. I cured a ringworm and lanced a whitlow under a
thumbnail. I sewed together a man who had won too much gambling with his quick-tempered
friends. These Ethiopians had a penchant for settling arguments with the
dagger. When one of the horses threw its rider down a gul-ley, I set his broken
arm. It knitted straight, and my reputation was enhanced. The Ethiopian
chieftain looked at me with a new respect, and I was offered the food-bowl
after he had made his selection of the choice cuts, before any of the other men
were allowed to eat. When* my leg had healed sufficiently for me to walk
again, I was given the run of the camp. However, I was not allowed out of
sight. An armed man followed me and stood over me, even when I was on the most
private and intimate business amongst the rocks. I was kept away from Masara and only saw her from
afar at the start of each day's journey, and again when we camped for the
night. During the long day's ride through the mountains we were separated; I
rode near the head of the caravan, while she was brought along at the rear. She
was always accompanied by her female gaolers, and usually surrounded by armed
guards. Whenever we did catch sight of each other, Masara
cast the most desperate and appealing looks at me, as though I would be able to
help her in some way. It was obvious that she was a prisoner of rank and of
importance. She was such a lovely young woman that I often found myself
thinking of her during the day, and trying to fathom the reason for her
captivity. I decided she was either an unwilling bride, being taken to meet her
future husband, or that she was a pawn in some political intrigue. Without a knowledge of the language I could not
hope to understand what was taking place, or to learn anything about these
Ethiopians. I set out to learn the Geez tongue. I have the ear of a musician, and I played my
tricks upon them. I listened attentively to all the chatter around me, and
picked up the cadence and the rhythm of their speech. Very early on, I was able
to deduce that the chieftain's name was Arkoun. One morning before the caravan
set out, Arkoun was giving orders for the day's march to his assembled band. I
waited until he had delivered a long and heated harangue, and then I repeated
it in precisely the same tone and cadence. They listened to me in stunned silence, and then
burst into uproar. They roared with laughter and beat each other on the back,
tears of mirth streamed down their cheeks, for they had a direct and
uncomplicated sense of humour. I had not the least idea what I had said, but it
was obvious that I had got it exactly right. They shouted excerpts from my speech at each other,
and wagged their heads, mimicking Arkoun's pompous manner. It took a long time
for order to be restored, but at last Arkoun strutted up to me and shouted an
accusatory question at me. I did not understand a word of it, but I shouted the
same question back at him, word for exact word. This time there was pandemonium. The joke of it was
too rich to be borne. Grown men clung to each other for support, they screamed
and wiped their streaming eyes. One of them fell into the fire and singed his
beard. Even though the joke was on him, Arkoun laughed
along with them and patted me on the back. From then onwards, every man and
woman in the camp was my teacher. I had only to point at any object and the
Geez word for it was shouted at me. When I began to string those words into
sentences, they corrected me eagerly, and were inordinately proud of my
progress. It took me some time to fathom the grammar. The
verbs were declined in a manner which had no relationship to Egyptian, and the
gender and plurals of the nouns were strange. However, within ten days I was
speaking intelligible Geez, and had even built up a good selection of choice
curses and invective. While I learned the language and treated their
ailments, I studied their mores and manners. I learned that they were inveterate
gamblers, and that the board-game that they played endlessly was a passion.
They called it dom, but it was a simplified and rudimentary form of bao. The
number of cups in the board and the quantity of stones brought into play varied
from bao. However, all the objects and the principles were similar. Arkoun himself was the dom champion of the band,
but as I studied his play, I saw that he had no inkling of the classic rule of
seven stones. Nor did he understand the protocol of the four bulls. Without a thorough
knowledge of these, no bao player could aspire to even the lowly third grade of
masters. I debated with myself the risk that I would run in humiliating such a
vain and overbearing tyrant as Arkoun, but in the end I decided that it was the
only way to gain ascendancy over him. The next time he sat in front of his tent and set
up the board, smirking and twirling his moustaches as he waited for a
challenger to step forward, I elbowed aside the first aspirant and settled
myself cross-legged opposite Arkoun. 'I have no silver to wager,' I told him in my still
rudimentary Geez. 'I play for love of the stones.' He nodded gravely. As an addict of the board, he
understood that sentiment. The news that I was taking the board against Arkoun
ran through the camp, and they all came laughing and jostling to watch. When I allowed Arkoun to lay three stones in the
east castle they nudged each other and chuckled with disappointment that the
game would be so swiftly lost. One more stone in the east, and the board was his.
They did not understand the significance of the four bulls that I had banked in
the south. When I loosed my bulls, they strode invincibly across the board,
splitting his unsupported stones and isolating the east castle. He was
powerless to prevent it. Four moves and the board was mine. I had not even been
called upon to demonstrate the rule of seven stones. For some moments they all sat in shocked silence. I
do not think that Arkoun realized the extent of his defeat for a while. Then,
when it sank in upon him, he stood up and drew the terrible blue sword. I
thought that I had miscalculated, and that he was about to lop my head, or at
least an arm. He lifted the sword high and then swung it down
with a shout of fury. With a dozen strokes he hacked the board to kindling and
scattered the stones about the camp. Then he strode out into the rocks, tearing
his beard and shouting my death threats to the towering cliffs, that hurled
them onwards down the valleys in a series of diminishing echoes. It was three days before Arkoun set up the board
again, and gestured to me to take my seat opposite him. The poor fellow had no
inkling of what lay in store for him. EACH DAY MY COMMAND OF THE GEEZ language increased,
and I was at last able to glean some understanding of my captor and the reason
for this long journey through the canyons and gorges. I had underrated Arkoun. He was not a chieftain but
a king. His full name was Arkoun Gannouchi Maryam, Negusa Naghast, King of
Kings and ruler of the Ethiopic state of Aksum. It was only later that I
learned that in this land any mountain brigand with a hundred horses and fifty
wives was likely to set himself up as a king, and that at any one time there
might be as many as twenty Kings of Kings on the rampage for land and loot. Arkoun's nearest neighbour was one Prester
Beni-Jon, also claiming to be King of Kings and ruler of the Ethiopic state of
Aksum. There appeared to be a certain amount of ill-feeling and rivalry between
these two monarchs. They had already fought a number of inconclusive battles. Masara was the favourite daughter of Prester
Beni-Jon. She had been kidnapped by one of the other robber chieftains, one of
those who had not yet crowned himself, nor taken the obligatory title of King
of Kings. In a straightforward trading arrangement, Masara had been sold to
Arkoun for a horse-load of silver bars. Arkoun intended using her to gain
political ground from her doting father. It seemed that hostage-taking and
ransom were very much a part of Ethiopian statesmanship. Not trusting any of his own men with such a
valuable commodity, Arkoun had gone himself to take possession of Princess
Masara. Our caravan was carrying her back to Arkoun's stronghold. I gathered
this and other information from the gossipy women slaves who brought me my
meals, or in casual conversation over the dom board. By the time we reached
Amba Kamara, the mountain fortress of King Arkoun Gannouchi Maryam, I was an
expert on the complicated and shifting politics of the various Ethiopic states
of Aksum, and the numerous claimants to the throne of the empire. I was aware of an increasing excitement running
through our caravan as we approached our journey's end, and at last we climbed
the narrow winding pathway, no more than just another goat-track, to the summit
of yet another amba. These ambas were the massifs that made up the mountain
ranges of central Ethiopia. Each of them was a flat-topped mountain with sheer
sides that plunged like a wall into the valley that divided it from the next
mountain. It was easy to see, when I stood at the top of the
precipice, how the land was fragmented into so many tiny kingdoms and
principalities. Each amba was a natural and impregnable fortress. The man on
top of it was invincible, and might call himself a king without fear of being
challenged. Arkoun rode up beside me and pointed to the
mountains on the southern sky-line. 'That is the hiding-place of that
horse-thief and scoundrel, Prester Beni-Jon. He is a man of unsurpassed treachery.'
He hawked in his throat and spat over the edge of the cliff in the direction of
his rival. I had come to know Arkoun as a man of not
inconsiderable cruelty and treachery himself. If he conceded Prester Beni-Jon
as his master in these fields, Masara's father must be a formidable man indeed. We crossed the tableland of the Amba Kamara,
passing through a few villages of stone-walled hovels, and fields of sorghum
and dhurra corn. The peasants in the fields were all tall, bushy-haired
ruffians, armed with swords and round copper shields. They appeared as fierce
and warlike as any of the men in our caravan. At the far end of the amba, the path led us to the
most extraordinary natural stronghold that I had ever seen. From the main table
of the mountain a buttress had eroded until it stood alone, a sheer pinnacle of
rock with precipitous sides, separated from the table by an awe-inspiring
abyss. This gulf was bridged by a narrow causeway, a
natural arch of stone, that joined it to the tableland. It was so narrow that
two horses could not pass each other on the pathway, so narrow that once a
horse started out across the bridge, it could not turn round and return, until
it had reached the other side. The drop under the causeway was a thousand feet,
straight into the river gorge below. It was so unnerving to the horses that the
riders were forced to dismount, blindfold them, and lead them over. When I was
halfway across, I found myself trembling with vertigo, and I dared not peer
over the edge of the pathway into the void. It required all my self-control to
keep walking, and not to throw myself flat and cling to the rocks beneath my
feet. Perched on top of this pinnacle of rock was an
ungainly, lopsided castle of stone blocks and reed thatch. The open windows were
covered with curtains of rawhide, and the raw sewage and odious refuse running
from the fortress stained and littered the cliff beneath it. Festooning the walls and battlements like pennants
and decorations celebrating some macabre festival, were the corpses of men and
women. Some had hung there so long that their bones had been picked white by
the flocks of crows that circled above the abyss or roosted squawking upon the
roofs. Other victims were still alive, and I watched their feeble last
movements with horror as they hung by their heels. However, most of them were
already dead and in various stages of decomposition. The smell of rotting human
carcasses was so thick that even the wind that whined eternally around the
cliffs could not disperse it. King Arkoun called the crows his chickens.
Sometimes he fed them on the walls, and at other times he threw their food from
the causeway into the gorge. The dwindling wail of another unfortunate victim
falling away into the depths was a feature of our life on the pinnacle of Adbar
Seged, the House of the Wind Song. These executions and the daily floggings and
chopping-off of hands or feet, or the pulling-out of tongues with red-hot tongs
were King Arkoun's principal diversions when he was not playing dom, or planning
a raid on one of the other neighbouring king of kings. Very often Arkoun
wielded the axe or the tongs in person, and his roars of laughter were as loud
as the screams of his victims. As soon as our caravan had crossed the causeway and
pulled into the central courtyard of Adbar Seged, Masara was whisked away by
her female gaolers into the labyrinth of stone passageways, and I was led to my
new quarters which abutted those of Arkoun. I was allotted a single stone cell. It was dark and
draughty. The open fireplace blackened the walls with soot and gave out little
heat. Though I wore the woollen robes of the land, I was never warm in Adbar
Seged. How I longed for the sunlight on the Nile and the bright oasis of my
very Egypt! I sat on those wind-swept battlements and pined for my family, for
Memnon and Tanus, for my little princesses, but most of all for my mistress.
Sometimes I woke in the night with the tears chilling my face, and I had to
cover my head with my sheepskin blanket, so that Arkoun would not hear my sobs
through the thick stone wall. Often I pleaded with him to release me. 'But why do you want to leave me, Taita?' 'I want to go back to my family.' 'I am your family now,' he laughed. 'I am your
father.' I made a wager with him. If I won a hundred
successive boards of dom from him, he agreed that he would let me go and give
me an escort back down the Nile to the great plains. When I won the hundredth
game, he chuckled and shook his head at my naivety. 'Did I say a hundred? I think not. Surely it was a
thousand?' He turned to his henchmen. 'Was the bargain a thousand?' 'A thousand!' they chanted. 'It was a thousand!' They all thought it a grand joke. When in a pique I
refused to play another board with Arkoun, he hung me naked from the walls of
the citadel by my heels until I squealed for him to set up the board. When Arkoun saw me naked, he laughed and prodded
me. 'You may have a way with the dom board, but it seems you have lost your own
stones, Egyptian.' This was the first time since my capture that my physical
mutilation had been revealed. Once again, men called me 'eunuch', much to my
shame and mortification. However, in the end the consequences were
beneficial. If I had been a man entire, they would never have let me go to
Masara. THEY CAME FOR ME IN THE NIGHT AND led me shivering
through the passages to Masara's cell. The room was lit by a dim oil lamp and
smelled of vomit. The girl was curled on a straw mattress in the centre of the
floor, with her vomit puddled on the stone floor beside her. She was in
terrible pain, groaning and weeping and holding her stomach. I set to work immediately, and examined her
carefully. I was afraid that I would find her stomach as hard as a stone, the
symptom of the swelling and bursting of the gut that would drench her insides
with the contents of her intestines. There was no remedy for this condition.
Not even I, with all my skills, could save her, if this was her affliction. To my great relief I found her stomach warm and
soft. There was no fever in her blood. I continued my examination, and though
she groaned and screamed with agony when I touched her, I could not find any
cause for her condition. I was puzzled and I sat back to think about it. Then I
realized that although her face was contorted with agony, she was watching me
with a candid gaze. 'This is worse than I feared.' I turned to her two
female attendants and spoke in Geez. 'If I am to save her, I must have my
chest. Fetch it immediately.' They scrambled for the door, and I lowered my head
to hers and whispered, 'You are a clever girl and a good actress. Did you
tickle your throat with a feather?' She smiled up at me and whispered back, 'I could
think of no other way to meet you. When the women told me that you had learned
to speak Geez, I knew that we could help each other.' 'I hope that is possible.' 'I have been so lonely. Even to speak to a friend
will be a joy to me.' Her trust was so spontaneous that I was touched. 'Perhaps
between us we will find a way to escape from this dreadful place.' At that moment we heard the women returning, their
voices echoing along the outside passage. Masara seized my hand. 'You are my friend, aren't you? You will come to me
again?' 'I am and I will.' 'Quickly, tell me before you must go. What was his
name?' 'Who?' "The one who was with you on that first day
beside the river. The one who looks like a young god.' 'His name is Memnon.' 'Memnon!' She repeated it with a peculiar
reverence. 'It is a beautiful name. It suits him.' The women burst into the room, and Masara clutched
her healthy little belly and groaned as though she were at the point of death.
While I clucked and shook my head with worry for the benefit of her women, I
mixed a tonic of herbs that would do her some good, and told them that I would
return in the morning. In the morning Masara's condition had improved, and
I was able to spend a little longer with her. Only one of the women was
present, and she soon became bored and wandered away to the far side of the
room. Masara and I exchanged a few quiet words. 'Memnon said something to me. I could not
understand. What was it he said?' 'He said, "I will come back for you. Be brave.
I will come back for you." ' 'He could not mean that. He does not know me. He
had met me only fleetingly.' She shook her head, and tears filled her eyes. 'Do
you think he meant it, Taita?' There was a haunting plea in her tone that moved
me, and I could not allow her to suffer more than she had already. 'He is crown prince of Egypt, and a man of honour.
Memnon would not have said it unless he meant every word.' That was all we could say then, but I came back the
next day. The very first thing she asked of me was, 'Tell me again what Memnon
said to me,' and I had to repeat his promise. I told Arkoun that Masara was improving in health,
but that she must be allowed out each day to walk on the battlements.
'Otherwise I cannot answer for her health.' He thought about that for a day. However, Masara
was a valuable asset for which he had paid a horse-load of silver bars, and at
last he gave his permission. Our daily exercise periods slowly extended, as the
guards became accustomed to seeing us together. In the end Masara and I were
able to spend most mornings hi each other's company, strolling around the walls
of Adbar Seged and talking endlessly. Masara wanted to know everything that I had to tell
about Memnon, and I racked my memory for anecdotes about him to entertain her.
She had favourite stories which I was obliged to repeat until she knew them by
heart, and she corrected me when I erred in the retelling. She particularly
enjoyed the account of how he had rescued Tanus and me from the wounded bull
elephant, and how he had received the Gold of Valour for his deed. 'Tell me about his mother the queen,' she demanded,
and then, 'Tell me about Egypt. Tell me about your gods. Tell me about when
Memnon was a baby.' Always her questions returned to him, and I was glad to
appease her demands, for I longed for my family. Speaking about them made them
seem closer to me. One morning she came to me distraught. 'Last night
I had a dreadful dream. I dreamed that Memnon came back to me, but I could not
understand what he said to me. You must teach me to speak Egyptian, Taita. We
will start today, this very minute!' She was desperate to learn and she was a clever
little thing. It went very quickly. Soon we were talking only Egyptian between
ourselves, and it was useful to be able to speak privately in front of her
guards. When we were not talking about Memnon, we were
discussing our plans to escape. Of course, I had been thinking of this ever
since our arrival at Adbar Seged, but it helped to have her thoughts on the
same subject to compare with my own. 'Even if you escape from this fortress, you will
never pass through the mountains without help,' she warned me. "The paths
are like a skein of twisted wool. You will never unravel them. Every clan is at
war with the next. They trust no strangers, and they will cut your throat as a
spy.' 'What must we do, then?' I asked. 'If you are able to get away, you must go to my
father. He will protect you and guide you back to your own people. You will
tell Memnon where I am, and he will come to save me.' She said this with such
shining confidence that I could not meet her eyes. I realized then that Masara had built up an image
of Memnon in her mind that was not based on reality. She was in love with a
god, not a stripling as young and untried as she was herself. I was responsible
for this, with my clever stories about the prince. I could not wound her now
and shatter her hope by telling her how forlorn all these imaginings truly
were. 'If I go to Prester Beni-Jon, your father, he will think
I am one of Arkoun's spies. He will have my head.' I tried to extricate myself
from the responsibilities she had laid upon me. 'I will tell you what to say to him. Things that
only he and I know. That will prove to him that you come from me.' She had blocked me there, so I tried a different
escape. 'How would I find my way to your father's fortress? You have told me
that the path is a tangled skein.' 'I will explain the way to you. Because you are so
clever you will remember everything I tell you.' By this time, naturally, I loved her almost as much
as I loved my own little princesses. I would take any risk to shield her from
hurt. She reminded me so strongly of my mistress at the same age that I could
deny her nothing. 'Very well. Tell it to me.' And so we began to plan
our escape. It was a game for me, which I played mostly to keep her hopes alive
and her spirits buoyant. I had no serious expectation of finding a way off this
pinnacle of rock. We discussed ways of making a rope to lower
ourselves down the cliff, although every time I looked over the causeway from
the terrace outside her cell, I shuddered at that gaping void of space. She
began to collect scraps of wool and cloth which she hid under her mattress.
From these she planned to plait a rope. I could not tell her that a rope long
enough and strong enough to support our weight and take us down to the floor of
the valley would fill her cell to the ceiling. For two long years we languished on the height of Adbar
Seged, and we never were able to devise a plan of escape, but Masara never lost
faith. Every day she asked me, 'What did Memnon say to me? Tell me again what
he promised.' 'He said, "I will come back for you. Be
brave." ' 'Yes. I am brave, am I not, Taita?' 'You are the bravest girl I know.' 'Tell me what you will say to my father when you
meet him.' I repeated her instructions, and then she would
reveal to me her latest plan of escape. 'I will catch the little sparrows that I feed on
the terrace. You will write a letter to my father to tell him where I am. We
will tie it to the sparrow's leg, and it will fly to him.' 'It is more likely to fly to Arkoun, who will have
us both thrashed, and we will not be allowed to see each other again.' In the end I escaped from Adbar Seged by riding out
on a fine horse. Arkoun was going out on another raid against King Prester
BeniJon. I was commanded to accompany him, in the capacity of personal
physician and dom player. As I walked my blindfolded horse across the causeway,
I looked back and saw Masara standing on her terrace looking down at me. She
was a lovely, lonely figure. She called to me in Egyptian. I could just make
out her words above the sough of the wind. 'Tell him I am waiting for him. Tell him I have been
brave.' And then softly, so I was not certain that I had heard the words right,
'Tell him I love him.' The wind turned the tears upon my cheeks as cold as
ice, as I rode away across Amba Kamara. THE NIGHT BEFORE THE BATTLE, ARKOUN kept me sitting
late in his tent. While he gave his last orders to his commanders, he stropped
the edge of the blue sword. Once in a while he would shave a few hairs off his
wrist with the steely, glittering blade to test the edge, and nod with
satisfaction. At last he rubbed down the blade with clarified mutton fat. This
strange, silver-blue metal had to be kept well greased, otherwise a red powder
would form upon it, almost as though it was bleeding. The blue sword had come to exert the same
fascination on me as it had on Tanus. Occasionally, when he was in a specially
benevolent mood, Arkoun would allow me to handle it. The weight of the metal
was surprising, and the sharpness of the edge was incredible. I imagined what
havoc it could wreak in the hands of a swordsman like Tanus. I knew that if we
ever met again, Tanus would want every detail of it, and so I questioned
Arkoun, who never tired of boasting about it. He told me that the sword had been forged in the
heart of a volcano by one of the pagan gods of Ethiopia. Arkoun's
great-grandfather had won it from the god in a game of dom that had lasted for
twenty days and twenty nights. I found all this quite plausible, except the
part of the legend about winning the weapon in a dom game. If Arkoun's
greatgrandfather had played dom at the same standard as Arkoun, then it must
have been a very stupid god who lost the sword to him. Arkoun asked my opinion of his battle plan for the
next day. He had learned that I was a student of military tactics. I told him
his plan was brilliant. These Ethiopians had as much grasp of military tactics
as they had of the play of the dom stones. Of course, the terrain would not
allow full use of the horses, and they had no chariots. Nevertheless, their
battles were fought in a haphazard and desultory manner. Arkoun's grand strategy for the morrow would be to
split his forces into four raiding parties. They would hide among the rocks and
rush out, seize a few hostages, slit a few throats, and then run for it. 'You are one of the great generals of history,' I
told Arkoun, 'I would like to write a scroll to extol your genius.' He liked
the idea, and promised to provide me with whatever materials I required for the
project, as soon as we returned to Adbar Seged. It seemed that King Prester Beni-Jon was a commander
of equal panache and vision. We met his forces the following day in a wide
valley with steep sides. The battlefield had been mutually agreed upon some
months in advance, and Prester Beni-Jon had taken up his position at the head
of the valley before we arrived. He came forward to shout insults and
challenges at Arkoun from a safe distance. Prester Beni-Jon was a stick of a man, thin as a
staff, with a long white beard and silver locks down to his waist. I could not
make out his features over that distance, but the women had told me that as a
young man he had been the most handsome swain in Ethiopia and that he had two
hundred wives. Some women had killed themselves for love of him. It seemed
clear to me that his talents might be more gainfully employed in the harem than
on the battlefield. Once Prester Beni-Jon had had his say, Arkoun went
forward and replied at length. His insults were flowery and poetic, they rolled
off the cliffs and echoed down the gorge. I committed some of his pithier
remarks to memory, for they were worth recording. When Arkoun subsided at last, I expected that
battle would be joined, but I was mistaken. There were several other warriors
on both sides who wished to speak. I fell asleep against a rock in the warm sun,
smiling to myself as I imagined what sport Tanus and a company of his Blues
would enjoy against these Ethiopian champions of rhetoric. It was afternoon when I woke and started up at the
clash of arms. Arkoun had loosed his first assault. One of his detachments
raced forward against Prester Beni-Jon's positions, beating their swords
against their copper shields. Within a remarkably short space of time they
returned with great alacrity to their starting-point, without having inflicted
or suffered casualties. Further insults were exchanged, and then it was
Prester Beni-Jon's turn to attack. He charged and retired with equal verve and
similar results. So the day passed, insult for insult, charge for charge. At
nightfall both armies retired. We camped at the foot of the valley and Arkoun
sent for me. 'What a battle!' he greeted me triumphantly, as I
entered his tent. 'It will be many months before Prester Beni-Jon will dare
take the field again.' 'There will be no battle on the morrow?' I asked. 'Tomorrow we will return to Adbar Seged,' he told
me, 'and you will write a full account of my victory in your scrolls. I expect
that after this salutary defeat Prester Beni-Jon will soon sue for peace.' Seven of our men had been wounded in this ferocious
encounter, all by arrows fired at extreme range. I drew the barbs and dressed
and bandaged the wounds. The following day I saw the wounded loaded on to the
litters and walked beside them, as we started back. One of the men had received a stomach wound and was
in much pain. I knew he would be dead from gangrene within the week, but I did
my best to ease his suffering and to cushion the bouncing of the litter over
the rougher sections of the track. Late that afternoon we came to a ford in the river,
one that we had crossed on our way to give battle to Prester Beni-Jon. I had
recognized this ford from the description that Masara had given me of the
countryside and the route to her father's stronghold. The river was one of the
numerous tributaries of the Nile that descended from the mountains. There had
been rain over the preceding days, and the level of the ford was high. I began the crossing, wading beside the litter of
my patient with the stomach wound. He was already delirious. Halfway across the
ford I realized that we had underestimated the height and strength of the
water. The flood caught the side of the litter and swung it sideways. It
twisted the horse around, dragging the poor animal into deeper water where its
hooves lost purchase on the gravel bottom. I was hanging on to the harness, and the next
moment the horse and I were both swimming. We were washed away downstream in
the icy green flood. The wounded man was tumbled out of the litter, and when I
tried to reach him, I lost my hold on the horse's harness. We were swept apart. The wounded man's head disappeared below the
surface, but by this time I was swimming for my own life. I rolled on to my
back and pointed my feet downstream. This way I was able to fend off the rocks
with my feet, as the current hurled me against them. For a short while some of
Ar-koun's men ran along the bank beside me, but soon the river swept me through
a bend and they could not find a way around the base of the cliff. The horse
and I were alone in the river. Below the bend, the speed of the current slackened,
and I was able to swim back to the horse and throw one arm over its neck. For
the moment I was safe. For the first time I thought of escape, and realized
that the gods had made an opportunity for me. I muttered a prayer of thanks, and
used a handful of the horse's mane to steer it on down the middle of the river. We had come downstream several miles and it was
dark before I steered my horse into the bank. We clambered ashore on a
sand-bar. I judged that I was safe from pursuit and recapture until morning.
None of Arkoun's men would venture down the gorge in darkness. However, I was
so chilled that my whole body shivered in uncontrollable spasms. I led the horse to a sheltered place out of the
wind, and then pressed my body to his flank. His wet hide steamed in the
moonlight. Gradually the warmth of the animal permeated me, and my shivering
subsided. Once I was half-warmed, I was able to gather up driftwood from the
sand-bank. Using the Shilluk method, I managed with much difficulty to start a
fire. I spread my robes out to dry, and crouched over the fire for the rest of
that night. As soon as it was light enough to see the path, I
dressed myself and mounted the horse. I headed away from the river, for I knew
that Arkoun's men would concentrate their search along the banks. Two days later, following the directions that
Masara had given me, I reached one of the fortified hilltop villages in the
domain of Prester Beni-Jon. The headman of the village expressed the intention
of cutting my throat immediately and taking my horse. I made full use of all my
persuasive gifts, and eventually he agreed to keep the horse but lead me to the
fortress of Prester Beni-Jon. THE GUIDES WHO WERE ESCORTING ME to King Prester
Beni-Jon spoke of him in warm and affectionate terms. The villages that we
passed along the way were cleaner and more prosperous than those of Arkoun. The
herds of kine were fatter, the crops well cultivated and the people better fed.
The horses I saw were magnificent. Their beauty brought tears to my eyes. When at last we came in sight of the castle high on
another amba, it was in a better state of repair than that of Arkoun, and no
grisly trophies decorated the walls. From close at hand, King Prester Beni-Jon was
indeed an extremely handsome man. His silver hair and beard endowed him with a
singular air of dignity. His complexion was fair and his eyes dark and
intelligent. At first he was highly sceptical of my story, but gradually his
manner changed towards me, as I recited the intimate knowledge with which
Masara had armed me. He was deeply affected by the messages of love and
duty that I brought to him from his daughter, and he questioned me eagerly as
to her health and welfare. Then his servants led me to quarters that, by
Ethiopian standards, were sumptuous, and I was provided with fresh woollen
robes to replace my rags. After I had eaten and rested, the servants led me
back to the dank and smoky cell that was Prester Beni-Jon's audience chamber. 'Your Majesty, Masara has been a prisoner of Arkoun
these past two years,' I pointed out to him immediately. 'She is a young and
tender girl. She pines away in his stinking dungeons.' I embroidered the facts
a trifle, to bring home to him the urgency of her plight. 'I have tried to assemble the ransom that Arkoun
demands for my daughter,' Prester Beni-Jon excused himself. 'But I would have
to melt down every plate and bowl in Aksum to put together such a hoard of
silver as would satisfy his greed. In addition, he demands great tracts of my
land and scores of my principal villages. To relinquish these to him would
weaken my realm and condemn tens of thousands of my subjects to his tyranny.' 'I could lead your army to his stronghold of Adbar
Seged. You could lay siege to the castle and force him to hand over Masara to
you.' Prester Beni-Jon looked startled by this proposal.
I do not think such a course of action had occurred to him. It was not the
Ethiopian way of waging war. 'I know Adbar Seged very well, but it is impregnable,'
he answered me primly. 'Arkoun has a mighty army at his back. We have fought
many fierce battles against him. My men are lions, but we have never been able
to defeat him.' I had seen the lions of Prester Beni-Jon in battle, and I saw
that his estimate of the situation was correct. The army he commanded could
never hope to storm Adbar Seged and free Masara by force of arms. The following day I returned with another proposal.
'Great Emperor of Aksum, King of Kings, as you well know, I am of the Egyptian
nation. Queen Lostris, the regent of Egypt, lies with her armies at the
confluence of the two rivers, where the Nile meets its twin.' He nodded. 'This I know. These Egyptians have entered
my territory without my leave. They are digging mines in my valleys. Soon I
will fall upon them and annihilate them.' It was my turn to be startled. Prester Beni-Jon was
aware of the work on Pharaoh's tomb, and our people there were in danger of attack.
Accordingly, I modified the suggestion that I was about to put to him. 'My people are skilled in the art of siege and
war,' I explained. 'I have influence with Queen Lostris. If you send me safely
back to her side, I will prevail on her to extend you her friendship. Her
troops will storm the fortress of Adbar Seged and free your daughter.' Although Prester Beni-Jon tried to disguise the
fact, I saw that my suggestion appealed to him. 'What would your queen require
in return for her friendship?' he asked carefully. We haggled for five days, but in the end the
bargain was struck. 'You will allow Queen Lostris to continue the mining work
in your valley, and you will declare those valleys a prohibited area. Your own
people will be forbidden to enter there on pain of death,' I told him. This was
for my mistress. It would secure the tomb of Pharaoh from desecration. 'I agree,' said Prester Beni-Jon. 'You will deliver to Queen Lostris two thousand
horses that I will choose from your herds.' This was for me. 'One thousand,' said the king. 'Two thousand.' I was firm. 'I agree,' said Prester Beni-Jon. 'Once she is free, the Princess Masara shall be
allowed to marry any man she chooses. You will not forbid it.' That was for
Memnon and the girl. 'It is against our custom,' he sighed. 'But
lagree.' 'When we capture them, Arkoun and the stronghold of
Adbar Seged will be handed over to you.' He looked more cheerful and nodded
vigorously. 'Finally, we Egyptians shall be allowed to keep all
the spoils of war that we capture from Arkoun, including the legendary blue
sword.' That was for Tanus. 'I agree,' said Prester Beni-Jon, and I could see
that he thought that he had made a bargain. He gave me an escort of fifty men, and I set out
the following day on the return to Qebui, riding a fine stallion that was the
king's parting gift to me. WE WERE STILL FIVE DAYS' RIDE FROM Qebui, when I
saw the swift dust-cloud ahead of us, racing towards us across the plain. Then
I saw the chariots dancing through the heat-mirage. As they approached, the
columns deployed into attack formation at the gallop. It was beautiful to
watch. The dressing was perfect, and the spacing between each vehicle so exact
that they looked like a string of beads. I wondered who commanded them. I shaded my -eyes as they drew closer, and my heart
leaped as I recognized the horses of the leading chariot. They were Rock and
Chain, my own darlings. However, I did not immediately recognize the charioteer
behind them. It was almost three years since last I had laid eyes on Mem-non.
The difference in age between seventeen and twenty is the difference between
the boy and the man. I had taken to riding with saddle-cloth and
stirrups, in the Ethiopian manner, and so now I stood high in the stirrups and
waved. I saw the chariot swerve, as Memnon recognized me and whipped up the
team to full charge. 'Mem!' I howled. 'Mem!' and his answering shout
came back to me on the wind. 'Tata! By the sweet milk of Isis, it's you!' He
pulled up the horses, sprang from the footplate and dragged me from my horse.
First he hugged me, then he held me at arm's-length and we studied each other
avidly. 'You are pale and thin, Tata. The bones are sticking out of you. Are
those grey hairs I see here?' He tugged at my temples. He was taller than I was now, lean in the waist and
broad in the shoulder. His skin was tanned and oiled to the colour of burnished
amber, and cords of muscle stood out in his throat when he laughed. He wore
wrist-guards of gold and the Gold of Valour on his bared chest. Although it
seemed impossible, he was more handsome than when I had last seen him. He
reminded me of a leopard, supple and sleek. He lifted me bodily and set me on the footplate of
the chariot. 'Take up the traces,' he ordered. 'I want to see if you have,lost
any of your old skill.' 'Which way?' I asked. 'West, to Qebui, of course,' he ordered. 'My mother
will be angry if I do not bring you directly to her.' That night we sat at a camp-fire together, away
from the other officers, so that we could talk in private. We sat in silence
for a while, looking up at the silver blaze of stars, and then Memnon said,
'When I thought I had lost you, it was as though I had lost a part of myself.
You are woven into my very first memory of life.' I, who deal in words, could find no words to answer
him. We were silent again, and then at last he laid a hand on my shoulder. 'Did you ever see the girl again?' he asked, and
though his tone was casual, his grip upon my shoulder was not. 'Which girl?' I
asked, to tease him. 'The girl at the river, on the day we were parted.' 'Was
there a girl?' I frowned, as I tried to remember. 'What did she look like?' 'Her face was a dark lily, and her skin was the
colour of wild honey. They called her Masara, and the memory of her still
troubles my sleep.' 'Her name is Masara Beni-Jon,' I told him, 'and I
have spent two years imprisoned with her in the fortress of Adbar Seged. There
I learned to love her, for her nature is even sweeter than her face.' He seized me with both hands now and shook me without
mercy. 'Tell me about her, Tata! Tell me everything. Leave nothing out.' So we sat the rest of that night beside the fire
and we talked about the girl. I told him how she had learned to speak Egyptian
for his sake. I told him how his promise to her had sustained her through the
dark, lonely days, and in the end I told" him the message that she had
sent to him, the message she had called out to me from the battlements of Adbar
Seged as I rode away and left her. 'Tell him I was brave. Tell him I love him.'
He was silent for a long while, staring into the flames, and then he said
softly, 'How can she love me? She does not know me.' 'Do you know her any better than she knows you?' I
asked, and he shook his head. 'Do you love her?' 'Yes,' he answered simply. 'Then she loves you in
the same way.' 'I made her a promise. Will you help me make good my promise to
her, Tata?' I HAVE NEVER IN MY LIFE KNOWN SUCH joy as was mine
on my return to Qebui when I went aboard the Breath of Horus. Memnon had sent a messenger ahead to warn them of
my return, and they were all waiting for me. 'By the stinking crust between
Seth's toes!' Kra-tas shouted. 'I thought we had got rid of you at last, you
old rogue.' And he crushed me to his chest until I thought my ribs were all staved
in. Tanus seized my shoulders and stared into my eyes
for a moment before he grinned, 'But for you, that hairy Ethiop would have had
me. He got the better bargain when he took you instead. Thank you, old friend.'
I saw how Tanus had aged. Like me, there was grey in his hair now, and his face
was weather-beaten, beginning to erode like a granite cliff. My little princesses were no longer little, but
they were still adorable. They were shy towards me, for their memory of me had
faded. They stared at me with big eyes as I made my obeisance. The colour of
Bekatha's hair had darkened to copper. I looked forward to rekindling her
affection. Tehuti recognized me at last. 'Tata!' she said.
'Did you bring me a present?' 'Yes, Your Highness,' I replied, 'I have brought
you my heart.' My mistress smiled at me as I walked towards her
along the deck. She wore the light nemes crown and the golden head of the cobra
on her brow. When she smiled, I saw that she had lost her first tooth, and the
gap marred her smile. She had thickened around the waist, and the heavy affairs
of state had furrowed her brow and etched crow's feet at the corners of her
eyes. To me, however, she was still the most lovely woman in the world. She stood up from the throne as I knelt before her.
This was the highest mark of her favour. She laid her hand on my bowed head,
and it was a caress. 'You have been away from us too long, Taita,' she
said, so softly that only I could hear her. 'Tonight you will sleep at the foot
of my bed once more.' That night, when she had drunk the bowl of herb
broth that I had prepared for her, and I had covered her with a fur blanket,
she murmured softly as she closed her eyes, 'Can I trust you not to kiss me
when I am asleep?' 'No, Your Majesty,' I replied, and stooped over
her. She smiled as my lips touched hers. 'Never leave us again for so long, Taita,' she
said. MEMNON AND I HAD PLANNED OUR TACTICS meticulously,
and we executed them with the same precision as one of our chariot manoeuvres.
Tanus was easy to convince. His defeat by Ar-koun still rankled. In his
presence Memnon and I discussed the ease with which the blue sword had sheered
his bronze blade, and how Arkoun would certainly have killed him, if I had not
intervened. Tanus bristled with humiliation. Then Memnon questioned me on the magical origins
and properties of the legendary weapon. Tanus forgot his pique and joined in
with avid questions of his own. 'This Prester Beni-Jon has declared the blue sword
a prize of war. Whoever can seize it, may hold it,' I told them. 'If we went against Arkoun, we would not be able to
use chariots in those valleys,' Memnon mused. 'It would have to be the
infantry. How do you think your Shilluk would fare against the Ethiops, Lord
Tanus?' Memnon still addressed Tanus formally. "Obviously he had not
learned in my absence that Tanus was his real father. By the time we had finished with him, Tanus was as
hot for the venture as either of us. He was totally in league with us as we
started our campaign on Queen Lostris. From the very beginning my mistress had understood,
as Tanus never had, just how vital the horses and chariots would be, if ever we
were to fulfil the dream of the return to our very Egypt. I displayed the
stallion that Prester Beni-Jon had given me, and pointed out to my mistress his
finer points of breed. 'Look at his nostrils, Majesty. See the depth of
his chest, and the balance of muscle to bone. The Hyksos have nothing to match
these Ethiopian horses.' Then I reminded her of her promise to the dead
pharaoh, and told her, 'Prester Beni-Jon will cede the valley of the tomb to
you. His warriors will guard it against the grave-robbers. He will place a
taboo upon the valley, and these Ethiops are superstitious people. They will
respect the prohibition even long after we have returned to Thebes.' I warned Memnon not to mention to Queen Lostris his
amorous interest in an expedition against Arkoun. It would do our cause no
good. Every mother is also a lover; she seldom takes any pleasure in seeing her
son led away by another younger woman. No woman, not even a queen, could resist the
combined charm and cunning of the three of us, Tanus and Memnon and myself.
Queen Lostris gave her consent to our expeditionary force marching on Adbar
Seged. WE LEFT THE WAGONS AND THE CHARIOTS at the valley
of Pharaoh's tomb, and struck out into the mountains. Prester Beni-Jon had sent
a company of guides to meet us. They were a hundred of his best and most
reliable men. Tanus had selected a full division of his wild and
bloodthirsty Shilluk, and promised them all the cattle they could capture. Each
of these black pagans carried a cloak of thick jackal fur rolled upon his back,
for we remembered the cold wind of the mountain passes. For support we had three companies of Egyptian
archers, led by Lord Kratas. That old ruffian had joined the company of nobles
during my sojourn in Adbar Seged. He was spoiling for a real fight. He and
every one of his men were armed with the new compound recurved bows that could
outdrive the Ethiopian long-bows by two hundred paces. Memnon had selected a small band of the finest
swordsmen and rough fighters that we had. Remrem was one of these, of course,
as were Lord Aqer and Astes. I was part of this special detachment, not for my
warlike skills, but simply because I was the only one who had ever entered the
fortress of Adbar Seged. Hui wanted to come with us and offered me every
bribe at his disposal. In the end I gave in to him, mainly because I needed an
expert to help me select the horses that Prester Beni-Jon had promised me. I impressed on both Tanus and the prince how vital
it was to move swiftly, not only for reasons of surprise, but also because the
rains must soon break upon the mountains. During my days in Adbar Seged I had
studied the patterns of the weather and the seasons. If the rains caught us in
the valleys, they would prove a more dangerous enemy than any Ethiop army. We made the approach march to Amba Kamara in less
than a month. Our column wound through the passes like a long, deadly cobra.
The bronze spear-heads of the Shilluk glittered in the high sunlight like the
scales of the serpent. We met no person to oppose us. The villages we passed
through were deserted. The inhabitants had fled and taken their herds and their
women with them. Although each day the clouds gathered black and sullen on the
mountain peaks, and at night the thunder muttered at us, the rains held off and
the fords of the rivers were low. Twenty-five days after setting out, we stood in the
valley below the massif of Amba Kamara, and looked up the winding track to the
heights looming over us. On my previous journeys up and down the mountain I
had studied the defences that Arkoun had erected along the pathway. These
comprised rockfalls and stone-walled redoubts. I pointed these out to Tanus,
and we could make out the bushy, unhelmeted heads of the defenders showing
above the walls of the strongpoints. 'The weakness of a roekfall is that you can only
let it come down once, and my Shilluk are quick enough on their feet to dodge a
charging buffalo,' Tanus said thoughtfully. He sent them up the path in small parties, and when
the defenders knocked out the wedges from under the roekfall and sent it
rolling down on the track, those long-legged black spearmen ran out to the side
with the agility of mountain goats. Once the slide of boulders had rumbled past
them, they turned straight up the almost sheer mountainside. Bounding from rock
to rock, and howling in such a horrible fashion that they started the hair on
the nape of my neck, they drove the defenders up the mountain and over the
crest. They were held up only by Arkoun's archers hidden
behind the walls of the stone redoubts. When this happened, Kratas led his
archers up the mountain. With their superior bow-range, the Egyptians were able
to stand back and shoot massed volleys, almost straight into the sky. It was fascinating to watch a swarm of arrows climb
into the air like a flock of black birds and then drop down on to the redoubt
so steeply that the stone wall afforded the men behind it no protection. We
heard their screams and then saw them break and scurry away up the slope.
Immediately the Shilluk were after them, baying like a pack of hunting dogs.
Even from the bottom of the valley I could hear their battle cry, 'Kajan!
Kajan! Kill! Kill!' Though my legs were hard and my wind strong with so
much marching, I had difficulty keeping up with Memnon and the rest of our
small group. The years were beginning to take their toll. We were all wearing long woollen Ethiopic robes,
and we carried the traditional round shields of our enemies. However, we had
not yet placed the horse-hair wigs on our heads. It would have been extremely
unwise to resemble the Ethiopian too closely while the Shilluk were in their present
mood. When at last I came out on the flat tableland of
the amba, I saw at a glance that Tanus was rallying and regrouping his
infantry. The one fault of the Shilluk as fighting men is that once they have
wet their spears with blood, they go berserk, and it is almost impossible to
control them. Tanus was roaring like a bull elephant and laying about him with
his golden whip of rank. Once more in hand, the Shilluk formed ranks and moved
forward against the first village where the Ethiopians were waiting behind the
stone walls. As the wave of tall black figures, topped by a foam of white
ostrich-feather head-dresses, washed towards them, they loosed a shower of
arrows from their long bows. But the Shilluk had their tall shields up. As the Shilluk charge burst upon them, some of the
Ethiopians rushed forward, brandishing their swords. They were not lacking in
courage, but this type of warfare was new to them. They had never been forced
to meet a charge that was carried through to the death. I stayed long enough to see them heavily engaged,
and then I called to Memnon and his band, 'The wigs!' Each of them pulled one
of the wigs of black horse-hair over his scalp. I had made these with my own
hands, and styled them on the Ethiopian model of beauty, full and floccose.
Clad in the long striped robes and with the wigs on our heads, we could pass as
a mob of Arkoun's clansmen. "This way! Follow me!' I cried, and let out an
ululating Ethiopic war cry. They yodelled and howled behind me, as we skirted
the village where the fight was still raging, and ran in a disorderly bunch
through the cornfields. We had to reach the fortress and be at Masara's
side to protect her when Arkoun finally realized that he had lost the day. I
knew that he would not hesitate to kill her as soon as she was no longer of
value to him. I thought that he would probably take the blue sword to her or
throw her from the causeway into the gorge. Those were his favourite means of
despatching his victims. As we made our way across the amba, we found the
entire tableland in turmoil. Bands of bushy-headed warriors milled about in
confusion. Women dragged their children by the arm, their possessions piled on
their heads, wailing with terror as they ran about like frightened chickens who
smell the fox. Herds of goats bleated, and cattle lowed and churned the dust.
The herd-boys had fled. Nobody paid us the least attention as we trotted
through the fields and kept clear of the villages. We followed the general movement towards Adbar
Seged at the far end of the table, and as we neared the causeway the crowds
thickened and congealed until we were obliged to force our way through them.
There were guards at the head of the causeway. They were turning the fugitives
back with drawn swords and clubs. Women were screaming and pleading for shelter
in the fortress, holding up their babies for mercy's sake. Some of them were
knocked down in the press and were trampled under the feet of those coming on
from behind. 'Form the tortoise.' Memnon gave the order quietly,
and our small band closed up and locked the edges of our Ethiopian shields. We
cut through the crowd like a shark through a shoal of sardines. Some of the
weaker ones at the front were pushed forward and forced over the edge of the
precipice. Their screams added to the panic. When we reached the head of the
causeway, the guards there tried to stop us, but they were themselves so
crowded by the mob that they could not swing their weapons, and were in danger
of being overwhelmed and thrown over the cliff. 'We are under King Arkoun's direct orders. Stand
aside!' I shouted at them in Geez. "The password?' the captain of the guard
yelled at me, as he struggled to stay on his feet. The crowd surged back and
forward in panic. 'You must give the password.' He poked his sword at me, but
Memnon struck the blade aside. During my imprisonment I had heard the password
repeated a thousand times, for my cell had been above the main gate. It might
have been changed since then, and I was ready to have the captain killed, as I
yelled the old password at him: "The mountain is high!' 'Go across!' He stood aside, and we struggled out
of the throng, kicking and shoving back those who tried to follow us. We ran
out on to the bridge. So urgent was the need to reach Masara that I barely noticed
the drop on either hand, and without a qualm I led them across the gaping void. 'Where is King Arkoun?' I shouted at the guards who
blocked the gateway. When they hesitated, I told them, "The mountain is
high! I have urgent despatches for the king. Stand aside! Let us pass!' We
barged through the open gate before they could decide to oppose us, and, with
twelve good men at my back, I raced for the outer staircase that led to the
upper terrace. There were two armed men at the door to Masara's
chamber, and I rejoiced to see them. I had worried that the girl might have
been moved to another part of the fort, but the presence of the guards assured
me that she had not. 'Who are you?' one of them shouted, and drew his sword.
'By wh'at authority—' He did not finish the challenge. I stepped aside and
allowed Memnon and Remrem to brush past me. They flew at the guards and cut
them down before they could defend themselves. The door to Masara's chamber was barred from within,
and when we hurled our combined weight against it, there came a chorus of
feminine screams and wails from the other side. At the third attempt the door
gave way and I was propelled through the opening into the room beyond. It was.
in deep gloom, and I could barely make out the huddle of women in the far
corner. 'Masara!' I called her name, as I plucked the wig
from my head, and let my own hair fall around my shoulders. She recognized me
by it. 'Taita!' She bit the wrist of the woman who tried
to hold her, and ran to me. She flung both arms around my neck, and then she
looked over my shoulder and her grip slackened, her dark eyes opened wide and
the colour flooded her cheeks. Memnon had pulled off his wig. Without it, he was
strikingly and unmistakably a prince. I stepped aside and left Masara standing
alone. The two of them stared at each other. Neither of them moved or spoke for
what seemed like an eternity, but was a moment only. Then Masara said softly
and shyly in Egyptian, 'You came. You kept your promise. I knew that you
would.' I think that this was the only time that I ever saw
Memnon at a loss. He could only nod his head, and then I witnessed an amazing
phenomenon. Blood flooded up his neck and suffused his face, so that even in the
gloom of the chamber it glowed. The Crown Prince of Egypt, son of Pharaoh,
commander of the first division of chariots, Best of Ten Thousand, holder of
the Gold of Valour, stood there blushing and as tongue-tied as a peasant clod. Behind me one of the women squawked like a startled
hen, and before I could put out a hand to hold her, she had ducked under my arm
and darted down the inner staircase. Her screams reverberated up the stairwell.
'Guards! The enemy has broken into the east wing. Come quickly!' and almost
immediately there was a rush of booted feet on the staircase. On the instant, Memnon was transformed from the
blushing young lover to a hard-faced guardsman. 'Take care of her, Tata, Let no
harm come to her,' he told me grimly, and stepped past me to the head of the
stairs. He killed the first man coming up with that classic
thrust to the throat that Tanus had taught him. Then he placed his foot in the
centre of his chest. As he jerked his blade free, he kicked the dead man
backwards down the stair-well. The falling corpse tumbled into the other men
coming up from below, and swept the stairs clean. Memnon looked at me. 'Do you think we can reach the
gate before they close it?' 'We must,' I answered. 'Our best route is back down
the outer staircase.' 'Remrem, lead us. Tata and the princess in the
centre. I will bring up the rear-guard,' he said crisply, and stabbed the next
man coming up the stairs in the eye. The Ethiopian dropped his weapon and clutched his
face with both hands. Memnon stabbed him again through the chest and pushed him
backwards down the stairs, clearing them a second time. 'Follow Remrem,' he
shouted at me. 'Don't stand there. After him as fast as you can.' I grabbed Masara's arm, but there was no need to
pull her along. She came with me readily, so quick and agile that she was
leading me. The sunlight struck us as we ran out on to the
terrace. After the dark room it dazzled me. I blinked to clear my vision, and
then I looked across the causeway to the edge of the tableland on the far side
of the gulf. Tanus' Shilluks were there. I saw their feathers dancing and their
shields held high. 'Kajan! Kill! Kill!' they sang, and their
spear-heads were dulled with fresh blood. The panic-stricken peasants scattered
before them, and they reached the head of the causeway. There were two or three hundred of Arkoun's
soldiers there. They had the abyss at their backs, and necessity made heroes of
every one of them. Now they had truly become lions. Although a score of them
were driven back over the edge, and plunged to their death in the valley far
below, the survivors hurled back the first charge of the Shilluk. I saw Tanus then, exactly where I expected him to
be, holding the centre. His helmet shone like a beacon in the dark sea of
Shilluk warriors. I saw him throw back his head and begin to sing. The savage Shilluk words carried over the gulf to
where I stood on the terrace of the fortress. The men around him took up the
chorus, and they surged forward, still singing. This time nothing could stand
before them. They stabbed and hacked their way through the defenders, and Tanus
was the first man on to the causeway. He ran lightly for such a big man, and he
was still singing. His Shilluk followed him on to the stone arch, but it was so
narrow that they were forced into single file. Tanus was halfway across, when the song died on his
lips, and he stopped. From the gateway of Adbar Seged, below where I
stood, another man stepped out on to the causeway to confront Tanus. I was
looking down and so could not see his face, but there was no mistaking the
weapon in his right hand. The blue sword caught the sunlight and flashed like a
sheet of summer lightning. 'Arkoun!' Tanus bellowed. 'I have been looking for
you.' Arkoun could not understand the words, but the
sense of them was unmistakable. He laughed into the wind, and his beard blew
out like smoke around his goaty face. 'I know you!' He swung the silver-blue blade around
his head, and it hissed and whined in the air. 'This time I will kill you.' He
started forward, out along the narrow arch of stone, running with long, lithe
strides straight at Tanus. Tanus altered his grip on the handle of his bronze
shield, and tucked his head in behind it. He now knew the power in that
glittering blade, and I saw that he did not intend meeting it with his own
softer bronze. Arkoun had also learned discretion from their last brief
encounter. From the way he carried the blue sword, I guessed that he would not
attempt another rash overhand stroke. As they came together, Arkoun gathered himself. I
saw his shoulders brace and his weight swing forward. He used the impetus of
his charge to send the straight thrust at Tanus' head. Tanus lifted the shield
and caught the blue blade in the centre of the heavy bronze target. It would have
snapped a sword of inferior metal, but the blue sword sheared through it as if
it were goat-skin. Half its silver length was buried in the yellow bronze. Then I realized Tanus' intention. He twisted the
shield at an angle so that the blade was trapped. Arkoun struggled to withdraw
his weapon, he wrestled and heaved, throwing his full weight backwards, but
Tanus had the blue sword in a vice of bronze. Arkoun gathered all his strength and pulled back
again. This time Tanus did not resist him. He leaped forward in the direction
that Arkoun was heaving, and this unexpected move threw Arkoun off-balance. Arkoun staggered away, tripped and teetered on the
brink of the chasm. In order to keep his balance, he was forced to relinquish
his grip on the hilt of the blue sword, and to leave it still embedded in the
shield. He windmilled his arms as he swayed out over the
drop. Then Tanus shifted his ground, put his shoulder behind the shield and barged
forward. The shield crashed into Arkoun's chest, and the pommel of the blue
sword caught him in the pit of his belly with all Tanus' weight and strength
behind it. Arkoun was thrown backwards, out into empty space.
He turned a slow somersault in the air and then went straight down, with his
robe ballooning around him, and his beard streaming like a chariot pennant in
the wind of his fall. From where I stood, I watched him make the same
last journey on which he had sent so many other unfortunate souls. From the
causeway until he struck the rocks a thousand feet below, he screamed all the
way down, on a high, receding note that was cut off abruptly at the end. Tanus stood alone in the middle of the causeway. He
still held the shield on high with the sword buried in the metal. Slowly the tumult and the fighting died away. The
Ethiopians had seen their king vanquished and cast down. The heart went out of
them. They threw down their weapons and grovelled for mercy. The Egyptian
officers were able to save some of them from the blood-crazed Shilluk, and
these were dragged away to where the slave-masters waited to bind them. I had no eyes for any of this, for I was watching
Tanus out there on the bridge. He began to walk towards the gateway, of the
fortress, and the men cheered him and raised their weapons in salute. 'There is plenty of fight in the old bull yet,'
Memnon laughed in admiration, but I did not laugh with him. I felt the chill
premonition of some awful tragedy, like the air stirred by the beat of vultures'
wings as they settle to their gruesome feast. 'Tanus,' I whispered. He walked with a slow and
hampered gait. He lowered the shield as he came down the bridge of stone, and
only then did I see the stain spreading on his breastplate. I thrust Masara into Memnon's arms and ran down the
outer staircase. The Ethiopian guards at the gate tried to surrender their
weapons to me, but I pushed my way past them and ran out on to the causeway. Tanus saw me running towards him and he smiled at
me, but the smile was lop-sided. He stopped walking and slowly his legs buckled
beneath him, and he sat down heavily in the middle of the bridge. I dropped on
my knees beside him, and saw the rent in the crocodile-skin of his breastplate.
Blood oozed from it, and I knew that the blue sword had bitten deeper than I
had believed possible. Arkoun had driven the point through the bronze shield,
on through the tough leather breastplate, and into Tanus' chest. Carefully I untied the straps that held his armour,
and lifted away the breastplate. Tanus and I both looked down at the wound. It
was a penetrating slit the exact width of the blade, like a tiny mouth with wet
red lips. Every breath that Tanus drew frothed through that horrid opening in a
rash of pink bubbles. It was a lung wound, but I could not bring myself to say
it. No man can survive a sword-cut through one of his lungs. 'You are wounded.' It was an asinine remark, and I
could not look at his face as I said it. 'No, old friend, I am not wounded,' he replied
softly. 'I am killed.' TANUS' SHILLUK MADE A LITTER WITH their spears, and
covered it with a rug of sheepskin. They lifted him and carried him, gently and
slowly, into the fortress of Adbar Seged. We laid him on the bed of King Arkoun, and then I
sent them all away. When they were gone, I placed the blue sword upon the bed
beside him. He smiled and laid his hand on the gold and jewelled hilt. 'I have
paid a high price for this treasure,' he murmured. 'I would have liked to wield
it just once upon the battlefield.' I could offer him no hope or comfort. He was an old
soldier, and he had seen too many lung wounds. I could not hope to deceive him
as to the final outcome. I bound up the wound with a pad of wool and a linen
bandage. While I worked, I recited the incantation to quell the bleeding,
'Retreat from me, creature of Seth—' But he was sinking away from me. Each breath he
drew was an effort, and I could hear the blood stirring in his lungs like a
hidden creature in the deep swamps. I mixed a draught of the sleeping-flower, but he
would not drink it. 'I will live every minute of my life,' he told me. 'Even
the very last one.' 'What else is there that I can do for you?' 'You have done so much already,' he said. 'But
there is no end to the demands that we all make upon you.' ' I shook my head,
'There is no end to what I would give.' 'These last things then I ask of you. Firstly, you
will never tell Mernnon that I am his sire. He must always believe that the
blood of the pharaohs runs in his veins. He will need every strength to meet
the destiny that awaits him.' 'He would be as proud to share your blood as that
of any king.' 'Swear to me you will not tell him.' 'I swear it,' I replied, and he lay a while
gathering his strength. 'There is one other boon.' 'I grant it before you name it,' I said. 'Take care of my woman who was never my wife.
Shield and succour her as you have done all these years past.' 'You know I will.' 'Yes, I know you will, for you have always loved her
as much as I have. Take care of Lostris and of our children. I give them all
into your hands.' He closed his eyes, and I thought that the end was
close, but his strength surpassed that of other men. After a while he opened
them again. 'I wish to see the prince,' he said. 'He waits for you on the terrace,' I answered, and
went to the curtained doorway. Memnon stood at the far end of the terrace. Masara
was with him, and the two of them stood close together but not touching. Their
expressions were grave and their voices muted. They both looked up as I called. Memnon came immediately, leaving the girl standing
alone. He went directly to Tanus' bed and stood looking down at him. Tanus
smiled up at him, but the smile was unsteady. I knew what effort it had cost
him. 'Your Highness, I have taught you all I know of
war, but I cannot teach you about life. Each man must learn that for himself.
There is nothing else I have to tell you before I start out on this new
journey, except to thank you for the gift of knowing and serving you.' 'You were ever more than a tutor to me,' Memnon
answered softly. 'You were the father I never knew.' Tanus closed his eyes, and his expression twisted. Memnon stooped and took his arm in a firm grip.
'Pain is just another enemy to be met and overcome. You taught me that, Lord
Tanus.' The prince thought it was the wound that had affected him, but I knew
that it was the pain of the word 'father'. Tanus opened his eyes. 'Thank you, Your Highness.
It is good to have you to help me through this last agony.' 'Call me friend, rather than highness.' Memnon sank
on one knee beside the bed, and he did not release the grip on Tanus' arm. 'I have a gift for you, friend.' The congealing
blood in Tanus' lungs blurred his voice. He groped for the handle of the blue
sword that still lay on the mattress beside him, but he did not have the
strength to lift it. He took Memnon's hand from his arm and placed it
upon the jewelled hilt. "This is yours now,' he whispered. 'I will think of you whenever I draw it from its
scabbard. I will call your name whenever I wield it on the battlefield.' Memnon
took up the weapon. 'You do me great honour.' Memnon stood up, and with the sword in his right
hand took the classic opening stance in the centre of the room. He touched the
blade to his lips, saluting the man lying on the bed. 'This is the way you taught me to do it.' Then he began the exercise of arms, in which Tanus
had drilled him when he was still a child. He performed the twelve parries, and
then the cuts and the lunges with an unhurried perfection. The silver blade
circled and swooped like a glittering eagle. It fluted and whined through the
air, and lit the gloom of the chamber with darting beams of light. Memnon ended it with the straight thrust, aimed at
the throat of an imaginary enemy. Then he placed the point between his feet and
rested both hands upon the pommel. 'You have learned well,' Tanus nodded. 'There is
nothing more that I can teach you. It is not too soon for me to go.' 'I will wait with you,' Memnon said. 'No.' Tanus made a weary gesture. 'Your destiny
waits for you beyond the walls of this dreary room. You must go forward to meet
it without looking back. Taita will stay with me. Take the girl with you. Go to
Queen Lostris and prepare her for the news of my death.' 'Go in peace, Lord Tanus.' Memnon would not degrade
that solemn moment with futile argument. He crossed to the bed and kissed his
father on the lips. Then he turned and, without a backward glance, he strode
from the room with the blue sword in his hand. 'Go on to glory, my son,' Tanus whispered, and
turned to face the stone wall. I sat at the foot of his bed and looked at the
dirty stone floor. I did not want to watch a man like Tanus weep. I WOKE IN THE NIGHT TO THE SOUND OF drums, those
crude wooden drums of the Shilluk, beating out there in the darkness. The
doleful sound of the Shilluk's voices chanting their savage dirge made me
shudder with dread. The lamp had burned low, and was guttering beside
the bed. It threw grotesque shadows on the ceiling, like the beating and
fluttering of the wings of vultures. I crossed slowly and reluctantly to where
Tanus lay. I knew that the Shilluk were not mistaken—they have a way of sensing
these things. Tanus lay as I had lastvseen him, with his face to
the wall, but when I touched his shoulder I felt the chill in his flesh. That
indomitable spirit had gone on. I sat beside him for the remainder of that night
and I lamented and mourned for him, as his Shilluk were doing. In the dawn I sent for the embalmers. I would not let those crude butchers eviscerate my
friend. I made the incision in His left flank. It was not a long, ugly slash,
such as the undertakers are wont to perform, but the work of a surgeon. Through it I drew his viscera. When I held Tanus'
great heart in my hands, I trembled. It was as though I could still feel all
his strength and power beat in this casket of flesh. I replaced it with
reverence and love in the cage of his ribs, and I closed the gash in his side
and the wound in his chest, that the blue sword had made, with all the skill at
my command. I took up the bronze spoon, and pressed it up his
nostril until I felt it touch the thin wall of bone at the end of the passage.
This flimsy partition I pierced with one hard thrust, and scooped out the soft
matter from the cavity of his skull. Only then was I content to deliver him
over to the embalmers. Even though there was no more for me to do, I
waited with Tanus through the forty long days of the mummification in the cold
and gloomy castle of Adbar Seged. Looking back upon it now, I realize that this
was weakness. I could not bear the burden of my mistress's grief when first she
heard the news of Tanus' death. I had allowed Memnon to assume the duty that was
rightfully mine. I hid with the dead, when I should have been with the living
who needed me more. I have ever been a coward. There was no coffin to hold Tanus' mummified body.
I would make him one when at last we reached the fleet at Qebui. I had the Ethiopian
women weave a long basket for him. The mesh of the weave was so fine that it
resembled linen. It would hold water like a pot of fired clay. WE CARRIED HIM DOWN FROM THE mountains. His Shilluk
easily bore the weight of his desiccated body. They fought each other for the
honour. Sometimes they sang their wild songs of mourning as we wound our way
through the gorges and over the windswept passes. At other times they sang the
fighting songs that Tanus had taught them. I walked beside his bier all that weary way. The
rains broke on the peaks and drenched us. They flooded the fords so that we had
to swim ropes across. In my tent at night, Tanus' reed coffin stood beside my
own cot. I spoke aloud to him in the darkness, as if he could hear and answer
me, just as we had done in the old days. At last we descended through the last pass, and the
great plains lay before us. As we approached Qebui, my mistress came to meet
our sad caravan. She rode on the footplate of the chariot behind Prince Memnon. As they came towards us through the grassland, I
ordered the Shilluk bearers to lay Tanus' reed coffin under the spreading
branches of a giant giraffe acacia. My mistress dismounted from the chariot and
went to the coffin. She placed one hand upon it, and bowed her head in silence. I was shocked to see what ravages sorrow had
wrought upon her. There were streaks of grey in her hair, and her eyes were
dulled. The sparkle and the zest had gone out of them. I realized that the days
of her youth and her great beauty were gone for ever. She was a lonely and
tragic figure. Her bereavement was so evident, that no person who looked upon
her now could doubt that she was a widow. I went to her side to warn her. 'Mistress, you must
not make your grief clear for all to see. They must never know that he was more
than just your friend and the general of your armies. For the sake of his
memory and the honour that he held so dear, hold back your tears.' 'I have no tears left,' she answered me quietly.
'My grief is all cried out. Only you and I will ever know the truth.' We placed Tanus' humble reed coffin in the hold of
the Breath ofHorus, beside the magnificent gold coffin of Phar-oah. I stayed at
the side of my mistress, as I had promised Tanus I would, until the worst
agonies of her mourning had subsided into' the dull eternal pain that would
never leave her again. Then, at her orders, I returned to the valley of the
tomb to supervise the completion of Pharaoh's sepulchre. Obedient to my mistress, I also selected a site further
down the valley for the tomb of Tanus. Though I did my very best with the
material and craftsmen available to me, Tanus' resting-place would be the hut
of a peasant compared to the funerary palace of Pharaoh Mamose. An army of craftsmen had laboured all these years
to complete the magnificent murals that decorated the passages and the
subterranean chambers of the king's tomb. The store-rooms of the tomb were
crammed with all the treasure that we had carried with us from Thebes. Tanus' tomb had been built in haste. He had
accumulated no treasure in his lifetime of service to the state and the crown.
I painted scenes upon the walls that depicted the events of his earthly
existence, his hunting of mighty beasts and his battles with the red pretender
and the Hyk-sos, and the last assault on the fortress of Adbar Seged. However,
I dared not show his nobler accomplishments, his love for my mistress and his
steadfast friendship to me. The love of a queen is treason, the friendship of a
slave is degrading. When at last it was completed, I stood alone in
Tanus' modest tomb, where he would spend all eternity, and I was suddenly
consumed by anger that this was all I could do for him. In my eyes he was more
a man than any pharaoh who had ever worn the double crown. That crown could
have been his, it should have been his, but he had spurned it. To me he was
more a king than ever Pharaoh had been. It was then that the thought first dawned upon me.
It was so outrageous that I thrust it from me. Even to contemplate it seriously
was a terrible treason, and offence in the eyes of men and the gods. However, over the weeks that followed, the thought
kept creeping back into my mind. I owed Tanus so much, and Pharaoh so little.
Even if I was damned to perdition, it would be a fair price to pay. Tanus had
given me more than that over my lifetime. I could not accomplish it alone. I needed help, but
who was there to turn to? I could not enlist either Queen Lostris or the
prince. My mistress was bound by the oath she had sworn to Pharaoh, and Memnon
did not know which of the two men was his natural father. I could not tell him
without breaking my oath to Tanus. In the end there was one person only who had loved
Tanus almost as much as I had, who feared neither god nor man, and who had the
brute physical strength I lacked. 'By Seth's unwiped backside!' Lord Kratas roared
with laughter when I revealed my plan to him. 'No one else but you could have
dreamed up such a scheme. You are the biggest rogue alive, Taita, but I love
you for giving me this last chance to honour Tanus.' The two of us planned it carefully. I even went to
the lengths of sending the guards at the entrance to the hold of the Breath
of Horus a jug of wine heavily laced with the powder of the
sleeping-flower. When Kratas and I at last entered the hold of the
ship where the two coffins lay, my resolve wavered. I sensed that the Ka of
Pharaoh Mamose watched me from the shadows and that his baleful spirit would
follow me all the days of my life, seeking vengeance for this sacrilege. Big, bluff Kratas had no such qualms, and he set to
work with such a will that several times during the course of the night, I had
to caution him against the noise he was making as we opened the golden lids to
the royal coffin and lifted out the mummy of the king. Tanus was a bigger man than Pharaoh, but
fortunately the coffin-makers had left us some space, and Tanus' body had
shrunk during the embalming. Even so, we were obliged to unwind several layers
of his wrappings before he fitted snugly into the great golden cask. I mumbled an apology to Pharaoh Mamose as we lifted
him into the humble wooden coffin, painted on the outside with a likeness of
the Great Lion of Egypt. There was room to spare, and before we sealed the lid we
packed this with the linen bandages that we had unwrapped from Tanus. AFTER THE RAINS HAD PASSED AND THE cool season of
the year returned, my mistress ordered the funeral procession to leave Qebui
and set out for the valley of the tomb. The first division of chariots, headed by Prince
Memnon, led us. Behind followed fifty carts loaded with the funerary treasure
of Pharaoh Mamose. The royal widow, Queen Lostris, rode on the wagon that
carried the golden coffin. I rejoiced to see her take this last journey in the
company of the one man she had loved, even though she thought it was another. I
saw her glance back more than once towards the end of the long caravan that
crept dolefully across the plains, five miles from its head to its tail. The wagon at the rear of the column that carried
the lighter wooden coffin was followed by a regiment of Shil-luk. Their
magnificent voices carried clearly to us at the head of the column as they sang
the last farewell. I knew that Tanus would hear them and know for whom the song
was sung. WHEN WE AT LAST REACHED THE VALLEY of the tomb, the
golden coffin was placed beneath a tabernacle outside the entrance to the royal
mausoleum. The linen roof of the tent was illuminated with texts and
illustrations from the Book of the Dead. There were to be two separate funerals. The first
was the lesser, that of the Great Lion of Egypt. The second would be the
grander and more elaborate royal funeral. So it was that three days after our arrival at the
valley, the wooden coffin was placed in the tomb that I had prepared for Tanus,
and the tomb was consecrated by the priests of Horus, who was Tanus' patron,
and then sealed. During this ritual, my mistress was able to
restrain her grief and to show nothing more than the decent sorrow of a queen
towards a faithful servant, although I knew that inside her something was dying
that would never be reborn. All that night the valley resounded to the chant of
the Shilluk regiment as they mourned for the man who had now become one of
their gods. To this day they still shout his name in battle. Ten days after the first funeral, the golden coffin
was placed on its wooden sledge and dragged into the vast royal tomb. It
required the efforts of three hundred slaves to manoeuvre the coffin through
the passageways. I had designed the tomb so precisely that there was only the
breadth of a hand between the sides and the lid of the coffin and the stone
walls and roof. To thwart all future grave-robbers and any others
who would desecrate the royal tomb, I had built a labyrinth of tunnels beneath
the mountain. From the entrance in the cliff-face, a wide passage led directly
to an impressive burial vault that was decorated with marvellous murals. In the
centre of this room stood an empty granite sarcophagus, with the lid removed
and cast dramatically aside. The first grave-robber to enter here would believe
that he was too late and that some other had plundered the tomb before him. In fact, there was another tunnel leading off at
right-angles from the entrance passage. The mouth of this was disguised as a
store-room for the funerary treasure. The coffin had to be turned and eased
into this secondary passage. From there it entered a maze of false passages and
dummy burial vaults, each'more serpentine and devious than the last. In all there were four burial chambers, but three
of these would remain forever empty. There were three hidden doors and two
vertical shafts. The coffin had to be lifted up one of these, and lowered down
the other. It took fifteen days for the coffin to be inched
through this maze, and installed at last in its final resting-place. The roof
and walls of this tomb were painted with all the skill and genius with which
the gods have gifted me. There was not a space the size of my thumbnail that
was not blazing with colour and movement. Five store-rooms led off from the chamber. Into
these were packed that treasure which Pharaoh Mamose had accumulated over his
lifetime, and which had come close to beggaring bur very Egypt. I had argued
with my mistress that, instead of being buried in the earth, this treasure
should be used to pay for the army and the struggle that lay ahead of us in our
efforts to expel the Hyksos tyrant and to liberate our people and our land. "The treasure belongs to Pharaoh,' she had
replied. 'We have built up another treasure of gold and slaves and ivory here
in Cush. That will suffice. Let the divine Mamose have what is his—I have given
him my oath on it.' Thus on the fifteenth day, the golden coffin was
placed within the stone sarcophagus that had been hewn out of the native rock.
With a system of ropes and levers, the heavy lid was lifted over it and lowered
into place. The royal family and the priests and the nobles
entered the tomb to perform the last rites. My mistress and the prince stood at the head of the
sarcophagus, and the priests droned on with their incantations and their
readings from the Book of the Dead. The sooty smoke from the lamps and the
breathing of the throng of people in the confined space soured the air, so it
was soon difficult to breathe. In the dim yellow light I saw my mistress turn pale
and the perspiration bead on her forehead. I worked my way through the tightly
packed ranks, and I reached her side just as she swayed and collapsed. I was
able to catch her before she struck her head on the granite edge of the
sarcophagus. We carried her out of the tomb on a litter. In the
fresh mountain air she recovered swiftly, but still I confined her to her bed
in her tent for the rest of that day. That night as I prepared her tonic of herbs, she
lay quietly and thoughtfully, and after she had drunk the infusion she
whispered to me, 'I had the most extraordinary sensation. As I stood in
Pharaoh's tomb, I felt suddenly that Tanus was very close to me. I felt his
hand touch my face and his voice murmur in my ear. That was when I fainted
away.' 'He will always be close to you,' I told her. 'I believe that,' she said simply. I can see now, though I could not see it then, that
her decline began on the day that we laid Tanus in his grave. She had lost the
joy of living and the will to go on. I WENT BACK INTO THE ROYAL TOMB THE next day with
the masons and the corps of slave labourers to seal the doorways and the
shafts, and to arm the devices that would guard the burial chamber. As we retreated through the maze of passageways, we
blocked the secret doorways with cunningly laid stone and plaster, and painted
murals over them. We sealed the mouths of the vertical shafts so that they
appeared to be smooth floor and roof. I set rockfalls that would be triggered by a
footstep on a loose paving slab, and I packed the vertical shafts with balks of
timber. As these decayed over the centuries and the fungus devoured them, they
would emit noxious vapours that would suffocate any intruder who succeeded in
finding his way through the secret doorways. But before we did all this, I went to the actual
burial chamber to take leave of Tanus. I carried with me a long bundle wrapped
in a linen sheet. When I stood for the last time beside the royal sarcophagus,
I sent all the workmen away. I would be the very last to leave the tomb, and
after me the entrance would be sealed. When I was alone I opened the bundle I carried.
From it I took the long bow, Lanata. Tanus had named it after my mistress and I
had made it for him. It was a last gift from the two of us. I placed it upon
the sealed stone lid of his coffin. There was one other item in my bundle. It was the
wooden ushabti figure that I had carved. I placed it at the foot of the sarcophagus.
While I carved it, I had set up three copper mirrors so that I could study my
own features from every angle and reproduce them faithfully. The doll was a
miniature Taita. Upon the base I had inscribed the words: 'My name
is Taita. I am a physician and a poet. I am an architect and a philosopher. I
am your friend. I will answer for you.' As I left the tomb, I paused at the entrance and
looked back for the last time. 'Farewell, old friend,' I said. 'I am richer for
having known you. Wait for us on the other side.' IT TOOK ME MANY MONTHS TO COMPLETE the work on the
royal tomb. As we retreated through the labyrinth, I personally inspected every
sealed doorway and every secret device that we left behind us. I was alone, for my mistress and the prince had
gone up into the mountains to the fortress of Prester Beni-Jon. They had gone
with all the court to prepare for the wedding of Memnon and Masara. Hui had
accompanied them to select the horses from the Ethiopian herds that were part
of our payment for the storming of Adbar Seged, and the recovery of Masara. When at last my work in the tomb was completed and
my workmen had sealed the outer entrance in the cliff-face, I also set off into
the mountains, over those cold and windy passes. I was anxious not to miss the
wedding feast, but I had left it late. The completion of the tomb had taken
longer than I had planned. I travelled as hard as the horses could stand. I reached Prester Beni-Jon's palace five days
before the wedding, and I went directly to that part of the fortress where my
mistress and her suite were lodged. 'I have not smiled since last I saw you, Taita,'
she greeted me. 'Sing for me. Tell me your stories. Make me laugh.' It was not an easy task she set me, for the
melancholy had entered deeply into her soul, and the truth was that I was not
myself cheerful or light-hearted. I sensed that more than sorrow alone was
affecting her. Soon we abandoned our attempts at merriment, and fell to
discussing affairs of state. It might have been a love match, and a meeting of
twin souls blessed by the gods as far as the two lovers were concerned, but for
the rest of us, the joining of Memnon and Masara was a royal wedding and a
contract between nations. There were agreements and treaties to negotiate, dowries
to be decided, trade agreements to draw up between the King of Kings and ruler
of Aksum, and the regent of Egypt and the wearer of the double crown of the two
kingdoms. As I had predicted, my mistress had been at first
less than enchanted by the prospect of her only son marrying a woman of a
different race. 'In all things they are different, Taita. The gods
they worship, the language they speak, the colour of their skins— oh! I wish he
had chosen a girl of our own people.' 'He will,' I reassured her. 'He will marry fifty,
perhaps a hundred Egyptians. He will also marry Libyans and Hurri-ans and
Hyksos. All the races and nations he conquers in the years to come will provide
him with wives, Cushites and Hittites and Assyrians—' 'Stop your teasing, Taita.' She stamped her foot
with something of her old fire. 'You know full well what I mean. Those others
will all be marriages of state. This, his first, is a marriage of two hearts.' What she said was true. The promise of love that
Mem-non and Masara had exchanged in those fleeting moments beside the river was
now blossoming. I was especially privileged to be close to them in
these heady days. They both acknowledged and were grateful for my part in
bringing them together. I was for both of them a friend of long standing,
somebody that they trusted without question. I did not share my mistress's misgivings. Though
they were different in every way that she had listed, their hearts were turned
from the same mould. They both possessed a sense of dedication, a fierceness of
the spirit, a touch of the ruthlessness and the cruelty that a ruler must have.
They were a matched pair, he the tiercel and she the falcon. I knew that she
would not distract him from his destiny, but rather that she would encourage
and incite him to greater endeavour. I was content with my efforts as a
matchmaker. One bright mountain day, watched by twenty thousand
men and women of Ethiopia and of Egypt who crowded the slopes of the hills
around them, Memnon and Masara stood together on the river-bank and broke the
jar of water that the high priest of Osiris had scooped from the infant Nile. The bride and the groom led our caravan down from
the mountains, -laden with the dowry of a princess and the treaties and the
protocols of kinship sealed between our two nations. Hui and his grooms drove a herd of five thousand
horses behind us. Some of these were in payment for our mercenary services, and
the rest made up Masara's dowry. However, before we reached the junction of the
two rivers at Qebui, we saw the dark stain on the plains ahead as though a
cloud had cast its shadow over the savannah—but the sun shone out of a
cloudless sky. The gnu herds had returned on their annual
migration. Within weeks of this contact with the gnu, the
Yellow Strangler disease fell upon our herd of Ethiopian horses, and it swept
through them like a flash-flood in one of the valleys of the high mountains. Naturally, Hui and I had been expecting the plague
to strike when the gnu returned, and we had made our preparations. We had trained
every groom and charioteer to perform the tracheotomy, and to treat the wound
with hot pitch to prevent mortification until the animal had a chance to
recover from the Strangler. For many weeks none of us enjoyed much sleep, but in
the end, fewer than two thousand of our new horses died of the disease, and
before the next flooding of the Nile, those that survived were strong enough to
begin training in the chariot traces. WHEN THE FLOODS CAME, THE PRIESTS sacrificed on the
banks of the river, each to his own god, and they consulted the auguries for
the year ahead. Some consulted the entrails of the sacrificial sheep, others
watched the flight of the wild birds, still others stared into vessels filled
with water from the Nile. They divined in their separate ways. Queen Lostris sacrificed to Hapi. Although I
attended the service with her and joined in the liturgy and the responses of
the congregation, my heart was elsewhere. I am a Horus man, and so are Lord
Kratas and Prince Memnon. We made a sacrifice of gold and ivory to our god and
prayed for guidance. It is not usual for the gods to agree with each
other, any more than it is for men to do so. However, this year was different
from any other that I had known. With the exception of the gods Anubis and
Thoth and the goddess Nut, the heavenly host spoke with one voice. Those three,
Anubis and Thoth and Nut, are all lesser deities. Their counsel could be safely
discounted. All the great gods, Ammon-Ra and Osiris and Horus and Hapi and Isis
and two hundred others, both great and small, gave the same counsel: 'The time
has come for the return to the holy black earth of Kemit.' Lord Kratas, who is a pagan at heart and a cynic by
nature, suggested that the entire priesthood had conspired to place these words
in the mouths of their patron gods. Although I expressed shocked indignation at
this blasphemy, I was secretly inclined to agree with Kratas' opinion. The priests are soft and luxurious men, and for
almost two decades we had lived the hard lives of wanderers and warriors in the
wild land of Cush. I think they hungered for fair Thebes even more than did my
mistress. Perhaps it was not gods, but men who had given this advice to return
northwards. Queen Lostris summoned the high council of state,
and when she made the proclamation that endorsed the dictates of the gods, the
nobles and the priests stood and cheered her to a man. I cheered as loud and as
long as any of them, and that night my dreams were filled with visions of
Thebes, and images of those far-off days when Tanus and Lostris and I had been
young and happy. SINCE THE DEATH OF TANUS, THERE HAD been no supreme
commander of our armies, and the war council met in secret conclave. Of course,
I was excluded from this assembly, but my mistress repeated to me every word
that was spoken. After long argument and debate, the command was
offered to Kratas. He stood before them, grizzled and scarred like an old
liori, and he laughed that great laugh of his and he said, 'I am a soldier. I
follow. I do not lead. Give me the command of the Shilluk, and I will follow
one man to the borders of death and beyond.' He drew his sword then and pointed
with it at the prince. 'That is the man I will follow. Hail, Memnon! May he
live for ever.' 'May he live for ever!' they shouted, and my
mistress smiled. She and I had arranged exactly this outcome. At the age of twenty-two years Prince Memnon was
elevated to the rank of Great Lion of Egypt and commander of all her armies.
Immediately he began to plan the Return. Though my rank was only that of Master of the Royal
Horse, I was on Prince Memnon's staff. Often he appealed to me to solve the
logistical problems that we encountered. During the day I drove his chariot
with the blue pennant fluttering over our heads as he reviewed the regiments,
and led them in exercises of war. Many nights the three of us, the prince and Kratas
and I, sat up late over a jar of wine as we discussed the Return. On those
nights Princess Masara waited upon us, filling the cups with her own graceful
brown hand. Then she sat on a sheep-skin cushion at Memnon's feet and listened
to every word. When our eyes met, she smiled at me. Our main concern was to avoid the hazardous and
onerous transit of all the cataracts on the way down-river. These could only be
navigated in flood season, and would thus limit the periods in which we could
travel. I proposed that we build another fleet of barges
below the fifth cataract; with these we could transport our army down to the
departure-point for the desert crossing of the great bight. When we regained
the river above the first cataract, we would rebuild another squadron of fast
fighting galleys and barges to carry us down to Elephantine. I was sure that if we timed it correctly, and if we
could shoot the rapids and surprise the Hyksos fleet anchored in the roads of
Elephantine, we would be able to deal the enemy a painful blow and capture the
galleys we needed to augment our force of fighting ships. Once we had secured a
foothold, we would then be able to bring down our infantry and our chariots
through the gorge of the first cataract, and engage the Hyksos on the
flood-plains of Egypt, We began the first stage of the Return the
following flood season. At Qebui, which had been our capital seat for so many years,
we left only a garrison force. Qebui would become merely a trading outpost of
the empire. The riches of Cush and Ethiopia would flow northwards to Thebes
through this entrepot. When the main fleet sailed back into the north, Hui
and I, with five hundred grooms and a squadron of chariots, remained behind to
await the return of the gnu migration. They came as suddenly as they always
did, a vast black stain spreading over the golden savannah grasslands. We went
out to meet them in the chariots. It was a simple matter to capture these ungainly
brutes. We ran them down with the chariots, and dropped a noose of rope over
their ugly heads as we ran alongside them. The gnu lacked the speed and the
spirit of our horses. They fought the ropes only briefly and then resigned
themselves to capture. Within ten days, we had penned over six thousand of them
in the stockades on the bank of the Nile which we had built for this purpose. It was here in the stockades that their lack of
stamina and strength was most apparent. Without cause or reason, they died in
their hundreds. We treated them kindly and gently. We fed them and watered them
as we would our horses. It was as though their wild wandering spirits would not
be fettered, and they pined away. In the end we lost over half of those that we had
captured, and many more died on the long voyage to the north. TWO FULL YEARS AFTER QUEEN LOSTRIS had commanded
the Return, our people assembled on the east bank of the Nile above the fourth cataract.
Before us lay the desert road across the great bight of the river. For the whole of the previous year the caravans of
wagons had set out from here. Each of them had been laden with clay jars filled
to the brim with Nile water, and sealed with wooden plugs and hot pitch. Every
ten miles along the dusty road we had set up watering stations. At each of
these, thirty thousand water jars had been buried to prevent them cracking and
bursting in the rays of that furious sun. We were nearly fifty thousand souls and as many
animals, including my dwindling herd of captured gnu. The water-carts set out
from the river each evening. Their task was unending. We waited on the river-bank for the rise of the new
moon to light our way across the wilderness. Although we had planned our
departure for this the coolest season of the year, still the heat and the sun
would be deadly to both man and beast. We would travel only at night. Two days before we were due to begin the crossing,
my mistress said, 'Taita, when did you and I last spend a day together fishing
on the river? Make ready your fish-spears and a skiff.' I knew that she had something of deep import that
she wished to discuss with me. We drifted down on those green waters until I could
moor the skiff to a willow tree on the far bank, where we were out of earshot
of the inquisitive. First we spoke of the imminent departure along the
desert road, and the prospects of the return to Thebes. 'When will I see her shining walls again, Taita?'
my mistress sighed, and I could only tell her that I did not know. 'If the gods are kind, we might be in Elephantine
by this time next season when the Nile flood carries our ships down the first
cataract. After that, our fortunes will ebb and flow like the river, with the
hazards and fortunes of war.' However, this was not what she had brought me out
on to the river to discuss, and now her eyes swam with tears as she asked, 'How
long has Tanus been gone from us, Taita?' My voice choked as I answered, 'He set out on his
journey to the fields of paradise over three years ago, mistress.' 'So it is longer than that by many months that I
last lay in his arms,' she mused, and I nodded. I was uncertain in which
direction her questions were leading us. 'I have dreamed of him almost every night since
then, Taita. Is it possible that he might have returned to leave his seed in my
womb while I still slept?' 'All things in heaven are possible,' I replied
carefully. 'We told the people that was how Tehuti and Bekatha were conceived.
However, in all truth and seriousness, I have never heard of it happening
before.' We were both silent for a while, and she trailed
her hand in the water and then lifted it to watch the drops fall from her
fingertips. Then she spoke again without looking at me. 'I think I am to have
another child,' she whispered. 'My red moon has waned and withered away.' 'Mistress,' I answered her quietly, and with tact,
'you are approaching that time of your life when the rivers of your womb will
begin to dry up.' Our Egyptian women are like desert flowers that bloom early
but fade as swiftly. She shook her head. 'No, Taita. It is not that. I
feel the infant growing within me.' I stared at her silently. Once again I felt the
wings of tragedy brush lightly past me, stirring the air and raising the hair
upon my forearms. 'You do not have to ask me if I have known another
man.' This time she looked directly into my eyes as she spoke. 'You know that I
have not.' 'This I know full well. Yet I cannot believe that
you have been impregnated by a ghost, no matter how beloved and welcome that
ghost might be. Perhaps your desire for another child has fathered your
imagination.' 'Feel my womb, Taita,' she commanded. 'This is a
living thing within me. Each day it grows.' 'I will do so tonight, in the privacy of your
cabin. Not here upon the river where prying eyes might discover us.' MY MISTRESS LAY NAKED UPON THE linen sheets, and I
studied first her face and then her body. When I looked upon her with the eyes
of a man, she was still lovely to me, but as a physician I could see clearly
how the years and the hardships of this life in the wilderness had wrought
their cruel change. Her hair was more silver than sable now, and bereavement
and the cares of the regency had chiselled their grim message on her brow. She
was growing old. Her body was the vessel which had given life to
three other lives.'But her breasts were empty now, there was none of the milk
of a new pregnancy swelling them. She was thin. I should have noticed that
before. It was an unnatural thinness, almost an emaciation. Yet her belly
protruded like a pale ivory ball out of proportion to those slim arms and legs. I laid my hands lightly upon her belly, upon the
silvery streaks where the skin had once stretched to accommodate a joyful
burden. I felt the thing within her and I knew at once that this was not life
beneath my fingers. This was death. I could not find words. I turned away from her and
went out on to the deck and I looked up at the night stars. They were cold and
very far away. Like the gods, they did not care. There was no profit in
appealing to them, gods or stars. I knew this thing that was growing within my
mistress. I had felt it in the bodies of other women. When they died, I had
opened the dead womb and seen the thing that had killed them. It was horrible
and deformed, bearing no resemblance to anything human or even animal. It was a
shapeless ball of red and angry flesh. It was a thing of Seth. It was a long time before I could gather the courage
to return to the cabin. My mistress had covered herself with a robe. She
sat in the centre of the bed and looked at me with those huge, dark green eyes
that had never aged. She looked like the little girl I once had known. 'Mistress, why did you not tell me about the pain?'
I asked gently. 'How do you know about the pain?' she whispered
back. 'I tried to hide it from you.' OUR CARAVAN SET OUT INTO THE DESERT, traveling by
moonlight across the silver sands. Sometimes my mistress walked at my side, and
the two princesses frolicked along with us, laughing and excited by the
adventure. At other times, when the pain was bad, my mistress rode in the wagon
that I had equipped for her comfort. Then I sat beside her and held her hand
until the powder of the sleeping-flower worked its magic and gave her surcease. Every night we travelled just as far as the next
watering-station along the road that was now well beaten by the thousands of
vehicles that had preceded us. During the long days we lay beneath the awning
of the wagon and drowsed in the sweltering heat. We had been thirty days and nights upon the road
when in the dawn we saw a remarkable sight. A disembodied sail upon the desert,
moving gently southwards over the sands. It was not until we had journeyed on
for many more miles that we saw how we had been deceived. The hull of the
galley had been hidden from us by the bank of the Nile, and below the dunes the
river ran on eternally. We had crossed the loop. Prince Memnon and all his staff were there to greet
us. Already the squadron of new galleys had almost completed fitting out. It
was the sail of one of these that we had first descried as we approached the
river again. Every plank and mast had been cut and sawn on the great plains of
Cush, and transported across the loop of the river. All the chariots were
assembled. Hui had herded all the horses across the desert, and the wagons had
carried their fodder with them. Even my gnu were waiting in their stockades
upon the river-bank. Although the wagon caravans carrying the women and
the children still followed, the main body of our nation had been brought
across. It had been an undertaking that almost defied belief, a labour of
godlike proportions. Only men like Kratas and Remrem and Memnon could have
accomplished it in so short a time. Now only the first cataract still stood between us
and the sacred earth of our very Egypt. We went on northwards again. My mistress sailed in
the new barge that had been built for her and the princesses. There was a large
and airy cabin for her, and I had equipped it with every luxury that was
available to us. The hangings were of embroidered Ethiopian wool, and the
furniture was of dark acacia wood inlaid with ivory and the gold of Cush. I
decorated the bulkheads with paintings of flowers and birds and other pretty
things. As always, I slept at the foot of my mistress's
bed. Three nights after we sailed, I woke in the night. She was weeping
silently. Although she had stifled her sobs with a pillow, the shaking of her
shoulders had awakened me. I went to her immediately. 'The pain has come again?' I asked. 'I did not mean to wake you, but it is like a sword
in my belly.' I mixed her a draught of the sleeping-flower,
stronger than I had ever given to her before. The pain was beginning to triumph
over the flower. She drank it and lay quietly for a while. Then she
said, 'Can you not cut this thing out of my body, Taita?' 'No, mistress. I cannot.' 'Then hold me, Taita. Hold me the way you used to
do when I was a little girl.' I went into her bed, and I took her in my arms. I
cradled her, and she was as thin and light as a child. I rocked her tenderly,
and after a while she slept. THE FLEET REACHED THE HEAD OF THE first cataract
above Elephantine, and we moored against the bank in the quiet flow of the
river before the Nile felt the urging of the cascades and plunged into the
gorge. We waited for the rest of the army to be ferried
down to us, all the horses and the chariots and Lord Kratas' pagan Shilluk
regiments. We waited also for the Nile to rise and open the cataract for us to
pass down into Egypt. While we waited, we sent spies down through the
gorge. They were dressed as peasants and priests and merchants with goods to
trade. I went down with Kratas into the gorge to map and mark the passage. Now,
at low water, every hazard was exposed. We painted channel-markers on the rocks
above the high-water line, so that even when the flood covered them, we would
still know where those obstacles lurked. We were many weeks at this labour, and when we
returned to where the fleet was moored, the army was assembled there. We sent
out scouting parties to find a route for the chariots and the horses through
the rock desert down into Egypt. We could not risk such a precious cargo to the
wild waters of the cataract. Our spies began to return from Elephantine. They
came in secretly and singly, usually in the night. They brought us the very
first news of our mother-land that we had heard in all the years of exile. King Salitis still reigned, but he was old now, and
his beard had turned silver-white. His two sons were the mighty men of the
Hyksos legions. Prince Beon commanded the infantry and Prince Apachan commanded
the chariots. The might of the Hyksos exceeded all our estimates.
Our spies reported that Apachan disposed of twelve thousand chariots. We had
brought down only four thousand from Cush. Beon had forty thousand archers and
infantry. Even with Kratas' Shilluk, we could muster only fifteen thousand. We
were heavily outnumbered. There was cheering news also. The great bulk of the
Hyksos force was held in the Delta, and Salitis had made his capital at the
city of Memphis. It would take months for him to move his forces south to
Elephantine and Thebes. He would not be able to bring his chariots up-river
until the floods abated and the land dried. There was only a single squadron of
chariots guarding the city of Elephantine, one hundred chariots to oppose our
entry. They were of the old solid-wheel type. It seemed that the Hyksos had not
yet perfected the spoked wheel. Prince Memnon laid out his battle plan for us. We
would pass through the cataract on the flood, and seize Elephantine. Then,
while Salitis moved southwards to oppose us, we would march on Thebes, raising
the populace in insurrection as we went. We could expect Salitis to give battle with his
full army on the flood-plains before Thebes, once the Nile waters had subsided.
By then we could hope that the disparity in the numbers of the two armies would
be redressed in part by the Egyptian troops that would rally to our standard. We learned from our spies that the Hyksos did not
suspect the presence of our army of liberation so close to their border, and
tha.t we could expect to gain the element of surprise with our first assault.
We learned also that Salitis had adopted our Egyptian way of life. These days
he lived in our palaces and worshipped our gods. Even his old Sutekh had
changed his name to Seth, and was, very appropriately, still his principal god. Although all his senior officers were Hyksos, many
of Salitis' captains and sergeants had been recruited from amongst the
Egyptians, and half the common soldiers were of our own nation. Most of these
would have been infants or not yet born at the time of our exodus. We wondered
where their loyalties would lie, when Prince Memnon led our army down into
Egypt. All was in readiness now. The scouts had marked a
road through the desert of the west bank, and the water wagons had laid down
stores of fodder and water jars along the length of it, enough to see our
chariots through to the fertile plains of our very Egypt. Our galleys were
rigged and manned for battle. When the Nile flooded, we would sail, but in the
meantime there was one last ritual to complete. We climbed the bluff above the river to where the
obelisk that my mistress had raised over two decades before, still stood, a
tall and elegant finger of stone pointing into the cloudless blue of the
African sky. My mistress was too weak to climb the rugged
pathway to the summit. Ten slaves carried her up in a sedan-chair, and set her
down below the tall monument. She walked painfully slowly to the foot of the
pillar on the arm of Prince Memnon, and gazed up at the inscription carved in
the granite. Our whole nation watched her, all those souls who had found their
way back to this point from which we had set out so long ago. My mistress read the inscription aloud. Her voice
was soft, but still so musical that it carried clearly to where I stood behind
the great lords and the generals. 'I, Queen Lostris, Regent of Egypt and widow of
Pharaoh Mamose, the eighth of that name, mother of the Crown Prince Memnon, who
shall rule the two kingdoms after me, have ordained the raising of this
monument. When she had finished the reading, she turned to
face her people and spread her arms. 'I have done that which was required of me,' she
said, and her voice regained some of its old power. 'I have led you back to the
border of your land. My task is completed and I relinquish the regency.' She
paused, and for a moment her eyes met mine over the heads of the nobles. I
nodded slightly to encourage her, and she went on. 'Citizens of Egypt, it is fitting that you have a
true Pharaoh to lead you the last steps of the way home. I give to you the
divine Pharaoh Tamose, who once was the Crown Prince Memnon. May he live for
ever!' 'May he live for ever!' the nation roared in one
voice. 'May he live for ever!' Pharaoh Tamose stepped forward to face his people.
'May he live for ever!' they shouted the third time, and our new pharaoh drew
the blue sword from its jewelled scabbard and saluted them with it. In the silence that followed, his voice rang and
echoed from the gaunt red crags of the hills. 'I take up this sacred trust. I swear on my hope of
eternal life to serve my people and my land all my days. I shall not flinch
from this duty, and I call upon all the gods to witness my oath.' THE FLOOD CAME. THE WATERS ROSE UP the rocks that
guarded the entrance to the gorge, and the colour changed from green to grey.
The cataract began to growl like a beast in its lair and the spray-cloud rose
into the sky and' stood as high as the hills that flanked the Nile. I went
aboard the leading galley with Lord Kratas and Pharaoh. We dropped our mooring
and shoved off into the stream. The rowers on the benches were stripped to
their breech-clouts, their faces turned up to watch Kratas as he stood high in
the stern, gripping the steering-oar in his bear-like fists. In the bows two teams of sailors under the king
stood ready with heavy oars to fend off. I stood beside Kratas, with the map of
the rapids spread on the deck in front of me, ready to call the twists and
turns of the channel to him as we came to them. I did not really need the map,
for I had memorized every line drawn upon it. In addition to which, I had
stationed reliable men on the sides of the gorge and on the islands in the main
stream ahead of us. They would use signal flags to show us the way through. As the current quickened beneath our keel, I cast
one last glance backwards and saw the rest of the squadron fall into line
astern behind us, ready to follow us down the cataract. Then I looked forward
again, and felt the fist of fear tighten on my bowels so that I was forced to
squeeze my buttocks together. Ahead of us the gorge smoked like the mouth of a
furnace. Our speed built up with deceptive stealth. The
rowers touched the surface lightly with the blades of the oars, just enough to
keep our bows pointed downstream. We floated so lightly and so smoothly that we
seemed to be drifting. It was only when I looked at the banks, and saw them
streaming past us, that I realized how fast we were running. The rock portals
of the gorge flew to meet us. None the less, it was only when I noticed the
grin on Kratas' craggy face that I realized the true danger of what we were
attempting. Kratas only grinned like that when he saw death crook a bony finger
at him. 'Come on, you rogues!' he shouted at his crew.
"This day I'll make your mothers proud of you, or I'll find work for the
embalmers.' The river was split by three islands, and the
channel narrowed. 'Bear to port, and steer for the blue cross.' I
tried to sound casual, but at that moment I felt the deck tip beneath my feet,
and I clutched at the rail. We flew down a chute of grey water, and our bows
swung giddily. I thought that we were already out of control, and waited for
the crunch of rock and for the deck to burst open beneath my feet. Then I saw
the bows steady, and the blue cross painted on the wall of rock was dead ahead. 'Hard to starboard as we come up to the flag!' my
voice squeaked, but I picked out the man on the centre island flagging us into
the turn, and Kratas put the steering-oar over and yelled at the benches, 'All
back right, pull together left!' The deck canted sharply as we spun into the
turn. The wall of rock flashed past us, and we were going
at the speed of a galloping horse. One more turn and the first rapids lay
ahead. Black rock stood across our path, and the waters piled upon it. The
water took on the shape of the rocks beneath it. It bulged and stood in tall
static waves. It opened into smooth green gulleys. It curled upon itself and
exploded into veils of white through which the rock snarled at us with black
fangs. My stomach clenched as we leaped over the edge and dropped down the
slope. At the bottom we -wallowed and spun, like a stalk of dry grass in a
whirlwind. 'Pull left!' Kratas bellowed. 'Pull till your balls
bounce!' We steadied and aimed for the next gap in the rock, and the white
water dashed over the deck and into my eyes. It hissed alongside, running in
tandem with us, and the waves stood taller than our poop-deck. 'By Seth's tattered and festering foreskin, I've
not had so much sport since I tupped my first ewe!' Kratas laughed, and the
rock sprang at us like a charging bull elephant. We touched once, and the rock rasped along our
belly. The deck shuddered beneath our feet, and I was too afraid to scream.
Then Memnon's team poled us free and we raced on down. Behind us I heard the shattering crash as one of
the other galleys struck hard. I dared not look round as I judged our next
turn, but soon there were wreckage and the heads of drowning men bobbing and
swirling in the torrent on both sides of us. They screamed to us as they were
borne away and dashed upon the spurs of rock, but we could offer them no
succour. Death pressed hard upon our heels and we ran on with the stench of it
in our nostrils. In that hour I lived a hundred lives, and died in
every one of them. But at last we were hurled from the bottom of the cataract
into the main body of the river. Of the twenty-three galleys that had entered
the gorge, eighteen followed us out. The others had been smashed to flotsam, and
the corpses of their drowned crew washed down beside us in the grey Nile flood. There was not time for us to celebrate our
deliverance. Dead ahead lay the Island of Elephantine, and on both banks of the
river stood the well-remembered walls and buildings of the city. 'Archers, string your bows!' King Tamose called
from the bows. 'Hoist the blue pennant! Drummer, increase the beat to attack
speed!' Our tiny squadron flew into the mass of shipping
that clogged the roads of Elephantine. Most of it was made up of trade barges
and transports. We passed these by, and went for the Hyksos galleys. The Hyksos
had manned their fighting ships with Egyptian sailors, for nobody knew the
river better. Only their officers were Hyksos. Most of them were ashore, carousing
in the pleasure-palaces of the docks. Our spies had told us which was the flag of the
southern admiral, a swallowtail of scarlet and gold so long that the end of it
dipped in the water. We steered for the ship that flew her, and Memnon boarded her
over the side with twenty men at his back. 'Freedom from the Hyksos tyrant!' they roared.
'Stand up for this very Egypt!' The crew gaped at them. They had been taken
completely by surprise, and most of them were unarmed. Their weapons were
locked away below decks, for the Hyksos officers trusted them not at all. The other galleys of our squadron had each picked
out one of the enemy fighting-ships and boarded it as swiftly. On all of them
the reaction of the crew was the same. After the first surprise they shouted
the question, 'Who are you?' And the reply was, 'Egyptian! The army of the true
Pharaoh Tamose. Join with us, countrymen! Cast out the tyrant!' They turned on their Hyksos officers and cut them
down before we could reach them. Then they embraced our men, roaring out a
welcome. 'For Egypt!' they cheered. 'For Tamose! For Egypt
and Tamose!' The cheering jumped from ship to ship. Men danced
upon the rails and swarmed up the masts to tear down the Hyksos banners. They broke
open the arms stores and passed out bows and swords. Then they poured ashore. They dragged the Hyksos
from the taverns and hacked them to bloody shreds, so that the gutters
discharged a scarlet flood into the harbour waters. They ran through the streets
to the barracks of the garrison, and fell upon the guard. 'For Egypt and Tamose!' they chanted. Some of the Hyksos officers rallied their men, and
held out for a while in pockets surrounded by the rabble. Then Kratas and
Memnon came ashore with their veterans, and within two hours the city was ours. Most of the Hyksos chariots were abandoned in their
lines, but half a squadron was escaping through the east gate and galloping
away over the causeway that crossed the inundated fields to the dry ground beyond. I had left the ship and hurried through the back
alleys, that I knew so well, to the north tower on the city walls. From there I
knew I would have the best view over the city and the surrounding countryside.
Bitterly, I watched the escaping detachment of chariots. Every one that got
away now would have to be fought later, and I wanted those horses. I was about
to turn away and watch what was happening in the city below me, when I saw a
little finger of dust rising from the foot of the harsh southern hills. I shaded my eyes and stared at it. I felt the
quickening of excitement. The dust was coming towards us swiftly, I could make
out the dark shapes beneath it. 'By Horus, it's Remrem!' I whispered with delight.
The old warrior had brought the first division of chariots through the bad
ground of the hills quicker than I would have believed possible. It was only
two days since we had parted. I watched with professional pride as the first
division opened from columns of four into line abreast. Hui and I had trained
them well. It was perfectly done, and Remrem had the Hyksos in enfilade. Half
their vehicles were still on the causeway. It seemed to me that the enemy
commander was not even aware of the massed squadrons bearing down upon his
exposed flank. I think he must still have been looking back over his shoulder.
At the very last moment he tried to swing into line abreast to meet Remrem's
charge, but it was far too late. He would have done better to have turned tail
and run for it. Remrem's chariots poured over him in a wave, and he
was washed away like debris in the stream of the Nile. I watched until I was
certain that Remrem had captured most of the Hyksos horses, and only then did I
sigh with relief and turn to look down into the city. The populace had gone wild with the joy of
liberation. They were dancing through the streets, waving any
piece of blue cloth that came to hand. Blue was the colour of Pharaoh Tamose.
The women tied blue ribbons in their hair, and the men wound blue sashes around
their waists and tied on blue arm-bands. There was still some isolated fighting, but
gradually the surviving Hyksos were cut down or dragged from the buildings they
were trying to defend. One of the barracks with several hundred men still
inside it was put to the torch. I heard the screams of the men as they burned,
and soon the aroma of scorched flesh drifted up to me. It smelled like roasting
pork. Of course there was looting, and some of our
upstanding citizens broke into the taverns and the wine shops and carried the
jars out into the street. When one of the jars broke, they went down on all
fours and guzzled the wine out of the gutter like hogs. I saw three men chase a girl down the alley below
where I stood. When they caught her they threw her down and ripped her skirt
away. Two of them pinned her limbs and held her spread-eagled while the third
man mounted her. I did not watch the rest of it. As soon as Memnon and Kratas had stamped out the
last pockets of Hyksos resistance, they set about restoring order to the city.
Squads of disciplined troops trotted through the streets, using the shafts of
their war spears as clubs to beat sense into the drunken and delirious mob. Memnon ordered a handful of those taken in the act
of rape and looting to be strangled on the spot, and their corpses were hung by
the heels from the city gates. By nightfall the city was quiet, and decent men
and women could once more safely walk her streets. Memnon set up his headquarters in Pharaoh Mamose's
palace, which had once been our home on Elephantine Island. The moment I
stepped ashore I hurried to our old quarters in the harem. They were still luxuriously appointed and had
escaped the looters. Whoever had occupied them had treated my murals with the
respect they warranted. The water-garden was a profusion of lovely plants, and
the ponds were filled with fish and lotus. The Egyptian gardener told me that
the Hyksos garrison commander who had lived here had admired our Egyptian ways,
and had tried to ape them. I was thankful for that. Within days I had restored the rooms and garden to
a state in which they were once more fit to receive my mistress. Then I went to
Memnon to ask permission to bring the queen home. Pharaoh was distracted by the burden of taking firm
hold of his kingdom. There were ten thousand matters that demanded his
attention, but he put them aside for the moment and embraced me. 'It all goes well, Tata.' 'A happy return, Your Majesty,' I replied, 'but
there is still so much to do.' 'It is my royal command that when you and I are
alone like this, you continue to call me Mem.' He smiled at me. 'But you are
right, there is much to do, and little time left to us before Salitis and all
his host marches up from the Delta to oppose us. We have won the first little
skirmish. The great battles lie ahead of us.' 'There is one duty that will give me great
pleasure, Mem. I have prepared quarters for the queen mother. May I go up-river
and bring her home to Elephantine? She has waited too long already to set foot
on Egyptian soil.' 'Leave at once, Tata,' he commanded, 'and bring
Queen Masara down with you.' The river was too high and the desert road too
rough. One hundred slaves carried the litters of the two queens along the banks
of the Nile, through the gorge and down into our green valley. It was not pure coincidence that the first building
we came to as we crossed the border was a small temple. I had planned our route
to bring us here. 'What shrine is this, Taita?' my mistress drew
aside the curtain of her litter to ask. 'It is the temple of the god Akh-Horus, mistress.
Do you wish to pray here?' 'Thank you,' she whispered. She knew what I had
done. I helped her down from the litter, and she leaned heavily upon me as we
entered the cool gloom of the stone building. We prayed together, and I felt certain that Tanus
was listening to the voices of the two people in all the world who had loved
him most. Before we went on, my mistress ordered me to hand over all the gold
that we had with us to the priests, and promised to send more for the upkeep and
the beautification of the temple. By the time we reached the Palace of Elephantine,
she was exhausted. Each day the thing in her womb grew larger as it fed upon
her wasting body. I laid her on a couch under the barrazza in the water-garden,
and she closed her eyes and rested for a while. Then she opened them again and
smiled at me softly. 'We were happy here once, but will I ever see Thebes again
before I die?' I could not answer her. It was idle to make promises to her that
were not mine to keep. 'If I die before that, will you promise to take me
back and build me a tomb in the hills from where I can look across and see my
beautiful city?' 'That I promise you with all my heart,' I replied. IN THE DAYS THAT FOLLOWED, ATON and I resuscitated
our old spider's web of spies and informers across the Upper Kingdom. Many of
those who4iad once worked for us were long dead, but there were also many who
were not. With the bait of gold and patriotism, they recruited other younger
spies in every village and city. Soon we had spies in the palace of the Hyksos
satrap in Thebes, and others as far north as the Delta of the Lower Kingdom.
Through them we learned which Hyksos regiments were billeted in each town, and
which of them were on the march. We learned their strength, and the names and
foibles of their commanders. We had an exact count of the numbers of their
ships and their chariots, and as the flood-waters of the Nile receded, we were
able to follow the southward movement of this huge mass of men and fighting machines,
as King Salitis marched on Thebes. I smuggled secret messages in the name of Pharaoh
Ta-mose to those Egyptians in the regiments of the enemy, urging them to
revolt. They started to trickle in through our lines, bringing more valuable
intelligence with them. Soon the trickle of deserters from the Hyksos armies
became a flood. Two full regiments of archers came marching in under arms, with
the blue banner waving over them, and chanting, 'Egypt and Tamose!' The crews of a hundred fighting galleys mutinied
and slew their Hyksos officers. When they came sailing up-river to join us,
they drove before them a fleet of barges that they had captured in the port of
Thebes. These were laden with grain and oil and salt and flax and timber, all
the sinews of war. By this time, all our own forces were down through
the cataract and deployed around the city, except only the small herd of tame
gnu. These I had left until the very last. From my lookout in the north tower,
I could see the horse-lines extending for miles along both banks, and the smoke
from the cooking-fires of the regimental encampments turned the air blue. Each day we were growing stronger, and the whole of
Egypt was in a ferment of excitement and anticipation. The heady aroma of
freedom perfumed each breath we drew. Kemit was a nation in the process of
rebirth. They sang the patriotic anthems in the streets and the taverns, and
the harlots and the wine merchants grew fat. Aton and I, poring over our maps and secret
despatches, saw a different picture emerging. We saw the Hyksos giant shaking
itself awake, and stretching out a mailed fist towards us. From Memphis and
every city and town in the Delta, King Salitis' regiments were on the march.
Every road was crowded with his chariots, and the river ran with his shipping.
All of this was moving south upon Thebes. I waited until \ knew that Lord Apachan, the
commander of the Hyksos chariots, had reached Thebes and was encamped outside
the city walls with all his vehicles and all his horses. Then I went before the
war council of Pharaoh Tamose. 'Your Majesty, I have come to report that the enemy
now have one hundred and twenty thousand horses and twelve thousand chariots
massed at Thebes. Within two months, the Nile will have subsided to the level
that will enable Apachan to begin his final advance.' Even Kratas looked grave. 'We have known worse
odds—' he began, but the king cut him short. 'I can tell by his face that the Master of the
Royal Horse has more to tell us. Am I right, Taita?' 'Pharaoh is always right,' I agreed. 'I beg your
permission to bring down my gnu from above the cataract.' Kratas laughed. 'By Seth's bald head, Taita, do you
intend riding out against the Hyksos on one of those clownish brutes of yours?'
I laughed with him politely. His sense of humour has the same subtlety as that
of the savage Shilluk he commands. The next morning Hui and I set off up-river to
bring down the gnu. By this time there were only three hundred of these sorry
creatures left alive out of the original six thousand, but they were quite tame
and could be fed from the hand. We herded them down at a gentle pace, so as not
to weaken them further. The horses that Remrem had captured in that first
brief battle with the escaping Hyksos chariots had on my orders been kept
separated from our own horses that we had brought down with us from Cush. Hui
and I moved the gnu into the same pasture with them, and after the first
uneasiness between the two species, they were all feeding peaceably together.
That night we penned gnu and Hyksos horses in the same stockade. I left Hui to
watch over them and returned to the palace on Elephantine Island. I will admit now to a great deal of uncertainty and
worry over the days that followed. I had invested so much faith in the success
of this ruse, which, after all, depended on a natural event that I did not
fully understand. If it failed, we would be faced with the full fury of an
enemy that outnumbered us by at least four to one. I had worked late with Aton and had fallen asleep
over my scrolls in the palace library, when I was shaken awake by uncouth
hands, and Hui was shouting in my ear. 'Come on, you lazy old rascal! Wake up!
I have something for you.' He had horses waiting at the landing. We hurried to
them as soon as the ferry put us ashore, and mounted up. We galloped all the
way along the river-bank in the moonlight, and rode into the horse-lines with
our mounts in a lather. The grooms had lamps lit and were working in the
stockade by their feeble yellow light. Seven of the Hyksos horses were down already with
the thick yellow pus pouring from their mouths and nostrils. The grooms were
cutting into their windpipes and placing the hollow reeds to save them from
choking and suffocating. 'It worked!' Hui shouted, and seized me in a coarse
embrace and danced me in a circle. 'The Yellow Strangled It worked! It worked!' 'I thought of it, didn't I?' I told him with all
the dignity that his antics allowed me. 'Of course it worked.' The barges had been moored against the bank these
weeks past, ready for this day. We loaded the horses immediately, all of those
who could still stand upright. The gnu we left in the stockade. Their presence
would be too difficult to explain where we were going. With one of the captured Hyksos galleys towing each
of the barges, we rowed out into the current and turned northwards. With fifty
oars a side and the wind and current behind us, we made good speed as we
hurried down to Thebes to deliver our gift to Lord Apachan. AS SOON AS WE PASSED KOM-OMBO WE lowered the blue
flag, and hoisted captured Hyksos banners. Most of the crew of the galleys that
were towing the barges had been born under Hyksos rule, some of them were of
mixed parentage and spoke the foreign language with colloquial fluency. Two
nights north of Kom-Ombo, we were hailed by a Hyksos galley. They laid
alongside and sent a boarding party over to inspect our cargo. 'Horses for the chariots of Lord Apachan,' our
captain told them. His father was Hyksos but his mother was an Egyptian
noblewoman. His deportment was natural and his credentials convincing. After a
cursory inspection they passed us through. We were stopped and boarded twice
more before we reached Thebes, but each time our captain was able to deceive
the Hyksos officers who came aboard. My chief concern by this time was the
state of the horses. Despite our best efforts, they were beginning to
die, and half of those still alive were in a pitiful condition. We threw the
carcasses overboard, and ran on northwards at our best speed. My original plan had been to sell the horses to the
Hyksos quartermasters in the port of Thebes, but no man who knew horseflesh
would look at this pitiful herd. Hui and I decided upon another course. We timed the last leg of our voyage to arrive at
Thebes as the sun was setting. My heart ached as I recognized all the familiar
landmarks. The walls of the citadel glowed pinkly in the last rays of the sun.
Those three elegant towers that I had built for Lord Intef still pointed to the
sky, they were aptly named the Fingers of Horus. The Palace of Memnon on the west bank, which I had
left uncompleted, had been rebuilt by the Hyksos. Even I had to admit that the
Asiatic influence was pleasing. In this light the spires and watch-towers were
endowed with a mysterious and exotic quality. I wished that my mistress was
there to share this moment of homecoming with me. We had both longed for it
over half her lifetime. In the fading light we were still able to make out
the vast concourse of men and horses and chariots and wagons that lay outside
the city walls. Although I had received accurate reports, it had not been
possible to visualize such multitudes. My spirits quailed as I looked upon
them, and remembered the gallant little army I had left at Elephantine. We would need every favour of the gods, and more
than a little good fortune to triumph against such a host.' As the last light
faded into night, the fires of the Hyksos bloomed and twinkled upon the plain,
like a field of stars. There was no end to them—they stretched away to the
limit of the eye. As we sailed closer, we smelled them. There is a
peculiar odour that a standing army exudes. It is a blend of many smells, of
dung-fires and of cooking food, the sweet smell of new-cut hay and the
ammoniacal smell of the horses, and the stench of human sewage in open pits, of
leather and pitch and horse-sweat and woodshavings and sour beer. Most of all
it is the smell of men, tens of thousands of men, living close to each other in
tents and huts and hovels. We sailed on, and the sounds floated across the
star-lit waters to our silent ship; the snort and the whinny of horses, the
sound of the coppersmiths' hammers on the anvil beating our spear-heads and
blades, the challenges of the sentries, and the voices of men singing and
arguing and laughing. I stood beside the captain on the deck of the
leading galley and guided him in towards the east bank. I remembered the wharf
of the timber merchants outside the city walls. If it still stood, it would be
the best point at which to disembark our herd. I picked out the entrance to the dock, and we
pushed in under oars. The wharf was exactly as I remembered it. As we came
alongside, the harbour-master came fussing on board, demanding our papers and
our licence to trade. I fawned upon him, bowing and grinning
obsequiously. 'Excellency, there has been a terrible accident. My licences were
blown from my hand by the wind, a trick of Seth, no doubt.' He blew himself up like an angry bullfrog, and then
subsided again as I pressed a heavy gold ring into his fat paw. He tested the
metal between his teeth, and went away smiling. I sent one of the grooms ashore to douse the
torches that illuminated the wharf. I did not want curious eyes to see the
condition of the horses that we brought ashore. Some of our animals were too
weak to rise, others staggered and wheezed, they drooled the stinking mucus
from mouth and nostrils. We were forced to place head-halters on them and coax
them out of the barge on to the wharf. In the end there were only a hundred
horses strong enough to walk. We led them down the wagon-track to the high ground
where our spies had told us the main horse-lines were laid out. Our spies had
also provided us with the password of the Hyksos first division of chariots,
and the linguists among us replied to the challenges of the sentries. We walked our horses the entire length of the enemy
encampment. As we went, we began to turn our stricken animals loose, leaving a
few of them to wander through the lines of every one of the Hyksos' twenty
chariot divisions. We moved so casually and naturally that no alarm was raised,
we 'even chatted and joked with the enemy grooms and horse-handlers we met
along the way. As the first streaks of dawn showed in the eastern
sky, we trudged back to the timber wharf on which we had disembarked. Only one
of the galleys had waited to take us off, the rest of the flotilla had cast off
and turned back southwards as soon as they had discharged their cargo of
diseased horses. We went aboard the remaining ship, and although Hui
and the other grooms threw themselves exhausted upon the deck, I stood at the
stern-rail and watched the walls of my beautiful Thebes, washed by the pure
early light, sink from view behind us. Ten days later, we sailed into the port of
Elephantine, and after I had reported to Pharaoh Tamose, I hurried to the
water-garden in the harem. My mistress lay in the shade of the barrazza. She was
pale and so thin that I could not keep my hands from trembling as I stretched
out to her in obeisance. She wept when she saw me. 'I missed you, Taita. There is so little time left
for us to be together.' THE NILE BEGAN TO SHRINK BACK INTO her bed. The
fields emerged from under the inundation, glistening black under a thick new
coat of rich mud. The roads began to dry out, opening the way northwards. Soon
it would be time for the plough, and the time for war. Aton and I waited
anxiously, perusing every report from our spies in the north. It came at last,
the intelligence for which we had waited and prayed. The news was carried by a
fast felucca, flying to us on the wings of the north wind. It docked in the
third watch of the night, but the messenger found Aton and me still working by
lamplight in his cell. I hurried with the dirty scrap of papyrus to the
royal apartments. The guards had orders to let me pass at any hour, but Queen
Masara met me at the curtained doorway to the king's bedchamber. 'I will not let you wake him now, Taita. The king
is exhausted. This is his first night's uninterrupted sleep in a month.' 'Your Majesty, I must see him. I am under his
direct orders—' While we still argued, a deep young voice called to
me from beyond the curtain, 'Is that you, Tata?' The curtain was thrown aside
and the king stood before us in all his naked splendour. He was a man as few
others I have ever known, lean and hard as the blade of the blue sword,
majestic in all his manly parts, so that I was all the more conscious of my own
disability when I looked upon him. 'What is it, Tata?' 'Despatches from the north. From the camp of the
Hyk-sos. A terrible pestilence is sweeping through the lines of the Hyksos.
Half their horses are stricken, and thousands of others fall prey to the
disease with each new day.' 'You are a magician, Tata. How could we have ever
mocked you and your gnu!' He gripped my shoulders and stared into my eyes. 'Are
you ready to ride to glory with me?' 'I am ready, Pharaoh.' 'Then put Rock and Chain into the traces, and fly
the blue pennant over my chariot. We are going home to Thebes.' SO WE STOOD AT LAST BEFORE THE CITY of a hundred
gates with four divisions of chariots and thirty thousand foot. King Salitis'
host lay before us, but beyond his multitudes the Fingers of Horus beckoned to
us, and the walls of Thebes shone with a pearly radiance in the dawn light. The
Hyksos army deployed ponderously in front of us, like the uncoiling of some
gigantic python, column after column, rank upon rank. Then- spear-heads
glittered and the golden helmets of the officers blazed in the early sunlight.
'Where is Apachan and his chariots?' the king demanded, and I stared at the
Finger of Horus that stood nearest the river. I had to strain my eyesight to make
out the tiny coloured scraps that waved from the top of the tower. 'Apachan has five divisions in the centre, and he
holds six more in reserve. They are hidden beyond the city wall.' I read the flag signals of the spy I had posted in
the tallest of the three towers. I knew that from there he had a falcon's view
across the battlefield. 'That is only eleven divisions, Tata,' the king
fumed. 'We know he has twenty. Where are the others?' 'The Yellow Strangler,' I answered him. 'He has fielded
every horse that can still stand.' 'By Horus, I hope you are right. I hope that
Apachan is not planning a pretty little surprise for us.' He touched my
shoulder. 'The dice are hi the cup, Tata. It is too late to change them now. We
must play this coup with what the gods have given us. Drive out in review.' I took up the reins and wheeled the chariot out in
front of our army. The king was showing himself to his troops. His presence
would give them heart, and stiffen their spines. I took the horses down the
long ranks at a tight hand-trot. Rock and Chain were brushed until their coats
shone like polished copper in the sunlight. The carriage of the royal chariot
was dressed in a thin skin of gold-leaf. This was the only concession I had
made, in my quest for lightness. The gold was beaten thinner than a papyrus sheet,
and it added less than a hundred deben to the overall weight of our vehicle,
yet it made a dazzling display. Friend or enemy who looked upon it could not
doubt that this was Pharaoh's chariot, and take heart or be struck by awe in
the thick of battle. On its long, whippy bamboo rod the blue pennant nodded and
streamed in the breeze high above our heads, and the men cheered us as we drove
down their ranks. On the day we had left Qebui to begin the Return, I
had made a vow not to cut my hah- until I had made sacrifice in the temple of
Horus in the centre of Thebes. Now my hah- reached to my waist, and to hide the
streaks of grey hi it, I had dyed it with henna imported from those lands
beyond the Indus river. It was a ruddy gold mane that set off my beauty to
perfection. I wore a simple starched kilt of the whitest linen, and the Gold of
Praise upon my naked chest. I did not wish in any way to detract from the glory
of my young pharaoh, so I wore no make-up and no other ornament. We passed in front of the massed regiments of the
Shilluk spearmen in the centre. Those magnificent bloodthirsty pagans were the
rock that anchored our line. They cheered us as we rode by, 'Kajan! Tanus!
Kajan! Tamose!' Their ostrich feathers seethed white as the foam of the river
in the cataracts as they raised their spears in salute. I saw Lord Kratas there
in the midst of them, and he shouted at me. His words were lost in the roar of
ten thousand voices, but I read his lips: 'You and I will get puking drunk
tonight in Thebes, you old hooligan.' The Shilluk were stacked in depth, file upon file
and regiment upon regiment. Kratas had exercised them ceaselessly in the
tactics that I had helped him evolve to deal with chariots. Apart from their
long spears, each of them carried a bundle of javelins, and a sling of wood and
leather to launch these with added power. They had set the sharpened wooden
staves into the earth to form a palisade in front of then" line. The Hyksos
chariots had to break through that spiny barrier to reach them. The Egyptian archers were drawn up behind them,
ready to move forward through their ranks or retreat again, as the vagaries of
the battle called for each differing tactic. They raised their recurved bows on
high and cheered Pharaoh. 'Tamose! Egypt and Tamose!' Pharaoh wore the blue war crown, with the golden
circlet of the uraeus around his brow, the heads of the vulture and the cobra
of the two kingdoms entwined, their jewelled eyes glittering. He returned their
salute with the bare blade of the blue sword held high. We wheeled around our own left flank, and before we
started back, Memnon stopped me with a hand on my shoulder. For a short while
we looked back over the field. The Hyksos were moving forward already. Their
front line was twice the length of our own. 'From your own treatise, Tata,' he quoted, '
"A circumspect defence until the enemy is committed, and then the rapid
and audacious attack." ' 'You have remembered the lesson well, sire.' 'It is certain we will be outflanked, and Apachan
will probably throw in his first five chariot divisions at the start.' 'I agree with you, Mem.' 'But we know what we have to do, don't we, Tata?'
He tapped my shoulder and we started back to where our own chariots were
holding in the rear. Remrem headed the first division, Astes had the
second, and Lord Aqer the third. Newly promoted to the rank of Best of Ten
Thousand, Captain Hui commanded the fourth division. Two regiments of Shilluk
guarded our baggage and the spare horses. 'Look at that old hunting dog,' Memnon nodded at
Remrem. 'He is chafing to be away. By Horus, I'll teach him a little patience
before this day is done.' We heard the horns sounding in the centre. 'It begins now.' Memnon pointed to the front, and
we saw the Hyksos chariots looming through the dust-clouds. 'Yes, Apachan has
turned loose his chariots.' He looked back at our divisions, and Remrem raised
his sword high. "The first is ready, Majesty,' he called «agerly, but
Memnon ignored him and signalled to Lord Aqer. The third division came forward
in column of fours behind us, and Pharaoh led them out. The Hyksos chariots lumbered forward, heavy and
majestic, aimed at the centre of our line. Memnon cut across in front of them,
interposing our thin column between their hordes and the infantry. Then, at his
signal, we wheeled into line abreast and we flew straight at them. It seemed
suicidal, as futile as charging one of our frail wooden galleys at the rocks of
the cataract. As we came together, our archers fired head-on into
the Hyksos, aiming for the horses. Gaps opened in their line as the animals
were brought down by our arrows, then at the last possible moment our own line
dissolved like wind-driven smoke. Our drivers used their superior speed and
manoeuvrability. Instead of coming into collision with the Hyksos line and
being crushed beneath the juggernaut, we swerved into the gaps and raced
through them. Not all our chariots escaped, and some were broken and
overturned, but Lord Aqer led four out of every five of them through. We emerged in the rear of the Hyksos charge and
spun around in a full-locked turn, re-forming the line at the gallop and again
using our speed to overhaul the Hyksos, coming into them from the rear, firing
our arrows into them at shortening range. The Hyksos chariots were designed to give
protection to the crew from the front, and their archers were stationed on the
footplate to fire their arrows forward. Confusion spread down their line as
they tried to meet our attack from the rear. Hard-pressed, some of the drivers
attempted to turn back to confront us, and they collided with the chariots
alongside. Those fearsome wheel-scythes cut into the legs of the neighbouring
horses, and brought them down in a screaming, whinnying tangle. The confusion spread among them just as the first
volley of arrows from the Egyptian archers rose up over the massed ranks of
Shilluk and dropped among the Hyksos. Immediately this happened, Memnon gave
the order, and we wheeled away and let them run down on that palisade of
sharpened staves. Half their horses were maimed or killed by those fierce
points. Those who broke through were met by the Shilluk and a cloud of
javelins. Struck by stake and arrow and javelin, their horses panicked, kicking
and rearing in the traces. Those chariots that were still under control hurled
themselves into the Shilluk phalanx. They met no resistance. The black ranks
opened before them, allowing the horses to run through, but then they closed up
behind them. Every one of those tall, willowy black devils was
an athlete and an acrobat. They leaped up on to the footplate of the racing
chariots from behind, and they stabbed and hacked at the crew with dagger and
spear. They swallowed that first charge of chariots the same way a jellyfish
engulfs a swift silver sardine in its myriad arms and amorphous body. The Hyksos spearmen were moving forward to follow
up and exploit the chariot charge, but now they were exposed. Loose horses and
the surviving chariots tore back into their massed ranks, and forced them to
open up and let them through. For the moment they were stranded in disorder in
the middle of the field, and Memnon skilfully seized the opportunity. Lord Aqer's horses were blown, and Memnon led them
back into reserve. He and I changed teams. It was but a moment's work for the
grooms to loosen the tack that coupled Rock and Chain, and to lead in a fresh
team from the horses being held in reserve. We had six thousand fresh horses
ready in the rear. I wondered how many Hyksos horses had escaped the Strangler,
how many fresh teams they were holding. As we wheeled back into line, Remrem called to us
desperately, 'Your Majesty! The first! Let my first division go!' Pharaoh ignored him and signalled to Astes. The
second moved forward behind us and formed up at the trot. The Hyksos infantry was still tangled in the middle
of the field. They had extended to overlap our shorter line, but had lost their
dressing. The line was crumpled and twisted. With a general's eye, Memnon picked
out the weakest point, a salient in their left flank. 'The second division will advance. Trot-march!
Forward! Pods of eight, charge!' We tore into the salient in the line, eight
chariots abreast. Pod after pod, we crashed into them and ripped them open.
Their left flank buckled, while their right still pressed forward. We had them
canted across the field, their centre was shearing, and Memnon re-formed the
third division at the gallop, and set them up to tear open the enemy centre. At the moment before we were committed to the
charge, I glanced across at the city. Dust had almost obscured the range, but I
glimpsed the two white flags on the summit of the Finger of Horus. It was the
warning signal from my lookout posted there, and I swivelled round and looked
back at the eastern fort of the city. 'Sire!' I cried, and pointed back. The king
followed my arm, and saw the first squadron of Hyksos chariots trot out from
concealment behind the curve of the wall. The others followed, like a column of
black warrior ants on the march. 'Apachan is throwing in his reserves to save his
infantry,' Memnon shouted, above the din of battle. 'A moment more, and he
would have had us in enfilade. Well done, Tata.' We had to let the infantry escape, as we wheeled
into line to face Apachan's chariots. We charged at each other across a field
littered with smashed and overturned chariots, loose arrows and javelins, dead
and wounded horses and dying men. As we came together, I stood taller on the
footplate and peered ahead. There was something unusual about the run of the
enemy chariots, and then it dawned upon me. 'Sire,' I cried, 'look at the horses! They are
running sick animals.' The chests of the leading teams were painted with a
glistening coat of yellow mucus that streamed from their gaping mouths. Even as
I watched, one of the horses coming towards us staggered and fell headlong,
bringing its teammate down with it. 'Sweet Isis, you are right. Their horses are
finished before they have begun,' Memnon answered. He saw instantly what he had
to do. It was the measure of his superb control that he was able to deflect a
charge of his chariots once it was fully launched. At this very last moment he
declined the head-on engagement. We opened like a flower before their charge, peeling
away on either side of them, turning and running back for our own lines,
drawing them on, straining their sick and gasping horses to their utmost. We ran before them in a tight, compact formation.
Their own line began to waver and fall apart as the weaker horses broke down.
Some of them fell as though struck in the head by an arrow. Others merely
slowed and stopped, standing with their heads hanging, mucus pouring from their
mouths in shiny golden ropes. Lord Aqer's own horses were almost blown by now.
They had driven two furious charges without a rest. Still pursued by the
remnants of Apachan's division, Memnon led them back to where Hui's fourth
division was drawn up alongside Remrem and his first. 'Pharaoh! The first is ready. Let me go! In the name
of all the gods, let me go!' Remrem howled with frustration. Memnon hardly glanced in his direction. I turned my
chariot in alongside that of Hui. A team of grooms slipped our sweat-soaked
horses from the traces and led in a fresh pair. While Lord Aqer's exhausted
division streamed back past us, we faced the oncoming Hyksos. 'Are you ready, Captain Hui?' Memnon called to him,
and Hui raised his bow in salute. 'For Egypt and Tamose!' he shouted. 'Then forward march. Charge!' Memnon laughed, and
our horses jumped against the traces and we shot forward. There were six full divisions of Apachan's chariots
scattered across the field in front of us. Half of them were broken down, with
the horses fallen or drooping in the traces, suffocated and dying from the Yellow
Strangler. Most of the others were reduced to a walk, the horses staggering and
wheezing. However, the remaining chariots came on in good order. We went out to meet them face to face. In the
centre of their charge rode a tall chariot, its coachwork clad in shining
bronze. On the footplate stood a man so tall that he towered above his driver.
He wore the high golden helmet of Hyksos royalty, and his dark beard was
plaited with coloured ribbons that fluttered in the wind like pretty
butterflies hovering over a flowering shrub. 'Apachan!' Memnon challenged him. 'You are a dead
man.' Apachan heard him, and he picked out our golden
chariot. He swerved to meet us, and Memnon tapped my shoulder. 'Lay me alongside the bearded hog. It's time for
the sword, at last.' Apachan loosed two arrows at us as we closed.
Memnon caught one on his shield. I ducked under the other, but I never lost my
concentration. I was watching those terrible spinning scythes on the hubs of
Apachan's wheels. They could hack my horses' legs out from under them. Behind me I heard the gravelly rasp as Memnon drew
the blue sword from its scabbard on the side panel, and from the corner of my
eye I caught the steely flash of the blade as he went on guard. I swung my horses' heads over, feinting to the
right to confuse the Hyksos driver, but the instant we started to turn away, I
changed direction again. I avoided his scythes and passed him close, then I
turned in sharply behind him. With my free hand I snatched up the
grappling-hook and tossed it over the side-panel of the other chariot. Now we
were locked together, but I had achieved the advantage, for we lay across his
stern. Apachan swivelled around, and aimed a sword-cut at
me, but I fell to my knees under it, and Memnon gathered up the blow on his
shield, then swung the blue sword. A shard of bronze curled from the edge of
Apachan's weapon, sliced away by the steel, and he shouted in angry disbelief,
and flung up his copper shield at the next blow. Apachan was a superb swordsman, but no match for my
king and the blue sword. Memnon mangled his shield to strips, and then swung
hard at his bronze blade, as Apachan tried to defend his head. The blue blade
sheared the bronze cleanly, and Apachan was left with only the hilt in his
fist. He opened his mouth wide and bellowed at us. The
teeth in the back of his jaw were black and rotten, and his spittle blew into
my face in a cloud. Memnon used that classic straight thrust to end it. He
drove the point of the blue blade through Apachan's open mouth, deeply into the
back of his throat. His angry bellow was drowned out by the torrent of bright
blood that burst through his hairy lips. I cut the rope of the grappling-hook, and let the
Hyksos chariot run free. The horses were out of control and they slewed away
and ran down the line of locked and battling chariots. Apachan clutched at the
dashboard, holding himself erect even though he was dying, and the blood
spurted from his mouth and cascaded down his breastplate. It was a sight that struck dismay into the hearts
of his charioteers. They tried to disengage their sick and staggering-horses,
but we ran hub-to-hub with them and hurled our javelins into them. We followed
them all the way back, until we came within range of their archers, and flocks
of arrows fell around us and forced us to break off. 'It is not over yet,' I warned Memnon, as we walked
our tired horses back. 'You have broken Apachan's chariots, but you still have
to deal with Beon's infantry.' 'Take me to Kratas,' Pharaoh ordered. I stopped our chariot in front of the massed
regiments of Shilluk, and Memnon called across to Kratas, 'What heart, my
Lord?' 'I fear, sire, that my fellows will fall asleep if
you cannot find a little work for us to do.' 'Then let us hear a tune from them as you take them
forward to seek employment.' The Shilluk began their advance. They moved with a
curious shuffling gait, and every third pace they stamped in unison with a
force that made the ground jump beneath their horny bare feet. They sang in
those deep, melodious African voices, a sound like a swarm of angry black bees,
and they drummed their spears upon their rawhide shields. The Hyksos were disciplined and brave, they could
not have conquered half the world if they had not been so. We had smashed up
their chariots, but they stood to meet Kratas' advance behind a wall of bronze
shields. The two armies came together like fighting temple
bulls. The black and the white bulls locked horns and fought it out
breast-to-breast and spear-to-spear. While the two armies of foot-soldiers mauled each
other, Pharaoh held back his chariots, using them with skill and daring only
when there was an opening or a weakness in the enemy positions. When a pocket
of the Hyksos infantry was isolated on the left, he sent in Aqer's division,
and annihilated them with two swift charges. When Lord Beon tried to send
reinforcements forward to assist his beleaguered front, Pharaoh despatched
Astes with five hundred chariots to frustrate him. The Hyksos rallied every one of their remaining
chariots, and every one of their horses that could still stand, and threw them
against our right. Memnon sent Hui and Astes out to meet them, and to break up
their attack. He left Remrem cursing and pleading and stamping up and down beside
his chariot, and ignored his pleas. Pharaoh and I circled the fighting in the golden
chariot, watching each shift and change in the conflict. He pushed in his
reserves in exactly those places where they were most needed, and with the
timing and anticipation that can never be taught or learned. It was as though
the pulse and the tempo of the battle beat in his heart, and he sensed it in
his blood. Always I looked for Kratas in the thick of it. Many
times I lost him, and I dreaded that he was down, but then his helmet showed
again with the ostrich-feather plume cut away, and the bronze splattered with
his own blood and the blood of other men. It was there in the centre where Kratas fought that
the Hyksos ranks began to give. It was like the first trickle through the earth
wall of a dam, their line bulged and stretched to the breaking-point. Their
rear ranks began to fall in upon themselves under the relentless pressure. 'By the love of Horus and the compassion of all the
gods, Tata, this is the moment of our victory.' Memnon saw it even before I
did. We galloped across to where Remrem still waited,
and Pharaoh hailed him, 'Are you ready, my Lord Remrem?' 'I have been ready since dawn, sire, but I am no
lord.' 'Would you argue with your king, sir? You are a lord
now. The enemy centre is breaking. Take your chariots and chase them back to
Memphis!' 'May you live for ever, Pharaoh!' Lord Remrem
roared, and he sprang to the footplate. He led out the first. Their horses were
fresh and strong, and their fighting spirit was chafed raw and angry with long
restraint. They crashed into the Hyksos right flank. They cut
through them with barely a check, and swung round1 and went into the enemy
centre from the rear. It was the perfect moment when the battle teetered, and
the Hyksos centre broke. Within the time it takes to draw and hold a long
breath, they were in rout. They streamed back towards the city gates, but even
Kra-tas' Shilluk were too far-gone to follow them. They stood knee-deep in the
piles of dead and dying men, they rested on their spears and let the Hyksos go.
This was when the genius of Memnon was made apparent. He had kept the first in
hand for this moment. They took up the chase, and I saw Remrem's sword rise and
fall to a terrible rhythm as he drove them on. The first of the fleeing enemy reached the city
gates, but they found them slammed closed in their faces. My spies and agents
had done their work well. The populace of Thebes was in revolt, and the city
was ours. They barred the gates to the broken Hyksos legions. Remrem pursued the Hyksos until night fell and his
horses were exhausted. He drove them back thirty miles, and every yard of the
north road was littered with their discarded weapons and the bodies of the
slain. I DROVE PHARAOH'S GOLDEN CHARIOT up to the main
gate of the city, and he stood tall on the footplate and shouted to the
sentinels on the parapet above us. 'Open the gates! Let me pass through!' 'Who is it that demands entry to Thebes?' they
called down. 'I am Tamose, ruler of the two kingdoms.' 'Hail Pharaoh! May you live for ever!' The gates swung open, and Memnon touched my
shoulder. 'Drive through, Tata.' I turned to face him. 'Forgive me, Majesty. I have
taken oath that I will not enter the city, except at the side of my mistress,
Queen Lostris. I must pass the reins to you.' 'Dismount,' he ordered me gently. 'Go! Fetch your
mistress and make good your oath.' He took the reins from my hand, and I climbed down
into the dusty roadway. I watched him drive the golden chariot through the gateway,
and the sound of cheering was like the thunder of waters in the cataracts at
high flood. The people of Thebes greeted their king. I stood at the roadside as our depleted and
battered army followed Pharaoh into the city. I realized what a bitter price we
had paid for our victory. We would not be fit to pursue the Hyksos until we had
rebuilt our army. By this time King Salitis would be strong again, and his
horses recovered from the Yellow Strangler. We had won the first battle, but I
knew that many more lay ahead of us before the tyrant could be cast out of this
very Egypt. I looked for Kratas as the Shilluk regiments
marched past, but he was not there. Hui had a chariot and fresh horses for me. 'I will
ride with you, Taita,' he offered, but I shook my head. 'I will travel faster alone,' I told him. 'Go into
the city and enjoy your triumph. A thousand pretty maids are waiting to welcome
you home.' Before I took the south road, I drove first to the
battlefield. The jackals and the hyena were already at the feast that we had
set for them, their growls and howls blended with the groans of the dying. The
dead were piled like the flotsam on the river-bank when the flood-waters
recede. I drove the chariot through to where I had last seen
Kratas, but this was the most gruesome corner of that awful field. The corpses
were piled high as my chariot wheels. I saw his helmet lying in the dust that
blood had turned to thick mud. I dismounted and took it up. The crest was gone
and the helm was all dented and battered in by heavy blows. I threw the helmet aside and began to search for
Kratas' body. I saw his leg protruding like the branch of a giant acacia from
beneath a pile of bodies. They were Shilluk and Hyksos lying together in the truce
of death. I dragged them aside and found Kratas on his back. He was drenched in
clotted black blood, his hair was matted with it and his face was a black,
crusted mask. I knelt beside him, and I whispered softly, 'Must
they all die? Every one I truly love, must they all die?' I leaned forward and
kissed his bloody lips. He sat up and stared at me. Then he grinned that
wide boyish grin of his. 'By the plug of dried snot in Seth's left nostril,
that was a real fight,' he greeted me. 'Kratas!' I stared at him with delight. 'You will
truly live for ever.' 'Never doubt it for a moment, my lad. But right now
I need a noggin.' I ran to the chariot and fetched the wine flask. He
held it at arm's-length and let the red wine squirt down his throat without
swallowing. When the flask was empty he threw it aside and belched. 'That will do well enough for a start,' he winked
at me. 'Now point me towards the nearest tavern, you old reprobate.' FASTER THAN ANY SHIP COULD SAIL against the
current, I carried the news to Elephantine. I was one man in the chariot, and
the horses ran lightly. I changed the teams at every relay station along the
south road, and galloped on without a check. The grooms handed me a flask or a
crust of corn-bread and cheese as they changed the horses, and I never slept or
even rested. During the night, the stars and the moon revealed
the path to me, and Horus guided my weary hands upon the traces, for though' I ached in every limb and I reeled on
the footplate with fatigue, I met with no mishap. At each relay station and in each village along the
way, I shouted the joyous news. 'A victory! A mighty victory! Pharaoh has
triumphed at Thebes. The Hyksos is cast down.' 'Praise to all the gods!' they cheered me. 'Egypt
and Ta-mose.' I galloped on, and they still speak of my ride to
this day along the south road. They tell of the gaunt rider with wild bloodshot
eyes, his robe thick with dust and the stains of dried blood, his long hair
blowing in the wind, the harbinger of victory, bringing the news to Elephantine
of the battle that set Egypt on the road to freedom. I drove from Thebes to Elephantine in two days and
two nights, and when I reached the palace, I barely had the strength left to
stagger into the water-garden where my mistress lay, and throw myself down
beside her couch. 'Mistress,' I croaked through cracked lips and a
throat that was parched with dust, 'Pharaoh has won a mighty victory. I have
come to take you home.' WE SAILED DOWN-RIVER TO THEBES. THE princesses were
with me to keep their mother company and to cheer her. They sat with her on the
open deck and sang to her. They rhymed and riddled and laughed, but there were
tones of sadness in their laughter and deep concern in their eyes as they
watched over my mistress. Queen Lostris was as frail as a wounded bird. There
was no weight to her bones and her flesh was as translucent as mother-of-pearl.
I could lift and carry her as easily as I had done when she was ten years of
age. The powder of the sleeping-flower was no longer able to still the pain
that gnawed into her belly like some terrible clawed crab. I carried her to the bows of the galley when at
last the walls of Thebes opened to our view around the last bend in the river.
With an arm around her thin shoulders I supported her, as we delighted together
in all those long-remembered scenes, and lived again a thousand joyous memories
of our youth. But the effort tired her. When we docked below the
Palace of Memnon, half the populace of Thebes was waiting to welcome her.
Pharaoh Tamose stood at the head of this vast throng. When the litter-bearers carried her ashore, they
cheered her. Although most of them had never laid eyes upon her, the legend of
the compassionate queen had persisted during her long exile. Mothers lifted up
their infants for her blessing, and they reached out to touch her hand as it
trailed from the edge of the litter. 'Pray to Hapi for us,' they pleaded. 'Pray for us,
Mother of Egypt.' Pharaoh Tamose walked beside her litter like the
son of a commoner, and Tehuti and Bekatha followed close behind. Both the
princesses smiled brightly, though the tears jewelled their eyelids. Aton had prepared quarters for the queen. At the
door I sent them all away, even the king. I laid her on the couch beneath the
vine arbour on the terrace. From there she could look across the river to the
shining walls of her beloved Thebes. When darkness fell, I carried her to her
bedchamber. As she lay upon the linen sheets, she looked up at me. 'Taita,' she
murmured, 'one last time, will you work the Mazes of Ammon-Ra for me?' 'Mistress, I can refuse you nothing.' I bowed my
head and went to fetch my medicine chest. I sat beside her bed, cross-legged upon the stone
slabs, and she watched me prepare the herbs. I crushed them in the alabaster
pestle and mortar, and heated the water in the copper kettle. I raised the steaming cup and saluted her with it. 'Thank you,' she whispered, and I drained the cup.
I closed my eyes and waited for the familiar but dreaded slide, over the edge of
reality, into the world of dreams and visions. When I returned, the lamps were guttering and
smoking in their brackets, and the palace was silent. There was no sound from
the river or from the sleeping city on the far bank, only the sweet trill of a
nightingale in the gardens, and the light breath of my mistress as she lay upon
her silken pillow. I thought she was sleeping. But the moment I lifted
my trembling hand to wipe the cold and nauseous sweat from my face, she opened
her eyes. 'Poor Taita, was it so bad?' It had been worse than ever before. My head ached
and my vision swam. I knew that I would never work the Mazes again. This was
the last time, and I had done it for her alone. 'I saw the vulture and the cobra stand on either
side of the river, divided by the waters. I saw the waters rise and fall one
hundred seasons. I saw one hundred sheaths of corn, and one hundred birds fly
over the river. Below them, I saw the dust of battle and the flash of swords. I
saw the smoke of burning cities mingle with the dust. 'At last I saw the cobra and the vulture come
together in congress. I saw them mating and entwined on a sheet of pure blue
silk. There were blue banners on the city walls and banners of blue flew on the
temple pylons. 'I saw the blue pennants on the chariots that drove
out across the world. I saw monuments so tall and mighty that they would stand
for ten thousand years. I saw the peoples of fifty different nations bow down
before them.' I sighed and pressed my fingers into my temples to
still the throbbing in my skull, and then I said, 'That was all my vision.' Neither of us spoke or moved for a long while
thereafter, then my mistress said quietly, 'One hundred seasons must pass
before the two kingdoms are united, one hundred years of war and striving
before the Hyksos are at last driven from the sacred soil of this very Egypt.
It will be hard and bitter for my people to bear.' 'But they will be united under the blue banner, and
the kings of your line will conquer the world. All the nations of the world
will pay homage to them,' I interpreted the rest of my vision for her. 'With this I am content.' She sighed and fell
asleep. I did not sleep, for I knew that she still needed
me near her. She woke again in that hour before dawn which is
the darkest of the night. She cried Out, 'The pain! Sweet Isis, the pain!' I mixed the Red Shepenn for her. After a while she
said, 'The pain has passed, but I am cold. Hold me, Taita, warm me with your
body.' I took her in my arms and held her while she slept. She awoke once more as the first timid rays of dawn
crept in through the doorway from the terrace. 'I have loved only two men in my life,' she
murmured, 'and you were one of those. Perhaps in the next life, the gods will
treat our love more kindly.' There was no reply I could give. She closed her
eyes for the last time. She stole away quietly and left me. Her last breath was
no louder than the one before, but I felt the chill in her lips when I kissed
them. 'Goodbye, my mistress,' I whispered. 'Farewell, my.
heart.' I HAVE WRITTEN THESE SCROLLS DURING the seventy
days and nights of the royal embalming. They are my last tribute to my
mistress. Before the undertakers took her away from me, I made
the incision in her left flank, as I had done for Tanus. I opened her womb and
took from it that terrible incubus that had killed her. It was a thing of flesh
and blood, but it was not human. When I cast it into the fire, I cursed it, and
I cursed the foul god Seth who had placed it in her. I have prepared ten alabaster jars to hold these
scrolls. I will leave them with her. I am painting all the murals of her tomb
with my own hand. They are the finest I have ever created. Each stroke of my
brush is an expression of my love. I wish that I could rest with her in this tomb, for
I am sick and weary with grief. But I still have my two princesses and my king
to care for. They need me. AUTHOR'S NOTE On 5 January 1988, Doctor Duraid ibn al Simma of
the Egyptian Department of Antiquities opened and entered a tomb on the west
bank of the Nile in the Valley of the Nobles. The reason why this tomb had not
been previously excavated was that in the ninth century AD an Islamic mosque
had been built over the site. It was only after long and delicate negotiations
with the religious authorities that the excavation was permitted. Immediately upon entering the passage that led to
the burial chamber, Dr Al Simma was greeted by a marvellous display of murals
which covered all the walls and the ceilings. They were the most elaborate and
vivacious that he had ever encountered in a lifetime spent studying the
monuments. He told me that he knew at once that he had made a
significant find, for from amongst the hieroglyphics on the walls stood out the
royal cartouche of an Egyptian queen who had not been previously recorded. His excitement and anticipation increased as he
approached the burial chamber, only to be dashed as he saw that the seals upon the
doorway had been damaged, and the entrance had been forced. In ancient times,
the tomb had been robbed and stripped of its sarcophagus and all its treasures. Nevertheless, Dr Al Simma was able to date the tomb
with reasonable accuracy to that dark night of strife and disaster that
overwhelmed Egypt in about 1780 BC. For the next century the Two Kingdoms were
in a state of flux. We have little record of the events of this period, but
from the chaos eventually rose a line of princes and pharaohs that finally
expelled the Hyksos invader, and lifted Egypt into its period of greatest
glory. It gives me pleasure to think that the blood of Lostris and Tanus and
Memnon ran strongly in their veins. It was almost a year after the tomb was first
opened, while Dr Al Simma's assistants were copying and photographing the
decorations of the walls, that a section of the plaster fell away to reveal a
hidden niche in which stood ten sealed alabaster vases. When Dr Al Simma asked me to assist in the
transcription of the scrolls contained in the vases, I was both honoured and
filled with trepidation. I was not, of course, qualified to work on the
original scrolls, which were written in the hieratic script. This work was done
at Cairo Museum by a team of international Egyptologists. Dr Al Simma asked me to rewrite this original
transcription in a style that would make it more accessible to the modern
reader. With this end in view I have included some anachronisms in the text.
For instance I have, in places, used such comparatively modern measures of
distance and weight as miles and ounces. I have also indulged myself with words
such as 'djinn' and 'houri' and 'hooligan' which Taita never employed, but
which, I feel certain, he would have used if they had formed part of his vocabulary. Very soon after beginning work on the texts all my
reservations began to evaporate as I became totally involved in the times and
character of the ancient author. Despite all his bombast and vainglory, I
developed an affinity and affection for the slave Taita that reached back over
the millennium. I am left with a realization of how little the
emotions and aspirations of man have changed in all that time, and a lingering
excitement that to this day somewhere in the Abyssinian mountains near the
source of the Blue Nile the mummy of Tanus still lies in the unviolated tomb of
Pharaoh Mamose. EXPLORE THE MYSTERIES OF THE SEVENTH SCROLL— WILBUR SMITH'S NEXT UNFORGETTABLE EPIC NOVEL, COMING SOON FROM ST. MARTIN'S PRESS. AN EXCERPT FOLLOWS: "The Seventh Scroll." She whispered, and
steeled herself to touch it. It was three thousand years old, written by a
genius out of time with history, a man who had been dust for all these
millennia, but who she had come to know and respect as she did her own husband.
His words were eternal, and they spoke to her clearly from beyond the grave,
from the fields of paradise, from the presence of the great Trinity, Osiris and
Isis and Horus, in whom he had believed so devoutly. As devoutly as she
believed in another more recent Trinity. She carried the scroll to the long table at which
Duraid, her husband, was already at work. He looked up as she laid it on the
table-top before him and for a moment she saw the same mystical mood in his
eyes that had affected her. He always wanted the scroll there on the table,
even when there was no real call for it. He had the photographs and the
microfilm to work with. It was as though he needed the unseen presence of the
ancient author close to him as he studied the texts. Then he threw off the mood and was the
dispassionate scientist once more. "Your eyes are better than mine, my
flower," he said. "What do you make of this letter?" She leaned over his shoulder and studied the
hieroglyph on the photograph of the scroll that he pointed out to her. She
puzzled over the character for a moment before she took the magnifying glass
from Duraid's hand, and peered through it again. "It looks as though Taita has thrown in
another cryptic of his own creation just to bedevil us." She spoke of the
ancient author as though he were a dear, but sometimes exasperating, friend who
still lived and breathed, and played tricks upon them. "We'll just have to puzzle it out, then,"
Duraid declared with obvious relish. He loved the ancient game. It was his
life's work. The two of them laboured on into the cool of the
night. This was when they did their best work. Sometimes they spoke Arabic and
sometimes English; for them the two languages were as one. Less often they used
French, which was their third common language. They had both received their
education at universities in England and the United States, so far from this
Very Egypt of theirs. Royan loved the expression "This Very Egypt"
that Taita used so often in the scrolls. She felt a peculiar affinity with this ancient
Egyptian in so many ways. After all she was his direct descendant. She was a
Coptic Christian, not of the Arab line that had so recently conquered Egypt,
less than two thousand years ago. The Arabs were newcomers in this Very Egypt
of hers; while her own blood line ran back to the dawn of sanguine man, to the
time of the pharaohs and the great pyramids. At ten o'clock Royan made coffee for them, heating
it on the charcoal stove that Alia had left for them before she went off to her
own family in the village. They drank the sweet strong brew from thin cups that
were half filled with the heavy grounds. While they sipped they talked as old
friends. For Royan that was their relationship, old friends.
She had known Duraid ever since she had returned from England with her
doctorate in archaeology and won her job with the Department of Antiquities, of
which he was the director and professor. She had been his assistant when he had opened the
tomb in the Valley of the Nobles; the tomb of Queen Lostris of the Ramessidian
line of pharaohs, the tomb that dated from 1780 BC. She had shared his disappointment when they
discovered that the tomb had been robbed in ancient times and all its treasures
plundered. All that remained were the marvellous murals that covered the walls
and the ceilings of the tomb. It was Royan herself who had been working at the
wall behind the plinth on which the sarcophagus had once stood, photographing
the murals, when a section of the plaster had fallen away to reveal in their
niche the ten alabaster jars. Each of the jars had contained a papyrus scroll.
Every one of them had been written and placed there by Taita, the slave of the
queen. Since then their lives, Duraid's and her own,
seemed to have revolved around those scraps of parchment. Although there was
some damage and deterioration, in the main they had survived three and a half
thousand years remarkably intact. What a fascinating story they contained of a nation
attacked by a superior enemy, armed with horse and chariot that were still alien
to the Egyptians of that time. Crushed by the Hyksos hordes, the people of the
Nile were forced to flee. Led by their queen, Lostris of the tomb, they
followed the great river southwards almost to its source amongst the brutal
mountains of the Ethiopian highlands. Here amongst those forbidding mountains, Lostris
had entombed the mummified body of her husband, the Pharaoh Mamose, who had
been slain in battle against the Hyksos. Long afterwards Queen Lostris had led her people
back northwards to this Very Egypt. Armed now with their own horses and
chariots, forged into hard warriors in the African wilderness they had come
storming back down the cataracts of the great river to challenge once more the
Hyksos invader, and in the end to triumph over him and wrest the double crown
of upper and lower Egypt from his grasp. It was a story that appealed to every fibre of her
being, and that had fascinated her as they had unravelled each hieroglyph that
the old slave had penned on the papyrus. It had taken them all these years, working at night
here in the villa of the oasis after all their daily routine work at the museum
in Cairo was done, but at last all of the ten scrolls had been deciphered, all
except the seventh scroll. This was the one that was the enigma, the one which
the author had cloaked in layers of esoteric shorthand and allusions so obscure
that they were unfathomable at this remove of time. Some of the symbols he used
they had never encountered before in all the thousands of texts that they had
studied in their combined lifetimes. It was obvious to them both that Taita had
not intended that the scrolls should be read and understood by any eyes other
than those of his beloved queen. These were his last gift for her to take with
her beyond the grave. It had taken all their combined skills, all their
imagination and ingenuity, but at last they were approaching the conclusion of
the task. There were still many gaps in the translation and many areas where
they were uncertain whether or not they had captured the true meaning, but they
had laid out the bones of the manuscript in such order that they were able to
discern the outline of the creature it represented. Now Duraid sipped his coffee and shook his head as
he had done so often before as he said, "It frightens me. The
responsibility. What to do with this knowledge we have gleaned? If it should
fall into the wrong hands." He sipped and sighed before he spoke again.
"Even if we take it to the right people, will they believe this story that
is three and a half thousand years old?" "Why must we bring in others?" Royan
asked with an edge of exasperation in her voice. "Why can we not do alone
what has to be done?" At times like these the differences between them
were most apparent. His was the caution of age, while hers was the impetuosity
of youth. "You do not understand," he said. It
always annoyed her when he said that; when he treated her as the Arabs treated
their women in a totally masculine world. She had known the other world where
women demanded and received the right to be treated as equals. She was a
creature caught between those worlds—the Western world and the Arab world. Duraid was still speaking and she had not been
listening to him. She gave him her full attention once more. "I have
spoken to the Minister again, but I do not think he believes in me. I think
that Nahoot has convinced him that I am a little mad." He smiled sadly.
Nahoot Guddabi was his ambitious and well-connected deputy. "At any rate
the minister says that there are no government funds available, and that I will
have to seek outside finance. So, I have been over the list of possible
sponsors again, and have narrowed it down to four. There is the Getty Museum,
of course—but I never like to work with a big impersonal institution. I prefer
to have a single man to answer to. Decisions are always easier to reach."
None of this was new to her, but she listened dutifully. "Then there is Herr Von Schiller. He has the
money and the interest in the subject, but I do not know him well enough to
trust him entirely." He paused, and Royan had listened to these musings so
often before that she could anticipate him. "What about the American? He is a famous
collector." She forestalled him. "Peter Walsh is a difficult man to work with.
His passion to accumulate makes him unscrupulous. He frightens me a
little." "So who does that leave?" she asked. He did not answer for they both knew the answer to
her question. Instead he turned his attention back to the material mat littered
the working table. "It looks so innocent, so mundane. An old
papyrus scroll, a few photographs and notebooks, a computer print-out. It is
difficult to believer how dangerous these might be in the wrong hands." He
sighed again. "You might almost say that they are deadly dangerous." Then he laughed. "I am being fanciful. Perhaps
it is the late hour. Shall we get back to work? We can worry about these other
matters once we have worked out all the conundrums set for us by this old
rogue, Taita, and completed the translation." He picked up the top photograph from the pile in
front of him. It was an extract from the central section of the scroll.
"It is the worst luck that the damaged piece of papyrus falls where it
does." He picked up his reading glasses and placed them on his nose before
he read aloud. "There are many steps to ascend on the
staircase to the abode of Hapi. With much hardship and endeavour we reached the
second step and proceeded no further, for it was here that the prince received
a divine revelation. In a dream his father, the dead God Pharaoh visited him
and commanded him, 'I have travelled far and I am grown weary. It is here that
I will rest for all eternity.' " Duraid removed his glasses and looked across at
Royan. "The second step. It is a very precise description for once. Taita
is not being his usual devious self." "Let's go back to the satellite
photographs," Royan suggested, and drew the glossy sheets toward her.
Duraid came around the table to stand behind her. "To me it seems most logical that the natural
feature that would obstruct them in the gorge would be something like a set of
rapids or a waterfall. If it were the second waterfall that would put them
here—" Royan placed her finger on a spot on the satellite photograph where
the narrow snake of the river threaded itself through the dark massifs of the
mountains on either hand. At that moment she was distracted and she lifted
her head. "Listen!" Her voice changed, sharpening with alarm. "What is it?" Duraid looked up also. "The dog." She answered. "That damn mongrel." He agreed.
"It's always making the night hideous with its yapping. I have promised
myself to get rid of it." At that moment the lights went out. They froze with surprise in the darkness. The soft
thudding of the decrepit diesel generator in its shed at the back of the palm
grove had ceased. It was so much a part of the oasis night that they noticed it
only when it was silent. Their eyes adjusted to the faint starlight that
came in through the terrace doors. Duraid crossed the room and took the oil
lamp down from the shelf beside the door where it waited for just such a
contingency. He lit it, and looked across at Royan with an expression of
comical resignation. "I will have to go down—" "Duraid." She interrupted him. "The
dog!" He listened for a moment, and his expression
changed to mild concern. The dog was silent out there in the night. "I am sure it is nothing to be alarmed
about." He went to the door, and for no good reason she suddenly called
after him. "Duraid, be careful!" He shrugged
dismissively and stepped out onto the terrace. She thought for an instant that it was the shadow
of the vine over the trellis moving in the night breeze off the desert, but the
night was still. Then she realized that it was a human figure crossing the
flagstones silently and swiftly,coming in behind Duraid as he skirted the fish
pond in the centre of the paved terrace. "Duraid!" She screamed a warning, and he
spun around, lifting the lamp high. "Who are you?" he shouted. "What do
you want here?" The intruder closed with him silently. The
traditional full length dishdaasha robe swirled around his legs, and the white
ghutrah head cloth covered his head. In the light of the lamp Duraid saw that
he had drawn the corner of the head cloth over his face to mask his features. The intruder's back was turned towards her so Royan
did not see the knife in his right hand, but she could not mistake the upward
stabbing motion that he aimed at Duraid's stomach. Duraid grunted with pain and
doubled up at the blow, and his attacker drew the blade free and stabbed again,
but this time Duraid dropped the lamp and seized the knife arm. The flame of the fallen oil lamp was guttering and
flaring. The two men struggled in the gloom, but Royan saw a dark stain
spreading over her husband's white shirt front. "Run!" He bellowed at her. "Go!
fetch help! I cannot hold him—" The Duraid she knew was a gentle person, a
soft man of books and learning. She could see that he was outmatched by his
assailant. The pain roused Duraid. It had to be that intense
to bring him back from that far place on the very edge of life to which he had
drifted. He groaned. The first thing he was aware of as he
regained consciousness was the smell of his own flesh burning, and then the
agony struck him with full force. A violent tremor shook his whole body and he
opened his eyes and looked down at himself. His clothing was blackening and smouldering, and
the pain was as nothing he had ever experienced in his entire life. He realized
in a vague way that the room was on fire all around him. Smoke and waves of
heat washed over him so that he could barely make out the shape of the doorway
through them. The pain was so terrible that he wanted it to end.
He wanted to die then and not to have to endure it further. Then he remembered
Royan. He tried to say her name through his scorched and blackened lips but no
sound came. Only the thought of her gave him the strength to
move. He rolled over once and the heat attacked his back that up until that
moment had been shielded. He groaned aloud and rolled again, just a little
nearer to the doorway. Each movement was a mighty effort and evoked fresh
paroxysms of agony, but when he rolled onto his back again he realized that a
gale of fresh air was being sucked through the open doorway to feed the flames.
A lungful of the sweet desert air revived him and gave him just sufficient
strength to lunge down the step onto the cool stones of the terrace. His
clothes and his body were still on fire. He beat feebly at his chest to try to
extinguish them but his hands were black burning claws. Then he remembered the fish pond. The thought of
plunging his tortured body into that cold water spurred him to one last effort
and he wriggled and wormed his way across the flags like a snake with a crushed
spine. The pungent smoke from his still cremating flesh
choked him and he coughed weakly, but kept doggedly on. He left slabs of his
own grilled skin on the stone coping as he rolled across it and flopped into
the pond. There was a hiss of steam and a pale cloud of it obscured his vision
so that for a moment he thought he was blinded. The agony of cold water on his
raw burned flesh was so intense that he slid back over the edge of
consciousness. When he came back to reality through the dark
clouds he raised his dripping head, and he saw a figure staggering up the steps
at the far end of the terrace, coming up out of the garden. For a moment he thought it was a phantom of his
agony, but when the light of the burning villa fell full upon her, he
recognized Royan. Her wet hair hung in tangled disarray over her face, and her
clothing was torn and running with lake water and stained with mud and green
algae. Her right arm was wrapped in muddy rags and her blood oozed through,
diluted pink by the dirty water. She did not see him. She stopped in the centre of
the terrace and stared in horror into the burning room. It was like looking
into the depths of a furnace, and she believed Duraid must still be in there.
She started forward but the heat was like a solid wall and it stopped her dead.
At that moment the roof collapsed, sending a roaring column of sparks and
flames high into the night sky. She backed away from it, shielding her face
with an upraised arm. Duraid tried to call to her but no sound issued
from his smoke-scorched throat. Royan turned away and started down the steps.
He realized that she must be going to call help. Duraid made a supreme effort
and a crow-like croak came out between his black and blistered lips. Royan spun around and stared at him, and then she
screamed. His head was not human. His hair was gone, frizzled away, and his
skin hung in tatters from his cheeks and chin. Patches of raw meat showed
through the black crusted mask. She backed away from him as though he were some
hideous monster. "Royan." He croaked and his voice was
just recognizable. He lifted one hand towards her in appeal and she ran to the
pond and seized the outstretched hand. "In the name of the Virgin, what have they
done to you?" She sobbed, but when she tried to pull him from the pond the
skin of his hand came away in hers in a single piece, like some horrible
surgical rubber glove, leaving the bleeding claw naked and raw. Royan fell on her knees beside the coping and
leaned over the pond to take him in her arms. She knew that she did not have
the strength to lift him out without doing him further dreadful injury. All she
could do was hold him and try to comfort him. She realized that he was dying;
no man could survive such fearsome injury. "They will come soon to help us," she
whispered to him in Arabic. "Someone must see the flames. Be brave, my
husband, help will come very soon." He was twitching and convulsing in her arm,
tortured by his mortal injuries and racked by the effort to speak. "The scroll?" His voice was barely
intelligible. Royan looked up at the holocaust that enveloped their home, and
she shook her head. "It's gone," she said. "Burned or
stolen." "Don't give it up." He mumbled, "All
our work—" "It's gone," she repeated. "No one will
believe us without—" " No." His voice was faint but fierce.''
For me, my last—'' "Don't say that." She pleaded, "You will be
all right." "Promise." He demanded, "Promise me!"
"We have no sponsor. I am alone. I cannot dp it alone."
"Harper!" he said. Royan leaned closer so that her ear touched his
fire-ravaged lips. "I don't understand." She told him.
"Harper." He repeated, "Strong—hard—clever man—" and she
understood then. Harper was the fourth and last name on the list of sponsors
that he had drawn up. Although he was the last on the list, somehow she had
always known that Duraid's order of preference was inverted. Nicholas
Quenton-Harper was his first choice. He had spoken so often of this man with
respect and warmth, and sometimes even with awe. "But what do I tell him? He does not know me.
How will I convince him? The seventh Scroll is gone—" "Trust him." He whispered, "Good
man. Trust him—" There was a terrible appeal in his, "Promise
me!" Then she remembered the notebook in the Giza flat,
and the Taita material on the hard drive of her P.C. Not everything was gone.
"Yes," she agreed, "I promise you, My Husband, I promise
you." THE SEVENTH SCROLL BY WILBUR SMITH— A MAY HARDCOVER FROM ST. MARTIN'S PRESS! WILBUR SMITH has written twenty-four novels,
meticulously researched during his numerous world-wide expeditions. His books are now
published in twenty-seven countries and have sold more than 65 million copies. RIVER GOD Wilbur Smith This book, like so many others before it, is for my
wife, Danielle Antoinette. The Nile that flows through this story has both of
us in her thrall. We have spent days of delight voyaging together upon her
waters and idling upon her banks. As we are, so is she a creature of this very
Africa of ours. Yet this great river runs neither so strongly nor
so deeply as my love for you, my darling.
THE RIVER LAY HEAVILY UPON THE desert, bright as a
spill of molten metal from a furnace. The sky smoked with heat-haze and the sun
beat down upon it all with the strokes of a coppersmith's hammer, hi the mirage
the gaunt hills flanking the Lostris was fourteen years of age. The I remember her so vividly on that day. She would
grow more beautiful as the years passed, become more poised and regal, but
never again would that glow of virgin womanhood radiate from her so
overpoweringly. Every man aboard, even the warriors at the rowing-benches, were
aware of it. Neither I nor any one of them could keep our gaze off her. She
filled me with a sense of my own inadequacy and a deep and poignant longing;
for although I am a eunuch I was gelded only after I had known the joy of a
woman's body. Taita,' she called to me, 'sing with me!' And when
I obeyed she smiled with pleasure. My voice was one of the many reasons that,
whenever she was able, she kept me near her; my tenor complemented her lovely
soprano to perfection. We sang one of the old peasant love songs that I had
taught her, and which was still one of her favourites: My heart flutters up like a wounded quail when I see my beloved's face and my cheeks bloom like the dawn sky to the sunshine of his smile— From the stern another voice joined with ours. It was
a man's voice, deep and powerful, but it lacked the clarity and purity of my
own. If my voice was that of a dawn-greeting thrush, men this was the voice of
a young lion. Lostris turned her head and now her smile shimmered
like the sunbeams on the surface of the Tanus' father, Pianki, Lord Harrab, had been one of
the grandees of the Egyptian nobility, but his mother had been the daughter of
a freed Tehenu slave. Like so many of her people, she had been fair-headed and
blue-eyed. She had died of the swamp fever while Tanus was still a child, so my
memory of her was imperfect. However, the old women said that seldom before had
such beauty as hers been seen in either of the two kingdoms. On the other hand, I had known and admired Tanus'
father, before he lost all his vast fortune and the great estates that had once
almost rivalled those of Pharaoh himself. He had been of dark complexion, with
Egyptian eyes the colour of polished obsidian, a man with more physical
strength than beauty, but with a generous and noble heart—some might say too generous
and too trusting, for he had died destitute, with his heart broken by those he
had thought his friends, alone in the darkness, cut off from the sunshine of
Pharaoh's favour. Thus it seemed that Tanus had inherited the best
from both his parents, except only worldly wealth, hi nature and in power he
was as his father; in beauty as his mother. So why should I resent my mistress
loving him? I loved him also, and, poor neutered thing that I am, I knew that I
could never have her for myself, not even if the gods had raised my status
above that of slave. Yet such is the perversity of human nature that I hungered
for what I could never have and dreamed of the impossible. Lostris sat on her cushion on the prow with her
slave girls sprawled at her feet, two little black girls from Cush, lithe as
panthers, entirely naked except for the golden collars around their necks.
Lostris herself wore only a skirt of bleached linen, crisp and white as an
egret's wing. The skin of her upper body, caressed by the sun, was the colour
of oiled cedar wood from the mountains beyond Byblos. Her breasts were the size
and shape of ripe figs just ready for plucking, and tipped with rose garnets. She had set aside her formal wig, and wore her natural
hair in a side-lock that fell in a thick dark rope over one breast. The slant
of her eyes was enhanced by the silver-green of powdered malachite cunningly
touched to the upper lids. The colour of her eyes was green also, but the
darker, clearer green of the Nile when its waters have shrunk and deposited
their burden of precious silts. Between her breasts, suspended on a gold chain,
she wore a figurine of Hapi, the goddess of the Nile, fashioned in gold and
precious lapis lazuli. Of course it was a superb piece, for I had made it with
my own hands for her. Suddenly Tanus lifted his right hand with the fist
clenched. As a single man the rowers checked their stroke and held the blades
of their paddles aloft, glinting in the sunlight and dripping water. Then Tanus
thrust the steering-oar hard over, and the men on the port bank stabbed their
backstroke deeply, creating a series of tiny whirlpools in the surface of the
green water. The starboard side pulled strongly ahead. The boat spun so sharply
that the deck canted over at an alarming angle. Then both banks pulled together
and she shot forward. The sharp prow, with the blue eyes of Horus emblazoned
upon it, brushed aside the dense stands of papyrus, and she lanced her way out
of the flow of the river and into the still waters of the lagoon beyond. Lostris broke off the song and shaded her eyes to
gaze ahead. 'There they are!' she cried, and pointed with a graceful little
hand. The other boats of Tanus' squadron were cast like a net across the
southern reaches of the lagoon, blocking the main entrance to the great river,
cutting off any escape in that direction. Naturally, Tanus had chosen for himself the
northern station, for he knew that this was where the sport would be most
furious. I wished it was not so. Not that I am a coward, but I have always the
safety of my mistress to consider. She had inveigled herself aboard the Breath
of Horus only after much intrigue in which, as always, she had deeply
involved me. When her father learned, as he surely would, of her presence in
the thick of the hunt, it would go badly enough for me, but if he learned also
that I was responsible for allowing her to be in the company of Tanus for a
full day, not even my privileged position would protect me from his wrath. His
instructions to me regarding this young man were unequivocal. However, I seemed to be the only soul aboard the Breath
of Horus who was perturbed. The others were simmering with excitement.
Tanus checked the rowers with a peremptory hand-signal, and the boat glided to
a halt and lay rocking gently upon the green waters that were so still that
when I glanced overboard and saw my own reflection look back at me, I was
struck, as always, by how well my beauty had carried over the years. To me it
seemed that my face was more lovely than the cerulean blue lotus blooms that
framed it. I had little time to admire it, however, for the crew were all
abustle. One of Tanus' staff officers ran up his personal
standard to the masthead. It was the image of a blue crocodile, with its great
coxcombed tail held erect and its jaws open. Only an officer of the rank of
Best of Ten Thousand was entitled to his own standard. Tanus had achieved such
rank, together with the command of the Blue Crocodile division of Pharaoh's own
elite guard, before his twentieth birthday. Now the standard at the masthead was the signal for
the hunt to begin. On the horizon of the lagoon the rest of the squadron were
tiny with distance, but their paddles began to beat rhythmically, rising and
falling like the wings of wild geese in flight, glistening in the sunlight.
From their sterns the multiple wavelets of their wakes were drawn out across
the placid waters and lay for a long while on the surface, as though moulded
from solid clay. Tanus lowered the gong over the stem. It was a long
bronze tube. He allowed the end of it to sink below the surface. When struck
with a hammer of the same metal the shrill, reverberating tones would be
transmitted through the water, filling our quarry with consternation. Unhappily
for my equanimity, I knew that this could readily turn to a murderous rage. Tanus laughed at me. Even in his own excitation he
had sensed my qualms. For a rude soldier he had unusual perception. 'Come up
here in the stern-tower, Taita!' he ordered. 'You can beat the gong for us. It
will take your mind off the safety of your own beautiful hide for a while.' I was hurt by his levity, but relieved by the
invitation, for the stern-tower is high above the water. I moved to do his
bidding without undignified haste, and,'as I passed him, I paused to exhort him
sternly, 'Have a care for the safety of my mistress. Do you hear me, boy? Do
not encourage her to recklessness, for she is every bit as wild as you are.' I
could speak thus to an illustrious commander of ten thousand, for he was once
my pupil and I had wielded the cane on more than one occasion across those
martial buttocks. He grinned at me now as he had in those days, as cocky and
impudent as ever. 'Leave that lady in my hands, I implore you, old
friend. There is nothing I would relish more, believe me!' I did not admonish
him for such a disrespectful tone, for I was in some small haste to take my
place in the tower. From there I watched him take up his bow. Already that bow was famous throughout the army,
indeed throughout the length of the great river from the cataracts to the sea.
I had designed it for him when he had grown dissatisfied with the puny weapons
that, up until that time, were all that were available to him. I had suggested
that we should try to fashion a bow with some new material other than those
feeble woods that grow in our narrow riverine valley; perhaps with exotic
timbers such as the heart-wood of the olive from the land of the Hittites or of
the ebony from Cush; or with even stranger materials such as the horn of the
rhinoceros or the ivory tusk of the elephant. No sooner had we made the attempt than we came upon
a myriad of problems, the first of which was the brittleness of these exotic
materials. In their natural state none of them would bend without cracking, and
only the largest and therefore the most expensive elephant tusk would allow us
to carve a complete bowstock from it. I solved both these problems by splitting
the ivory of a smaller tusk into slivers and gluing these together in
sufficient girth and bulk to form a full bow. Unfortunately it was too rigid
for any man to draw. However, from there it was an easy and natural step
to laminate together all four of our chosen materials—olive wood, ebony, horn
and ivory. Of course, there were many months of experimentation with
combinations of these materials, and with various types of glue to hold them
together. We never did succeed in making a glue strong enough. In the end I
solved this last problem by binding the entire bowstock with electrum wire to
prevent it from flying apart. I had two big men assist Tanus in twisting the
wire on to it with all their combined strength, while the glue was still hot.
When it cooled, it set to an almost perfect combination of strength and pliability. Then I cut strands from the gut of a great
black-maned lion that Tanus hunted and killed with his bronze-bladed war spear
out in the desert. These I tanned and twisted together to form a bowstring. The
result was this gleaming arc of such extraordinary power that only one man out
of all the hundreds who had made the attempt could draw it to full stretch. The regulation style of archery as taught by the
army instructors was to face the target and draw the nocked arrow to the
sternum of the chest, hold that aim for a deliberate pause, then loose on
command. However, not even Tanus had the strength to draw this bow and hold his
aim steadily. He was forced to develop a completely new style. Standing
sideways to the target, addressing it over his left shoulder, he would throw up
the bow with his left arm outstretched and, with a convulsive heave, draw back
the arrow until the feathered flights touched his lips and the muscles of his
arms and chest stood proud with the effort. In that same instant of full extension,
seemingly without aiming, he would loose. At first, his arrovlfe flew at random as wild bees
leave the hive, but he practised day after day and month after month. The fingers of his right hand became raw and
bleeding from the chafing of the bowstring, but they healed and toughened. The
inside of his left forearm was bruised and excoriated where the bowstring
slashed past it on the release of the arrow, but I fashioned a leather guard to
protect it. And Tanus stood at the butts and practised and practised. Even I lost confidence in his ability to master the
weapon but Tanus never gave up. Slowly, agonizingly slowly, he gained control
of it to the point where, finally, he could launch three arrows with such
rapidity that they were all in the air at the same instant. At least two of the
three would strike the target, a copper disc the size of a man's head set up at
a distance of fifty paces from where Tanus stood. Such was the force of those
arrows that they would fly cleanly through the metal which was the thickness of
my little finger. Tanus named this mighty weapon Lanata which was,
quite coincidentally, the discarded baby-name of my mistress. Now he stood in
the bows with the woman at his side, and her namesake in his left hand. They
made a marvellous couple, but too obviously so for my peace of mind. I called sharply, 'Mistress! Come back here
immediately! It is unsafe where you are.' She did not even deign to glance over
her shoulder, but made a sign at me behind her back. Every one of the crew of
the galley saw it, and the boldest of them guffawed. One of those little black
vixens that were her handmaidens must have taught Lostris that gesture, which
was more appropriate to the ladies of the riverside taverns than to a high-born
daughter of the House of Intef. I considered remonstrating with her, but at
once abandoned such an imprudent course, for my mistress is amenable to
restraint only in certain of her moods. Instead, I applied myself to beating
the bronze gong with sufficient vigour to disguise my chagrin. The shrill, reverberating tone carried across the
glassy waters of the lagoon, and instantly the air was filled with the
susurration of wings and a shade was cast over the sun as, from the papyrus beds
and the hidden pools and open water, a vast cloud of water-fowl rose into the
sky. They were of a hundred varieties: black and white ibis with vulturine
heads, sacred to the goddess of the river; flights of honking geese in russet
plumage, each with a ruby droplet in the centre of its chest; herons of
greenish-blue or midnight black, with bills like swords and ponderous
wing-beats; and ducks in such profusion that their numbers challenged the eye
and the credibility of the beholder. Wild-fowling is one of the most ardent pursuits of
the Egyptian nobility, but that day we were after different game. At that
moment, I saw far ahead a disturbance upon the glassy surface. It was weighty
and massive, and my spirits quailed, for I knew what terrible beast had moved
there. Tanus also had seen it, but his reaction was altogether different from
mine. He gave tongue like a hunting hound, and his men shouted with him and
bent to their paddles. The Breath ofHorus shot forward as though she were one
of the birds that darkened the sky above us, and my mistress shrieked with
excitement and beat with one small fist upon Tanus' muscled shoulder. The waters roiled once more and Tanus signalled to
his steersman to follow the movement, while I hammered upon the gong to bolster
and sustain my courage. We reached the spot where last we had seen movement,
and the vessel glided to a standstill while every man upon her decks gazed
around eagerly. I alone glanced directly over the stem. The water
beneath our hull was shallow and almost as clear as the air above us. I
shrieked as loudly and as shrilly as my mistress had and leapt back from the
stem-rail, for the monster was directly under us. The hippopotamus is the familiar of Hapi, the
goddess of the Nile. It was only with her special dispensation that we could
hunt it. To that end Tanus had prayed and sacrificed at the goddess's temple
that morning, with my mistress close by his side. Of course, Hapi is her patron
goddess, but I doubted that alone was the reason for her avid participation in
the ceremony. The beast that I saw beneath us now was an enormous
old bull. To my eye, he seemed as large as our galley, a gigantic shape that
lumbered along the bottom of the lagoon, his movements slowed down by the drag
of the water so that he moyed like a creature from a nightmare. He raised puffs
of mud from beneath his hooves the same way that a wild oryx stirs the dust as
it races across the desert sands. With the steering-oar Tanus spun the boat about and
we sped after the bull. But even at that slow and mannered gallop he rapidly
drew away from us. His dark shape faded into the green depths of the lagoon
ahead of us. 'Pull! By Seth's foul breath, pull!' Tanus howled
at his men, but when one of his officers shook out the knotted lash of the whip,
Tanus frowned and shook his head. I have never seen him ply the lash where it
was not warranted. Suddenly the bull broke through the surface ahead
of us and blew a great cloud of fetid steam from his lungs. The stink of it
washed over us, even though he was well out of bowshot. For a moment his back
formed a gleaming granite island in the lagoon, then he drew a whistling breath
and with a swirl was gone again. 'After him!' Tanus bellowed. 'There he is,' I cried, as I pointed over the side,
'he's doubling back.' 'Well done, old friend,' Tanus laughed at me,
'we'll make a warrior of you yet.' That notion was ridiculous, for I am a
scribe, a sage and an artist. My heroics are of the mind. None the less, I felt
a thrill of pleasure, as I always do at Tanus' praise, and my trepidation was,
for the moment, lost in the excitement of the chase. To the south of us the other galleys of the
squadron had joined the hunt. The priests of Hapi had kept a strict count of
the number of these great beasts in the lagoon, and had given sanction for
fifty of them to be slaughtered for the coming festival of Osiris. This would
leave almost three hundred of the goddess's flock remaining in the temple
lagoon, a number that the priests considered ideal to keep the waterways free
of choking weed, to prevent the papyrus beds from encroaching upon the arable
lands and to provide a regular supply of meat for the temple. Only the priests
themselves were allowed to eat the flesh of the hippopotamus outside the ten
days of the festival of Osiris. So the hunt spun out across the waters like some
intricate dance, with the ships of the squadron weaving and pirouetting while
the frenzied beasts fled before them, diving and blowing and grunting as they
surfaced to dive again. Yet each dive was shorter than the last, and the
swirling breaches at the surface became more frequent as their lungs were
emptied and could not be fully recharged before the pursuing ships bore down
upon them and forced them to dive again. All the while the bronze gongs in the
stern-tower of each galley rang out to blend with the excited cries of the
rowers and the exhortations of the helmsmen. All was wild uproar and confusion
and I found myself shouting and cheering along with the most bloodthirsty of
them. Tanus had concentrated all his attention on the
first and largest bull. He ignored the females and younger animals that
breached within bowshot, and followed the great beast through all his
convolutions, drawing inexorably closer to him each time he surfaced. Even in my
excitation I could not but admire the skill with which Tanus handled the Breath
of Horus and the manner in which his crew responded to his signals. But
then, he always had the knack of getting the very best out of those he
commanded. How otherwise, with neither fortune nor great patron to sustain him,
could he have risen so swiftly to exalted rank? What he had achieved he had
done on his own merit, and that despite the malignant influence of hidden
enemies who had placed every obstacle in his way. Suddenly the bull burst through the surface not
thirty paces from the bows. He came out gleaming in the sunshine, monstrous
black and awful, clouds of steamy vapour spurting from his nostrils like that
creature from the underworld that devours the hearts of those who are found
wanting by the gods. Tanus had an arrow nocked and now he threw up the
great bow and loosed it in the same fleeting instant. Lanata played her
dreadful shimmering music, and the arrow leaped out in a blur that deceived the
eye. While it still hissed in flight, another followed it and then another. The
bowstring hummed like a lute, and the arrows struck one after the other. The
bull bellowed as they buried themselves full-length in his broad back, and he
dived again. These were missiles that I had devised especially
for this occasion. The feathered flights had been removed from the arrows and
replaced by tiny floats of baobab wood such as the fisherman use to buoy their
nets. They slipped over the butt of the shaft in such a way that they were
secure in flight but would become dislodged once the beast dived and dragged
them through the water. They were attached to the bronze arrow-head by a fine
linen thread that was wound around the shaft, but which unravelled once the
float was detached. So now, as the bull sped away beneath the water, the three
tiny floats popped to the surface and bobbed along behind him. I had painted
them bright yellow so that the eye was drawn to them and the bull's position
was instantly revealed, even though he was deep in the lagoon. Thus Tanus was able to anticipate each of the
bull's wild rushes and to send the Breath of Horus speeding to head him
off and to place another set of arrows deep in the glistening black back as it
bulged out of the water. By now the bull was towing a garland of pretty yellow
corks behind him, and the waters were streaking and swirling red with his
blood. Despite the wild emotions of the moment I could not help but feel pity
for the stricken creature each time it came bellowing to the surface to be met
by another hail of the deadly hissing arrows. My sympathy was not shared by my
young mistress, who was in the very thick of the fray and shrieking with the
delicious terror and excitement of it all. Once again the bull came up dead ahead, but this
time facing the Breath of Horus as she bore down upon him. His jaws
gaped so wide that I could see far down his throat. It was a tunnel of bright
red flesh that could easily have engulfed a man entirely. The jaws were lined
with such an array of fangs that my breath stopped and my flesh chilled. In his
bottom jaw they were huge ivory sickles designed to harvest the tough and
sinewy stalks of standing papyrus. In his upper jaw they were gleaming white
shafts as thick as my wrist that could shear through the hull timbers of the Breath
of Horus as easily as I would bite through a cake of cornflour. I had
recently had the opportunity of examining the corpse of a peasant woman who,
while cutting papyrus on the river-bank, had disturbed a cow hippo that had just
given birth to a calf. The woman had been severed in half so neatly that it
seemed she had been struck with the keenest of bronze blades. Now this enraged monster with his maw filled with
these gleaming teeth was bearing down upon us, and even though I was high in
the stem-tower and as far from him as I could possibly be, yet I found myself
as incapable of sound or movement as a temple statue, frozen with terror. Tanus loosed yet another arrow which flew squarely
down the gaping throat, yet the creature's agony was already so terrible that
he seemed not to notice this further injury, although it must eventually prove
fatal. He charged without check or hesitation straight at the bows of the Breath
of Horus. Such a fearsome roar of fury and of mortal anguish issued from
the tortured throat that an artery ruptured deep within it and gouts of blood
were sent spraying from his open jaws. The spewing blood turned to clouds of
red mist in the sunlight, both beautiful and horrible at the same time. Then
the bull crashed headlong into the bows of our galley. The Breath of Horus was cutting through the
water at the speed of a running gazelle, but the bull was even swifter in his
rage and his bulk was so solid that it seemed as though we had run aground on a
rocky shore. The rowers were sent sprawling from their benches, while I was
hurled forwards with such force against the rail of the stern-tower that the
air was driven from my lungs and replaced by a solid rock of pain in my chest. Yet even in rny own distress my concern was all for
my mistress. Through tears of agony I saw her flung forward by the impact,
'fcnus threw out his arm to try to save her, but he was also off-balance from
the shock, and the bow in his left hand hindered him. He was only able to check
her impetus for a moment, but then she teetered at the rail with her arms
windmilling desperately, and her back arched out over the drop. 'Tanus!' she screamed, and reached out one hand to
him. He recovered his balance with the nimbleness of an acrobat and tried to
catch her hand. For an instant their fingers touched, then it seemed that she
was plucked away and dashed over the side. From my elevated position in the stern I was able
to follow her fall. She flipped over in the air like a cat, and the white skirts
streamed upwards to expose the exquisite length of her thighs. To me it seemed
that she fell for ever, and my own anguished cry blended with her despairing
wail. 'My baby!' I cried. 'My little one!' For I was
certain that she was lost. It seemed that all 'her life, as I had known it,
replayed itself before my eyes. I saw her again as a toddling infant and heard
the baby endearments that she bestowed on me, her adoring nursemaid. I saw her
grow to womanhood, and I remembered every joy and every heartache that she had
caused me. I loved her then in the moment of losing her even more than I had
done in all those fourteen long years. She fell upon the vast, blood-splattered back of
the infuriated bull, and for an instant lay spread-eagled there like a human sacrifice
upon the altar of some obscene religion. The bull whirled about, mounting high
out of the water, and he twisted his huge deformed head backwards, trying to
reach her. His bloodshot piggy eyes glared with the insanity of his rage, and
his great jaws clashed as he snapped at her. Somehow Lostris managed to gather herself and cling
to a pair of the arrow-shafts that protruded from the bull's broad back as
though they were handles. She lay with her arms and legs spread wide. She was
not screaming now, all her art and strength employed in staying alive. Those
curved ivory fangs rang upon each other like the blades of duelling warriors as
they gnashed in air. At each bite they seemed to miss her by only a
finger's-breadth, and any instant I expected one of her lovely limbs to be
pruned away like a delicate shoot from the vine, and to see her sweet young
blood mingle with those brutish effusions that streamed from the bull's wounds. In the prow Tanus recovered swiftly. For an instant
I saw his face and it was terrible. He tossed aside the bow, for it was useless
to him now, and he seized instead the hilt of his sword and jerked the blade
free of its crocodile-skin scabbard. It was a gleaming length of bronze as long
as his arm, and the edges were honed until they could shave the hair from the
back of his hand. He leaped up on to the gunwale and balanced there
for an instant, watching the wild gyrations of the mortally wounded bull in the
water below him. Then he launched himself outwards and dropped like a stooping
falcon with the sword held in both hands and pointing downwards. He dropped across the bull's thick neck, landing
astride it as though he were about to ride it into the underworld. The full weight of his body and the impetus of that
wild leap were behind the sword as he struck. Half the length of the blade was
driven into the hippopotamus's neck at the base of the skull, and, seated upon
it like a rider, Tanus worried and worked the keen bronze deeper, using both
arms and the strength of those broad shoulders. At the goad of the blade the
bull went berserk. His strivings up to that point seemed feeble in comparison
to this fresh outburst. The bull reared most of his enormous bulk out of the
lagoon, swinging his head from side to side, throwing solid sheets of water so
high in the air that they crashed down on the deck of the galley and, like a
curtain, almost obscured the scene from my horrified gaze. Through it all I watched the couple on the
monster's back tossed about mercilessly. The shaft of one of the arrows that
Lostris was holding snapped, and she was almost thrown clear. If this had
happened she would surely have been savaged by the bull and chopped into bloody
tatters by those ivory fangs. Tanus reached backwards and with one arm seized
and steadied her, while with his right hand he never ceased working the broifce
blade deeper into the nape of the bull's neck. Unable to reach them, the hippopotamus slashed at
his own flanks, inflicting terrible gaping wounds in his sides so that for
fifty paces around the galley the waters were incarnadined, and both Lostris
and Tanus were painted entirely crimson from the tops of their heads to the
soles of their feet by the spurting blood. Then- faces were turned to grotesque
masks from which their eyes whitely glared. The violent death-throes of the bull had carried
them far from the galley's side, and I was the first aboard to recover my wits.
I yelled to the rowers, 'Follow them! Don't let them get away,' and they sprang
to their stations and sent the Breath of Horus in pursuit. At that instant it seemed that the point of Tanus'
blade must have found the joint of the vertebrae in the breast's neck and
slipped through. The immense carcass stiffened and froze. The bull rolled on to
his back with all four legs extended rigidly, and he plunged below the waters
of the lagoon, bearing Lostris and Tanus with him into the depths. I choked back the wail of despair that rose in my
throat, and bellowed an order to the deck below. 'Back-water! Do not overrun
them! Swimmers to the bows!' Even I was startled by the power and authority of
my own voice. The galley's forward way was checked, and before I
could reflect on the prudence of what I was doing, I found myself heading a
rush of hulking warriors across the deck. They would probably have cheered
while they watched any other officer drown, but not their Tanus. As for myself, I had already stripped off my skirt
and was naked. Not the threat of a hundred lashes would have made me do this in
any other circumstances, for I have let only one other person ever see those
injuries that the state executioner inflicted upon me so long ago, and he was
the one who had ordered the castrating knife used upon me in the first place.
But now, for once, I was totally oblivious of the gross mutilation of my
manhood. I am a strong swimmer, and although in retrospect
such foolhardiness makes me shudder, I truly believe that I might have dived
over the side and swum down through those blood-dyed waters in an attempt to
rescue my mistress. However, as I poised myself at the ship's rail, the waters
directly below me opened and two heads bobbed out, both of them streaming water
and as close as a pair of mating otters. One was dark and the other fair, but
from both of them issued the most unlikely sound I had ever heard. They were
laughing. They were howling and shrieking and spluttering with laughter as they
floundered towards the ship's side, locked so firmly in each other's arms that
I was certain that they were in real danger of drowning one another. All my concern turned instantly to outrage at this
levity, and at the thought of the dreadful folly which I had been on the point
of committing. Like a mother whose first instinct on finding her lost child is
to thrash it, I heard my own voice lose all its previous deep authority and
turn shrill and querulous. I was still berating my mistress with all my famous
eloquence as she and Tanus were dragged by a dozen willing hands from the water
on to the deck. 'You reckless, unbridled little savage!' I railed
at her. 'You thoughtless, selfish, undisciplined little hoyden! You promised
me! You swore an oath on the maidenhead of the goddess—' She ran to me and threw both arms around my neck.
'Oh, Taita!' she cried, still bubbling with laughter. 'Did you see him? Did you
see Tanus spring to my rescue? Was it not the noblest deed that ever you heard
of? Just like the hero of one of your very best stories.' The fact that I had been on the point of making a
similar heroic gesture was quite ignored, and this only increased my
irritation. Added to which I suddenly realized that Lostris had lost her skirt,
and that the cold, wet body she pressed to mine was entirely naked. She was
displaying to the rude gaze of officers and men the neatest, tightest pair of
buttocks in all Egypt. I snatched up the nearest shield and used it to
cover both our bodies while I shouted at her slave girls to find another skirt
for her. Their giggles only increased my fury, and as soon as both Lostris and
I were once again decently covered, I rounded on Tanus. 'As for you, you careless ruffian, I shall report
you to my Lord Intef! He will have the skin flogged from your back.' 'You will do no sucff thing,' Tanus laughed at me,
and threw one wet muscled arm around my shoulders to hug me so soundly that I
was lifted off my feet, 'for he would have you flogged just as merrily.
Nevertheless, thank you for your concern, old friend.' He looked around quickly, with one arm still
encircling my shoulder, and frowned. The Breath of Horus was separated
from the other ships of the squadron, but by now the hunt was over. Every
galley but ours had taken its full share of the bag that the priests had
sanctioned us. Tanus shook his head. 'We did not make the most of
our chances, did we?' he grunted, and ordered one of his officers to hoist the
recall signal to the squadron. Then he forced a smile. 'Let us broach a jug of
beer together, for now we have a while to wait and this has been thirsty work.'
He went to the bows where the slave girls were fussing over Lostris. At first I
was still so angry that I would not join their impromptu picnic on the deck.
Instead I maintained an aloof dignity in the stern. 'Oh, let him sulk a while,' I heard Lostris'
stage-whisper to Tanus as she recharged his cup with foaming beer. "The
old darling gave himself an awful scare, but he will get over it as soon as he
is hungry. He does so love his food.' She is the epitome of injustice, is my mistress. I
never sulk, I am no glutton, and at that time I was barely thirty years of age,
although to a fourteen-year-old anyone above twenty is an ancient, and I admit
that, when it comes to food, I do have the refined tastes of a connoisseur. The
roast wild goose with figs that she was ostentatiously displaying was one of my
favourite dishes, as she very well knew. I made them suffer for a while longer, and it was
only when Tanus brought me a jug of beer with his own hand and cajoled me with
all his charm that I deigned to relent a little and let him lead me to the
prow. Still, I was a little stiff with them until Lostris kissed my cheek and
said, loud enough for all to hear, 'My girls tell me that you took command of
the ship like a veteran, and that you would have dived overboard to rescue me.
Oh, Taita, what would I ever do without you?' Only then would I smile at her
and accept the slice of goose she pressed upon me. It was delicious, and the
beer was of three-palm quality. Even so, I ate sparingly, for I have my figure
to consider and her earlier jibe about my appetite still rankled a little. Tanus' squadron was scattered widely across the
lagoon, but now it began to regroup. I saw that some of the other galleys had
suffered damage, as we had. Two ships had collided in the heat of the chase,
while four others had been attacked by the quarry. However, they reassembled
swiftly and took up their battle stations. Then, in line astern and with
strings of gay pennants fluttering at the mastheads to proclaim the size of
each galley's bag, they dashed past us. The crews raised a cheer as they came
level with the Breath of Horus. Tanus saluted them with a clenched fist
and the Blue Crocodile standard was dipped at the masthead, for all the world
as though we had just achieved a famous victory against daunting odds. Boyish
display, perhaps, but then I am still enough of a boy to enjoy military
ceremonial. As soon as it was over, the squadron resumed its
battle stations and was holding its position against the light breeze that had
sprung up, with skilful use of paddles and steering-oars. Of course, there was
no sign of the slaughtered hippopotami as yet. Although every galley had killed
at least one, while some had killed two and even three, the carcasses had all
sunk away into the green depths of the lagoon. I knew that Tanus was secretly
lamenting the fact that the Breath ofHorus had not been the most successful
boat, and that our protracted encounter with the bull had limited our score to
only that single animal. He was accustomed to excelling. Anyway, he was not his
usual ebullient self and he soon left us on the prow and went to supervise the
repairs to the hull of the Breath ofHorus. The bull's charge had sprung the underwater
planking and we were taking enough water to necessitate constant bailing of the
bilges with leather buckets. This was a most inefficient procedure which
diverted men from their duties as rowers and warriors. Surely it could be
improved upon, I thought to myself. So while we waited for the carcasses of the dead
beasts to rise, I sent one of theslave girls to fetch the basket that contained
my writing instruments. Then, after a little further thought, I began to sketch
out an idea for mechanically removing the water from the bilges of a fighting
galley in action, a method which did not demand the efforts of half the crew.
It was based pn the same principle as the shadoof water buckets. I thought that
two men might operate it instead of a dozen at the buckets, as was now the
case. When I had completed the sketch, I pondered on the collision
that had caused the original damage. Historically, the tactics used in battles
between squadrons of river galleys had always been the same as those of land
engagements. The ships would lie alongside each other and exchange volleys of
arrows. They would then close and grapple and board, and finish the business
with the sword. The galley captains were always careful to avoid collision, as
this was considered sloppy seamanship. 'But what if—' I thought suddenly, and I began a
sketch of a galley with a reinforced bow. As the idea took firm root I added a
horn like that of the rhinoceros at the water line. It could be carved from
hardwood and clad with bronze. Angled forwards and slightly downwards, it could
be driven through the hull of an opposing vessel to rip out her belly. I was so
engrossed that I did not hear Tanus come up behind me. He snatched the papyrus
scroll from me and studied it avidly. Of course, he understood instantly what I was
about. When his father had lost his fortune, I had tried everything in my power
to find a rich patron to sponsor him to enter one of the temples as a novice
scribe, there to continue his studies and his learning. For I truly believed
that, with my tutelage, he had every prospect of developing into one of the great
minds of Egypt, perhaps in time a name to rank with that of Imhotep who, one
thousand years before, had designed those first marvellous pyramids at
Saqqarah. I had been unsuccessful, naturally enough, for the same
enemy whose spite and guile had destroyed Tanus' father had set out to bar the
way to Tanus himself. No man in the land could prevail against such a baleful
influence. So instead I had helped Tanus to enter the army. Despite my
disappointment and misgivings, this had been his own choice of career ever
since he had first stood upright and wielded a wooden sword on the other
infants in the playground. 'By the carbuncles on Seth's buttocks!' he
exclaimed now, as he studied my drawings. 'You and that designing brush of
yours are worth ten full squadrons to me!' Tanus' casual blasphemy on the name of the great
god Seth always alarms me. For although both he and I are Horus men, still I do
not believe in flagrantly offering offence to any member of the pantheon of
Egyptian gods. I personally never pass a shrine without offering a prayer or
making a small sacrifice, no matter how humble or unimportant the god it
houses. It is, to my mind, simple common sense and good insurance. One has
sufficient enemies amongst men without deliberately seeking out others amongst
the gods. I am particularly obsequious to Seth, for his formidable reputation
terrifies me. I suspect that Tanus knows all this and deliberately does it to
tease me. However, my discomfort was soon forgotten in the warm glow of his
praise. 'How do you do it?' he demanded. 'I am the soldier,
and today I saw everything that you did. Why did not the same ideas occur to
me?' We were instantly immersed in a lively discussion
of my designs. Of course, Lostris could not be excluded for long, and she came
to join us. Her handmaidens had dried and rebraided her hair and retouched her
make-up. Her loveliness was a distraction, especially since she stood beside me
and nonchalantly draped one slim arm over my shoulder. She would never have
touched a man like that in public, for it would have offended against custom
and modesty. But then I am not a man, and though she leaned against me, her
eyes never left Tanus' face. Her preoccupation with him went back to when she had
first learned to walk. She had stumbled along adoringly behind the lordly
ten-year-old Tanus, faithfully trying to copy his every gesture and word. When
he spat, she spat. When he swore, she lisped the same oath, until Tanus had
complained bitterly to me, 'Can you not make her leave me alone, Taita? She's
just a baby!' He was not doing much complaining now, I noticed. At last we were interrupted by a hail from the
lookout in the bows, and we all hurried forward and peered eagerly across the
lagoon. The first hippopotamus carcass was rising to the surface. It came up
belly first as the gases in its intestines expanded and the guts distended like
a child's balloon made from a goat's bladder. It bobbed on the surface with all
its legs extended stiffly. One of the galleys sped across to recover it. A
saitor scrambled out on to the carcass and secured a line to one of the legs.
As soon as this was done, the galley towed it away towards the distant shore. .
By now the huge corpses were surfacing all around us. The galleys gathered them
up and dragged them away. Tanus secured two of them to our stern-hawser and the
rowers strained at their paddles to move them through the water. As we approached the shore I shaded my eyes against
the slanting sun's rays and peered ahead. It seemed that every man, woman and
child in Upper Egypt was waiting upon the bank. They were a vast multitude,
dancing and singing and waving palm-fronds to welcome the incoming fleet. The
restless movement of their white robes seemed like a storm surf breaking upon
the edge of the placid lagoon. As each galley drew up against the bank, teams of
men clad only in the briefest loin-cloths waded out as deep as their armpits to
fasten ropes to the bloated carcasses, hi their excitement they were oblivious
to the ever-present threat of crocodiles lurking in the opaque green waters.
Every season these ferocious dragons devour hundreds of our people. Sometimes they are so bold that they rush out on to
dry land to seize a child playing near the water's edge or a peasant woman
washing clothes or drawing water for her family. Now, in the vast meat-hunger that gripped them, the
people were interested in only one thing. They seized the ropes and hauled the
carcasses ashore. As they slithered up the muddy bank, scores of tiny silver
fish that had been feasting on the open wounds were slow to relinquish their
hold and were drawn out with the carcasses. Stranded upon the mud-banks, they
flopped and quivered like stars that had fallen to earth. Men and women, all wielding knives or axes, swarmed
like ants over the bodies. In a delirium of greed they howled and snarled at
each other like vultures and hyenas on a lion's kill, disputing each titbit as
they hacked at the gigantic carcasses. Blood and bone chips flew in sheets as
the blades hacked and hewed. There would be long lines of wounded at the temple
that evening, awaiting treatment from the priests for their missing fingers and
gashes down to the bone where the careless blades had slipped. I too would be busy half the night, for in some
quarters I have a reputation as a medical doctor that surpasses even that of
the priests of Osiris. In all modesty I must admit that this reputation is not
entirely unwarranted, and Horus knows my fees are much more reasonable than those
of the holy men. My Lord Intef allows me to keep for myself a third part of all
that I earn. Thus I am a man of some substance, despite my slave status. From the stern-tower of the Breath of Horus
I watched the pantomime of human frailty that was being played out below me.
Traditionally the populace is allowed to eat its fill of the meats of the hunt
upon the foreshore, just as long as none of the spoils are carried away. Living
as we do in a verdant land which is fertilized and watered by the great river,
our people are well fed. However, the staple diet of the poorer classes is
grain, and months may pass between their last mouthful of meat and the next.
Added to which, the festival was a time when all the normal restraints of
everyday life were thrust aside. There was licence to excess in all things of
the body, in food and drink and carnal passion. There would be sore bellies and
aching heads and matrimonial recriminations on the morrow, but this was the
first day of the festival and there was no check on any appetite. I smiled as I watched a mother, naked to the waist
and plastered from head to toe with blood and fat, emerge from the belly cavity
of a hippopotamus, clutching a running lump of liver which she threw to one of
her brood in the jostling, shrieking pack of children that surrounded the
carcass. The woman ducked back into the interior of the beast, while, clutching
his prize, the child darted away to one of the hundreds of cooking-fires that
burned along the shore. There an elder brother snatched the hunk of liver from
him and threw it on the coals, while a pack of younger urchins crowded forward
impatiently, slavering like puppies. The eldest child hooked the barely scorched liver
off the fire with a green twig, and his brothers and sisters fell upon it and
devoured it. Immediately it was consumed they bayed for more, with fat and
juice running down their faces and dripping from their chins. Many of the
younger ones had probably never tasted the delicious flesh of the river-cow
before. It is sweet and tender and fine-grained, but most of all it is fat,
fatter than beef or striped wild ass, and the marrow-bones are truly a delicacy
fit for the great god Osiris himself. Our people are starved of animal fat and
the taste of it drove them wild. They gorged themselves, as was their right on
this day. I was content to keep aloof from this riotous mob,
happy in the knowledge that my Lord Intef s bailiffs would secure the finest
cuts and marrow-bones for the palace kitchens where the cooks would prepare my
personal platter to perfection. My precedence in the vizier's household exceeds
all other, even that of his major-domo or the commander of his bodyguard, both
of whom are free-born. Of course, it is never openly spoken of, but all tacitly
acknowledge my privileged and superior position and few would dare challenge
it. I watched the bailiffs at work now, claiming the
share of my lord, the governor and grand vizier of all the twenty-two nomes of
Upper Egypt. They swung their long staves with the expertise bom of long
practice, whacking any bare back or set of naked buttocks that presented
themselves as targets, and shouting their demands. The ivory teeth of the animals belonged to the
vizier, and the bailiffs collected every one of them. They were as valuable as
the elephant tusks that are brought down in trade from the land of Cush, beyond
the cataracts. The last elephant had been killed in our Egypt almost one
thousand years ago, in the reign of one of the pharaohs of the Fourth Dynasty,
or so the hieroglyphics on the stele in his temple boast. Naturally, from the
fruits of the hunt my lord was expected to tithe the priests of Hapi who were
the titular shepherds of the goddess's flock of river-cows. However, the amount
of the tithe was in my lord's discretion, and I who was in overall charge of
the palace accounts knew where the lion's share of the treasure would end up.
My Lord Intef does not indulge in unnecessary generosity, even towards a
goddess. As for the hides of the hippopotamus, these
belonged to the army and would be turned into war shields for the officers of
the guards regiments. The army quartermasters were supervising the skinning-out
and the handling of the hides, each of which was almost the size of a Bedouin
tent. The meat that could, not be consumed on the bank
would be pickled in brine, or smoked or dried. Ostensibly it would be used to
feed the army, the members of the law courts, the temples and other civil
servants of the state. However, in practice a large part of it would be discreetly
sold, and the proceeds would filter down quite naturally into my lord's
coffers. As I have said before, my lord was the wealthiest man in the Upper
Kingdom after Pharaoh himself, and growing richer every year. A fresh commotion broke out behind me, and I turned
quickly. Tanus' squadron was still in action. The galleys were drawn up in line
of battle, stem to stern, parallel to the shore-line, but fifty paces off it on
the edge of the deeper water. On each ship harpooneers stood at the rails with
their weapons poised and pointed down at the surface of the lagoon. The taint of blood and offal in the water had
attracted the crocodiles. Not only from all over the lagoon, but from as far
off as the main course of the Nile, they had come swarming to the feast. The
harpooneers were waiting for them. Each long harpoon pole was tipped with a
relatively small bronze head, viciously barbed. Spliced to an eye in the metal
head was a tough flax rope. The skill of the harpooneers was truly impressive.
As one of these scaly saurians came slipping through the green water, with its
great crested tail flailing, moving like a long dark shadow, silent and deadly
beneath the surface, they would be waiting for it. They would allow the
crocodile to pass beneath the galley, and then, as it emerged on the far side
with the harpooneer's movements screened from it by the ship's hull, he would
lean out over it and stab downwards. It was not a violent blow, but an almost delicate
dab with the long pole. The bronze head was as sharp as a surgeon's needle, and
its full length was buried deep beneath the reptile's thick, scaly hide. The
harpooneer aimed for the back of the neck, and so skilful were these thrusts
that many of them pierced the spinal cord and killed the creature instantly. However, when a blow missed its mark, the water
exploded as the wounded crocodile burst into wild convulsions. With a twist of
the harpoon pole the metal head was detached and remained buried in the
reptile's armoured neck. Then four men took the creature on the flax line to
control its contortions. If the crocodile was a large one— and some of them
were four times the length of a man stretched out on the ground—then the coils
of line were whipped away smoking over the gunwale, scorching the palms of the
men who were trying to hold it. When this happened, even the hungry crowds on the
beach paused for a while to cheer and shout encouragement, and to watch the
struggle as the crocodile was eventually subdued or the rope parted like a whiplash
and the sailors were sent tumbling backwards across the deck. More often, the
stout flax line held. As soon as the crew were able to turn the reptile's head
towards them, it could no longer swim out into the deep water. They could then
drag it in a turmoil of froth and white water to the ship's side where another
gang was waiting with clubs to crush the rock-hard skull. When the carcasses of the crocodiles were dragged
to the bank, I went ashore to examine them. The skinners of Tanus' regiment
were already at work. It was the grandfather of our present king who had
granted the regiment the honorific 'the Blue Crocodile Guards' and bestowed
upon them the standard of the Blue Crocodile. Their battle armour is made from
the horny skins of these dragons. Properly treated and cured, it becomes hard
enough to stop an arrow or turn the edge of an enemy sword-cut. It is far
lighter in weight than metal, and much cooler to wear in the desert sun. Tanus,
in his crocodile-skin helmet all decorated with ostrich plumes, and his
breastplate of the same hide, polished and starred with bronze rosettes, is a
sight to strike terror into the heart of an enemy, or turmoil into the belly of
any maiden who looks upon him. As I measured and noted the length and girth of each
carcass, and watched the skinners at work, I felt not even the most fleeting
sympathy for these hideous monsters as I had for the slaughtered river-cows. To
my mind there is no more loathsome beast in nature than the crocodile, with the
possible exception of the venomous asp. My revulsion was increased a hundredfold when a
skinner slit open the belly of one of the largest of these grotesque animals,
and out on to the mud slithered the partly digested remains of a young girl.
The crocodile had swallowed the entire top half of her body, from the waist
upwards. Although the flesh was bleached soft and pasty-white by the digestive
juices and was sloughing from the skull, the girl's top-knot was still intact
and neatly plaited and coiled above the ghastly, ruined face. As a further
macabre touch, there was a necklace around her throat and pretty bracelets of
red and blue ceramic beads on the skeletal wrists. No sooner was this gruesome relic revealed than
there came a shriek so high and heart-rending that it cut through the hubbub of
the throng, and a woman elbowed aside the soldiers and ran forward to drop on
her knees beside the pitiful remains. She tore her clothing and keened the
dreadful ululation of mourning. 'My daughter! My little girl!' She was the same woman
who had come to the palace the previous day to report her daughter missing. The
officials had told her that the child had probably been abducted and sold into
slavery by one of the gangs of bandits who were terrorizing the countryside.
These gangs had become a force in the land, blatantly conducting their lawless
depredations in broad daylight right up to die gates of the cities. The palace
officials had warned the woman that there was nothing they could do about
recovering her daughter, for the gangs were beyond any control that the state
could exert upon them. For once mis dire prediction had proved unfounded.
The mother had recognized the ornaments which still decorated the pathetic
little corpse. My heart went out to the stricken woman, as I sent a slave to
fetch an empty wine jar. Although the woman and her child were both strangers
to me, I could not prevent my own tears from welling up as I helped her to
gather the remains and place them in the jar for decent burial. As she staggered away into the uncaring multitude
of revellers, carrying the jar clutched to her breast, I reflected mat despite
all the rites and prayers mat the mother would lavish upon her daughter, and
even in the unlikely event that she could afford the staggering cost of the most
rudimentary mummification, the child's shade could never find immortality in
the life beyond the grave. For that to happen, the corpse must be intact and
whole before embalming. My feelings were all for the unfortunate mother. It is
a weakness of mine that I so often lament, that I take upon myself the cares
and sorrows of every unfortunate that crosses my path. It would be easier to
have a harder heart, and a more cynical turn of mind. As always when I am saddened or distressed, I
reached for my brush and scroll and began to record all that was taking place
around me, everything from the harpooneers, the bereaved mother, the skinning
and the butchery of the dead river-cows and crocodiles on the beach, to the
unfettered behaviour of the feasting, revelling populace. Already those who were stuffed with meat and gorged
with beer were snoring where they had fallen, oblivious of being kicked and
trampled by the others still capable of remaining upright. The younger and more
shameless were dancing and embracing and using the gathering darkness and the
inadequate cover of the scanty bushes and the trampled papyrus beds to screen
their blatant copulations. This wanton behaviour was merely a symptom of the
malaise that afflicted the entire land. It would not have been thus if only
there had been a strong pharaoh, and a moral and upright administration in the
nome of Greater Thebes. The common people take their example from those above
them. Although I disapproved most strongly of it all,
still I recorded it faithfully. Thus an hour sped away while I sat cross-legged
and totally absorbed upon the poop-deck of the Breath ofHorus, scribbling and
sketching. The sun sank and seemed to quench itself in the great river, leaving
a coppery sheen on the water and a smoky glow in the western sky as though it
had set fire to the papyrus beds. The crowds on the beach were becoming ever more
raucous and unrestrained. The harlots were doing a brisk trade. I watched a
plump and matronly love-priestess, wearing the distinctive blue amulet of her
calling upon her forehead, lead a skinny sailor who was half her size from one
of the galleys into the shadows beyond the firelight. There she dropped her
skirts and fell to her knees in the dust, presenting him with a quivering parr
of monumental buttocks. With a happy cry the little fellow was upon her like a
dog on a bitch, and within seconds she was yapping as loudly as he was. I began
to sketch their antics, but the light faded swiftly, and I was forced to quit
for the day. As I set my scroll aside, I realized with a start
that I had not seen my mistress since before the incident with the dead child.
I leaped to my feet hi a panic. How could I have been so remiss? My mistress
had been strictly raised, I had seen to that. She was a good and moral child,
fully aware of the duties and obligations which law and custom placed upon her.
She was aware also of the honour of the high family to which she belonged, and
of her place in society. What was more, she stood in as much awe as I did of
her father's authority and temper. Of course I trusted her. I trusted her as much as I would have trusted any
other strong-willed young creature in the first flush of passionate womanhood
on a night such as this, alone somewhere in the darkness with the handsome and
equally passionate young soldier with whom she was totally infatuated. My panic was not so much for the fragile maidenhead
of my mistress, that ethereal talisman which once lost is seldom mourned, as
for the much more substantial risk of damage to my own skin. On the morrow we
would return to Karnak and the palace of my Lord Intef, where there would be
wagging tongues aplenty to carry the tale of any lapse or indiscretion on any
of our parts to him. My lord's spies permeated every layer of society
and every corner of our land, from the docks and the fields to the palace of
Pharaoh itself. They were even more numerous than my own, for he had more money
to pay his agents, although many of them served both of us impartially and our
networks interlocked at many levels. If Lostris had disgraced us all, father,
family, and me her tutor and guardian, then my Lord Intef would know of it by
morning, and so would I. I ran from one end of the ship to the other,
searching for her. I climbed into the stern-tower and scanned the beach in
desperation. I could see nothing of her or of Tanus, and my worst fears were
encouraged. Where to search for them in this mad night I could
not begin to think. I caught myself wringing my hands in an agony of
frustration, and stopped myself immediately. I am always at pains to avoid any
appearance of effeminacy. I do so abhor those obese, mincing, posturing
creatures who have suffered the same mutilation as I have. I always try to
conduct myself like a man rather than a eunuch. I controlled myself with an effort and assumed the
same coldly determined mien that I had seen on Tanus' features in the heat of
battle, whereupon my wits were restored to me and I became rational once again.
I considered how my mistress was likely to behave. Of course, I knew her
intimately. After all, I had studied her for fourteen years. I realized that
she was much too fastidious and conscious of her noble rank brazenly to mingle
with the drunken, uncouth throng upon the beach, or to creep away into the
bushes to play the beast with two backs, as I had watched the sailor and the
fat old harlot do. I knew that I could call upon no one else to assist me in my
search, for that would have guaranteed that my Lord Intef would hear all about
it. I had to do it all myself. To what secret place had Lostris allowed herself to
be carried away? Like most young girls of her age she was enchanted with the
idea of romantic love. I doubted that she had ever seriously considered the
more earthy aspects of the physical act, despite the best efforts of those two
little black sluts of hers to enlighten her. She had not even displayed any
great deal of interest in the mechanics of the business when I had attempted,
as was my duty, to warn her, at least sufficiently to protect her from herself. I realized then that I must look for her in some
place that would live up to her sentimental expectations of love. If there had
been a cabin on the Breath ofHorus I would have hurried to it, but our river
galleys are small, utilitarian righting ships, stripped down for speed and
manoeuvrability. The crew sleep on the bare deck, while even the captain and
his officers have only a reed awning for a night shelter. This was not rigged
at the moment, and so there was no place aboard where they could be hiding. Karnak and the palace were half a day's travel
away. The slaves were only now erecting our tents on one of the small inshore
islands that had been set aside to give our party privacy from the common herd
of humanity. It was remiss of the slaves to be so tardy, but they had been
caught up in the festivities. In the torchlight I could see that a few of them
were more than a little unsteady on their feet as they struggled with the
guy-ropes. They had not yet erected Lostris' personal tent, so the luxurious
comforts of carpets and embroidered hangings and down-filled mattresses and
linen sheets were not available to the lovers. So where then might they be? At that moment a soft yellow glow of torchlight
farther out on the lagoon caught my attention. Immediately my intuition was
aroused. I realized that, given my mistress's connections with the goddess
Hapi, her temple on its picturesque little granite island in the middle of the
lagoon would be exactly the place that would draw Lostris irresistibly. I
searched the beach for some means of reaching the island. Although there were
shoals of small craft drawn up on the shore, the ferrymen were mostly
falling-down drunk. Then I spotted Kratas on the beach. The ostrich
feathers on his helmet stood high above the heads of the crowd, and his proud
bearing marked him out. 'Kratas!' I yelled at him, and he looked across at
me and waved. Kratas was Tanus' chief lieutenant and, apart from myself, the
firmest of his multitude of friends. I could trust Kratas as I dared trust no
other. 'Get me a boat!' I screamed at him. 'Any boat!' I
was so distraught and my tone so shrill that it carried clearly to him. It was
typical of the man that he wasted not a moment in question or indecision. He
strode to the nearest felucca on the shore. The ferryman was lying like a log
in his own bilges. Kratas took him by the scruff of the neck and lifted him out
bodily. He dropped him on the beach, and the ferryman never moved, but lay in a
stupor of cheap wine, twisted in the attitude that Kratas had dumped him in.
Kratas launched the craft himself and, with a few thrusts of the punt pole,
laid alongside the Breath of Horus. In my haste I tumbled from the tower
and landed in a heap in the bows of the tiny craft. 'To the temple, Kratas,' I pleaded with him as I
scrambled up, 'and may the sweet goddess Hapi grant we are not already too
late!' With the evening breeze in the lateen sail we were
whisked across the dark waters to the stone jetty below the temple. Kratas
secured the painter to one of the mooring-rings, and made as if to follow me
ashore, but I stopped him. 'For Tanus' sake, not mine,' I told him, 'do not
follow me, please.' He hesitated a moment, then nodded. 'I will be listening
for your call.' He drew his sword and offered it to me, hilt first. 'Will you
need this?' I shook my head. 'It is not that kind of danger.
Besides, I have my dagger. But thank you for your trust.' I left him in the
boat and hurried up the granite steps to the entrance of the temple of Hapi. The rush torches in their brackets on the tall
entrance pillars threw a ruddy, wavering light that seemed to bring to life the
bas-relief carvings on the walls and make them dance. The goddess Hapi is one
of my favourites. Strictly speaking, she is neither god nor goddess, but a
strange, bearded, hermaphroditic creature possessed of both a massive penis and
an equally cavernous vagina, and bounteous breasts that give milk to all. She
is the deification of the Nile, and the goddess of the harvest. The two
kingdoms of Egypt and all the peoples in them depend utterly upon her and the
periodic flooding of the great river which is her alter ego. She is able to
change her gender or, like many of the other gods of this very Egypt, take on
the shape of any animal at will. Her favourite guise is that of the
hippopotamus. Despite the god's ambiguous sexuality, my mistress Lostris always
considered her to be female, and so do I. The priests of Hapi may differ from
us on this view. Her images upon the stone walls were vast and
motherly. Painted in hectic primary colours of red and yellow and blue, she
beamed down with the head of a kindly river-cow, and seemed to invite all of
nature to be fruitful and to multiply. The implied invitation was most
inappropriate to my present anxiety. It was my fear that my precious charge
might even at this moment be availing herself of the goddess's indulgence. A priestess was kneeling at the side-altar, and I
ran to her, seized her by the hem of her cape and tugged at it urgently. 'Holy
sister, tell me, have you seen the Lady Lostris, daughter of the grand vizier?'
There were very few citizens of Upper Egypt who did not know my mistress by
sight. They all loved her for her beauty, her gay spirit and her sweet
disposition, and they clustered around her and cheered her in the streets and
market-places when she walked abroad. The priestess grinned at me, all wrinkled and
toothless, and she laid one bony finger on the side of her nose with such a sly
and knowing expression that all my worst fears were confirmed. I shook her again, but less gently. 'Where is she,
revered old mother? I beseech you, speak!' But instead she wagged her head and
rolled her eyes towards the portals of the inner sanctum. I sped across the granite flags, my heart
outrunning my frantic feet, but even in my distress I wondered at the boldness
of my mistress. Although as a member of the high nobility she had right of
access to the holy of holies, was there another in all of Egypt who would have
the nerve to choose such a place for her love tryst? At the entrance to the sanctum I paused. My
instinct had been right. There they were, the two of them, just as I had
dreaded. 1 was so obsessed by my own certainty of what was taking place that I
almost yelled aloud to them to stop it. Then I checked myself. My mistress was fully clad, more so than was usual,
for her breasts were covered and she had spread a blue woollen shawl over her
head. She was kneeling before the gigantic statue of Hapi. The goddess beamed
down upon her, bedecked in wreaths of blue water-lilies. Tanus knelt beside her. He had laid aside his
weapons and his armour. They were piled at the door of the sanctuary. He was
dressed only in a linen shift and short tunic, with sandals on his feet. The
young couple were holding hands, and their faces were almost touching as they
whispered solemnly together. My base suspicions were refuted, and I was struck
with remorse and shame. How could I ever have doubted my mistress? Quietly I
began to withdraw, although I would go only as far as the side-altar, where I
would give thanks to the goddess for her protection, and from where I could
keep a discreet eye on further proceedings. However, at that moment Lostris rose to her feet
and diffidently approached the statue of the goddess. I was so enthralled by
her girlish grace mat I lingered a moment longer to watch her. From around her neck she unclasped the lapis lazuli
figurine of the goddess which I had made for her. I realized with a pang that
she was about to offer it as a sacrifice. That jewel had been crafted with all
my love for her, and I hated to see it leave her throat. Lostris stood on
tiptoe to hang it on the idol's neck. Then she knelt and kissed the stone foot
while Tanus watched, still kneeling where she had left him. She rose and turned to go back to him, but then she
saw me in the doorway. I tried to melt away into the shadows, for I was
embarrassed at having spied upon so intimate a moment. However, her face lit
with joy and before I could escape, she ran to me and seized my hands. 'Oh, Taita, I am so glad that you are here—you of
all people! It is so fitting. It makes it all so perfect.' She led me forward
into the sanctum and Tanus rose to his feet and came smiling to take my other
hand. 'Thank you for coming. I know we can always count
upon you.' I wished that my motives had been as pure as they believed them to
be, so I hid my guilty heart from them with a loving smile. 'Kneel here!' Lostris ordered me. 'Here, where you
can hear every word we say to each other. You will bear witness for us before
Hapi and all the gods of Egypt.' She pressed me to my knees, and then she and
Tanus resumed their places in front of the goddess and took each other's hands,
looking full into each other's eyes. Lostris spoke first. 'You are my sun,' she
whispered. 'My day is dark without you.' 'You are the Nile of my heart,' Tanus told her
quietly. "The waters of your love feed my soul.' 'You are my man, through this world and all the
worlds to come.' 'You are my woman, and I pledge you my love. I
swear it to you on the breath and the blood of Horus,' Tanus said clearly and
openly, so that his voice echoed through the stone halls. 'I take up your pledge and return it to you one
hundredfold,' Lostris cried. 'No one can ever come between us. Nothing can ever
part us. We are one, for ever.' She offered her face to his and he kissed her,
deeply and lingeringly. As far as I was aware, it was the first kiss that the
couple had ever exchanged. I felt that I was privileged to have witnessed such
an intimate moment. As they embraced, a sudden chill wind off the
lagoon swirled through the dimly lit halls of the temple and fluttered the
torch flames, so that for an instant the faces of the two lovers blurred before
my eyes and the image of the goddess seemed to stir and quiver. The wind passed
as swiftly as it had come, but the whisper of it around the great stone pillars
was like the distant sardonic laughter of the gods, and I shuddered with
superstitious awe. It is always dangerous to pique the gods with
extravagant demands, and Lostris had just asked for the impossible. This was
the moment that for years I had known was coming, and which I had dreaded more
bitterly than the day of my own death. The pledge that Tanus and Lostris had
made to each other could never endure. No matter how deeply they meant it, it
could never be. I felt my own heart tearing within me as, at last, they broke
the kiss and both turned back to me. 'Why so sad, Taita?' Lostris demanded, her own face
flooded with joy. 'Rejoice with me, for this is the happiest day of my life.' I forced my lips to smile, but I could find no word
of comfort or of felicitation for these two, the ones I loved best in all the
world. I remained upon my knees, with that fixed, idiotic smile on my lips and
desolation in my soul. Now Tanus lifted me to my feet and embraced me.
'You will speak to Lord Intef on my behalf, won't you?' he demanded as he
hugged me. 'Oh yes, Taita,' Lostris joined her plea to his. 'My
father will listen to you. You are the only one who can do it for us. You won't
fail us, will you, Taita? You have never let me down, never once in all my
life. You'll do it for me, won't you?' What could I say to them? I could not be so cruel
as to tell them the blunt truth. I could not find the words to blight this
fresh and tender love. They were waiting for me to speak, to express-my joy for
them, and to promise them my help and support. But I was struck dumb, my mouth
was as dry as if I had bitten into, an unripe pomegranate. 'Taita, what is it?' I watched the joy wither upon
my mistress's beloved countenance. 'Why do you not rejoice for us?' 'You know that I love you both, but—' I could not
continue. 'But? But what, Taita?' Lostris demanded. 'Why do
you give me "buts" and a long face on this happiest of all possible
days?' She was becoming angry, her jaw was setting, but at the same time there
were tears gathering deep in her eyes. 'Don't you want to help us? Is this the
real value of all the promises you have made to me over the years?' She came to
me and thrust her face close to mine in challenge. 'Mistress, please don't talk like that. I do not
deserve that treatment. No, listen to me!' I placed my fingers on her lips to
forestall another outburst. 'It is not me. It is your father, my Lord Intef—' 'Exactly.' Impatiently Lostris plucked my hand away
from her mouth. 'My father! You will go to him and speak to him the way you
always do, and it will be all right.' 'Lostris,'"! began, and it was a sign of my
distress that I used her name in this familiar fashion, 'you are no longer a
child. You must not delude yourself with childish fantasies. You know that your
father will never agree—' She would not listen to me, she did not want to
hear the truth that I would speak, so she rushed in with words to drown out
mine. 'I know that Tanus has no fortune, yes. But he has a marvellous future
ahead of him. One day he will command all the armies of Egypt. One day he will
fight the battles which will reunite the two kingdoms, and I will be at his
side.' 'Mistress, please hear me out. It is not only the
lack of Tanus' fortune. It is more, much more.' 'His blood-line and his breeding, then? Is that
what troubles you? You know full well that his family is as noble as ours.
Pianki, Lord Harrab was my own father's equal and his dearest friend.' She had
closed her ears to me. She did not realize the depth of the tragedy on which we
were embarking. Neither she nor Tanus did, but then I was probably the only
person in the kingdom who understood it fully. I had protected her from the truth all these years
and, of course, I had never been able to tell Tanus either. How could I explain
it to her now? How could I reveal to her the depths of the hatred that her
father bore towards the young man she loved? It was a hatred born out of guilt
and envy, and yet all the more implacable for these reasons. However, my Lord Intef was a crafty and devious
man. He was able to conceal his feelings from those around him. He was able to
dissemble his hatred and his spite, and to kiss the one he would destroy and
heap rich gifts and lulling flattery upon him. He had the patience of the
crocodile buried in the mud at the drinking-place on the river, waiting for the
unsuspecting gazelle. He would wait years, even a decade, but when the
opportunity arose, he was as swift as that reptile to strike and drag his prey
under. Lostris was blithely unaware of the depths of her
father's rancour. She even believed that he had loved Pianki, Lord Harrab, as
Tanus' father had loved him. But then how could she know the truth of it, for I
had always shielded her from it? In her sweet innocence Lostris believed that
the only objections that her father would have to her lover were those of fortune
and family. 'You know it is true, Taita. Tanus is my equal in
the lists of the nobility. It is written in the temple records for all to see.
How can my father deny it? How can you deny it?' 'It is not for me to deny or to accede, mistress—' "Then you will go to my father for us, won't
you, dear Taita? Say you will, please say you will!' I could only bow my head in acquiescence, and to
hide the hopeless expression in my eyes. THE FLEET WAS HEAVILY LADEN ON THE return to
Karnak. The galleys were low in the water under their cargoes of rawhides and
salted meat. Thus our progress against the Nile's current was slower than on
our outward journey, but still too swift for my heavy heart and mounting dread.
The lovers were gay and euphoric with then- newly declared love and their trust
in me to remove the obstacles from their path. I could not bring myself to deny
them this day of happiness, for I knew that it would be one of the very last
they would share, I think that if I could have found the words or summoned the
courage, I would have urged them, there and then, to seek the consummation of
then- love that I had so opposed the night before. There would never be another
chance for them, not after I had alerted my Lord Intef with my foredoomed
attempt at matchmaking. Once he knew what they were about, he would come
between them and thrust them apart for ever. So instead I laughed and smiled as gaily as they
did, and tried to hide my fears from them. They were so blinded by love that I
succeeded, whereas at any other time my mistress would have seen through me
immediately. She knows me almost as well as I know her. We sat together in the prow, the three of us, and
we discussed the re-enactment of the passion of Osiris that would be the
highlight of the festival. My Lord Intef had made me the impresario of the
pageant, and I had cast both Lostris and Tanus in leading roles. The festival is held every second year, at the
rising of the full moon of Osiris. There was a time when it was an annual
event. However, the expense and disruption of royal life caused by having to
remove the court from Elephantine to Thebes was so great that Pharaoh decreed a
greater interval between the festivals. He was always a prudent man with his
gold, was our Pharaoh. The plans for the pageant provided me with a fine
distraction from the looming confrontation with my Lord Intef, and so now I
rehearsed the two lovers in their lines. Lostris was to play Isis, the wife of
Osiris, while Tanus would take on the major role of Horus. They were both
vastly amused at the idea of Tanus playing Lostris' son, and I had to explain
that the gods were ageless, and it was quite possible that a goddess could
appear younger than her offspring. I had written a new script for the pageant to
replace the one that had remained unchanged for almost a thousand years. The
language of the ancient one was archaic and unsuitable for a modern audience.
Pharaoh would be the guest of honour when the pageant was performed in the
temple of Osiris on the final night of the festival, so I was particularly
anxious that it should be a success. I had already encountered opposition to my
new version of the passion from the more conservative nobles and priests. Only
my Lord Intef's intervention had prevailed against their objections. My lord is not a deeply religious man and would not
normally have interested himself in theological arguments. However, I had
included a few lines that were designed to amuse and flatter him. I read them
to him out of context, and then tactfully pointed out to him that the chief
opposition to my version came from the high priest of Osiris, a prissy old man
who had once frustrated my Lord Intef's interest in a comely young acolyte.
This was a trespass for which my lord had never forgiven the high priest. Thus it was that my version would be performed for
the first time. It was essential that the actors bring out the full glory of my
poetry, or it might well be the last time it would be heard. Both Tanus and Lostris possessed marvellous
speaking voices, and they were determined to reward me for my promise to help
them. They gave me of their best, and thus the rehearsal was so absorbing,
their recitations so startling, that for a while I could forget myself. Then I was brought back from the passion of the gods
to my own mundane preoccupations by a cry from the lookout. The fleet was
sweeping around the last bend in the river, and there lay the twin cities of
Luxor and Karnak, that between them made up Greater Thebes, strung out along
the bank before us and sparkling like a necklace of pearls in the stark
Egyptian sunlight. Our fantastic interlude had ended, and we must face reality
once again. My spirits tumbled as I scrambled to my feet. 'Tanus, you must transfer Lostris and myself to the
galley of Kratas before we come any closer to the city. My lord's minions will
be watching us from the land. They must not see us in your company.' 'A little late, is it not?' Tanus smiled at me.
'You should have thought of that some days ago.' 'My father will learn about us soon enough,'
Lostris endorsed his objection. 'It might make your task easier if we forewarn
him of our intentions.' 'If you know better than I, then you must do it
your way and I will take no further part in this crazy business of yours.' I
put on my most stiff and offended air, and they relented immediately. Tanus signalled Kratas' galley alongside, and the
lovers had only a few moments for their farewells. They dared not embrace
before the eyes of half the fleet, but the glances and the loving words they
exchanged were almost as fulfilling. From the stern-tower of Kratas' ship we waved to
the Breath of Horus as she turned from us, and with her paddles flashing
like the wings of a dragonfly, she bore away to her moorings in front of the
city of Luxor, while we continued on up-river towards the palace of the grand
vizier. IMMEDIATELY WE DOCKED AT THE PALACE wharf, I made
enquiry as' to the whereabouts of my master and was relieved to learn that he
had crossed the river to undertake a last-minute inspection of Pharaoh's tomb
and funerary temple on the west bank. The king's temple and tomb had been under
construction for the past twelve years, ever since the first day that he had
donned the double white and red crown of the two kingdoms. It was nearing completion
at last, and the king would be anxious to visit it as soon as the festival was
over and he was free to do so. My Lord Intef was anxious that the king should
not be disappointed. One of my lord's many titles and honours was Guardian of
the Royal Tombs, and it was a serious responsibility. His absence afforded me a further day in which to
prepare my case and plan my strategy. However, the solemn promise that the two
lovers had extracted from me was to speak out for them at the first
opportunity, and I knew that would be on the morrow when my lord held his
weekly assize. As soon as I had seen my mistress safely ensconced
in the harem, I hurried to my own quarters in that wing of the palace which is
reserved for the special companions of the grand vizier. My Lord Intef's domestic arrangements were as
devious as the rest of his existence. He had eight wives, all of whom brought
to his marriage-bed either substantial dowry or influential political
connections. However, only three of these women had ever borne him children.
Apart from my Lady Lostris, there were two sons. As far as I was aware, and I was aware of
everything that happened in the palace and most of what happened outside it, my
lord had not visited the harem in the last fifteen years. The getting of
Lostris had been the last occasion that he had performed his matrimonial
duties. His sexual tastes lay in other directions. The special companions of
the grand vizier who lived in our wing of the palace were as pretty a
collection of slave boys as you could find in the Upper Kingdom, where over the
previous hundred years pederasty had replaced wild-fowling and hunting as the
favourite preoccupation of most of the nobility. This was merely another
symptom of the ills that beset our lovely land. I was the eldest of this select company of slave
boys. Unlike so many others over the years whom, once their physical beauty had
begun to fade or pall, my lord had sent to the auction block in the
slave-market, I had endured. He had come to value me for virtues other than my
physical beauty alone. Not that this had faded—on the contrary, it had grown
more striking as I had matured. You must not think me vain if I mention this,
but I have determined to set down nothing but the truth in these accounts. They
are remarkable enough without my having to resort to false modesty. No, my lord seldom pleasured himself with me in
those days, a neglect for which I was truly thankful. When he did so, it was
usually only to punish me. He knew full well the physical pain and the humiliation
his attentions always caused me. Although I had still been a child when I first
learned to hide my revulsion, and to simulate pleasure in the perverse acts
that he forced upon me, I never succeeded in deceiving him. Strangely, my feelings of disgust and my loathing
for this unnatural congress never detracted from his own enjoyment, rather they
seemed to enhance it. He was neither a gentle nor a compassionate man, my Lord
Intef. I have counted in the hundreds the slave boys who, over the years, were
brought to me weeping and torn after their first night of love with my master.
I doctored them and tried my best to comfort them. That is perhaps why they
called me Akh-Ker in the slave boys' quarters, a name which means Elder
Brother. I might no longer be my master's favourite
plaything, but he valued me much more highly than that. I was many other things
to him—physician and artist, 'musician and scribe, architect and bookkeeper,
adviser and confidant, engineer and nursemaid to his daughter. I am not so
naive as to believe that he loved me or that he trusted me, but I think that at
times he came as close to it as he was capable. That was why Lostris had
prevailed upon me to plead on her behalf. My Lord Intef had no concern for his only daughter,
other than to maintain her marriage value at its optimum, and this was another
duty that he delegated entirely to me. Sometimes he did not speak a single word
to her from one flooding of the Nile to the next. He showed no discernible
interest in the regular reports which I made to him of her training and
schooling. Of course, I was always at pains to conceal from
him my true feelings for Lostris, knowing that he would certainly use them
against me at the first opportunity. I always tried to give him the impression that
I found her tuition and her care a tedious duty that I mildly resented having
thrust upon me, and that I shared his own disdain and distaste for all of
womankind. I don't think he ever realized that, despite my emasculation, I had
the feelings and desires of a natural man towards the opposite sex. My lord's disinterest in his daughter was the
reason why I was occasionally tempted, on the urging of my mistress, to run
such insane risks as this latest escapade of ours on board the Breath of
Horus. There was usually at least a chance that we would get away with it. That evening I retired early to my private
quarters, where my first concern was to feed and pamper my darlings. I have a
love for birds and animals, and a way with them that amazes even myself. I had
an intimate friendship with a dozen cats, for no one can ever claim to own a
cat. I owned, on the other hand, a pack of fine dogs. Tanus and I used them to
hunt the oryx and the lion out in the desert. The wild birds flocked to my terrace to enjoy the
hospitality I provided for them. They competed raucously amongst themselves for
a perch on my shoulder or on my hand. The boldest of them would take food from
between my lips. My tame gazelle would brush against my legs like one of the
cats, and my two falcons squawk at me from their perches on the terrace. They
were the rare desert Sa-kers, beautiful and fierce. Whenever we were able,
Tanus and I would take them out into the desert to fly them against the giant
bustards. I took great pleasure from their speed and aerial grace as they
stooped down on their prey. Anyone else who attempted to fondle them would feel
the cutting edge of those hooked yellow bills, but with me they were as gentle
as sparrows. Only once I had taken care of my menagerie did I call
one of the slave boys to bring my evening meal. On the terrace overlooking the
wide green expanse of the Nile I savoured the exquisite little dish of wild
quail cooked in honey and goat's milk that the head chef had prepared
especially to welcome me home. From there I was able to watch for the return of
my lord's barge from the far bank. It came with the sunset glowing on the
single square sail, and I felt my spirits sink. He might send for me this
evening, and I was not ready to face him. Then with relief I heard Rasfer, the commander of
the palace guard, shouting for my lord's favourite of the moment, a sloe-eyed
Bedouin lad, barely ten years old. A short while later I heard the child
protesting in a terrified treble as Rasfer dragged him past my door towards the
curtained entrance of the grand vizier's chambers. Although I had heard it so
many times before, I never could harden myself to the sounds of the children,
and I felt the familiar pang of pity. Still, I was relieved that it was not I
who would be called that evening. I would need a good night's sleep so as to
look my best in the morning. I woke before dawn with the feeling of dread still
strong upon me. Even my ritual swim in the cool waters of the Nile did nothing
to relieve it. I hurried back to my chamber where two of the slave boys were
waiting to oil my body and comb out my hair. I detested the new fashion amongst
the nobility of wearing make-up. My own skin and complexion were fine enough
not to require it, but my lord liked his boys to use it, and I wanted to please
him especially that day. Even though my image in the bronze mirror reassured
me, I could find no appetite for my breakfast. I was the first member of my
lord's entourage awaiting his arrival in the water-garden where he held his
assize every morning. While I waited for the rest of the court to
assemble I watched the kingfishers at work. I had designed and supervised the
building of the water-garden. It was a marvellous complex of channels and ponds
which overflowed from one into the other. The flowering plants had been
collected from every part of the kingdom and beyond, and they were a dazzle of
colour. The ponds were stocked with all the hundreds of varieties of fish that
the Nile yields up to the nets of the fishermen, but they had to be replenished
daily as a result of the depredations of the kingfishers. My Lord Intef enjoyed watching the birds hovering
in the air like jewels of lapis lazuli, then darting down to hit the water in a
flash of spray, and rising again with a silver sliver quivering in their long
bills. I think he saw himself as a fellow predator, a fisher of men, and that
he looked upon the birds as his kin. He never allowed the gardeners to
discourage the birds. Gradually I was joined by the rest of the court. Many
of them were dishevelled and yawning from sleep. My Lord Intef keeps early
hours and likes to complete the bulk of the business of state before the main
heat of the day. We waited respectfully in the first rays of the sun for my
lord's arrival. 'He's in a good mood this morning,' the chamberlain whispered,
as he took his place beside me, and I felt a tiny prickle of hope. I might yet
be able to escape the serious consequences of my foolhardy promise to Lostris. There was a stirring and a murmuring amongst us as
when the river breeze moves through the papyrus beds, and my Lord Intef came
out to us. His walk was stately and his manner was sumptuous,
for he was mighty with the weight of his honours and his power. Around his neck
he wore the Gold of Praise, that necklace of red gold from the mines of Lot
which Pharaoh had laid upon him with his own hands. His praise-singer preceded
him, a stump-legged dwarf chosen for his misshapen body and stentorian tones.
It amused my lord to surround himself with curiosities, either beautiful or
grotesque. Cavorting and prancing on his bowed legs, the dwarf chanted the
lists of my lord's titles and honours. 'Behold the Support of Egypt! Greet the Guardian of
the Waters of the Nile! Bow down before Pharaoh's Companion!' These were all
titles granted by the king, and many of them imposed specific duties and
obligations on him. As Guardian of the Waters, for instance, he was responsible
for monitoring the levels and flows of the seasonal floods of the Nile, a duty
which was naturally delegated to that faithful, indefatigable slave, Taita. I had spent half a year with a team of engineers
and mathematicians working under me, measuring and carving the rock cliffs at
Assoun so that the height of the waters rising up them could be accurately
gauged and the volume of the flood calculated. From these figures I was able to
estimate the size of the harvest months in advance. This enabled both famine
and plenty to be anticipated and planned for by the administration. Pharaoh had
been delighted with my work and bestowed further honours and reward upon my
Lord Intef. 'Bend the knee for the Nomarch of Kamak and the
Governor of all the twenty-two nomes of Upper Egypt! Greet the Lord of the
Necropolis and the Keeper of the Royal Tombs!' My lord was by these titles
responsible for designing, building and maintaining the monuments to pharaohs
long dead and the one still living. Once again, these duties were unloaded upon
a long-suffering slave's shoulders. My lord's visit to Pharaoh's tomb the day
before had been the first that he had undertaken since the previous festival of
Osiris. It was I who was sent out in the dust and the heat to cajole and curse
the lying builders and the conniving masons. I often regretted having let my
master realize the extent of my talents. He singled me out now without seeming to have done
so. The yellow eyes, as implacable as those of a wild leopard, touched mine,
and he inclined his head slightly. I stepped in behind him as he passed, and I
was struck as always by his height and the width of his shoulders. He was an
outrageously handsome man with long, clean limbs and a flat, hard belly. His
head was leonine and his hair dense and lustrous. At this time he was forty
years of age, and I had been his slave for almost twenty of those. My Lord Intef led us to the barrazza in the centre
of the garden, a thatched building without enclosing walls, open to the cool
breeze off the river. He seated himself cross-legged on the paved floor at the
low table on which lay the state scrolls, and I took my usual place behind him.
The day's business began. Twice during the morning my lord leaned back
slightly towards me. He did not turn his head nor did he say a word, but he was
asking my advice. I barely moved my lips and I kept my voice pitched so low
that no one else could hear me and very few were even aware of the exchanges
between us. Once I murmured, 'He is lying,' and a second time,
'Retik is a better man for the post, and he has offered a gift of five gold
rings to my lord's private treasury.' And though I did not mention it then,
another ring of gold to me if the post were secured. At noon my lord dismissed the congregation of
officials and petitioners and called for his midday meal. For the first time
that day we were alone together, except for Rasfer, who was both the commander
of the palace guard and the official state executioner. Now he took his post at
the gate to the garden, within sight of the barrazza but out of earshot. With a gesture my lord invited me to move up to his
elbow, and to taste the delicious meats and fruits that had been laid out
before him. While we waited for the effects of any possible poisoning to
manifest themselves upon me, we discussed the morning's business in detail. Then he questioned me about the expedition to the
lagoon of Hapi and the great hippopotamus hunt. I described it all to him and
gave him the figures of the profits that he might expect from the meat and
hides and teeth of the river-cows. I inflated the estimate of profits a little,
and he smiled. His smile is frank and charming. Once you have seen it, it is
easier to understand my Lord Intef's ability to manipulate and control men.
Even I, who should have known better, was once again lulled by it. As he bit into a succulent cold cut of river-cow
fillet, I drew a breath, screwed up my courage and began my plea. 'My lord
should know that I allowed your daughter to accompany me on the expedition.' I
could see by his eyes that he already knew this and that he had been waiting
for me to attempt to conceal it from him. 'You did not think to obtain my permission
beforehand?' he asked mildly, and I avoided his eyes and concentrated on
peeling a grape for him as I answered, 'She only asked as we were on the point
of departure. As you know, the goddess Hapi is her patron, and she wished to
worship and make sacrifice at the lagoon temple.' 'Still you did not ask me?' he repeated, and I
offered him the grape. He parted his lips and allowed me to slip it into his mouth.
That could only mean that he was well disposed towards me, so obviously he had
not yet found out the full truth about Tanus and Lostris. 'My lord was in council with the nomarch of Assoun
at the time. I would not have dared disturb you. Besides, there was no harm in
it that I could fathom. It was a simple domestic decision which I thought
beneath your concern.' 'You are so glib, aren't you, my darling?' he
chuckled. 'And so beautiful today. I like the way you have painted your
eyelids, and what is that perfume you are wearing?' 'It is distilled from the petals of the wild
violet,' I replied. 'I am happy that you like it, for I have a flask of it as a
small gift for you, my lord.' I produced the flask from my purse and went on my
knees to offer it to him. He placed his finger under my chin and lifted my face
to kiss me on the lips. Dutifully I responded to the kiss until he drew back
and patted my cheek. 'Whatever it is you are up to, you are still very
attractive, Taita. Even after all these years you can still make me smile. But
tell me, you took good care of the Lady Lostris, did you not? You never let her
out of your sight or care for a moment, did you?' 'As always, my lord,' I agreed vehemently. 'So there is nothing unusual concerning her that
you wish to report to me, is there?' I was still on my knees in front of him, and my
next attempt to speak failed. My voice dried up. 'Do not squeak at me, my old darling,' he laughed.
'Speak out like a man, even though you are not.' It was a cruel little jibe,
but it steeled me. 'There is indeed something I wish humbly to bring
to my lord's attention,' I said, and it does indeed concern the Lady Lostris.
As I have already reported, your daughter's red moon rose for the first time at
the flooding of the great river. Since then the courses of her moon have flowed
strongly each month.' My lord made a small grimace of distaste, the
functions of the feminine body repelled him. I found this ironic, considering
his own preoccupation with those far less savoury reaches of the masculine
anatomy. I hurried on. 'The Lady Lostris is now of
marriageable age. She is a woman of an ardent and loving nature. I believe it
would be wise to find a husband for her, as soon as we can.' 'No doubt you have one to suggest?' he asked drily,
and I nodded. 'There is indeed a suitor, my lord.' 'Not one, Taita. You mean another one, don't you? I
know of at least six, including the nomarch of Assoun and the governor of Lot,
who have already made offers.' 'I did mean another one, but this time one that the
Lady Lostris approves of. As you recall, she referred to the nomarch as that
fat toad, and to the governor as a randy old goat.' "The child's approval or disapproval is of no interest
to me whatsoever.' He shook his head, and smiled and stroked my cheek to
encourage me. 'But go on, Taita, tell me the name of this lovelorn swain who
will do me the honour of becoming my son-in-law in return for the richest dowry
in Egypt.' I steeled myself to reply, but he stopped me. 'No, wait! Let me
guess.' His smile turned into that sly and foxy grin tha,t
I knew so well, and I realized that he had been toying with me. 'For Lostris to welcome him, he must be young and
handsome.' He pretended to muse on it. 'And for you to speak out for him, he
must be a friend or a protege of yours. There must have been an opportunity for
this paragon to declare his suit and to solicit your support. What would be the
time and the place for that to have happened? I wonder. Could it have been at
midnight in the temple of Hapi, perhaps? Am I on the right trail, Taita?' I felt myself pale. How did he know so much? He
slid his hand around behind my head and caressed the nape of my neck. This was
often his prelude to love-making, and he kissed me again. 'I can see by your face that my guesses are close
to the target.' He took a handful of my hair and twisted it lightly. 'Now it
remains only to divine the name of this bold lover. Could it be Dakka? No, no,
Dakka is not so stupid as to incur my wrath.' He twisted my hair just hard
enough to bring tears to my eyes. 'Kratas, then? He is handsome and foolhardy
enough to take the risk.' He twisted harder and I felt a clump of my hair come
away in his hand with a tearing sound. I choked back the whimper in my throat. 'Answer me, my darling, was it Kratas?' He forced
my face down into his lap. 'No, my lord,' I whispered painfully. I was not
surprised to find that he was fully aroused. He pushed my face down upon
himself and held me there. 'Not Kratas, are you sure?' He pretended to be
puzzled. 'If it was not Kratas, then I am at a loss to guess who else might be
so insolent, so insulting and so mortally stupid as to approach the virgin
daughter of the grand vizier of Upper Egypt.' Abruptly, he raised his voice. 'Rasfer!' he cried.
My head was twisted in his lap so that through streaming eyes I could watch
Rasfer approach. In Pharaoh's menagerie on Elephantine Island at
Assoun there was a huge black bear brought in many years ago by one of the
trade caravans from the East. That vicious, scarred brute always reminded me
strongly of the commander of my lord's bodyguard. They both had the same vast,
shapeless body and the raw, savage power to crush a man to death. However, in
loveliness of face and sweetness of disposition, the bear had been favoured far
beyond Rasfer. I watched Rasfer approach now at a trot that was
surprisingly swift and agile for those heavy, tree-like legs and the swell of
his hairy gut, and I was transported back over the years to the day that my
manhood had been plucked from me. It all seemed so familiar, as though I was being
forced to live once more through that terrible day. Every detail of it was
still so clear in my mind that I wanted to shriek aloud. The actors in that
long-ago tragedy were the same. My Lord Intef, Rasfer the brute, and me. Only
the girl was missing. Her name had been Alyda. She had been the same age
as me, sixteen sweet innocent years. Like me, she had been a slave. I remember
her now as having been beautiful, but it is likely that my memory cheats me,
for had she been so she would have gone into a harem of one of the great houses
and not been relegated to the kitchen. I do know for certain that she had skin
the colour and lustre of polished amber that was warm and soft to the touch. I
will never forget the feel of Alyda's body, for I will never experience
anything like it again. In our misery we had found comfort and deep solace in
each other. I never discovered who it was that betrayed us. I am not usually a
vengeful man, but I still dream that one day I will find the person who
delivered us up. At that time I had been my Lord Intef s favourite,
his special darling. When he discovered that I had been faithless to him, the affront
to his self-esteem was such as to drive him to the very frontier of madness. Rasfer had come to fetch us. He dragged us to my
lord's chamber, one of us in each hand, as easily as if we had been a pair of
kittens. There he had stripped us naked while my Lord Intef sat cross-legged on
the floor, just as he was doing now. Rasfer bound Alyda's wrists and ankles
with rawhide thongs. She was pale and shivering but she did not weep. My love
for her and my admiration for her courage had never been stronger than at that
moment. My Lord Intef beckoned me to kneel in front of him
and he took a lock of my hair and whispered endearments to me. 'Do you love me,
Taita?' he asked, and because I was afraid, and because in some dim way I
thought that it might spare Alyda's suffering, I answered, 'Yes, my lord, I
love you.' 'Do you love anyone else, Taita?' he asked in a
voice of silk and, coward and traitor that I was, I answered him, 'No, my lord,
I love only you.' It was only then that I heard Alyda begin to weep. It was one
of the most harrowing sounds of my life. He called to Rasfer, 'Bring the slut here. Place
her so that they can see each other clearly. Taita must be able to see
everything that is done to her.' As Rasfer pushed the girl into my line of vision I
could see that he was grinning. Then my master raised his voice slightly: 'Very
well, Rasfer, you may proceed.' Rasfer slipped a loop of braided rawhide rope over
Alyda's forehead. At close intervals the rope was knotted, so that it looked
like a headband such as the Bedouin women wear. Standing behind the girl,
Rasfer thrust a short, stout baton of olive wood through the rawhide loop and
twisted it until it came up tight against her smooth, unblemished skin. The
knots of harsh leather bit into her flesh and Alyda grimaced with the pain. 'Slowly, Rasfer,' my lord warned him. 'We still
have a long way to go.' The olive-wood baton seemed like a child's toy in
Ras-fer's huge, hairy paws. He twisted it with careful deliberation, a quarter
of a turn at a time. The knots bit in deeper, and Alyda's mouth dropped open
and her lungs emptied in a gasping rush of air. All the colour drained from her
skin so that it turned to the colour of dead ashes. She struggled to fill her
empty lungs with air and then released it in one long, penetrating scream. Still grinning, Rasfer twisted the baton and the
line of leather knots buried themselves in Alyda's forehead. Her skull changed
shape. At first I thought it was a trick of my overwrought mind, then I
realized that her head was, in truth, constricting and elongating as the loop
tightened. Her scream was now a single unbroken peal that plunged into my heart
like a sword-blade. It went on and on- for what seemed like for ever. Then her skull burst. I heard the bone collapse
with a sound like a palm-nut crushed in the jaws of a feeding elephant. That
terrible, piercing scream was cut off abruptly, as Alyda's corpse sagged in
Rasfer's hands, and my soul was filled to overflowing with my sorrow and
despair. After what seemed like an eternity my lord lifted
my head and looked into my yes. His expression was sad and regretful as he told
me, 'She has gone, Taita. She was evil and she led you astray. We must make
certain that it never happens again. We must protect you from any further temptations.'
Once again he signalled to Rasfer and he took
Alyda's naked body by the heels and dragged it out on to the terrace. The back
of her crushed head bumped down the steps and her hair streamed out behind her.
With a heave of his massive shoulders, Rasfer threw her far out into the river.
Her slack limbs flashed and tumbled as she fell and struck the water. She sank
swiftly with her hair spreading out around her like trailing fronds of the
river-weed. Rasfer turned away and went to the end of the terrace
where two of his men were tending a brazier of burning charcoal. Beside the
brazier a full set of surgeon's instruments were laid out on a wooden tray. He
glanced over them and then nodded with satisfaction. He returned and bowed
before my Lord Intef. 'All is in readiness.' My master wiped my tear-streaked face with one
finger, then lifted the finger to his lips as though he were tasting my sorrow.
'Come, my pretty darling,' he whispered, and lifting me to my feet he led me
out on to the terrace. I was so distraught and blinded by my tears that I did
not realize my own peril until the soldiers seized me. They threw me down and
held me spread-eagled on the terracotta tiles, pinning me at wrists and ankles
so that I could move only my head. My master knelt at my head, while Rasfer knelt
between my spread thighs. 'You will never do this evil thing again, Taita.'
Only then did I become aware of the bronze scalpel that Rasfer had concealed in
his right hand. My master nodded at him and he reached down with his free hand
and seized me and stretched me out, until it felt as though he were plucking my
entrails out through my groin. 'What a fine pair of eggs we have here!' Rasfer
grinned and showed me the scalpel, holding it up before my eyes. 'But I am
going to feed them to the crocodiles, just as I did with your little
girl-friend.' He kissed the blade. 'Please, my lord,' I begged, 'have mercy—' but my
entreaties ended in a shrill cry as Rasfer slashed down with the blade. It felt
as though a redhot skewer had been thrust up into my belly. 'Say goodbye to them, pretty boy.' Rasfer held up
the sac of pale wrinkled skin and its pathetic contents. Then he began to rise,
but my lord stopped him. 'You have not finished,' he told Rasfer quietly. 'I
want all of it.' Rasfer stared at him for a moment, not
understanding the order. Then he began to chuckle until his belly bounced. 'By
the blood of Horus,' he roared, 'from now on pretty boy will have to squat like
a girl when he wants to piss!' . He struck again, then bellowed with laughter
as he held up the finger of flesh that had once been the most intimate part of
my body. 'Never mind, boy. You'll walk a lot lighter without
that weight to carry around with you.' Staggering with laughter, he started
towards the edge of the terrace as if to hurl them into the river, but once
again my lord called to him sharply. 'Give them to me!' he ordered, and obediently
Rasfer placed the bloody fragments of my manhood in his hands. For a few
seconds my lord examined them curiously, and then he spoke to me again. 'I am
not so cruel as to deprive you for ever of such fine trophies, my darling. I
will send these to the embalmers, and when they are ready I will have them
placed on a necklace surrounded with pearls and lapis lazuli. They will be my
present to you at the next festival of Osiris. Thus at the day of your burial
they can be placed in your tomb with you, and if the gods are kind, you may
have the use of them in the afterlife.' Those terrible memories should have ended at the
moment when Rasfer staunched the bleeding with a ladle of boiling embalming
lacquer from the brazier, and I was plunged into blessed oblivion by the
unbearable intensity of the pain, but now I was trapped in the nightmare. It
was all happening again. Only this time little Alyda was missing, and instead
of the gelding-knife Rasfer held the whip of hippo-hide in his great hairy
fist. The whip was as long as the full stretch of
Rasfer's arms and it tapered to the thickness of his little ringer at the
point. I had watched him whittling it himself, shaving off the coarse outer
layer from the long strip of cured hide until the inner skin was exposed,
periodically pausing to test the balance and the heft of it, cutting it through
the air until it keened and whined like the desert wind through the canyons of
the hills of Lot. It was the colour of amber and Rasfer had polished it
lovingly until it was smooth and translucent as glass, but so supple that he
could bend it into a perfect arc between those bear-like paws. He had allowed
the blood of a hundred victims to dry upon it and to dye the thin end of it to
a lustrous patina that was aesthetically quite beautiful. Rasfer was an artist with this awful tool. He could
flick out and leave on the tender thigh of a young girl only a crimson weal
that never broke the skin, but stung as viciously as a scorpion and left his
victim writhing and weeping with the agony of it; or with a dozen hissing
strokes he could strip the skin and flesh from a man's back and leave his ribs
and the crest of his spine exposed. He stood over me now and grinned as he flexed the
long lash in his hands. Rasfer loved his work, and he hated me with all the
force of his envy and the feelings of inferiority that my intelligence and
looks and favour engendered in him. My Lord Intef stroked my naked back and sighed.
'You are so wicked sometimes, my old darling. You try to deceive me to whom you
owe the deepest loyalty. Nay, more than simple loyalty—to whom you owe your
very existence.' He sighed again. 'Why do you force this unpleasantness upon
me? You should know much better than to press the suit of that young jackanapes
upon me. It was a ludicrous attempt, but I suppose that I understand why you made
it. That childlike sense of compassion is one of your many weaknesses, and one
day will probably be the cause of your complete downfall. However, at times I
find it rather quaint and endearing and I might readily have forgiven you for
it, but I cannot overlook the fact that you have endangered the market value of
the goods that I placed in your care.' He twisted my head up so that my mouth
was free to answer him. 'For that, you must be punished. Do you understand me?' 'Yes, my lord,' I whispered, but I rolled my eyes
to watch the whip in Rasfer's hands. Once again my Lord Intef buried my face in
his lap, and then he spoke to Rasfer above my head. 'With all your cunning, Rasfer. Do not break the
skin, please. I do not want this delightfully smooth back marred permanently.
Ten will do as a start. Count then aloud for us.' I had watched a hundred or more unfortunates
undergo this punishment, some of them warriors and vaunted heroes. Not one of
them was able to remain silent under the lash of Rasfer. In any event it was
best not to do so, for he took silence as a personal challenge to his skill. I
knew this well, having travelled this bitter road before. I was quite prepared
to swallow any stupid pride and pay tribute to Rasfer's art in a loud voice. I
filled my lungs in readiness. 'One!' grunted Rasfer, and the lash fluted. The way
a woman later forgets the full pain of childbirth, I had forgotten the
exquisite sting of it, and I screamed even louder than I had intended. 'You are fortunate, my dear Taita,' my Lord Intef
murmured in my ear. 'I had the priests of Osiris examine the goods last night.
They are still intact.' I squirmed in his lap. Not only from the pain, but also
at the thought of those lascivious old goats from the temple probing and prying
into my little girl. Rasfer had his own little ritual to draw out the
punishment and to ensure that both he and his victim were able to savour the
moment to the full. Between each stroke he jogged in a small circle around the
barrazza, grunting exhortations and encouragement to himself, holding the whip
at high port like a ceremonial sword. As he completed the circle he was in
position for the next stroke, and he raised the lash high. 'Two!' he cried, and
I shrieked again. ONE OF LOSTRIS' SLAVE GIRLS WAS WAITING for me on
the broad terrace of my quarters when I limped painfully up the steps from the
garden. 'My mistress bids you attend her immediately,' she
greeted me. 'Tell her that I am indisposed.' I tried to avoid
the summons and, shouting for one of the slave boys to dress my injuries, I
hurried through into my chamber in an attempt to rid myself of the girl. I
could not face Lostris yet, for I dreaded having to report my failure, and
having at last to make her face the reality "and the impossibility of her love
for Tanus. The black girl followed me, ogling the livid weals across my back
with delicious horror. 'Go tell your mistress that I am injured, and that
I cannot come to her,' I snapped over my shoulder. 'She told me that you would try to wriggle out of
it, but she told me also that I was to stay with you and see to it that you did
not.' 'You are insolent for a slave,' I reprimanded her
sternly as the boy anointed my back with a healing salve of my own concoction. 'Yes,' agreed the imp with a grin. 'But then so are
you.' And she dodged the half-hearted slap I aimed at her with ease. Lostris is
much too soft with her handmaidens. 'Go tell your mistress that I will come to her,' I
capitulated. 'She said I must wait and make sure you did.' So I had an escort as I passed the guards at the
gate of the harem..The guards were eunuchs like myself, but, unlike me, they
were portly and androgynous. Despite their corpulence, or perhaps because of
it, they were powerful men and fierce. However, I had used my influence to
secure both of them this cosy sinecure, so they passed me through into the
women's quarters with a respectful salute. The harem was not nearly as grand nor as
comfortable as the quarters of the slave boys, and it was clear where my Lord Intef's
real interest lay. It was a compound of mud-brick hutments surrounded by a high
mud wall. The only gardens or decorations were those that Lostris and her maids
had undertaken, with my assistance. The vizier's wives were too fat and lazy
and caught up in the scandals and intrigues of the harem to exert themselves. Lostris' quarters were those closest to the main
gate, surrounded by a pretty garden with a lily pond and song-birds twittering
in cages woven of split bamboo. The mud walls were decorated with bright murals
of Nile scenes, of fish and birds and goddesses, that I had helped her paint. Her slave girls were huddled in a subdued group at
the doorway, and more than one of them had been weeping. Their faces were
streaked with tears. I pushed my way past them into the cool, dark interior,
and at once heard my mistress's sobs from the inner chamber. I hurried to her,
ashamed that I had been so craven as to try to avoid my duty to her. She was lying face down on the low bed, her entire
body shaking with the force of her grief, but she heard me enter and whirled
off the bed and rushed to me. 'Oh, Taita! They are sending Tanus away. Pharaoh
arrives in Karnak tomorrow, and my father will prevail upon him to order Tanus to
take his squadron up-river to Elephantine and the cataracts. Oh, Taita! It is
twenty days' travel to the first cataract. I shall never see him again. I wish
I were dead. I shall throw myself into the Nile and let the crocodiles devour
me. I don't want to h've without Tanus—' All this in one rising wail of
despair. 'Softly, my child.' I rocked her in my arms. 'How
do you know all these terrible things? They may never happen.' 'Oh, they will. Tanus has sent me a message. Kratas
has a brother in my father's personal bodyguard. He heard my father discussing
it with Rasfer. Somehow my father has found out about Tanus and me. He knows
that we were in the temple of Hapi alone. Oh, Taita, my father sent the priests
to examine me. Those filthy old men did horrid things to me. It hurt so,
Taita.' I hugged her gently. It is not too often that I
have the opportunity to do so, but now she hugged me back with all her
strength. Her thoughts turned from her own injuries to her lover. 'I shall never see Tanus again,' she cried, and I
was reminded of how young she truly was, not much more than a child, vulnerable
and lost in her grief. 'My father will destroy him.' 'Even your father cannot touch Tanus,' I tried to
reassure her. 'Tanus is a commander of a regiment of Pharaoh's own elite guard.
He is the king's man. Tanus takes his orders only from Pharaoh, and he enjoys
the full protection of the double crown of Egypt.' I did not add that this was
probably the only reason that her father had not already destroyed him, but went
on gently, 'While as for never seeing Tanus again, you will be playing opposite
him in the pageant. I will make certain that there is a chance for the two of
you to speak to each other between the acts.' 'My father will never lei the pageant go on now.' 'He has no alternative, unless he is prepared to
ruin my production and risk Pharaoh's displeasure, and you can be certain that
he will never do that.' 'He will send Tanus away, and have another actor
play Horus,' she sobbed. "There is no time to rehearse another actor.
Tanus will play the god Horus. I will make that clear to my Lord Intef. You and
Tanus will have a chance to talk. We will find a way out for the two of you.' She gulped back her tears and looked up at me with
complete trust. 'Oh, Taita. I know that you will find a way. You always do—'
She broke off suddenly and her expression changed. Her hands moved over my
back, exploring the ridged welts that Rasfer's whip had raised across it. 'I am sorry, mistress. I tried to put forward
Tanus' suit, as I promised you I would, and all this is the consequence of my
stupidity.' She stepped behind me and lifted the light linen
tunic I had donned' to hide my injuries, and she gasped. "This is Rasfer's
work. Oh, my poor dear Taita, why did you not warn me that this would happen,
that my father was so violently opposed to Tanus and to me?' I was hard put not to gasp at this artless piece of
effrontery, I who had pleaded and warned them and in return been accused of
disloyalty. I managed to hold my peace, however, although my back still
throbbed abominably. At least my mistress's own misery was forgotten for
the moment in her concern for my superficial injuries. She ordered me to sit on
her bed and remove my tunic while she ministered to me, her genuine love and compassion
making up for the lack of her medicinal skills. This distraction lifted her
from the utter depths of her despair. Soon she was chattering away in her usual
ebullient fashion, making plans to thwart her father's wrath and to reunite
herself with Tanus. Some of these plans demonstrated her good common sense,
while others, more far-fetched, merely pointed to her trusting youth and lack
of knowledge and experience in the wicked ways of the world. 'I shall play such
a fine role of Isis in the pageant,' she declared at one stage, 'and I shall
make myself so, agreeable to Pharaoh that he will grant me any boon that I ask
of him. Then I shall beg him for Tanus as my husband, and he will say—' here
she mimicked the king's pompous ceremonial tones so cleverly that I was forced
to grin, 'and he will say, "I declare the betrothal of Tanus, Lord Harrab,
son of Pianki, and of the Lady Lostris, daughter of Intef, and I raise my good
servant Tanus to the rank of Great Lion of Egypt and commander of all my armies.
I further order that all the former estates of his father, the noble Pianki,
Lord Harrab be returned to him—" ' Here she broke off in the middle of her
ministrations to my wounds and flung her arms around my neck. 'It could happen like that, could it not, dear
Taita? Please say that it could!' 'No natural man could resist you, mistress,' I
smiled at her nonsense. 'Not even great Pharaoh himself.' If I had known then
how close my words would turn out to being the truth, I think I should have
placed a live coal on my tongue before I spoke them. Her face was shining with hope once again. That was
enough reward for me, and I donned my tunic again to bring to an end her too
enthusiastic ministrations to my back. 'But now, mistress, if you are to make a beautiful
and irresistible Isis, you must get some rest.' I had brought with me a potion
of the powder of the sleeping-flower which is called the Red Shepenn. The seeds
of this precious flower had first been brought into this very Egypt by the
trade caravans from a mountainous land somewhere far to the east. I now
cultivated the red blooms in my garden, and when the petals were fallen I
scratched the seed carapace with a gold fork of three tines. Thick white milk
flowed from these wounds, which I gathered and dried and treated in accordance
with the formula I had evolved. The' powder could induce sleep, conjure up
strange dreams or smooth out pain. 'Stay with me awhile, Taita,' she murmured as she
settled down on the bed, curled like a sleepy kitten. 'Cuddle me to sleep like
you did when I was a baby.' She was a baby still, I thought, as I took her in
my arms. 'It will all turn out all right, won't it?' she
whispered. 'We will live happily ever after, just like they do in your stories,
won't we, Taita?' When she was asleep" I kissed her forehead
softly and covered her with a fur rug before I stole from her chamber. ON THE FIFTH DAY OF THE FESTIVAL OF Osiris, Pharaoh
came down-river to Karnak from his palace on Elephantine Island which was ten
days' travel away by swift river galley. He came in full state with all his
retinue to officiate at the —— festival of the god. Tanus' squadron had left Karnak three days
previously, speeding away upstream to meet the great flotilla and escort it on
the last stage of the voyage, so neither Lostris nor I had seen him since we
had all three returned from the great river-cow hunt. It was a special joy for
both of us then to see his galley come flying around the bend in the river,
full on the current and with a strong desert wind abeam. The Breath of Horus
was in the van of the fleet, leading it up from the south. Lostris was in the grand vizier's train, standing
behind her two brothers, Menset and Sobek. The two boys were comely and well-favoured,
but there was too much of their father in them for my taste. Menset, the elder
of the two, I particularly mistrusted, and the younger followed where his
brother led. I was standing further back in the ruck of
courtiers and lesser functionaries from where I could keep an eye both on
Lostris and on my Lord Intef. I saw the back of her neck flush with pleasure
and excitement at the glimpse she had of Tanus' tall figure on the stern-tower
of the Breath of Horus. The scales on his crocodile-skin breastplate
gleamed in the simlight, and the spray of ostrich feathers on his helmet
floated in the draught of the galley's passage. Lostris was hopping with excitement and waving both
slim arms above her head, but her squeals and her antics were lost in the roar
of the vast crowd that lined both banks of the Nile to welcome their pharaoh.
Thebes is the most populous city in the world, and I guessed that almost a
quarter of a million souls had turned out to welcome the king. Meanwhile Tanus
looked neither left nor right, but stared sternly ahead with his unsheathed
sword held before his face in salute. The rest of his squadron followed the Breath
of Horus in the wide vee of the egret formation, named for the pattern that
those birds fly in as they return in the sunset to their roosts. All their
standards and battle honours were streaming out in a fluttering blaze of
rainbow colours, a noble show that set the crowds cheering and waving their
palm-fronds wildly. It was some time before the first vessel of the main
convoy came wallowing round the bend behind them. It was laden with ladies and
nobles of the king's entourage. It was followed by another, and then by a great
untidy horde of vessels great and small. They came swarming downstream,
transports filled with palace servants and slaves and all their accoutrements
and paraphernalia, barges laden with oxen and goats and chickens for the
kitchens, gilded and gaily painted vessels bearing cargoes of palace furniture
and treasure, of nobles and lesser creatures, all uncomfortably jumbled
together in a most unseamanlike fashion. In what contrast was the display put
up by Tanus' squadron as it rounded-to downstream and held its geometrically
spaced formation against the swift Nile current! At last Pharaoh's state barge lumbered around the
bend, and the cheering of the crowd rose to a crescendo. This huge vessel, the
largest ever built by man, made its ponderous way towards where we were waiting
to welcome it at the stone wharf below the grand vizier's palace. I had plenty of time in which to study it and to
muse how aptly its size and design, and the handling of it, reflected the
present state and government of this very Egypt of ours—Egypt as she stood in
the twelfth year of the rule of Pharaoh Mamose, the eighth of that name and
line,,and the weakest yet of a weak and vacillating dynasty. The state barge
was as long as five of the fighting galleys laid end to end, but its height and
breadth were so ill-proportioned that they gravely offended my artistic
instincts. Its massive hull was painted in the riotous colours that were the
fashion of the age, and the figurehead of Osiris on the bows was gilded with
real gold leaf. However, as she drew closer to the landing where we waited, I
could see that the brilliant colours were faded in patches and her sides were
zebra-striped in dun where her crew had defecated over the rail. Amidships stood a tall deck-house, Pharaoh's
private quarters, that was so solidly constructed of thick planks of precious
cedar, and so stuffed with heavy furniture that the sailing characteristics of
the barge were sadly affected. Atop this grotesque edifice, behind an ornate
railing that was woven of fresh lilies, beneath a canopy of finely tanned
gazelle skins skilfully sewn together and painted with images of all the major
gods and goddesses, sat Pharaoh in majestic isolation. On his feet were sandals
of gold filigree and his robe was of linen so pure that it shone like the high
cumulus clouds of full summer. On his head he wore the tall double crown; the
white crown of Upper Egypt with the head of the vulture goddess Nekhbet,
combined with the red crown and the cobra head of Buto, the goddess of the
Delta. Despite the crown, the ironic truth was that this
beloved sovereign of ours had lost the Delta almost ten years previously. In
our turbulent days another pharaoh ruled in Lower Egypt, one who also wore the
double crown, or at least his own version of it, a pretender who was our
sovereign's deadly adversary, and whose constant wars against us drained both
kingdoms of gold and the blood of the young men. Egypt was divided and torn by
internal strife. Over the thousand or so years of our history, it had always
been thus when weak men took on the mantle of pharaoh. It needed a strong, bold
and clever man to hold the two kingdoms in his fists. In order to turn the unwieldy vessel into the
current and bring her to her moorings at the palace wharf, the captain should
have steered close in to the far bank. If he had done so, he would have had the
full breadth of the Nile in which to complete his turn. However, he had
obviously misjudged the strength of wind and current and he began his turn from
midstream. At first the barge swung ponderously across the current, listing
heavily as the height of the deck-house caught the hot desert wind like a sail.
Half a dozen boatswains raged about the lower deck with their whips rising and
falling, the snapping of the lash on bare shoulders carrying clearly across the
water. Under the goading of the lash the rowers plied their
paddles in a frenzy that churned the waters alongside the hull to foam, one
hundred paddles a side pulling against each other and none of them making any
effort to synchronize the stroke. Their curses and cries blended with the
shouted orders of the four helmsmen who were struggling with the long
steering-oar in the stern. Meanwhile, on the poop-deck, Nembet, the geriatric
admiral and captain of the barge, alternately combed his fingers through his
long scraggy grey beard and flapped his hands in impotent agitation. High above this pandemonium sat Pharaoh, motionless
as a statue and aloof from it all. Oh, verily this was our Egypt. Then the rate
of the barge's turn bled away until she was no longer swinging but heading
straight for where we stood on the bank, locked in chains by the pull of the
current and the contrary push of the wind. Captain and crew, despite all their
wild and erratic exertions, seemed powerless either to complete the manoeuvre
and head her into the current, or to heave-to and prevent her from ploughing
headlong into the granite blocks of 'the wharf and staving in her great gilded
bows. As everyone realized what was about to happen, the cheers of the crowd
watching from the shore slowly died away and an awful hush fell upon both banks
of the Nile into which the shouting and the turmoil on the decks of the huge
vessel carried all the more clearly. Then suddenly all the eyes of the crowd were drawn
downstream, as the Breath ofHorus broke from her station at the head of the
squadron and came tearing up-river, driven by the flying paddles. In perfect
unison those paddles dipped and pulled and swung and dipped again. She cut in
so sharply under the bows of the barge mat the. crowd gasped with a sound
higher than the wind in the papyrus beds. Collision seemed inevitable, but at
the last possible moment Tanus signalled with a clenched fist lifted above bis
head. Simultaneously both banks of rowers backed water and the helmsman put the
steering-oar hard over. The Breath ofHorus checked and paid away before the
ponderous advance of the great barge. The two vessels touched as lightly as a
virgin's kiss, and for an instant the stern-tower of the Breath of Horus
was almost level with the barge's main deck. In that instant Tanus poised himself on the bulwark
of the tower. He had kicked off his sandals, divested himself of his armour,
and thrown aside his weapons. Around his waist he had tied die end of a light
flax line. With the line trailing behind him he leaped out across the gap
between the two vessels. As though awakening from a stupor, the crowd
stirred and shook itself. If there was still one amongst them who did not know
who Tanus was, he would know before this day was out. Of course, Tanus' fame
had already been won in the river wars against the legions of the usurper in
the Lower Kingdom. However, only his own troops had ever seen him in action.
The reported deed never carries the same weight as the one that the eye sees
for itself. Now, before the gaze of Pharaoh, the royal flotilla
and the entire populace of Kamak, Tanus leaped from one deck to the other and
landed as lightly as a leopard. 'Tanus!' I am sure that it was my mistress,
Lostris, who first called out his name, but I was next. 'Tanusl' I yelled, and then all those around me
took up the cry. 'Tanus! Tanus! Tanus!' They chanted it like an ode to some
newly discovered god. The moment he landed on the deck of the barge,
Tanus whirled and raced into the bows, hauling in the thin line hand over hand as
he ran. The crew of his galley had spliced a heavy hawser, as thick as a man's
arm, to the end of the carrying-line. Now they sent it across as Tanus lay back
against the weight of it. With the muscles of his arms and back shining with
sweat, he dragged it in. By this time a handful of the barge's crew had
realized what he was about, and rushed forward to help him. Under Tanus!
direction they took three turns with the end of the hawser about the barge's
bowsprit, and the instant it was securdd Tanus signalled his galley away. The Breath of Horus leaped into the current,
gathering speed swiftly. Then abruptly she came up short against the hawser,
and the weight of the heavy vessel on the other end threw her back on her
haunches. For a dreadful moment I thought she might capsize and be dragged
under, but Tanus had anticipated the shock and signalled his crew to cushion it
by skilfully backing the long paddles. Although she was dragged down so low that she took
in green water over her stem, the galley weathered it, bobbed up and came back
taut on the hawser. For a long moment nothing happened. The galley's puny
weight made no impression on the great ship's ponderous way. The two vessels
were locked together as though a crocodile had an old bull buffalo by the snout
but could not drag him from the bank. Then Tanus in the bows of the barge
turned to face the disorganized crew. He made one authoritative gesture that
caught all their attention, and a remarkable change came over them. They were
waiting for his command. Nembet was the commander of all Pharaoh's fleet
with the rank of Great Lion of Egypt. Years ago he had been one of the mighty
men, but now he was old and feeble. Tanus took over from him effortlessly, as
though it were as natural as the force of the current and the wind, and the
crew of the barge responded immediately. 'Pull!' He gestured to the port bank of oarsmen and
they bent their backs and pulled with a will. 'Back-water!' He stabbed his clenched fist at the
starboard side and they dug in hard with the pointed blades of their paddles.
Tanus stepped to the rail and signalled to the helmsman of me Breath of
Horus, masterfully coordinating the efforts of both crews. Still the barge
was bearing down upon the wharf and now only a narrow strip of open water
separated the vessel from the granite blocks. Then at last, slowly, too slowly, she began to
respond. The gaudily painted bows began to swing up into the current as the
galley dragged mem round. Once again the cheering died away and that fateful
hush fell upon us all as we waited for the enormous ship to crash into the
wharf and tear out her own guts on the rock. When that happened there was no
doubt what the consequences must be for Tanus. He had snatched command from the
senile admiral and so must bear the full responsibility for all the old man's
mistakes. When Pharaoh was dashed from his throne by the collision, when the
double crown and all his dignity were sent rolling across the deck, and when
the state barge sank beneath him and he was dragged from the river tike a
drowning puppy before the gaze of all his subjects, men there would be both the
insulted Admiral Nembet and my Lord Intef to encourage Pharaoh to bring the
full weight of his displeasure to bear upon the presumptuous young upstart. I stood helplessly and trembled for my dear friend,
and then a miracle occurred. The barge was already so'close to running aground
and Tanus so near to where I stood that his voice carried clearly to me.
"Great Horus, help me now!' he cried. There is no doubt at all in my mind that the .gods
often take a hand in the affairs of men. Tanus is a Horus man, and Horus is the
god of the wind. The desert wind had blown for three days and nights
out of the western desolation of the Sahara. It had blown at the strength of
half a gale without a check for all that time, but now it dropped. It did not
taper off, it simply ceased to blow at all. The wavelets mat had flecked the
surface of the river flattened out, and the palms along the waterfront that had
been vigorously shaking their fronds fell still, as though frozen by a sudden
frost. Released from the claws of the wind, the barge
rolled back on to an even keel and yielded to the pull of the Breath of
Horus. Her elephantine bows turned up into the current, and she came parallel
with the wharf at the exact moment that her side touched the dressed stone and
the rush of the Nile killed her forward-way and stalled her motionless in the
water. One last command from Tanus and, before the ship
could gather stern-way, the mooring ropes were cast on to the wharf and swiftly
garnered up by eager hands and made fast to the stone bollards. Lightly as a
goose-down feather floating on the water, the great barge of state lay safe and
serene at her berth, and neither the throne upon which Pharaoh sat, nor the
high crown upon his head, had been disturbed by her moorage. We, the onlookers, burst out in a roar of praise
for the feat, and the name of Tanus rather than that of Pharaoh was on all our
tongues. Modestly, and very prudently, Tanus made no attempt to acknowledge our
applause. To draw any further attention to himself that might detract from the
welcome that awaited the king would have been folly indeed, and would certainly
have negated any royal favour that his exploit had earned him. Pharaoh was
always jealous of his royal dignity. Instead, Tanus surreptitiously signalled
the Breath of Horus alongside. When she was hidden from our view by the
bulk of the barge, he dropped overside on to the galley's deck, quitting the
stage on which he had just earned such distinction, and leaving it now to his
king. However, I saw the expression of fury and chagrin
on the face of Nembet, the ancient admiral, the Great Lion of Egypt, as he came
ashore behind Pharaoh, and I knew that Tanus had made himself another powerful
enemy. I WAS ABLE TO MAKE GOOD MY PROMISE to Lostris that
very evening when I put the cast of the pageant through their dress rehearsal.
Before the performance began I was able to give the two lovers almost an hour
alone together. hi the precincts of the temple of Osiris, which was
to be our theatre for the pageant, I had set up tents to act as dressing-rooms
for each of the principal players. I had purposely placed Lostris' tent a
little apart from the others, screened from them by one of the huge stone
columns that support the roof of the temple. While I stood on sentry duty at
the entrance to the tent, Tanus lifted the opposite panel and slipped in under
it. I tried not to eavesdrop on their cries of delight
as they first embraced, nor to the whispering and cooing, to the muffled
laughter and to the small moans and gasps of their decorous love-making which
followed. Although at this stage I would not have made any attempt to prevent
it, I was convinced that they would not carry this love-making to its ultimate
conclusion. Long afterwards both Lostris and Tanus separately confirmed this
one for me. My mistress; had been a virgin on her wedding day. If only any of
us had known how close upon us that wedding day was, I wonder how differently
we might have acted then. Although I was acutely aware that every minute that
they were alone together in the tent increased the danger for all of us, still
I could not bring myself to call enough and separate them. Although the welts
on my back that Raster's whip had raised still burned, and although deep in
that morass of my soul where I attempt to hide all my unworthy thoughts and
instincts my envy for the lovers burned as painfully, still I let them stay
together much longer than I should have done. I did not hear my Lord Intef coming. He used to
have his sandals shod in the softest kid-skin to muffle his footfalls. He moved
silently as a ghost, and many a courtier and slave felt either Rasfer's whip or
his noose on account of a careless word that my lord overheard on his noiseless
peregrinations through the halls and corridors of the palace. However, over the
years I developed an instinct that enabled me most times to sense his presence
before he materialized out of the shadows. This instinct was not infallible,
but that evening it stood me in good stead. When I looked round suddenly he was
almost upon me, gliding between the pillars of the hypostyle hall towards me,
slim and tall and deadly as an erect cobra. 'My Lord Intef!' I cried loudly enough to startle
myself. 'I am honoured that you have come to witness our rehearsals. I would be
deeply grateful for any advice or suggestions—' I was gabbling wildly in an
attempt to cover my confusion and to alert the lovers in the tent behind me. In both objects I succeeded better than I had any
right to expect. I heard the sudden scuffle of consternation within the
dressing-tent behind me as the lovers broke apart, and then the flutter of the
rear panel of the tent as Tanus ducked out the way he had entered. At any other time I would never have succeeded so
easily in deceiving my Lord Intef. He would have read the guilt upon my face as
clearly as I read the hieroglyphics on the temple walls or my own characters on
this scroll; but that evening he was blinded by his own wrath, and intent only
on taking me to task for my latest misdemeanour. He did not rage; or roar with
anger. My Lord is at his most dangerous when his tone is mild and his smile
silky. 'Dear Taita.' It was almost a whisper. 'I hear that
you have altered some of the arrangements for the opening act of the pageant,
despite the fact that I personally ordered them. I could not believe that you
have been so presumptuous. I had to come all this way in the heat to find out
for myself.' I knew it was of no avail to feign innocence or
ignorance, so I bowed my head and tried to look aggrieved. 'My lord. It was not
I who ordered the changes. It was His Holiness, the abbot of the temple of
Osiris—' But my lord broke in impatiently, 'Yes, of course
he did, but only after you put him up to it. Do you think I do not know both
you and that mumbling old priest? He never had an original thought in his head,
while you have nothing but.' 'My lord!'I protested. 'What devious little trick was it this time? Was it
one of those convenient dreams sent to you by the gods?' my lord asked, his
voice as soft as the rustle of one of the sacred cobras that infested the
temple, sliding across the stone flags of the floor. 'My lord!' I did my best to look shocked by the
accusation, although I had indeed given the good abbot a rather fanciful
account of how Osiris in the guise of a black crow had visited me in my sleep
to complain of the spilling of blood in his temple. Up until that time the priest had voiced no
objection to the realistic piece of theatre that my Lord Intef had planned for
the amusement of Pharaoh. I had only resorted to dreams when all my efforts to
dissuade my lord had failed. It was deeply abhorrent to me to be party to such
an abomination as my lord had ordered to be performed in the first act of the
pageant. Of course I am aware that certain savage peoples in the eastern lands
make human sacrifice to their gods. I have heard that the Kassites, who live
beyond the twin rivers Tigris and Euphrates, cast new-born babes into a fiery
furnace. The caravan masters who have travelled in those distant lands speak of
other atrocities performed in the name of religion, of young virgins
slaughtered to promote the harvest or captives of war beheaded before the
statues of a triple-headed god. However, we Egyptians are a civilized people and we
worship wise and just gods, not blood-crazed monsters. I had tried to convince
my master of this. I had pointed out to him that only once before had a pharaoh
made human sacrifice; when Menotep had slit the throats of the seven rebel
princes in the temple of Seth and quartered their corpses and sent the embalmed
fragments to the governors of each of the nomes as a warning. History still
remembered the deed with distaste. Menotep is known to this day as the Bloody
King. 'It is not human sacrifice,' my master had
contradicted me. 'Merely a well-merited execution, to be carried out in a
rather novel fashion. You will not deny, dear Taita, that the death penalty has
always been an important part of our system of justice, will you? Tod is a
thief. He has stolen from the royal coffers and he must die, if only as an
example to others.' It sounded reasonable, except that I knew he was
not at all interested in justice, but rather in protecting his own treasure and
in impressing Pharaoh, who so loved pageant and theatre. This had left me with
no alternative but to dream for the benefit of the good abbot. Now my Lord
In-tef's lip lifted in a smile which exposed his perfect teeth but which
chilled my blood and raised the hairs on the nape of my neck. 'Here is a little piece of advice,' he whispered
close to my face. f'I suggest that you have another dream tonight, so that
whichever god it was that visited you last time has an opportunity to
countermand his previous instructions to the abbot and to endorse my
arrangements. If this does not happen, I will find some more work for
Rasfer—that is my solemn promise to you.' He turned and strode away, leaving me
both relieved that he had not discovered the lovers and miserable that I was
forced to go ahead with the vile display which he had ordered. Nevertheless, after my master had left, the
rehearsal was a heartening success that revived my spirits. Lostris was in such
a glow of happiness after her tryst with Tanus that her beauty was indeed
divine, and Tanus in his youth and power was the young Horus incarnate. Naturally I was perturbed by the entrance of my
Osiris to the stage, aware as I now was of the fate that my Lord Intef had
ordered for him. My Osiris was played by a handsome, middle-aged man named Tod
who had been one of the bailiffs until he had been caught dipping into my Lord
Intef's coffers to support a young and expensive courtesan of whom he was
enamoured. I was not proud that it was my examination of the accounts that had
brought to light the discrepancies. My lord had released him from custody, where he was
awaiting formal trial and sentencing, to play the part of the god of the
underworld in the pageant. My lord had promised not to take the matter further
if he fulfilled the role of Osiris satisfactorily. The unfortunate Tod was
unaware of the hidden menace in this offer and threw himself into the act with
pathetic enthusiasm, believing that he was about to earn his pardon. He could
not know that, in the meantime, my lord had secretly signed his death warrant
and handed the scroll to Rasfer, who was not only the state executioner but my
choice to play Seth in our little production. It was my lord's intention that
he should combine both roles on the following evening when the pageant was
performed before Pharaoh. Although Rasfer was a natural choice for the role of
Seth, I regretted having cast him in it as I watched him rehearse the opening
scene with Tod, and I shuddered as I imagined how the main performance would
differ from the rehearsal. After the rehearsal it was my most pleasant duty to
escort my mistress back to the harem compound. She would not let me leave but
kept me late listening to her excited resume of the day's extraordinary events
and the role that Tanus had played in them. 'Did you see how he called upon the great god Horus
and how the god came at once to his aid? Surely he has the full favour and
protection of Horus, don't you agree? Horus will not let any evil befall us, of
that I am now certain.' There was much more of this happy fantasy, and no
more talk of parting and suicide. How swiftly the winds of young love shift! 'After what Tanus did today, the way he saved the state
barge from wrecking, surely he must also have earned Pharaoh's high favour,
don't you think so, Taita? With favour of both the god and Pharaoh, my father
can never succeed in having Tanus sent away now, can he, Taita?' I was called upon to endorse every happy thought
that occurred to her, and I was not allowed to leave the harem until I had
memorized at least a dozen messages of undying love which I was sworn to carry
to Tanus personally. When, exhausted, I finally reached my own quarters,
there was still no rest for me. Nearly all the slave boys were waiting for me,
as excited and garrulous as my mistress had been. They also wanted Jo have my
opinion of the day's events, and particularly of Tanus' rescue of Pharaoh's
ship and the significance of that deed. They crowded around me on the terrace
above the river as I fed my pets, and vied with each other for my attention. 'Elder brother, is it true that Tanus called upon
the god for his help, and Horus intervened immediately? Did you see it happen?
Some even say that the god appeared in his falcon shape and hovered over Tanus'
head, spreading protective wings over him. Is it true?' 'Is it true, Akh, that Pharaoh has promoted Tanus
to Companion of Pharaoh, and given him an estate of five hundred fed dan of
fertile land on the riverside as reward?' 'Elder brother, they say that the oracle at the
desert shrine of Thoth, the god of wisdom, has cast a horoscope for Tanus. The
oracle divines that he will be the greatest warrior in the history of our Egypt
and that, one day, Pharaoh will favour him above all others.' It is amusing now
to look back on these childish prattles, and to realize the strange truths that
were adumbrated in them, but at the time I dismissed them as I did the
children, with mock severity. As I composed myself to sleep, my last thought was
that the populace of the twin towns of Luxor and Karnak had taken Tanus to
their hearts completely, but that this was an onerous and dubious distinction.
Fame and popularity breed envy in high places, and the adulation of the mob is
fickle. They often take as much pleasure in tearing down the idols that they
have grown tired of, as they did in elevating them in the first place. It is safer by far to live unseen and unremarked,
as I always attempt to do. ON THE AFTERNOON OF THE SIXTH DAY OF the festival,
Pharaoh moved in solemn procession from his villa in the midst of the royal
estates in the open country between Karnak and Luxor, down the ceremonial
avenue lined with statues of granite lions, to the temple of Osiris on the bank
of the Nile. The great sledge on which he rode was so tall that
the dense crowds lining the avenue were forced to strain their necks backwards
to look up at him on his great gilded throne as he trundled by, drawn by twenty
pure white bullocks with massive humped shoulders and wreaths of flowers on
their horned heads. The skids of the sledge ground harshly over the paving and
scarred the stone slabs. One hundred musicians led the procession, strumming
the lyre and the harp, beating the cymbal and the drum, shaking the rattle and
the sistrum, and blowing on the long straight hom of the oryx and on the
curling horn of the wild ram. A choir of a hundred of the finest voices in
Egypt followed them, singing hymns of praise to Pharaoh and that other god
Osiris. Naturally I led the choir. Behind us followed an honour guard from the
Blue Crocodile regiment led by Tanus himself. The crowds raised a special cheer
for him as, all plumed and armoured, he strode past. The unmarried maidens shrieked
and more than one of them sank swooning in the dust, overcome by the hysteria
that his new-won fame engendered. Behind the guard of honour came the vizier and his
high-office bearers, then the nobles and their wives and children, then a
detachment of the Falcon regiment, and finally Pharaoh's great sledge. In all,
this was an assembly of several thousand of the most wealthy and influential
persons in the Upper Kingdom. As we approached the temple of Osiris, the abbot
and all his priests were drawn up on the staircase between the tall entrance
pylons to welcome Pharaoh Mamose. The temple had been freshly painted and the
bas-relief on the outer walls was dazzling with colour in the warm yellow glow
of the sunset. A gay cloud of banners and flags fluttered fiom their poles set
in the recesses of the outer wall. At the base of the staircase Pharaoh descended from
his carriage and in solemn majesty began the climb up the one hundred steps.
The choir lined both sides of the staircase. I was on the fiftieth step and so
I was able to study the king minutely during the few seconds that it took for
him to pass close to me. I already knew him well, for he had been a patient
of mine, but I had forgotten how small he was—that is, small for a god. He
stood not ~as tall as my shoulder, although the high double crown made him seem
much more impressive. His arms were folded across his chest in the ritual
posture and he carried the crook and the flail of his royal office and his
godhead. I remarked as I had before that his hands were hairless, smooth and
almost feminine, and that his feet also were small and neat. He wore rings on
all his fingers and on his toes, amulets on his upper arms and bracelets on his
wrists. The massive pectoral plate of red gold on his chest was inlaid with
many colours of faience depicting the god Thoth bearing the feather of truth.
That piece of jewellery was a splendid treasure almost five hundred years old
and . had been worn by seventy kings before him. Under the double crown, his face was powdered dead
white like that of a corpse. His eyes were dramatically outlined with startling
jet black and his lips were rouged crimson. Under the heavy make-up his
expression was petulant, and his lips were thin and straight and humourless.
His eyes were shifty and nervous, as well they might be, I reflected. The foundations of this great House of Egypt were
cracked, and the kingdom riven and shaken. Even a god has his worries. Once his
domain had stretched from the sea, across the seven mouths of the Delta,
southwards to Assoun and the first cataract—the greatest empire on earth. He
and his ancestors had let it all slip away, and now his enemies swarmed at his
shrunken borders, clamouring like hyena and jackal and vulture to feast on the
carcass of our Egypt. In the south were the black hordes of Africa, in
the north along the coast of the great sea were the piratical sea-people, and
along the lower reaches of the Nile the legions of the false Pharaoh. In the
west were the treacherous Bedouin and the sly Libyan, while in the east new
hordes seemed to rise up daily, their names striking terror into a nation grown
timid and hesitant with defeat. Assyrians and Medes, Kassites and Humans and
Hittites—there seemed no end to their multitudes. What advantage remained in our ancient civilization
if it were grown feeble and effete with its great age? How were we to resist
the barbarian in his savage vigour, his cruel arrogance and his lust for rapine
and plunder? I was certain that this pharaoh, like those who had immediately
preceded him, was not capable of leading the nation back to its former glories.
He was incapable even of breeding a male heir. This lack of an heir to the empire of Egypt seemed
to obsess him even more than the loss of the empire itself. He had taken twenty
wives so far. They had given him daughters, a virtual tribe of daughters, but
no son. He would not accept that the fault lay with him as sire. He had
consulted every doctor of renown in the Upper Kingdom and visited every oracle
and every important shrine. I knew all this because I was one of the learned
doctors he had sent for. I admit that at the time I had felt some trepidation
in prescribing to a god, and that I had wondered why he should need to consult
a mere mortal on such a delicate subject. Nevertheless, I had recommended a
diet of bull's testicles fried in honey and counselled him to find the most
beautiful virgin in Egypt and take her to his marriage-bed within a year of the
first flowering of her woman's moon. I had no great faith in my own remedy, but bull's
testicles, when cooked to my recipe, are a tasty dish, while I reckoned that
the search for the most beautiful virgin in the land might distract Pharaoh and
prove not only amusing but pleasurable as well. From a practical point of view,
if the king bedded a sufficient number of young ladies, then surely one of them
must eventually drop a male pup into his harem. Anyhow, I consoled myself that my treatment was not
as drastic as some of the others proposed by my peers, particularly those
disgusting remedies dreamed up by the quacks in the temple of Osiris who call
themselves doctors. If not actually efficacious, my recommendations would at
least do no harm. That was what I believed. How wrong ;the fates would prove
me, and if only I had known the consequences of my folly, I would have taken
Tod's place in the pageant rather than have given Pharaoh such frivolous
counsel. I was amused and flattered when I heard that
Pharaoh must have taken my advice seriously, and that he had ordered his
nomarchs and his governors to scour the length'of the land from El Amarna to
the cataracts to find bulls with succulent balls and any virgin who might fit
my specifications for the mother of his first son. My sources at the king's
court informed me that he had already rejected hundreds of aspiring applicants
for the- title of the most beautiful virgin in the land. Then the king was swiftly past me and gone into the
temple to the keening of the priests and the obsequious bobbing of the abbot.
The grand vizier and all his train followed closely, and then there was an
undignified rush of lesser citizens to find places from which to watch the
passion play. Space in the temple was limited. Only the mighty and the noble
and those rich enough to bribe the thieving priests were allowed into the inner
courtyard. The others were forced to watch through the gates from the outer
court. Many thousands of the citizenry would be disappointed and would have to
be content with a secondhand account of the pageant. Even I, the impresario,
had great difficulty in fighting my way through the press of humanity, and I
only succeeded when Tanus saw my predicament and sent two of his men to rescue
me and force a path for me into the precincts reserved for the actors. Before the pageant could begin, we were obliged to
endure a succession of flowery speeches, firstly from the local functionaries
and government ministers, and then from the grand vizier in person. This
interlude of speechifying gave me the opportunity to make certain that all the
arrangements for the pageant were perfect. I went from tent to tent, checking
the costumes and the make-up of each of my actors, and soothing last-minute
attacks of temperament and stage-fright. The unfortunate Tod was nervously dreading the possibility
that his performance might not please my Lord Intef. I was able to assure him
that it most certainly would, and then I administered to him a draught of the
Red Shepenn, which would deaden the pain that he was about to have inflicted
lipon him. When I came to Rasfer's tent he was drinking wine
with two of his cronies from the palace guard and, with a whetstone, laying an
edge on his short bronze sword. I had created his make-up to render him even
more repulsive, which was not an easy feat given the high plateau of ugliness
from which we started. I realized how well I had succeeded as he leered at me
with blackened teeth and offered me a cup of the wine. 'How does your back feel now, pretty, boy? Have a taste
of a1 man's drink! Perhaps it will give you balls again.' I am accustomed to
his taunts and I kept my dignity as I told him that my Lord Intef had
countermanded the abbot's orders and that the first act was to be played out in
the original form. 'I have spoken to Lord Intef already.' He held up
the sword. 'Feel the edge, eunuch. I want to make certain that it meets with
your approval.' I left him feeling a little queasy. Although Tanus would not be on stage until the
second act, he was already in costume. Relaxed and smiling, he clasped my
shoulder. 'Well, old friend, this is your opportunity. After this evening your
fame as a playwright will spread throughout Egypt.' 'As yours has already. Your name is on every lip,'
I told him, but he laughed it away with careless modesty as I went on, 'Do you
have your closing declamation prepared, Tanus? Would you like to recite it to
me now?' Traditionally, the actor who played Horus would
close the pageant with a message to Pharaoh, ostensibly from the gods but in
reality from his own subjects. In olden times this had been the one occasion
during the year when the populace, through the agency of the actor, could bring
to the king's notice matters of concern which they were not able to address to
him at any other time. However, during the rule of this last dynasty of kings
the tradition had fallen away, and the closing speech had become merely another
eulogy to the divine pharaoh. For days past I had been asking Tanus to rehearse
his speech for me, but every time he had put me off with excuses so lame that I
was by now thoroughly suspicious of his intentions. "This is the last
opportunity,' I insisted, but he laughed at me. 'I have decided to let my speech be as much a
surprise to you as I hope it will be to Pharaoh. That way you should both enjoy
it more.' And there was nothing I could do to persuade him. At times he can be
far and away the most headstrong and obstinate young ruffian I have ever
encountered. I left him in not a little dudgeon, and went to find more convivial
company. As I stooped in throughjhe entrance of Lostris'
dressing-tent, I froze with shock. Even though I had designed her costume
myself and instructed her handmaidens as to exactly how I wanted her powder and
rouge and eye-paint applied, still I was not prepared for the ethereal vision
that stood before me now. For a moment I was convinced that another miracle had
taken place and that the goddess had indeed risen up from the underworld to
take my mistress's place. I gasped aloud and had actually begun to sink to my
knees in superstitious awe when my mistress giggled and roused my from my
delusion. 'Isn't this fun? I cannot wait to see Tanus in full
costume. I am sure he must look like the god himself.' She turned slowly to
allow me to appraise her own costume, smiling at me over her shoulder. 'No more godlike than you, my lady,' I whispered.
'When will the play begin?' she demanded impatiently. 'I am so excited that I
can wait no longer.' I cocked my ear to the panel of the tent and
listened for a moment to the drone of the speeches in the great hall. I
realized that this was-the final oration and that at any moment my Lord Intef
would call upon my players to perform. I took Lostris' hand and squeezed it. 'Remember the
long pause and the haughty look before you begin your opening speech,' I
cautioned her, and she slapped my shoulder playfully. 'Away with you, you old fuss-pot, it will all go
perfectly, you'll see.' And at that moment I heard my Lord Intef's voice
raised. 'The divine god Pharaoh Mamose, the Great House of
Egypt, the Support of the Realm, the Just, the Great, the All-Seeing, the
All-Merciful—' The titles and honorifics continued while I hurried out of
Lostris' tent and made my way to my opening position behind the central pillar.
I peered around the column and saw that the inner courtyard of the temple was
packed and that Pharaoh and his senior wives sat in the front rank on low
benches of cedar wood, sipping cool sherbet or nibbling dates and sweetmeats. My Lord Intef was addressing them from the front of
the raised platform below the altar that was our stage. The main body of the
stage was still .hidden from the audience by the linen curtains. I surveyed it
for one last time, although it was too late to do anything further about it now. Behind the curtains the set was decorated with
palms and acacia trees that the palace gardeners had transplanted under my
instruction. My masons had been taken from the work on the king's tomb to build
a stone cistern at the back of the temple from which a stream could be diverted
across the stage to represent the river Nile. At the rear of the stage, hanging from floor to
ceiling, were tightly stretched sheets of linen on which the artists from the
necropolis had painted marvellous landscapes. In the half-light of the dusk and
the flicker of the torches in "their brackets the effect was so realistic
as to transport the beholder into a different world in a distant time. There were other delights that I had prepared for
Pharaoh's amusement, from cages of animals, birds and butterflies that would be
released to simulate the creation of the world by the great god Ammon-Ra, to
flares and torches that I had doctored with chemicals to burn with brilliant
flames of crimson and green, and flood the stage with eerie light and
smoke-clouds, like those of the underworld where the gods live. 'Mamose, son of Ra, may you be granted eternal
life! We your loyal subjects, the citizens of Thebes, beg you to draw nigh and
give your divine attention to this poor play that we dedicate to Your Majesty.' My Lord Intef concluded his address of welcome and
resumed his seat. To a fanfare of hidden rams' horns, I stepped out from behind
the pillar and faced the audience. They had endured discomfort and boredom on
the hard flagstones, and by now were ripe for the entertainment to begin. A
raucous cheer greeted my entrance and even Pharaoh smiled in anticipation. I held up both hands for silence, and only when it
was total did I begin to speak my overture. 'While I walked in the sunlight, young and filled
with the vigour of youth, I heard the fatal music in the reeds by the bank of
the Nile. I did not recognize the sound of this harp, and I had no fear, for I
was in the full bloom of my manhood and secure in the affection of my beloved. 'The music was of surpassing beauty. Joyously I
went to find the musician, and could not know that he was Death and that he
played his harp to summoame alone.' We Egyptians are fascinated by death, and I
had at once touched a deep chord within my audience. They sighed and shuddered. 'Death seized me and bore me up in his skeletal
arms towards Ammon-Ra, the sun god, and I was become one with the white light
of his being. At a great distance I heard my beloved weep, but I could not see
her and all the days of my life were as though they had never been.' This was
the first public recitation of my prose, and I knew almost at once that I had
them, their faces were fascinated and intent. There was not a sound in the
temple. 'Then Death set me down in a high place from which
I could see the world like a shining round shield in the blue sea of the
heavens. I saw'all men and all creatures who have ever lived. Like a mighty
river, tune ran backwards before mine eyes. For a hundred thousand years I
watched their strivings and their deaths. I watched all men go from death and
old .age to infancy and birth. Time became more and more remote, going back
until the birth of the first man and the first woman. I watched them at the
moment of their birth and then before. At last there were no men upon the earth
and only the gods existed. 'Yet still the river of time flowed back beyond the
time of the gods into Nun, into the time of darkness and primordial chaos. The
river of time could flow no further back and so reversed itself. Time began to
run forward in the manner that was familiar to me from my days of life upon the
earth, and I watched the passion of the gods played out before me.' My audience
were all of them well versed in the theology of our pantheon, but none of them
had ever heard the mysteries presented in such a novel fashion. They sat silent
and enthralled as I went on. 'Out of the chaos and darkness of Nun rose
Ammon-Ra, He-Who-Creates-Himself. I watched Ammon-Ra stroke his generative
member, masturbating and spurting out his seminal seed in mighty waves that
left the silver smear that we know as the Milky Way across the dark void. From
this seed were generated Geb and Nut, the earth and the heaven.' 'Bak-her!' a
single voice broke the tremulous silence of the temple. 'Bak-her.' Amen!' The
old abbot had not been able to contain himself, and now he endorsed my vision
of the creation. I was so astonished by his change of heart that I almost
forgot my next line. After all, he. had been my sternest critic up to that time.
I had won him over completely, and my voice soared in triumph. 'Geb and Nut coupled and copulated, as man and
women do, and from their dreadful union were bom the gods Osiris and Seth, and
the goddesses Isis and Nephthys.' I made a wide gesture and the linen curtains were
drawn slowly aside to reveal the fantasy world that I had created. Nothing like
this had ever been seen in Egypt before and the audience gasped with amazement.
With measured tread I withdrew, and my place upon the stage was taken by the god
Osiris. The audience recognized him instantly by the tall, bottle-shaped
head-dress, by his arms crossed over his chest and by the crook and the flail
he held before him. Every household kept his statuette in the family shrine. A droning cry of reverence went up from every
throat, and indeed the sedative that I had administered to Tod glittered
weirdly in his eyes and gave him a strange, unearthly presence that was
convincingly godlike. With the crook and the flail Osiris made mystical
gestures and declaimed in sonorous tones, 'Behold Atur, the river!' Once more the audience rustled and murmured as they
recognized the Nile. The Nile was Egypt and the centre of the world. 'Bak-her!' another voice called out, and, watching
from my hidden place amongst the pillars, I was astonished and delighted as I
realized who had spoken. It was Pharaoh. My play had both secular and divine
endorsement. I was certain mat from now on mine would become the authorized
version, replacing the thousand-year-old original. I had found my place in
immortality. My name would live on down the millennium. Joyfully I signalled for the cistern to be opened
and the waters began to flow across our stage. At first the audience did not
comprehend, and men they realized that they were actually witnessing the
revelation of the great river, and a shout went up from a thousand throats,
'BaK-her! Bak-her!' 'Behold the waters rise!' cried Osiris, and obediently the
Nile was swollen by the inundation. 'Behold the waters fall!, cried the god, and they
shrank at his command. 'Now they will rise again!' I had arranged for buckets of dye to be added to
the water as it poured out of the cistern at the rear of the temple. First a
green dye to simulate the low-water period, and then, as it rose again, a
darker dye that faithfully emulated the colour of the silt-laden waters of the
high inundation. 'Now behold the insects and birds upon the earth!'
ordered Osiris, and the cages at the rear of the stage were opened and a
shrieking, chattering, swirling cloud of wild birds and gorgeously coloured
butterflies filled the temple. The watchers were like children, enchanted and
enthralled, reaching up to snatch the butterflies from the air and then release
them again to fly out between the high pillars of the temple. One of the wild
birds, a long-billed hoopoe marvellously patterned in colours of white and
cinnamon and black, flew down unafraid and settled on Pharaoh's crown. The
crowd was delighted. 'An omen!' they cried. 'A blessing on the king. May he
live for ever!' and Pharaoh smiled. It was naughty of me, but afterwards I hinted to my
Lord Intef that I had trained the bird to single out Pharaoh, and although it
was of course quite impossible, he believed me. Such is my reputation with animals
and birds. On the stage Osiris wandered through the paradise
mat he had created, and the mood was set for the dramatic moment when, with a
blood-chilling shriek, Seth bounded on to the stage. Although they had been
expecting it, still the powerful and hideous presence shocked the audience, and
the women screamed and covered their faces, only to peer out again from between
trembling ringers. 'What is mis you have done, brother?' Seth bellowed
in jealous rage. 'Do you set yourself above me? Am I not also a god? Do you
hold all creation to yourself alone, mat I, your brother, may not share it with
you?' Osiris answered him calmly, his dignity remote and
cool as the drug held him in its thrall. 'Our father, Ammon-Ra, has given it to
us both. However, he has also given us the right to choose how we dispose of
it, for good or for evil—' The words that I had put into the mouth of the god
reverberated through the temple. They were the finest that I had written, and
the audience hung upon them. However, I alone of all of mem knew what was
coming, and the beauty and the power of my own composition were soured as I
steeled myself for it. Osiris drew to the close of his speech. 'This is
the world as I have revealed it. If you wish to share it in peace and brotherly
love, then you are welcome. However, if you come in warlike rage, if evil and
hatred fill your heart, then I order you gone.' He lifted his right arm all
draped in the gleaming diaphanous linen of his robe and pointed the way for
Seth to leave the paradise of Earth. Seth hunched those huge, hairy shoulders like a
buffalo bull, and he bellowed so mat the spittle flew from his lips in a cloud
that was flavoured by the rotting teeth in his jaws. I could smell it from
where I stood. He lifted high the bronze broad-sword and rushed at his brother.
This had never been rehearsed, and it took Osiris completely by surprise. He
stood with his right arm still outstretched, and the blade hissed with the
power of the stroke as it swung down. The hand was lopped off at the wrist as
cleanly as I would prune a shoot from the vine that grows over my terrace. It
fell at Osiris' feet and lay there with the fingers fluttering feebly. The surprise was so complete and the sword so sharp
that for a long moment Osiris did not move, except to sway slightly on his
feet. The audience must have believed that this was another theatrical trick,
and that the fallen hand was a dummy. The blood did not come at once, which
lulled them further. They were intensely interested but not alarmed, until
suddenly Osiris reeled back and with a dreadful cry clutched at the stump of
his lower arm;' Only then did the blood burst out between his fingers and
sprayed down his white robe, staining it like spilt wine. Still clutching his
stump, Osiris staggered across the stage and began to scream. That scream, high
and clear with mortal agony, broke the mood of the spectators' complacency.
They knew then for the first time that what they were witnessing was not
make-believe, but they were trapped in horrified silence. Before Osiris could reach the edge of the stage,
Seth came bounding after him oik those thick bow-legs. He seized the stump of
Osiris' arm and used it as a handle to drag him back into the centre of the
stage, where he threw him sprawling full-length on the stone flags. The tinsel
crown tumbled from Osiris' head and the plaits of dark hair fell to his
shoulders as he lay in a spreading puddle of his own blood. 'Please spare me,' Osiris shrieked, as Seth stood
over him, and Seth laughed. It was a full-throated roar of genuine amusement.
Rasfer had become Seth, and Seth was hugely enjoying himself. That savage laughter woke the audience from its
trance. However, the illusion was complete. They no longer believed that they
were watching a play, and for all of them this terrible spectacle had become
reality. Women screamed and men roared with fury as they witnessed the murder
of their god. 'Spare him! Spare the great god Osiris!' they
howled, but not one of them rose from his seat or rushed on to the stage to
attempt to prevent the tragedy from being played out. They knew that the straggles and passions of the
gods were beyond the influence of mortal men. Osiris reached up and pawed at Seth's legs with his
one remaining hand. Still laughing, Seth grabbed bis wrist and pulled his arm
out to its full length, inspecting it as a butcher might inspect the shoulder
of a goat before he sections it. 'Cut it off!' screamed a voice in the crowd, thick
with the lust for blood. The mood had swung again. 'Kill him!' screamed another. It has always
troubled me how the sight of blood and violent death affects even the mildest
of men. Even I was stirred by this terrible scene, sickened and horrified, it
is true, but beneath it stirred by a revolting excitement. With a casual sweep of the blade, Seth struck off
the arm, and Osiris fell back, leaving the twitching limb in Seth's red fist.
He was trying to rise to his feet, but he had no hands to support himself. His
legs kicked spasmodically, and his head whipped from side to side, and still he
screamed. I tried to force myself to turn away, but though my gorge rose and
scalded the back of my throat, still I had to watch. Seth hacked the arm into three pieces through the
joint of the wrist and the elbow. One at a time he hurled the fragments into
the packed ranks of the audience. As they spun through the air they sprinkled
those below with drops of ruby. They roared like the lions hi Pharaoh's zoo at
feeding-time, and held up their hands to catch these holy relics of their god. Seth worked on with dedicated gusto. Osiris' feet
he chopped off at the ankles. Then the calves at the knees, and the thighs at
the hip joints. As he threw each of these to mem, the mob clamoured for more. "The talisman of Seth!' howled a voice amongst
them. 'Give us the talisman of Seth!' and the cry was taken up. According to
the myth, the talisman is the most powerful of all the magical charms. The
person who has it in his possession controls all the dark forces of the
underworld, It is the only one of the fourteen segments of Osiris' body that
was never recovered by Isis and her sister Nephthys from the far corners of the
earth to which Seth scattered them. The talisman of Seth is that same part of
the body that Rasfer deprived me of, and which forms the centre-piece of that
beautiful necklace that was the cynical gift of my Lord Intef. 'Give us the
talisman of Seth!' the mob howled, and Seth reached down and lifted the red
sodden tunic of the limbless trunk at his feet. He was still laughing. I
shuddered as I recognized that merciless sound that I had heard so often at my
own punishment sessions. In sympathy I experienced once again the sudden fire
in my groin as the short sword flashed in Seth's hairy paw, already wet and
running with his victim's blood, and he lifted on high the piteous relic. The crowd pleaded for it. 'Give it to us,' ttfey
begged him. 'Give us the power of the talisman.' The spectacle had transformed
them into ravening beasts. Seth ignored their pleas. 'A gift,' he cried. 'A
gift from one god to another. I Seth, god of darkness, dedicate this talisman
to the god-Pharaoh, Mamose the divine.' And he hopped down the stone stairs on
those powerful bow-legs and placed the relic at Pharaoh's feet. To my amazement the king leaned forward and gathered
it up to himself. His expression beneath the powder and paint was
spellbound,"as though this was the true relic of the god. I am sure that
at that moment he truly believed it was. He held it in his right hand through
all that ensued. His gift accepted, Seth rushed back on to the stage
to complete his butchery. The thing that haunts me still is that the poor
dismembered creature was alive and sensate to the very end. I realized that the
drug I had given Tod had done little to dull his senses. I saw the terrible
agony in his eyes as he lay in the lake of his own blood and rolled his head
from side to side, the only part that remained to him to move. For me, then, it came as an intense relief when at
last Seth struck off the head and held it up by its thick plaited locks for the
crowd to admire. Even then, the poor creature's eyes swivelled wildly in their
sockets as he looked for the very last time on this world. At last they dulled
and glazed over, and Seth tossed the head to them. Thus the first act of our pageant ended in swelling
and rapturous applause that threatened to shake the granite pillars of the
temple from their bases. DURING THE INTERMISSION MY SLAVE helpers cleaned
away the gruesome evidence of the slaughter from the set. I was particularly
concerned that my Lady Lostris should not realize what had truly taken place in
the first act. I wished her to believe that all had gone as we had rehearsed
it. So I had arranged that she stay in her tent, and that one of Tanus' men remain
at the entrance to keep her there, and also to ensure that none of her Cushite
maidens were allowed to peep out at the first act and rush back to Lostris with
a report. I knew that if she realized the truth, she would be too distraught to
play her part. While my helpers used buckets of water from our stage Nile to
wash away the ghastly evidence, I hurried to my mistress's tent to reassure her
and to satisfy myself that my precautions to shield her had been effective. 'Oh, Taita, I heard the applause,' she greeted me
happily. 'They love your play. I am so happy for you. You so richly deserve
this success.' She chuckled in a conspiratorial fashion. 'It sounded as though
they believed the murder of Osiris was real, and the buckets of ox-blood with
which you drenched Tod were truly the blood of the god.' 'Indeed, my lady, they seemed totally deceived by
our little tricks,' I agreed, although I still felt faint and ill from what I
had just lived through. My Lady Lostris suspected nothing, and when I led
her out on to the stage, she barely glanced at the grisly stains that remained
upon the stones. I posed her in her opening position, and adjusted the
torchlight to flatter her. Even though I was accustomed to it, still her beauty
choked my throat and made my eyes sting with tears. I left her concealed by the linen curtains, and
stepped out to face my audience. There was no sarcastic applause to greet me
this time. Every one of them, from Pharaoh to the meanest vassal, was captive
to my voice, as in my lambent prose I described the mourning of Isis and her
sister Nephthys at the death of their brother. When I stepped down and the curtain was drawn aside
to reveal the grieving figure of Isis, the audience gasped aloud at her
loveliness. After the horror and blood of the first act, her presence was all
the more moving. Isis began to sing the lament for the dead, and her
voice thrilled through the gloomy halls of the temple. As her head moved to the
cadence of her voice, the torchlight was reflected in a darting and flickering
shaft from the bronze moon that surmounted her horned headdress. I watched Pharaoh
attentively as she sang. His eyes never left her face, and his lips moved
silently in sympathy with the words that swelled from her throat. My heart is a wounded gazelle,
torn by the lion claws of
my grief— She lamented and the king
and all his train grieved with her. There is no sweetness in
the honeycomb, no perfume remains in the
desert blossom. My soul is an empty temple,
deserted by the god of
love. In the front rank one or
two of the king's wives were snuffling and blubbering, but nobody even glanced
at them. I look on death's grim face with a smile. Gladly would I follow him, if he could lead me to the arms of my dear lord. By now not only the royal wives but every one of
the women were weeping, and most of the men also. Her words and her beauty were
too much for them to resist. It seemed impossible that a god should show the
same emotions as mortal men, but the slow tears were cutting runnels through
the white powder on Pharaoh's cheeks, and he blinked his heavy, kohl-darkened
eyelids like an owl as he stared at my Lady Lostris. Nephthys entered and sang a duet with her sister,
then hand-in-hand the two women went in search of the scattered fragments of
Osiris' corpse. Of course I had not placed the actual dismembered
portions of Tod's corpse for them to find. During the intermission my helpers
had retrieved these and carried them away to the'embalmers on my instructions.
I would pay for Tod's funeral out of my own purse. It seemed the very least
that I could do to compensate the unfortunate creature for my own part in his
murder. Despite the missing portion of his anatomy that Pharaoh still held in
his hand, I hoped the gods might make an exception in his case and allow Tod's
shade to pass into the underworld, and that there he might not think too badly
of me. It is wise to have friends wherever you can, in this world and the next. To represent the body of the god I had the funeral
artists from the necropolis build for me a magnificent mummy car-tonnage,
depicting Osiris in his full regalia and in the death pose with his arms folded
across his chest. This container I had cut 'into thirteen sections that fitted
together like a child's building-blocks. As the sisters retrieved each of these sections
they sang a hymn of praise to the god's parts, to his hands and feet, to his
limbs and trunk, and finally to his divine head. Such eyes, like stars set in the heavens, must shine for ever. Death should never dim such beauty, nor the funeral wrappings contain such majesty. When at last the two sisters had reassembled the
complete body of Osiris, except for the missing talisman, they pondered aloud
how they could return it to life once more. This was my opportunity to add to the pageant that
essential element that makes any theatrical production appeal to the popular
taste. There is a broad lascivious streak in most of us, and the playwright and
the poet does well to bear this in mind if he hopes to have his work
appreciated by the main body of his audience. "There is but one certain way to bring our
dear lord and brother back to life.' I placed the words in the mouth of the
goddess Nephthys. 'One of us must perform the act of generation with his
shattered body to make it whole again and to fan the spark of life within it.' The audience stirred and leaned forward with
anticipation at this suggestion. It had elements to appeal to even the most
prurient of those present, including incest and necrophilia. I had agonized over how I would represent upon the
stage this episode in the myth of the resurrection of Osiris. My mistress had
shocked me when she had declared herself willing to carry her role through to
the end. She had even had the effrontery to point out, with that impudent grin
of hers, that she might gain some valuable knowledge and experience from doing
so. I was not certain if she was jesting or if she would really have gone
through with it; however, I would not give her the opportunity to demonstrate
her good faith or lack of it. Her reputation and the honour of her family were
too valuable to trifle with. So it was that at my signal, the linen curtains
were drawn once more and my Lady Lostris quickly left the stage. Her place was
taken by one of the upper-class courtesans who usually plied her trade in a
palace of love near the port. I had hired this wench, from amongst several that
I had interviewed, because of her fine young body that so much resembled that
of my mistress. Of course, in facial beauty she could not come close to my Lady
Lostris, but then I know of none who could. As soon as the substitute goddess was in position,
the torches at the rear of the stage were lit so as to cast her shadow upon the
curtain. She began to disrobe in the most provocative manner. The males in the
audience cheered on her shadowy gyrations, convinced that they were watching my
Lady Lostris. The harlot responded to this encouragement with an increasingly
lewd display that was almost as well received as the slaughter of Osiris in the
first act. Now came that action of the play that had given me,
the author, considerable pause, for how could I contrive fecundity without a
stout peg to hang it on? We had just seen Osiris forcefully deprived of his. In
the end I was forced to stoop to that tired old theatrical device that I so
scorned in the work of other playwrights, namely the intervention of the gods
and their supernatural powers. While my Lady Lostris spoke from the wings, her
shad-owy alter ego on stage stood over the mummiform figure of Osiris and made
a series of mystical gestures. 'My dear brother, by the rare and marvellous
powers granted to me by our forefather, Ammon-Ra, I restore to you those manly
parts that cruel Seth so brutally tore from you,' intoned my mistress. I had equipped the mummy case with a device that I
could raise by hauling on a length of fine linen twine that ran over a pulley
in the temple roof directly above where Osiris lay. At Isis' words the wooden
phallus, hinged to the god's pudenda, rose in majestic splendour, as long as my
arm, into full erection. The audience gasped with admiration. When Isis caressed it, I jerked the string to make
it leap and twitch. The audience loved it, but loved it even better when the
goddess mounted the supine mummy of the god. Judging by the convincing
acrobatics of her simulated ecstasy, the harlot I had chosen to play the part
must have been one of the truly great exponents of her art. The audience gave
full recognition to her superior performance, egging her on with whistling and
hooting and shouting ribald advice. At the climax of this exhibition the torches were
extinguished and the temple plunged into darkness. In the darkness the
substitution was made once more and when the torches were re-lit my Lady
Lostris stood in mid-stage with a new-born infant in her arms. One of the
kitchen slaves had been considerate enough to give birth a few days previously,
and I had borrowed her whelp for the occasion. 'I give you the new-born son of Osiris, god of the
underworld, and of Isis, goddess of the moon and of the stars.' My Lady Lostris
lifted the infant high and he, astonished by the sea of strangers before him,
screwed up his tiny face and turned bright red as he howled. Isis raised her voice above his and cried,
"Greet the young Lord Horus, god of the wind and the sky, falcon of the
heavens!' Half the audience were Horus men and their enthusiasm for their
patron was unbounded. They came to their feet in a roaring tumult, and the
second act ended in another triumph for me and in mortification for the infant
god, who on later examination was found to have prodigiously soiled his
swaddling-cloth. I OPENED THE FINAL ACT WITH ANOTHER of my
recitations describing the childhood and the coming to manhood of Horus. I
spoke of the sacred charge laid upon him by Isis, and as I did so, the curtains
were drawn aside to reveal the goddess in the centre of the stage. Isis was
bathing in the Nile, attended by her handmaidens. Her wet robe clung to her
body so that the pale glory of her skin shone through. The indistinct outlines
of her breasts were tipped with tiny rose-buds of virgin pink. Tanus as Horus entered from the wings, and
immediately dominated the stage. In his polished armour and his warrior's pride
he was a perfect counterpoint for the beauty of the goddess. The long list of
his battle honours in the river wars, together with his most recent exploit in
saving the royal barge, had focused the attention of the populace full upon
him. For this moment Tanus was the darling of the crowd. Before he could speak,
they began to cheer him, and the applause continued so long that the actors
were forced to freeze in their opening positions. While the cheering swirled around Tanus, I picked
out certain faces in the audience and watched their reactions. Nembet, the
Great Lion of Egypt, scowled and muttered fiercely into his beard, making no
attempt to hide his animosity. Pharaoh smiled graciously and nodded slightly,
so that those seated behind him were made aware of his approbation, and their
own enthusiasm was encouraged. My Lord Intef, never one to fly against the
prevailing winds, smiled his most silky smile and nodded his head in concert
with his king. His eyes, however, when seen from my vantage-point, were deadly. At last the applause abated
and Tanus could speak his lines, not without difficulty, however, for every
time he paused to draw breath another outburst of cheering broke out. It was
only when Isis began to sing that complete silence fell upon them once more. The suffering of your
father, the terrible fate that
hangs over our house, all these must be expunged. In verse Isis warned her
noble son, and held out her arms to him in supplication and in command. The curse of Seth is upon us all, and only you can break it. Seek out your monstrous uncle. By his arrogance and his ferocity, you will know him. When you find him, strike him down. Chain him, bind him to your will, that the gods and all men will be freed for ever from his ghastly sway. Still singing, the goddess withdrew and left her
son to his quest. Like children following a well-loved nursery rhyme, the
audience knew full well what to expect and leaned forward eagerly and hummed
with anticipation. When at last Seth came leaping back on stage for
the cataclysmic battle, the age-old struggle between good and evil, beauty and
ugliness, duty and dishonour, the audience was ready for him. They greeted Seth
with a chorus of hatred that was spontaneous and unfeigned. In defiance Rasfer
leered and gibbered at them, strutting about the stage, cupping his genitalia
in his hands and thrusting his hips out at them in a mocking and obscene
gesture that drove them wild with fury. 'Kill him, Horus!' they howled. 'Smash in his ugly
face!' And Seth pranced before them, stoking their fury. 'Kill the murderer of the great god Osiris!' they
roared in a paroxysm of loathing. 'Smash in his face!' 'Rip out his guts!' The congregation's reaction to him was in no way
moderated by the fact that it knew, deep down, that this was Rasfer and not
Seth. 'Hack off his head!' they screamed. 'Kill him! Kill him!' At last Seth pretended to see his nephew for the
first time, and swaggered up to him, lolling his tongue out between his blackened teeth, drooling like an idiot so that
silver strands of saliva slimed down on to his chest. I would never have
believed that Rasfer could make himself more repulsive than nature had already
accomplished, but now he proved me wrong. 'Who is this child?' he demanded, and belched full
in the face of Horus. Tanus was unprepared for this and stepped back
involuntarily, his expression of disgust unfeigned as he smelled Rasfer's
breath and the contents of his stomach, the sour wine still fermenting in it. Tanus recovered swiftly and spoke his next line. 'I
am Horus, son of Osiris.' Seth let out a mocking peal of laughter. 'And what
is it you seek, boy child of a dead god?' 'I seek vengeance for the murder of my noble father.
I seek the assassin of Osiris.' 'Then search no further,' Seth shouted, 'for I am
Seth the vanquisher of lesser gods. I am Seth the eater of stars, and the
destroyer of worlds.' The two gods drew their swords and rushed at each
other, to meet in mid-stage with a ringing clash of bronze as blade struck
blade. In an attempt to reduce the chances of accidental injury, I had
attempted to substitute wooden swords for bronze, but neither of my actors
would have any of it. My Lord Intef had intervened when Rasfer had appealed to
him. He had ordered that they be allowed to wield their real battle weapons,
and I had been forced to yield to this higher authority. At least it added to
the realism of the scene as they stood now chest to chest, with blades locked,
and glared into each other's face. They made an extraordinary pair, so totally
dissimilar, pointing up the moral of the play, the eternal conflict of good
against evil. Tanus was tall and fair and comely. Seth was swarthy and
thick-set, bow-legged and hideous. The contrast was direct and visceral. The
mood of the audience was as fiery and as fiercely partisan as that of the two
protagonists. Simultaneously they pushed each other backwards and
then rushed in again, thrusting and cutting, feinting and parrying. They were
both highly trained and skilled swordsmen, amongst the finest in all Pharaoh's
armies. Their blades whirled and glinted in the torchlight so that they seemed
as insubstantial as the sunlight reflected from the wind-ruffled surface of the
great river. The sound of their flight was that of the wings of the birds
startled from their roosts in the gloomy heights of the temple, but when they
clashed together it was with the heavy ring of hammers at the coppersmith's
forge. What seemed to the observer to be the chaos of real
battle was in fact a meticulously choreographed ballet which had been carefully
rehearsed. Each man knew exactly how each blow must be launched and each parry
timed. These were two superb athletes engaged in the activity for which they
had trained their entire warrior's lifetime, and they made it seem effortless. When Seth thrust, Horus left his parry so late that
the point actually touched his breastplate and left a tiny bright scratch on
the metal. Then when Horus launched himself forward in riposte, his edge flew
so close to Seth's head that a coil of his coarse matted hair was shorn from
his skull, as if by a barber's razor. Their footwork was as graceful and
intricate as that of the temple dancers, and they were swift as falcons and
lithe as hunting cheetahs. The crowd was mesmerized and so was I. Therefore it
must have been some deep instinct that warned me, perhaps even a nudge from the
gods, who knows? At any rate, something outside myself made me tear my eyes
away from the spectacle and glance at my Lord Intef where he sat in the front
row. Again, was it instinct or my own deep knowledge of
him, or the intervention of the god who protects Tanus that placed the thought
in my mind? A little of all three of these, perhaps, but I knew with instant
and utter certainty the reason for that wolfish smile on my Lord Intef's
handsome features. I knew why he had chosen Rasfer to play Seth. I
knew why he had made no effort to exclude Tanus from the role of Horus, even
after he had found out about the relationship between him and my Lady Lostris.
I knew why he had ordered the use of real swords, and I knew why he was smiling
now. The massacre was not over for the evening. He was looking forward to more.
Before this act was played out, Rasfer would ply his special talents once
again. 'Tanus!' I screamed, as I started forward. 'Beware!
It's a trap. He intends—' My cries were drowned out by the thunder of the
crowd, and I had not taken a second step when I was seized by each arm from
behind. I tried to struggle free, but two of Rasfer's ruffians held me fast and
started to drag me away. They had been placed there for just such a moment as
this, to prevent me from warning my friend. 'Horus, give me strength!' I rendered up a swift
and silent entreaty, and instead of resisting them I hurled myself back in the
same direction as they were pulling me. For an instant they were thrown
off-balance, and I broke half-free of their grasp. I managed to reach the edge
of the stage before they could control me again. 'Horus, give me voice!' I prayed, and then screamed
with all my breath, 'Tanus, beware! He means to kill you.' This time my voice carried above that of the mob,
and Tanus heard me. I saw his head flick and his eyes narrow slightly. However,
Rasfer heard me as well. He responded instantly, breaking the rehearsed
routine. Instead of dropping back before the whirlwind of cuts and thrusts that
Tanus was aiming close to his brutish head, he stepped in and, with an upward
sweep of his own blade, he forced Tanus' sword-arm high. Without the benefit of surprise he would never have
made the opening into which he now launched a thrust behind which was the full
weight of those massive shoulders and mighty trunk. The point of his blade was
aimed an inch below the rim of Tanus' helmet and directly at his right eye. It
should have skewered his eye and cleaved his skull through and through. However, my shouted warning had given Tanus that
fleeting moment of grace in which to react. He recovered his guard just in
time. With the pommel of his sword he managed to touch a glancing blow to
Rasfer's wrist. It had just sufficient force to deflect the sword-point a
finger's-width, and at the same moment Tanus tucked in his chin and rolled his
head. It was too late to avoid the blow entirely. However, the stroke that
might have skewered his eye and split his skull like a rotten melon, merely
laid open his eyebrow to the bone, and then flew on over his shoulder. Instantly a sheet of blood gushed from the shallow
wound and flowed over Tanus' face, blinding his right eye. He was forced to
fall back before the savage onslaught that Rasfer now launched at him.
Desperately he gave ground, blinking at the blood and trying to wipe it away
with his free hand. It seemed impossible that he would be able to defend
himself, and if only I had not been held so securely by the palace guards, I
would have drawn the little jewelled dagger at my belt and rushed to his aid. Even without my assistance Tanus was able to survive
that first murderous attack. Though he was wounded twice more, a gouge across
the left thigh and a nick on the biceps of his sword-arm, he kept weaving and
parrying and ducking. Rasfer kept coming at him, never letting him recover his
balance or his full vision. Within minutes Rasfer was blowing and grunting like
a giant forest hog, and running with sweat, his misshapen torso gleaming in the
torchlight, but the speed and fury of his assault never faltered. Though no great swordsman myself, I am a student of
the art. So often had I watched Rasfer at practice in the weapons-yard that I
knew his style intimately. I knew he was an exponent of the attack khamsin, the
attack 'like the desert wind'. It was a manoeuvre that perfectly suited his
brute strength and physique. I had seen him practise it on a hundred occasions
and now I divined by his footwork that he was gathering himself for it, for
that one last effort that would end it all. Struggling in the grip of my captors, I screamed at
Tanus again, 'Khamsin! Be ready!' I thought that my warning had been drowned
and washed away by the uproar that filled the temple, for Tanus showed no
reaction. Later he told me he had indeed heard me, and that with his impaired
vision that second warning of mine had certainly saved him once again. Rasfer dropped back a half-pace, the classic
prelude to the khamsin, relaxing the pressure for an instant to position his
opponent for the coup. Then his weight shifted and his left foot swung forward
into the lead. He used his momentum and all the strength of his right leg to
launch his entire body into the attack, like some grotesque carrion-bird taking
to flight. As both his feet left the ground, the point of his blade was aimed
at Tanus' throat. It was inexorable. Nothing could prevent that deadly blade
from flying true to its mark except the one classic defence, the stop-hit. At the precise instant that Rasfer was fully
committed to the stroke, Tanus launched himself with equal power and superior
grace. Like an arrow leaving the bowstring, he flew straight at his opponent.
As they met in mid-air Tanus gathered up Rasfer's blade with his own and let it
run down on to the pommel, where it came up hard and short, stopping it dead.
It was the perfectly executed stop-hit. The mass and speed of the two big men were thrown
on to the bronze blade in Rasfer's fist, and it could not withstand the shock.
It snapped cleanly, and left him clutching only the sheared-off hilt. Then they
were locked chest-to-chest once more. Although Tanus' sword was still
undamaged, Rasfer had got in under his guard and he could not wield it. Both
Tanus' hands, the sword still held in his right fist, were locked behind
Rasfer's back as the two men heaved and strained at each other. Wrestling is one of the military disciplines in
which every warrior in the Egyptian army is trained. Bound to each other by the
crushing embrace of arms, they spun about the stage, each attempting to throw
the other off-balance, snarling into each other's eyes, hooking a heel to trip,
butting at each other with the visors of their helmets, equally matched thus
far in strength and determination. The audience had long since sensed that this was no
longer a mock engagement, but a fight to the death. I wondered that their appetites
had not been jaded by all they had witnessed that evening, but it was not so.
They were insatiable, howling for blood and yet more blood. At last Rasfer tore his arm free of Tanus'
encircling grip. He still clutched the hilt of the broken sword in his fist,
and with the jagged edge he struck at Tanus' face, deliberately aiming at his
eyes and the wound in his brow, trying to enlarge and aggravate it. Tanus
twisted his head to avoid the blows, catching them on the peak of his bronze
helmet. Like a python shifting its coils around its prey, he used the moment
to, adjust his crushing hold around Rasfer's chest. The strain that he was
exerting was such that Rasfer's features began to swell and engorge with blood.
The air was being forced out of him, and he struggled against suffoca-- tion.
He began visibly to weaken. Tanus kept up the pressure until a carbuncle on
Rasfer's back was stretched to bursting-point and the yellow pus erupted in a
stinking stream and trickled down into the waistband of his kilt. Already suffocating, Rasfer grimaced at the pain of
the bursting abscess and checked. Tanus felt him falter, and he summoned some
deep reserve of strength. He changed the angle of his next effort, dropping his
shoulders slightly and forcing his opponent backwards and upwards on to his
heels. Rasfer was off-balance, and Tanus heaved again and forced him back a
pace. Once he had him moving backwards, he kept the momentum going. Still
locked to his opponent, he ran Rasfer backwards across the stage, steering him
towards one of the gigantic stone pillars. For a moment none of us realized
Tanus' intention, and then we saw him drop the point of his sword to the
horizontal and press the hilt hard against Rasfer's spine. At a full run the point of Tanus' sword hit the
unyielding column. The metal screeched against the granite, and the shock was
transmitted up the blade. It stopped those two big men in their tracks, and the
force of it drove the hilt into Rasfer's spine. It would have killed a lesser
man, and even Rasfer was paralyzed by it. With the last gust of his foul breath
he let out a cry of agony, and his arms flew open. The broken haft of his own
sword spun from his grip and skidded away across the stone pavement. Rasfer's knees buckled, and he sagged in Tanus'
arms. Tanus thrust his hip into him, and, with a heave of his upper body,
hurled Rasfer over backwards. He landed so heavily that I heard more than one
of his ribs crackle like dry twigs in the flames of the camp-fire. The back of
his skull bounced upon the stone flags with a sound like a desert melon dropped
from on high, and the breath from his lungs whistled out of his throat. He groaned in agony. He had barely the strength to
lift his arms to Tanus in capitulation. Tanus was so carried away by battle-rage,
and inflamed by the roar of the crowd, that he was a man berserk. He stood over
Rasfer and lifted his sword on high, gripping the hilt with both hands. He was
a dreadful sight. Blood from the wound in his forehead had painted his visage
into a glistening devil mask. Sweat and blood had soaked the hair of his chest
and stained his clothing. 'Kill him!' roared the congregation. 'Kill the evil
one!' The point of Tanus' sword was aimed at the centre
of Rasfer's chest, and I steeled myself for the down-stroke that would impale
that gross body. I willed Tanus to do it, for I hated Rasfer more than any of
them. The gods know that I had reason, for here was the monster who had gelded
me, and I longed for my revenge. It was in vain. I should have known my Tanus better
than expect him to skewer a surrendered enemy. I saw the fires of madness begin
to fade from his eyes. He shook his head slightly, as if to regain control of
himself. Then, instead of stabbing down, he lowered his sword-point slowly
until it just pricked Rasfer's chest. The keen point raised a drop of blood,
bright as a garnet amongst the coarse hair of Rasfer's chest. Then Tanus picked
up the lines of his script. 'Thus I bind you to my will, and I expel you from
the light. May you wander through all eternity in the dark places. May you
nevet jnore have power over the noble and the good amongst men. I give you to
rule over the thief and the coward, over the bully and the cheat, over the liar
and the murderer, over the grave-robber and the violater of virtuous women,
over the blasphemer and the breaker of faith. From henceforth you are the god
of all evil. Get you gone, and carry away with you the curse of Horus and of
his resurrected father, Osiris.' Tanus lifted the point of his sword from Rasfer's
chest and tossed the weapon aside, deliberately disarming himself in the
presence of his enemy to demonstrate his disdain and scorn. The blade clattered
on the flagstones and Tanus strode to the running waters of our stage Nile and
went down on one knee to scoop a handful and dash it into his own face, washing
away the blood. Then he tore a strip of linen from the hem of his kilt and
swiftly bound up the wound on his forehead to stem the bleeding. Rasfer's two apes released me and rushed on stage
to succour their fallen commander. They lifted him to his feet, and he
staggered between them, heaving and blowing like a great obscene bullfrog. I
saw that he was grievously injured. They dragged him from the stage, and the
crowd howled its derision and hatred at him. I watched my Lord Intef, and his expression was for
the moment unguarded. I saw every one of my suspicions confirmed there. This
was how he had planned to wreak his vengeance on Tanus—to have him slain before
the eyes of the entire populace—and on his own daughter: to have her lover
killed before her eyes—that was to have been Lostris' punishment for flouting
her father's will. My Lord Intef s frustration and disappointment now
were enough to make me feel a smug satisfaction as I considered what retribution
must be in store for Rasfer. He might have preferred more of the rough
treatment that Tanus had dealt out to him, to the punishment that my Lord Intef
would inflict upon him. My master was ever harsh with those who failed him. Tanus was still gasping from the exertions of the
duel, but now, as he moved to the front of the stage, he drew a dozen deep
breaths to steady himself for the declamation that would bring the pageant to
an end. As he faced the congregation it fell silent, for in blood and anger he
was an awe-inspiring sight. Tanus lifted up both his hands to the temple-roof
and cried out in a loud voice, 'Ammon-Ra, give me voice! Osiris, give me
eloquence!' The traditional entreaty of the orator. 'Give him voice! Give him eloquence!' the crowd responded,
and their faces were still rapt with all they had witnessed, but hungry for
more entertainment. Tanus was that unusual creature, a man of action
who was also a man of words and ideas. I am sure that he would have been
generous enough to admit that many of those ideas were planted in his mind by
that lowly slave, Taita. However, once planted, they were in fertile ground. When it came to oratory, Tanus' exhortations to his
squadrons on the eve of battle were famous. Of course, I had not been present
at all of these, but they had been relayed to me verbatim by Kratas, his
faithful friend and lieutenant. I had copied many of these speeches down on a
set of papyrus scrolls, for they were worthy of preservation. Tanus had the common touch, and the ability to
appeal directly to the ordinary man. I often thought that much of this special
power of his sprang from his transparent honesty and his forthright manner. Men
trusted him and followed willingly wherever he led them, even unto death
itself. I was still overwrought by the conflict we had all
just witnessed and the closeness of Tanus' escape from the trap that my Lord
Intef had laid for him. Nevertheless, I was eager to listen to the declamation
that Tanus had prepared without my help or advice. To be truthful, I was still
a little resentful that he had declined my assistance, and more than a little
nervous as to what he might come out with. Tact and subtlety have never been
Tanus' most notable virtues. Now Pharaoh made a gesture of invitation to him to
speak, crossing and uncrossing the ceremonial crook and flail, and inclining
his head gracefully. The congregation was silent and intent, leaning forward
eagerly so as not to miss a single word. 'It is I, Horus the falcon-headed, that speaks,' Tanus
began, and they encouraged him. 'It is verily the falcon-headed! Hear him!' 'Ha-Ka-Ptahr Tanus used the archaic form from which
the present name of Egypt was derived. Very few realized that the original
meaning was the temple of Ptah. 'I speak to you of this ancient land given to
us ten thousand years since, in the time when all the gods were young. I speak
to you of the two kingdoms that in nature are one and indivisible.' Pharaoh nodded. This was the standard dogma,
approved by both temporal and religious authority that neither recognized the
impostor in the Lower Kingdom, nor even acknowledged his existence. 'Oh, Kemitr Tanus used another ancient name for
Egypt: the Black Land, after the colour of the Nile mud brought down by the
annual inundation. 'I speak to you of this land riven and divided, torn by
civil war, bleeding and drained of treasure.' My own shock was mirrored on the
faces of all those who listened to him. Tanus had just given voice to the
unspeakable. I wanted to rush on to the stage and clap my hand over his mouth
to prevent him from going on, but I was transfixed. 'Oh, Ta-Merir Another old name: the Beloved Earth.
Tanus had learned well the history I had taught him. 'I speak to you of old and
feeble generals, and admirals too weak and indecisive to-wrest back the stolen
kingdom from the usurper. I speak to you of ancient men in their dotage who
waste your treasure and spill the blood of your finest young men as though it
were the lees of bitter wine.' In the second row of the audience I saw Nembet, the
Great Lion of Egypt, flush with anger and scratch furiously with chagrin at his
beard. The other elderly military men around him frowned and moved restlessly
on their benches, rattling their swords in their scabbards as a sign of their disapproval.
Amongst them all, only my Lord Intef smiled as he watched Tanus escape from one
trap only to blunder into the next. 'Our Ta-Meri is beset by a host of enemies, and yet
the sons of the nobles prefer to cut off their own thumbs rather than to carry
the sword to protect her.' As he said this, Tanus looked keenly at Menset and
Sobek, Lostris' older brothers, where they sat beside their father in the
second row. The king's decree exempted from military service only those with
such physical disability as to render them unfit. The surgeon priests at the
temple of Osiris had perfected the art of removing the top joint of the thumb
with little pain or danger of infection, thus rendering it impossible for that
hand to wield a sword or pluck a bowstring. The young bucks proudly flaunted
their mutilations as they sat gambling and carousing in the riverside taverns.
They considered the missing digit a mark not of cowardice, but of
sophistication and independent spirit. 'War is the game played by old men with the lives
of the young,' I had heard Lostris' brothers argue. 'Patriotism is a myth
conceived by those old rogues to draw us into the infernal game. Let them fight
as they will, but we want no part of it.' In vain I had remonstrated with them
that the privilege of Egyptian citizenship carried with it duties and
responsibilities. They dismissed me with the arrogance of the young and
ignorant. Now, however, beneath Tanus' level stare they
fidgeted and concealed their left hands in the folds of their clothing. They
were both of them right-handed, but had convinced the recruiting officer to the
contrary, with their eloquence and a dash of gold. The common people at the rear of the great hall
hummed and stamped their feet in agreement with what Tanus had said. It was
their sons who filled the rowing-benches of the war galleys, or marched under
arms through the desert sands. However, in the wings of the stage I wrung my hands
in despair. With that little speech Tanus had made an enemy of fifty of the
young nobles in the audience. They were men who would one day inherit power and
influence in the Upper Kingdom. Their enmity outweighed a hundred times the
adoration of the common herd and I prayed for Tanus to cease. In a few minutes
he had done enough damage to last us all a hundred years, but he went on
blithely. 'Oh, Ta-Nutri!' This was yet another ancient name:
the Land of the Gods. 'I speak to you of the wrong-doer and the robber who
waits in ambush on every hilltop and in every thicket. The farmer is forced to
plough with his shield at his side, and the traveller must go with his sword
bared.' Again the commoners applauded. The depredations of
the robber bands were a terrible scourge upon them all. No man was safe beyond
the mud walls of the towns, and the robber chieftains who called themselves the
Shrikes were arrogant and fearless. They respected no law but their own, and no
man was safe from them. Tanus had struck exactly the right note with the
people, and suddenly I was moved by the notion that this was all much deeper
than it seemed. Revolutions have been forged and dynasties of pharaohs
overturned by just such appeals to the masses. With Tanus' next words my
suspicion was strengthened. 'While the poor cry out under the lash of the
tax-collector, the nobles anoint the buttocks of their fancy boys with the most
precious oils of the orient—' A roar went up from the rear of the hall, and my
fears were replaced by a tremulous excitement. Had this been carefully planned?
Was Tanus more subtle and devious than I had ever given him credit for? 'By HorusF I cried in my heart. 'The land is ripe
for revolution, and who better to lead it than Tanus?' I felt only
disappointment that he had not taken me into his confidence and made me party
to his design. I could have planned a revolution as skilfully and as cunningly
as I could design a water-garden or write a play. I craned to look over the heads of the
congregation, expecting at the very next moment to see Kratas and his brother
officers burst into the temple at the head of a company of warriors from the
squadron. I felt the hair on my forearms and at the nape of my neck lift with
excitement as I pictured them snatching the double crown from Pharaoh's head
and placing it upon the blood-smeared brow of Tanus. With what joy I would have
joined the cry of 'Long live Pharaoh! Long live King Tanus!' Heady images swirled before my eyes as Tanus went
on speaking. I saw the prophecy of the desert oracle fulfilled. I dreamed of
Tanus, with my Lady Lostris beside him, seated on the white throne of this very
Egypt, with myself standing behind them resplendent in the apparel of the grand
vizier of the Upper Kingdom. But why, oh why, had he not consulted me before
embarking on this perilous venture? With his next breath he made the reason plain. I
had misjudged my Tanus, my honest, plain and good Tanus, my noble, straight and
trustworthy Tanus, lacking only in guile and stealth and deceit. This was no plot. This was simply Tanus speaking
his mind without fear or favour. The commoners, who only moments before had
been clinging enraptured to every word that fell from his tongue, were now
quite unexpectedly given the sharp edge of that organ as he rounded upon them. 'Hear me, oh Egypt! What is to become of a land
where the mean-spirited try to suppress the mighty amongst them; where the
patriot is reviled; where there is no man of yesterday revered for his wisdom;
where the petty and the envious seek to tear down the men of worth to their own
base level?' There was no cheering now as those at the back of
the hall recognized themselves in this description. Effortlessly my Tanus had
succeeded in alienating every man amongst them, great and small, rich and poor.
Oh, why had he not consulted me, I mourned, and the answer was plain. He had
not consulted me because he knew I would have counselled him against it. 'What order is there in society where the slave is
free with his tongue, and counts himself as equal to those of noble birth?' he
blazed at them. 'Should the son revile his father and scorn the wisdom paid for
in grey hairs and wrinkled brow? Should the waterfront harlot wear rings of
lapis lazuli and set herself above the virtuous wife?' By Horus, he would not spare one of them from the
lash of his tongue, I thought bitterly. As always, he was completely oblivious
to his own safety in the pursuit of what he saw as the right and open way. Only one person in the temple was enchanted with
what he had to tell them. Lostris appeared at my side and gripped my arm. 'Isn't he wonderful, Taita?' she breathed. 'Every
word he utters is the truth. Tonight he is truly a young god.' I could find neither the words nor the heart to
agree with her, and I hung my head in sorrow as Tanus went on relentlessly. 'Pharaoh, you are the father of the people. We cry
out to you for protection and for succour. Give the affairs of state and war
into the hands oЈ honest and clever men. Send the rogues and the fools to rot
on their estates. Call off the faithless priests and the usurious servants of
the state, those parasites upon the body of this Ta-Meri of ours.' Horus knows that I am as good a priest-hater as the
best of them, but only a fool or very brave man would call down the wrath of every
god-botherer in Egypt upon his own head, for their power is infinite and their
hatred implacable. While as for the civil servants, their lines of influence
and corruption have been set up over the centuries and my Lord Intef was the
chief of them all. I shuddered in pity for my dear blunt friend as he went on
handing out instructions to Pharaoh on how to restructure the whole of Egyptian
society. 'Heed the words of the sage! Oh, king, honour the
artist and the scribe. Reward the brave warrior and the faithful servant. Root
out the bandits and the robbers from their desert fastnesses. Give the people
example and direction in their lives, so that this very Egypt may once again
flourish and be great.' Tanus fell to his knees in the centre of the stage
and spread his arms wide. 'Oh, Pharaoh, you are our father. We protest our love
to you. In return, show us now a father's love. Hear our entreaties, we beg of
you.' Up to that moment I had been stupefied by the
depths of my friend's folly, but now, much too late, I regained my wits and
signalled frantically for my stage-hands to drop the curtain before Tanus could
do any further damage. As the gleaming folds of cloth floated down and hid him
from their view, the audience sat in stunned silence, as though they did not
believe all that they had heard and seen that night. It was Pharaoh himself who broke the spell. He rose
to his feet, and his face behind the stiff white make-up was inscrutable. As he
swept from the temple, the congregation prostrated itself before him. Before he
too went down in obeisance, I saw my Lord Intef’s expression. It was
triumphant. I ESCORTED TANUS BACK FROM THE TEMPLE to his own
sparsely furnished quarters close to the dock at which his squadron was moored.
Although I walked beside him with my hand on the hilt of my dagger, prepared
for the consequences of his foolhardy honesty to be visited on us immediately,
Tanus was quite unrepentant. Indeed, he seemed oblivious to the depths of his
folly and inordinately pleased with himself. I have often remarked how a man
freshly released from terrible strain and mortal danger becomes garrulous and
elated. Even Tanus, the hardened warrior, was no exception. 'It was time somebody stood up and said what needed
to be said, don't you agree, old friend?' His voice rang clear and loud down
the darkened alley, as though he were determined to summon any awaiting
assassin to us. I kept my agreement muted. 'You did not expect it of me, did you now? Be
honest with me, Taita. It took you quite by surprise, did it not?' 'It
surprised us all.' This time I could agree with a little more enthusiasm. 'Even
Pharaoh was taken aback, as well he might be.' 'He listened, Taita. He took it all in, I could
tell. I did good work this evening, don't you think so?' When I attempted to raise the subject of Rasfer's
treacherous attack upon him and broach the possibility that it might have been
inspired by my Lord Intef, Tanus would have none of it. 'That is impossible,
Taita. You dreamed it. Lord Intef was my father's dearest friend. How could he
wish me ill? Besides, I am to be his son-in-law, am I not?' And despite his
injuries he let out such a happy shout of laughter that it roused the sleepers
in the darkened huts that we were passing and they shouted grumpily back at us to
be quiet. Tanus ignored their protests. 'No, no, I am sure that you are wrong,' he cried.
'It was simply Raster working out his spite in his own charming way. Well,
he'll know better next time.' He threw his arm around my shoulders and hugged
me so hard that it hurt. 'You saved me twice tonight. Without your warnings
Rasfer would have had me both times. How do you do these things, Taita? I swear
you are a secret warlock, and have the gift of the inner eye.' He laughed
again. How could I stifle his joy? He was like a boy, a
big rumbustious boy. I could not help but love him all the more. This was not
the time to point out the danger in which he had placed himself and all of us
who were his friends. Let him have his hour, and tomorrow I would sound
the voice of reason and of caution. So I took him home and stitched the gash in
his forehead, and washed his other wounds and anointed them with my special
mixture of honey and herbs to prevent mortification. Then I gave him a stiff
draught of the Red Shepenn and left the good Kratas to guard his slumbers. When I reached my own quarters well after midnight,
there were two summonses awaiting me: one from my Lady Lostris and the other
from the vanquished Rasfer. There was no doubt as to which of them I would have
responded to if I had been given the choice, but I was not. Rasfer's two thugs
almost dragged me away to where he lay on a sweat-soaked mattress, cursing and
moaning by turns, and calling on Seth and all die gods to witness his pain and
his fortitude. 'Good Taita!' he greeted me, raising himself
painfully on one elbow, 'you will not believe the pain. My chest is afire. I
swear every bone in it is crushed, and my head aches as though it is bound by
thongs of rawhide.' With very little effort I was able to force back my
tears of pity, but it is a strange thing about those of us who are doctors and
healers that we cannot find it in our hearts to deny our skills to even the
most abominable creatures that require them. I sighed with resignation,
unpacked the leather bag that contained my medical equipment and set out my
instruments and unguents. I was delighted to find that Rasfer's
self-diagnosis was perfectly valid, and that apart from numerous contusions and
shallow wounds, at least three of his ribs were broken and there was a lump on
the back of his head almost the size of my fist. I had, therefore, a perfectly
legitimate reason for adding considerably to his discomfort. One of the broken
ribs was seriously out of alignment and there was genuine danger that it might
pierce the lung. While his two thugs held him down and Rasfer squealed and
howled most gra-tifyingly, I manipulated the rib back into place and strapped
up his chest with linen bandages well soaked in vinegar to shrink as they
dried. Then I addressed myself to the lump on the back of
his skull where it had struck the stone paving. The gods are often generous.
When I held a lamp to Rasfer's eyes the pupils did not dilate. There was not
the least doubt in my mind as to what treatment was required. Bloody fluid was
gathering inside that unlovely skull. Without my help Rasfer would be dead by
the following sunset. I thrust aside the obvious temptation and reminded myself
of the surgeon's duty to his patient. There are probably only three surgeons in all of
Egypt who are capable of trepanning a skull with a good chance of success, and
personally I would not put much faith in the other two. Once again I ordered
Rasfer's two oafs to take hold of him to control his struggles, and to hold him
face down on his mattress. By the roughness of their handling and their obvious
disregard for their master's injured ribs, I surmised that they were not
exactly overflowing with loving feeling towards then- master. Once again a chorus of howls and squeals turned the
night hideous and gladdened my labours, as I made a semicircular incision
around the lump on his scalp, and then peeled a large flap of skin away from
the bone. Now not even those two strapping ruffians could hold him down. His
struggles were splashing blood as high as the ceiling of the room and
sprinkling us all, so that we seemed to be inflicted with a red pox. At last,
in exasperation, I ordered them to bind his ankles and wrists to the bedposts
with leather straps. 'Oh, gentle and sweet Taita, the pain is beyond belief.
Give me but a drop of that flower juice, I beg you, dear friend,' he blubbered. Now that he was safely bound to the bed, I could
afford to be frank with him. 'I understand, my good Rasfer, just how you feel.
I also would have been grateful for a little of the flower when last you took
the knife to me. Alas, old comrade, my store of the drug is finished, and there
will not be another eastern caravan for at least a month,' I lied cheerfully,
for very few knew that I cultivated the Red Shepenn myself. Knowing that the
best was yet to come, I reached for my bone-drill. The human head is the only part of the body that
puzzles me as a doctor. At the orders of my Lord Intef the corpses of all
executed criminals are handed over to me. In addition Tanus has been able to
bring me many fine specimens from the battlefield, suitably pickled in vats of
brine. All these I have dissected and studied so that I know every bone and how
it fits into its exact place in the skeleton. I have traced the route by which
food enters the mouth and passes through the body. I have found that great and
wondrous organ, the heart, nestling between the pale air-bladders of the lungs.
I have studied the rivers of the body through which the blood flows, and I have
observed the two types of blood which determine the moods and emotions of man. There is, of course, that bright joyous blood that,
when released by the cut of a scalpel or the headsman's axe, spurts out in
regular impulses. This is the blood of happy thoughts and fine emotions, it is
the blood of love and kindness. Then there is that darker sullen blood that
flows without the vigour and the bounding joy of the other. This is the blood
of anger and of sorrow, of melancholic thoughts and evil deeds. All these matters I have studied, and have filled
one hundred papyrus rolls with my observations. There is no man in the world
that I know of who has gone to such lengths, certainly none of those quacks in
the temple with their amulets and their incantations have done so. I doubt any
one of them could tell the liver from the sphincter of the anus without an
invocation to Osiris, a casting of the divining dice and a fat fee paid in
advance. In all modesty I can say that I have never met a
man who understands the human body better than I, and yet the head is still a
puzzle to me. Naturally I understand that the eyes see, the nose smells, the
mouth tastes and the ears hear— but what is the purpose of that pale porridge
that fills the gourd of the skull? I have never been able to fathom it myself, and no
man has ever been able to offer me a satisfactory explanation, except that
Tanus came closest to it. After he and I had spent an evening together sampling
the latest vintage of red wine, he had woken in the dawn and suggested with a
groan, 'Seth has placed this thing in our heads as his revenge on mankind.' I once met a man who was travelling with a caravan
from beyond those legendary twin rivers, the Tigris and the Euphrates, who
professed to have studied the same problem. He was a wise man and together we
debated many mysteries over the course of half a year. At one point he
suggested that all human emotion and thought sprang not from the heart, but
from those soft amorphous curds that make up the brain. I mention this naive
assertion only to demonstrate how gravely even an intelligent and learned man
can err. Nobody who has ever considered that mighty organ,
the heart, leaping with its own life in the centre of our body, fed by great rivers
of blood, protected by the palisades of bone, can doubt that this is the
fountain from which all thought and emotion springs. The heart uses the blood
to disseminate these emotions throughout the body. Have you ever felt your
heart stir within you and quicken to beautiful music, or a lovely face, or the
fine words of a moving speech? Have you ever felt anything leaping around
inside your head? Even the wise man from the East had to capitulate before my
ruthless logic. No rational man can believe that a bloodless puddle
of curdled milk lying inert in its bony jar could conjure up the lines of a
poem or the design of a pyramid, could cause a man to love or to wage war. Even
the embalmers scoop it out and discard it when they prepare a corpse for the long
journey. There is, however, a paradox here in that if this
glutinous mass is interfered with, even by the pressure of trapped fluid upon
it, the patient is certainly doomed. It requires an intimate knowledge of the
structure of the head and a quite marvellous dexterity to be able to drill
through the skull without disturbing the sac that contains this porridge. I
have both these attributes. As I ground down slowly through the bone,
encouraged by Rasfer's bellows, I paused regularly to wash away the bone chips
and filings by splashing vinegar into the wound. The sting of the liquid added
little to the patient's well-being, but revived the flagging volume of his
voice. Suddenly the sharp bronze drill bit cleanly through
the skull, and a tiny but perfect circle of bone was blown out of the wound by
the pressure within. It was followed immediately by a spurt of dark, clotted
blood that hit me in the face. Immediately Rasfer relaxed under me. I knew, not
without a sneaking pang of regret, that he would survive. As I stitched the
flap of scalp back into place, covering the aperture in the depths of which the
dura mater pulsed ominously, I wondered if I had truly done mankind a great
service by preserving this specimen of it. When I left Rasfer with his head swathed in
bandages, snoring and whimpering in porcine self-pity, I found that I was
completely exhausted. The excitements and alarums of the day had expended even
my vast store of energy. However, there was to be no rest for me yet, for my
Lady Lostris' messenger still hovered on the terrace of my quarters and pounced
on me as I set foot on the first step. I was allowed only sufficient grace to
wash away Rasfer's blood and change my soiled raiment. As I tpttered into her chamber, barely able to
place one . foot before the other, my Lady Lostris met me with blazing eyes and
ominously tapping foot. 'Just where do you think you have been hiding yourself,
Master Taita?' she lashed out at me immediately. 'I sent for you before the
second watch, and it's now not much short of dawn. How dare you keep me waiting
so? Sometimes you forget your station. You know full well the punishment for
impertinent slaves—' She was in full flight, having let her impatience brew for
all these hours. In anger her beauty is stunning, and when she stamped her foot
in that adorable gesture that was so typically her own, I thought that my heart
must burst with my love for her. 'Don't you stand there grinning at me!' she flared
at me. 'I am so truly angry that I could order you flogged.' She stamped her
foot again, and I felt the tiredness fall from my shoulders like a heavy load.
Her mere presence had the power to revitalize me. 'My lady, what a wondrous role you played this
night. It seemed to me and all who watched you that it was indeed the divine
goddess that walked amongst us—' 'Don't you dare try your tricks with me.' She
stamped for the third time, but without conviction. 'You'll not wriggle out of
this so easily—' 'Truly, my lady, as I walked back from the temple
through the crowded streets, your name was on every tongue. They said your
singing was the finest they had ever heard, and had quite stolen every heart.' 'I believe not a word,' she declared, but she was
clearly having difficulty sustaining her fury. 'In fact I thought my voice was
awful this evening. I was flat at least once, and off-key on numerous—' 'I must contradict you, mistress. You were never
better. And what beauty! It lit the whole temple.' She is not truly vain, my
Lady Lostris, but she is a woman. 'You awful man!' she cried in exasperation. 'I was
ready to have you flogged this time, I truly was. But come and sit beside me on
the bed and tell me all about it. I am still so excited that I am sure I will
not sleep for a week.' She took my hand and led me to the bed, babbling on
happily about Tanus, and how he must have won every heart as well as Pharaoh's
with his wonderful performance and fearless speech, and how the infant Horus
had beshat her dress, and did I truly think that she had sung even passing
well, and wasn't I just saying so? At last I had to stop her. 'My lady, it is almost
dawn and we must be ready to leave with all the court to accompany the king
when he crosses the river to inspect his funerary temple and his tomb. You must
get some sleep if you are to look your best on such an important state
occasion.' 'I'm not sleepy, Taita,' she protested, and went
chattering on, only to slump against my shoulder a few minutes later, fallen
asleep in mid-sentence. Gently, I slipped her head down on to the carved
wooden headrest and covered her with a rug of colobus monkey furs. I could not
bring myself to leave immediately but hovered beside her bed. At last I placed
a gentle kiss upon her cheek. She did not open her eyes, but whispered
sleepily, 'Do you think there will be an opportunity for me to speak to the
king tomorrow? Only he will be able to prevent my father sending Tanus away.' I could think of no ready answer for her, and while
I still dithered, she fell fully asleep. I COULD SCARCELY DRAG MYSELF FROM my couch at dawn,
for I seemed barely to have closed my eyes to sleep before it was time to open
them again. My reflection in the bronze mirror was haggard and my eyes were
underscored in purple. Swiftly I touched on make-up to cover the worst of my
sorry condition, enhancing the hollows of my eyes with kohl and my pale
features with a brushing of antimony. Two of the slave boys combed out my hair
and I was so pleased with the result that I felt almost cheerful as I hurried
down to the grand vizier's private dock where the great state barge lay moored. I was amongst the last to join the throng upon the
quay, but no one seemed to notice my late arrival, not even my Lady Lostris who
was already on the deck of the barge. I watched her for a while. She had been invited to join the royal women. These
comprised not only the king's wives, but his numerous- concubines and all his
daughters. Of course these last were the cause of much of Pharaoh's
unhappiness, a flock of them ranging in age from crawlers and toddlers to
others of marriageable age, and not a son amongst them. How was Pharaoh's
immortality to be maintained without a male line to carry it forward? It was difficult to believe that, like me, Lostris
had not slept more than an hour or two, for she seemed as sweet and fresh as
one of the desert roses in my garden. Even in mat glittering array of feminine
beauty that had been hand-picked by Pharaoh's factors or sent to him in tribute
by his satraps at the ends of the empire, Lostris stood out like a swallow in a
flock of drab little desert larks. I looked for Tanus, but his squadron was already
lying well upstream, ready to escort Pharaoh's crossing, and the reflection of
the rising sun turned the surface of the river into a dazzling silver sheet that
blinded the eye. I could not look into it. At that moment there was the steady boom of a drum,
and the populace craned to watch Pharaoh's stately progress down from the
palace to the royal barge. This morning he wore the light nemes crown of
starched and folded linen, secured around his forehead with the gold band of
the uraeus. The erect golden cobra, with its hood flared and its garnet eyes
glittering, rose up from his brow. The cobra was the symbol of the powers of
life and death that Pharaoh held over his subjects. The king was not carrying
the crook and flail, only the golden sceptre. After the double crown itself,
this was the most holy treasure of all the crown jewels and was reputed to be
over a thousand years old. Despite all the regalia and the ceremonial, Pharaoh
wore no make-up. Under the direct rays of the early sun, and without make-up to
disguise the fact, Mamose himself was unremarkable. Just a soft little godling
of late middle age, with a small round paunch bulging over the waistband of his
kilt and features intricately carved with lines of worry. As he passed where I stood, it seemed he recognized
me, for he nodded slightly. I immediately prostrated myself on the paving, and
he paused and made a sign for me to approach. I crawled forward on hands and
knees, and knocked my forehead three times on the ground at his feet. 'Are you not Taita, the poet?' he asked in that
thin and petulant voice of his. 'I am Taita the slave, your Majesty,' I replied. There
are times when a little humility is called for. 'But I am also a poor
scribbler.' 'Well, Taita the slave, you scribbled to good
effect last night. I have never been so well entertained by a pageant. I shall
issue a royal edict declaring your poor scribblings to be the official
version.' He announced this loud enough for all the court to
hear, and even my Lord Intef, who followed him closely, beamed with pleasure.
As I was his slave, the honour belonged to him more than to me. However,
Pharaoh was not finished with me yet. 'Tell me, Taita the slave, are you not also the
same surgeon who recently prescribed to me?' 'Majesty, I am that same humble slave who has the
temerity to practise a little medicine.' "Then when shall your cure take effect?' He
dropped his voice so that only I could hear the question. 'Majesty, the event wiE take place nine months
after you have fulfilled all those conditions that I listed for you.' As we
were now in a surgeon-and-patient relationship, I felt emboldened to add, 'Have
you followed the diet I set you?' 'By Isis' bountiful breasts!' he exclaimed with an
unexpected twinkle in his eye. 'I am so full of bull's balls, it is a wonder
that I do not bellow when a herd of cows passes the palace.' He was in such pleasant mood that I tried a little
joke of my own. 'Has Pharaoh found the heifer I suggested?' 'Alas, doctor, it is not as simple as it would
seem. The prettiest flowers are soonest visited by the bee. You did stipulate
that she must be completely untouched, did you not?' 'Virgin and untouched, and within a season of her
first red moon,' I added quickly, making it as difficult as possible to put my
recipe to the test. 'Have you found one who meets that description, Majesty?' His expression changed again, and he smiled thoughtfully.
The smile looked out of place on those melancholy features. 'We shall see,' he
murmured. 'We shall see.' And he turned and mounted the boarding-ladder of the
barge. As my Lord Intef drew level with me, he made a small gesture, ordering
me to fall in behind him, and so I followed him up on to the deck of the royal
barge. The wind had dropped during the night and the dark
waters of the river seemed heavy and quiet as oil in the jar, disturbed only by
those streaks and whirlpools upon the surface where the eternal current ran
deep and swift. Even Nembet should be able to make the crossing in these
conditions, although Tanus' squadron stood by in most unflattering fashion, as
if Tanus was preparing to rescue him from error once again. My Lord Intef drew me aside as soon as we reached
the deck. 'You still have the power to surprise me sometimes, my old darling,'
he whispered, and squeezed my arm. 'Just when I was seriously beginning to
doubt your-loyalty.' I was taken aback by this sudden flush of goodwill,
since the welts from Rasfer's lash across my back still ached. However, I bowed
my head to shield my expression and waited for him to give me direction before
committing myself, which he did immediately. 'I could not have written a, more appropriate declamation
for Tanus to recite before Pharaoh if I had tried myself. Where that imbecile
Rasfer failed so dismally, you retrieved the day for me in your usual style.'
It was only then that it all fell into place. He believed that I was the author
of Tanus' monumental folly, and that I had composed it for his benefit. In the
uproar of the temple he could not have heard my shouted warnings to Tanus, or
he would have known better. 'I am pleased that you are pleased,' I whispered
back to him. I felt an enormous sense of relief. My position of influence had
not been compromised. It was not my own skin I was thinking of at that
moment—well, not entirely. I was thinking of Tanus and Lostris. They would need
every bit of help and protection that I could give them during the stormy days
that lay ahead for both of them. I was grateful that I was still in a position
to be of some use to them. 'It was no less than my duty.' Thus I made the most
of this windfall. 'You will find me grateful,' my Lord Intef replied.
'Do you remember the piece of ground on the canal behind the temple of Thoth
that we discussed some time ago?' 'Indeed, my lord.' We both knew that I had hankered
after that plot for ten years. It would make a perfect writer's retreat and a
place to which I could retire in my old age. 'It is yours. At my next assize, bring the deed to
me for my signature.' I was stunned and appalled by the vile manner in which it
had come into my possession, as payment for an imagined piece of treachery on
my part. For a moment I thought of rejecting the gift, but only for a moment.
By the time I had recovered from my shock we were across the river and pulling
into the mouth of the canal that led across the plain to Pharaoh Mamose's great
funerary temple. I had surveyed this canal with only minimal help
from the royal architects, as I had planned virtually single-handed the whole
complicated business of the transport of Pharaoh's body from the place of his
death to the funerary temple where the mummification process would take place. I had assumed that he would die at his palace on
lovely little Elephantine Island. Therefore his corpse would be brought
down-river iri the state barge. I had designed the canal to accommodate the
huge ship snugly. So now she slipped into it as neatly as the sword into its
scabbard. Straight as the blade of my dagger, the canal cut
through the black loam soil of the riparian plain two thousand paces to the
foot of the gaunt Saharan foothills. Tens of thousands of slaves had laboured
over the years to build it, and to line it with stone blocks. As the barge
nosed into the canal, two hundred sturdy slaves seized the tow-ropes from the
bows and began to draw her smoothly across the plain. They sang one of the sad
melodious work chants as they marched in ranks along the tow-path. The peasants
working in the fields beside the canal ran to welcome us. They crowded to the
bank, calling blessing on the king and waving palm-fronds, as the great barge
moved majestically by. When at last we slid into the stone dock below the
outer walls of the half-finished temple, the slaves made the tow-ropes fast to
the mooring-rings. So precise was my design that the. entry port in the bulwark
of the state barge lined up exactly'with the portals of the main gate to the
temple. As the huge vessel came to rest, the trumpeter in
the bows blew a fanfare on his gazelle horn, and the portcullis was raised
slowly, to reveal the royal hearse waiting in the gateway attended by the
company of embalmers in their crimson robes and fifty priests of Osiris in rank
behind them. The priests began to chant as they trundled the
hearse forward on its wooden rollers, on to the deck of the barge. Pharaoh
clapped his hands with delight and hurried forward to examine this grotesque
vehicle. I had taken no part in the conception of this
celebration of bad taste. It was entirely the work of the priests. Suffice it
only to say that in the naked sunlight, the superabundant gold-work shone so
brightly as to offend the eye almost as painfully as did the actual design.
Such weight of gold forced the priests to pant and sweat as they manhandled the
clumsy ark on to the deck, and it listed even the great ship alarmingly. That
weight of gold could have filled all the grain stores of the Upper Kingdom, or
built and fitted out fifty squadrons of fighting ships and paid then- crews for
ten years. Thus the inept craftsman attempts to hide the paucity of his
inspiration behind a dazzle of treasure. If only they had given me such
material to work with, they might have seen something different. This monstrosity was destined to be sealed in the
tomb with Pharaoh's dead body. No matter that its construction had contributed
largely to the financial ruin of the kingdom, Pharaoh was delighted with it. At my Lord Intef's suggestion, the king mounted the
vehicle and took his seat on the platform designed to carry his sarcophagus.
From there he beamed about him, all his dignity and royal reserve forgotten. He
was probably enjoying himself as much as he ever had in all his gloomy life, I
reflected with a pang of pity. His death was to be the pinnacle to which most
of his living energy and anticipation were directed. On what was clearly an impulse, he beckoned my Lord
Intef to join him on the ark and then looked around the crowded deck as if
seeking someone else in the throng. He seemed to find who he wanted, for he
stooped slightly and said something to the grand vizier. My Lord Intef smiled and, following his direction,
singled out my Lady Lostris. With a gesture he ordered her to come to him on
the ark. She was clearly flustered, and blushed under her make-up, a rare
phenomenon for one who was so seldom caught out of countenance. However, she
recovered swiftly, and mounted the carriage with girlish, long-legged grace
that as usual carried every eye with her. She knelt before the king and touched her forehead
three times to the floor of the platform. Then, in front of all the priests and
the entire court, Pharaoh did an extraordinary thing. He reached down and took
Lostris' hand, and lifted her to her feet, and seated her beside him on the
platform. It was beyond all protocol, there was no precedent for it, and I saw
his ministers exchange looks of amazement. Then something else happened of which even they were
not aware. When I was very young there had lived in the boys' quarters an old
deaf slave who had befriended me. It was he who had taught me to read men's
speech not only by the sound of it, but also by the shape of their lips as they
formed the words. It was a very useful accomplishment. With it I could follow a
conversation at the far end of a crowded hall, with musicians playing and a
hundred men around me laughing anxl shouting at each other. Now, before my eyes I saw Pharaoh say softly to my
Lady Lostris, 'Even in daylight you are as divine as was the goddess Isis in
the torchlight of the temple.' The shock of it was like the blow of a fist in my
stomach. Had I been blind, I berated myself desperately, or had I merely been
stupid? Surely any imbecile must have anticipated the direction in which my
capricious meddling must incline the order in which the dice of destiny might
fall. My facetious advice to the king must inevitably
have had the effect of directing his attention towards my Lady Lostris. It was
as though some malignant impulse below the surface of my mind had set out to
describe her precisely to him as the mother of his first-born son. The most
beautiful virgin in the land, to be taken within the first season after her
moon had flowered—it was her exactly. And then, of course, by casting her as
the leading female in the pageant, I had managed to display her to the king in
the kindest possible light. What I suddenly realized was about to happen was
all of it my fault, as much as though I had deliberately engineered it. What is
more, there was nothing I could do about it now. I stood in the sunlight so
appalled and stricken with remorse that for a while I was deprived of the
powers of speech and of reason. When the sweating priests shoved the hearse off the
deck and through the gateway, the crowd around me started after it and I was
borne along with them willy-nilly, as though I were a leaf upon a stream
without direction of my own. Before I was able to recover my wits I found
myself within the forecourt of the funerary temple. I began to push my way
forward, jostling those ahead of me to get past them and to reach the side of
the hearse before it came to the main entrance of the royal mortuary. As one team of priests pushed the vehicle forward,
a second team picked up the wooden rollers that were left behind it and ran
forward to place them ahead of the ponderous golden vehicle. There was a short
delay as the carriage reached that area of the courtyard that had not yet been
paved. While the priests spread straw ahead of the rollers to smooth the
passage over this rough ground, I slipped quickly around the back of the row of
huge carved stone lions that lined the carriageway, and hurried down this clear
space until I was level with the ark. When one of the priests tried to bar my
way and prevent me reaching the side of the vehicle, I gave him such a look as
would have made one of the stone lions quail, and spat a single word at him
that was seldom heard in the temple confines and caused him to step hurriedly
aside and let me pass. When I reached the near side of the ark I found
myself directly below Lostris, close enough to stretch up and touch her arm,
and to hear every word she addressed to the king. I could tell at once that she
had completely recovered her poise which Pharaoh's unexpected interest in her
had disturbed, and was now setting out to be as agreeable as possible to him.
Miserably, I recalled how she had planned to do exactly this, and to use his
favour to secure his agreement to her marriage to Tanus. As recently as last
evening I had dismissed it as girlish prattle, but now it was happening, and it
was beyond my power to prevent it or to warn her of the dangerous waters into
which she was steering. If, earlier in this chronicle, I have given the
impression that my Lady Lostris was a flighty child with not a thought in her
pretty head other than romantic nonsense and her own frivolous enjoyment of
life, then I have fallen short in my efforts as historian of these
extraordinary events. Although still so young, she was at times mature far
beyond her years. Our Egyptian girls bloom early in the Nile sunlight. She was
also a diligent scholar, with a bright mind and a thoughtful and enquiring side
to her nature, all of which I had done my very best over the years to foster
and develop. Under my tutelage she had reached the stage where
she could debate with the priests the most obscure religious dogma, could hold
her own with the palace lawyers on such matters as the Land Tenure Acts and the
extremely complicated Irrigation Act that regulated the usage of the waters
from the Nile. Of course, she had read and absorbed every single one of the
scrolls in the palace library. These included several hundred of which I was
the author, from my medical treatises to my definitive essays on the tactics of
naval warfare, together with my astrological scrolls on the names and natures
of all the heavenly bodies, and my manuals on archery and swordsmanship,
horticulture and falconry. She could even argue with me my own principles of
architecture, and compare them to those of the great Imhotep. Thus she was perfectly equipped to discuss any
subject from astrology to the practice of war, from politics or the building of
temples to the measurement and regulation of the Nile waters, all of which were
subjects that fascinated Pharaoh. In addition she could rhyme and riddle and
coin an amusing pun, and her vocabulary was almost as extensive as my own. In
short, she was an accomplished conversationalist, with a ready sense of humour.
She was articulate and had an enchanting voice and a merry little laugh. Truly,
no man or god could resist her, especially if she could offer to someone
without a son the promise of an heir. I had to warn her, and yet how could a slave
intrude upon the congress of persons so infinitely high above his own station?
I skipped nervously beside the carriage, listening to my Lady Lostris' voice at
its most enthralling as she set herself out to engage the king's fancy. She was describing to him the manner in which his
funerary femple had been laid out to conform to the most propitious
astronomical aspects, those of the moon and the zodiac at the time of Pharaoh's
birth. Of course she was merely repeating knowledge that she had gleaned from
me, for I was the one who had surveyed and orientated the temple to the
heavenly bodies. However, she was so convincing that I found myself following
her explanations as though I was hearing them for the first time. The funeral ark passed between the pylons of the
inner court of the temple and rolled down the long colonnaded atrium, past the
barred and guarded doors to the six treasuries in which were manufactured and
stored the funerary offerings which would go with the king to his tomb. At the
end of the atrium the acacia-wood doors, on which were carved the images of all
the gods of the pantheon, were swung open, and we entered the mortuary where
Pharaoh's corpse would one day be embalmed. Here in this solemn chapel the king dismounted from
the carriage, and went forward to inspect the massive table on which he would
lie for the ritual of mummification. Unlike the embalming of a commoner, royal
embalming took seventy days to accomplish. The table had been sculpted from a
single block of diorite, three paces long and two wide. Into the dark, mottled
surface of the stone had been chiselled the indentation that fitted the back of
the king's head, and the grooves which would drain the blood and other bodily
fluids released by the scalpels and the instruments of the embalmers. The grand master of the guild of embalmers was
standing beside the table, ready to explain the entire process to the king, and
he had an attentive audience, for Pharaoh seemed fascinated by every gruesome
detail. At one stage it seemed that he might so far forget his dignity as to
climb up upon the diorite block and try its fit, very much as though it were a
new costume of linen presented by his tailor. However, he restrained himself with an obvious
effort, and instead devoted himself to the mortician's description of how the
first incision would be made from his gullet to his groin, and how his viscera
would be lifted out cleanly and then divided into their separate parts—liver,
lungs, stomach and entrails. The heart, as the hearth of the divine spark, would
be left in place, as would the kidneys with their associations with water and
thus with the Nile, the source of life. After this edifying instruction, Pharaoh minutely
examined the fqur Canopic jars that would receive his viscera. They stood on
another smaller granite table close at hand. The jars were carved from gleaming
translucent alabaster the colour of milk. Their stoppers were fashioned in the
shapes of the animal-headed gods: Anubis the jackal, Sobeth the crocodile,
Thoth the ibis-headed, Sekhmet with the head of a lioness. They would be the
guardians of Pharaoh's divine parts until his awakening in the eternal life. On the same granite table that held the Canopic
jars, the embalmers had laid out their instruments and the full array of pots
and amphorae that contained the natron salts, lacquers and other chemicals that
they would use in the process. Pharaoh was fascinated by the glistening bronze
scalpels which would disembowel him, and when the embalmer showed him the long
pointed spoon that would be pushed up his nostrils to scoop out the contents of
his skull, those cheesy curds over which I had pondered so long and
fruitlessly, the king was fascinated and handled the grisly instrument with
reverential awe. Once the king had satisfied his curiosity at the
mortuary table, my Lady Lostris directed his attention to the painted
bas-relief engravings that covered the walls of the templi from floor to
ceiling. The decorations were not yet completed, but were none the less quite
striking in their design and execution. I had drawn most of the original
cartoons with my own hand, and had closely supervised the others drawn by the
palace artists. These had been traced on to the walls with charcoal sticks.
Once the tracings were in place, I had corrected and perfected them in
free-hand. Now a company of master sculptors was engraving them into the
sandstone blocks, while behind them a second company of artists was painting in
the completed bas-relief. The dominant colour I had chosen for these designs
was blue in all its variation: the blue of the starling's wing, the blues of
the sky and the Nile in the sunlight, the blues of the petals of the desert
orchid and the shimmering blue of the river perch quivering in the fisherman's
net. However, there were other colours as well, all thqse vibrant reds and
yellows that we Egyptians love so well. Pharaoh, accompanied closely by my Lord Intef, in
his capacity of Keeper of the Royal Tombs, made a slow circuit of the high
walls, examining every detail, and commenting on most of them. Naturally the
theme I had chosen for the mortuary was the Book of the Dead, that detailed map
and description of the route to the underworld that Pharaoh's shade must
follow, and the depictions of all the trials and dangers he would confront
along the way. He paused for a long while before my drawing of the
god Thoth, with his bird head and long curved ibis beak, weighing Pharaoh's
disembodied heart on the scales against the feather of truth. Should the heart
be impure, it would tip the scales against the feather, and the god would
immediately toss it to the crocodile-headed monster that waited close at hand
to devour it. Softly, the king quoted the protective mantra laid down in the
book to shield himself from such a calamity, and then passed on to my next
engraving. It was almost noon before Pharaoh had completed his
inspection of the mortuary temple and led the way out into the forecourt where
the palace chefs had laid out a sumptuous open-air banquet. 'Come and sit here, where I can speak to you
further on the matter of the stars!' Once again the king ignored precedent to
place my Lady Lostris close to him at the banquet table, even moving one of his
senior wives to make a place for her. During the meal he directed most of his
conversation towards my mistress. She was now completely at her ease and kept
the king and all those around her enthralled and merry with her wit and charm. Of course, as a slave I did not have a seat at the
table, nor could I even inveigle myself within range of my mistress to warn her
to moderate her demeanour in the king's presence. Instead, I found myself a
place on the pedestal of one of the granite lions, from where I could look down
the length of the banquet table and watch everything that took place there. I was
not the only observer, for my Lord Intef sat close to the king and yet
withdrawn, watching it alj with glittering, implacable eyes, like a handsome
but deadly spider at the centre of his web. At one stage of the meal a yellow-billed kite wheeled
high over head, and uttered a screech, a sardonic and mocking cry. Hurriedly I
made the sign against the evil eye, for who knows what god it was that had
taken the form of the bird to muddle and confuse our petty endeavours? After the midday meal it was customary for the
court to rest for an hour or so, especially at this the hottest season of the
year. However, Pharaoh was so wrought up that today he would have none of it. 'Now we will inspect the treasuries,' he announced.
The guards at the doors of the first treasury stood aside and presented arms as
the royal party approached, and the doors were swung open from within. I had planned these six treasuries not only as
store-rooms to hold the vast funerary treasure that Pharaoh had been collecting
for the past twelve years, ever since his accession to the double throne, but
also as workshops in which a small army of craftsmen and artisans was
permanently employed in adding to that treasure. The hall that we entered was the armoury that
housed the collection of weapons and accoutrements of the battlefield and the
wild chase, both practical and ceremonial, which the king would take with him
into the afterworld. With my Lord Intef's concurrence, I had arranged for the
craftsmen to be at their benches so that the king would have the opportunity of
watching them at work. As Pharaoh passed slowly down the row of benches,
his questions were so astute and technical that those nobles and priests to
whom he addressed himself could provide no answers, and they looked around
frantically for someone who could. I was summoned hastily from the back of the
crowd and pushed forward to face the king's interrogation. 'Ah, yes,' Pharaoh grimaced bleakly as he
recognized me. 'It is none other than the humble slave who writes pageants and
cures the sick. No one here seems to know the composition of this electrum wire
that binds the stock of the war-bow that this man is making for me.' 'Gracious Pharaoh, the metal is a mixture of one
part of copper to five parts of silver and four of gold. The gold is of die red
variety found only in the mines of Lot in the western desert. No other gives
the wire the same pliability or elasticity, of course.' 'Of course,' the king agreed wryly. 'And how do you
make the strands so thin? These are no thicker than the hairs of my head.' 'Majesty, we extrude the hot metal by swinging it
in a special pendulum that I designed for the purpose. Later we can watch the
process in the gold foundry, if Your Majesty so wishes.' Thus during the rest of the tour I was able to
remain at the king's side and to deflect some of his attention away from
Lostris, but I still could not find the opportunity to speak to her alone. Pharaoh passed down the armoury to inspect the huge
array of weapons and armour already in store. Some of these had belonged to his
forefathers and had been employed in famous battles; others were newly
manufactured and would never be used in war. All of them were magnificent, each
a pinnacle of the armourer's art. There were helmets and breast-plates of
bronze and silver and gold, battle swords with ivory hilts set with precious
stones, full-dress ceremonial uniforms of the commander-in-chief of each of the
king's elite regiments, shields and bucklers in hippo-hide and crocodile-skin,
all starred with rosettes of gold. It made a splendid array. From the armoury we crossed the atrium to the
furniture store, where a hundred cabinet-makers laboured with cedar and acacia
and precious ebony wood to build the funeral furnishings for the king's long
journey. Very few substantial trees grow in our riparian valley, and wood is a
scarce and costly commodity, worth very nearly its weight in silver. Almost
every stick of it must be carried hundreds of leagues across the desert, or
shipped downstream from those mysterious lands to the south. Here it was piled
in extravagant stacks, as though it were commonplace, and the fragrance of
fresh sawdust perfumed the hot air. We watched while craftsmen inlaid the head-board of
Pharaoh's bed with patterns of mother-of-pearl and woods of contrasting colour.
Others decorated the arm-rests of the chairs with golden falcons and the
back-rests of the padded sofas with the heads of silver lions. Not even the
halls of the royal palace at Elephantine Island contained such delicate
workmanship as would grace the rock cell of the king's tomb. From the furniture treasury we passed on to the
hall of the sculptors. In marble and sandstone and granite of a hundred
differing hues, the sculptors whittled and chipped away with chisel and file so
that a fine, pale dust hung in the air. The masons covered their noses and
mouths with strips of linen on which the dust settled and their features were
powdered white with the insidious stuff. Some of the men coughed behind their
masks as they worked, a persistent, dry cough that was peculiar to their
profession. I had dissected the corpses of many old sculptors who had worked
thirty years and died at their trade. I found their lungs petrified and turned
to stone in their bodies, thus I spent as little time as possible in the
masons' shop lest I contract the same malady. None the less, their products were wondrous to
contemplate, statues of the gods and of Pharaoh himself that seemed to vibrate
with life. There were life-sized images of Pharaoh seated on his throne or
walking abroad, alive and dead, in his god form or in the shape of a mortal
man. These statues wouMJine the long causeway that led from the funerary temple
on the valley floor up into the wall of black hills from which his final tomb was
even at this moment being excavated. At his death the golden hearse, drawn by a
train of one hundred white bullocks, was to bear his massive sarcophagus along
that causeway to its final resting-place. This granite sarcophagus, only partially completed,
lay in the centre of the masons' hall. Originally it had been a single block of
pink granite quarried from the mines at Assoun, and ferried down-river in a
barge especially constructed for that purpose. It had taken five hundred slaves
to haul it ashore and drag it over wooden rollers to where it now lay, an
oblong of solid stone five paces long, three wide and three tall. The masons had begun by sawing a thick slab from
the top of it. Upon this granite hd a master mason was fashioning the likeness
of the mummiform Pharaoh, with his arms crossed and the crook and flail gripped
in his dead hands. Another team of masons was now engaged,in hollowing out the
interior of the main granite block to provide a nest into which the cluster of
inner coffins would fit perfectly. Including the huge outer sarcophagus, there
would be seven coffins hi all, fitting one within the other like a child's
puzzle-toy. Seven was, of course, one of the magical numbers. The innermost
coffin would be of pure gold, and later we watched it being beaten out of the
formless mass of metal in the hall of the goldsmiths. It was this multiple sarcophagus, this mountain of
stone and gold housing the king's wrapped corpse, that the great golden hearse
would carry along the causeway to the hills, a slow journey that would take
seven whole days to complete. The hearse would stop each night in one of the
small shrines that were spaced at intervals along the causeway. A fascinating adjunct to the hall of statues was
the ushabti shop at the rear where the servants and retainers who would escort
the dead king were being carved. These were perfect little manikins of wood
representing all the grades and orders of Egyptian society who would work for
the king in the hereafter, so as to enable him to maintain his estate and the
style of his existence in the underworld. Each ushabti was a delightfully carved wooden doll
dressed in the authentic uniform of his calling and bearing the appropriate
tools. There were farmers and gardeners, fishermen and bakers, beer-brewers and
handmaidens, soldiers and tax-collectors, scribes and barbers, and hundreds
upon hundreds of common labourers to perform every menial task and to go
forward in the king's place if ever he were called upon by the other gods to
work in the underworld. At the head of this congregation of little figures
there was even a grand vizier whose miniature features closely resembled those
of my Lord Intef. Pharaoh picked out this manikin and examined him closely,
turning him over to read the description on his back. My name is Lord Intef, grand vizier of the Upper
Kingdom, Pharaoh's sole companion, three times the recipient of the Gold of
Praise. I am ready to answer for the king. Pharaoh passed the doll to my Lord Intef. 'Is your physique
truly so muscular, my Lord Intef?' he asked with a smile just below the surface
of his dour expression, and the grand vizier bowed slightly. 'The sculptor has failed to do me justice, Your
Majesty.' The last treasury that the king visited that day
was the hall of the goldsmiths. The infernal glow of the furnaces cast a
strange glow on the features of the jewellers as they worked with total
concentration at their benches. I had coached them well. At the entrance of the
royal entourage, the goldsmiths knelt in unison to make the triple obeisance to
Pharaoh, and then rose and resumed their work. Even in that large hall the heat of the furnace
flames was so sulphurous as almost to stop the breath, and we were soon bathed
in our own sweat. However, the king was so fascinated by the treasure displayed
for him that he seemed not to notice the oppressive atmosphere. He went
directly to the raised dais in the centre of the hall where the most
experienced and skilful smiths were at work upon the golden inner coffin. They
had perfectly captured Pharaoh's living face in the shimmering metal. The mask
would fit exactly over his bandaged head. It was a divine image with eyes of
obsidian and rock-crystal, and with the cobra-headed uraeus encircling the
brow. I truly believe that no finer masterpiece of the goldsmith's art has ever
been fashioned in all the thousand years of our civilization. This was the peak
and the zenith. All the unborn ages might one day marvel at its splendour. Even after Pharaoh had admired the golden mask from
every angle, he seemed unable to tear himself too far from it. He spent the
remainder of the day on the dais beside it, seated on a low stool while box
after cedar-wood box of exquisite jewels were laid at his feet and the contents
catalogued for him. I cannot believe that such a treasure was ever
before accumulated in one place at one time. To make a bald list of the items
does not in the least way suggest the richness and the diversity of it all.
None the less, let me tell you at the outset that, there were six thousand four
hundred and fifty-five pieces already in the cedar-wood boxes, and that each
day more were added to the collection as the jewellers worked on tirelessly. There were rings for Pharaoh's toes as well as his
fingers; there were amulets and charms, and gold figurines of the gods and
goddesses; there were necklaces and bracelets and pectoral medallions and belts
on which were inlaid falcons and vultures and all the other creatures of the
earth and the sky and the river; there were crowns and diadems studded with
lapis lazuli and garnets and agate and carnelians and jasper and every gemstone
that civilized man holds dear. The artistry with which all this had been designed
and manufactured eclipsed all that had been created over the preceding one
thousand years. It is often in decline that a nation creates its most beautiful
works of art. In the formative years of empire the obsession is with conquest
and the building-up of wealth. It is only once this has been achieved that there
is leisure and a desire to develop the arts, and—more importantly—rich and
powerful men to sponsor them. The weight of gold and silver already used in the
manufacture of the hearse and the funeral mask and all the rest of this
breathtaking collection of treasure was in excess of five hundred takhs; thus
it would have taken five hundred strong men to lift it all. I had calculated
that this was almost one-tenth of the total weight of these precious metals
that had been mined in the entire one thousand years of our recorded history.
All of this the king intended taking with him to the tomb. Who am I, a humble slave, to question the price
that a king was willing to pay for eternal life? Suffice it only to state that
in assembling this treasure, while at the same time conducting the war against
the Lower Kingdom, Pharaoh had, almost alone and unaided, plunged this very
Egypt of ours into beggary. No wonder, then, that Tanus in his declamation had
singled out the depredation of the tax-collectors as one of the most terrible
afflictions visited upon the populace. Between them and the robber bands that
ravaged unchecked and unhindered through the countryside, we were all ruined
and crushed under the financial yoke that was too heavy for any of us to bear.
To survive at all, we had to evade the tax collector's net. So as he set out to
beggar us for his own aggrandizement, the king made criminals of us at the same
moment. Very few of us, great or small, rich or poor, slept well at night. We
lay awake dreading at any moment the heavy knock of the tax-collector upon the
door. Oh, sad and abused land, how it groaned beneath the
yoke! LAVISH QUARTERS HAD BEEN PREPARED in the necropolis
in which the king would spend that night upon the west bank of the Nile, close
to his own final resting-place in the gaunt black hills. The necropolis, the
city of the dead, was almost as extensive as Karnak itself. It was home to all
those associated with the building and the care of the funerary temple and the
royal tomb. There was a full regiment of the elite guard to protect the holy
places, for the usurper in the north was as avaricious for treasure as was our
own dear king, while the robber barons in the desert became each day bolder and
more daring. The treasuries of the funerary temple were a sore temptation to
every predator hi the two kingdoms, and beyond. hi addition to the guards there were the companies
of the craftsmen and the artisans and all their apprentices to house. I was
responsible for the records of wages and rations, so I knew exactly how many
there were. On the last pay-day their number had been four thousand eight
hundred and eleven. Added to this, there were over ten thousand slaves employed
upon the work. I will not weary myself by listing the numbers of
oxen and sheep that had to be slaughtered each day to feed them all, nor the
cartloads of fish that were brought up from the Nile, nor the thousands of jars
of beer that were brewed daily to slake the summef thirst of this multitude as
they laboured under the watchful eye and the ready lash of the overseers. The pecropolis was a city, and in that city was a
palace for the king. It was with relief that we moved into it to spend the
night, for it had been a wearying day. But once again there was little rest for
me. I tried to reach my Lady Lostris, but it was almost
as if there existed a conspiracy to keep me away from her. According to her
little black maids, first she was at toilet, and after that she was in her
bath, and then she was resting and could not be disturbed. Finally, as I still
waited in the antechamber of her quarters, a summons reached me from her
father, and I could linger no longer, but must hurry to my master. As soon as I entered my Lord Intef s bedchamber he
dismissed all the others in the room. When we were alone, he kissed me. I was
once more surprised by his benevolence and disturbed by his excited manner.
Seldom had I seen him in such mood, and always before it had adumbrated
calamitous events. 'How often the gateway to power and fortune is
found in the most unexpected place!' he laughed at me, and caressed my face.
'This time it lies between the thighs of a woman. No, my old darling, don't
play the innocent. I know just what a cunning hand you have taken in all of
this. Pharaoh has told me how you cajoled him into it by promising him a male
heir to his line. By Seth, but you are the cunning one, are you not? Not a word
to me of your design, but you schemed it all on your own account.' He laughed again, and twisted a lock of my hair
between his fingers. 'You must have divined my ultimate ambition all along,
even though we have never discussed it openly. So you set out to achieve it for
me. Of course, I should have you punished for your presumption,' he twisted the
lock of hair until tears started into my eyes, 'but how can I be angry with you
when you have placed the double crown within my grasp?' He released the tress
of my hair and kissed me again. 'I have just come from the king's presence. In
two days, at the culmination of the festival, he will announce his betrothal to
my daughter, Lostris.' I felt a sudden darkness behind my eyes, and a chilly
dew formed on my skin. 'The wedding will take place the same day,
immediately after the closing ceremony of the festival, I saw to that. We don't
want any delay in which something might happen to prevent it, do we?' Such a swift royal wedding was unusual but not
unheard of. When brides were chosen to seal a political union, or to
consolidate the conquest of a new territory, the wedding often took place the very
same day it was decided. Pharaoh Mamose the First, forefather of our present
pharaoh, had married the daughter of a conquered Human chieftain on the actual
battlefield. However, such historical precedents were of little comfort to me
now as I faced the bleak maturation of my worst fears. My Lord Intef seemed not to notice my distress. He
was too concerned with his own immediate interests, and he went on speaking.
'Before I gave my formal consent to the union, I prevailed on the king to
concede that if she bore him a son then he would elevate my daughter to the
rank of principal wife and queen consort.' He clapped his hands in unrestrained
triumph. 'Of course, you realize what that means. If Pharaoh
should die before my grandson is of age to rule, then I as his grandfather and
closest male line would become regent—' He broke off suddenly and stared at me,
and I knew him so well that I- understood exactly what was running through his
mind. He was bitterly regretting that indiscretion, nobody should ever have
heard that thought expressed. It was purest treason. If Lostris bore a son to
Pharaoh, then the father would not live long thereafter. We both understood
that. My Lord Intef had given voice to regicide, and he was considering
removing the only one who had heard it spoken, the humble slave, Taita. We both
understood that clearly. 'My lord, I am only grateful that it has turned out
the way I planned it. I admit now that I have worked deviously to place your
daughter in the king's way, and that I described her to him as the mother of
his future son. I used the pageant as a show-piece to focus his attention upon
her. However, I could not bring myself to speak to you of such momentous
affairs until they had been successfully engineered. But there still remains a
great deal for us to do, before we can count ourselves secure—' and I began
swiftly to extemporize a list of all that might go awry before he could gain
control of the crown and the golden sceptre of Egypt. Tactfully I made it clear
how much he still needed me if he were to achieve his design. I saw him relax
as he followed my arguments, and I knew that at least for the immediate future
I was safe. It was some time before I could reasonably escape
from his presence and hurry to warn my Lady Lostris of the terrible predicament
in which I had placed her. However, before I reached her door I realized that
my warning to her would serve no purpose other than to distress her to the
point of dementia or even suicide. I could waste no further time if I were to prevent
events from rushing to their tragic conclusion. There was only one person to whom I could turn now. I LEFT THE NECROPOLIS AND SET OFF alone along the
tow-path of the canal, back towards the river-bank where I knew that Tanus'
squadrons were encamped. The moon was only three days from full and it lit the
jagged hills of the western horizon with a cold yellow radiance and threw black
shadows on the plain below. As I hurried along, I recited to myself a full list
of all the possible calamities and misfortunes that might befall Tanus, my Lady
Lostris and myself in the days ahead. I was goading myself the same way that a
black-maned desert lion lashes up his temper with the bony spike in the end of
his tail before he charges at the huntsman. Thus I was in fulminating mood long
before I reached the bank of the Nile. I found Tanus' encampment without
difficulty, hard by the bank of the Nile and the mouth of the canal. The ships
of the squadron were anchored below the camp. The sentries challenged me and
then, when they recognized me, led me to Tanus' tent. Tanus was at late supper with Kratas and four other
of his subordinate officers. He rose to greet me with a smile and offered me
the beer tankard in his hand. "This is such an unexpected pleasure, old friend.
Sit down beside me and have a pull of my beer while my slave brings you a cup
and platter. You look hot and out of sorts—' I cut short these pleasantries by
rounding on him furiously. 'To Seth with you, you great senseless oaf! Do you
not understand what jeopardy you have placed us in? You and that flapping
jawbone of yours! Do you have no thought for the safety and the well-being of
my mistress?' In truth I had not meant to be so harsh on him, but once I had
started, it seemed that I was unable to control my emotions, and all my fear
and anxiety came tumbling out in a flood of invective. Not all that I accused
him of was true or fair, but it made me feel better to have it out. Tanus' expression changed and he held up one hand
as though to shield himself. 'Whoa! You take me unawares. I am unarmed and
unable to defend myself from such a murderous assault.' In front of his
officers his tone was jocular, but his smile was thin as he seized my arm and
steered me out of the tent into the darkness, and half-dragged me beyond the
regimental lines into the open moonlit fields beyond. I was like a child in the
grip of that right hand that was trained to wield the sword and draw the great
bow Lan-ata. 'Now puke it up!' he ordered me grimly. 'What has
happened to put you in such vile humour?' I was still angry, but more afraid than angry, and
my tongue took flight again. 'I have spent half my life trying to protect you
from your own stupidity, and I am sick of it. Don't you understand anything of
life? Did you truly believe that you would be allowed to escape unscathed from
the incredible folly into which you threw all of us last night?" 'Are you talking about my declamation at the
pageant?' He looked puzzled, and released the crushing grip on my arm. 'How can
you say it was folly? All my officers, and every other person I have spoken to
since then, are all delighted with what I had to say—' 'You fool, don't you see that the opinions of all
your officers and all your friends count for the price of a rotten fish in the
scheme of things? Under any other ruler you would already be dead, and even
this weak and vacillating old man of ours cannot afford to let you escape the
consequences of your insolence. It is more than his throne is worth. There will
be a bill for you to pay, Tanus, Lord Harrab. Horus knows, it will be a heavy
bill.' 'You' are speaking in riddles,' he snapped at me.
'I did the king a great service. He is surrounded by fawning toadies who feed
him the lies they think he wants to hear. It was past time that he learned the
truth, and I know in my heart that once he considers it, he will be grateful to
me.' My anger began to evaporate before his simple and
steadfast belief in the triumph of good. 'Tanus, my dearest friend, what an
innocent you are! No man is ever grateful for having the unpalatable truth
rammed down his throat. But apart from that, you have played directly into the
hands of my Lord Intef.' 'My Lord Intef?' He stared at me hard. 'What of my
Lord Intef? You speak of him as though he were my enemy. The grand vizier was
my father's dearest friend. I know that I can trust him to protect me. He swore
an oath to my father as he lay on his death-bed—' I could see that despite his sunny disposition and
our friendship, he was becoming truly angry with me, probably for the first
time in his life. I knew also that, although it was slow to rouse, Tanus' anger
was something to fear. 'Oh, Tanus!' I curbed my own anger at last. 'I have
been unfair to you. There is so much that I should have told you, and never did.
Nothing was as you thought it. I was a coward, but I could not tell you that
Intef was your own father's deadliest enemy.' 'How can this be true?' Tanus shook his head. 'They
were friends, the dearest friends. My earliest memories are of them laughing
together. My father told me that I could trust my very life to my Lord Intef.' "The noble Pianki, Lord Harrab believed that,
it is true. His faith cost him his entire fortune, and in the end his life
which he placed in Intef's hands.' 'No, no, you must be mistaken. My father was the
victim of a series of misfortunes—' 'And every one of those misfortunes was engineered
by my Lord Intef. He envied your father for his virtues and his popularity, for
his wealth and his influence with Pharaoh. He realized that Lord Harrab would
be appointed grand vizier before him and he hated him for all these things.' 'I cannot believe you. I cannot bring myself to
believe you.' Tanus shook his head in denial, and the last of my anger was
snuffed out. 'I will explain it all to you, as I should have
done long ago. I will give you all the proof you need. But there is no time for
it now. You must trust me. My Lord Intef hates you even as he hated your
father. Both you and my Lady Lostris are in danger. In danger of more than simply
life itself, in danger of losing each other for ever.' 'But how is that possible, Taita?' He was confused
and shaken by my words. 'I thought that my Lord Intef had agreed to our union.
Have you not spoken to him, then?' 'Yes, I have spoken to him,' I cried, and I seized
Tanus' hand and thrust it up under the back of my tunic. 'That was his reply.
Feel the welts left by the lash! He had me flogged for even suggesting the
marriage between you and my Lady Lostris. That is how much he hates you and
your family.' Tanus stared at me speechlessly, but I saw that he
believed me at last, and so I was able to come to the subject that was
dominating my thoughts more even than his intemperate speech, or the vendetta
that the grand vizier had conducted so successfully against him over so many
years. 'Hear me now, my dear friend, and brace yourself
for the very worst tidings yet.' There was no other way to tell him, except as
directly as Tanus would have told me. 'Far from agreeing to your marriage, my
Lord Intef has this very night pledged his daughter's hand to another. She is
to be married immediately to Pharaoh Mamose, and after she bears his first son
she will become his principal wife and consort. The king will make the
announcement himself at the end of the festival of Osiris. The marriage will
take place that very same evening.' Tanus swayed on his feet and in the moonlight his
face turned ghostly pale. Neither of us could speak for a long while and then
Tanus turned away from me and walked out alone into the field of standing corn.
I trailed behind him, keeping him in sight, until at last he found an outcrop
of black rock and seated himself upon it with the weary air of a very old man.
I came up softly and seated myself below him. Deliberately I remained silent
until he sighed and asked quietly, 'Has Lostris consented to this marriage?' 'Of course not. As yet she probably knows nothing
about it. But dp you think for one moment that her objections would count
against the will of her father and the king? She will have no say in the
matter.' 'What are we to do, old friend?' Even in my distress I was grateful to him that he
used the plural, including me, reassuring me of our friendship. 'There is one
other probability that we must face,' I warned him. 'And that is that in the
same speech that Pharaoh announces his betrothal to Lostris, he will order your
imprisonment, or worse still, issue your death warrant. My Lord Intef has the
king's ear and he will certainly put him up to it. In truth he would have good
reason. You are certainly guilty of sedition.' 'I do not care to live without Lostris as my wife.
If the king takes her from me, then he is welcome to my head as a marriage
gift.' He said it simply, without histrionics, so that I had difficulty in
feigning anger and putting the edge of contempt into my voice. 'You sound like a weak and pitiful old woman,
giving herself up to the fates without a struggle. What a fine and undying love
is yours, if you will not even fight for her!' 'How do you fight a king and a god?' Tanus asked
quietly. 'A king to whom you have sworn allegiance, and a god who is as remote
and as unassailable as the sun?' 'As a king he does not deserve your allegiance. You
set that out clearly in your declamation. He is a weak and dithering old man
who has divided the two kingdoms and brought our Ta-Meri bleeding to her
knees.' 'And as a god?' Tanus again asked quietly, as
though he were not really interested in the answer, although I knew him to be a
devout and religious man, as so many great warriors are. 'A god?' I made my tone derisive. 'You have more of
the godhead in your sword-arm than he has in all his soft little body.' 'Then what do you suggest?' he asked with deceptive
mildness. 'What would you have me do?' I drew a deep breath and then blurted it out. 'Your
officers and your men would follow you to the gates of the underworld. The
populace loves you for your courage and your honour—' I faltered, for his
expression in the moonlight gave me no encouragement to continue. He was silent
for twenty beats of my racing heart and then he ordered me softly, 'Go on! Say
what you have to say.' 'Tanus, you would make the noblest pharaoh that
this Ta-Meri, this mother-land, has known for a thousand years. You with my
Lady Lostris on the throne beside you could lead this land and this people back
to greatness. Call out your squadrons, and lead your men down the causeway to
where that unworthy pharaoh lies unprotected and vulnerable. By dawn tomorrow
you could be ruler of the Upper Kingdom. By this time next year you could have
defeated the usurper and have reunited the two kingdoms.' I leaped to my feet
and faced nun. 'Tanus, Lord Harrab, your destiny and that of the woman you love
await you. Seize them in both your strong warrior's hands!' 'Warrior's hands, yes.' He held them up before my
face. 'Hands that have fought for my mother-land and have protected her
rightful king. You do me a disservice, old friend. They are not the hands of a
traitor. Nor is this the heart of a blasphemer, that would seek to cast down
and destroy a god, and take his place in the pantheon.' I groaned aloud in my frustration. 'You would be
the greatest pharaoh of the Isist five hundred years, and you need not proclaim
your godhead, not if the idea offends you. Do it, I beseech you, for the sake
of this very Egypt of ours, and of the woman that we both love!' 'Would Lostris still love a traitor as she loved a
soldier and a patriot? I think not.' He shook his head. 'She would love you no matter what—' I began, but
he cut me short. 'You cannot convince me. She is a woman of virtue
and of honour. As a traitor and a thief, I would forfeit all right to her
respect. What is of equal importance, I would never respect myself again, or
consider myself worthy of her sweet love, if I did what you urge. Speak of it
no more, as you value our friendship. I have no claim to the double crown, nor
will I ever make such claim. Horus, hear me, and turn your face away from me if
ever I should break this pledge.' The matter was closed, I knew him so well, that
great infuriating oaf, whom I loved with all my heart. He meant exactly what he
said, and would cleave to it at any cost. "Then what will you do, damn your stubborn
heart?' I. flared at him. 'Nothing that I say has any weight with you. Do you
want to face this on your own? Are you suddenly too wise to heed my counsel?' 'I'm willing to take your counsel, just as long as
it has sense to it.' He reached out and drew me down beside him. 'Come, Taita,
help us. Lostris and I need you now as never before. Don't desert us. Help us
find the honourable way.' 'I fear there is no such thing,' I sighed, my
emotions bobbing and spinning like a piece of flotsam caught in the Nile flood.
'But if you will not seize the crown, then you dare not stay here. You must
sweep Lostris up in your arms and bear her away.' He stared at me in the moonlight. 'Leave Egypt? You
cannot be serious. This is my world. This is Lostris' world.' 'No!' I reassured
him. 'That is not what I had in mind. There is another pharaoh in Egypt. One
who has need of warriors and honest men. You have much to offer such a king.
Your fame in the Lower Kingdom is as great as it is here at Karnak. Place
Lostris on the deck of the Breath of Horus and send your galley flying
northwards. No other ship can catch you. In ten days, with this wind and
current, you can present yourself at the court of the red pharaoh in Memphis,
and swear allegiance to—' 'By Horus, you are determined to make a traitor of
me yet,' he cut across me. 'Swear allegiance to the usurper, you say? Then what
of the allegiance I swore to the true Pharaoh Mamose? Does that count for
nothing with you? What kind of man am I, that can make the same oath to every
king or renegade that crosses my path? An oath is not something to be bartered
or reclaimed, Taita, it is for life. I gave my oath to the true Pharaoh
Mamose.' 'That true Pharaoh is the same one who will marry
your love, and will order the strangling-rope to be twisted around your neck,'
I pointed out grimly, and this time even he wavered. 'You are right, of course. We should not stay in
Karnak. But I will not make myself a traitor or break my solemn oath by taking
up the sword against my king.' 'Your sense of honour is too complicated for me.' I
could not keep the tone of sarcasm from my voice. 'All I know is that it bodes
fair to make corpses of us all. You have told me what you will not do. Now tell
me what you will do to save yourself, and rescue my Lady Lostris from a hateful
fate.' 'Yes, old friend, you have every right to be angry
with me. I asked for your help and advice. When you gave it freely, I scorned
it. I beg your patience. Bear with me a while longer.' Tanus sprang to his feet
and began to prowl about like the leopard in Pharaoh's menagerie, back and
forth, muttering to himself, shaking his head and bunching his fists, as if to
face an adversary. At last he stopped in front of me. 'I am not
prepared to play the traitor, but with a heavy heart I will force myself to
play the coward. If Lostris agrees to accompany me, and only if she agrees,
then I am prepared to take flight. I will take her away from this land we both
love so well.' 'Where will you go?' I asked. 'I know that Lostris can never leave the river. It
is not only her life and mine, but her god also. We must stay with Hapi, the
river. That leaves only one direction open to us.' He raised his right arm,
gleaming with muscle in the moonlight, and pointed south. We will follow the
Nile southwards into the depths of Africa, into the land of Gush and beyond. We
will go up beyond the cataracts into the un-fathomed wilderness where no
civilized man has ever gone before. There, perhaps, if the gods are kind, we
will carve out another Ta-Meri for ourselves.' 'Who will be your companions?' 'Kratas, of course, and those of my officers and
men who are game for the adventure. I'll address them tonight and give them the
choice. Five ships, perhaps, and the men to work them. We must be ready to
leave by dawn. Will you go back to the necropolis and fetch Lostris to me?' 'And me?' I asked quietly. 'You'll take me with
you?' 'You?' He laughed at me. Now that the decision was
made, his mood took flight, high as the bating falcon launched from the gloved
fist. 'Would you truly give up your garden and your books, your pageants and
your building of temples? The road will be dangerous, and the life hard. Do you
truly want that, Taita?' 'I could hot let you go alone, without my
restraining hand upon your shoulder. What folly and danger would you lead my
mistress into, if I were not there to guide you?' 'Come!' he ordered, and clapped me on the back. 'I
never doubted that you would come with us. I know that Lostris would not leave
without you, anyway. Enough chatter! We have work to do. First, we will tell
Kratas and the others what we intend, and let them make their choice. Then you
must go back to the necropolis and fetch Lostris, while I make the preparations
for our departure. I'll send a dozen of my best men with you, but we must
hurry. It is past midnight, and well into the third watch.' Silly romantic fool that I am, but I was as excited
as he was as we hurried back to the regiment's encampment below the temple and
the causeway. I was so elated that my sense of danger was dulled. It was Tanus
who picked out the sinister movement in the moonlight ahead of us and seized my
arm and drew me beneath the shelter of a stunted carob tree. 'An armed party,' he whispered, and I saw the glint
of bronze spearheads. There was a large band of men, thirty or forty, I
estimated. 'Bandits, perhaps, or a raiding party from the
Lower Kingdom,' Tanus growled, and even I was alarmed by the stealthy behaviour
of the armed men ahead of us. They were not using the tow-path of the canal,
but creeping through the open fields, spreading out to surround Tanus'
encampment on the river-bank. 'This way!' With a soldier's eye for ground he
picked out a shallow wadi that ran down to join the river, and he steered me to
it. We jumped down and ran doubled over until we reached the perimeter of the
camp. Then Tanus sprang out of the wadi and roused the camp with a bellow. 'Stand to arms! On me, the Blues! Form on me!' It
was the rallying cry of the Blue Crocodile Guards, and it was taken up at once
by the sergeants of each company. Instantly the camp boiled to life. The men
sleeping round the fires leaped to their feet and snatched up their stacked
weapons, while the officers' tents burst open as though the men within had
never slept but had been waiting, tensed and ready for Tanus' command. Sword in
hand, they raced to their stations, and I saw Kratas in the forefront. I was amazed by the swiftness of their response,
even though I knew that these were all battle-tested veterans. Before I could
draw a dozen excited breaths they had formed in their phalanxes, with
overlapping shields and long spears thrust outwards facing the darkness. The
strange band out there in the night must have been as startled as I was by this
militant display, for although I could still make out the vague shapes of many
men and the gleam of their weapons in the gloom, the murderous charge we were
all expecting from them never materialized. The instant that Tanus had his formations in line,
he ordered the advance. We had often debated the advantages of offensive action
over defence, and now the massed squadrons moved forward, poised to break into
a full charge at Tanus' command. It must have been a daunting spectacle to the
men out there in the darkness, for a voice hailed us with an edge of panic in
its tone. 'We are Pharaoh's men on the king's business. Hold your attack!' 'Hold hard, the Blues!' Tanus stopped the menacing
advance, and then called back, 'Which pharaoh do you serve, the red usurper or
the true pharaoh?' 'We serve the true king, the divine Mamose, ruler of
the Upper and the Lower Kingdoms. I am the king's messenger.' 'Come forward, king's messenger, who creeps around
in the night like a thief. Come forward and state your business!' Tanus invited
him, but under his breath he told Kratas, 'Be ready for treachery. The smell of
it is thick in the air. Have the fires built up. Give us light to see.' Kratas gave the order and bundles of dry rushes
were flung on to the watch-fires. The flames leaped up, and the darkness was
thrown back. Into this ruddy glow the leader of the strange band stepped
forward and snouted, 'My name is Neter, Best of Ten Thousand. I am the
commander of Pharaoh's bodyguard. I bear the hawk seal for the arrest and
detention of Tanus, Lord Harrab.' 'By Horus, he lies in his teeth,' Kratas growled.
'You are no felon with a warrant on your head. He insults you and the regiment.
Let us at them and I'll thrust that hawk seal up between his buttocks.' 'Hold!' Tanus restrained him. 'Let us hear the
fellow out.' He raised his voice again. 'Show us the seal, Captain Neter.' Neter held it aloft. A small statuette in
glistening blue faience, in the shape of the royal hawk. The hawk seal was the
king's personal empowerment. The bearer acted with all the force and validity
of Pharaoh himself. On pain of death, no man could question or hinder him in
the course and commission of the royal business. The bearer answered only to
the king. 'I am Tanus, Lord Harrab,' Tanus conceded. 'And I
acknowledge the hawk seal.' 'My lord, rny lord!' Kratas whispered urgently. 'Do
not go to the king. It will mean your certain death. I have spoken to the other
officers. The regiment is behind you, nay, the entire army is behind you. Give
us the word. We'll make you king before the new day breaks.' 'My ear is deaf to those words,' Tanus told him
softly, but with a weight of menace in his tone more telling than any growl or
bellow. 'But only this once, Kratas, son of Maydum. Next time that you speak
treason, I will deliver you to the king's wrath with my own hands.' He turned from Kratas to me, and drew me a little
to one side. 'It is too late, old friend. The gods frown on our enterprise. I
must trust myself to the king's good sense. If he is truly a god, then he will
be able to look into my heart and see for himself that it contains no evil.' He
touched my arm, and that light gesture was to me more significant than the
warmest embrace. 'Go to Lostris, tell her what has happened, tell her why it
has happened. Tell her I love her and, whatever happens, I will do so through
this life and the next. Tell her I will wait for her, to the ends of eternity,
if need be.' Then Tanus ran his sword back into the scabbard at
his side and with empty hands stepped forward to meet the bearer of the hawk
seal. 'I stand ready to do the king's bidding,' he said simply. Behind him his own men hissed and growled, and
rattled their swords against their bucklers, but Tanus turned and quieted them
with a gesture and a frown, then strode out to confront Neter. The king's guard
closed in around him, and then at a trot they moved away along the tow-path of
the canal, back towards the necropolis. The camp was filled with angry, bitter young men
when I left it and followed Tanus and his escort at a discreet interval. When I
reached the necropolis, I went directly to my Lady Lostris' quarters. I was
distressed to find them deserted except for three of her little black maids,
who in their usual lazy and lackadaisical manner were packing the last of their
mistress's clothing into a cedar-wood chest. 'Where is your mistress?' I demanded, and the
eldest and most insolent of them picked her nose as she gave me an airy reply,
'Where you can't reach her, eunuch.' The others tittered at her powers of
repartee. They are all of them jealous of my favour with my Lady Lostris. 'Answer me straight, or I'll whip your insolent
backside, you little baggage.' I had done so before, so she relented and
muttered sulkily, "They have taken her to Pharaoh's own harem. You have no
influence there. Despite your missing balls, the guards will'never let you pass
amongst the royal women.' She was right, of course, but still I had to make
the attempt. My mistress wouM need me now, as much as she ever had in all her
life. As I feared, the guards at the gate to the king's
harem were intractable. They knew who I was, but they had orders that no one,
not even the closest members of Lostris' retinue, was to be allowed to go to
her. It cost me a gold ring, but the best I could
achieve, even with that extravagance, was the promise that one of the guards would
take my message to her. I wrote it out on a scrap of papyrus parchment, a bland
little attempt at encouragement. I dared not relate all that had befallen us,
nor the peril in which Tanus now stood. I could not even mention him by name,
and yet I had to reassure her of his love and protection. As an investment, it
was not worth the price I was forced to pay. Hardest of all to bear, I learned
later that my gold had been entirely wasted and that she never received the
message. Is there no man we can trust in this perfidious world? I was not to see either Tanus or my Lady Lostris
again until the evening of the last day of the festival of Osiris. THE FESTIVAL ENDED IN THE TEMPLE OF the god. It
seemed once more that all the populace of Greater Thebes was packed into the
courtyards. We were jammed so tightly that I could scarcely breathe in the
press and the heat. I was feeling wretched, for I had slept little for
two nights in succession on account of the worry and the strain. Apart from the
uncertainty of the fate of Tanus, I had been further burdened by my Lord Intef
with the onerous duty of arranging the wedding ceremony of the king to his
daughter, a duty that ran so contrary to my own desires. Added to which, I was
parted from my mistress, and I could scarcely bear it. I do not know how I came
through it. Even the slave boys were concerned about me. They declared that
they had never seen my beauty so impaired, or my spirits so low. Twice during Pharaoh's interminable speech from the
throne, I found myself swaying on my feet, on the very point of fainting.
However, I forced myself to hold on, while the king droned out the platitudes
and half-truths with which he sought to disguise the true state of the kingdom
and to placate the populace. As was only to be expected, he never referred
directly to the red pharaoh in the north or the civil war in which we were
embroiled, except in such broad terms as 'these troubled times' or 'the
defection and insurrection'. However, after he had spoken for a while it
suddenly became plain to me that he was referring to every one of the issues
that Tanus had raised in his Reclamation, and attempting to find remedies for
each of them. It was true that he was doing so in his usual inept
and vacillating fashion, but the simple fact that he had taken notice of what
Tanus had said braced me and focused my wandering attention. I edged forward in
the press of humanity until I had a better view of the throne, by which time
the king was speaking about the impudence of the slaves and the disrespectful
behaviour of the lower classes of our society. This was another issue that
Tanus had mentioned, and I was amused to hear Pharaoh's solution. 'From
henceforth the slave-owner may order fifty lashes to the insolent slave, without
recourse to the magistrate to sanction such punishment,' he announced. I smiled when I remembered how this same king had
almost wrecked the state twelve years previously with another proclamation that
ran in the exact opposite direction to this latest pronouncement. Still
idealistic at his coronation, he had set out actually to abolish the ancient
and honourable institution of slavery. He had wanted to turn every slave in
Egypt loose and make him a free man. Even at this remove in time, such folly is still
incomprehensible to me. Though I am myself a slave, I believe that slavery and
serfdom are the institutions on which the greatness of nations is founded. The
rabble cannot govern itself. Government should be entrusted only to those born
and trained to it. Freedom is a privilege, not a right. The masses need a
strong master, for without control and direction anarchy would reign. The
absolute monarch and slavery and serfdom are the pillars of a system that has
allowed us to develop into civilized men. It had been instructive to see how the slaves
themselves had rebelled at the prospect of having freedom thrust upon them. I
had been very young at the time, but I too had been alarmed at the prospect of
being turned out from my warm and secure niche in the lioys' quarters to
scavenge on the rubbish-heaps for my next crust of bread with a horde of other
freed slaves. A bad master is better than no master at all. Of course, the kingdom had been thrown into chaos
by this folly. The army had been upon the brink of revolt. Had the red pharaoh
in the north seized the opportunity, then history might have been written
differently. In the end our own pharaoh had hastily withdrawn his misguided
decree of manumission, and managed to cling to his throne. Now here he was little
more than a decade later proclaiming increased punishments for the impudence of
a slave. It was so typical of this hesitant and muddling pharaoh that I
pretended to mop my brow in order to cover the first smile that had creased my
face in the last two days. 'The practice of self-mutilation for the purpose of
avoiding military service will in future be strongly discouraged,' the king
droned on. 'Any eligible young man claiming exemption under this dispensation
is to appear before a tribunal of three army officers, at least one of whom is
to be a centurion or officer of superior rank.' This time my smile was one of
reluctant approval. For once Pharaoh was on the right tack. I would dearly love
to see Menset and Sobek displaying their missing thumbs to some hardened old
veteran of the river wars. What tender sympathy they could expect! 'The fine
for such an offence will be one thousand rings of gold.' By Seth's bulging
belly, that would make those two young dandies pause, and my Lord Intef would
have to meet the fine on their behalf. Despite my other concerns, I was beginning to feel
a little more cheerful, as Pharaoh continued, 'From this day forward it will be
an offence punishable by a fine of ten gold rings for a harlot to ply for trade
in any public place, other than one set aside by the magistrates for that
purpose.' This time I could barely prevent myself from laughing aloud.
Vicariously Tanus would make puritans and honest men of all of Thebes. I
wondered how the sailors and the off-duty soldiers would welcome this
interference in their sporting lives. Pharaoh's period of lucidity had been
short-lived. Any fool knows the folly of trying to legislate to man's sexual
foibles. Despite my doubts as to the wisdom of the king's
remedies, still I found myself overtaken by a tremulous excitement. It was
clear that the king had taken serious notice of every issue that Tanus had
brought forward in his declamation. Could he now go on to condemn Tanus for
sedition? I wondered. However, Pharaoh had not finished yet. 'It has been
brought to my notice that certain officials of the state have abused the trust
and faith that I have placed in them. These officials, concerned with the
collection of taxes and the handling of public funds, will be called upon to
account for the monies placed in their care. Those found guilty of embezzlement
and corruption will be summarily sentenced to death by strangulation.' The
populace stirred and sighed with disbelief. Would the king truly seek to
restrain his tax-collectors? Then a single voice at the back of the hall cried
out, 'Pharaoh is great! Long live Pharaoh!' The cry was taken up until the
temple rang with the cheering. It must have been an unusual sound for the king
to hear, that spontaneous applause. Even at the distance that I was from the
throne I could tell that he enjoyed it. His lugubrious expression lightened and
the double crown seemed to weigh less heavily on his head. I was certain that
all of this must improve Tanus' chances of escaping the executioner's noose. When the cheering eventually subsided, the king
went on in his particular style to diminish everything that he had just
achieved. 'My trusted grand vizier, the noble Lord Intef, will be placed in
sole and absolute charge of this investigation of the civil service, with the
full powers of search and arrest, of life and of death vested in him.' There
was just the softest echo of applause to greet this appointment, and I used it
to disguise a sardonic chuckle. Pharaoh was sending a hungry leopard to count
the birds in his chicken-coop. What sport my Lord Intef would have amongst the
royal treasuries, and what a redistribution of the nation's wealth would now
take place with my master doing the counting, and milking the tax-collectors of
their secret hoards of savings! Pharaoh had a rare talent for capsizing or running
the noblest sentiments and intentions on to the rocks with his blundering
helmsmanship. I wondered what other folly he would manage to perpetrate before
he finished speaking that day, and I did not have too long to wait. 'For some time it has been a cause for great
concern to me that a state of lawlessness exists in the Upper Kingdom, placing
the lives and the estates of honest citizens in the gravest jeopardy. I had
made dispositions to deal with this state of affairs at an appropriate time.
However, the matter was recently presented to me in such an untimely and
ill-advised manner as to reek of sedition. It was done under the dispensation
of the festival of Osiris. However, that dispensation does not cover treason or
the crime of blasphemy, an attack on the person and divinity of the king.'
Pharaoh paused significantly. It was clear that he was speaking of Tanus, and I
was once again critical of his judgement. A strong pharaoh would not explain
his motives to the people, or seek to win their approval for his actions. He
would simply have ,pronounced sentence and have had done with the matter. 'I speak, of course, of Tanus, Lord Harrab, who
played the role of the great god Horus at the pageant of Osiris. He has been
arrested for the crime of sedition. My councillors are divided on the subject
of this person's guilt. There are those amongst them who wish him to pay the
supreme penalty—' I saw my Lord Intef, standing below the throne, avert his
gaze for a moment, and it confirmed what I already knew, that he was the chief
amongst those who wished to see Tanus executed '—and there are those who feel
that his declamation at the festival was indeed inspired by divine forces and
that it was not the voice of Tanus, Lord Harrab, that spoke out on these
matters, but the veritable voice of the god Horus. If this latter be the case,
then clearly there can be no culpability to the mortal through whom the god
chose to speak.' The reasoning was fair, but what pharaoh worth the
double crown would deign to explain it to this horde of common soldiers and
sailors and farmers, of tradesmen and labourers and slaves, most of whom were
still suffering from the ill-effects of too much wine and revelry? While I
still pondered this, the king gave a command to the captain of his bodyguard
who stood below the throne. I recognized him as Neter, the officer who had been
sent to arrest Tanus. Neter marched away smartly and returned a moment later,
leading Tanus from the sanctuary at the rear of the hall. My heart leaped at the sight of my friend, and then
with joy and hope I realized that he was unbound, there were no chains on his
ankles. Although he carried no weapons and wore no badge of rank, and was
dressed in a simple white kilt, he walked with his accustomed elastic step and
jaunty grace. Apart from the,healing scab on his forehead where Rasfer had
struck him, he was unmarked. He had not been beaten or tortured, and I felt my
optimism revived. They were not treating him as a condemned man. A moment later all my hopes were dashed to pieces.
Tanus made his obeisance before the throne, but when he rose to his feet again,
Pharaoh looked down upon him severely and spoke in a voice without pity.
'Tanus, Lord Harrab, you stand accused of treason and sedition. I find you
guilty of both these crimes. I sentence you to death by strangulation, the
traditional punishment of the traitor.' As Neter placed the noose of linen rope around
Tanus' neck to mark him as one condemned to die, a groan went up from the
people who watched. A woman wailed, and soon the temple was filled with cries
of lamentation and the ululation of mourning. Never before had such a display
accompanied the passing of die death sentence. Nothing could demonstrate more
clearly the love which the populace bore Tanus. I wailed with them and the
tears broke from my lids and streamed down my face to pour like a waterfall on
to my chest. The bodyguards fell upon the crowd, using the butts
of their long spears in an attempt to beat the mourners into silence. It was in
vain, and I screamed out over their heads, 'Mercy, bountiful Pharaoh! Mercy for
the noble Tanus!' One of the guards struck me on the side of the
head, and I fell to the ground half-stunned, but my cry was taken up. 'Mercy,
we beseech you, oh divine Mamose!' It took all the efforts of the guards to
restore some order, but still a few of the women were sobbing. Only when Pharaoh raised his voice again were we at
last silent, so that every one-of us heard his next pronouncement. "The
condemned man has complained of the lawless state of the kingdom. He has called
upon the throne to stamp out the bands of robbers who ravage the land. The
condemned man has been called a hero, and there are those who say that he is a
mighty warrior. If this be true, then he himself would be better suited than
any other to carry out those measures he demands.' Now the people were confused and silent, and I
struck the tears from my face with my forearm as I strained to catch the next
word. 'Therefore, the sentence of death is deferred for two years. If the
condemned man was truly inspired by the god Horus when he made his seditious
speech, then the god will assist him in the task I now place upon him.' The silence was profound. None of us seemed able to
understand what we were hearing, although hope and despair filled my soul in
equal measure. At a signal from the king one of the ministers of
the crown stepped forward and offered Pharaoh a tray on which lay a tiny blue
statuette. Pharaoh held it aloft and announced, 'I issue to Lord Harrab the
hawk seal of the pharaohs. Under the auspice of the seal he may recruit all the
men and materials of war that he deems necessary to his task. He may employ
whatever means he chooses, and no man may prevent him. For two full years he is
the king's man, and he answers only to the king. At the end of that time, on
the last day of the next festival of Osiris, he will come before the throne
once again, wearing the noose of death around his neck. If he has failed in his
task, the noose will be tightened and he will be strangled to death on the spot
where he now stands. If he has completed his task, then I, Pharaoh Mamose, will
lift the noose from around his neck with my own hands and replace it with a
chain of gold.' Still none of us could speak or move, and we stared
in fascination as Pharaoh made a gesture with the crook and the flail. 'Tanus,
Lord Harrab, I charge you with the task of eradicating from the Upper Kingdom
of Egypt the outlaws and robber bands that are terrorizing this land. Within
two years you will restore order and peace to the Upper Kingdom. Fail me at
your peril.' A roar went up from the congregation, wild as the
sound of storm surf beating on a rocky shore. Though they cheered unthinkingly,
I lamented. The task that Pharaoh had set was too great for any mortal man to
achieve. The cloud of death had not been lifted from over Tanus. I knew that in
two years from today he would die on the very same spot where he now stood so
young and proud and tall. FORLORN AS A LOST WAIF, SHE STOOD alone in the
midst of the multitude, with the river that was her patron god at her back and
before her a sea of faces. The long linen shift that fell to her ankles was dyed
with the juice of shellfish to the colour of the finest wine, a colour that
proclaimed her as a virgin bride. Her hair was loose. It flowed down on to her
shoulders in a soft dark tide that shone in the sunlight as though with an
inner fire. On those shining locks she wore the bridal wreath woven from the
long stems of the water-lily. The blossoms were an unearthly cerulean blue,
with throats of the clearest gold. Her face was as white as freshly ground cornflour.
Her eyes were so large and dark that they reminded me heart-breakingly of the
little girl whom, in years gone by, I had so often woken from the grip of
nightmare, and lit the lamp and sat beside her cot until she slept again. This
time I could not help her, for the nightmare was reality. I could not go to her, for the priests and
Pharaoh's guard surrounded her, as they had all these days past, and they would
not let me near unto her. She was lost to me for ever, my little girl, and I
could not support the thought of it. The priests had built the wedding canopy of river
rushes on the bank above the Nile, and my Lady Lostris waited beneath it for
her bridegroom to come to claim her. At her side stood her father, with the
Gold of Praise glittering around his neck and the smile of the cobra on his lips. The royal bridegroom came at last, to the solemn
beat of the drum and the bleat of gazelle-horn trumpets, and to me this wedding
march was" die saddest sound in all the earth. Pharaoh wore the nemes crown and carried the
sceptre, but behind the pomp and the regalia, he was still a little old man
with a pot-belly and a sad face. I could not help but think of the other
bridegroom who might have stood under the canopy beside my mistress, if only
the gods had been kinder. Pharaoh's ministers and high officials attended him
so closely that my view of my mistress was obscured. Despite the fact that it
was I who had been forced to arrange every detail of it, I was excluded from
the wedding, and I had only glimpses of my Lady Lostris during the ceremony. The high priest of Osiris washed the hands and the
feet of both the bride and the groom with water freshly drawn from the Nile to
symbolize the purity of their union. Then the king broke a morsel from the
ritual corn-loaf and offered it to his young bride as a pledge. I glimpsed my
mistress's face as he placed the crust between her lips. She could neither chew
nor swallow but stood with it ia her mouth as though it were a stone. Once again she was hidden from my view, and it was
only when I heard the crunch of the empty jug that had contained the marriage
wine as the bridegroom shattered it with a blow of his sword, that I knew that
it was done and that Lostris was for ever more beyond the reach of Tanus' arms. The crowd beneath the canopy opened and Pharaoh led
his newest bride forward to the front of the platform to present her to the
people. They showed their love for Lostris in a chorus of adulation that went
on and on until my ears rang and my head swam. I wanted to escape from the press and go to find
Tanus. Although I knew that he had been released from detention and was once
again at liberty, he had not attended the ceremony. He was perhaps the only man
in Thebes who had not come to the riverside today. I knew that wherever he
might be, he stood in as dire need of me as I was of him. The only small
comfort that either of us might find on this tragic day was with each other.
However, I could not tear myself away. I had to see it out to the final
harrowing moment. At last my Lord Intef came forward to take his farewell
of his daughter. As the crowd subsided into silence he embraced her. Lostris was like a corpse in his embrace. Her arms
hung limply at her side, and her face was pale as death. Her father released
her, but kept a grip on her hand as he turned and faced the congregation to
offer the ritual gift to his daughter. Traditionally, this gift was made over
and above the dowry that went directly to the bridegroom. However, only the
nobility observed this custom, which was designed to give the bride an independent
income. 'Now that you go from my house and from my
protection to the house of your husband, I bestow upon you the gift of parting,
that you will remember me always as the father that loved you.' The words were
inappropriate to the circumstances, I thought bitterly. My Lord Intef had never
loved another living soul. However, he continued the ancient formula, as though
the sentiments were his own. 'Ask any boon of me, my beloved child. I will
refuse you nothing on this joyous day.' It was the usual practice for the extent of the
gift to be agreed in private between father and daughter before the ceremony,
hi this case, however, my Lord Intef had told his daughter unequivocally what
she was entitled to ask for. He had done me the honour of discussing the matter
with me the previous day, before .informing Lostris of his decision. 'I don't
want to be extravagant, but on the other hand I do not wish to appear
parsimonious in Pharaoh's eyes,' he had mused. 'Let us say, five thousand gold
rings and fifty feddan of land—not on the riverfront, mind you.' He had, with my prompting, finally decided on five
thousand gold rings and one hundred feddan of prime irrigable land as being a
suitable gift for a royal wedding. On his instruction I had already drawn up
the deed of grant for the land, and set aside the gold from a secret store that
my master kept out of the way of the tax-collectors. The matter was settled. It remained only for
Lostris to give voice to the request before her groom and all the wedding
guests. But she stood pale and silent and withdrawn, seeming neither to see nor
hear what was going on around her. 'Speak up, my child. What is it that you desire
from me?' My Lord Intef s tones of paternal love were becoming strained, and he
shook his daughter's hand to rouse her. 'Come, tell your father what he can do
to make this happy day complete.' My Lady Lostris stirred as though coming awake from
a dreadful dream. She looked about her and her tears welled up and threatened
to break over her quivering eyelids. She opened her mouth to speak, but what
came from her throat was the weak little cry of a wounded bird. She closed her
lips again and shook her head speechlessly. 'Come, child. Speak out.' My Lord Intef was having
difficulty sustaining an expression of paternal affection. 'Name your marriage
gift, and I will give it to you, whatever it is that you desire.' The effort that Lostris had to make was apparent to
me, even though I stood so far from her, but this time when she opened her
mouth her request rang out over our heads, clear as the music of the lyre.
There could not have been a soul in the crowd who did not hear every word of
it. 'For my gift give me the slave, Taita!' My Lord Intef reeled back a pace as though she had
thrust a dagger into his belly. He stared at her aghast, his mouth opening and
closing without a sound escaping. Only he and I knew the value of the gift that
Lostris had demanded. Not even he, with the store of wealth and treasure that
he had garnered over a lifetime, could afford such a payment. He recovered swiftly. His expression was once more
calm and benign, though his lips stretched tight. 'You are too restrained, my
darling daughter. A single slave is no fitting gift for Pharaoh's bride. Such
stinginess is not in my nature. I would rather you accepted a gift of real
value, five thousand rings of gold and—' 'Father, you have always been too generous with me,
but I want only Taita.' My Lord Intef smiled a white smile, white teeth,
white lips and white rage. While he still stared at Lostris I could see that
his mind was racing. I was the most valuable of all his possessions. It
was not simply my wide range of extraordinary talents that made up the full
measure of my worth to him. Even more, it was that I knew intimately every
convoluted thread of the intricate tapestry of his affairs. I knew every
informer and spy in his network, every person whom he had ever bribed and who
had bribed him. I knew which favours were outstanding on each account, which
favours remained to be settled, and which grudges were still to be paid off. I knew all his enemies, a long list; and I knew
those he counted his friends and allies, a much shorter list. I knew where
every nugget of his vast treasure was hidden, who were his bankers and his
agents and his nominees, and how he had concealed the ownership of great tracts
of land and stores of precious metals and gemstones in the legal labyrinth of
deeds and titles and servitudes. All of this was information that would delight
the tax-collectors and cause Pharaoh to revise his opinion of his grand vizier. I doubted that my Lord Intef himself could remember
and trace all his wealth without my assistance. He could not properly order and
control his sprawling, shadowy empire without me, for he had kept himself aloof
and separated from the most unsavoury aspects of it. He had preferred to send
me to take care of those details which, if discovered, might incriminate him. So it was that I knew a thousand dark secrets, and I
knew of a thousand fearful deeds, of embezzlement and extortion, of robbery and
bloodiest murder, all of which taken together could destroy even a man as
powerful as the grand vizier. I was indispensable. He could not let me go. And
.yet, before Pharaoh and the entire population of Thebes, he could not deny
Lostris her request. My Lord Intef is a man full of ire and hatred. I
have seen such rage in him that must have made Seth, the god of anger, start up
and take notice. But I had never seen such fury as now that his own daughter
had him cornered. 'Let the slave Taita stand forward,' he called, and
I saw that it was a ruse for him to gain a respite. I pushed my way as swiftly
as I was able to the foot of the wedding platform, to give him as little time
as possible to plan his next mischief. 'I am here, my lord,' I cried, and he stared down
at me with those deadly eyes. We have been together so long that he can speak
to me with a look almost as clearly as with the spoken word. He stared at me in
silence until my heart was racing and my fingers fluttered with fear, then at
last he said in soft, almost affectionate tones, 'Taita, you have been with me
since you were a child. I have come to regard you as a brother more than as a
slave. Still, you have heard my daughter's request. I am by nature a fair and
kind man. After all the years it would be inhuman of me to discard you against
your wishes. I know that it is unusual for a slave to be given a say in his own
disposal, but then your circumstances are indeed unusual. Choose, Taita. If you
wish to stay in your home, the only home you have ever known, then I cannot
find the heart to send you away. Not even at the request of my own daughter.'
He never took his eyes off me, those terrible yellow eyes. I am not a coward
but I am careful of my safety. I realized that I was staring into the eyes of
death, and I could not find my voice. I tore my gaze from his, and looked towards my Lady
Lostris. There was such appeal there, such loneliness and terror, that my own
safety counted for nothing. I could not desert her" now, not at any price
or under any threat. 'How can a poor slave deny the wish of Pharaoh's
wife? I am ready to do the bidding of my new mistress,' I cried out at the top
of my lungs, and I hoped that my voice had a manly ring to it and was not as
shrill as it sounded in my own ears. 'Come, slave!' my new mistress ordered. 'Take your
place behind me.' As I mounted the platform, I was forced to pass
close to > my Lord Intef. His white, stiff lips barely moved as he spoke:
for my ears alone. 'Farewell, my old darling. You are a dead; man.' I shuddered as though a poisonous cobra had slid
across my path and I hurried to take my place in the retinue of my mistress, as
though I truly believed that I could find safety in her protection. I STAYED CLOSE TO LOSTRIS DURING THE rest of the
ceremony and I waited on her personally at the wedding feast, hovering at her
elbow and trying to make her eat a little of the meats and fine fare that was
spread before her. She was so wan and sickly that I was certain that she had
eaten nothing in the last two days, not since her betrothal and the
condemnation of Tanus. In the end I succeeded in getting her to take a
little watered wine, but that was all. Pharaoh saw her drink and thought that
she was toasting him. He lifted his own gold chalice, and smiled at her over
the rim as he returned the toast, and the wedding guests cheered the couple
delightedly. 'Taita,' she whispered to me as soon as the king's
attention was diverted by the grand vizier who sat at his other hand, 'I fear
that I am going to vomit. I cannot stay here another moment. Please take me
back to my chamber.' It was an impudence and a scandal, and had I not
been able to adopt the role of surgeon, I could never have achieved it, but I
was able to creep on my knees to the king's side, and to whisper to him without
causing an undue comment amongst the wedding guests, most of whom were well
along in wine at this stage. As I grew to know him better, I found that Pharaoh
was a kindly man, and this was the first proof he gave me of it. He listened to
my explanations and then clapped his hands and addressed the guests. 'My bride
will go to her chamber now to prepare for the night ahead,' he told them, and
they leered and greeted the announcement with lewd comment and lascivious
applause. I helped my mistress to her feet, but she was able
to make her obeisance to the king and leave the banquet hall without my support.
In her bedchamber she threw up the wine she had drunk into the bowl that I held
for her, and then she collapsed upon the bed. The wine was all her stomach
contained and my suspicion that she had been starving herself was confirmed. 'I don't want to live without Tanus.' Her voice was
weak, but I knew her well enough to recognize that her will was as strong as
ever. Tanus is alive,' I tried to console her. 'He is
strong and young and will live for another fifty years. He loves you and he
promises to wait for you to the end of time. The king is an old man, he cannot
live for ever—' She sat up on the fur bedcover and her voice became
stern and determined. 'I am Tanus' woman and no other man shall have me. I
would rather die.' 'We all die in the end, mistress.' If only I could
distract her for the first few days of this marriage, I knew I could see her
through. But she understood me too well. 'I know what you are up to, but all your pretty
words will do you no good. I am going to kill myself. I order you to prepare a
draught of poison for me to drink.' 'Mistress, I am not versed in the science of
poison.' It was a forlorn attempt, and she crushed it effortlessly. 'Many is the time that I have seen you give poison
to a suffering animal. Do you not remember your old dog, the one with abscesses
in its ears, and your pet gazelle that was mauled by a leopard? You told me
that the poison was painless, that it was the same as going to sleep. Well, I
want to go to sleep and be embalmed and go on to the other world to wait fpr
Tanus there.’ I had to try other persuasion. 'But what about me,
mistress? You have only this day taken possession of me. How can you abandon
me? What will become of me without you? Have pity on me.' I saw her waver, and
I thought I had her, but she lifted her chin stubbornly. 'You will be all right, Taita. You will always be
all right. My father will take you back gladly after I am dead.' 'Please, my little one,' I used the childhood
endearment in a last attempt to cajole her, 'let us talk of this in the
morning. Everything will be different in the sunlight.' 'It will be the same,' she contradicted me. 'I will
be parted from Tanus, and that wrinkled old man will want me in his bed to do
horrid things to me.' Her voice was raised so that the other members of the
king's harem might hear every word. Fortunately most of them were still at the
wedding feast, but I trembled at the thought of her description of him being
relayed to Pharaoh. Her voice became shriller with the edge of hysteria
in it. 'Mix me the poison draught now, this instant, while I watch you do it. I
order you to do it. You dare not disobey me!' This command was so loud that
even the guards at the outer gates must be able to hear her, and I dared not
argue longer. 'Very well, my lady. I will do it. I must fetch my
chest of medicine from my rooms.' When I returned with the chest under my arm, she
was up from the bed and pacing around her chamber with glittering eyes in that
pale, tragic face. 'I am watching you. Don't try any of your tricks on
me now,' she warned me, as I prepared the draught from the scarlet glass
bottle. She knew that colour warned of the lethal contents. When I handed the bowl to her, she showed no fear,
and paused only to kiss my cheek. 'You have been both father and loving brother
to me. I thank you for this last kindness. I love you, Taita, and I shall miss
you.' She lifted the bowl in both hands as though it were
a wassail cup rather than a fatal potion. 'Tanus, my darling,' she toasted him with it, 'they
shall never take me from you. We shall meet again on the far side!' And she
drained the bowl at a swallow, then dropped it to shatter on the floor. At
last, with a sigh, she fell back upon the bed. 'Come, sit beside me. I am afraid to be alone when
I die.' Taken on her empty stomach, the effect of the
draught was very rapid. She had only time to turn her face to me and whisper,
'Tell Tanus again how much I loved him. Unto the portals of death, and beyond.'
Then her eyes closed and she was gone. She lay so still and pale that for a moment I was
truly alarmed, afraid that I had misjudged the strength of the powder of the
Red Shepenn which I had substituted for the essence of the deadly Datura Pod.
It was only when I held a bronze hand-mirror to her mouth that the clouded
surface reassured me she still breathed. I covered her gently, and tried to
convince myself that in the morning she would be resigned to the fact that she
was still alive, and that she would forgive me. At that moment there was a peremptory knock upon
the door of the outer chamber and I recognized the voice of Aton, the royal
chamberlain, demanding entrance. He was another eunuch, one of the special
brotherhood of the emasculated, so I could count him as a friend. I hurried
through to greet him. 'I have come to fetclTyour little mistress to the
king's pleasure, Taita,' he told me, in high girlish tones so incongruous with
such a large frame. He had been gelded before puberty. 'Is she ready?' 'There has been a small mishap,' I explained, and
led him through to see Lostris for himself. He puffed out his rouged cheeks with consternation
when he saw her condition. 'What can I tell Pharaoh?' he cried. 'He will have
me beaten. I will not do it. The woman is your responsibility. You must answer
to the king, and stand before his wrath.' It was not a duty that I relished, but Aton's
distress was real, and at least I had my medical status to afford me some
protection from the king's frustrated expectations. Reluctantly, I agreed to
accompany him to the royal bedchamber. However, I made sure that there was one
of the older and more reliable slave maids in attendance in my mistress's outer
chamber before I left her alone. Pharaoh had removed his crown and his wig. His head
was shaved as bare and white as an ostrich egg. The effect startled even me,
and I wondered how my mistress would have responded to the sight. I doubt that
it would have raised either her ardour or her opinion of him. The king seemed as startled to see me as I was to
see him. We stared at each other for a moment before I fell to my knees and
made my obeisance. 'What is this, Taita the slave? I sent for
another—' 'Merciful Pharaoh, on behalf of the Lady Lostris I
come to beg your understanding and indulgence.' I launched into a harrowing
description of my Lady Lostris' condition, larding it with obscure medical
terms and explanations that were intended to divert the royal appetite. Aton
stood beside me, nodding in emphatic corroboration of all I had to say. I am sure that it would not have worked with a
younger and more vigorous bridegroom, ready and rearing to get to the business,
but Mamose was an old bull. It would have been impossible to tally all the
lovely women who over the past thirty years or so had enjoyed his services. In
single file they would probably have encircled the city of Thebes of a hundred
gates, possibly more than once. 'Your Majesty,' Aton interrupted my explanations at
last, 'with your permission, I will fetch you another female companion for the
night. Perhaps the little Human with the unusual control of her—' 'No, no,' the king dismissed him. 'There will be
plenty of time for it when the child is recovered from her indisposition. Leave
us now, chamberlain. There is some other matter that I wish to discuss with the
doctor—I mean, with this slave.' As soon as we were alone the king lifted his shift
to display his belly. 'What do you think is the cause of this, doctor?' I
examined the rash that adorned his protuberant paunch, and found it to be an
infestation of the common ringworm. Some of the royal women washed less
frequently than is desirable in our hot climate. I have noted that filth and
the contagious itch go together. The king had probably contracted the infection
from one of them. 'Is it dangerous? Can you cure it, doctor?' Fear
makes commoners of us all. He was deferring to me now as would any other
patient. With his permission, I went to my quarters to fetch
my medicine chest, and when I returned, I ordered him to lie on the ornate gold
and ivory marquetry bed while I massaged an ointment into the inflamed red
circle of skin on his belly. The ointment was of my own concoction and would
heal the rash within three days, I assured him. 'In a great measure you are responsible for the
fact.that I have married this child who is your new mistress,' he told me as I
worked. 'Your ointment may cure my rash, but will your other treatment provide
me with a son?' he demanded. 'These are troubled times. I must have an heir
before I am another year older. The dynasty is in jeopardy.' We physicians are always reluctant to guarantee our
cures, but then so is the lawyer and the astrologer. While I procrastinated he
gave me the escape I was searching for. 'I am no longer a young man, Taita. You are a
doctor and I can tell you this. My weapon has been in many a fierce battle. Its
blade is no longer as keen as once it was. Of late it has failed me when I most
had need of it. Do you have something in that box of yours that would stiffen
the wilting stem of the lily?' 'Pharaoh, I am pleased that you have discussed this
with me. Sometimes the gooVwork in mysterious ways—' we both made the sign to
avert evil before I went on, 'your first congress with my virgin mistress must
be perfectly executed. Any faltering, any bending from our purpose, any failure
to raise on high the royal sceptre of your manhood, will frustrate our efforts.
There will be only one opportunity, the first union must be successful. If we
have to try again there will be the danger of your fathering yet another female.'
My medical grounds for this prognosis were rather insubstantial. Nevertheless,
we both looked grave, he graver than I did. I held up my forefinger. 'Had we made the attempt
tonight, and—' I said no more, but let my forefinger droop suggestively, and
shook my head. 'No, we are fortunate to have been given another chance by the
gods.' 'What must we do?' he demanded anxiously, and I was
silent for a long while, kneeling in deep thought beside his bed. It was difficult not to let my relief and satisfaction
become apparent. Within the first day of my mistress's marriage, I was already
working my way into a position of influence with the king, and I had been
offered a perfect excuse for keeping her maidenhead intact for at least a
little longer, long enough perhaps for me to be able to prepare her for the
brutal shock of her first act of procreation with a man whom she did <w>t
love and who was, indeed, physically distasteful to her. I told myself that
with clever management of the situation, I might be able to draw out this
period of grace indefinitely. 'Yes indeed, Your Majesty, I can help you, but it
will take some time. It will not be as easy as curing this rash.' My mind was
racing. I had to wring every drop out of this sponge. 'We will have to go on to
a very strict diet.' 'No more bull's balls, I beseech you, doctor.' 'I think you have had enough of those now. However,
we will need to warm youf blood and sweeten your generative fluids for the
fateful attempt. Goat's milk, warm goat's milk and honey three times a day, and
of course the special potions I will prepare for you from the horn of the
rhinoceros and the root of the mandrake.' He looked relieved. 'You are certain this will
work?' 'It has never failed before, but there is one other
measure that is essential.' 'What is that?' His relief evaporated, and he sat
up and peered at me anxiously. 'Complete abstinence. We must allow the royal
member to rest and regain its full strength and force once again. You must forsake
your harem and all its pleasures for a while.' I said this with the dogmatic
air of the physician that cannot be gainsaid, for it was the one sure way to
ensure that my Lady Lostris would remain untouched. However, I was worried by
what his reaction would be. He could conceivably have flown into a rage at the
thought of being denied his conjugal pleasures. He might have rejected me, and
I could have lost all the advantage that I had so newly won. But I had to take
the risk for the benefit of my mistress. I had to protect her just as long as I
was able. The king's reaction surprised me. He simply lay
back on his headrest and smiled complacently to himself. 'For how long?' he
asked quite cheerfully, and I was struck by the realization that my strictures
had come as a relief to him. For me, to whom the act of love with a beautiful
woman would always be an unattainable and elusive dream, it took an immense
effort to understand that Pharaoh was content to be relieved of a once
pleasurable duty that, by reason of being so often performed, had become
onerous. There must have been at least three hundred wives,
and concubines in his harem at that time, and some of those Asian women were
notorious for their insatiable appetites. I tried to sympathize with the effort
that it must require to act like a god night after night, and year after year.
The prospect did not daunt me as the actuality seemed to have wearied the king. 'Ninety days,' I said. 'Ninety days?' he repeated thoughtfully. 'Nine
Egyptian weeks of ten days each?' 'At least,' I said firmly. 'Very well.' He nodded without rancour and changed
the subject easily. 'My chamberlain tells me, doctor, that apart from
your medical skills, you are also one of the three most eminent astrologers in
this very Egypt of ours?' I wondered why my friend the chamberlain had
qualified his assertion. For the life of me I could not think who the other two
might be, but I inclined my head modestly. 'He flatters me, Your Majesty, but
perhaps I do have some little knowledge of the heavenly bodies.' 'Cast a horoscope for me!' he ordered, sitting up
eagerly. 'Now?' I asked with surprise. 'Now!' he agreed. 'Why not? For on your orders
there is nothing that I should rather be doing at this moment/ That unexpected
smile of his was really quite endearing, and despite what he meant to Tanus and
my mistress, I found myself liking him. 'I shall have to fetch some of my scrolls from the
palace library.' 'We have all night,' he pointed out. 'Fetch
whatever you need.' The exact time and date of the king's birth were
well documented and I had in the scrolls all the, observations of the movements
of the heavenly bodies made by fifty generations of astrologers before me.
While the king watched avidly, I made the first cast of the royal horoscope,
and before I had half finished it I saw the character of the man, as I had
observed it, perfectly endorsed by his stars. The great red wandering star,
that we know as the eye of Seth, dominated his destiny. It was the star of
conflict and uncertainty, of confusion and war, of sadness and misfortune, and
in the end of violent death. But how could I tell him all these things? I extemporized and put together a scantily veiled
resume of the well-documented facts of his life, and laced these with a few
less well-known details that I had gathered from my spies, one of whom was the
royal chamberlain. Then I followed with the usual assurances of good health and
long life that every client wants to hear. The king was impressed. 'You have all the skills
that your reputation made me expect.' "Thank you, Your Majesty. I am pleased that I
have been able to be of service.'. I began to gather up my scrolls and my
writing instruments preparatory to taking my leave. It was very late by now.
From the darkness beyond the palace walls I had already heard the first
cockerel crow. 'Wait, Taita. I have not given you permission to
leave. You have not told me what I really want to know. Will I have a son and
will my dynasty survive?' 'Alas, Pharaoh, those matters cannot be predicted by
the stars. They can give only the general inclination of your fate, and the
overall direction that your life will take, without making clear such details—' 'Ah, yes,' he interrupted me, 'but there are other
means of seeing into the future, are there not?' I was alarmed by the direction
in which his questions were leading, and I attempted to head him off, but he
was determined. 'You interest me, Taita, and I have made enquiry
about you. You are an adept of the Mazes of Ammon-Ra.' I was distressed. How
had he found this out? Very few knew of this esoteric gift of mine, and I
wanted it to remain thus. However, I could not blatantly deny it, so I remained
silent. 'I saw the Mazes hidden at the bottom of your
medicine chest,' he said, and I was relieved that I had not attempted to deny
my gift and been caught out in the lie. I shrugged with resignation, for I knew
what was coming. 'Work the Mazes for me, and tell me if I am to have
an heir and whether or not my dynasty will survive,' he ordered. A horoscope is one thing; it requires only a
knowledge of the configuration of the stars and their properties. Some little
patience, and the correct procedure will result in a fairly accurate
prediction. A divination by the Mazes of Am-mon-Ra is another matter entirely. It
requires an expenditure of the life-forces, a burning up of something deep
inside the seer that leaves him worn out and exhausted. These days I will go to lengths to avoid having to
exercise this gift. It is true that on rare occasions I can still be persuaded
to work the Mazes, but then for days thereafter I am spiritually and physically
depleted. My Lady Lostris, who knows of this strange power of mine, also knows
of the effect that it has upon me, and she has forbidden me, for my own sake,
to practise it, except occasionally on her behalf. However, a slave cannot deny a king, and with a
sigh I reached for the leather bag in the bottom of my chest that contained the
Mazes. I set the bag aside and prepared a mixture of the herbs that are
necessary to open the eyes of the soul, to enable them to look into the future.
I drank the potion, and then waited until the familiar but dreaded sensation of
rising out of my own body assailed me. I felt dreamy and far from reality as I
brought out the leather bag which contained the Mazes. The Mazes of Ammon-Ra consist of ten ivory discs.
Ten is the mystical number of the greatest potency. Each disc represents a
single facet of human existence, from birth to death and the hereafter. With my
own hands I had carved the symbols on the face of each of the Mazes. Each one
was a tiny masterpiece. By constantly handling and breathing upon them over the
years I had endowed them with part of my own life-force. I poured them from the bag and began to fondle
them, concentrating all my powers upon them. Soon they began to feel warm as
living flesh to my touch, and I experienced the familiar sensation of depletion
as my own strength flowed.from me into the ivory discs. I arranged the Mazes
face-down in two random stacks and invited Pharaoh to take up each pile in
turn, to rub them between his fingers and to concentrate all his attention upon
them at the same time as he repeated his questions aloud: 'Will I have a son?
Will my dynasty survive?' I relaxed completely and opened my soul to allow
the spirits of prophecy to enter. The sound of his voice began to penetrate
into my soul, deeper and deeper with each repetition, like missiles from a
slingshot striking upon the same spot. I began to sway slightly where I sat, the same way
that the cobra dances to the flute of the snake-charmer. The drug took its full
effect. I felt as though my body had no weight to it and that I was floating in
air. I spoke as if from a great distance and my voice echoed strangely in my
own head, as though I sat in a cavern below the surface of the earth. I ordered the king to breathe upon each stack and
then to divide it into halves, setting aside one half and retaining the other.
Again and again I made him split each pile and then combine the remainder,
until he was left with only two of the coin-shaped Mazes. For the last time he breathed upon them and then at
my instruction placed one in each of my hands. I held them tightly and pressed
them to my breast. I could feel my heart pounding against my clenched fists as
it absorbed the influence of the Mazes. I closed my eyes and from the darkness saw shapes
begin to emerge, and strange sounds filled my ears. There was no form or
coherence to them, it was all confusion. I felt dizzy, and my senses blurred. I
felt myself grow lighter still, until I seemed to float in space. I allowed
myself to be carried upwards as though I were a blade of dry grass caught in a
whirlwind, one of those dust devils of the Saharan summer. The sounds in my head became clearer, and the dark
images firmed. 'I hear a new-born infant cry.' My voice was
distorted, as though my palate had been riven at birth. 'Is it a boy?' Pharaoh's question throbbed in my
head, so that I felt rather than heard it. Then slowly my vision began to harden, and I looked
down a long tunnel through the darkness to a light at the far end. The ivory
Mazes in my hands were hot as embers from the hearth and seared the flesh of my
palms. In the nimbus of light at the end of the tunnel I
saw a child, lying in the bloody puddle of its own birth-waters, with the fat
python of the placenta still coiled upon its belly. 'I see a child,' I croaked. 'Is it a boy?' Pharaoh demanded from out of the
surrounding darkness. The infant wailed and kicked both legs in the air,
and I saw rising from between the chubby thighs a pale finger of flesh
surmounted by a cap of wrinkled skin. 'A boy,' I confirmed, and I felt an unexpected
tenderness towards this phantom of my mind, as though it were truly flesh and
blood. I reached out to it with my heart, but the image faded, and the birth
cry receded and was lost in the blackness. "The dynasty? What will become of my line?
Will it endure?' The king's voice reached me, and then was lost in a cacophony
of other sounds that filled my head—the sound of battle trumpets, the shouts of
men in mortal conflict, and the ring of bronze. I saw the sky above me, and the
air was dark with flights of arrows arcing overhead. 'War! I see a mighty battle that will change the
shape of the world,' I cried to make myself heard above the sounds of conflict
that filled my head. 'Will my line survive?' The king's voice was
frantic, but I paid it no heed, for there was a mighty roaring in my ears, like
the sound of the khamsin wind, or the waters of the Nile boiling through the great
cataracts. I saw a strange yellow cloud that obscured the horizon of my vision,
and the cloud was shot through with flashes of light, which I knew were the
reflection of the sun from weapons of war. 'What of my dynasty?' Pharaoh's voice tugged at my mind,
and the vision faded. There was a silence in my head and I saw a tree standing
upon the bank of the river. It was a great acacia in full leaf, and its
branches were heavy with fruit pods. On the topmost branch was perched a hawk,
the royal hawk, but even as I watched, the hawk changed shape and colour. It
was transformed into the'double crown of Egypt,' red and white, the papyrus and
the lotus of the two kingdoms entwined. Then, before my eyes, the waters of the
Nile rose and fell, and rose and fell again. Five times in all I saw the waters
flood. While still I stared with burning eyes, abruptly
the sk;; above the tree darkened with flying insects, and a dens« cloud of
locusts descended upon the tree. They covered ii completely. When they rose
again the tree was devastate* and bare of the last trace of green. Not a leaf
remained on the dry brown twigs. Then the dead tree toppled and fell
ponderously to earth. The fall shattered the trunk and thci crown was smashed
into pieces. The fragments turned to dust and were blown away on the wind.
Nothing remained but the wind and the driven sands of the desert. 'What is it that you see?' Pharaoh demanded, but it
all faded and I found myself once more seated on the floor o> the king's bedchamber.
I was gasping for breath, as though I had run a great distance, and salt sweat
scalded my eyesi and poured down my body in rivulets to soak the linen o) my
kilt and to form a pool on the tiles beneath me. I was shaking with a burning
fever and there was that familiar sicM and heavy feeling in the pit of my
stomach that I knew would be with me for days to come. Pharaoh was staring at me and I realized what a
haggard: and dreadful sight I presented to him. 'What did you see?' he
whispered. 'Will my line survive?' I could not tell him the truth of my vision, so I
invented: another to satisfy him. 'I saw a forest of great trees thali reached
to the horizon of my dream. There was no end ta their number and on top of each
tree there was a crown, the red and the white crown of the two kingdoms.' Pharaoh sighed and covered his eyes with his hands
fon a while. We sat in silence, he in the release that my lie had) given him,
and I in sympathy for him. At last I lied softly. 'The forest that I saw was
the line: of your descendants,' I whispered, to spare him. 'They reachi to the
boundaries of time, and each of them wears the crowni of Egypt.' He uncovered his eyes, and his gratitude and his
joy were; pathetic to watch. 'Thank you, Taita. I can see how the: divination
has taxed your strength. You may go now andl rest. Tomorrow the court will sail
for my palace on Elephantine Island. I will have a galley set aside for the
safe passage of you and your mistress. Guard her with your life, for she is the
vessel that contains the seeds of my immortality.' I was so weak that I had to use the frame of the
bed to lift myself to my feet. I tottered to the door and steadied myself
agaiiist the jamb. However, I was not so weakened that I could not think of my
duty to my mistress. 'There is the matter of the marriage sheet. The
populace will expect to have it displayed,' I reminded him. 'Both your
reputation and that of my mistress is at stake.' 'What do you suggest, Taita?' This soon he was
relying on me. I told him what must be done, and he nodded. 'See to it!' Carefully I folded the sheet that covered the royal
bed. It was of the finest linen, white as the high cirrus clouds of summer,
embroidered with the rare silk thread that the trade caravans occasionally
bring in from the East. I carried the folded sheet with me when I left the
king's bedchamber and made my way back through the still dark and silent palace
to the harem. My mistress was sleeping like a dead woman, and I
knew that with the amount of the-Red Shepenn I had given her, she would sleep
the day away and would probably only wake that evening. I sat beside her bed
for a while. I felt exhausted and depressed for the Mazes had drained my soul.
The images they had evoked still troubled me. I felt certain that the infant I
had seen was that of my mistress, but then how could the rest of my vision be
explained? There seemed to be no answer to the riddle, and I set the thought
aside for I still had work to do. Squatting beside Lostris' bed, I spread the
embroidered sheet upon the floor. The blade of my dagger was sharp enough to
shave the hair from my forearm. I picked out one of the blue rivers of blood
beneath the smooth skin on the inside of my wrist, and I pricked it with the
point of the dagger and let the dark slow blood trickle on to the sheet. When I
was satisfied with the extent of the stain, I bound up my wrist with a strip of
linen to staunch the bleeding, and bundled the soiled sheet. The slave girl was still in attendance in the outer
chamber. I ordered that Lostris was to be allowed to sleep undisturbed. Knowing that she would be well cared for, I was
content to leave her, and climb the ladder to the top of the outer wall of the
harem. The dawn was only just breaking, but already an
inquisitive crowd of old women and loiterers had gathered below the walls. They
looked up expectantly when I appeared. I made a show of shaking out the sheet before I
draped it over the ramparts of the outer wall. The bloodstain in the centre of
the cloud-white ground was the shape of a flower, and the crowd buzzed with
gossip at this badge of my mistress's virginity and her bridegroom's virility. At the rear of the crowd stood a figure taller than
those around him. His head was covered by a striped woolen shawl. It was only
when he threw this back and exposed his face and his head of red-gold hair that
I recognized him. 'Tanus!' I shouted. 'I must speak to you.' He looked up at me upon the wall, and his eyes were
filled with such pain as I wished never to see again. That stain upon the sheet
had destroyed his life. I also had known the agony of lost love and remembered
every detail of it even after all the long years. Tanus' heart wound was fresh
and bleeding still, more agonizing than any hurt that he had received on the
battlefield. He needed my help now, if he were to survive it.
'Tanus! Wait for me.' He threw the shawl over his head, covering his
face, and he turned from me. Unsteady as a drunkard, he stumbled away. 'Tanus!' I shouted after him. 'Come back! I must
talk to you.' He did not look round, but quickened his pace. By the time that I had climbed down from the wall
and run out of the main gates, he had disappeared into the maze of alleys and
mud huts of the inner city. I SEARCHED FOR TANUS HALF THE MORNING, but his
quarters were deserted and nobody had seen him in any of his customary haunts. At last I had to abandon the search, and to make my
wajfcback to my own rooms in the quarters of the slave boys. The royal flotilla
was preparing to sail for the south. I had still to assemble and pack my
possessions if my mistress and I were to be ready for the departure. I forced
aside the sense of gloom that the Mazes and my glimpse of Tanus had left me,
and I set about bundling up my possessions and breaking up the only home that I
had ever known. My animals seemed to sense that something untoward
was happening. They fretted and chirped and whined, each trying in his own way
to attract my attention. The wild birds hopped and fluttered on the paved
terrace outside, while in the corner nearest my bed, my beloved Saker falcons
stretched their wings and raised the feathers along their backs, and screeched
at me from their perches. The dogs and the cats and the tame gazelle crowded
around my legs, trying to brush against me, and hindered my efforts to pack my
possessions. In exasperation I noticed the jug of soured goat's
milk beside my bed. It is one of my favourite drinks, and the slave boys make
certain that the jug is always refilled. My animals also enjoy the thickened
milk, so to distract them I carried the jug out on to the terrace and filled
their clay drinking-bowls. They crowded around the bowls, pushing and shoving
each other, and I left them and went back to my task, closing the awnings of
rush matting to keep them out. It is curious how many possessions even a slave can
gather about him over a lifetime. The boxes and bundles were piled high against
one wall before I was at last finished. By this time my mood of depression and
weariness was almost prostrating, but I was still sufficiently alert to be
aware of the silence. I stood for a while in the centre of my room, listening
uneasily. The only sound was the jingle of the tiny bronze bells on the jesses
of my female falcon where she sat in the far corner and watched me with that intent,
implacable gaze of the raptor. The tiercel, smaller but more handsome than she,
was asleep on his own perch in the other corner, with the soft leather hood of
the rafter covering his eyes. None of my other pets made a sound. Not one of
the cats mewed or hissed at the dogs, nor did the wild birds chirrup or sing,
none of my puppies growled or tumbled over each other in boisterous play. I went to the rash awning and drew it aside. The sunlight
burst into the room and blinded me for a moment. Then my vision returned and I
cried out with horror. They were scattered upon the terrace and down into the
garden every bird and animal. They lay in the abandoned attitudes of death, every
one of them where he had fallen. I rushed out to them, calling my favourites by
name, kneeling to pick one of them up in my armsi and hugging the slack warm
body as I searched for signs of life., There was no flicker of it in any of
them, though I went to eachi of them. The birds were small and light in my
hand, their mar-velous plumage undimmed by death. I thought that my already heavy heart must now
burst: with the sheer weight of my grief. I knelt on the terrace with my family
scattered around me and I wept. It was some time before I could bring myself to
think about the cause of this tragedy. Then I stood up and went to one of the
empty bowls that lay on the tiles. They had licked it clean, but I sniffed at
it to try and fathom the nature of the poison that had been intended for me.
The odour of soured milk disguised any other smell; all I knew was that it had
been swift and deadly. I wondered who had placed the jug beside my bed,
but it did not matter whose hand had carried the vessel to me. I knew with
utter certainty who had given the order for it. 'Farewell, my old darling. You
are a dead man,' Lord Intef had told me, and he had not waited long to
transform the words into the deed. The anger that seized me was a form of madness. It
was aggravated by my unsteady state and sombre mood. I found that I was shaking
with a rage that I had never known before. I drew the little dagger from my
belt and before I realized what I was doing, I was rushing down the steps of
the terrace with the naked blade in my hand. I knew that at this time of the
morning Intef would be in his water-garden. I could no longer bear to think of
him as my Lord Intef. The memory of every outrage he had ever visited upon me,
every agony and every humiliation, was bright and clear in my mind. I was going
to kill him now, stab him a hundred times through that cruel and evil heart. I was in sight of the gate to the water-garden
before I regained my sanity. There were half a dozen guards at the gate, and
there would be as many more beyond. I would never get within dagger-thrust of
the grand vizier before they cut me down. I forced my flying feet to check and
turn back. I slipped the dagger into the jewelled leather sheath, and brought
my breathing under control. I walked slowly back to the terrace and gathered up
the pathetic bodies of my pets. I had planned to plant a row of sycamore trees
along the border of my garden. The holes to take them had already been dug. The
trees would never be planted now that I was leaving Kamak, and the pits would
serve as graves for my beloved creatures. It was the middle of the afternoon
before I had filled the last grave, but my rage was unabated. If I could not
yet have my full vengeance, at least I could give myself a foretaste of it. There was still a little of the sour milk left in
the jug beside my bed. I held the jug in my hands and tried to think of some
way in which I could get it to the grand vizier's kitchens. It would be so
fitting to pay him his own vile coin, although I knew in my heart that the idea
was futile. Lord Intef was far too cunning to be taken so easily. I myself had
helped him devise the system he used to keep himself secure from poison and
assassination. He could not be reached without much careful planning. What was
more, he would be especially on his guard now. I would have to be patient, but
that was impossible. Even if I could not kill him yet, I could exact some
lesser payment as a deposit against what I was determined must follow. Still carrying the fatal jug, I slipped out of one
of the side-doors of the boys' quarters into the street. I did not have to go
far to find a milkman surrounded by his flock of nanny-goats. While I waited he
stripped the rich milk from the swollen udders of one of them, topping the jug
to the brim. Whoever had prepared the poison had used enough to murder half the
citizens of Karnak. I knew that more than sufficient remained in the jug for my
purpose. One of the grand vizier's bodyguards loafed at the
door to Rasfer's chamber. The fact that he had him under guard proved to me
that Rasfer was still valuable to Lord Intef, and the loss of his personal
lieutenant would annoy if not seriously discommode him.
' The guard recognized me and waved me into the
sickroom that smelled like a sty. Rasfer lay on his filthy bed, basting in his
own sweat. However, I could tell at once that my surgery had been successful,
for he opened his eyes and cursed me weakly. He must also be so certain of his
own eventual recovery that he need no longer toady to me. 'Where have you been, you ball-less freak?' he
growled at me, hardening my resolve and ridding me of the last traces of any
pity that I might have felt for him. 'I have been in agony ever since you
drilled into my skull. What kind of physician are you—' There was much more in this style, which I
pretended to ignore as I unwound the soiled bandage from around his head. My
interest was purely academic as I examined the small wound that the trepan had
left in his scalp. It was another perfectly executed operation, and I felt a
certain professional regret that it would be wasted. 'Give me something for the pain, eunuch!' Rasfer
tried to seize the front of my tunic, but I was too quick for him and stepped
back out of his reach. I made a fuss of shaking a few crystals of harmless
salt from a glass vial into his drinking-bowl, and then topped it up with milk
from my jug. 'If the pain becomes too bad, this will relieve
it,' I told him as I set the bowl near to his hand. Even at this stage, I could
not bring myself to hand it to him directly. He heaved himself up on one elbow and reached for
the bowl to guzzle it down. Before his fingers touched it, I pushed it out of
his reach with my foot. At the moment I thought that this was merely a desire
to prolong the anticipation, and I felt satisfaction at his distress as he
whined at me, 'Good Taita, give me the potion. Let me drink. This pain in my
head will drive me mad.' 'First let's talk a while, good Rasfer. Did you
hear that the Lady Lostris asked for me as her parting gift from Lord Intef?' Even in his pain, he grinned at me. 'You are a fool
if you think he will let you go. You are a dead man.' "The very words Lord Intef used. Will you
mourn for me, Rasfer? Will you weep for me when I am gone?' I asked softly, and
he began to chuckle, then broke it off and glanced at the bowl. 'In my own way, I have always been rather fond of
you,’ he grunted. 'Now let me have the bowl.' 'How fond of me were you when you castrated me?' I
asked, and he stared up at me. 'Surely you do not still bear a grudge for that? It
was long ago, and besides, I could not disobey the orders of Lord Intef. Be
reasonable, Taita, let me have the bowl.' 'You laughed as you cut me. Why did you laugh? Did
you enjoy it so much?' He shrugged and then winced at the pain that the
movement caused him. 'I am a jovial man. I always laugh. Come now, old friend,
say you forgive me and let me have the bowl.' I nudged it towards him with my foot. He reached
out and seized it, his movements still uncoordinated. A few drops slopped over
the rim as he raised it greedily to his mouth. I didn't realize what I was about to do, until I
had leapt forward and struck the bowl out of his hands. It hit the floor
without shattering and rolled into the corner, splashing milk up on to the
wall. Rasfer and I stared at each other. I was appalled
by my own stupidity and my weakness. If ever a man deserved a death by the
agony of poison, it was this one. But then I saw again the contorted bodies of
my pets strewn across the terrace, and I knew why I had not been able to allow
Rasfer to drink. Only a fiend could commit such an act. I have too high a
regard for myself ever to descend to the ignominy of the poisoner. I saw understanding dawn in Rasfer's bloodshot
eyes. 'Poison,' he whispered. 'The bowl was poisoned.' 'It was sent to me by Lord Intef.' I don't know why
I told him this. Perhaps I was trying to excuse myself for the atrocity that I
had almost committed. I don't know why I was behaving so strangely. Maybe it
was still the aftereffects of working the Mazes. I staggered slightly as I
turned for the door. Behind me Rasfer began to laugh, softly at first
and then louder, until great gusty bellows of laughter seemed to shake the
walls. 'You are a fool, eunuch,' he roared after me as I
ran. 'You should have done it. You should have killed me, for now as surely as
I have a hole between my buttocks, I will kill you.' As I had expected, when at last I returned to her
chamber my Lady Lostris was still asleep. I settled at the foot of her bed,
intending to wait for her to wake on her own. However, the rigours and the
exertions of the past day and night had been too much for me. I slumped down
and fell asleep, curled like a puppy on the tiles. I WOKE UNDER ATTACK. SOMETHING struck the side of
my head such a painful blow that I was on my feet before I was properly awake.
The next blow took me across the shoulder and stung like the bite of a hornet. 'You cheated me!' my Lady Lostris screamed at me.
'You did not let me die.' She swung the fan again. It was a formidable weapon,
the bamboo handle was as long as twice the span of my arms, and the comb at its
head that held the fan of ostrich feathers was of solid silver. Fortunately she
was still groggy from the drug and from oversleeping, and her aim was erratic.
I ducked under the blow, and the momentum of it swung her around so that she
collapsed on the bed again. She dropped the fan and burst into tears. 'I wanted
to die. Why did you not let me die?' It was some time before I could approach her, and
put one arm around her to comfort her. 'Did I hurt you, Taita?' she asked. 'I
have never beaten you before.' 'Your first attempt was a very good one,' I
congratulated her ruefully. 'In fact you are so good at it that I do not think
you need practise it further.' Theatrically I rubbed the side of my head, and
she smiled through her tears. 'Poor Taita. I do treat you so badly. But you did
deserve it. You cheated me. I wanted to die and you disobeyed me.' I saw it was
time to change the subject. 'Mistress, I have the most remarkable news for you.
But you must promise to tell no one of it, not even your maids.' Not since she
had first learned to talk had she been able to resist a secret, but then what
woman can? The promise of one had always been enough to distract her, and it
worked yet again. Even with her heart broken and the threat of
suicide hanging over her, she sniffed back the last of her tears and ordered,
'Tell me!' Recently, I had accumulated a good store of secrets
to choose from, and I paused for a moment to make my selection. I would not
tell her of the poisoning of my pets, of course, nor of my glimpse of Tanus. I
needed something to cheer her rather than to depress her further. 'Last night I went to Pharaoh's bedchamber and I
spoke to him for half the night.' The tears rose to the surface of her eyes once
more, 'Oh, Taita, I hate him. He's an ugly old man. I don't want to have to—' I wanted no more in that vein, in moments she would
be weeping again, so I hurried on, 'I worked the Mazes for him.' Instantly I
had her complete attention. My Lady Los-tris is totally fascinated by my powers
of divination. If it were not for the deleterious effect that the Mazes have
upon my health, she would make me work them every single day. 'Tell me! What did you see?' She was riveted. No thought
of suicide now, all sadness forgotten. She was still so young and artless that
I felt ashamed of my trickery, even though it was for her own good. 'I had the most extraordinary visions, mistress. I
have never had such clear images, such depths of sight—' Tell me! I declare I will die of impatience if you
don't tell me immediately.' 'First you must swear secrecy. Not another soul
must ever know what I saw. These are affairs of state and dire consequence.' 'I swear. I swear.' 'We cannot take these matters lightly—' 'Get on with it, Taita. You are teasing me now. I
order you to tell me this very moment or, or,' she groped for a threat to
coerce me, 'or I shall beat you again.' 'Very well. Listen to my vision. I saw a great tree
upon the bank of the Nile. Upon the summit of the tree was the crown of Egypt.' 'Pharaoh! The tree was the king.' She saw it at
once, and I nodded. 'Go on, Taita. Tell me the rest of it.' 'I saw the Nile rise and fall five times.' 'Five years, the passing of five years!' She
clapped her hands with excitement. She loves to unravel the riddles of my
dreams. "Then the tree was devoured by locusts, and
thrown down and turned to dust.' She stared at me, unable to utter the words, so I
spoke for her. 'In five years Pharaoh will be dead, and you will be a free
woman. Free from your father's thrall. Free to go to Tanus, with no man to stop
you.' 'If you are lying to me, it will be too cruel to
bear. Please say it is true.' 'It is true, my lady, but there is more. In the
vision, I saw a new-born babe, a boy child, a son. I felt my love go out to the
infant, and I knew that you were the mother of the child.' 'The father, who was the father of my baby? Oh,
Taita, tell me please.' 'In the dream I knew with absolute certainty that
the father was Tanus.' This was the first deviation from the truth that I had
allowed myself, but once again I had the consolation of believing that it was
for her benefit. She was silent for a long time, but her face shone
with an inner glow that was all the reward I could ever ask for. Then at last
she whispered, 'I can wait for five years. I was prepared to wait all eternity
for him. It will be hard, but I can wait five years for Tanus. You were right
not to let me die, Taita. It would have been an offence in the face of the
gods.' My relief buoyed me up, and I now felt more
confident that I would be able to steer her safely through all that lay ahead. AT DAWN THE FOLLOWING DAY THE royal flotilla sailed
south from Karnak. As the king had promised, my Lady Lostris and all her
entourage were on board one of the small, fast galleys of the southern
squadron. I sat with my mistress on the cushions under the awning
on the poop that the captain had arranged especially for her. We looked back at
the lime-washed buildings of the city shining in the first tangerine tints of
the rising sun. 'I cannot think where he has gone.' She was
fretting over Tanus as she had a score of times since we had set. sail. 'Did
you look everywhere for him?' 'Everywhere,' I confirmed. 'I spent half the
morning scouring the inner city and the docks. He has disappeared. But I left
your message with Kratas. You can be sure Kratas will deliver it to him.' 'Five years without him, will they ever pass?' THE VOYAGE UP-RIVER PASSED PLEASANTLY enough in
long, leisurely days spent sitting on the poop-deck in conversation with my
mistress. We discussed every detail of our changed circumstances in great
depth, and examined all that we might expect and hope for in the future. I
explained to her alHhe complexities of life at the court, the precedent and the
protocol. I traced for her the hidden lines of power and influence, and I
listed all those whom it would be in our interest to cultivate and those whom
we could safely ignore. I explained to her the issues of the day, and how
Pharaoh stood on each of them. Then I went on to discuss with her the feeling
and the mood of the citizenry. In a large measure I was indebted to my friend
Aton, the royal chamberlain, for all this intelligence. It seemed that over the
last dozen years every ship that had come downriver from Elephantine Island to
Karnak had carried a letter from him to me full of these fascinating details,
and on its return to Elephantine Island had carried a golden token of my
gratitude back to my friend, Aton. I was determined that we would soon be at the
centre of the court and in the mainstream of power. I had not trained my
mistress all these years to see the weapons that I had placed in her armoury
rust with disuse. The sym of her many accomplishments and her talents was
already formidable, but I was patiently adding to it each day. She had a keen
and restless mind. Once I had helped her to throw off theblack mood that had
threatened to destroy her, she was, as always, open to my instruction. Every
chance I had, I fired up her ambition and her eagerness to take up the role I
had planned for her. I soon found that one of the most effective means
of enlisting her attention and cooperation was to suggest that all this would
be to the eventual benefit and advantage of Tanus. 'If you have influence at
court, you will be better able to protect him,' I pointed out to her. "The
king has set him an almost impossible task to fulfil. Tanus will need us if he
is to succeed, and if he fails only you will be able to save him from the
sentence that the king has placed upon him.' 'What can we do to help him carry out his task?' At
the mention of Tanus I immediately had all her attention. 'Tell me truly, will
any man be able to stamp out the Shrikes? Is it not too difficult a mission,
even for a man like Tanus?' The bandits that terrorized the Upper Kingdom
called themselves the Shrikes, after those fierce birds. Our Nile shrike is
smaller than a dove; a handsome little creature with a white chest and throat
and a black back and cap, it plunders the nests of other birds and makes a
grisly display of the pathetic carcasses of its victims by hanging them on the
thorns of the acacia tree. Its vernacular name is the Butcher Bird. In the beginning the bandits had used it as a
cryptic name to conceal their identity and to hide their existence, but since
they had grown so strong and fearless, they had adopted it openly and often
used the black and white feather of the Butcher Bird as their emblem. In the beginning they would leave the feather on
the doorway of a home they had robbed or on the corpse of one of their victims.
But in those days, so bold and so organized had they become that at times they
might send a feather to an intended victim as a warning. In most cases that was
all that was necessary to make the victim pay over a half of all he owned in
the world. That was preferable to having all of it pillaged, and having his
wives and daughters carried off and raped, and he and his sons thrown into the
burning ruins of then- home to boot. 'Do you think it possible that even with the power
of the hawk seal Tanus will be able to carry out the king's mission?' my mistress
repeated. 'I have heard that all the bands of the Shrikes in the whole of the
Upper Kingdom are controlled by one man, someone that they call the Akh-Seth,
the brother of Seth. Is that true, Taita?' I thought for a moment before I answered. I could
not yet tell her all I knew of the Shrikes, for if I did so, then I would be
forced to reveal how such knowledge had come into my possession. At this stage
that would not be much to her advantage, nor to my credit. There might be a
time for these disclosures later. 'I have also heard that rumour,' I agreed
cautiously. 'It seems to me that if Tanus were to find and crush this one man,
Akh-Seth, then the Shrikes would crumble away. But Tanus will need help that
only I can give him.' She looked at me shrewdly. 'How can you help him?'
she demanded. 'And what do you know about this business?' She is quick, and hard to deceive. She sensed at
once that I was hiding something from her. I had to retreat swiftly and to play
on her love of Tanus and her trust in me. 'For Tanus' sake, ask me no more now. Only give me
your permission to do what I can to help him complete the task that Pharaoh has
set him.' 'Yes, of course we must do all in our power. Tell
meliow I can help.' 'I will stay with you at the court on Elephantine Island
for ninety days, but then you must give me leave to go to him—' 'No, no,' she interrupted me, 'if you can be of
help to Tanus, you must go immediately.' 'Ninety days,' I repeated stubbornly. That was the period
of grace that I had won for her. Although I was torn between these two dear
children of mine, my first duty was to my mistress. I knew that I could not leave her alone at the
court without a friend or a mentor. I also knew that I had to be with her when
the king finally sent for her in the night. 'I cannot leave you yet, but don't wony. I have
left a message for Tanus with Kratas. They will be expecting me, and I have
explained to Kratas all that has to be done before I arrive back at Kamak.' I
would not tell her more, and there can be few as obtuse or as evasive as I can
be when I set myself to it. The flotilla sailed only during the day. Neither
the navigational skills of Admiral Nembet nor the comfort of the king and his
court would stand up to a night passage, so every evening we moored and a
forest of hundreds of tents sprang up on the river-bank. Always the royal
stewards chose the most congenial spot to pitch camp, usually in a grove of
palm trees or in the lee of a sheltering hillock, with a temple or a village
nearby from which we were able to draw supplies. The entire court was still in festive mood. Every
camp was treated as a picnic. There was dancing and feasting in the light of
the bonfires, while in the shadows the courtiers intrigued and flirted. Many an
alliance both political and carnal was struck during those balmy nights,
perfumed with the fruity aromas of the irrigated lands along the river and the
spicier desert airs blown in from further afield. I used every moment to the best advantage of both
my mistress and myself. Of course she was now one of the royal ladies, but
there were already several hundred of those, and she was still a very junior
wife. Lord Intef's foresight might change her future status, but only if she
bore Pharaoh a son. In the meantime it was up to me. Almost every evening after we had gone ashore,
Pharaoh sent for me, ostensibly to see to the cure of his ringworm, but in
reality t& review the preparations for begetting a male heir to the double
crown. While he watched with interest, I prepared my tonic for potency and
virility from grated rhinoceros horn and mandrake root, which I mixed with warm
goat's milk and honey. When he had taken this, I examined the royal member and
was delighted for the sake of my mistress to find that it possessed neither the
length nor the girth that one would have expected from a god. I was of the
opinion that my mistress, even in her virgin state, would be able to cope with
its modest dimensions without too much discomfort. Naturally I would do all in
my power to avoid the dread moment, but if I was unable to stave it off, then I
was determined to ease the passage to womanhood for her. Having found the king to be healthy if unremarkable
in these regions, I recommended a poultice of cornflour mixed with olive oil
and honey to be applied to the royal member at night before retiring, and then
I went on to deal with the ringworm. To the king's intense gratification my
ointment cured the condition within the three days that I had promised, and my
already considerable reputation as a physician was enhanced. The king boasted
of my accomplishment to his council of ministers, and within days I was in huge
demand throughout the court. Then, when it was known that I was not only a
healer but also an astrologer whom even the king consulted, my popularity
became boundless. Every,evening there came to our tents a succession
of messengers bearing expensive gifts for my mistress from this lady or that
lord and begging that she allow me to visit them for a consultation. We acceded
to only those with whom we wished to make better acquaintance. Once I was in
the tent of a powerful and noble lord, he with his kilt up around his waist
while I examined his haemorrhoids, it was a simple matter to extol my mistress
and bring her many virtues to the attention of my patient. The other ladies of the harem soon discovered that
my Lady Lostris and I sang a beautiful duet together, and that we could compose
the most intriguing riddles and tell even more amusing stories. We were in
demand throughout the court, and especially amongst the children of the harem.
This gave me special pleasure, for if there is anything I love more than
animals, it is small children. Pharaoh, who was responsible for our popularity in
the first place, soon had the increase of it reported to him. This further
spurred his interest in my mistress, if it were not already sufficiently
intense. At sailing time on many mornings she was summoned on board the royal
barge to spend the day in the king's company, while most evenings, at the royal
invitation, my mistress dined at the king's board, and regaled him and the
assembled company with her natural wit and childlike grace. Of course I was
always in discreet attendance. When the king made no move to send for her in
the night in order to force her to submit to those horrible but rather hazy
terrors she had conjured up,' her feelings towards him began to moderate. Beneath his glum exterior Pharaoh Mamose was a kind
and decent man. My Lady Lostris soon realized this, and like me, she began to
grow quite fond of him. Before we reached Elephantine Island she was treating
him like a favourite uncle, and quite unaffectedly would sit on his knee to
tell him a story, or would play throwing-sticks with him on the deck of the
royal barge, both of them flushed with the exertion and laughing like children.
Aton confided to me that he had never seen the king so gay. All this was watched and noted by the court, who
very soon recognized her as the king's favourite. Soon there were other
visitors to our tents in the evening, those who had a petition which they
wished my mistress to bring to Pharaoh's notice. The gifts they proffered were
even more valuable than those offered for my services. My mistress had rejected her father's gift in
favour of a single slave, so she had begun the journey southwards as a pauper,
dependent on my own modest savings. However, before the voyage was done she had
accumulated not only a comfortable fortune, but also a long list of favours
owed by her new rich and powerful friends. I kept a careful accounting of all
these assets. I am not so conceited that I should pretend that my
Lady Lostris would not have achieved this recognition without my help. Her
beauty and her cleverness and her sweet, warm nature must have made her a
favourite in any circumstances. I only suggest that I was able to make it
happen a little sooner and a little more certainly. Our success brought with it some drawbacks. As
always, there was jealousy from those who felt themselves displaced in
Pharaoh's favour, and there was also the matter of Pharaoh's mounting carnal
interest in my mistress. This was aggravated by the period of abstinence that I
had enforced upon him. One evening in his tent after I had administered
his rhinoceros horn, he confided in me, 'Taita, this cure of yours is really
most efficacious. I have not felt so virile since I was a young man, way back
before my coronation and my divinity. This morning when I awoke I had a
stiffening of the member which was so gratifying that I sent for Aton to view
it. He was mightily impressed and he wished forthwith to fetch your mistress.' I was thoroughly alarmed by this news, and I put on
my sternest expression and shook my head and sucked air through my teeth and
tut-tutted to show my disapproval. 'I am grateful for your good sense in not
agreeing to Aton's suggestion, Your Majesty. It could so easily have undone all
our efforts. If you want a son, then you must follow my regime meticulously.' This brought home to me the swift passage of time,
and how soon the ninety days of grace would be up. I began to condition my
mistress for that night which Pharaoh would soon insist upon. First I must prepare her mind, and I set about this
by pointing out to her that it was inevitable, and that if she wished to
outlive the king and eventually to go to Tanus, then she would have to submit
to the king's will. She was always a sensible girl. 'Then you will have to explain exactly what it is
he expects of me, Taita,' she sighed. I was not the best guide in this area. My
personal experience had been ephemeral, but I was able to outline the
fundamentals and to make it seem so commonplace as not to alarm her unduly. 'Will it hurt?' she wanted to know, and I hastened
to reassure her. 'The king is a kind man. He has much experience of
young girls. I am sure he will be gentle with you. I will prepare an ointment
for you that will make things much easier. I will apply it every night before
you retire. It will open the gateway. Think to yourself that one day Tanus will
pass through those same portals, and that you are doing this to welcome him and
no other.' I tried to remain the aloof physician and take no
sensual pleasure in what I had to do to help her. The gods forgive me, but I
failed in my resolution. She was so perfect in her womanly parts as to
overshadow the most lovely blossom that I had ever raised in my garden. No
desert rose ever bore petals so exquisite. When I smoothed the ointment upon
them they raised their own sweet dew, more oleaginous and silky to the touch
than any unguent that I could concoct. Her cheeks turned rosy and her voice was husky as
she murmure.d, 'Up until now, I thought that part of me was meant for only one
purpose. Why is it that when you do that, I long so unbearably for Tanus?' She trusted me so implicitly, and had so little
understanding of these unfamiliar sensations, that it required the exercise of
all my ethics as a physician to proceed with the treatment only as long as was
necessary. However, I slept only fitfully that night, haunted by dreams of the
impossible. AS WE SAILED DEEPER INTO THE SOUTH, so the belts of
green land on each side of the river narrowed. Now the desert began to squeeze
in upon us. In places brooding cliffs of black granite trod the verdant fields
under foot and pressed so close as to overhang the turgid waters of the Nile. The most forbidding of these narrows was known as
the Gates of Hapi, and the waters were whipped into a wild and wilful temper as
they boiled through the gap in the high cliffs. We made the passage of the Gates of Hapi, and came
at last to Elephantine, the largest of a great assembly of islands that were
strung through the throat of the Nile, where the harsh hills constricted its
flow and forced it through the narrows. Elephantine was shaped like a monstrous shark
pursuing the shoal of lesser islands up the narrows. On either side of the
river the encroaching deserts were distinct in colour and character. On the
west bank, the Saharan dunes were hot orange and savage as the Bedouin who were
the only mortals able to survive amongst them. To the east, the Arabian desert
was dun and dirty grey, studded with black hills that danced dreamlike in the
heat mirage. These deserts had one thing in common—both of them were killers of
men. What a delightful contrast was Elephantine Island,
set like a glistening green jewel in the silver crown of the river. It took its
name from the smooth grey granite boulders that clustered along its bank like a
herd of the huge pachyderms and also from the fact that the trade in ivory
brought down from the savage land of Cush beyond the cataract had for a
thousand years centred upon this place. Pharaoh's palace sprawled over most of the island,
and the wags suggested that he had chosen to build it here at the southernmost
point in his kingdom to be as far from the red pretender in the north as
possible. The wide stretch of water that surrounded the
island secured it from the attack of an enemy, but the remainder of the city
had overflowed on to both main banks. After great Thebes, west and east
Elephantine together made up the largest and most populous city in the Upper
Kingdom, a worthy rival to Memphis, the seat of the red pretender in the Lower
Kingdom. As at no other place in the whole of Egypt,
Elephantine Island was clad with trees. Their seeds had been brought down by
the river on a thousand annual floods, and they had taken root in the fertile
loams that had themselves been transported by the restless waters. On my last visit to Elephantine, when I had come
up-river to do a survey of the river gauges for my Lord Intef in his capacity
as Guardian of the Waters, I had spent many months on the island. With the
assistance of the head gardener, I had catalogued the names and natural
histories of all the plants in the palace gardens, so I was able to point them
out to my mistress. There were/Jews trees the like of which had never been seen
elsewhere in Egypt. Their fruits grew not upon the branch but on the main trunk,
and their roots twisted and writhed together like mating pythons. There were
dragon's blood trees whose bark, when cut, poured out a bright red sap. There
were Cushite sycamores and a hundred other varieties that spread a shady green
umbrella over the lovely little island. The royal palace was built upon the solid granite
that lay below the fertile soil and formed the skeleton of the island. I have
often wondered that our kings, the long line of phar-aohs of fifty dynasties
that stretches back over a thousand years, have each of them devoted so much of
his life and treasure to the building of vast and eternal tombs of granite and
marble, while in their lifetimes they have been content to live in palaces with
mud walls and thatched roofs. In comparison to the magnificent funerary temple
that I was building for Pharaoh Mamose at Karnak, this palace was a very modest
affair, and the dearth of straight lines and symmetry offended the instincts of
both the mathematician and the architect in me. I suppose the sprawling jumble
of red clay walls and roofs canted at odd angles did have a sort of bucolic
charm, yet I itched to get out my ruler and plumb-line. Once we had gone ashore and found the quarters that
had been set aside for us, the true appeal of Elephantine was even more
apparent. Naturally we were lodged hi the walled harem on the northern tip of
the island, but the size and the furnishings of our lodgings confirmed our
favoured position, not only with the king but with his chamberlain as well.
Aton had made the allocation, and he, like most others, had proved completely
defenceless against my mistress's natural charm, and was now one of her most
shameless admirers. He placed at our disposal a dozen spacious and airy
rooms with our own courtyard and kitchens. A side-gate in the main wall led
directly down to the riverside-and a stone jetty. That very first day I
purchased a flat-bottomed skiff which we could use for fishing and
water-fowling. I kept it moored at the jetty. As to the rest of our new home, however comfortable
it might have been, neither my mistress nor I was satisfied, and we immediately
set about improving and beautifying it. With the cooperation of my old friend
the head gardener, I laid out and planted our own private garden hi the
courtyard, with a thatched barrazza under which we could sit in the heat of the
day, and where I kept my Saker falcons tethered on their perches. At the jetty I set up a shadoof to lift from the
river a constant flow of water that I led through ceramic pipes to our own
water-garden with lily-ponds dnd fish-pools. The overflow from the pools
drained away in a narrow gutter. This gutter I directed through the wall of my
mistress's chamber, across a screened corner of the room and out the far side,
from whence it returned to the main flow of the Nile. I carved a stool of
fragrant cedar wood, with a hole through the seat, and placed this over the
gutter so that anything dropped through the bottom of the seat would be borne
away by the never-ending flow of water. My mistress was delighted with this
innovation and spent far more time perched upon the stool than was really
necessary to accomplish the business for which it was originally intended. The walls of our quarters were bare red clay. We
designed a set of frescoes for each room. I drew the cartoons and transposed
them on to the walls and then my mistress and her maids painted in the designs.
The frescoes were scenes from the mythology of the gods, with fanciful
landscapes peopled by wonderful animals and birds. Of course, I used my Lady
Lostris as my model for the figure of Isis, but was it any wonder that the
figure of Horus was central to every painting, or that on the insistence of my
mistress, he was depicted as having red-gold hair and that he looked amazingly
familiar? The frescoes caused a stir throughout the harem and
every one of the royal wives took turns to visit us, to drink sherbet and to
view the paintings. We had set a fashion, and I was prevailed upon to advise on
the redecoration of most of the private apartments in the harem, at a suitable
fee, of course. In this process we made many new friends amongst the royal
ladies and added considerably to our financial estate. Very soon the king heard about the decorations and
came in person to examine them. Lostris gave him the grand tour of her
chambers. Pharaoh noticed her new water-stool of which my mistress was so proud
that when the king asked her to demonstrate it for him she did so without
hesitation, perching upon it and giggling as she sent a tinkling stream into
the gutter. She was still so innocent as not to realize the
effect that this display had upon her husband. I could tell by his expression
that any attempt that I might make to delay him beyond the promised ninety days
was likely to be difficult. After the tour, Pharaoh sat under the barrazza and
drank a cup of wine while he actually laughed aloud at some of my mistress's
sallies. At last he turned to me. 'Taita, you must build me a water-garden and
a barrazza just like this— only much bigger, and whilst you are about it, you
can make a water-stool for me as well.' When at last he was ready to leave, he commanded me
to walk a little way alone with him, ostensibly to discuss the new
water-garden, but I knew better. No sooner had we left the harem than he was at
me. 'Last night I dreamed of your mistress,' he told
me, 'and when I awoke, I found that my seed had spilled out upon the sheets.
That has not happened to me since I was a boy. This little vixen of yours has
begun to fill my thoughts both sleeping and waking. I have no doubt that I can
make a son with her, and that we should delay no longer. What do you think,
doctor, am I not yet ready for the attempt?' 'I counsel you most strongly to observe the ninety
days, Majesty. To make the attempt before that would be folly.' It was
dangerous to label the king's desire as folly, but I was desperate to contain
it. 'It would be most unwise to spoil all our chances of success for so short a
period of time.' In the end I prevailed, and left him looking glummer than
ever. When I returned to the harem, I warned my mistress
of the king's intentions, and so thoroughly had I conditioned her to accept the
inevitable that she showed no undue distress. She was by this time completely
resigned to her role as the king's favourite, while my promise that there would
be a term to her captivity here on Elephantine Island made it easier for her to
bear. In all fairness, our sojourn on the island could not truly be described
as captivity. We Egyptians are the most civilized men on earth. We treat our
women well. I have heard of others, the Hurrians and the Cushites and the
Libyans, for example, who are most cruel and unnatural towards their wives and
daughters. The Libyans make of the harem a true prison in
which the women live their entire lives without sight of a living male apart
from the eunuchs and the children. They say that even male dogs and cats are
forbidden to pass through the gates, so great is their possessive frenzy. The Hurrians are even worse. Not only do they confine
their women and make them cover their bodies from ankle to wrist, but they
force them to go masked as well, even within the confines of the harem. Thus
only a woman's husband ever lays eyes upon her face. The primitive tribes of Cush are the worst of all
of them. When their women reach the age of puberty they circumcise them in the
most savage manner. They cut away the clitoris and me inner lips of the vagina
to remove the seat of sexual pleasure so that they may never be tempted to
stray from their husbands. This may seem so bizarre as to defy belief, but I
have seen the results of this brutal surgery with my own eyes. Three of my
mistress's slave girls were captured by the slavers only after they were
matured and had been subjected to the knife by their own fathers. When I
examined the gaping, scar-puckered pits they had been left with, I was
sickened, and my instincts as a healer were deeply offended by this mutilation
of that masterpiece of the gods, the human body. It has been my observation
that this circumcision does not achieve its object, for it seems to deprive the
victim of the most desirable female traits, and leaves her cold and calculating
and cruel. She becomes a sexless monster. On the other hand, we Egyptians honour our women
and treat them, if not as equals, at least with consideration. No husband may
beat his wife without recourse to the magistrate, and he has a legal duty to
dress and feed and maintain her in accordance with his own station in society.
A wife of the king, or of one of the nobles, is not confined to the harem, but,
if suitably escorted by her entourage, may walk abroad in city street or
countryside. She is not forced to hide her charms, but, according to the
fashion of the moment and her own whim, she may sit at her husband's
dinner-table with her face uncovered and her breasts bared, and entertain his
male companions with conversation and song. She may hold, in her own right, slaves and land and
fortune separately from the estate of her husband, although the children she bears
belong to him alone. She may fish, and fly hawks, and even practise archery,
although such masculine endeavours as wrestling and swordsmanship are forbidden
to her. There are, quite rightly, certain activities from which she is barred,
such as the practice of law and architecture, but a high-born wife is a person
of consequence, possessed of legal rights and dignity. Naturally it is not the
same for the concubine or for the wife of a common man. They have the same
rights as the bullock or the donkey. Thus my mistress and I were free to wander abroad
to explore the twin cities on each bank of the Nile and the surrounding
countryside. In the streets of Elephantine my Lady Lostris was very soon a
favourite, and the common people gathered round her to solicit her blessing and
her generosity. They applauded her grace and beauty, just as they had done in
her native Thebes. I was instructed by her always to carry a large bag of cakes
and sweetmeats from which she stuffed the cheeks of every ragamuffin we encountered
who seemed to her to require nourishing. Wherever we went, we seemed always to
be surrounded by a shrieking, dancing flock of children. My mistress always seemed happy to sit in the doorway
of a poor shanty with the housewife, or under a tree in the field of a peasant
fanner and listen to their woes and grievances. At the first opportunity she
would take these up with Pharaoh. Often he would smile indulgently and agree to
the redress that she suggested. So her reputation as a champion of the common
man was bom. When she passed through even the saddest, poorest quarters of the
city, she left smiles and laughter behind her. On other days we fished together from our little
skiff in the backwaters of the lagoons that the inundation of the Nile had
created, or we laid out decoys for the wild duck. I had made a special bow for
my mistress which was suited to her strength. Of course it was nothing like the
great bow, Lan-ata, that I had designed for Tanus, but it was adequate for the
water-fowl we were after. My Lady Lostris was a better marksman than most men I
have watched at the archery butts, and when she loosed an arrow it was very
seldom that I was not required to plunge overside and swim out to retrieve the
carcass of a duck or a goose. Whenever the king went out hawking, my mistress was
invited to attend. I would walk behind her with my Saker falcons on my arm, as
we skirted the edge of the papyrus beds. As soon as a heron rose with heavy
wing-beats from a hidden pool in the reeds, she would take one of the falcons
from me and kiss its hooded head. 'Fly fast and true, my beauty!' she would
whisper to it, and slip the rufter to unmask the fierce yellow eyes, and launch
the splendid little killer aloft. We would watch entranced as the falcon towered high
above the quarry, and then folded those sickle wings and stooped with a speed
that made the wind sing over his dappled plumage. The shock of impact carried
clearly to us over a distance of two hundred paces. A puff of pale blue
feathers was smeared across the darker blue of the sky, and then was carried
away like smoke on the river breeze. The falcon bound to its prey with hooked
talons to bring it smashing to earth. My mistress shrieked in triumph and ran
as fast as a boy to retrieve the bird, to lavish praise upon it and pamper it,
and then to feed it the severed head of the heron. I love all creatures of the water and the land and
the air. My mistress has the same feelings. Why is it then, I often wonder,
that both of us are so moved by these sports of the chase? I have puzzled over
it without finding an answer. Perhaps it is simply that man, and woman also,
are the earth's fiercest predator. We feel a kinship with the falcon, with his
beauty and his speed. The heron and the goose were given to the falcon by the
gods as his rightful prey. In the same way, man has been given dominance over
all other creatures on earth. We cannot deny these instincts with which the
gods have endowed us. From the earliest age, when she had first developed
the strength and the stamina to stay with us, I had allowed my Lady Lostris to
accompany Tanus and myself on our hunting and fishing forays. For, perhaps to
mask his hatred of his rival, Lord Harrab, my Lord Intef consented to my
hunting sorties with young Tanus. Years before, Tanus ancH had taken possession of a
deserted fisherman's shack which we had discovered on the fringe of the swamp
below Karnak. We had made this our secret hunting-lodge. It was only a short
distance from the shack to the edge of the true desert. So from this
comfortable base we had the options of fishing the lagoon or of wild-fowling or
of hawking that noble bird, the giant bustard, in the open desert. In the beginning Tanus had resented the intrusion
of this gawky nine-year-old girl, skinny and flat-chested as a boy, into our
private world. Soon, however, he had grown accustomed to her presence and even
found it convenient to have someone to run errands for him and perform the
irksome little chores around camp. Thus, little by little, Lostris had picked up the
lore and the wisdom of the outdoors, until she knew every fish and bird by its
proper name, and could wield a harpoon or a hunting-bow with equal skill. In
the end Tanus had become as proud of her as if it had been he who had invited
her to join us in the first place. She had been with us in the black rock hills above
the river valley on the day that Tanus had hunted the cattle-killer. The lion
was a scarred old male with a black mane that waved like a field of corn in the
wind as he walked, and a voice like the thunder of the heavens. We set my pack
of hounds upon him and followed them as they bayed the lion up from the paddock
beside the Nile where he had killed his last bullock. The dogs cornered him at
the head of a rocky defile. The lion fixed on us as soon as we came up and
brushed the dogs aside as he charged through them. As he came grunting and roaring towards us, my
mistress had stood unwavering, only a pace behind Tanus' left shoulder, with
her own puny little bow at full draw. Of course, it had been Tanus who had
killed the beast, sending an arrow from the great bow Lanata hissing down his
gaping throat, but we had bcJth seen Lady Lostris' courage displayed in full
measure. I think it was probably on that day that Tanus
first became aware of his true feelings for her, while for my mistress, the
hunt and the chase were for ever bound up with the images and memories of her
lover. She had remained ever since an avid huntress. She had learned from Tanus
and myself to respect and to love the quarry, but not to burden herself with
guilt when she exercised her god-given rights over the other creatures of the
earth, to use them as beasts of burden, to consume them as food, or to pursue them
as game. We may have dominance over the beasts, but in the
same way, all men and women are Pharaoh's cattle, and none may gainsay him.
Promptly on the ninetieth night the king sent Aton to fetch my mistress. BECAUSE OF OUR FRIENDSHIP AND HIS own feelings for
my mistress, Aton had given me ample warning before he came. I was able to make
my final preparations well in advance of his arrival. For the last time I
rehearsed my mistress in exactly what to say to the king and how to behave
towards him. Then I applied the ointment that I had reserved for this occasion.
It was not only a lubricant, but contained also the essence of a herb that I
use on other patients to deaden the pain of tooth-ache and other minor
afflictions. It had the property of numbing the sensitive mucous membranes of
the body. She was brave right up to the moment that Aton
appeared in the doorway of her chamber, and then her courage deserted her and
she turned to me with tears brimming against her lids. 'I cannot go alone. I am
afraid. Please come with me, Taita.' She was pale beneath the make-up that I
had applied so carefully, and a fit of shivering took hold of her so that her
small white teeth chattered together softly. 'Mistress, you know that is not possible. Pharaoh
has sent for you. This once I cannot help you.' It was then that Aton came to her aid. 'Perhaps
Taita could wait in the ante-chamber of the king's bedroom, with me. After all,
he is the royal physician, and his services may be needed,' he suggested in his
reedy voice, and my mistress stood on tiptoe to kiss his fat cheek. 'You are so kind, Aton,' she whispered, and he
blushed. My Lady Lostris held my hand tightly as we followed
Aton through the labyrinth of passages to the king's apartments. In the
ante-chamber she squeezed it hard, and then dropped my hand and went to the
doorway to the king's chamber. She paused and looked back at me. She had never
looked so lovely or so young and vulnerable. My heart was breaking, but I
smiled at her to give her courage. She turned from me and stepped through the
curtains. I heard the murmur of the king's voice as he greeted her and her soft
reply. Aton seated me on a stool at the low table, then
without a word set up the bao board between us. I played without attention, moving
the polished round stones in the cups carved into the wooden board, and Aton
won three quick games in succession. He had very seldom beaten me before, but I
was distracted by the voices from the room beyond, although they were too low
for me to catch the actual words. Then quite clearly I heard my mistress say, exactly
as I had coached her, 'Please, Your Majesty, be gentle with me. I beseech you,
do not hurt me,' and the appeal was so moving that ,even Aton coughed softly
and blew his nose upon his sleeve, while it was all I could do to restrain
myself from leaping to my feet and rushing through the curtain to drag her
away. For a while there was silence and then a single
high, sobbing cry that rent my soul, and once again silence. Aton and I sat hunched over the bao board, no
longer making any pretence at playing. I do not know how long we waited, but it
must have been in the last watch of the night when I heard at last the sound of
an old man's snores from beyond the curtain. Aton looked up at me and nodded,
then he rose ponderously to his feet. Before he reached the curtains, they parted, and my
mistress stepped through them and came directly to where I sat. 'Take me home,
Taita,' she whispered. Without thinking about it I picked her up in my
arms, and she hugged mexaround the neck and laid her head on my shoulder, just
like she used to as a little girl. Aton took up the oil lamp and lit the way
for us back to the harem. He left us at the door to my mistress's bedchamber. I
laid her on the bed, and while she drowsed I examined her gently. There was a
little blood, just a smear of it on those silken thighs, but it had staunched
itself. 'Is there any pain, my little one?' I asked softly,
and she opened her eyes and shook her head. Then quite unexpectedly she smiled at me. 'I don't
know what all the fuss was about,' she murmured. 'In the end, it was not much
worse than using your water-stool, and it didn't take much longer either.' And
she curled herself in a ball and fell asleep without another sound. I almost wept with relief. All my preparations and
the numbing herbs I had employed had seen her through without damage to either
her body or her sweet spirit. IN THE MORNING WE WENT OUT HAWKING as though nothing
untoward had happened, and my mistress mentioned the subject only once during
the day. As we picnicked on the bank of the river, she asked thoughtfully,
'Will it be the same with Tanus, do you think, Taita?' 'No, mistress. You and
Tanus love each other. It will be different. It will be the most wonderful
moment in your entire life,' I assured her. 'Yes, I know deep in my heart that is how it should
be,' she whispered, and involuntarily both of us looked northwards along the
sweep of the Nile, towards Kamak far.below the horizon. Although I knew well where my duty towards Tanus
lay, life on the island was so idyllic, and I so much enjoyed the exclusive
company of my mistress, that I delayed my departure with the excuse that she
still needed me. In truth, although Pharaoh sent for her night after night, my
mistress had a tough and resilient streak in her and was blessed with the
instinct of survival in full measure. Very swiftly she learned how to please
the king, but at the same time to remain untouched and emotionally unmoved by
it. She did not need me as much as Tanus did. Indeed, it was she who began to
nag me to leave her at Elephantine and to journey down-river once again. I procrastinated until one evening, after a full
day out in the field with the king, we returned late to the palace. I saw to it
that my mistress was bathed and her evening meal was laid out for her before I
went to my own rooms. As I entered my chamber the delicious odour of ripe
mangoes and pomegranates filled the air. In the centre of the floor stood a
large closed basket which I could tell was filled with these two favourite
fruits of mine. I was not surprised to find it there, for never a day passed
without gifts being sent to my mistress and me by someone seeking our favours. I wondered who it was this time, and my mouth
filled with saliva as another whiff of the fragrance filled my nostrils. I had
not eaten since noon. As I lifted the woven lid and reached for the reddest and
ripest of the pomegranates, the fruit spilled and rolled across the floor.
There was a sharp hissing sound and a great black ball of writhing coils and
gleaming scales flopped out of the basket and lashed out at my legs. I leaped backwards, but not fast enough. The open
jaws of the serpent struck the leather heel of my sandal with such force that I
very nearly lost my balance. A cloud of venom was released from the curved
fangs. The clear but deadly fluid drenched the skin of my ankle, but with
another leap, I managed to evade the second strike that followed immediately
upon the first. I threw myself back against the wall in the far corner of the
room. The cobra and I confronted each other across the
width of the floor. Half its body was coiled upon itself, but the front portion
of it was raised as high as my shoulder. Its hood was extended to display the
broad black and white bands which patterned it. Like some dreadful black lily
of death swaying upon its stem, it watched me with those glittering, beady
eyes, and I realized that it stood between me and the only door to the chamber. It is true that some cobras are kept as pets. They
are given the run of the household, and they keep down the numbers of rats and
mice that infest the building. They will drink milk from a jug andx become as
tame as kittens. There are others of these serpents that are trained by methods
of torment and provocation to become deadly tools of the assassin. I was in no
doubt as to which kind of cobra this was standing before me now. I sidled along the wall, trying to outflank it and
to reach safety. It launched itself at me, and the gape of its jaw was a pale
sickly yellow and tendrils of venom drooled from the tips of its fangs.
Involuntarily I yelled with terror as I sprang away from it and cowered in my
corner again. The serpent recovered swiftly from the strike, and reared
upright. It was still between me and the doorway. I knew that its poison sacs
were charged with sufficient venom to kill a hundred strong men. As I watched,
its lower body uncoiled slowly and it began to glide across the floor towards
me, its flaring head held high and those terrible, bright little eyes fastened
upon me. I have seen one of these snakes mesmerize a fowl so
that it made no move to escape at this sinuous approach, but lay before it with
a patent air of resignation. I was paralyzed in the same way, and found that I
could neither move nor cry out again as death glided towards me. Then suddenly I saw a movement beyond the swaying
cobra. My Lady Lostris appeared in the doorway, summoned by my first terrified
cry. I found my voice again, and I screamed at her, 'Be careful! Come no
closer!' She paid no heed to my warning as she took in the
scene at a glance. A moment's delay or hesitation on her part, and the serpent
would have struck at me for the third and last time. My mistress had been at
her dinner when she heard my cry for help. She stood now with a half-eaten
melon in one hand and a silver knife in the other, and she reacted with the
swift instinct of a true huntress. Tanus had taught her to forsake the awkward
double-jointed manner of throwing that is natural to the female, and she hurled
the melon she held with the force and aim of a trained javelineer. It struck
the cobra upon the back of its extended hood, and for a fleeting instant the
blow knocked it flat upon the tiled floor. Like the release of a war bow, the
serpent whipped erect and turned its dreadful head towards my mistress and then
sped at her across the room in full attack. I was released from my trance at last and started
forward to help her, but I was too slow. Using its tail as a fulcrum, the cobra
swung forward and aimed at her with its jaws so widely distended that venom
sprayed from its erect fangs in a fine, pale mist. My mistress leaped back,
agile and swift as a gazelle before the rush of the hunting cheetah. The cobra
missed its strike, and for an instant the impetus threw it flat at her feet,
extended to its full glistening, scaly length. I do not know what possessed her, but she had never
lacked in courage. Before the cobra could recover, she hopped forward again and
landed with both those neat little sandalled feet upon the back of its head,
pinning it to the tiles with her full weight. Perhaps she had expected to crush its spine, but
the snake was as thick as her wrist and resilient as the lash of Rasfer's whip.
Although its head was pinned, the rest of its long body whipped up and over and
coiled around her legs. A woman of lesser sense and nerve might have tried to
escape that loathsome embrace. If she had done so my mistress would have died,
for the instant the cobra's head was freed the death-strike would have
followed. Instead, she kept both feet planted firmly upon the
writhing serpent, spreading her arms to balance herself, and she screamed out,
'Help me, Taita!' I was, already halfway across the room, and now I
dived full length and thrust my hands into the coils of the serpent's body that
boiled around her legs. I groped along its sinuous length, down to where it
narrowed into the neck, and I seized it and locked both my hands around the
cobra's throat, with my fingers entwined. 'I have him!' I yelled, almost incoherent with my
own horror and loathing for this cold, scaly creature that struggled in my
grip. 'I have him! Get away from us! Stand clear!' My mistress leaped back obediently, and I came to
my feet clutching the creature with a frantic strength, trying to keep its
gaping jaws away from my face. The tail whipped back and wound around my
shoulders and my neck, threatening to strangle me as I clung to the head. With
this grip upon me the snake now had purchase, and its strength was terrifying.
I found that I could not hold it, even with both my fists locked around its
throat. It was gradually forcing its head free, drawing it inexorably back
through my fingers. I realized that the instant it broke out of my grip, it
would lash out at my unprotected face. 'I can't hold it!' I screamed, more to myself than
to Lady Lostris. I was holding it at arm's-length, but it was pulling itself
towards my face, drawing closer to my eyes every moment as waves of power
pulsed through it, contracting and tightening the coils around my throat,
forcing the head back through my fingers. Although my knuckles were white with the strength
of my grip, the cobra was so close to my face that I could see the fangs
flicking back and forth in the roof of its wide gaping jaws. The cobra was able
to erect or to flatten them at will. They were bony white needles, and pale,
smoky jets of venom spurted from -their tips. I knew that if even a droplet of
that poison entered my eyes, it would blind me, and the burning pain of it
might drive me half-mad. I twisted the snake's head away from my face so
that the spray of poison was discharged into the air, and I screamed again in
despair, 'Call one of the slaves to help me!' 'On the table!' my mistress spoke close beside me.
'Hold its head on the table!' I was startled. I had thought that she had obeyed
my order and run to find help, but she was at my side, and I saw that she still
brandished the silver table-knife. Carrying the cobra with me, I staggered across the
floor and fell to my knees beside the low table. With a supreme effort I
managed to force the snake's head down across one edge of the table, and to
hold it there. It gave my mistress a chopping-block against which to wield the
knife. She hacked at the base of the cobra's neck, behind the hideous head. The snake felt the first cut and redoubled its
struggles. Coil after coil of rubbery flesh lashed and contorted around my
head. Hissing bursts of air flew from its gape, almost deafening us, the awful
din mingling with the spurts of venom from its fangs. The little blade was sharp, and the scaly flesh
parted under it. Slippery, cool, ophidian blood welled up over my fingers, but
the blade bit down to the bone of the spine. With all her strength and with her
face contorted by the effort, my mistress sawed at the bone, but now my fingers
were lubricated by the cobra's blood. I felt the head slither out between them
and the serpent was free, but at the same moment the knife found the joint
between the vertebrae and slipped through, cleaving the spine. Dangling by a thread of-skin, the head was thrown
about loosely by the cobra's death-throes. Although almost severed from the body,
the fangs still flickered and oozed poison. The lightest touch would be enough
to drive them into my flesh. I tore at the body with frenzied, bloody fingers
and at last managed to unwind it from around my throat, and to hurl it to the
floor. As the two of us backed away to the door, the snake
continued its grotesque contortions, knotting itself and coiling into a ball,
scaly turns sliding over each other. 'Are you harmed, my lady?' I asked, without being
able to tear my eyes away from the death-throes of the carcass. 'Is there any
of the venom in your eyes or on your skin?' 'I am all right,' she whispered. 'And you, Taita?'
The tone of her voice alarmed me enough to make me forget my own distress, and
I looked at her face. The reaction from danger had already seized her, and she
was beginning to shake. Her dark green eyes were too large to fit that glassy
white face. I had to find some way to release her from the icy grip of shock. 'Well,' I said briskly, 'that takes care of
tomorrow evening's dinner. I do so love a nice piece of roast cobra.' For a moment she stared at me blankly and then she
let out a peal of hysterical laughter. My own laughter was no less wild and
unrestrained. We clung helplessly to each other and laughed until tears poured
down our cheeks. I WOULD NOT TRUST OUR COOK WITH IT, so I prepared
the cobra myself. I skinned and gutted it and stuffed it with wild garlic and
other herbs, together with a dollop of mutton fat from the tail of a prime ram.
Then I coiled it in a ball and wrapped ir\in banana leaves and covered the
whole bundle with a thick coating of wet clay. I built over the lump of clay a
hot fire which I kept burning all day. That evening when I cracked open the hard-baked
ball of clay, the aroma released by the succulent white flesh flooded our
mouths with saliva. There are those who have dined at my table who say they
have never eaten tastier food than that which I prepare, and who am I to
contradict my friends? I served the flaky fillets to my mistress with a
wine of five-palm quality that Aton had chanced upon in Pharaoh's store-rooms.
My Lady Lostris insisted that I sit with her under the barrazza in the
courtyard and share the meal. We agreed that it was better than the tail of
crocodile, or even than the flesh of the finest perch from the Nile. It was only when we had eaten our fill and sent the
rest of it to her slave maidens that we broached the matter of who it was that
had sent me the gift of the basket of fruit. I tried not to alarm my mistress, and made a joke of
it: 'It must have been somebody who does not like my singing! ' However, she
was not to be put off so easily. 'Don't play the clown with me, Taita. It is one
direction in which you have little talent. I think you know who it was, and I
think I do as well.' I stared at her, not sure how to deal with what I
suspected was coming. I had always protected her, even from the truth. I
wondered how far she had seen through me. 'It was my father,' she said with such finality
that there was no reply or denial I could give her. 'Tell me about him, Taita.
Tell me all the things I should know about him, but which you never dared tell
me.' It came hard at first. A lifetime of reticence
cannot be overcome in a moment. It was still difficult to realize that I was no
longer completely under the thrall-of Lord Intef. Deeply as I had always hated
him, he had dominated me body and soul since my childhood, and there persisted
a kind of perverse loyalty that made it difficult for me to speak out freely
against him. Weakly I attempted to fob her off with only the barest outlines of
her father's clandestine activities, but she cut across me impatiently. 'Come now! Don't take me for a fool. I know more
about my father than you ever dreamed. It is time for me to learn the rest of
it. I charge you straight, tell me everything.' So I obeyed her, and there was so much to tell that
the full moon was halfway up the sky before I was done. We sat in silence for a
long time afterwards. I had left out nothing, nor had I tried to deny or to excuse
my own part in any of it. 'No wonder he wantsyou dead,' she whispered at
last. 'You know enough to destroy him.' She was silent a little longer, and
then she went on, 'My father is a monster. How is it possible that I am any
different from him? Why, as his daughter, am I not also possessed by such
unnatural instincts?' 'We must thank all the gods that you are not. But
mistress, do you not despise me also for what I have done?' She reached across and touched my hand: 'You forget
that I have known you all my life, since the day that my mother died giving
birth to me. I know what you really are. Anything you did, you were forced to
do, and freely I forgive you for it.' She sprang to her feet and paced restlessly around
the lily pond before she returned to where I sat. 'Tanus is in terrible danger from my father. I
never realized just how much until this evening. He must be warned so that he
will be able to protect himself. You must go to him now, Taita, without
delaying another day.' 'Mistress—' I began, but she cut me off brusquely. 'No, Taita, I will not listen to any more of your
sly excuses. You will leave for Karnak tomorrow.' SO BEFORE SUNRISE THE NEXT MORNING I set out
fishing, alone in the skiff. However, I made certain that at least a dozen
slaves and sentries saw me leave the island. In a backwater of the lagoon I opened the leather
bag in which I had concealed a tom-cat that had befriended me. He was a sad old
animal riddled with mange and with agonizing canker in both ears. For some time
I had been steeling myself to give him release from his misery. Now I fed him a
lump of raw meat laced with Datura essence. I held him on my lap and stroked
him as he ate, and he purred contentedly. As soon as he slipped painlessly into
oblivion, I cut his throat. I sprinkled the blood over the skiff, and dropped
the carcass of the cat overboard where I knew that the crocodiles would soon
dispose of it. Then, leaving my harpoons and lines and other gear on board, I
pushed the skiff out into the slow current and waded through the papyrus beds
to hard ground. We had agreed that my mistress would wait until
nightfall before she raised the alarm. It would be noon tomorrow before they
found the blood-smeared skiff and concluded that I had been taken by a
crocodile or been murdered by a band of the Shrikes. Once I was ashore, I changed swiftly into the
costume I had brought with me. I had chosen to impersonate one of the priests
of Osiris. I would often ape their stilted gait and pompous manners for the
amusement of my mistress. It needed only a wig, a touch of make-up and the
correct costume to make the transformation. The priests are always on the move,
up and down along the river, travelling between one temple and another, begging
or rather demanding alms along the way. I would excite little interest, and my
disguise might help to discourage an attack by the Shrikes. On superstitious
grounds they were often reluctant to interfere with the holy men. I skirted the lagoon and entered the town of West
Elephantine through the poor quarter. At the docks I approached one of the
barge captains who was loading a cargo of corn in leather bags and clay jugs of
oil. With the right degree of arrogance I demanded free passage td Karnak in
the name of the god, and he shrugged and spat on the deck, but allowed me to
come aboard. All men are resigned to the extortions of the brotherhood. They
may despise the priests, but they also fear their power, both spiritual and
secular. Some say that the priesthood wields almost as much power as does
Pharaoh himself. The moon was full and the barge captain a more
intrepid mariner than Admiral Nembet. We did not anchor at night. With the
breeze and the full flood of the Nile behind us, we made a fair passage and on
the fifth day rounded the bend of the river and saw the city of Karnak lying
before us. My stomach was queasy as I went ashore, for this
was my town and every beggar and idler knew me well. If I were recognized, Lord
Intef would hear about it before I could reach the city gates. However, my
disguise held up, and I kept to the back alleys as I hurried in a purposeful
and priestly manner to Tanus' house near the squadron base. His front door was unbarred. I entered as though I
had the right, and closed the door securely behind me. The starkly furnished
rooms were deserted and when I searched diem, I found nothing to give me any
indication of his whereabouts. Tanus had obviously been gone for a long time,
possibly since my mistress and I had left Karnak. The milk in a jug by the
window had thickened and dried like hard cheese, and a crust of sorghum bread
on the plate beside it was covered with a blue mould. As far as I could see, nothing was missing; even
the bow Lanata still hung on its rack above his bed. For Tanus to have left
that was extraordinary. Usually it was like an extension of his body. I hid it
away carefully in a secret compartment below his sleeping-place, which I had
built for him when first he had moved into these lodgings. I wished to avoid
moving around the city in daylight, so I remained in Tanus' rooms for the rest
of that afternoon, occupying myself with cleaning up the dust and filth that
had accumulated. At nightfall I slipped out and went down to the
riverside. I saw immediately that the Breath ofHorus was at her moorings. She
had obviously been in action since last I had seen her, and had suffered battle
damage. Her bows were shattered and her timbers amidships had been scorched and
charred. I noted with a stir of proprietary pride that Tanus
had made the modifications to her hull that I had designed. The gilded metal
horn protruded from her bows, just above the water-line. From its battered
condition I surmised that it fiad done fierce execution amongst the fleets of the
red pretender. However, I could see that neither Tanus nor Kratas
was on deck. A junior officer whom I recognized had the watch, but I discarded
the idea of hailing him, and instead set out to tour the sailors' haunts around
the area of the docks. It says a great deal for the morals and the
sanctity of the priests of Osiris that I was welcomed in the dives and
whorehouses like an habitue. In one of the more respectable taverns I
recognized the impressive figure of Kratas. He was drinking and playing at dice
with a group of his brother officers. I made no move to approach him, but I
watched him across the crowded room. Meanwhile I fended off the advances of a
succession of pleasure-birds of both sexes who were progressively lowering
their tariffs in their efforts to tempt me out into the dark alleyway to sample
their well-displayed charms. None of them were in the least deterred by my
priestly collar of blue glass beads. When "Kratas at last gave his companions a
hearty goodnight and made his way out into the alley, I followed his tall
figure with relief. 'What is it you want from me now, beloved of the
gods?' he growled at me with scorn when I hurried up beside 'him. 'Is it my
gold or my bum-splitter you crave?' Many of the priests had taken
enthusiastically to this modern vogue for pederasty. Til take the gold,' I told him. 'You have more of
that than the other, Kratas.' He stopped dead in his tracks and stared at me
suspiciously. His bluff and handsome features were only a little flushed and
befuddled by liquor. 'How do you know my name?' He seized me by the
shoulder and dragged me into a lighted doorway, and studied my face. At last he
snatched the wig from off my head. 'By the piles between Seth's buttocks, it's you,
Taita!' he roared. 'I'd be obliged if you would refrain from shouting
out my name to all the world,' I told him, and he turned serious at once. 'Come! We'll go to my rooms.' Once we were alone, he poured two mugs of beer.
'Haven't you had enough of that?' I asked, and he grinned at me. 'We'll only know the answer to that in the morning.
How now, Taita! Don't be too strict with me. We have been down-river raiding
the red usurper's fleet for the past three weeks. Sweet Hapi, but that bow-horn
of yours works wonders. We cut up nearly twenty of his galleys and we chopped
the heads off a couple of hundred of his rascals. Although it was thirsty work,
not a drop of anything stronger than water has passed my lips in all that time.
Don't begrudge me a mouthful of beer now. Drink with me!' He raised his mug,
and I was also thirsty. I saluted him in return, but as I put the mug down
again, I asked, 'Where is Tanus?' He sobered instantly v 'Tanus has disappeared,' he
said, and I stared at him. 'Disappeared? What do you mean, disappeared? Did he
not lead the raid down-river?' Kratas shook his head. 'No. He's gone. Vanished. I
have had my men scour every street and every house in all of Thebes. There is
no sign of him. I tell you, Taita, I am worried, really worried.' 'When did you last see him?' 'Two days after the royal wedding, after the Lady
Lostris married the king, on the evening of the day that you sailed with the
royal flotilla for Elephantine. I tried to talk some sense into his thick head,
but he would not listen.'- 'What did he say?' 'He handed over the command of the Breath of
Horus and the entire squadron to me.' 'He could not do that, surely?' 'Yes, he could. He used the authority of Pharaoh's
hawk I nodded. 'And then? What did he do?' 'I have just
told you. He disappeared.' I sipped at the mug of beer as I tried to think it
out. Meanwhile Kratas went to the window and urinated through it It splashed
noisily into the street below and I heard a startled passer-by shout up at him,
'Careful where you spray, you filthy pig.’ Kratas leaned out and quite cheerfully offered to
crack his skull for him, and the man's grumblings receded rapidly. Chortling
with this small victory, Kratas came back to me and I asked, 'What mood was
Tanus in when he left you?' Kratas turned serious again. "The blackest and
most ugly temper I have ever witnessed. He cursed the gods and Pharaoh. He even
cursed the Lady Lostris and called her a royal whore.' I winced to hear it. Yet I knew that this was not
my Tanus speaking. It was the voice of despairing and hopeless love. 'He said that Pharaoh could carry out his threat to
have him strangled for sedition and he would welcome the release. No, he was in
terrible straits and there was nothing that I could do or say to comfort him.' 'That was all? He gave you no hint as to what he
intended?' Kratas shook his head and refilled his beer mug. 'What happened to the hawk seal?' I asked. 'He left it with me. He said he had no further use
for it. I have it safe aboard the Breath of Horus.' 'What of the other arrangements that I discussed
with you? Have you done what I asked?' He looked into his mug guiltily and muttered, 'I
began to make the arrangements, but after Tanus was gone, there seemed no point
to it. Besides, I have been busy down-river since then.' 'It is not like you, Kratas, to be so unreliable.'
I had found that with Kratas hurt disappointment was more effective man anger.
'My Lady Lostris was relying on you. She told me that she trusted you
completely. Kratas is a great rock of strength—those were her exact words.' I could see that it was working yet again, for
Kratas is also one of my mistress's ardent admirers. Even a hint of her
displeasure would move him. 'Damn you, Taita, you make me sound like a
weak-kneed idiot—' I kept silent, but silent can be more irksome than words.
'What in the name of Horus does the Lady Lostris want me to do?' 'Nothing more than I asked you to do before I left
for Elephantine,' I told him, and he slammed down his mug. 'I am a soldier. I cannot leave my duties and take
half the squadron to go off on some mad adventure. It was one thing when Tanus
had the hawk seal—' 'You have the hawk seal now,' I told him softly. He stared at me. 'I cannot use it without Tanus—' 'You are his lieutenant. Tanus gave you the hawk
seal to use. You know what to do with it. Do it! I will find Tanus and bring
him back, but you must be ready by then. There is desperate and bloody work
ahead, and Tanus needs you. Don't let him down, not again.' He flushed with anger at the jibe. Til make you
swallow those words.' he promised. 'And that will be the finest meal you could set for
me,' I told him. I love brave and honest men, they are so easily manipulated. I WAS UNCERTAIN AS TO HOW I WOULD make good my
promise to find Tanus, but I left Kratas to sleep off his debauch, and I went
out into the town again to try. Once more I made the rounds of every one of his
old haunts and questioned anyone who could possibly have seen him. I had no
illusions as to the risk I was taking in pursuing my enquiries about Tanus, or
as to just how flimsy was my disguise if I should run into anybody who knew me
well, but I' had to find him. I kept going through the night, until even the
shebeens and whorehouses along the waterfront had thrown out the last drunken
customers and doused their lamps. As the dawn broke over the river, I stood tired and
disconsolate on the bank of the Nile, and tried to think if there was some
possibility I had overlooked. A wild honking cry made me look up. High above me
a straggling skein of Egyptian geese was outlined against the pale gold and
coppery tonep of the eastern sky. Immediately they brought to my mind those
happy days that the three of us, Tanus and the Lady Lostris and myself, had
spent wild-fowling in the swamps. 'Fool!' I reviled myself. 'Of course that's it.' By this time they alleyways of the souk were filled
with a noisy, jostling crowd. Thebes is the busiest city in the world, no man
is idle here. They blow glass and work gold and silver, they weave flax and
throw pots. The merchant deals and haggles, the lawyer cants, the priest chants
and the whore swives. It is an exciting, flamboyant city and I love it. I forced my way through the throng and the hubbub
of banter and bargaining as the merchants and the farmers displayed-their wares
for the housewives and the bailiffs of the rich households. The souk stank
fulsomely of spices and fruits, of vegetables and fish and meats, some of which
were far from fresh. Cattle bellowed and goats bleated and added their dung to
the human contribution of excrement that trickled down the open gutters towards
old Mother Nile. I thought of buying an ass, for it would be a long
walk in this hottest season of the year, and there were some sturdy beasts on
offer. In the end I decided against such extravagance, not only on the grounds
of economy, for I knew that once I was out in the open countryside, an
expensive animal would certainly attract the attention of the Shrikes. For such
a prize they might overcome their religious scruples. Instead, I purchased only
a few handfuls of dates and a loaf of bread, a leather bag to carry these
provisions and a gourd water-bottle. Then I set out through the narrow streets
for the main gate of the city. I had not reached the gates when there was a
commotion in the street ahead of me and a detachment of the palace guards came
towards me, using their staves to force a passage through the market crowds.
Close behind them a half-dozen slaves carried an ornate and curtained litter at
a jog-trot. I was trapped against the clay-daub walls of one of the buildings
and though I recognized both the litter and the commander of the bodyguards, I
could not avoid a confrontation. Panic seized me. I might survive a casual scrutiny from
Rasfer, but I was certain that even under my disguise, my Lord Intef would know
me instantly. Standing beside me was an old slave woman with breasts like two
great amphorae of olive oil and a backside like a hippopotamus's. I wriggled
sideways until her bulk hid me. Then I settled my wig over my eyes and peeped
out from behind her. Despite my fears I felt a tingle of professional
pride that Rasfer was on his feet again so soon after my surgery. He led his
troop of bodyguards towards where I hid, but it was only when he drew almost
level that I noticed that one side of his face had collapsed. It was as though
his unlovely features had been modelled in wax and then held close to a naked
flame. This condition is often the consequence of even the most skilful
trepanning. The other half of his face was set in its customary scowl. If
Rasfer had been hideous before, now he should cause the children to cry and
their elders to make the sign against the evil eye when they looked upon him. He passed close by where I stood, and the litter
followed him. Through a chink in the embroidered curtains I caught a glimpse of
Lord Intef as he sprawled elegantly on pillows of pure silk imported from the
East that must have cost at least five gold rings each. His cheeks were freshly shaved and his hair was
dressed in formal ringlets. On top of his coiffure was set a cone of perfumed
beeswax that would melt in the heat and trickle over his scalp and down his
neck to cool and soothe his skin. One hand, the fingers stiff with jewelled
rings, lay languidly on the smooth brown thigh of a pretty little slave boy who
must have been a recent addition to his collection, for I did not recognize
him. I was taken off-guard by the strength of my own
hatred as I looked at my old master. All the countless injuries and
humiliations that I had suffered at his hands rushed back to torment me, and
these were aggravated by his most recent outrage. By sending the cobra to me he
had endangered the life of my mistress. If I had been able to forgive all else,
I would never be able to forgive him that. He began to turn his head in my direction, but
before our eyes could meet, I sank down behind the mountainous woman in, front
of me. The litter was borne away down the narrow alley, and as I stared after
it, I found that I was trembling just as I had after my struggle with the
cobra. 'Divine Horus, hear this plea. Grant me no rest
until he is dead and gone to his master, Seth,' I whispered, and I pushed my
way on towards the city gate. THE INUNDATION WAS AT ITS HEIGHT, and the lands
along the river were in the fecund embrace of the Nile. As she had done every
season from the beginning of time, she was laying down on our fields another
rich layer of black silt. When she receded again, those glistening expanses
would once more bloom with that shade of green that is peculiar to this very
Egypt. The rich silt and the sunshine would raise three crops to harvest before
the Nile poured over its banks once more to deliver its bounty. The borders of the flooded fields were hemmed with
the raised dykes that controlled the flood and also served as roadways. I
followed one of these footpaths eastward until I reached the rocky ground along
the foothills, then I turned southward. As I went, I paused occasionally to
turn over a rock beside the path, until I found what I was looking for. Then I
struck out with more determination. I kept a wary eye on the rough and broken ground on
my right-hand side, for that was just the type of terrain that would afford a
fine ambush for a band of Shrikes. I was crossing one of the rocky ravines that
lay across the pathway when I was hailed from close at hand. 'Pray for me, beloved of the gods!' My nerves were
so tightly strung that I had let out a startled cry and leapt in the air before
I could prevent it. A shepherd boy sat on the edge of the ravine just
above me. He was not more than ten years old, but he seemed as old as man's
first sin. I knew that the Shrikes often used these children as their scouts
and their sentinels. This grubby little imp looked perfect for that role. His
hair was matted with filth, and he wore a badly tanned goat's skin that I could
smell from where I stood. His eyes were as bright and as avaricious as those of
a crow as he ran them over me, assessing my costume and my baggage. 'Where are you headed, and what is your business,
good father?' he asked, and blew a long warbling note on his reed flute that
could have been a signal to somebody hidden further up the hillside. It took another few moments for my heart to steady
its wild pace, and my voice was a little breathless as I told him, 'You are
impertinent, child. What business is it of yours who I am or where I go?' Immediately he changed his demeanour towards me. 'I
am starved, gentle priest, an orphan forced to fend for myself. Don't you have
a crust for me in that big bag of yours?' 'You look well-nourished to me.' I turned away, but
he scrambled down the bank and danced beside me. 'Let me see in your bag, kind father,' he insisted.
'Alms, I beg of you, gentle sir.' 'Very well, you little ruffian.' Out of the bag I
brought a ripe date. He reached out for it, but before his fingers touched it,
I closed my hand and when I opened it again the date had been transformed into
a purple scorpion. The poisonous insect lifted its tail menacingly over its
head, and the boy screamed and fled back up the bank. At the top he paused only long enough to howl at
me, 'You are not a priest. You are one of the desert djinn. You are a devil,
not a man.' Frantically he made the sign against the evil eye and spat three
times on the ground, and then he raced away up the hill. I had captured the scorpion from under a flat rock
farther back along the path. Naturally, I had nipped the sting from the end of
its tail before slipping it into my bag in readiness for just such an
eventuality. The old slave who had taught me to read lips, had showed me a few
other tricks while he was about it. One of them was sleight-of-hand. At the shoulder of the next hill I paused to look
back. The shepherd boy was on the crest far above me, but he was not alone.
There were two men with him. They stood in a group looking down at me, and the
child was gesticulating vehemently. As soon as they saw I had spotted them, all
three of them disappeared over the skyline. I doubted they would want further
truck with a demon priest. I had not gone much farther when I saw movement on
the track ahead of me, and I stopped short and shaded my eyes against the
dazzle of the noonday sun. I was relieved to make out a small and
innocent-seeming party coming in my direction. I moved forward cautiously to
meet it, and as we drew together, my heart leaped as I thought I recognized
Tanus. He was leading a donkey. The doughty little animal was heavily burdened.
Atop the large bundle on its back sat a woman and a child, but it trotted on
gamely. I saw that the woman was herself heavily burdened, her belly swelling
out with her pregnancy. The child balanced behind her was a girl on the verge of
puberty. I was about to hail Tanus and hurry forward to meet
him, when I realized that I was mistaken and the man was a stranger. It was his
tall, broad-shouldered figure, the limber way he moved and the shining shock of
gold-blond hair that had deceived me. He was watching me suspiciously and had
drawn his sword. Now he pulled the donkey off the path and interposed himself
between me and the precious burden it carried. 'The blessings of the gods upon you, good fellow.'
I played out my role as priest, and he grunted and kept the point of the sword
aimed at my belly. No man trusted a stranger in this very Egypt of ours. 'You risk the life of your family on this road, my
friend. You should have sought out the protection of a caravan. There are
brigands in the hills.' I was truly worried for them. The woman seemed gentle
and decent, while the child was on the verge of tears at my warding. 'Pass on, priest!' the man ordered. 'Keep your
advice for those who value it.' 'You are kind, gentle sir,' the woman whispered.
'We waited a week at Qena for the caravan, and could not wait longer. My mother
lives at Luxor, and she will help with the birth of my baby.' 'Silence, woman!' her husband growled at her. 'We
want no truck with strangers, even though they wear the robes of the
priesthood.' I hesitated, trying to fathom if there was anything
that I could do for them. The girl was a pretty little thing with dark obsidian
eyes, and she had quite touched my heart. However, at that moment the husband urged
the donkey past where I stood, and with a helpless shrug, I watched them go. 'You cannot bleed for all of mankind,' I told
myself. 'Nor can you force your advice on those who reject it.' Without looking
back again, I went on northwards. It was late afternoon before I looked down on the
spur of rock that thrust out into the green swampland. Even from this
vantage-point it was impossible to pick out the shanty. It was hidden deep in
the papyrus beds, and the roof was of papyrus stems, so the concealment was
perfect. I ran down the path, leaping from rock to rock, until I reached the
edge of the water. This far from the main course of the Nile, the flood was not
so significant. I found our old dilapidated boat tied up at the
landing. It was half-flooded and I had to bale it out before committing it to
the water. I poled out cautiously along the tunnel through the papyrus. At low
ebb of the Nile the shanty stood on dry land, but now there was sufficient
water under the stilts that supported it to drown a standing man. There was an empty boat in better shape than mine
tied to one of the hut stilts. I moored mine beside it, climbed the rickety
ladder and peered into our old hunting-lodge. It consisted of a single room,
and the sunshine streamed in through the holes in the"thatched roof, but
no matter, for it never rains in Upper Egypt. The hut had not been in such disorder since the day
Tanus and I had first discovered it. Clothing and weapons and cooking-pots were
scattered around like the debris of a battlefield. The stink of liquor was even
more powerful than that of old food and unwashed bodies. Those unwashed bodies were lying on an equally
unwashed mattress in the far corner. I crossed the littered floor gingerly to
inspect them for signs of life, and at that moment the woman grunted and rolled
over. She was young and her naked body was full and enticing, with big round
breasts and a thatch of crisp curls at the base of her belly. However, even in
repose, her face was hard and common. I had no doubt that Tanus had found her
on the waterfront. I had always known him to be fastidious, and he was
never a drinking man. This creature and the empty wine jars that were stacked
against every wall were merely an indication of. how far he had been brought
down. I looked at him now as he slept, and hardly recognized him. His face was
mottled and bloated with drink and covered with un-trimmed beard. It was clear
that he had not shaved since last I had seen him outside the harem walls. At that moment the woman woke. Her eyes focused on
me and in a single catlike movement she was off the mattress and reaching for
the sheathed dagger hanging on the wall beside me. I snatched the weapon away
before she could reach it and offered her the naked point. 'Go!' I ordered softly. 'Before I give you
something in your belly that even you have never felt before.' She gathered up her clothes and pulled them on
hurriedly, all the while staring at me venomously. 'He has not paid me,' she said, once she was
dressed. 'I am sure you have already helped yourself
generously.' I gestured towards the door with the dagger. 'He promised me five rings of gold.' She changed
her tone and began to whine. 'I have worked hard for him these last twenty days
or more. I have done everything for him, cooked and kept his house, serviced
him and cleaned up his puke when he was drunk. I must be paid. I will not leave
until you pay me—' I seized her by a lock of her long black hair and
ushered her to the doorway. I helped her, still by means of her hair, into the more
dilapidated of the two boats. Once she had poled out of my reach, she turned
upon me such a stream of abuse that the egrets and other water-fowl were
frightened from the reed-beds around us. When I returned to where Tanus lay, he had not
moved. I checked the wine jars. Most of them were empty, but there were still
two or three that were full. I wondered how he had accumulated such a store of
liquor, and guessed that he had probably sent the woman back to Karnak to find
a ferryman to ship it out to him. There had been enough to keep the entire
corps of the Blue Crocodile Guards drunk for a season. Little wonder that he
was in such a condition. I sat beside his mattress for a while, letting my
sympathy for him run its full course. He had tried to destroy himself. I
understood that, and did not despise him for it. His love for my mistress was
such that without it he did not wish to continue living. Of course I was also angry with him for abusing
himself in such a fashion, and for succumbing to such self-indulgent folly.
However, even in this pitiful drink-sodden state, I could still find much that
was noble and admirable about him. After all, he was not alone in guilt. My
mistress had tried to take poison for the very same reason as he had tried to
destroy himself. I had understood and forgiven her. Could I do less for Tanus?
I sighed for these two young people who were all that I had in Me of any real
value. Then I stood up and got to work. Firstly, I stood over Tanus for a while, bolstering
my anger to the extent that I could be really harsh with him. Then I took him
by the heels and dragged him across the floor of the hut. He came half out of
his stupor and cursed weakly, but I took no notice of his protests and tumbled
him through the doorway. He plunged into the swamp head-first and raised a
mighty splash as he went under. I waited for him to come up and flounder about
groggily on the surface, still only half-conscious. I dropped in beside him, grabbed a double handful
of his hair and thrust his head back under-water. For a moment he struggled
only weakly and I was able to hold him under with ease. Then his natural
instincts of survival took over and he heaved up with all his old strength. I
was lifted clear of the surface and thrown aside like a twig in a storm. Tanus came out bellowing in the effort to draw
breath, and striking out blindly at his unseen adversary. One of those blows
would have stunned a hippopotamus, and I backed away hurriedly and watched him
from a distance. Coughing and choking, he floundered to the ladder
and hung upon it with his hair streaming into his eyes. He had obviously
swallowed so much water and sucked so much of it into his lungs that I felt a
tingle of alarm. My cure might have been a little too vigorous. I was just
about to go to his aid, when he opened his mouth wide and a foul mixture of
swamp water and rotten wine erupted out of him. I was astonished by the
quantity of it. He hung on to the ladder, gasping and gurgling for
breath. I swam to one of the stilts of the hut and waited until he had vomited
again before I told him, putting all the contempt 1 could muster into my voice,
'My Lady Lostris would be so proud to see you now.' He peered about with streaming eyes and focused on
me at last. 'Taita, damn you! Was it you that tried to drown me? You idiot, I
could have killed you.' 'hi your present condition the only damage you
could do would be to a jar of wine. What a sorry, disgusting sight you are!' I
climbed the ladder into the hut and left him in the water, shaking his head and
mumbling to himself. I set about tidying up the mess and the filth. It was some time before Tanus followed me up the
ladder and sat shamefacedly in the doorway. I ignored him-and went on with my
work, until at last he was forced to break the silence. 'How are you, old friend? I have missed you.' 'Others have missed you also. Kratas, for one. The
squadron has been fighting down-river. They could have found use for another
sword. My Lady Lostris, for another. She speaks of you every day, and holds her
love pure and true. I wonder what she would think of that trollop I chased out
of your bed?' He groaned and held his head. 'Oh, Taita, don't
speak your mistress's name. To be reminded of her is unbearable—' 'So broach another jug of wine and wallow in your
own filth and your self-pity,' I suggested angrily. 'I have lost her for ever. What would you have me
do then?' 'I would want you to have faith and fortitude, as
she has.' He looked up at me pitifully. Tell me about her,
Taita. How is she? Does she still think of me?' 'More is the pity,' I grunted disgustedly. 'She
thinks of little else. She holds herself ready for the day that you two are
brought together again.' 'That will never be. I have lost her for ever and I
don't want to go on living.' 'Good!' I agreed briskly. 'Then I'll not waste
further time here. I'll tell my mistress that you did not want to hear her
message.' I pushed past him, swarmed down the ladder and dropped into the
skiff. 'Wait, Taita!' he called after me. 'Come back!' 'To what purpose? You want to die. Then get on with
it. I'll send the embalmers out to pick up the corpse later.' He grinned with embarrassment. 'All right, I am
being a fool. The drink has fuddled my mind. Come back, I beg of you. Give me
the message from Lostris.' With a show of reluctance I climbed back up the
ladder, and he followed me into the hut, staggering only a little. 'My mistress bids me tell you that her love for you
is untouched by any of the things that have been thrust upon her. She is still
and will always be your woman.' 'By Horus, she puts me to shame,' he muttered. 'No,' I disagreed. 'Your shame is of your own
making.' He snatched his sword from the scabbard that hung
above the filthy bed and slashed out at the row of wine amphorae that stood
against the far wall. As each one burst, the wine poured out and trickled
through the slats of the floor. He was panting as he came back to me, and I scoffed
at him. 'Look at you! You have let yourself go until you are as soft and as
short of wind as an old priest—' 'Enough of that, Taita! You have had your say. Mock
me no more, or you will regret it.' I could see he was becoming as angry as I had
intended. My insults were stiffening him up nicely. 'My mistress would have you
take uj? the challenge thrown to you by Pharaoh so that you will still be alive
and a man of honour and worth in five years' time, when she is free to come to
-you.' I had his full attention now. 'Five years? What is
this about, Taita? Will there truly be a term to our suffering?' 'I worked the Mazes for Pharaoh. He will be dead in
five years from now,' I told him simply. He stared at me in awe and I saw a
hundred different emotions pursue each other across his features. He is as easy
to read as this scroll on which I write. "The Mazes!' he whispered at last. Once long
ago he had been a doubter, and had disparaged my way with the Mazes. That had
changed and he was now an even firmer believer in my powers than my mistress.
He had seen my visions become reality too often to be otherwise. 'Can you wait that long for your love?' I asked.
'My mistress swears that she can wait for you through all eternity. Can you
wait a few short years for her?' 'She has promised to wait for me?' he demanded. 'Through all eternity,' I repeated, and I thought
he might begin to weep. I could not have faced that, not watched a man like
Tanus in tears, so I went on hastily, 'Don't you want to hear the vision that
the Mazes gave me?' He thrust back the tears. 'Yes! Yes!" he
agreed eagerly, and so we began to talk. We talked until the night fell, and
then we sat in the darkness and talked some more. I told him the things that I had told my Lady
Lostris, all the details that I had kept from them both over the years. When I
came to the details of how his father, Pianki, Lord Harrab, had been ruined and
destroyed by his secret enemy, Tanus' anger was so fierce that it burned away
the last effects of the debauchery from his mind, and by the time the dawn
broke over the swamps, his resolve was once more clear and strong. 'Let us get on with this enterprise of yours, for
it seems the right and proper way.' He sprang to his feet and girded on his
sword scabbard. Although I thought it wise to rest a while and let him recover
fully from the effects of the wine, he would have no part of it. 'Back to Karnak at once!' he insisted. 'Kratas is
waiting, and the lust to avenge my father's memory and to lay eyes on my own
sweet love again burns like a fire in my blood.' ONCE WE HAD LEFT THE SWAMP, TANUS took the lead
along the rocky path, and I followed him at a run. As soon as the sun came up
above the horizon, the sweat burst out across his back and streamed down to
soak the waistband of his kilt. It was as though the rancid old wine was being
purged from his body. Although I could hear him panting wildly, he never paused
to rest or even moderated his pace, but ran on into the rising heat from the
desert without a check. It was I who pulled him up with a shout, and we stood
shoulder to shoulder and stared ahead. The birds had caught my attention. I had
picked out the commotioji of their wings from afar. 'Vultures,' Tanus grunted with ragged breath. 'They
have something dead amongst the rocks.' He drew his sword and we went forward
cautiously. We found the man first, and chased the vultures off
him in a flurrying storm of wings. I recognized him by the shock of blond hair
as the husband I had met on the road the previous day. There was nothing left
of his face, for he had lain upon his back and the birds had eaten the flesh
away to the bones of the skull. They had picked out his eyes, and the empty
sockets stared at the cloudless sky. His lips were gone and he grinned with
bloody teeth, as though at the futile joke of our brief existence upon this
earth. Tanus rolled him on to his stomach, and we saw at once the stab-wounds
in his back that had killed him. There were a dozen of these thrust through his
ribs. 'Whoever did this was making sure of the job,'
Tanus remarked, hardened to death as only a seasoned soldier can be. I walked on into the rocks and a buzzing black
cloud of flies rose from the dead body of the wife. I have never understood
where the flies come from, how they materialize so swiftly out of the searing
dry heat of the desert. I guessed that the wife had aborted while they were
busy with her. They must have left her alive after they had taken their
pleasure with her. With the last of her strength she had taken the infant
protectively in her arms. She had died like that, huddled against a boulder,
shielding her still-born infant from the vultures. I went on deeper into the broken ground, and once
again the flies led me to where the bandits had dragged the little girl. At
least one of them had summoned up the compassion to cut her throat after they
had finished with her, rather than let her bleed slowly to death. One of the flies settled on my lips. I brushed it
away and began to weep. Tanus found me still weeping. 'Did you know them?' he asked, and I nodded and cleared
my throat to answer. 'I met them on the road yesterday. I tried to
warn—' I broke off, for it was not easy to continue. I took a deep breath.
"They had a donkey. The Shrikes will have taken it.' Tanus nodded. His expression was bleak as he turned
away and made a rapid cast amongst the rocks. 222 'This way’, he called, and broke into a run,
heading out into the rocky desert. 'Tanus!' I yelled after him. 'Kratas is waiting—'
But he took not the least notice and I was left with no option but to follow
him. I caught up with him again when he lost the tracks of the donkey on a bad
piece of ground and was forced to cast ahead. 'I feel for that family even more than you do,' I
insisted. 'But this is folly. Kratas waits for us. We do not have time to
waste—' He cut me off without even glancing in my
direction, 'How old was that child? Not more than nine years? I always have
time to see justice done.' His face was cold and vengeful. It was clear to see
that he had recovered all his former mettle. I knew better than to argue
further. The image of the little girl was still strong and
clear in my mind. I joined him and we picked up the trail again. Now, with the
two of us cooperating, we went forward even more swiftly. Tanus and I had tracked gazelle and oryx, and even
lion, in this fashion and we had both become adept at this esoteric art. We
worked as a team, running on each side of the spurs that our quarry had left,
and signalling every twist or change in it to each other. Very soon our quarry
reached a rough track that led eastward from the river and still deeper into
the desert. They had joined it, and made our task of catching up with them that
much simpler. It was almost noon, and our water-bottles were
empty when at last we spotted them far ahead. There were five of them, and the
donkey. It was clear that they had not expected to be followed deep into the
desert which was their fastness, and they were moving carelessly. They had not
even taken the trouble to cover then- back-trail. Tanus pulled me down behind the shelter of a rock
while we caught our breath, and he growled at me, 'We'll circle out ahead of
them. I want to see their faces.' He jumped up and led me in a wide detour out to one
side of the track. We overtook the band of Shrikes, but well beyond then- line
of sight. Then we cut in again to meet the track ahead of them. Tanus had a
soldier's eye for ground, and set up the ambuscade unerringly. We heard them coining from afar, the clatter of the
don-key's hooves and the sing-song of their voices. While we waited for them, I
had the first opportunity to contemplate the prudence of my decision to follow
along so unquestion-ingly. When the party of Shrikes at last came into view I
was convinced that I had been over-hasty. They were as murderous-looking a bunch
of ruffians as I had ever laid eyes upon, and I was armed only with my little
jewelled dagger. Just short of where we lay, the tall, bearded
Bedouin who was obviously their leader stopped suddenly, and ordered one of the
men who followed him to unload the water-skin from the donkey. He drank first
and then passed it on to the others. My throat closed in sympathy as I watched
them swallow down the precious stuff. 'By Horus, look at the stains of the women's blood
on their robes. I wish I had Lanata with me now,' Tanus whispered, as we
crouched amongst the rocks. 'I could put an arrow through that one's belly and
drain the water from him like beer from the vat.' Then he laid a hand on my
arm. 'Don't move until I do, do you hear me? I want no heroics from you now,
mind.' I nodded vigorously, and felt not the slightest inclination to protest
against these very reasonable instructions. The Shrikes came on again directly to where we
waited. They were all heavily armed. The Bedouin walked ahead. His sword was strapped
between his shoulder-blades, but with the handle protruding up over his left
shoulder, ready to hand. He had the cowl of his woollen cloak drawn over his
head to protect him from the fierce sunlight. It impaired his side-vision and
he did not notice us as he passed close in front of us. Two others followed him closely, one of them
leading the donkey. The last two sauntered along behind the animal, engrossed
in a listless squabble over a piece of gold jewellery that they had taken from
the murdered woman. All their weapons were sheathed, except for the short,
bronze-headed stabbing spears carried by the last pair. Tanus let them all pass, and then he stood up
quietly and moved in. behind the last two men in the column. He appeared to move
casually, as the leopard does, but it was in reality only a breath before he
swung his sword at the neck of the man on the right. Although I had intended backing Tanus up to the
full, somehow my good intentions had not been translated into action, and I
still crouched behind my comforting rock. I justified myself with the thought
that I would probably only have hindered him if I had followed him too closely. I had never watched Tanus kill a man before.
Although I knew that it was his vocation and that he had, over the years, had
every opportunity to hone these gruesome skills, still I was astonished by his
virtuosity. As he struck, his victim's head leapt from its shoulders like a
desert spring-hare from its burrow, and the decapitated trunk actually took
another step before the legs buckled under it. As the blow reached the limit of
its arc, Tanus smoothly reversed the stroke. With the same movement he struck
back-handed at the next brigand. The second neck severed just as cleanly. The
head toppled off and fell free, while the carcass slumped forward with the
blood fountaining high in the air. The splash of blood and the weighty thump-thump of
the two disembodied heads striking the rocky earth alerted the other three Shrikes.
They spun about in alarm, and for a moment stared in bewildered disbelief at
the sudden carnage in their ranks. Then with a wild shout they drew their
swords and rushed at Tanus in a body. Rather than retreating before them, Tanus
charged them ferociously, splitting them apart. He swung to face the man he had
isolated from his mates, and his thrust ripped a bloody flesh-wound down the
side of his chest. The man squealed and reeled backwards. But before Tanus was
able to finish him off, the other two fell upon him from behind. Tanus was
forced to spin round to face them, and bronze clashed on bronze as he stopped
their charge. He held them off at sword's-length, engaging first one and then
the other, until the lightly wounded man recovered and came at him from his
rear. 'Behind you!' I yelled at him, and he whipped round
only just in time to catch the thrust on his own blade. Instantly the other two
were upon him again, and he was forced to give ground in order to defend
himself from all sides. His swordsmanship was breathtaking to watch. So swift
was his blade that it seemed that he had erected a glittering wall of bronze
around himself against which the blows of his enemies clattered ineffectually. Then I realized that Tanus was tiring. The sweat
streamed from his body in the heat, and his features were contorted with the
effort. The long weeks of wine and debauchery had taken their toll of what had
once been his limitless strength and stamina. He fell back before the next rush with which the
bearded Bedouin drove at him, until he pressed his back to one of the boulders
on the opposite side of the track from where I still crouched helplessly. With
the rock to cover his back, all three of his attackers were forced to come at
him from the front. But this was no real respite. Their attack was relentless.
Led by the Bedouin, they howled like a pack of wild dogs as they bayed him, and
Tanus' right arm tired and moved slower. The spear carried by the first man whom Tanus had
beheaded had fallen in the middle of the track. I realized that I must do
something immediately if I were not to watch Tanus hacked down before my eyes.
With a huge effort I gathered up my slippery courage, and crept from my
hiding-place. The Shrikes had forgotten all about me in their eagerness for the
kill. I reached the spot where the spear lay without any one of them noticing
me, and I snatched it up. With the solid weight of the weapon in my hands, all
my lost courage came flooding back. The Bedouin was the most dangerous of the three of
Tanus' adversaries, and he was also the closest to me. His back was towards me,
and his whole attention was on. the unequal duel. I levelled the spear and
rushed at him. The kidneys are the most vulnerable target in the
human back. With my knowledge of anatomy, I could aim my thrust exactly. The
spear-point went in a finger's-width to one side of the spinal column, all the
way in. The broad spear-head opened a gaping wound, and skewered his right
kidney with a surgeon's precision. The Bedouin stiffened and froze like a
temple statue, instantly paralysed by my thrust. Then, as I viciously twisted
the blade in his flesh the way Tanus had taught me, mincing his kidney to pulp,
the sword fell from his fist and he collapsed with such a dreadful cry that his
comrades were distracted enough to give Tanus his chance. Tanus' next thrust took one of them in the centre
of his chest, and despite his exhaustion it still had sufficient power in it to
fly cleanly through the man's torso and for the blood-smeared point to protrude
a hand-span from between his shoulder-blades. Before Tanus was able to clear
his blade from the clinging embrace of live flesh and to kill the last Shrike,
the survivor spun round and ran. Tanus took a few paces after him, then gasped, 'I'm
all done in. After him, Taita, don't let that murderous jackal get away.' There are very few men that can outrun me. Tanus is
the only one I know of, but he has to be on top form to do it. I put my foot in
the centre of the Bedouin's back and held him down as I jerked the spearhead
out of his flesh, and then I went after the last Shrike. I caught him before he had gone two hundred paces,
and I was running so lightly that he did not hear me coming up behind him. With
the edge of the spear-head I slashed the tendon in the back of his heel, and he
went down sprawling. The sword flew out of his hand. As he lay on his back
kicking and screaming at me, I danced around him, pricking him with the point
of the spear, goading him into position for a good clean killing thrust. 'Which of the women did you enjoy the best?' I
asked him, as I stabbed him in the thigh. 'Was it the mother, with her big
belly, or was it the little girl? Was she tight enough for you?' 'Please spare me!' he screamed. 'I did nothing. It
was the others. Don't kill me!' "There is dried blood on the front of your
kilt,' I said, and I stabbed him in the stomach, but not too deeply. 'Did the
child scream as loudly as you do now?' I asked. As he rolled over into a ball to protect his
stomach, I stabbed him in the spine, by a lucky chance finding the gap between
the vertebrae. Instantly he was paralysed from the waist down, and I stepped
back from him. 'Very well,' I said. 'You ask me not to kill you,
and I won't. It would be too good for you.' I turned away and walked back to join Tanus. The
maimed Shrike dragged himself a little way after me, his paralysed legs
slithering after him like a fisherman dragging a pair of dead carp. Then the
effort was too much and he collapsed in a whimpering heap. Although it was past
noon, the sun still had enough heat in it to kill him before it set. Tanus looked at me curiously as I came back to join
him. "There is a savage streak in you that I never suspected before.' He
shook his head in wonder. 'You never fail to amaze me.' He pulled the water-skin from the back of the
donkey and offered it to me, but I shook my head. 'You first You need it more
than I do.' He drank, his eyes tightly closed with the pleasure
of it, and then gasped, 'By the sweet breath of Isis, you are right I am soft
as an old woman. Even that little piece of sword-play nearly finished me.' Then
he looked around at the scattered corpses, and grinned with satisfaction. 'But
all in all, not a bad start on Pharaoh's business.' 'It was the poorest of beginnings,' I contradicted
him, and when he crooked an eyebrow at me I went on, 'We should have kept at
least one of them alive to lead us to the Shrikes' nest. Even that one', I
gestured towards the dying man lying out there amongst the rocks, 'is too
far-gone to be of any use to us. It was my fault. I allowed my anger to get the
better of me. We won't make the same mistake again.' We were halfway back to where we had left the
bodies of the murdered family before my true nature reasserted itself, and I
began bitterly to regret my callous and brutal treatment of the maimed brigand. 'After all, he was a human being, as we are,' I
told Tanus, and he snorted. 'He was an animal, a rabid jackal, and you did a
fine job. You have mourned him far too long. Forget him. Tell me, instead, why
we must make this detour back to look at dead men, instead of heading straight
for Kratas' camp.' 'I need the husband's body.' I would say no more
until we stood over the mutilated corpse. The pathetic relic was already
stinking in the heat The vultures had left very little flesh on the bones. 'Look at that hair,' I told Tanus. 'Who else do you
know with a bush' like that?' For a moment he looked puzzled, and then he
grinned and ran his fingers through his own dense ringlets. 'Help me load him on the donkey,' I ordered.
'Kratas can take him into Karnak to the morticians for embalming. We'll buy him
a good funeral and a fine tomb with your name on the walls. Then, by sunset
tomorrow, all of Thebes will know that Tanus, Lord Harrab perished in the
desert, and was half-eaten by the birds.' 'If Lostris hears of it—' Tanus looked worried. Til send a warning letter to her. The advantage we
will win by letting the world believe you dead will far outweigh any risk of
alarming my mistress.' KRATAS WAS CAMPED AT THE FIRST oasis on the caravan
road to the Red Sea, less than a day's march from Karnak. He had with him a
hundred men of the Blue Crocodile Guards, all of them carefully selected, as I
had commanded. Tanus and I reached the encampment in the middle of the night.
We had travelled hard and were close to exhaustion. We fell on our
sleeping-mats beside the camp-fire and slept until dawn. At first light, Tanus was up and mingling with his
men. Their delight at having him back was transparent. The officers embraced
him and the men cheered him, and grinned with pride as he greeted each of them
by name. At breakfast Tanus gave Kratas instructions to take
the putrefying corpse back to Karnak for burial and to make certain that the
news of his death was the gossip of all Thebes. I gave Kratas a letter for my
Lady Lostris. He would find a trustworthy messenger to carry it up-river to
Elephantine. Kratas selected an escort of ten men, and they
prepared to set off with the donkey and its odorous burden, back towards the
Nile and Thebes. 'Try to catch up with us on the road to the sea. If
you cannot, then you'll find us camped at the oasis of Gebel Nagara. We will
wait for you there,' Tanus shouted after him, as the detachment trotted out
ofVhe encampment. 'And remember to bring Lanata, my bow, when you return!' NO SOONER WAS KRATAS OUT OF SIGHT beyond the first
rise on the westerly road than Tanus formed up the rest of the regiment and led
us away in the opposite direction along the caravan road towards the sea. The caravan road from the banks of the river Nile
to the shores of the Red Sea was long and hard. A large, unwieldy caravan
usually took twenty days to make the journey. We covered the distance in four
days, for Tanus pushed us in a series of forced marches. At the outset, he and
I were probably the only ones of all the company who were not in superb
physical condition. However, by the time we reached Gebel Nagara, Tanus had
burned the excess fat off his frame and sweated out the last poisons from the
wine jar. He was once again lean and hard. As for myself, it was the first time that I had
ever made a forced march with a company of the guards. For the first few days I
suffered all the torments of thirst and aching muscles, of blistered feet and
exhaustion that the Ka of a dead man must be forced to endure on the road to
the underworld. However, my pride would not allow me to fall behind, apart from
the facMjiat to do so in this wild and savage landscape would have meant
certain death. To my surprise and pleasure, I found that after the first few
days, it became easier and easier to keep my place in the ranks of trotting
warriors. Along the way, we passed two large caravans moving
towards the Nile, with the donkeys bow-legged under their heavy loads of trade
goods, and escorts of heavily armed men far surpassing in number the merchants
and their' retainers who made up the rest of the company. No caravan was safe
from the depredations of the Shrikes unless it was protected by a force of
mercenaries such as these, or unless the merchants were prepared to pay the
crippling toll money that the Shrikes demanded to allow them free passage. When we met these strangers, Tanus pulled his shawl
over his head to mask his face and hide that golden bush of hair. He was too
distinctive a figure to risk being recognized and his continued existence being
reported in Karnak. We'did not respond to the greetings and questions that were
flung at us by these other travellers, but ran past them in aloof silence
without even glancing in their direction. When we were still a day's march from the coast, we
left the main caravan route and swung away southwards, following an ancient
disused track that had been shown to me some years previously by one of the
wild Bedouin whom I had befriended. The wells at Gebel Nagara lay on this old
route to the sea, and were seldom visited by humans these days, only by the
Bedouin and the desert bandits, if you can call these human. By the time we reached the wells, I was as slim and
physically fit as I had ever been in my life, but I lamented the lack of a
mirror, for I was convinced that this new energy and force that I felt within
myself must be reflected in my features, and that my beauty must be enhanced by
it. I would have welcomed the opportunity to admire it myself. However, there
seemed to be no dearth of others to admire it in my place. At the camp-fire in
the evenings, many a prurient glance was flashed in my direction, and I
received more than a few sly offers from my companions, for even such an elite
fighting corps as the guards was contaminated by the new sexual licence that
permeated our society. I kept my dagger beside me in the night and when I
pricked the first uninvited visitor to my sleeping-mat with the needle-point,
his yells caused much hilarity amongst the others. After that, I was spared any
further unwelcome attentions. Even once we had reached the wells, Tanus would
allow us little rest. While we waited for Kratas to catch up, he kept his men
exercising at arms, and at competitions of archery and wrestling and running. I
was pleased to see that Kratas had chosen these men strictly in accordance with
my instructions to him. There was not a single hulking brute amongst them.
Apart from Tanus himself, they were all small, agile men aptly suited to the
role that I planned for them. Kratas arrived only two days behind us. Taking into
account his return to Karnak and the time taken up by the tasks that Tanus had
set for him there, this meant that he must have travelled even more swiftly
than we had done. 'What held you up?' Tanus greeted him. 'Did you
find a willing maid on the way?' 'I had two heavy burdens to carry,' Kratas replied,
as they embraced. 'Your bow, and the hawk seal. I am glad to be rid of both of them.'
He handed over both the weapon and the statuette with a grin, delighted as ever
to be back with Tanus. Tanus immediately took Lanata out into the desert.
I went with him and helped him stalk close to a herd of gazelle. With these
fleet little creatures racing and leaping across the plain, it was an
extraordinary sight to watch Tanus bowl over a dozen of them at full run with
as many arrows. That night, as we feasted on grilled livers and fillets of
gazelle, we discussed the next stage of my plan. In the morning we left Kratas in command of the
guards, and Tanus and I set out alone for the coast. It was only half a day's
travel to the small fishing village which was our goal, and at noon we topped
the last rise and looked down from the hills on to the glittering expanse of
the sea spread below us. From this height we could see clearly the dark outline
ofthe coral reefs beneath the turquoise waters. As soon as we entered the village, Tanus called for
the headman, and so apparent from his bearing was Tanus' importance and
authority, that the old man came at a run. When Tanus showed him the hawk seal,
he fell to the earth in obeisance, as though it were Pharaoh himself who stood
before him, and beat his head upon the ground with such force that I feared he might
do himself serious injury. When I lifted him to his feet once more, he led us
to the finest lodgings in the village, his own filthy hovel, and turned his
numerous family out to make room for us. Once we had eaten a bowl of the fish stew that our
host provided and drunk a cup of the delicious palm wine, Tanus and I went down
to the beach of dazzling white sand and bathed away the sweat and the dust of
the desert in the warm waters of the lagoon that was enclosed by the jagged
barricade of coral that lay parallel to the shore. Behind us the harsh
mountains, devoid of the faintest green tinge of growing things, thrust up into
the aching blue desert sky. Sea, mountains and sky combined in a symphony of
grandeur that stunned the senses. However, I had little time to appreciate it
all, for the fishing fleet was returning. Five small dilapidated vessels with
sails of woven palm-fronds were coming in through the pass in the reef. So
great was the load of fish that each of them carried, that they seemed in danger
of foundering before they could reach the beach. I am fascinated by all the natural bounty that the
gods provide for us, and I examined the catch avidly as it was thrown out upon
the beach, and questioned the fishermen as to each of the hundred different
species. The pile of fish formed a glittering treasure of rainbow colours, and
I wished that I had my scrolls and paint-pots to record it all. This interlude was too brief. As soon as the catch
was unloaded, I embarked on one of the tiny vessels that stank so abundantly of
its vocation, and waved back at Tanus on the beach as we put out through the
pass in the reef. He was to remain here until I returned with the equipment
that we needed for the next part of my plan. Once again, I did not want him to
be recognized where I was going. His job now was to prevent any of the
fishermen or their families from sneaking away into the desert to a secret
meeting with the Shrikes, to report the presence in their village of a
golden-headed lord who bore the hawk seal. The tiny vessel threw up her bows at the first
strong scent of the sea, and the helmsman tacked across the wind and headed her
up into the north, running parallel to that dun and awful coast. We had but a
short way to go, and before nightfall the helmsman pointed over the bows at the
clustered stone buildings of the port of Safaga on the distant shore-line. FOR A THOUSAND YEARS SAFAGA HAD been the entrepot
for all trade coming into the Upper Kingdom from the East. Even as I stood in
the bows of our tiny craft, I could make out the shapes of other much larger
vessels on the northern horizon as they came and went between Safaga and the Arabian ports on the eastern shore of the narrow
sea. It was dark by the time that I stepped ashore on the
beach at Safaga, and nobody seemed to remark my arrival. I knew exactly where I
was going, for I had visited the port regularly on Lord Intefs nefarious
business. At this hour the streets were almost deserted, but the taverns were
packed. I made my way swiftly to the home of Tiamat the merchant. ; Tiamat was
a rich man and his home the largest in the old town. An armed slave barred the
door to me. 'Tell your master that the surgeon from Karnak who
saved his leg for him is here,' I ordered, and Tiamat himself limped out to
greet me. He was taken aback when he saw my clerical disguise, but had the good
sense not to remark on it, nor to mention my name in front of the slave. He
drew me into his walled garden, and as soon as we were alone he exclaimed, 'Is
it really you, Taita? I heard that you had been murdered by the Shrikes at
Elephantine.' He was a portly, middle-aged man, with an open,
intelligent face and a shrewd mind. Some years previously he had been carried
in to me on a litter. A party of travellers had found him beside the road,
where he had been left for dead after his caravan had been pillaged by the
Shrikes. I had stitched him together, and even managed to save the leg that had
already mortified by the time I first saw it. However, he would always walk
with a limp. 'I am delighted to see that the reports of your
death are premature,' he chuckled, and clapped his hands to have his slaves
bring me a cup of cool sherbet and a plate of figs and honeyed dates. After a decent interval of polite conversation, he
asked quietly, 'Is there anything I can do for you? I owe you my life. You have
only to ask. My home is your home. All I have is yours.' 'I am on the king's business,' I told him, and drew
out the hawk seal from under my tunic. His expression became grave. 'I acknowledge the
seal of Pharaoh. But it was not necessary to show it to me. Ask what you will
of me. I cannot refuse you.' He listened to all I had to say without another
word, and when I had finished, he sent for his bailiff and gave him his orders
in front of me. Before he sent the man away, he turned to me and said, 'Is
there anything that I have forgotten? Anything else you need at all?' 'Your generosity is without limits,' I told him.
'However, there is one other thing. I long for my writing materials.' He turned back to the bailiff. 'See to it that
there are scrolls and brushes and ink-pot in one of the packs.' After the bailiff had left, we sat on talking for
half the night. Tiamat stood at the centre of the busiest trading route in the Upper
Kingdom, and heard every rumour and whisper from the farthest reaches of the
empire, and from beyond the sea. I learned as much in those few hours in his
garden as I would in a month in the palace at Elephantine. 'Do you still pay your ransom to the Shrikes to
allow your caravans through?' I asked, and he shrugged with resignation. 'After what they did to my leg, what option do I
have? Each season then" demands become more exorbitant. I must pay over
one-quarter of the value of my goods to them as soon as the caravan leaves
Safaga, and half my profits once The goods are sold in Thebes. Soon they will
beggar us all, and grass will grow on the caravan roads, and the trade of the
kingdom will wither and die.' 'How do you make these payments?' I asked. 'Who
determines the amount, and who collects them?' 'They have then- spies here in the port. They watch
every cargo that is unloaded, and they know what each caravan carries when it
leaves Safaga. Before it even reaches the mountain pass, it will be met by one
of the robber chieftains who will demand the ransom they have set.' It was long past midnight before Tiamat called a
slave to light me to the chamber he had set aside for me. 'You will be gone before I rise tomorrow.' Tiamat
embraced me. 'Farewell, my good friend. My debt to you is not yet paid in full.
Call upon me again, whenever you have need.' The same slave woke me before dawn, and led me down
to the seafront in the darkness. A fine trading vessel of Tiamat's fleet was
moored inside the reef. The captain weighed anchor as soon as I came aboard. In the middle of the morning we crept in through
the pass in the coral and dropped anchor in front of the little fishing village
where Tanus stood on the beach to welcome me. DURING MY ABSENCE TANUS HAD MANAGED to gather
together six decrepit donkeys, and the sailors from Tiamat's ship waded ashore
carrying the bales that we had brought with us from Safaga, and loaded them on
to these miserable creatures. Tanus and I left the captain of the trading
vessel with strict orders to await our return, then, leading the string of
donkeys, we headed back, inland towards the wells at Gebel Nagara. Kratas' men had obviously suffered the heat and the
sand-flies and the boredom with poor grace, for they accorded us a welcome that
was out of keeping with the period that we had been absent. Tanus ordered
Kratas to parade them. The ranks of warriors watched as I unpacked the first
bale that we had brought in on the donkey train. Almost immediately their
interest gave way to mild amusement as I laid out the costume of a slave girl.
In its turn, this was replaced by a buzz of speculation and argument as the
bales yielded up a further seventy-nine* complete female costumes. Kratas and two of his officers helped me place one
of these on the sand in front of each guardsman, and then Tanus gave the order:
'Disrobe! Put on the dress in front of you!' There was a roar of protest and
incredulous hilarity, and k was only when Kratas and his officers passed down
the ranks with assumed expressions of sternness to reinforce the order, that
they began to obey it. Unlike our women who dress but lightly and often
leave their bosom bared and their legs free and naked, the women of Assyria
wear skirts that sweep the ground and sleeves that cover their arms to the
wrist. For reasons of misplaced modesty they even veil their faces when they
walk abroad, although perhaps these restrictions are placed upon them by the
possessive jealousy of their menfolk. Then again there is a wide difference
between the sunny land of Egypt and those more sombre climes where water falls
from the sky and turns solid white upon the moun-taintops, and the winds chill
the flesh and the bones of men like death. Once they had weathered the first shock of seeing
each other in'this outlandish apparel, the nien entered into the spirit of the
moment. Soon there were eighty veiled slave girls prancing and mincing about in
the long skirts that reached to their ankles, tweaking each other's buttocks
and casting exaggerated sheep's eyes at Tanus and his officers. The officers could no longer maintain their
gravity. Perhaps it is because of my peculiar circumstances that I have always
found the spectacle of men dressed as women to be vaguely repulsive, but it is
strange how few other men share my feelings of distaste, and it needs only some
hairy ruffian to don a skirt to reduce his audience to a state of incontinence. In the midst of this uproar, I congratulated myself
that I had insisted that Kratas choose only the smallest and slimmest men from
the squadron. Looking them over now, I was certain that they would be able to
carry through the deception. They would need only a little schooling in
feminine deportment. THE FOLLOWING MORNING OUR STRANGE caravan passed through
the little fishing village and wound its way down on to the beach, where the
trading vessel waited. Kratas and eight of his officers made up the escort.
Complete lack of any armed escort for such a valuable consignment would surely
have aroused suspicion. Nine armed men dressed in the motley garb of
mercenaries would be sufficient to allay this, but would not deter a large
raiding party of Shrikes. At the head of the caravan marched Tanus, dressed
in the rich robes and beaded head-dress of a wealthy merchant from beyond the
Euphrates river. His beard had grown out densely, and I had curled it for him
into those tight ringlets that the Assyrians favoured. Many of these Asians,
particularly those from the high mountainous regions further north, have the
same complexion and skin coloration as Tanus, so he looked the part I had
chosen for him. I followed close behind him. I had overcome my
aversion to wearing female garb, and donned the long skirts and veil, together
with the gaudy jewellery of an Assyrian wife. I was determined not to be
recognized when I returned to Safaga. The voyage was enlivened by the sea-sickness of
most of the slave girls and not a few of the officers, for they were accustomed
to sail on the placid waters of the great river. At one stage so many of them
were lining the rail to make their offerings to the gods of the sea, that the
ship took on a distinct list. We were all relieved to step on to the beach at
Safaga, where we caused much excitement The Assyrian girls were famous for their
skills on the love couch. It was said that some of them were capable of tricks
that could bring a thousand-year-old mummy back to life. It was obvious to
those who watched us come ashore that behind the veils our slave girls must be
images of feminine loveliness. A shrewd Asian merchant would not transport his
wares so far and at such expense, unless he was certain of a good price in the
slave-markets on the Nile. One of the Safaga merchants approached Tanus
immediately and offered to buy the entire bevy of girls on the spot, and spare
him the onerous journey across the desert with them. Tanus waved ffim away with
a scornful chuckle. 'Have you been warned of the perils of the journey
that you intend making?' the merchant insisted. 'Before you reach the Nile, you
will be forced to pay a ransom for your safe passage that will eat up most of
your profits.' 'Who will force me to pay?' Tanus demanded. 'I pay
only what I owe.' "There are those who guard the road,' the merchant
warned him. 'And even though you pay what they demand, there is no certainty
that they will let you pass unharmed, especially with such tempting goods as
you have with you. The vultures on the road to the Nile are so fat from feeding
on the carcasses of stubborn merchants that they can hardly fly. Sell to me now
at a good profit—' 'I have armed guards', Tanus indicated Kratas and
his small squad, 'who will be a match for any robbers we may meet.' And the
onlookers who had listened to the exchange tittered and nudged each other at
the boast. The merchant shrugged. 'Very well, my brave friend.
On my next journey through the desert, I will look for your skeleton beside the
road. I will recognize you by that blustering red beard of yours.' As he had promised me he would, Tiamat had forty
donkeys waiting for us. Twenty of them were laden with filled water-skins, and
the remainder with pack-saddles to carry the bales and bundles that we brought
ashore from the trading ship. I was anxious that we should spend as little time
as possible in the port, under all those prying eyes. It would take only a
single lapse by one of the slave girls to reveal his true gender, and we would
be undone. Kratas and his escort hurried them through the narrow streets,
keeping the bystanders at a distance, and making certain that the slave girls
kept thek veils in place and their eyes downcast, and that none of them
responded in gruff masculine tones to the ribald comment that followed us,
until we were out into the open country beyond the town. We camped that first night still within sight of
Safaga. Although I did not anticipate an attack until we were beyond the first
mountain pass, I was certain that we were already being watched by the spies of
the Shrikes. While it was still light, I made sure that our
slave girls conducted themselves as women, that they kept their faces and
bodies covered, and that when they went into the nearby wadi to attend to
nature's demands, they squatted in decorous fashion and did not uncouthly spray
their water while standing. It was only after darkness fell that Tanus ordered
the bundles carried by the donkeys to be opened and the weapons they contained
to be issued to the slave girls. Each of mem slept with his bow and his sword
concealed under his sleeping-mat. Tanus posted double sentries around the camp. After
we had inspected them and made sure that they were all well placed and fully
alert, Tanus and I slipped away, and in the darkness returned to the port of
Safaga. I led him through the dark streets to the house of Tiamat. The merchant
was expecting our arrival, and had a meal laid ready to welcome us. I could see
that he was excited to meet Tanus. 'Your fame proceeds you, Lord Harrab. I knew your
father. He was a man indeed,' he greeted Tanus. 'Although I have heard
persistent rumours that you died in die desert not a week since, and that even
at this moment your body lies with the morticians on the west bank of the Nile,
undergoing the ritual forty days of the embalming process, you are welcome in
my humble house.' While we enjoyed the feast he provided, Tanus
questioned him at length on all he knew of the Shrikes, and Tiamat answered him
freely and openly. At last Tanus glanced at me and I nodded. Tanus
turned back to Tiamat and said, 'You have been a generous friend to us, and yet
we have been less than honest with you. This was from necessity, for it was of
vital importance that no one should guess at our real purpose in mis endeavour.
Now I will tell you that it is my purpose to smash the Shrikes and deliver
their leaders up to Pharaoh's justice and wrath.' Tiamat smiled and stroked his beard. 'This comes as
no great surprise to me,' he said, 'for I have heard of the charge mat Pharaoh
placed upon you at the festival of Osiris. That and your patent interest in
those murderous bandits left little doubt in my mind. I can say only that I
will sacrifice to the gods for your success.' 'To succeed, I will need your help again,' Tanus
told him. 'You have only to ask.' 'Do you think that the Shrikes are as yet aware of
our caravan?' 'All of Safaga is talking about you,' Tiamat
replied. 'Yours is the richest cargo that has arrived this season. Eighty
beautiful slave girls will be worth at least a thousand gold rings each in
Karnak.' He chuckled and shook his head at the joke. 'You can be certain that
the Shrikes already know all about you. I saw at least three of their spies in
the crowd at the waterfront watching you. You can expect them to meet you and
make their demands even before you reach the first pass.' When we rose to take our leave, he walked with us
as far as his own door. 'May all the gods attend your endeavours. Not only
Pharaoh, but every living soul in the entire kingdom will be in your debt if
you can stamp out this terrible scourge that threatens to destroy our very
civilization, and drive us all back into the age of barbarism.' IT WAS STILL COOL AND DARK THE FOLLOWING morning
when die column started out. Tanus, with Lanata slung over his shoulder, was at
die head of die caravan, widi myself, in all my womanly grace and beauty,
following him closely. Behind us the donkeys were harnessed hi single file,
moving nose to tail down the middle of die well-beaten track. The slave girls
were hi double columns on die outer flanks of the file of donkeys. Their
weapons were concealed in die packs upon the backs of die animals. Any of die
men needed only to reach out to lay a hand upon die hilt of his sword. Kratas had split his escort into diree squads of
six men each, commanded by Astes, Remrem and himself. Astes and Remrem were
warriors of renown and more than deserving of dieir own commands. However, bodi
of diem had, on numerous occasions, refused promotion in order to remain with
Tanus. That was die quality of loyalty mat Tanus inspired in all who served
under him. I could not help thinking yet again what a pharaoh he would have
made. The escorts now slouched along beside die column,
making every attempt to forsake their military bearing. It would seem to die spies
who were certainly watching us from die hills that they were diere solely to
prevent any of die slaves from escaping. In north diey were fully occupied widi
preventing their charges from breaking into marching step and sounding off a
chorus of one of die rowdy regimental songs. 'You diere, Kernit!' I heard Remrem challenge one
of diem. 'Don't take such long steps, man, and swing that fat arse of yours a
little! Try to make yourself alluring.' 'Give me a kiss, captain,' Kernit called back, 'and
I'll do anything you say.' The heat was rising, and the mirage was beginning
to make die rocks dance. Tanus turned back to me. 'Soon I will call our first
rest-stop. One cup of water for each—' 'Good husband,' I interrupted him, 'your friends
have arrived. Look ahead!' Tanus turned back, and instinctively gripped die
stock of die great bow that hung at his side. 'And what fine fellows they are,
too!' At that moment our column was winding through the
first foothills below the desert plateau. On either hand we were walled in by
the steep sides of the rocky hills. Now three men stood in the track ahead of
us. The one who led them was a tall, menacing figure swathed in the woollen
robe of the desert traveller, but his head was bared His skin was very dark,
and deeply pitted with the scars of the smallpox. He had a nose that was hooked
like the beak of a vulture, and his right eye was an opaque jelly from the
blind-worm that burrows deep into the eyeball of its victims. 'I know the one-eyed villain,' I said softly, so that
Tanus alone could hear. 'His name is Shufti. He is the most notorious of the
barons of the Shrikes. Be wary of him. The lion is a gentle beast compared to
this one.' Tanus gave no sign of having heard me, but lifted
his right hand to show that it held no weapon, and called out cheerfully, 'May
all your days be scented with jasmine, gentle traveller, and may a loving wife
welcome you at your own front door when at last your journey is done.' 'May your water-skins stay filled and cool breezes
fan your brow when you cross the Thirsty Sands,' Shufti called back, and he
smiled. That smile was fiercer than a leopard's snarl, and his single eye
glared horribly. 'You are kind, my noble lord,' Tanus thanked him.
'I would like to offer you a meal and the hospitality of my camp, but I pray
your indulgence. We have a long road before us, and we must pass on.' 'Just a little more of your time, my fine
Assyrian.' Shufti moved forward to block the path. 'I have something which you
need, if you and your caravan are ever, to reach the Nile in safety.' He held
up a small object. 'Ah, a charm!' Tanus exclaimed. 'You are a
magician, perhaps? What manner of charm is this you are offering me?' 'A feather.' Shufti was still smiling. "The
feather of a shrike.' Tanus smiled, as though to humour a child. 'Very
well then, give me this feather and I'll delay you no longer.' 'A gift for a. gift. You must give me something in
return,' Shufti told him. 'Give me twenty of your slaves. Then, when you return
from Egypt, I will meet you on the road again and you will give me half the
profits from the sale of the other sixty.' 'For a single feather?' Tanus scoffed. "That
sounds like a sorry bargain to me.' "This is no ordinary feather. It is a shrike's
feather,' Shufti pointed out. 'Are you so ill-informed that you have never
heard of that bird?' 'Let me see this magical feather.' Tanus walked
towards him with his right hand outstretched, and Shufti came forward to meet
him. At the same time Kratas, Remrem and Astes wandered up inquisitively, as
though to examine the feather. Instead of taking the gift from his hand, suddenly
Tanus seized Shufti's wrist and twisted it up between his shoulder-blades. With
a startled cry, Shufti fell to his knees and Tanus held him easily. At the same
time Kratas and his men darted forward, taking the other two bandits by as much
surprise as their chief. They knocked the weapons out of their hands, and
dragged them to where Tanus stood. 'So, you little birds think to frighten Kaarik, the
Assyrian, with your threats, do you? Yes, my fine vendor of feathers, I have
heard of the Shrikes. I have heard that they are a flock of chattering,
cowardly little fledglings, that make more noise than a flock of sparrows.' He
twisted Shufti's arm more viciously, until the bandit yelled with pain and fell
flat on his face. 'Yes, I have heard of the Shrikes, but have you heard of
Kaarik, the terrible?' He nodded at Kratas, and quickly and efficiently they
stripped the three Shrikes stark naked and pinned them spread-eagled upon the rocky
earth. 'I want you to remember my name, and fly away like
a good little shrike when next you hear it,' Tanus told him, and nodded to
Kratas again. Kratas flexed the lash of his slave-whip between his fingers. It
was of the same type as Rasfer's famous tool, whittled from the cured hide of a
bull hippopotamus. Tanus held out his hand for it, and reluctantly Kratas
handed it over to him. 'Don't look so sad, slave-master,' Tanus told him.
'I'll let you have your turn later. But Kaarik, the Assyrian, always takes the
first spoonful from the pot.' Tanus slashed the whip back and forth through the
air, and it whistled like the wing of a goose in flight. Shufti squirmed where
he lay, and twisted his head around to hiss at Tanus, 'You are mad, you
Assyrian ox! Do you not. realize that I am a baron of the Shrike clan? You dare
not do this to me—' His naked back and buttocks were stippled with pox scars. Tanus lifted the whip on high, and then brought it
down in a full-armed stroke with all his weight behind it. He laid a purple
welt as fat as my forefinger across Shufti's back. So intense was the pain of
it that the bandit's entire body convulsed and the ah- hissed out of his lungs,
so that he could not scream. Tanus lifted the lash and then meticulously laid
another ridged welt exactly parallel to the first, almost, but not quite,
touching it. This time Shufti filled his lungs and let out a hoarse bellow,
like a buffalo bull caught in a pitfall. Tanus ignored his struggles and his
outraged roars, and worked on assiduously, laying on the strokes as though he
were weaving a carpet. When at last he was done, his victim's legs,
buttocks and back were latticed with the fiery weals. Not one of the blows had
overlaid another. The skin was intact and not a drop of blood had spilled out,
but Shufti was no longer wriggling or screaming. He lay with his face in the
dirt, his breath snoring in his throat, so that each exhalation raised a puff
of dust. When Remrem and Kratas released him, he made no effort to sit up. He
did not even stir. Tanus tossed the whip to Kratas. "The next one
is yours, slave-master. Let us see whdt a pretty pattern you can tattoo on his
back.' Kratas' strokes hummed with power, but lacked the
finesse that Tanus had demonstrated. Soon the bandit's back was leaking like a
flawed jar of red wine. The droplets of blood fell into the dust and rolled
into tiny balls of mud. Sweating lightly, Kratas was satisfied at last, and
he passed the whip to Astes as he indicated the last victim. 'Give that one something
to remind him of his manners, as well.' Astes had an even more rustic touch than Kratas. By
the time he had finished, the last bandit's back looked like a side of fresh
beef that had been cut up by a demented butcher. Tanus signalled the caravan to move forward,
towards the pass through the red rock mountains. We lingered a while beside the
three naked men. At last Shufti stirred and lifted his head, and
Tanus addressed him civilly. 'And so, my friend, I beg leave of you. Remember
my face, and step warily when you see it again.' Tanus picked up the fallen
shrike's feather and tucked it into his headband. 'I thank you for your gift.
May all your nights be cradled in the arms of lovely ladies.' He touched his
heart and lips in the Assyrian gesture of farewell, and I followed him up the
road after the departing caravan. I looked back before we dropped over the next rise.
All three Shrikes were on their feet, supporting each other to remain upright.
Even at this distance I could make out the expression on Shufti's face. It was
hatred distilled to its essence. 'Well, you have made certain that we will have
every Shrike this side of the Nile upon us, the moment we take our first step
beyond the pass,' I told Kratas and his ruffians, and I could not have pleased
them more, had I promised them a shipload of beer and pretty girls. FROM THE CREST OF THE PASS WE looked back at the
cool blue of the sea for the last time and then dropped down into that
sweltering wilderness of rock and sand that stood between us and the Nile. As we moved forward, the heat came at us like a
mortal enemy. It seemed to enter through our mouths and nostrils as we gasped
for breath. It sucked the moisture from our bodies like a thief. It dried out
our skin and cracked it until our lips burst open like over-ripe figs. The
rocks beneath our feet were hot, as though fresh from the pot-maker's kiln, and
they scalded and blistered our feet, even through the leather soles of our
sandals. It was impossible to continue the march during the hottest hours of
the day. We lay in the flimsy shade of the linen tents that Tiamat had
provided, and panted like hunting dogs after the chase. When the sun sank towards the jagged rock horizon,
we went on. The desert around us was charged with such a brooding nameless
menace that even the high spirits of the Blue Crocodile Guards were subdued.
The long slow column wound like a maimed adder through the black rock outcrops
and tawny lion-coloured dunes, following the ancient road along which countless
other travellers had passed before us. When night fell at last, the sky came alive with
such a dazzle of stars and the desert was lit so brightly that, from my place
at the head of the caravan, I could recognize the shape of Kratas at the tail,
although two hundred paces separated us. We marched on for half the night
before Tanus gave the order to fall out. Then he had us up before dawn and we
marched on until the heat-mirage dissolved the rocky outcrops around us and
made the horizon swim so that it seemed to be moulded from melting pitch. We saw no other sign of life, except that once a
troop of dog-headed baboons barked at us from the cliffs of a stark rock
tableland as we passed below them, and the vultures soared so high in the hot
blue sky that they appeared to be but dust motes swirling in slow and
deliberate circles high above us. When we rested in the middle of the day the
whirlwinds pirouetted and swayed with the peculiar grace of dancing houris
across the plains, and the cupful of water that was our ration seemed to turn
to steam in my mouth. 'Where are they?' Kratas growled angrily. 'By
Seth's sweaty scrotum, I hope these little birds will soon puff up their
courage and come in to roost.' Although they were all tough veterans and inured to
hardship and discomfort, nerves and tempers were wearing thin. Good comrades
and old friends began to snarl at each other for no reason, and bicker over the
water ration. 'Shufti is a cunning old dog,' I told Tanup. 'He
will gather his forces and wait for us to come to him, rather than hurry to
meet us. He will let us tire ourselves with the journey, and grow careless with
our fatigue, before he strikes.' On the fifth day I knew that we were approaching
the oasis of Gallala when I saw that the dark cliffs ahead of us were riddled
with the caves of ancient tombs. Centuries ago, the oasis had supported a
thriving city, but then an earthquake had shaken the hills and damaged the
wells. The water had dwindled to a few seeping drops. Even though the wells had
been dug deeper to reach the receding water, and the earthen steps reached down
to where the surface of the water was always in shade, the city had died. The
roofless walls stood forlorn in the silence, and lizards sunned themselves in
the courtyards where rich merchants had once dallied with their harems. Our very first concern was to refill the
water-skins. The voices of the men drawing water at the bottom of the well were
distorted by the echoes in the deep shaft. While they were busy, Tanus and I
made a swift tour of the ruined city. It was a lonely and melancholy place. In
its centre was the dilapidated temple to the patron god of Gallala. The roof
had fallen in and the walls were collapsing in places. It had but a single
entrance through the crumbling gateway at the western end. 'This will do admirably,' Tanus muttered as he
strode across it, measuring it with his soldier's eye for fortification and
ambuscade. When I questioned him on his intentions, he smiled and shook his
head. 'Leave that part of it to me, -old friend. The fighting is my business.' As we stood at the centre of the temple I noticed
the tracks of a troop of baboons in the dust at our feet, and I pointed them
out to Tanus. "They must come to drink at the wells,' I told him. That evening when we sat around the small, smoky
fires of dried donkey dung in the ancient temple, we heard the baboons again,
the old bull apes barking a challenge in the hills that surrounded the ruined
city. Their voices boomed back and forth along the cliffs, and I nodded at
Tanus across the fire. 'Your friend, Shufti, has arrived at last. His scouts
are in the hills up there watching us now. It is they who have alarmed the
baboons.' 'I hope you are right. My blackguards are close to
mutiny. They know mis is all your idea, and if you are wrong, I might have to
give them your head or your backside to appease them,' Tanus growled, and went
to speak to Astes at the neighbouring cooking-fire. Swiftly a new mood infected the camp as they
realized that the enemy was near. The scowls evaporated and the men grinned at
each other in the firelight, as they surreptitiously tested the edges of the
swords concealed beneath the sleeping-mats on which they sat. However, they
were canny veterans and they went through the motions of normal caravan life,
so as not to alert the watchers in the dark hills above us. At last we were all
bundled on our mats, and the fires died down, but none of us slept. I could
hear them coughing and fidgeting restlessly all around me in the dark. The long
hours drew out, and through the open roof I watched the great constellations of
the stars wheel in stately splendour overhead, but still the attack never came. Just before dawn, Tanus made his round of the
sentries for the last time, and then, on his way back to his place beside the
cooling ashes of last night's fire, he stopped by my mat for a moment and
whispered, 'You and your friends the baboons, you deserve each other. All of
you bark at shadows.' 'The Shrikes are here. I can smell them. The hills
are full of them,' I protested. 'All you can smell is the promise of breakfast,' he
grunted. He knows how I detest the suggestion that I am a glutton. Rather than
reply to such callow humour, I went out into the darkness to relieve myself
behind the nearest pfle of ruins. As I squatted there, a baboon barked again, the
wild, booming cry shattering the preternatural silences of that last and
darkest of the night-watches. I turned my head in that direction and heard,
faint and faraway, the sound of metal strike rock, as though a nervous hand had
dropped a dagger up there on the ridge, or a careless shield had brushed
against a granite outcrop as an armed man hurried to take up his station before
the dawn found him out. I smiled complacently to myself; there are few
pleasures in my life compared to that of making Tanus eat his words. As I
returned to my mat, I whispered to the men mat I passed, 'Be ready. They are
here,' and I heard my warning passed on from mouth to sleepless mouth. Above me the stars began to fade away, and the dawn
crept up on us as stealthily as a lioness stalking a herd of oryx. Then
abruptly I heard a sentry on the west wall of the temple whistle, a liquid
warble that might have been the cry of a nightjar except that we all knew better,
and instantly a stir ran through the camp. It was checked by the low but urgent
whispers of Kratas and his officers, 'Steady, the Blues! Remember your orders.
Hold your positions!' and not a man stirred from his sleeping-mat. Without rising, and with my shawl masking my face,
I turned my head slowly and looked up at the crests of the cliffs that stood
higher than the temple walls. The shark's-tooth silhouette of the granite hills
began to alter most subtly. I had to blink my eyes to be certain of what I was
seeing. Then slowly I turned my head in a full circle, and it was the same in
whichever direction I looked. The skyline all about us was picketed with the
dark and menacing shapes of armed men. They formed an unbroken palisade around
us through which no fugitive could hope to escape. I knew then why Shufti had delayed his retaliation
so long. It would have taken him all this time to gather together such an army
of thieves. There must be a thousand or more of them, although in the poor light
it was not possible to count their multitudes. We were outnumbered at least ten
to one, and I felt my spirits quail. It was poor odds, even for a company of
the Blues. The Shrikes stood as still as the rocks around
them, and I was alarmed at this evidence of their discipline. I had expected
them to come streaming down upon us in an untidy rabble, but they were behaving
like trained warriors. Their stillness was more menacing and intimidating than
any wild shouting and brandishing of weapons would have been. As the light strengthened swiftly, we could make
them out more clearly. The first rays of the sun glanced off the bronze of
their shields and their bared sword-blades, and struck darts of light into our
eyes. Every one of them was muffled up, a scarf of black wool wound around each
head so that only their eyes showed in the slits, eyes as malevolent as those
of the ferocious blue sharks that terrorize the waters of the sea we had left
behind us. The silence drew out until I thought that my nerves
might tear and my heart burst with the pressure of blood within it. Then
suddenly a voice rang out, shattering the dawn silence and echoing along the
cliffs. 'Kaarik! Are you awake?' I recognized Shufti then, despite the scarf that
masked him. He stood in the centre of the west wall of the cliff, where the
road cut through it. 'Kaarik!' he called again. 'It is time for you to pay what
you owe me, but the price has risen. I want everything now. Everything!' he
repeated, and flung aside the scarf so that his pock-marked features were
revealed. 'I want everything you have, including your stupid and arrogant
head.' Tanus rose from his mat and threw aside his
sheepskin rug. "Then you will have to come down and take % from me,' he
shouted back, and drew his sword. Shufti raised his right arm, and his blind eye
caught the light and gleamed like a silver coin. Then he brought his arm down
abruptly. At his signal, a shout went up from the ranks of
men that lined the high ground, and they lifted their weapons and shook them to
the pale yellow dawn sky. Shufti waved them forward and they streamed down the
cliffs in a torrent into the narrow valley of Gallala. Tanus raced to the centre of the temple court where
the ancient inhabitants had raised a tall stone altar to their patron Bes, the
dwarf god of music and drunkenness. Kratas and his officers ran to join him,
while the slave girls and I crouched on our mats and covered our heads, wailing
with terror. ' Tanus leaped up on to the altar, and went down on
one knee as he flexed the great bow Lanata. It took all of his strength to
string it, but when he stood erect again it shimmered in its coils of silver
electrum wire, as though it were a living thing. He reached over his shoulder
and drew an arrow from the quiver on his back and faced the main gateway
through which the horde of Shrikes must enter. Below the altar, Kratas had drawn up his men into a
single rank, and they also had strung their bows and faced the entrance to the
square. They made a pitifully small cluster around the altar, and I felt a lump
rise in my throat as I watched them. They were so heroic and undaunted. I would
compose a sonnet in their honour, I decided on a sudden impulse, but before I
could find the first line, the head of the mob of bandits burst howling through
the ruined gateway. Only five men abreast could climb the steep
stairway into the opening, and the distance to where Tanus stood on the altar
was less than forty paces. Tanus drew and let his first arrow fly. That single
arrow killed three men. The first of them was a tall rogue dressed in a short
kilt, with long greasy tresses of hair streaming down his back. The arrow took
him in the centre of his naked chest and passed through his torso as cleanly as
though he were merely a target cut from a sheet of papyrus. Slick with the blood of the first man, the arrow
struck the man behind him in the throat. Although the force of it was
dissipating now, it still went through his neck and came out behind him, but it
could not drive completely through. The fletchings at the back of the shaft
snagged in his flesh, while the barbed bronze arrow-head buried itself in the
eye of the third man who had crowded up close behind him. The two Shrikes were
pinned together by the arrow, and they staggered and thrashed about in the
middle of the gateway, blocking the opening to those who were trying to push
then-way past them into the courtyard. At last the arrow-head tore out of the
third man's skull, with the eye impaled .upon the point. The two stricken men
fell apart, and a throng of screaming bandits poured over them into the square.
The small band around the altar met them with volley after volley of arrows,
shooting them down so that then- corpses almost blocked the opening, and those
coming in from behind were forced to scramble over the mounds of dead and
wounded. It could not last much longer, the pressure of
warriors from behind was too great and their numbers too overwhelming. Like the
bursting of an earthen dyke unable to stem the rising flood of the Nile, they
forced the opening, and a solid mass of fighting men poured into the square and
surrounded the tiny band around the altar of the god Bes. It was too close quarters for the bows now, and
Tanus and his men cast them aside and drew their swords. 'Horus, arm me!' Tanus
shouted his battle-cry, and the men around him took it up, as they went to
work. Bronze rang on bronze as the Shrikes tried to come at them, but they had
formed a ring around the altar, facing outwards. No matter from which side they
came, the Shrikes were met by the point and the deadly sword-play of the
guards. The Shrikes were not short of courage, and they pressed in serried
ranks around the altar. As one of them was cut down, another leaped into his
place. I saw Shufti in the gateway. He was holding back
from the fray, but cursing his men and; ordering them into the thick of it with
horrid howls of rage. His blind eye rolled in its socket as he exhorted them,
'Get me the Assyrian alive. I want to kill him slowly and hear him squeal. The bandits completely ignored the women who
cowered on their sleeping-mats, their heads covered, waiting and screeching
with terror. I wailed with the best of them, but the struggle in the centre of
the yard was too uncomfortable for my liking. By this time, there were over a
thousand men crowded into the confined space. Choking in the dust, I was kicked
and pummelled by the sandalled feet of the battling horde, until I managed to
crawl away into a corner of the wall. One of the bandits turned aside from the fighting
and stooped over me. He tore the shawl away from my face and for a moment
stared into my eyes. 'Mother of Isis,' he breathed, 'you are beautiful!' He was an ugly devil with gaps in his teeth and a
scar down one cheek. His breath stank like a sewerage gutter as he lusted into
my face. 'Wait until this business is over. Then I'll give you something to
make you squeal with joy,' he promised, and twisted my face up to his. He
kissed me. My natural instinct was to pull away from him, but I
resisted it and returned his kiss. I am an artist of the love arts, for I
learned my skills in the boys' quarters of Lord Intef. My kisses can turn a man
to water. I kissed him with all my skill, and he was
transfixed by it. While he was still paralysed, I slipped my dagger from its
sheath beneath my blouse and slid the point through the gap between his fifth
and sixth ribs. When he screamed, I muffled the sound with my own lips and
clasped him lovingly to my breast, twisting the blade in his heart until, with
a shudder, he relaxed completely against me, and I let him roll over on his
side. I looked around me quickly. In the few moments that
it had taken me to dispose of my admirer, the plight of the small group of
guards around the altar had worsened. There were gaps in their single rank. Two
men were down and Amseth was wounded. He had switched his sword into his left
hand, while the other arm hung bleeding at his side. With a rush of relief I saw that Tanus was still
untouched, still laughing with the savage joy of it all as he plied the
sword.'But he had left it too late to spring the trap, I thought. The eitee
band of Shrikes were crowded into the square and bafying around him like hounds
around a treed leopard. Withiri' moments he and his gallant little band must be
cut down. Even as I watched, Tanus killed another of them
with a straight thrust through the throat, and then he jerked his blade free of
the clinging flesh and stepped back. He threw back his head and let loose a
bellow that rang from the crumbling walls around us. 'On me, the Blues!' On the instant every one of the cringing slave
girls leapt up and flung aside their trailing robes. Their swords were already
bared and they fell upon the rear of the robber horde. The surprise was
complete and overwhelming. I saw them kill a hundred or more before their
victims even realized what they were about, and could rally to meet them. But
when they did turn to face this fresh attack, they exposed their backs to Tanus
and his little band. They fought well, I'll give them that, though I am
sure it was terror, rather than courage, that drove them on. However, their
ranks were too close-packed to allow them free play with the sword, and the men
they faced were some of the finest troops in Egypt, which is to say the entire
world. For a while yet they held on. Then Tanus bellowed
again from the midst of the turmoil. For a moment I thought it was another
command, then I realized that it was the opening bar of the battle hymn of the
guards. Though I had often heard it spoken in awe that the Blues always sang
when the battle was at its height, I had never truly believed it possible. Now
all around me the song was taken up by a hundred straining voices: We are the Breath of Horus, hot as the desert wind, we are the reapers of men— Their swords beat an accompaniment to the words,
like the clangour of hammers on the anvils of the underworld. In the face of
such arrogant ferocity the remaining Shrikes wavered, and then suddenly it was
no longer a battle, but a massacre. I have seen a pack of wild dogs surround and tear
into a flock of sheep. This was worse. Some of the Shrikes threw down their
swords and fell to their knees begging quarter. There was no mercy shown them.
Others tried to reach the gateway, but guardsmen waited for them there, sword
in hand. I danced on the fringes of the fighting, screaming
across at Tanus, trying to make myself heard in the uproar, 'Stop them. We need
prisoners.' Tanus could not hear me, or more likely he simply
ignored my entreaties. Singing and laughing, with Kratas at his left hand and
Remrem on the other, he tore into them. His beard was soaked with the spurted
blood of those he had killed, and his eyes glittered in the running red mask of
his face with a madness I had never seen in them before. Joyous Hapi, how he
thrived on the heady draught of battle! 'Stop it, Tanus! Don't kill them all!' This time he
heard me. I saw the madness fade, and he was once more in control of himself. 'Give quarter to those who plead for it!' he
roared, and the guards obeyed him. But in the end, out of the original
thousand, fewer than two hundred Shrikes grovelled unarmed on the bloody stone
flags and pleaded for their lives. For a while I stood dazed and uncertain on the
fringe of this carnage, and then from the corner of my eye I caught a furtive
movement. Shufti had realized that he could not escape
through the gateway. He threw down his sword and darted to the east wall of the
court, close to where I stood. This was the most ruined section, where the wall
was reduced to half its original height. The tumbled mud-bricks formed a steep
ramp, and Shufti scrambled up it, slipping and falling, but rapidly nearing the
top of the wall. It seemed that I was the only one who had noticed his flight. The
guards were busy with their other prisoners, and Tanus had his back turned to
me as he directed the mopping-up of the shattered enemy. Almost without thinking, I stooped and picked up
half ai mud-brick. As Shufti topped the wall, I hurled the brick up at him with
all my strength. It thumped against the back off his skull with such force that
he dropped to his knees, and! then the treacherous pile of loose rubble gave
way beneath) him and he came sliding back down in a cloud of dust to) land at
my feet, only half-conscious. I pSunced upon him where he lay, straddling his
chest,, and I firessed the point of my dagger to his throat. He stared! up at
me, his single eye still glazed with the crack I hadl dealt him. 'Lie still,' I cautioned him, 'or I will gut you
like a fish." I had lost my shawl and head-dress, and my hair
hadl come down on to my shoulders. He recognized me then,, which was no
surprise. We had met often, but in differentt circumstances. 'Taita, the eunuch!' he mumbled. 'Does Lord Intef
know what you are about?' 'He will find out soon enough,' I assured him, andi
pricked him until he grunted, 'but you will not be the one to enlighten him.' Without removing the point from his throat, I
shouted to two of the nearest guards to take him. They flipped him on to his
face and bound his wrists together with linen twine before they dragged him
away. Tanus had seen me capture Shufti, and he strode
across to me now, stepping over the dead and wounded. 'Good throw, Taita! You
have forgotten nothing that I taught you.' He clapped me on the back so hard
that I staggered. 'There is plenty of work for you still. We've lost four men
killed, and there are at least a dozen wounded.' 'What about their camp?' I asked, and he stared at
me. 'Whatcamp?' 'A thousand Shrikes did not spring up from the
sands like desert flowers. They must have pack-animals and slaves with them.
Not far from here, either. You must not let them escape. Nobody must escape to
tell the tale of today's battle. None of them must be allowed to carry the news to
Karnak that you are still alive.' 'Sweet Isis, you are right! But how will we find
them?' It was obvious that Tanus was still bemused with battle lust. Sometimes
I wondered what he would do without me. 'Back-track them,' I told him impatiently. 'A
thousand pairs of feet will have trodden a road for us to follow back to where
they came from.' His expression cleared, and he hailed Kratas across
the length of the temple. 'Take fifty men. Go with Taita. He will lead you to
their base-camp.' 'The wounded—' I began to protest. I had enjoyed
enough fighting for one day, but he brushed my objections aside. 'You are the
best tracker I have. The wounded can wait for your care, my ruffians are all as
tough as fresh buffalo steaks, very few of them will die before you return.' FINDING THEIR CAMP WAS AS SIMPLE AS I had made it
sound. With Kratas and fifty men following me closely, made a wide cast
around the city, and behind the first line of hills I picked up the broad track
that they had made as they came in and deployed to surround us. We followed it
back at a trot, and had covered less than a mile before we topped a rise and
found the camp of the Shrikes in the shallow valley below us. Their surprise was complete. They had left fewer
than twenty men to guard the donkeys and women. Kratas' men overran them at the
first rush, and this time I was too late to save any prisoners. They spared
only the women, and once the camp was secure, Kratas let his men have them as
part of the traditional reward of the victors. The women seemed to me to be a more comely
selection than I would have expected in such company. I saw quite a few pretty
faces amongst them. They submitted to the rituals of conquest with a remarkably
good grace. I even heard some of them laughing and joking as the guardsmen
threw dice for them. The vocation of camp-follower to a band of Shrikes could
not be considered the most delicate calling, and I doubted that any of these
ladies were blushing virgins. One by one, they were led by their new owners
behind the cover of the nearest clump of rocks, where their skirts were lifted
without further ceremony. New moon follows the death of the old, spring
follows winter, none of the ladies showed any signs of mourning for their
erstwhile spouses. Indeed, it seemed probable that new and perhaps lasting
relationships were being struck up here on the desert sand. For myself, I was more interested in the
pack-donkeys and what they carried. There were over a hundred and fifty of
theses ;and most of them were sturdy animals in prime condition which would
fetch good prices in the market at Karnak or Safaga. I reckoned that I should
be entitled to at least a centurion's share when the prize money was divided
up. After all, I had already dispensed large amounts of my own savings in the
furtherance of this enterprise, and should be entitled to some compensation. I
would speak seriously to Tanus about it, and could expect his sympathy. His is
a generous spirit. By the time we returned to the city of Gallala,
leading the captured pack-animals laden with booty and followed by a straggle
of women who had attached themselves quite naturally to their new menfolk, the
sun had set. One of the smaller ruined buildings near the wells
had been turned into a field hospital. There I worked through the night, by the
light of torch and oil lamp, sewing together the wounded guardsmen. As always,
I was impressed by their stoicism, for many of their wounds were grave and
painful. None the less, I lost only one of my patients before dawn broke.
Amseth succumbed to loss of blood from the severed arteries in his arm. If I
had attended to him immediately after the battle, instead of going off into the
desert, I might have been able to save him. Even though the responsibility
rested with Tanus, I felt the familiar guilt and sorrow in the face of a death
that I might have prevented. However, I was confident that my other patients
would heal swiftly and cleanly. They were all strong young men in superb
condition. There were no wounded Shrikes to attend. Their
heads had been lopped off where they lay on the battlefield. As a physician, I
was perturbed by this age-old custom of dealing with the wounded enemy, yet I
suppose there was logic in it. Why should the victors waste their resources on
the maimed vanquished, when it was unlikely they would have any value as
slaves, and, if left alive, might recover to fight against them another day? I worked all night with only a swallow of wine and
a few mouthfuls of food taken with bloody hands to sustain me, and I was almost
exhausted, but there was to be no rest for me yet. Tanus sent for me as soon as
it was light THE UNWOUNDED PRISONERS WERE BEING held in the
temple of Bes. Their wrists were bound behind their backs, and they were
squatting in long lines along the north wall, with the guards standing over
them. As soon as I entered the temple, Tanus called me to
where he stood with a group of his officers. I was still in the dress of an
Assyrian wife, so I lifted my blood-splattered skirts and picked my way across
the floor littered with the debris of the battle. 'There are thirteen clans of Shrikes—isn't that
what you told me, Taita?' Tanus asked, and I nodded. 'Each clan with its own
baron. We have Shufti. Let's see if you recognize any of the other barons
amongst this gathering of the fair and gentle people.' He indicated the
prisoners with a chuckle, and took my arm to lead me down the ranks of
squatting men. I kept my face veiled so that none of the prisoners
could recognize me. I glanced at each face as I passed, and recognized two of
them. Akheku was head of the southern clan that preyed on the lands around
Assoun, Elephantine and the first cataract, while Setek was from further north,
the baron of Kom-Ombo. It was clear that Shufti had gathered together
whatever men he could find at such short notice. There were members of all the
clans amongst those that we had captured. As I identified their leaders with a
tap on the shoulder, they were dragged away. When we reached the end of the line Tanus asked,
'Are you sure that you missed none of them?' 'How can I be sure? I told you that I never met all
of the barons.' Tanus shrugged. 'We could not hope to catch every
little bird with one throw of the net. We must count ourselves fortunate that
we have taken as many as three so soon. But let us look at the heads. We might
be lucky enough to find a few more amongst them.' This was a gruesome business that might have
affected a more delicate stomach than mine, but human flesh, both dead and
living, is my stock-in-trade. While we sat at our ease on the steps of the
temple enjoying our breakfast, the severed heads were displayed to us, held up
one at a time by the blood-caked hair, tongues lolling from between slack lips,
and dull eyes powdered with dust staring into the other world whither they were
bound. My appetite was as healthy as ever, for I had eaten
very little during the last two days. I devoured the delicious cakes and fruits
that Tiamat had provided, while I pointed out those heads I recognized. There
was a score or so of common thieves that I had encountered during the course of
my work for Lord Intef, but only one more of the barons. He was Nefer-Temu of
Qena, a lesser member of the ghastly brotherhood. "That makes four of them,' Tanus grunted with
satisfaction, and ordered Nefer-Temu's head to be placed on the pinnacle of the
pyramid of skulls that he was erecting in front of the well of Gallala. 'So now we have accounted for four of them. We must
find the other nine barons. Let us begin by putting the question to our
prisoners.' He stood up briskly, and I hastily gulped down the remains of my
breakfast and followed him reluctantly back into the temple of Bes. Although I was the one who had made clear to Tanus
the necessity of having informers from within the clans, and indeed it was I
who had suggested how we should recruit them, still now that the time to act
upon my suggestion had arrived, I was stricken with remorse and guilt. It was
one thing to suggest ruthless action, but another thing entirely to stand by
and watch it practised. I made a feeble excuse that the wounded men in the
makeshift hospital might need me, but Tanus brushed it away cheerfully. 'None
of your fine scruples now, Taita. You will stay with me during the questioning
to make certain that you overlooked none of your old friends on your first
inspection.' The questioning was swift and merciless, which I
suppose was only appropriate to the character of the men we were dealing with. To begin with, Tanus sprang up on to the storie
altar of Bes, and, with the hawk seal in one hand, he looked down on the ranks
of squatting prisoners with a smile %at must have chilled them, even though
they sat in the full rays of the desert sun. 'I am the bearer of the hawk seal of Pharaoh
Mamose, and I speak with his voice,' he told them grimly, as he held the
statuette high. 'I am your judge and your executioner.' He paused and let his
gaze pass slowly over their upturned faces. As each of them met his eyes, they
dropped their own. Not one of them could hold firm before his penetrating
scrutiny. 'You have been taken in the act of pillage and
murder. If there is one of you who would deny it, let him stand before me and
declare his innocence.' He waited while the impatient shadows of the
vultures, circling in the sky above us, criss-crossed the dusty courtyard.
'Come now! Speak up, you innocents.' He glanced upwards at the circling birds
with their grotesque pink bald heads. 'Your brethren grow impatient for the
feast. Let us not keep them waiting.' Still none of them spoke or moved, and Tanus
lowered the hawk seal. 'Your actions, which all here have witnessed, condemn
you. Your silence confirms the verdict. You are guilty. In the name of the divine
Pharaoh, I pass sentence upon you. I sentence you to death by beheading. Your
severed heads will be displayed along the caravan routes. All law-abiding men
who pass this way will see your skulls grinning at them from the roadside, and
they will know that the Shrjke has met the eagle. They will know that the age
of lawlessness has passed from the land, and that peace has returned to this
very Egypt of ours. I have spoken. Pharaoh Mamose has spoken.' Tanus nodded, and the first prisoner was dragged
forward and forced to his knees before the altar. 'If you answer three questions truthfully, your
life will be spared. You will be enlisted as a trooper in my regiment of the
guards, with all the pay and privileges. If you refuse to answer the questions,
your sentence will be carried out immediately,' Tanus told him. He looked down on the kneeling prisoner sternly.
'This is the first question. What clan do you belong to?' The condemned man made no reply. The blood oath of
the Shrikes was too strong for him to break. 'This is the second question. Who is the baron that
commands you?' Tanus asked, and still the man was silent. 'This is the third and the last question. Will you
lead me to the secret places where your clan hides?' Tanus asked, and the man
looked up at him, hawked in his throat and spat. His phlegm spattered yellow
upon the stones. Tanus nodded to the guardsman who stood over him with the
sword. The stroke was clean and the head toppled on to the
steps at the foot of the altar. 'One more head for the pyramid,' Tanus said
quietly, and nodded for the next prisoner to be brought forward. He asked the same three questions, and when the
Shrike answered him with a defiant obscenity, Tanus nodded. This time the
headsman mistimed the blow and the corpse flopped about with the neck only
half-severed. It took three more strokes before the head bounced down the
steps. Tanus lopped twenty-three heads, I was counting
them to distract myself from the waves of debilitating compassion that assailed
me, until the first of the condemned men broke down. He was young, not much
more than a boy. In a shrill voice he gabbled out the replies before Tanus
could actually pose the three questions to him. 'My name is Hui. I am a blood-brother of the clan
of Basti the Cruel. I know his secret places, and I will lead you to them.'
Tanus smiled with grim satisfaction and gestured for the lad to be led away.
'Care for him well,' he warned his gaolers. 'He is now a trooper of the Blues,
and your companion-in-arms.' After the defection of one of them, it went more
readily, although there were still many who defied Tanus. Some of them cursed
him, while others laughed their defiance at him until the blade swept down, and
their bravado ended with their very last breath that burst from the severed
windpipe in a crimson gust. I was filled with admiration for those who, after a
base and despicable life, at the end chose to die with some semblance of
honour. They laughed at death. I knew #iat I was not capable of that quality of
courage. Offered that choice, I am certain that I would have responded as some
of the weaker prisoners did. 'I am a member of the clan of Ur,' one confessed. 'I am of the clan of Maa-En-Tef, who is baron of
the west bank as far as El Kharga,' said another, until we had informers to
lead us to the strongholds of every one of the remaining robber barons, and a
shoulder-high pile of recalcitrant heads to add to the pyramid beside the well. ONE OF THE MATTERS TO WHICH TANUS and I had given
much thought was the disposal of the three robber barons we had already
captured, and the score of informers we had gleaned from the ranks of the
condemned Shrikes. ___ We knew that the influence of the Shrikes was so
pervasive that we dared not keep our captives in Egypt. There was not a prison
secure enough to prevent Akh-Seth and his barons from reaching them, either to
set them free by bribery or force, or to have them silenced by poison or some
other unpleasant means. We knew that Akh-Seth was like an octopus whose head
was hidden, but whose tentacles reached into every facet of our government and
into the very fabric of our existence. This was where my friend Tiamat, the merchant of
Saf-aga, came into my reckoning. Matching now as a unit of the Blue Crocodile
Guards, and not as a slave caravan, we returned to the port on the Red Sea in
half the time that it had taken us to reach Gallala. Our captives were hustled
aboard one of Tiamat's trading vessels that was waiting for us in the harbour,
and the captain set sail immediately for the Arabian coast, where Tiamat
maintained a secure slave-compound on the small off-shore island of Jez Baquan,
run by his own warders. The waters around the island were patrolled by packs of
ferocious blue sharks. Tiamat assured us that no one who had attempted escape
from the island had ever avoided both the vigilance of the warders and the
appetites of the sharks. Only one of our captives was not sent to the
island. He was Hui from the clan of Basti the Cruel, the same youngster who had
been the first to capitulate to the threat of execution. During the march to
the sea, Tanus had kept the lad close to him and had turned all the
irresistible force of his personality upon him. By this time Hui was his
willing slave. This special gift of Tanus' to win loyalty and devotion from the
most unlikely quarters never failed to amaze me. I was sure that Hui, who had
buckled so swiftly under the threat of execution, would now willingly lay down
his worthless life for Tanus. Under Tanus' spell, Hui poured out every detail
that he could remember of the clan to which he had once sworn a blood-oath. I
listened quietly, with my writing-brush poised, as Tanus questioned him and I
recorded all he had to tell us. We learned that the stronghold of Basti the Cruel
was in the fastness of that awful desert of Gebel-Umm-Bahari, on the summit of
one of the flat-topped mountains that was protected by sheer cliffs on every
side. Hidden and impregnable, but less than two days' march from the east bank
of the Nile and the busy caravan routes that ran along its banks, it was the
perfect nest for the raptor. "There is one path to the top, cut like a
stairway from the rock. It is wide enough for only one man to climb at a time,'
Hui told us. "There is no other way to the summit?' Tanus
asked, and Hui grinned and laid his finger along his nose in a conspir-atory
gesture. 'There is another route. I have used it often, to
return to the mountain after I had deserted my post to visit a lady Mend. Basti
would have had me killed if he had known I was missing. It is a dangerous
climb, but a dozen godd men could make it and hold the top of the cliff while
the main force came up the pathway to them. I will lead you up it, Akh-Horus.' It was the first time that I heard the name.
Akh-Horus, the brother of the great god Horus. It was a good name for Tanus.
Naturally, Hui and our other captives could not know Tanus' real identity. They
knew only in their simple way that Tanus must be some kind of god. He looked
like a god and he fought like a god, and he invoked the nametrf Horus in the
midst of battle. So, they had reasoned, he must be the brother of Horus. Akh-Horus! It was a name that all Egypt would come
to know well in the months ahead. It would be shouted from hilltop to hilltop.
It would be carried along the caravan routes. It would travel the length of the
river on the lips of the boatmen, from city to city, and from kingdom to
kingdom. The legend would grow up around the name, as the accounts of his deeds
were repeated and exaggerated at each telling. Akh-Horus was the mighty warrior who appeared from
nowhere, sent by his brother Horus to continue the eternal struggle against
evil, against Akh-Seth, the lord of the Shrikes. Akh-Horus! Each time the people of Egypt repeated
the name, it would fill their hearts with fresh hope. All that was in the future as we sat in the garden
of Tia-mat the merchant. Only I knew how hot Tanus was for Basti, and how eager
to lead his men into the Gebel-Umm-Bahari to hunt him down. It was not only
that Basti was the most rapacious and pitiless of all the barons. There was
much more to it than that. Tanus had a very personal score to settle with that
bandit. From me, Tanus had learned that Basti had been the
particular instrument that Akh-Seth had used to destroy the fortune of Pianki,
Lord Harrab, Tanus' father. 'I can lead you up the cliffs of Gebel-Umm-Bahari,'
Hui promised. 'I can deliver Basti into your hands.' Tanus, was silent awhile in the darkness as he
savoured that promise. We sat and listened to the nightingale singing at the
bottom of Tiamat's garden. It was a sound totally alien from the evil and
desperate affairs that we were discussing. After a while Tanus sighed and
dismissed Hui. 'You have done well, lad,' he told him. 'Fulfil
your promise, and you will find me grateful.' Hui prostrated himself, as though before a god, and
Tanus nudged him irritably with his foot. 'Enough of that nonsense. Away with
you now.' This recent, unlooked-for elevation to the godhead
embarrassed Tanus. No one could ever accuse him of being either modest or
humble, but he was at least a pragmatist, with noi false illusions of his own
station; he never aspired to become either a pharaoh or a divine, and he was
always short with any servility or obsequious behaviour from those around him. As soon as the lad was gone, Tanus turned back to
me. 'So often I lie awake in the night and consider all that you have told me
about my father. I ache in every fibre of my body and soul for revenge against
the one who drove him into penury and disgrace and hounded him to his death. I
can barely restrain myself. I am filled by the desire to abandon this devious
way that you have devised of trapping Akh-Seth. Instead, I long to seek him out
directly, and tear out his foul heart with my bare hands.' 'If you do that, you will lose everything,' I said.
'You know that well. Do it my way and you will restore not only your own
reputation, but that of your noble father into the bargain. My way, you will
retrieve the estate and the fortune that was stolen from you. My way will not
only give you your full measure of revenge, but will also lead you back to
Lostris and the fulfilment of the vision that I divined for the pah- of you in
the Mazes of Ammon-Ra. Trust me, Tanus. For your sake and the sake of my
mistress, trust me.' 'If I don't trust you, then who can I trust?' he
asked, and touched my arm. 'I know you are right, but I have always lacked
patience. For me the swift and direct road has always been easiest.' 'For the time being, put Akh-Seth out of your mind.
Think only of the next step along the devious way that we must travel together.
Think of Basti the Cruel. It was Basti who destroyed your father's trade
caravans as they returned from the East. For five seasons, not one of the
caravans of Lord Harrab ever returned to Karnak. They were all attacked and
looted along the road. It was Basti who destroyed your father's copper-mines at
Sestra and murdered the engineers, and their slave workers. Since then those
rich veins of ore have lain untapped. It was Basti who systematically pillaged
your father's estates along the Nile, who slaughtered his slaves in the fields
and burned the crops, until in the end, only weeds grew in Lord Harrab's
fields, and he was forced to sell them at a fraction of their real worth.' 'All that may be true, but it was Akh-Seth who gave
Basti his orders.' 'No one will believe that. Pharaoh will not believe
that, unless he hears Basti confess it,' I told him impatiently. 'Why are you
always so stubborn? We have gone over this a hundred times. The barons first,
and then at last the head of the snake, Akh-Seth.' 'Yours is the voice of wisdom, I know it. But it is
hard to bear the waiting. I long for my revenge. I long to cleanse the stain of
sedition and treason from my honour, and I long—oh, how I long for Lostris!' He leaned across and clasped my shoulder with a
grip that made me wince. 'You have done enough here, old friend. I could never
have accomplished so much without you. If you had not come to find me, I might
still be sodden with drink and lying in the embrace of some stinking whore. I
owe you more than I can ever repay, but I must send you away now. You are
needed elsewhere. Basti is my meat, and I don't need you to share the feast
with me. You will not be coming with me to Gebel-Umm-Bahari. I am sending you
back where you belong—where I also belong, but where I cannot be—at the side of
the Lady Lostris. I envy you, old friend, I would give up my hope of
immortality to be going to her in your place.' I protested most prettily, of course. I swore that
all I wanted was another chance at those villains, and that I was his companion
and that I would be seriously aggrieved if he would not give me a place at his
side in the next campaign. All the time I was secure in the knowledge that when
Tanus set his mind on a course of action he was adamant and could not easily be
dissuaded, except very occasionally by his friend and adviser, Taita the slave. The truth was that I had enjoyed my fill of wild
heroics and people trying to kill me. I was not by nature a soldier, not some
insensitive clod of a trooper. I hated the rigours of campaigning in the
desert. I could not bear another week of heat and sweat and flies without even
a glimpse of the sweet green waters of Mother Nile. I longed for the feel of
clean linen against my freshly bathed and anointed skin. I missed my mistress
more than I could express in mere words. Our quiet, civilized life in the
painted rooms on the Island Of Elephantine, our music and long, leisurely
conversations together, my pets and my scrolls, all these exerted an
irresistible draw upon me. Tanus was right, he no longer needed me, and my
place was with my mistress. However, to acquiesce too readily to his orders
might lower his opinion of me, and I did not want that either. At last I allowed him to convince me, and,
concealing my eagerness, I began my preparations for my return to Elephantine. TANUS HAD ORDERED KRATAS BACK TO Karnak, to
assemble and bring up reinforcements for the expedition into the desert of
Gebel-Umm-Bahari. I was to travel under his protection as far as Karnak, but
taking leave of Tanus was not a simple matter. Twice when I had already left
the house of Tiamat to join Kratas where he waited for me on the outskirts of
the town, Tanus called me back to give me another message to take to my
mistress. 'Tell her that I think of her every hour of every
day!' 'You have already given me that message,' I protested. 'Tell her that my
dreams are filled with images of her lovely face.' 'And that one also. I can recite them by heart.
Give me something new,' I pleaded. 'Tell her that I believe the vision of the Mazes,
that in a few short years we will be together—' 'Kratas is waiting for me. If you keep me here, how
can I deliver your message?' 'Tell her that everything I do is for her. Every
breath I draw is for her—' he broke off, and embraced me. 'The truth is, Taita,
I doubt I can live another day without her.' 'Five years will pass like that single day. When
next you meet her, your honour will be restored and you will once more stand
high in the land. She can only love you the more for that.' He released me. 'Take good care of her until I am
able to assume that joyous duty from you. Now, away vyjth you. Speed to her
side.' "That has been my intention this hour past,' I
told him wryly, and made good my escape. With Kratas at the head of our small detachment, we
made the journey to Karnak in under a week. Fearful of discovery by Rasfer or
Lord Intef, I spent as little time in my beloved city as it took me to find
passage on one of the barges heading southwards. I left Kratas busily
recruiting from amongst the elite regiments of Pharaoh's guards the thousand
good men that Tanus had demanded, and I went aboard the barge. We had the north wind in our sails all the way, and
we tied up at the wharf of East Elephantine twelve days after leaving Thebes. I
was still dressed in the wig and garb of the priesthood, and nobody recognized
me as I came ashore. For the price of a small copper ring I hired a
felucca to take me across the river to the royal island, and it put me down at
the steps that led up to the water-gate to our garden in the harem. My heart
pounded against my ribs as I bounded up the stairs. I had been away from my
mistress far too long. It was at times such as these that I realized the full
strength of my feelings for her. I was certain that Tanus' love was but a light
river breeze in comparison to the khamsin of my own emotions. One of Lostris' Cushite maidens met me at the gate,
and tried to prevent me from entering. 'My mistress is unwell, priest. There is
another doctor with her at this moment. She will not see you.' 'She will see me,' I told her, and stripped off my
wig. 'Taita!’ she squealed, and fell to her knees,
frantically making the sign to ward off evil. 'You are dead. This is not you,
but some evil apparition from beyond the grave.' I brushed her aside and hurried to my mistress's
private quarters, to be met at the doors by one of those priests of Osiris who
consider themselves physicians. 'What are you doing here?' I demanded of him,
appalled that one of these quacks had been anywhere near my mistress. Before he
could answer, I bellowed at him, 'Out! Get out of here! Take your spells and
charms and filthy potions, and don't come back.' He looked as though he were prepared to argue, but
I placed my hand between his shoulder-blades and gave him a running start
towards the gate. Then I rushed to my mistress's bedside. The odour of sickness filled the chamber, sour and
strong, and a wild grief seized me as I looked down at the Lady Lostris. She
seemed to have shrunk in size, and her skin was pale as the ashes of an old
camp-fire. She was asleep or in a coma, I could not be certain which, but there
were dark, bruised shadows beneath her closed eyelids. Her lips had that dry
and crusty look that filled me with dread. I drew back the linen sheet that covered her and
beneath it she was naked. I stared in horror at her body. The flesh had melted
off her. Her limbs were thin as sticks and her ribs and the bones of her pelvis
stuck out through the unhealthy skin, like those of drought-stricken kine.
Tenderly, I placed my hand in her armpit to feel for the heat of fever, but her
skin was cool. What kind of disease was this, I fretted. I had not encountered
any like it before. Without leaving her side, I yelled for her slave
girls, but none of them had the courage to face the ghost of Taita. In the end
I had to storm into their quarters and drag one of them whimpering from under
her bed. 'What have you done to your mistress to bring her
to this pass?' I kicked her fat backside to focus her attention on my question,
and she whined and covered her face, so as not to have to look upon me. 'She will not eat. Barely a mouthful in all these
weeks. Not since the mummy of Tanus, Lord Harrab was laid in his tomb in the
Valley of the Nobles. She has even lost the child of Pharaoh that she was
carrying in her womb. Spare me, kind ghost, I have done you no harm.' I stared down at her in bewilderment for a moment,
until I realized what had happened. My message of comfort to the Lady Lostris
had never been delivered. Intuitively I guessed that the messenger whom Kratas
had dispatched from Luxor to carry my letter to my mistress, had never reached
Elephantine. He had probably become one more victim of the Shrikes, just
another corpse floating down the river with an empty purse and a gaping wound
in his throat. I hoped that my letter had fallen into the hands of some
illiterate thief, and not been taken to Akh-Seth. There was no time to worry about
that now. I rushed back to my mistress's side and fell on my
knees beside her bed. 'My darling,' I whispered, and stroked her haggard brow.
'It is me, Taita, your slave.' She stirred slightly and mumbled something I could
not catch. I realized that there was little time to spare; she was far-gone. It
was over a month since Tanus' purported death. If the slave girl had spoken the
truth, and she had indeed taken no food in all that time, then it was a wonder
that she was still alive. I leaped up again and ran to my own rooms. Despite
my 'demise' nothing had been changed, and my medicine chest was in the alcove
where I had left it. With it in my arms, I hurried back to my mistress. My
hands were shaking as I lit a twig of the scorpion bush from the flame of the
oil lamp beside her bed, and held the glowing end under her nose. Almost
immediately she gasped and sneezed and struggled to avoid the pungent smoke. 'Mistress, it is I, Taita. Speak to me.' She opened her eyes and I saw the dawn of pleasure in
them swiftly extinguished by the fresh realization of her bereavement. She held
out her thin, pale arms to me, and I took her to my breast. 'Taita,' she sobbed softly. 'He is dead. Tanus is
dead. I cannot live without him.' 'No! No! He is alive. I come directly from him with
messages of love and devotion from him to you.' 'You are cruel to mock me so. I know he is dead.
His tomb is scaled—' 'It was .a, subterfuge to mislead his enemies,' I
cried. 'Tanus lives. I swear it to you. He loves you. He
waits for you.' 'Oh, that I could believe you! But I know you so
well. You will lie to protect me. How can you tormept me with false promises? I
hate you so—*' She tried to break from my arms. 'I swear it. Tanus is alive.' 'Swear on the honour of the mother you never knew.
Swear on the wrath of all the gods.' She hardly had the strength to challenge
me. 'On all these I swear, and on my love and duty to
you, my mistress.' 'Can it be?' I saw the strength of hope flow back
into her, and a faint flush of color bloom in her cheeks. 'Oh, Taita, can it
truly be?' 'Would I look so joyful, if it were not? You know I
love him almost as much as you do. Could I smile thus, if Tanus were truly
dead?' While she stared into my eyes, I launched into a
recitation of all that had occurred since I had left her side so many weeks
ago. I excluded only the details of the condition in which I had discovered
Tanus hi the old shack in the swamps, and the female company I had found him
keeping. She said not a word, but her eyes never left my
face as she devoured my words. Her pale face, almost translucent with
starvation, glowed like a pearl as she listened to my account of our adventures
at Gallala, of how Tanus led the fighting like a god, and of how he sang with
the wild joy of battle. 'And so you see, it is true. Tanus is alive,' I
ended, and she spoke for the first time since I had begun. 'If he is alive, then bring him to me. I will not
eat a mouthful until I set my eyes upon his face once more.' 'I will bring him to your side as swiftly as I can
send a messenger to him, if that is what you wish,' I promised, and reached for
the polished bronze mirror from my chest. I held the mirror before her eyes, and asked
softly, 'Do you want him to see you as you are now?' She stared at her own gaunt, hollow-eyed image. 'I will send for him today, if you order it. He
could be here within a week, if you really want that.' I watched her straggle with her emotions. 'I am
ugly,' she whispered. 'I look like an old woman.' 'Your beauty is still there, just below the
surface.' 'I cannot let Tanus see me like this.' Feminine
vanity had triumphed over all her other emotions. 'Then you must eat.' 'You promise,' she wavered, 'you promise that he is
still alive, and that you will bring him to me as soon as I am well again?
Place your hand on my heart and swear it to me.' I could feel her every rib and her heart fluttering
like a trapped bird beneath my fingers. 'I promise,' I said. 'I will trust you this time, but if you are lying I
will never trust you again. Bring me food!' As I hurried to the kitchen, I could not help but
feel smug. Taita, the crafty, had got his own way yet again. I mixed a bowl of warm milk and honey. We would
have to begin slowly, for she had driven herself to the very edge of
starvation. She vomited up the contents of the first bowl, but was able to keep
down the second. If I had delayed my return by another day, itmight have been
too late. SPREAD BY THE CHATTERING SLAVE GIRLS, the news of
my miraculous return from the grave swept through the island like the smallpox. Before nightfall Pharaoh sent Aton to fetch me to
an audience. Even my old friend Aton was ——— strained and reserved in my
presence. He leaped away nimbly when I tried to touch him, as though my hand
might pass through his flesh like a puff of smoke. As he led me through the
palace, slaves and nobles alike scurried out of my path, and inquisitive faces
watched me from every window and dark comer as we passed. Pharaoh greeted me with a curious mixture of
respect and nervousness, most alien to a king and a god. 'Where have you been, Taita?' he asked, as though
he did not really want to hear the answer. I prostrated myself at his feet. 'Divine Pharaoh,
as you yourself are part of the godhead, I understand that you ask that
question to test me. You know that my lips are sealed. It would be sacrilege
for me to speak of these mysteries, even to you. Please convey to the other
deities who are your peers, and particularly to Anubis, the god of the cemeteries,
that I have been true to the charge laid upon me. That I have kept the oath of
silence imposed upon me. Tell them that I have passed the test that you set
me.' His expression glazed as he considered this, and he
fidgeted nervously. I could see him forming question after question, and then
discarding each of them in turn. I had left him no opening to exploit. In the end he blurted out lamely, 'Indeed, Taita,
you have passed the test I set you. Welcome back. You have been missed.' But I
could see that all his suspicions were confirmed, and he treated me with that
respect due to one who had solved the ultimate mystery. I crawled closer to him and dropped my voice to a
whisper. 'Great Egypt, you know the reason I have been sent back?' He looked mystified, but nodded uncertainly. I came
to my feet and glanced around suspiciously, as though I expected to be
overlooked by supernatural forces. I made the sign against evil before I went
on, 'The Lady Lostris. Her illness was caused by the direct influence of—' I
could not say the name, but made the horn sign with two fingers, the sign of
the dark god, Seth. His expression changed from confusion to dread, and
he shivered involuntarily and drew closer to me, as if for protection, as I
went on, 'Before I was taken away, my mistress was already carrying in her womb
the treasure of the House of Mamose when the Dark One intervened. Due to her
illness, the son she was bearing you has been aborted from her womb.' Pharaoh looked distraught. 'So that is the reason
that she miscarried,' he began, and then broke off. I picked up my cue smoothly. 'Never fear, Great
Egypt, I have been sent back by forces greater than those of the Dark One to
save her, so that the destiny that I foresaw in the Mazes of Ammon-Ra may run
its allotted course. There will be another son to replace the one that was
lost. Your dynasty will still be secured.' 'You must not leave the side of the Lady Lostris
until she is well again.' His voice shook with emotion. 'If you save her and she
bears me another son, you may ask from me whatever you wish, but if she dies—'
he stopped as he considered what threat might impress one who had already
returned from beyond, and in the end let it trail away. 'With your permission, Your Majesty, I shall go to
her this instant.' 'This instant!'he agreed.'Go! Go!' MY MISTRESS'S RECOVERY WAS SO SWIFT that I began to
suspect that I had unwittingly invoked some force beyond my own comprehension,
and I felt a superstitious awe at my own powers. Her flesh filled out and firmed almost as I ———
watched. Those pitiful empty sacs of skin swelled into plump, round breasts
once again, sweet enough to make the stone image of the god Hapi which stood at
the doorway to her chamber burn with envy. Fresh young blood suffused the chalk
of her skin until it glowed once more, and her laughter tinkled like the
fountains of our water-garden. Very soon it was impossible to keep her to her bed.
Within three weeks of my return to Elephantine, she was playing games of toss
with her handmaidens, dancing about the garden and leaping high to reach the
inflated bladder above the heads of the others, until, fearful that she might
overtax her returning strength, I confiscated the ball and ordered her back to
her chamber. She" would obey me only after we had struck another bargain,
and I had agreed to sing with her, or teach her the most arcane formulas of the
bao board which would allow her to enjoy her first victory over Aton, who was
an addict of the game. Aton came almost every evening to enquire about my
mistress's health on behalf of the king, and afterwards to play the board-game
with us. Aton seemed to have decided at last that I was not a dangerous ghost,
and although he treated me with a new respect, our old friendship survived my
demise. Each morning my Lady Lostris made me repeat my
promise to her. Then she would reach for her mirror and study her reflection
without the faintest trace of vanity, assessing every facet of her beauty to
determine if it was ready yet to be looked upon by Lord Tanus. 'My hair looks like straw, and there is another
pimple coming up on my chin,' she lamented. 'Make me beautiful again, Taita.
For Tanus' sake make me beautiful.' 'You have done the damage to yourself, and then you
call for Taita to make it better,' I grumbled, and she laughed and threw her
arms around my neck. 'That's what you are here for, you old scallywag.
To look after me.' Each Evening when I mixed a tonic for her and
brought the steaming bowl to her as she prepared for sleep, she would make me
repeat my promise to her. 'Swear you will bring Tanus to me, just as soon as I
am ready to receive him.' I tried to ignore the difficulties and the dangers
that this promise would bring upon us all. 'I swear it to you,' I repeated
dutifully, and she lay back against the ivory headrest and went to sleep with a
smile upon her face. I would worry about fulfilling my promise when the time
came. FROM ATON, PHARAOH HAD A FULL REPORT of Lostris'
recovery and came in person to visit her. He brought her a new necklace of gold
and lapis lazuli in the form of an eagle and sat until evening, playing
word-games and setting riddles with her. When he was ready to leave, he called
me to walk with him as far as his chambers. 'The change in her is extraordinary. It is a
miracle, Taita. When can I take her to bed again? Already she seems
well enough to bear my son and heir.' 'Not yet, Great Egypt,' I assured him vehemently.
'The slightest exertion on the part of my mistress might trigger a relapse.' He
no longer questioned my word, for now I spoke with all the authority of the
once dead, although his previous awe of me had worn a little thin with
familiarity. The slave girls also were becoming accustomed to my
resurrection, and were able to look at my face without having to make the sign.
Indeed, my return from the underworld was no longer the most popular fare of
the palace gossips. They had something else to keep them busy. This was die
advent of Akh-Horus into the lives and consciousness of every person living in
the land along the great river. The first time I heard the name Akh-Horus whispered
in the palace corridors, I did not immediately place it. The garden of Tiamat
beside the Red Sea seemed so remote from the little world of Elephantine, and I
had forgottetfcthe name that Hui had bestowed on Tanus. When, howeva, I heard
the accounts of the extraordinary deeds ascribed to this demi-god, I realized
who they were speaking about. In a fever of excitement, I ran all the way back to
the harem and found my mistress in the garden, besieged by a dozen visitors,
noble ladies and royal wives, for she had so far recovered from her illness as
to resume once more her role as court favourite. I was so wrought up that I forgot my place as a
mere slave, and to be rid of .them I was quite rude to the royal ladies. They
flounced out of the garden squawking like a gaggle of offended geese, and my
mistress rounded on me. "That was unlike you. What on earth has come over
you, Taita?' 'Tanus!' I said the name like an incantation, and
she forgot all her indignation and seized both my hands. 'You have news of Tanus! Tell me! Quickly, before I
die of impatience.' 'News? Yes, I have news of him. What news! What extraordinary
news. What unbelievable news!' She dropped my hands and picked up her formidable
silver fan. 'Stop your nonsense this instant,' she threatened me with it. 'I'll
not put up with your teasing. Tell me, or I swear you'll have more lumps on
your head than a Nubian has fleas.' 'Come! Let's go where nobody can hear us.' I led
her down to the jetty and handed her into our little skiff. Out in the middle
of the river we were safe from the flapping ears that lurked behind each corner
of the palace walls. "There is a fresh, clean wind blowing through
the land,' I told her. 'They call this wind Akh-Horus.' 'The brother of Horus,' she breathed it with
reverence. 'Is this what they call Tanus now?' 'None of them know it is Tanus. They think he is a
god.' 'He is a god,' she insisted. 'To me, he is a god.' 'That is how they see
it also. If he were not a god, how then would he know where the Shrikes are
skulking, how else would he march unerringly to their strongholds, how would he
know instinctively where they are waiting to wayr lay the incoming caravans,
and to surprise them in their own ambuscades?' 'Has he accomplished all these things?' she
demanded in wonder. 'These deeds and a hundred others, if you can
believe the wild rumours that are flying about the palace. They say that every
thief and bandit in the land runs in terror of his life, that the clans of the
Shrikes are being shattered one by one. They say that Akh-Horus sprouted wings,
like those of an eagle, and flew up the inaccessible cliffs of Gebel-Umm-Bahari
to appear miraculously in the midst of the clan of Basti the Cruel. With his
own hands, he hurled five hundred of the bandits from the top of the cliffs—' 'Tell me more!' She clapped her hands, almost
capsizing the skiff in her enthusiasm. "They say that at every crossroads and beside
every caravan route he has built tall monuments to his passing.' 'Monuments?
What monuments are these?' 'Piles of human skulls, high pyramids of skulls. The
heads of the bandits he has slain, as a warning to others.' My mistress shuddered with delicious horror, but
her face still shone. 'Has he killed so many?' she demanded. 'Some say he has slain five thousand, and some say
fifty thousand. There are even some who say one hundred thousand, but I think
those must be exaggerating a little.' 'Tell me more! More!' "They say he has already captured at least six
of the robber barons—' 'And chopped off their heads!' she anticipated me
with ghoulish relish. 'No, they say that he has not killed them, but
transformed them into baboons. They say he keeps them in a cage for his
amusement.' 'Is all of this possible?' she giggled. 'For a god, anything is possible.' 'He is my god. Oh, Taita, when will you let me see
him?' 'Soon,' I promised. 'Your beauty burns up brighter
every day. Soon it will be fully restored.' 'In the meantime you must gather every story and
every rumour of Akh-Horus and bring them to me.' She sent me to the shipping wharf every day to
question the crews of the barges coming down from theg north for news of Akh-Horus. 'They are saying now that nobody has ever seen the
face of Akh-Horus, for he wears a helmet with a visor that covers all but his
eyes. They say also that in the heat of battle the head of Akh-Horus bursts
into flame, a flame that blinds his enemies,' I reported to her after one such
visit. 'In the sunlight I have seen Tanus' hair seem to
burn with a heavenly light,' my mistress confirmed. On another morning I could tell her, "They say
that he can multiply his earthly body like the images in a mirror, that he can
be in many" different places at one time, for on the same day he can be
seen in Qena and Kom-Ombo, a hundred miles apart.' 'Is that possible?' she asked, with awe. 'Some say this is not true. They say that he can
cover these great distances only because he never sleeps. They say that in the
night hours he gallops through the darkness on the back of a lion, and in the
day he soars through the sky on the back of an enormous white eagle to fall
upon his enemies when they least expect it.' "That could be true.' She nodded seriously. 'I
do not believe about the mirror images, but the lion and the eagle might be
true. Tanus could do something like that. I believe it.' 'I think it more likely that everybody in Egypt is
eager to set eyes upon Akh-Horus, and that the desire is father to the act.
They see him behind every bush. As to the speed of his travels, well, I have
marched with the guards and I can vouch for—' She would not allow me to finish,
but interrupted primly. "There is no romance in your soul, Taita. You
would doubt that the clouds are the fleece of Osiris' flocks, and that the sun
is the face of Ra, simply because you cannot reach up and touch them. I, for my
part, believe Tanus is capable of all these things.' Which assertion put an end
to the argument, and I hung my head in submission. IN THE AFTERNOONS THE TWO OF US RESUMED our old
practice of strolling through the streets and the market-places. As before her
illness, "rny mistress was welcomed by an adoring populace, and she stopped
to speak with all of them, no matter their station or their calling. From
priests to prostitutes, none was immune to her loveliness and her unfeigned
charm. Always she was able to turn the conversation to
Akh-Horus, and the people were as eager as she was to discuss the new god. By
this time he had been promoted in the popular imagination from demi-god to a
full member of the pantheon. The citizens of Elephantine had already begun a
subscription for the building of a temple to Akh-Horus, to which my mistress
had made a most generous donation. A site for the temple had been chosen on the bank
of the river opposite the temple of Horus, his brother, and Pharaoh had made
the formal declaration of his intention to dedicate the building in person.
Pharaoh had every reason to be grateful. There was a new spirit of confidence
abroad. As the caravan routes were made secure, so the volume of trade between
the Upper Kingdom and the rest of the world blossomed. Where before one caravan had arrived from the East,
now four made a safe crossing of the desert, and as many set out on the return
journey. To supply the caravan masters, pack-donkeys were needed in their
thousands, and the farmers and breeders drove them into the cities, grinning at
the expectation of the high prices they would receive. Because it was now safe to work the fields furthest
from the protection of the city walls, crops were planted where for decades
only weeds had grown, and the farmers, who had been reduced to beggars, began
to prosper again. The oxen drew the sledges piled high with produce along the
roads that were now protected by the legions of Akh-Horus, and the markets were
filled with fresh produce. Some of the profits of the merchants and the
land-owners from these ventures were spent in the building of new villas in the
countryside, where it was once more deemed safe to take their families to live.
Artisans and craftsmen, who had walked the streets of Thebes and Elephantine
seeking employment for their skills, were suddenly in demand, and used their
wages to buy not only the necessities of life but luxuries for themselves and
their families. The markets were thronged. The volume of traffic up and down the Nile swelled
dramatically, so that more craft were needed, and the new keels were laid down
in every shipyard. The captains and crews of the river boats and the shipyard
workers spent their new wealth in the taverns and pleasure-houses, so that the
prostitutes and the courtesans clamoured for fine clothes and baubles, and the
tailors and the jewellers thrived and built new homes, while their wives
prowled the markets with gold and silver in their purses, looking for
everything from new slaves to cooking-pots. Egypt was coming to life again, after being
strangled for all these years by the depredations of Akh-Seth and the Shrikes. As a result of all this, the state revenues
burgeoned, and Pharaoh's tax-collectors circled above it all with as much
relish as the vultures above the corpses of the bandits that Akh-Horus and his
legions were strewing across the countryside. Of course, Pharaoh was grateful. So were my mistress and I. At my suggestion, the
two of us invested in a share of a trading expedition that was setting out
eastwards into Syria. When the expedition returned six months later, we found
that we had made a profit of fifty times our original investment. My mistress
bought herself a string of pearls and five new female slaves to make my life
miserable. Prudent as always, I used my share to acquire five plots of prime
land on the east bank of the river, and one of (the law scribes drew up the
deeds and had them registered in the temple books. THEN CAME THE DAY THAT I HAD BEEN dreading. One
morning my mistress studied her reflection in the mirror with even more
attention than usual, and declared that she was ready at last. In all fairness,
I had grudgingly to agree that she had never looked more lovely. It was as
though all she had suffered recently had tempered her to a new resilience. The
last traces of girlishness, uncertainty, and puppy fat had evaporated from her
features, and she had become a woman, mature and composed. 'I trusted you, Taita. Now prove to me that I was
not silly to do so. Bring Tanus to me.' When Tanus and I had parted at Safaga, we had been
unable to agree on any sure method of exchanging messages. 'I will be on the march every day, and who can tell
where this campaign will lead me. Do not let the Lady Lostris worry if she does
not hear from me. Tell her I will send a message when my task is completed. But
tell her that I will be there when the fruits of our love are ripe upon the
tree, and are ready for plucking.' Thus it was that we had heard nothing of him other
than the wild rumours of the wharves and bazaars. Once again it seemed that the gods had intervened to
save me, this time from the wrath of my Lady Lostris. There was a fresh rumour
in the market-place that day. A caravan coming down the northern road had
encountered a recently erected pyramid of human heads at the roadside not two
miles beyond the city walls. The heads were so fresh that they were stinking
only a little and had not yet been cleaned of flesh by the crows and vultures. 'This means only one thing,' the gossips told each
other. "This means that Akh-Horus is in the nome of Assoun, probably within
sight of the walls of Elephantine. He has fallen upon the remnants of the clan
of Akheku, who have been skulking in the desert since their baron had his head
hacked off at Gallala. Akh-Horus has slaughtered the last of the bandits, and
piled their heads at the roadside. Thanks be to the new god, the south has been
cleared of the dreaded Shrikes!' This was news indeed, the best I had heard in
weeks, and I was in a fever to take it to my mistress. I pushed my way through
the throng of sailors and merchants and fishermen on the wharf to find a
boatman to take me back to the island. Somebody tugged at my arm, and I shrugged the hand
away irritably. Despite the new prosperity sweeping the land, or perhaps
because of it, the beggars were more demanding than ever. This one was not so
easily put off, and I turned back to him, angrily raising my staff to drive him
off. 'Do not strike an old friend! I have a message for
you from one of the gods,' the beggar whined, and I stayed the blow and gaped
at him. 'Hui!' My heart soared as I recognized the sly grin
of the erstwhile robber. 'What are you doing here?' I did not wait for a reply
to my fatuous question, but went on swiftly, 'Follow me at a distance.' I led him to one of the pleasure-houses in a narrow
alley beyond the harbour that provided rooms to couples, of the same or of
mixed gender. They rented the rooms for a short period measured by a
water-clock set at the door, and charged a large copper ring for this service.
I paid this exorbitant fee and the moment we were alone, I seized Hui by his
ragged cloak. 'What news of your master?' I demanded, and he
chuckled with infuriating insolence. 'My throat is so dry I can hardly speak.' Already
he had adopted all the swagger and insolent panache of a trooper of the Blues.
How quickly a monkey learns new tricks! I shouted for the porter to bring up a
pot of beer. Hui drank like a thirsty donkey, then lowered the pot and belched
happily. 'The god Akh-Horus sends greetings, to you and to
another whose name cannot be mentioned. He bids me tell you that the task is
completed and that all the birds are in the cage. He reminds you that it lacks
only a few months to the next festival of Osiris and it is time to write a new
script for the passion play for the amusement of the king.' 'Where is he? How long will it take for you to
return to him?' I demanded eagerly. 'I can' be with him before Ammon-Ra, the sun god,
plunges beyond the western hills,' Hui declared, and I glanced through the window
at the sun which was halfway down the sky. Tanus was lying up very close to the
city, and I rejoiced anew. How I longed to feel his rough embrace, and hear
that great booming laugh of his! Grinning to myself in anticipation, I paced up and
down the filthy floor of the room while I decided on the message that I would
give Hui to take back to him. IT WAS ALMOST DARK WHEN I STEPPED ashore on our
little jetty and hurried up the steps. One of the slave girls was weeping at
the gate, and rubbing her swollen ear. 'She struck me,' the girl whimpered, and I saw that
her dignity had suffered more than her ear. not refer to the Lady Lostris as
"she",' I scolded her. 'Anyway, what have you to complain of? Slaves
are there to be struck.' None the less, it was unusual for my mistress to
lift a hand to anyone in her household. She must indeed be in a fine mood, I
thought, and slowed my pace. Proceeding warily now, I arrived just as another
of the girls fled weeping from the chamber. My mistress appeared in the doorway
behind her, flushed with anger. 'You have turned my hair into a hay-stack—' She saw me then and broke off her tirade. She
rounded on me with such gusto that I knew that I was the true object of her
ire. 'Where have you been?' she demanded. 'I sent you to
the harbour before noon. How dare you leave me waiting so long?' She advanced
upon me with such an expression that I backed off nervously. 'He is here,' I told.her hastily, and then dropped
my voice so that none of the slave girls could hear me. 'Tanus is here,' I
whispered, 'the day after tomorrow I will make good my promise to you.' Her mood swung in a full circle and she leaped up
to throw her arms around my neck, then she went off to find her offended girls
and to comfort them. AS PART OF HIS ANNUAL TRIBUTE THE vassal king of
the amorites had sent Pharaoh a pair of trained hunting cheetahs from his
kingdom across the Red Sea. The king was eager to run these magnificent
creatures against the herds of gazelle that abounded in the desert dunes of the
west bank. The entire court, including my mistress, had been commanded to
attend the course. We sailed across to the west bank in a fleet of
small river craft, white sails and bright-coloured pennants fluttering. There
was laughter and the music of lute and sistrum to accompany us. The annual
flooding of the great river would begin within days, and this expectation,
together with the prosperous new climate of the land, enhanced the carnival
mood of the court. My mistress was in a gayer mood than any of them,
and she called merry greetings to her friends in the other boats as our felucca
cut through the green summer waters at such a rate as to deck our bows with a
lacy white garland of foam and leave a shining wake behind us. It seemed that I was the only one who was not happy
and carefree. The wind had a harsh, abrasive edge to it, and was blowing from
the wrong quarter. I kept glancing anxiously at the western sky. It was
cloudless and bright, but there was a brassy sheen to the heavens that was
unnatural. It was almost as though another sun was dawning from the opposite
direction to the one we knew so well. I put aside my misgivings and tried to enter into
the spirit of the outing. I failed in this, for I had more than the weather to
worry about. If one part of my plan went awry, my life would be in danger, and
perhaps other lives more valuable than mine would be at risk. I must have shown all this on my face, for my
mistress nudged me with her pretty painted toe and told me, 'So glum, Taita?
Everyone who looks at you will know that you are up to something. Smile! I
command you to smile.' When we landed on the west bank, there was an army
of slaves waiting for us there. Grooms holding splendid white riding donkeys
from the royal stables, all caparisoned with silk. Pack-donkeys laden with
tents and rugs and baskets of food and'wine, and all the other provisions for a
royal picnic. There was a regiment of slaves in attendance, some to hold
sun-shades above the ladies, others to wait upon the noble guests. There were
clowns and acrobats and musicians to entertain them, and a hundred huntsmen to
provide the sport. The cheetah cage was loaded on a sledge drawn by a
team of white oxen, and the court gathered around the vehicle to admire these
rare beasts. They did not occur naturally in our land, for they were creatures
of the open grassy savannah, and there was none of this type of terrain along
the river. They were the first that I had ever seen, and my curiosity was so
aroused that for a while I forgot my other worries and went up as close to the
cage as I could push through the crowd without jostling or treading on the toes
of some irascible nobleman. They were the most beautiful cats that I could
imagine, taller and leaner than our leopards, with long, clean limbs and
concave bellies. Their sinuous tails seemed to give expression to their mood.
Their golden hides were starred with rosettes of deepest black, while from the
inner corner of each of their eyes, a line of black was painted down the cheek
like a runnel of tears. This, with their regal bearing, gave them a tragic and
romantic air that I found enchanting. I longed to own one of these creatures,
and I decided on the moment to put the thought into the mind of my mistress.
Pharaoh had never refused one of her whims. Too soon for my liking, the barque carrying the
king across the river arrived on the west bank, and with the rest of the court
we hurried to the landing to greet him. Pharaoh was dressed in light hunting garb and for once
seemed relaxed and happy. He stopped beside my mistress and while she made a
ritual obeisance, he enquired graciously about her health. I was filled with
dread that he might decide to keep her by his side throughout the day, which
would have upset all my arrangements. However, the hunting cheetah caught his
attention and he passed by without giving my mistress any order to follow. We lost ourselves in the throng and made our way to
where a donkey was being held for my Lady Lostris. While I helped her to mount,
I spoke quietly to the groom. When he told me what I wanted to hear, I slipped
a ring of silver into his hand, and it disappeared, as though by magic. With one slave leading her and another holding a
sunshade over her, my mistress and I followed the king and the sledge out into
the desert. With frequent stops for refreshment, it took us half the morning to
reach the Valley of the Gazelles. On the way we passed at a distance the
ancient cemetery of Tras which dated from the time of the very first pharaohs.
Some of the wise men said that the tombs had been carved from the cliff of
black rock three thousand years ago, although how they reached this conclusion
I could not tell. Without making it obvious, I studied the entrances of the
tombs keenly as we passed. However, from so far off I could make out no trace
of recent human presence around them, and I was unreasonably disappointed. I
kept glancing back, as we went on. The Valley of the Gazelles was one of the royal
hunting preserves, protected by the decrees of a long line of pharaohs. A
company of royal gamekeepers was permanently stationed in the hills above the
valley to enforce the king's proclamation reserving all the creatures in it to
himself. The penalty for hunting here Without the royal authority was death by
strangulation. The nobles dismounted on the crest of one of these
hills overlooking the broad brown valley. With despatch the tents were set up
to give them shade, and jars of sherbet and beer were broached to slake the
thirst of their journey. I made certain that my mistress and I secured a
good vantage-point from which to watch the hunt, but one from which we could
also withdraw discreetly without attracting undue attention to ourselves. In
the distance I could make out the herds of gazelle through the wavering watery
mirage on the floor of the valley. I pointed them out to my mistress. 'What do they find to eat down there?' my Lady
Lostris asked. 'There is not a trace of green. They must eat stones, for there
are enough of those.' 'Many of those are not stones at all, but living
plants,' I told her. When she laughed in disbelief, I searched the rocky ground
and. plucked a handful of those miraculous plants. "They are stones,' she insisted, until she
held one in her hand and crushed it. The thick juice trickled over her fingers,
and she marvelled at the cunning of whatever god had devised this deception.
"This is what they live on? It does not seem possible.' We could not continue this conversation, because
the hunt was beginning. Two of the royal huntsmen opened the cage and the
hunting cheetahs leaped down to earth. I expected them to attempt to escape,
but they were tame as temple cats and rubbed themselves affectionately against
the legs of then- handlers. The cats uttered a strange twittering sound, more
like a bird than a savage predator. Along the far side of the brown, scorched valley
bottom I could make out the line of beaters, their forms tiny and distorted by
distance and mirage. They were moving slowly in our direction, and the herds of
antelope were beginning to drift ahead of them. While the king and his huntsmen, with the cheetahs
on leash, moved down the slope towards the valley bottom, we and the rest of
the court remained on the crest. The courtiers were already placing wagers with
one another, and I was as eager as any of them to watch the outcome of the
hunt, but my mistress had her mind on other matters. 'When can we go?' she whispered. 'When can we
escape into the desert?' 'Once the hunt begins, all their eyes will be upon
it. That will be our opportunity.' Even as I spoke, the wind that had blown us
across the river and cooled us on the march suddenly dropped. It was as though
a coppersmith had opened the door of his forge. The air became almost too hot
to breathe. Once again I looked to the western horizon. The sky
above it had turned a sulphurous yellow. Even as I watched, the stain seemed to
spread across the heavens. It made me uneasy. However, I was the only one in
the crowd who seemed to notice this strange phenomenon. Although the hunting party was now at the bottom of
the hill, it was still close enough for me to observe the great cats. They had
seen the herds of gazelle which were being driven slowly towards them. This had
transformed them from affectionate pets into the savage hunters they truly
were. Their heads were up, intent and alert, ears pricked forward, leaning
against the leash. Their concave bellies were sucked in, and every muscle was
taut as a bowstring drawn to full stretch. My mistress tugged at my skirt, and whispered
imperatively, 'Let us be gone, Taita,' and reluctantly I began to edge away
towards a clump of rocks that would cover our retreat and screen us from the
rest of the company. The bribe of silver to the groom had procured for us a donkey
that was now tethered out of sight amongst the rocks. As soon as we reached it,
I checked that it carried what I had ordered, the water-skin and the leather
bag of provisions. I found that they were all in order. I could not restrain myself, and I pleaded with my
mistress, 'Just one moment more.' Before she could forbid it, I scrambled to
the top of the rocky outcrop and peeped down into the valley below. The nearest antelope were crossing a few hundred
paces in front of where Pharaoh held the pair of cheetahs on the leash. I was
just in time to watch him slip them and send them away. They started out at an
easy lope, heads up, as if they were studying the herds of daintily trotting
antelope to select their prey. Suddenly the herds became aware of their rapid
approach, and they burst into full flight. Like a flock of swallows they
skimmed away across the dusty plain. The cats stretched out their long bodies, reaching
far ahead with their forepaws and then whipping their hindquarters through,
doubling their lean torsos before stretching out again. Swiftly they built up
to the top of their speed, and I had never seen an animal so swift. Compared to
them, the herds of gazelle seemed suddenly to have run into swampy ground and
to have had their flight impeded. With effortless elegance, the two cats
overhauled the herd, and ran past one or two stragglers before they caught up
with the victims of their choice. The panic-stricken antelopes tried to dodge the
deadly rush. They leaped high and changed direction in mid-air, twisting and
doubling back the moment their dainty hooves touched the scorched earth. The
cats followed each of the convolutions with graceful ease, and the end was
inevitable. Each of them bore one of die gazelle to earth in a
sliding, tumbling cloud of dust, and then crouched over it, jaws clamped across
the windpipe to strangle it-while the gazelle's back legs kicked out
convulsively, and then at last stiffened into the rigor of death. I found myself shaken and breathless with the
excitement of it all. Then my mistress's voice roused me. 'Taita! Come down
immediately. They will see you perched up there.' And I slid down to rejoin
her. Although I was still wrought up, I boosted her into
the saddle and led the donkey down into the dead ground where we were out of
sight of the company on the hilltop behind us. My mistress could not sustain
her irritation with me for very long, and when I slyly mentioned Tanus' name
again she forgot it entirely, and urged her mount on towards the rendezvous. Only after I had placed another ridge behind us and
was certain that we were well clear of the Valley of the Gazelles, did I head
back directly towards the cemetery of Tras. In the still, hot air, the sound of
our donkey's hooves clinked and crackled on the stones as though it were
passing over a bed of broken glass. Soon I felt the sweat break out upon my
skin, for the air was close and heavy with a feeling of thunder. Long before we
reached the tombs, I told my mistress, 'The air is dry as old bones. You should
drink a little water—' 'Keep on! There will be plenty of time to drink
your fill later.' 'I was thinking only of you? mistress,' I
protested. 'We must not be late. Every moment you waste will
give me that much less with Tanus.' She was right, of course, for we would have
little enough time before we were missed by the others. My mistress was so
popular that many would be looking to enjoy her company once the hunt was over
and they were returning to the river. As we drew closer to the cliffs, so her eagerness increased
until she could no longer abide the pace of her mount. She leaped off its back
and ran ahead to the next rise. 'There it is! That is where he will be waiting
for me," she cried, and pointed ahead. As she danced on the skyline, the wind came at us like
a ravening wolf, howling amongst the hills and canyons. It caught my mistress's
hair and spread it like a flag, snapping and tangling it around her head. It
lifted her skirts high above her slim brown thighs, and she laughed and
pirouetted, flirting with the wind as though it were her lover. I did not share
her delight. I turned and looked back and saw the storm coming
out of the Sahara. It towered into the sullen yellow heavens, dun and awful,
billowing upon itself like surf breaking on a coral reef. The wind-blown sand
scoured my legs and I broke into a run, dragging the donkey behind me on its
lead. The wind thrusting into my back almost knocked me off my feet, but I
caught my mistress. 'We must be quick,' I shouted above the wind. 'We
must reach the shelter of the tombs before it hits us.' High clouds of sand blew across the sun, dimming it
until I could look directly at it with my naked eye. All the world was washed
with that sombre shade of ochre, and the sun was a dull ball of orange. Flying
sand raked the exposed skin of our limbs and the backs of our necks, until I
wound my shawl around my mistress's head to protect her, and led her forward by
the hand. Sheets of driven sand engulfed us, blotting out our
surroundings, so that I feared I had lost direction, until abruptly a hole
opened in the curtains of sand, and I saw the dark mouth of one of the tombs
appear ahead of us. Dragging my mistress with one hand and our donkey with the
other, I staggered into tne shelter of the cave. The entrance-shaft was carved
from the solid rock. It led us deep into the hillside, and then made a sharp
turn before entering the burial chamber where once the ancient mummy had been
laid to rest. Centuries before, the grave-robbers had disposed of the embalmed
body and all its treasures. Now all that remained were the faded frescoes upon
the stone walls, images- of gods and monsters that were ghostly in the gloom. My mistress sank down against the rock wall, but
her first thoughts were for her love. 'Tanus will never find us now,' she cried
in despair, and I who had led her to safety was hurt by her ingratitude. I
unsaddled our donkey and heaped the load in a comer of the tomb. Then I drew a
cup of water from the skin and made her drink. 'What will happen to the others, the king and all
our friends?' she asked, between gulps from the cup. It was her nature to think
of the welfare of others, even in her own predicament. 'They have the huntsmen to care for them,' I told
her. "They are good men and know the desert.' But not well enough to have
anticipated the storm, I thought grimly. Although I sought to reassure her, I
knew it would go hard with the women and children out there. 'And Tanus?' she asked. 'What will become of him?'
Tanus especially will know what to do. He is like one of the Bedouin. You can
be sure he will have seen the storm coming.' 'Will we ever get back to the river? Will they ever
find us here?' At last she thought of her own safety. 'We will be safe here. We have water enough for
many days. When the storm blows itself out, we will find our way back to the
river.' Thinking of the precious water, I carried the bulging skin further into
the tomb, where the donkey would not trample it. By now it was almost completely
dark, and I fumbled with the lamp that the slave had provided from the pack,
and blew upon the smouldering wick. It flared and lit the tomb with a cheery
yellow light. While I was still busy with the lamp and my back
was turned to the entrance, my mistress screamed. It was a sound so high and
filled with such mortal terror that I was struck with equal dread, and the
courses of my blood ran thick and slow as honey, although my heart raced like
the hooves of the flying gazelle. I spun about and reached for, my dagger, but
when I saw the monster whose bulk filled the doorway, I froze without touching
the weapon on my belt. I knew instinctively that my puny blade would avail us
not at all against whatever this creature might be. In the feeble light of the lamp the form was
indistinct and distorted. I saw that it had a human shape, but it was too large
to be a man, and the grotesque head convinced me that this was indeed that
dreadful crocodile-headed monster from the underworld that devours the hearts
of those who are found wanting on the scales of Thoth, the monster depicted on
the walls of the tomb. The head gleamed with reptilian scales, and the beak was
that of an eagle or a gigantic turtle. The eyes were deep and fathomless pits
that stared at us implacably. Great wings sprouted from its shoulders.
Half-furled, they flapped about the towering body like those of a falcon at
bate. I expected the creature to launch itself on those wings and to rend my
mistress with brazen talons. She must have dreaded this as much as I, for she
screamed again as she crouched at the monster's feet. Then suddenly I realized that the creature was not
winged, but that the folds of a long woollen cape, such as the Bedouin wear,
were flogging on the wind. While we were still frozen by this horrible
presence, it raised both hands and lifted off the gilded war helmet with the
visor fashioned like the head of an eagle. Then it shook its head and a mass of
red-gold curls tumbled down on to the broad shoulders. 'From the top of the eliff I saw you coming through
the storm,' it said in those dear familiar tones. My mistress screamed again, this time with wildly
ringing joy. 'Tanus!' She flew to him, and he gathered her up as though
she were a child and lifted her so high that her head brushed the rock roof.
Then he brought her down and folded her to his chest. From the cradle of his
arms, she reached up with her mouth for his, and it seemed that they might
devour each other with the strength of their need. I stood forgotten in the shadows of the tomb.
Although I had conspired and risked so much to bring them together, I cannot
bring myself to write down here the feelings that assailed me as I was made
reluctant witness to their rapture. I believe that jealousy is the most ignoble
of all our emotions, and yet I loved the Lady Lostris as well as Tanus did, and
not with the love of a father or of a brother, either. I was a eunuch, but what
I felt for her was the love of a natural man, hopeless of course, but all the
more bitter because of that. I could not stay and watch them and I began to
slink from the tomb like a whipped puppy, but Tanus saw me leaving and broke
that kiss which was threatening to destroy my soul. 'Taita, don't leave me alone with the wife of the
king. Stay with us to protect me from this terrible temptation. Our honour is
in jeopardy. I cannot trust myself, you must stay and see that I bring no shame
to the wife of Pharaoh.' 'Go,' cried my Lady Lostris from his arms. 'Leave
us alone. I'll listen to no talk of shame or honour now. Our love has been too
long denied. I cannot wait for the prophecy of the Mazes to run its course.
Leave us alone now, gentle Taita.' I fled from the chamber as though my life was in danger.
I might have run out into the storm and perished there. That way I would have
found surcease, but I was too much of a coward, and I let the wind drive me
back. I stumbled to a corner of the shaft where the wind could no longer harry
me, and I sank to the stone floor. I pulled my shawl over my head to stop my
eyes and my ears, but although the storm roared along the cliff, it could not
drown the sounds from the burial chamber. For two days the storm blew with unabated ferocity.
I slept for part of that time, forcing myself to seek oblivion, but whenever I
awoke, I could hear them, and the sounds of their love tortured me. Strange
that I had never known such distress when my mistress was with the king—but
then on the other hand not so strange, for the old man had meant nothing to
her. This was another world of torment for me. The
cries, the groans, the whispers tore at my heart. The rhythmic sobs of a young
woman that were not those of pain threatened to destroy me. Her wild scream of
final rapture was more agonizing to me than the cut of the gelding-knife. At last the wind abated and died away, moaning at
the foot of the cliffs. The light strengthened and I realized that it was the
third day of my incarceration in the tomb. I roused myself and called to them,
not daring to enter the inner chamber for fear of what I might discover. For a
while there was no .reply, and then my mistress spoke in a husky, bemused voice
that echoed eerily down the shaft. 'Taita, is that you? I thought that I had
died in the storm and been carried to the western fields of paradise.' ONCE THE STORM HAD DROPPED, WE HAD little time
remaining. The royal huntsmen would already be searching for us. The storm had
given us the best possible excuse for our absence. I was sure that the
survivors of the hunting party would be scattered across these terrible hills.
But the search-party must not discover us in the company of Tanus. On the other hand, Tanus and I had barely spoken
during these last days, and there was much to discuss. Hastily we made our
plans, standing in the entrance to the shaft. My mistress was quiet and composed as I had seldom
seen her before. No longer the irrepressible chatterbox, she stood beside
Tanus, watching his face with a new serenity. She reminded me of a priestess
serving before the image of her god. Her eyes never left his face, and
occasionally she reached out to touch him, as if to reassure herself that it
was truly he. When she did this, Tanus broke off whatever he was
saying and gave all his attention to those dark green eyes. I had to call him
back to the business we still had not completed. In the presence of such
manifest adoration, my own feelings were base arid mean. I forced myself to
rejoice for them. It took longer to finish our business than I deemed
wise, but at last I embraced Tanus in farewell and urged the donkey out into
the sunlight that was filtered by the fine yellow dust that still filled the
air. My mistress lingered, and I waited for her in the valley below. Looking back, I saw them emerge from the cave at
last. They stood gazing at each other for a long moment without touching, and
then Tanus turned and strode away. My mistress watched until he was gone from
her sight, then she came down to where I waited. She walked like a woman in a dream. I helped her to mount, and while I adjusted the
saddle girth, she reached down and took my hand. 'Thank you,' she said simply. 'I do not deserve your gratitude,' I demurred. 'I am the happiest creature in all the world.
Everything that you told me of love is true. Please rejoice for me, even
though—' she did not finish, and suddenly I realized that she had read my
innermost feelings. Even in her own great joy, she grieved that she had caused
me pain. I think I loved her more in that moment than I had ever done before. I turned away and took up the reins, and led her
back towards the Nile. ONE OF THE ROYAL HUNTSMEN SPIED US from a far
hilltop, and hailed us heartily. 'We have been searching for you at the king's command,'
he told us, as he hurried down to join us. 'Was the king saved?' I asked. 'He is safe in the
palace on Elephantine Island, and he has commanded that the Lady Lostris be
brought to him directly she is found.' As we set foot on the palace jetty, Aton was there,
puffing out his painted cheeks with relief and fussing over my mistress. 'They
have found the bodies of twenty-three unfortunates who perished in the storm,'
he told us with ghoulish relish. 'All were certain that you would be found dead
also. However, I prayed at the temple of Hapi for your safe return.' He looked
pleased with himself, and I was annoyed that he tried to claim the credit for
her survival for himself. He allowed us only time enough to wash hastily and
anoint our dry skin with perfumed oil, before he whisked us away to the
audience with the king. Pharaoh was truly moved to have my mistress
returned to him. I am sure he had come to love her as much as any of the
others, and not merely for the promise of immortality that he saw in her. A
tear tangled in his eyelash and smeared the paint on his cheek as she knelt
before him. 'I thought you were lost,' he told her, and would
have embraced her, had etiquette permitted it. 'Instead I find you prettier and
livelier than ever.' Which was true, for love had gilded her with its special
magic. 'Taita saved me,' she told Pharaoh. 'He guided me
to a shelter and protected me through all those terrible days. Without him I
would have perished, like those other poor souls.' 'Is this true, Taita?' Pharaoh demanded of me
directly, and I assumed my modest expression, and murmured, 'I am but a humble
instrument of the gods.' He smiled at me, for I knew he had become fond of
me also. 'You have rendered us many services, oh humble instrument. But this is
the most valuable of them all. Approach!' he commanded, and I knelt before him. Aton stood beside him, holding a small cedar-wood
box. He lifted the lid and proffered it to the king. From the case Pharaoh
lifted out a gold chain. It was of the purest unalloyed gold, and bore the
marks of the royal jewellers to attest its weight of twenty deben. The king held the chain over my head and intoned,
'I bestow upon you the Gold of Praise.' He lowered it on to my shoulders, and
the oppressive weight was a delight to me. This decoration was the highest mark
of royal favour, usually reserved for generals and ambassadors, or for high
officials such as Lord IntefV I doubted that ever in the history of this very
Egypt had the gold chain been placed around the neck of a lowly slave. That was not the end of the gifts and awards that
were to be bestowed upon me, for my mistress was not to be outdone. That
evening while I was attending her bath, she suddenly dismissed her slaves and,
standing naked before me, she told me, 'You may help me to dress, Taita.' She
allowed me this privilege when she was especially well pleased with me. She
knew just how much I enjoyed having her to myself in these intimate
circumstances. Her loveliness was covered only by the glossy
tresses of her sable hair. It seemed that those days she had spent with Tanus
had filled her with a new quality of beauty. It emanated from deep within her.
A lamp placed inside an alabaster jar will shine through the translucent sides;
in the same way, the Lady Lostris seemed to glow. 'I never dreamed that such a poor vessel as this
body of mine could contain such joy.' She stroked her own flanks as she said it
and looked down at herself, inviting me to do the same. 'All that you promised
me came to pass while I was with Tanus. Pharaoh has bestowed the Gold of Praise
upon you, it is fitting that I also show my appreciation to you. I want you to
share my happiness in some way.' 'Serving you is all the reward I could wish for.'
'Help me to dress,' she ordered, and lifted her hands above her head. Her
breasts changed shape as she moved. Over the year I had watched them grow from
tiny immature figs into these round, creamy pomegranates, more beautiful than
jewels or marble sculptures. I held the diaphanous nightdress over her, and
then let it float down over her body. It covered her, but did not obscure her
loveliness, in the same way that the morning mist decks the waters of the Nile
in the dawn. 'I have commanded a banquet, and sent invitations
to the royal ladies.' 'Very well, my lady. I shall see to it.' 'No, no,
Taita. The banquet is in your honour. You will sit beside me as my guest.' This was as shocking as any of the wild schemes she
had thought up recently. 'It is not fitting, mistress. You will offend against
custom.' 'I am the wife of Pharaoh. I set the customs.
During the banquet I will have a gift for you, and I will present it to you in
the sight of all.' 'Will you tell me what this gift is?' I asked, with
some trepidation. I was never sure of what mischief she would dream up next. 'Certainly I will tell you what it is.' She smiled
mysteriously. 'It is a secret, that's what it is.' EVEN THOUGH I WAS THE GUEST OF HONOUR, I could not
leave the arrangements for the banquet to cooks and giggling slave girls. After
all, the reputation of my mistress as a hostess was at stake. I was at the
market before dawn to procure the finest, freshest produce from the fields and
the river. I promised Aton that he would be invited, and he opened the king's
wine cellar and let me make my selection. I hired and rehearsed the best
musicians and acrobats in the city. I sent out the slaves to gather hyacinth
and lily and lotus from the banks of the river to augment the masses of blooms
that already decorated our garden. I had the weavers plait tiny arks of reeds
on which I floated coloured glass lamps and set them adrift on the ponds of our
water-garden. I set out leather cushions and garlands of flowers for each
guest, and jars of perfumed oil to cool them in the sultry night and drive away
the mosquitoes. At nightfall the royal ladies began to arrive in
all their frippery and high fashion. Some of them had even shaved their heads
and replaced their natural hair with elaborate wigs woven from the hair which
the wives of the poor were forced to sell, in order to feed their brats. This
was a fashion I abhorred and I vowed to do all in my power to prevent my
mistress from succumbing to such folly. Her lustrous tresses were amongst my
chief delights, but when it comes to fashion, even the most sensible woman is
not to be trusted. When, at the insistence of my mistress, I seated
myself on the cushion beside her, rather than taking my usual position behind
her, I could see that many of our guests were scandalized by such indecorous
behaviour, and they whispered to each other behind their fans. I was just as
uncomfortable as they were, and to cover my embarrassment, I signalled the
slaves to keep the wine cups filled, the musicians to play, and the dancers to
dance. The wine was robust, the music rousing, and the
dancers were all male. They gave ample proof of their gender, for I had ordered
them to perform in a state of nature. The ladies were so enchanted by this
display that they soon forgot their decent outrage, and did justice to the
wine. I had no doubt that many of the male dancers would not leave the harem
before dawn. Some of the royal ladies had voracious appetites, and many had not
been visited by the king in years. In this convivial atmosphere my mistress rose to
her feet and called (for the attention of her guests. Then she commended me to
them in terms so extravagant that even I blushed. She went on to relate amusing
and touching episodes from the lifetime we had spent together. The wine seemed
to have softened the attitude of the women towards me, and they laughed and
applauded. A few of them even wept a little with wine and sentiment. At last my mistress commanded me to kneel before
her, and as I did so, there was a murmur of comment. I had chosen to wear a
simple kilt of the finest linen, and the slave girls had dressed my hair in the
fashion that best suited me. Apart from the Gold of Praise around my throat, I
wore no other ornament. In the midst of such ostentation, my simple style was
striking. With regular swimming and exercise I had kept the athletic body which
had first attracted Lord Intef to me. In those years I was in my prime. I heard one of the senior wives murmur to her
neighbour, 'What a pity he has lost his jewels. He would make such a diverting
toy.' This evening I could ignore the words that in other circumstances would
have caused me intense pain. My mistress was looking very pleased with herself.
She had succeeded in keeping me ignorant of the nature of her gift. Usually she
was not so adroit as to be able to outwit me. She looked down on my bowed head
and spoke slowly and clearly, wringing the utmost enjoyment from the moment. 'Taita the slave. For all the years of my life you
have been a shield over me. You have been my mentor and my tutor. You have
taught me to read and to write. You have made clear to me the mysteries of the
stars and the arcane arts. You have taught me to sing and to dance. You have
shown me how to find happiness and contentment in many things. I am grateful.' The royal ladies were once more beginning to become
restive. They had never before heard a slave praised in such effusive terms. 'On the day of the khamsin you did me a service
that I must reward. Pharaoh has bestowed the Gold of Praise upon you. I have my
own gift for you.' From under her robe she took a roll of papyrus
secured with a coloured thread. 'You knelt before me as a slave. Now rise to
your feet as a free man.' She held up the papyrus. 'This is your deed of manumission,
prepared by the scribes of the court. From this day forward, you are a free
man. I lifted my head for the first time and stared at
her in disbelief. She pressed the roll of papyrus into my numbed fingers, and
smiled down at me fondly. 'You did not expect this, did you? You are so
surprised that you have no words for me. Say something to me, Taita. Tell me
how grateful you are for this boon.' Every word she spoke wounded me like a poisoned
dart. My tongue was a rock in my mouth as I contemplated a life without her. As
a freed man, I would be excluded from her presence for ever. I would never
again prepare her food, nor attend her bath. I would never spread the covers
over her as she prepared for sleep, nor would I rouse her in the dawn and be at
her side when first she opened those lovely dark green eyes to each new day. I
would never again sing with her, or hold her cup, or help her to dress and have
the pleasure of gazing upon all her loveliness. I was stricken, and I stared at her hopelessly, as
one whose life had reached its end. 'Be happy, Taita,' she ordered me. 'Be happy in
this new freedom I give you.' 'I will never be happy again,' I blurted. 'You have
cast me off. How can I ever be happy again?' Her smile faded away, and she stared at me in
perturbation. 'I offer you the most precious gift that it is in my power to
give you. I offer you your freedom.' I shook my head. 'You inflict the most dire
punishment upon me. You are driving me away from you. I will never know
happiness again.' 'It is not a punishment, Taita. It was meant as a
reward. Please, don't you understand?' 'The only reward I desire is to remain at your side
for the rest of my life.' I felt the tears welling up from deep inside me, and
I tried to hold them back. 'Please, mistress, I beg of you, don't send me away
from you. If you have any feeling towards me, allow me to stay with you.' 'Do not weep,' she commanded. Tor if you do, then I
will weep with you, in front of all my guests.' I truly believe that she had
not, until that moment, contemplated the consequences of this misplaced piece
of generosity that she had dreamed up. The tears broke over my lids and
streamed down my cheeks. 'Stop it! This is not what I wanted.' Her own tears
kept mine good company. 'I only thought to honour you, as the king has honoured
you.' I held up the roll of papyrus. 'Please let me tear
this piece of foolery to shreds. Take me back into your service. Give me leave
to stand behind you, where I belong.' 'Stop it, Taita! You are breaking my heart.' Loudly
she snuffled up her tears, but I was merciless. 'The only gift I want from you is the right to
serve you for all the days of my life. Please, mistress, rescind this deed.
Give me your permission to tear it.' She nodded vigorously, blubbering as she used to do
when she was a little girl who had fallen and grazed her knees. I ripped the
sheet of papyrus once and then again. Not satisfied with this destruction, I
held the fragments to the lamp flame and let them burn to crispy black curls. 'Promise me that you will never try to drive me
away again. Swear that you will never again try to thrust my freedom upon me.' She nodded through her tears, but I would not
accept that. 'Say it,' I insisted. 'Say it aloud for all to hear.' 'I promise to keep you as my slave, never to sell
you, nor to set you free," she whispered huskily through the tears, and
then a beam of mischief shone out of those tragic dark green eyes. 'Unless, of
course, you annoy me inordinately, then I will summon the law scribes immediately.'
She put out a hand to lift me to my feet. 'Get up, you silly man, and attend to
your duties. I swear my cup is empty.' I resumed my proper position behind her, and
refilled the cup. The tipsy company thought it all a bit of fun that we had
arranged for their amusement, and they clapped and whistled and threw flower
petals at us to show their appreciation. I could see that most of them were
relieved that we had not truly flouted decorum, and that a slave was still a
slave. My mistress lifted the wine cup to her lips, but
before she drank, she smiled at me over the rim. Though her eyes were still wet
with tears, that smile lifted my spirits and restored my happiness. I felt as
close to her then as ever I had in all the years. THE MORNING AFTER THE BANQUET AND my hour of
freedom, we woke to find that during the night the river had swollen with the
commencement of the annual flood. We had no warning of it until the joyous
cries of the watchmen down at the .——— port aroused us. Still heavy with wine,
I left my bed and ran down to the riverside. Both banks were already lined with
the populace of the city. They greeted the waters with prayers and songs and
waving palm-fronds. The low waters had been the bright green of the
verdigris that grows on bars of copper. The waters of the inundation had
flushed it all away, and now the river had swollen to an ominous grey. During
the night it had crept halfway up the stone pylons of the harbour, and soon it
would press against the earthworks of the embankment. Then it would force its
way into the mouths of the irrigation canals that had been cracked and dry for
so many months. From there it would swirl out and flood the fields, drowning
the huts of the peasants, and washing away the boundary markers between the
fields. The surveying and replacement of the boundaries
after each flood was the responsibility of the Guardian of the Waters. Lord
Intef had multiplied his fortune by favouring the claims of the rich and the
generous when the time came round each year to reset the marker stones. From upstream echoed the distant rumble of the
cataract. The rising flood overwhelmed the natural barrages of granite that
were placed in its path, and, as it roared through the gorges, the spray rose
into the hard blue sky, a silver column that could be seen from every quarter
of the nome of Assoun. When the fine mist drifted across the island, it was
cool and refreshing on our upturned faces. We delighted in this blessing, for
it was the only rain we ever knew in our valley. Even as we watched, the
beaches around our island were eaten up by the flood. Soon our jetty would be
submerged, and the river would lap at the gates of our garden. Where it would
stop was a question that could only be calculated by a study of the levels of
the Milometer. On those levels hung prosperity or famine for the whole land and
every person in it. I hurried back to find my mistress and to prepare
for the ceremony of the waters, in which I would play a prominent role. We
dressed in our finest and I placed my new gold chain around my neck. Then, with
the rest of our household and the ladies of the harem, we joined the
spontaneous procession to the temple of Hapi. Pharaoh and all the great lords of Egypt led us.
The priests, plump with rich living, were waiting for us on the temple steps.
Their heads were shaven, their pates shining with oil, and their eyes
glittering with avarice, for the king would sacrifice lavishly today. Before the king the statue of the god was carried
from the sanctuary, and decked with flowers and fine crimson linen. Then the
statue was drenched in oils and perfume while we sang psalms of praise and
thanks to the god for sending down the flood. Far to the south, in a land that no civilized man
had ever visited, the god Hapi sat on top of his mountain and from two pitchers
of infinite capacity he poured the holy waters into his Nile. The water from
each pitcher was of a different colour and taste; one was bright green and
sweet, the other grey and heavy with the silt which flooded our fields each
season and charged them with new life and fertility. While we sang, the king made sacrifice of corn and
meats and wine and silver and gold. Then he called out his wise men, his
engineers and his mathematicians, and bade them enter the Nilometer to begin their
observations and their calculations. In the time that I had belonged to Lord Intef, I
had been nominated as one of the keepers of the water. I was the only slave in
that illustrious company, but I consoled myself by the fact that very few
others wore the Gold of Praise, and that they treated me with respect. They had
worked with me before, and they knew my worth. I had helped to design the
Milometers that measured the flow of the river, and I had supervised the
building of them. It was I who had worked out the complex formula to determine
the projected height and the volume of each flood from the observations. Our way lit by flickering torches of pitch-dipped
rushes, I followed the high priest into the mouth of the Nilometer, a dark
opening in the rear wall of the sanctuary. We descended the incline shaft, the
stone steps slippery with slime and the effusions of the river. From under our
feet, one of the deadly black water cobras slithered away, and with a furious
hiss plunged into the dark water that had already risen halfway up the shaft. We gathered on the last exposed step and by the
light of the torches studied the marks that my masons had chiselled in the
walls of the shaft. Each of the symbols had values, both magical and empirical,
allotted to it. We made the first and most crucial reading together
with extreme care. Over the following five days we would take it in turns to
watch and record the rising waters, and time the readings with the flow, of a
water-clock. From samples of the water, we would estimate the amount of silt it
bore, and all these factors would influence our final conclusions. When the
five days of observation were completed, we embarked on a further three days of
calculations. These covered many scrolls of papyrus. Finally, we were ready to
present our findings to the king. On that day Pharaoh returned to the temple in
royal state, accompanied by his nobles and half the population of Elephantine
to receive the estimates. As the high priest read them aloud, the king began
to smile. We had forecast an inundation of almost perfect proportions. It would
not be too low, to leave the fields exposed and baking in the sun, depriving
them of the rich black layer of silt so vital to their fertility. Nor would it
be so high as to wash away the canals and earthworks, and to drown the villages
and cities along the banks. This season would bring forth bountiful harvests
and fat herds. Pharaoh smiled, not so much for the good fortune of
his subjects, but for the bounty that his tax-collectors would gather in. The
annual taxes were computed on the value of the flood, and this year there would
be vast new treasures added to the store-rooms of his funerary temple. To close
the ceremony of the blessing of the water in the temple of Hapi, Pharaoh announced
the date of the biennial pilgrimage to Thebes to participate in the festival of
Osiris. It did not seem possible that two years had passed since my mistress
had played the part of the goddess in the last passion of Osiris. I had as little sleep that night as when I had kept
vigil in the shaft of the Nilometer, for my mistress was too excited to seek
her own couch. She made me sit up with her until dawn, singing and laughing and
repeating those stories of Tanus to which she never tired of listening. In eight days the royal flotilla would sail
northwards on the rising flood of the Nile. When we arrived, Tanus, Lord Harrab
would be waiting for us in Thebes. My mistress was delirious with happiness. THE FLOTILLA THAT ASSEMBLED IN THE harbour roads of
Elephantine was so numerous that it seemed to cover the water from bank to
bank. My mistress remarked jokingly that a man might cross the Nile without
wetting his feet by strolling over the bridge of hulls. With pennants and flags
flying from every masthead, the fleet made a gallant show. We and the rest of
the court had already embarked on the vessels that had been allotted to us, and
from the deck we cheered the king as he descended the marble steps from the
palace and went aboard the great, state barge. The moment he was safely
embarked, a hundred horns sounded the signal to set sail. As one, the fleet
squared away and pointed their bows into the north. With the rush of the river
and the banks of oars driving us, we bore away. There had been a different spirit abroad in the'
land since Akh-Horus had destroyed the Shrikes. The inhabitants of every
village we passed came down to the water's edge to greet their king. Pharaoh
sat high on the poop, wearing the cumbersome double crown, so that all might
have a clear view of him. They waved palm-fronds and shouted, 'May all the gods
smile on Pharaoh!' The river brought down to them not only their king, but also
the promise of its own benevolence, and they were happy. Twice during the days that followed, Pharaoh and
all his train went ashore to inspect the monuments that Akh-Horus had raised to
his passing at the crossroads of the caravan routes. The local peasants had
preserved these gruesome piles of skulls as sacred relics of the new god. They
had polished each skull until it shone like ivory, and bound the pyramids with
building clay so that they would stand through the years. Then they had built
shrines over them and appointed priests to serve these holy places. At both these shrines my mistress left a gold ring
as an offering, joyously accepted by the self-appointed guardians. It was to no
avail that I protested this extravagance. My mistress often lacked the proper
respect for the wealth that I was so painstakingly amassing on her behalf.
Without my restraining hand, she would probably have given it all away to the
grasping priesthood and the insatiable poor, smiling as she did so. On the tenth night after leaving Elephantine, the
royal entourage camped on sTpleasant promontory above a bend in the river. The
entertainment that evening was to include one of the most famous story-tellers
in the land, and usually my mistress loved a good story above most other
pleasures. Both she and I had been looking forward to this occasion and
discussing it avidly since leaving the palace. It was therefore to my surprise
and bitter disappointment that the Lady Lostris declared herself too fatigued
and out of sorts to attend the story-teller. Although she urged me to go, and
take the rest of our household with me, I could not leave her alone when she
was unwell. I gave her a hot draught and I slept on the floor at the end of her
bed, so that I could be near if she needed me during the night. I was truly worried in the morning when I tried to
wake her. Usually she would spring from her bed with a smile of anticipation,
ready to seize and devour the new day, a glutton for the joy of living.
However, this morning she pulled the covers back over her head and mumbled,
'Leave me to sleep a .little longer. I feel as heavy and dull as an old woman.' "The king has decreed an early start. We must
be aboard before the sun rises. I will bring you a hot infusion that will cheer
you.' I poured boiling water over a bowl of herbs that I had picked with my own
hands during the most propitious phase of the last moon. 'Do stop fussing,' she grumped at me, but I would
not let her sleep again. I prodded her awake and made her drink the tonic. She
pulled a face. 'I swear you are trying to poison me,' she complained, and then,
without warning and before I could do anything to prevent it, she vomited
copiously. Afterwards she seemed as shocked as I was. We both
stared at the steaming puddle beside her bed in consternation. 'What is wrong with me, Taita?' she whispered. 'Nothing
like this has ever happened to me before.' Only then did the meaning of it all dawn on me. "The khamsin!' I cried. "The cemetery of
Tras! Tanus!' She stared at me blankly for a moment, and then her
smile lit the gloom of the tent like a lamp. 'I am making a baby!' she cried. 'Not so loud, mistress,' I pleaded. 'Tanus' baby! I am carrying Tanus' son.' It could
not be the king's infant, for I had successfully kept him from her bed since
her starvation sickness and her miscarriage. 'Oh, Taita,' she purred, as she lifted her
nightdress and inspected her flat, firm belly with awe. 'Just think of it! A
little imp just like Tanus growing inside of me.' She palpated her stomach
hopefully. 'I knew that such delights as I discovered in the tomb of Tras could
not pass unremarked by the gods. They have given me a memory that will last all
my lifetime.' 'You race ahead,' I warned her. 'It may be only a
colic. I must make the tests before we can be sure.' 'I need no test. I know it in my heart and in the
secret depths of my body.' 'We will still do the tests,' I told her wryly, and
went to fetch the pot. She perched upon it to provide me with the first water
of her day, and I divided this into two equal parts. The first portion of her urine I mixed with an
equal part of Nile water. Then I filled two jars with black earth and in each
of them planted five seeds of dhurra corn. I watered one jar with pure Nile
water, and the other with the mixture that my mistress had provided. This was
the first test. Then I hunted amongst the reeds in the lagoon near
the camp and captured ten frogs. These were not the lively green and yellow
variety with leaping back legs, but slimy, black creatures. Their heads are not
separated from their sluggish, fat bodies by a neck, and their eyes sit on top
of the flat skull, so that the children call them sky-gazers. I placed five of each of the sky-gazers in two
separate jars of river water. To the one I added my mistress's intimate
emission and I left the other unadulterated. The following morning, in the
privacy of my mistress's cabin on board the galley, we removed the cloth with
which I had covered the jars and inspected the contents. The com watered by the Lady Lostris had thrown tiny
green shoots, while the other seeds were still inert. The five sky-gazers who
had not received my mistress's blessing were barren, but the other more
fortunate five had each laid long silvery strings which were speckled with
black eggs. 'I told you so!' my mistress chirruped smugly,
before I could give my official diagnosis. 'Oh, thanks to all the gods! No more
beautiful thing has happened to me in all my life.' 'I will speak to Aton immediately. You will share
the king's couch this very night,' I told her grimly, and she stared at me in
bewilderment. 'Even Pharaoh who believes most things I tell him,
will not believe that you were impregnated by the seeds blown in on the khamsin
wind. We must have a foster-father for this little bastard of ours.' Already I
considered the infant ours, and not hers alone. Though I tried to conceal it
behind my levity, I was every bit as delighted with her fecundity as she was. 'Don't you ever call him a bastard again,' she
flared at me. 'He will be a prince.' 'He will be a prince only if I can find a royal
sire for him. Prepare yourself. I am going to see the king.' 'LAST NIGHT I HAD A DREAM, GREAT Egypt,' I told
Pharaoh. 'It was so amazing that to confirm it I worked the Mazes of Ammon-Ra.' Pharaoh leaned forward eagerly, for he had come to
believe in my dreams and the Mazes as much as any of my other patients. 'This
time it is unequivocal, Majesty. In my dream the goddess Isis appeared and
promised to counter the baleful influence of her brother Seth, who so cruelly
deprived you of your first son when he struck down the Lady Lostris with the
wasting disease. Take my mistress to your bed on the first day of the festival
of Osiris, and you will be blessed with another son. That is the promise of the
goddess.' 'Tonight is the eve of the festival.' The king
looked delighted. 'In truth, Taita, I have been ready to perform this pleasant
duty all these past months, had you only allowed me to do so. But you have not
told me what you saw in the Mazes of Ammon-Ra.' Again he leaned forward
eagerly, and I was ready for him. 'It was the vision as before, only this time it was
stronger and more vivid. The same endless forest of trees growing along the
banks of the river, each tree crowned and imperial. Your dynasty reaching into
the ages, strong and unbroken.' Pharaoh sighed with satisfaction. 'Send the child
to me.' When I returned to the tent, my mistress was waiting for me. She had
prepared herself with good grace and humour. 'I shall close my eyes and imagine that I am back
in the tomb of Tras with Tanus,' she confided, and then giggled saucily.
'Although to imagine the king as Tanus is to imagine that the tail of the mouse
has become the trunk of the elephant.' Aton came to fetch her to the king's tent soon
after the king had eaten his dinner. She went with a calm expression and a firm
step, dreaming perhaps of her little prince, and of his true father who waited
for us in Thebes. BELOVED THEBES, BEAUTIFUL THEBES OF the hundred
gates—how we rejoiced as we saw it appear ahead of us, decorating the broad
sweep of the river-bank with its temples and gleaming walls. My mistress sang out with excitement as each of the
familiar landmarks revealed itself to us. Then, as the royal barge put in to
the wharf below the palace of the grand vizier, the joy of home-coming went out
of both of us, and we fell silent. The Lady Lostris groped for my hand like a
little girl frightened by tales of hob-goblins, for we had seen her father. Lord Intef with his sons, Menset and Sobek, those
two thumbless heroes, stood at the head of the great concourse of the nobles
and the city fathers of Thebes that waited upon the quay to greet the king.
Lord Intef was as handsome and suave as I had imagined him in my nightmares,
and I felt my spirits quail. 'You must be vigilant now,' the Lady Lostris
whispered to me. "They will seek to have you out of their way. Remember
the cobra.' Not far behind the grand vizier stood Rasfer.
During our absence he had obviously received high promotion. He now wore the
head-dress of a Commander of Ten Thousand and carried the golden whip of rank.
There had been no improvement in his facial muscles. One side of his face still
sagged hideously and saliva dribbled from the corner of his mouth. At that
moment he recognized me, and grinned at me with half his face across the narrow
strip of water. He lifted his golden whip in ironic greeting. 'I promise you, my lady, that my hand will be upon
my dagger and I will eat nothing but fruit that I have peeled with my own hands
while Rasfer and I are in Thebes together,' I murmured, as I smiled at him and
returned his salute with a cheery wave. 'You are to accept no strange gifts,' my mistress
insisted, 'and you will sleep at the foot of my bed, where I can protect you at
night. During the day you will stay at my side, and not go wandering off on
your own.' 'I will not find that irksome,' I assured her, and
over the following days I kept my promise to her and remained under her
immediate protection, for I was certain that Lord Intef would not jeopardize
his connection to the throne by putting his daughter in danger. Naturally, we were often in the company of the
grand vizier, for it was his duty to escort the king through all the ceremonies
of the festival. During this time, Lord Intef played the role of loving and
considerate father to the Lady Lostris, and he treated her with all the
deference and consideration due to a royal wife. Each morning he sent her
gifts, gold and jewels and exquisite little carvings of scarabs and godlets in
ivory and precious woods. Despite my mistress's orders, I did not return these.
I did not wish to warn the enemy, and besides, the gifts were valuable. I sold
them discreetly and invested the proceeds in stores of corn held for us in the
granaries of trustworthy merchants in the city, men who were my friends. In view of the expected harvest, the price of com
was the lowest it had been for ten years. There was only one direction it could
go, and that was up, although we might have to wait a while for our profits.
The merchants gave me receipts in the name of my mistress which I deposited in
the archives of the law courts. I kept only a fifth part to myself, which I
felt was a very moderate commission. This gave me some secret pleasure whenever I caught
Lord Intef watching me with those pale leopard's eyes. That look left me in no
doubt that his feelings towards me had not moderated. I remembered his patience
and his persistence when dealing with an enemy. He waited at the centre of his
web like a beautiful spider, and his eyes glittered as he watched me. I
remembered the bowl of poisoned milk and the cobra, and despite all my
precautions, I was uneasy. Meanwhile the festival rolled on with all the
ceremony and tradition, as it had for centuries past. However, this season it
was not Tanus' Blues but another squadron that hunted the river-cows in the
lagoon of Hapi, while another company of actors played out the passion in the
temple of Osiris. Because Pharaoh's decree was observed and the version of the
play was mine, the words were as powerful and moving. However, this new Isis
was not as lovely as my mistress had portrayed her, nor was Horus as noble or
striking as Lord Tanus. On the other hand, Seth was winsome and lovable in
comparison to the way that Rasfer had played him. The day after the passion, Pharaoh crossed the
river to inspect his temple, and on this occasion he kept me close at hand
throughout the day. On numerous occasions he openly consulted me on aspects of
the works. Of course I wore my golden chain whenever it was proper to do so.
None of this was missed by Lord Intef, and I could see him musing on the favour
the king showed to me. I hoped that this might further serve to protect me from
the grand vizier's vengeance. Since I had left Thebes, another architect had been
placed in charge of the temple project. It was perhaps unfair that Pharaoh
should expect this unfortunate to be able to maintain the high standards that I
had set, or to push the work forward at the same pace. 'By the blessed mother of Horus, I wish you were
still in charge here, Taita,' Pharaoh muttered. 'If she would part with you, I
would buy you from your mistress, and keep you here in the City of .the Dead
permanently to supervise the work. The cost seems to have doubled since this
other idiot took over from you.' 'He is a naive young man,' I agreed. 'The masons
and the contractors will steal his testicles from him and he will not notice
that they are missing.' 'It is my balls mat they are stealing,' the king
scowled. 'I want you to go over the bill of quantities with him and show him
where we are being robbed.' I was of course flattered by his regard, and there
was nothing spiteful in my pointing out to Pharaoh the lapses of taste that the
new architect had perpetrated when he redesigned the pediment to my temple
facade, or the shoddy craftsmanship that those rogues in the guild of masons
had been able to slip past him. The pediment was permeated with the decadent
Syrian style that was all the rage in the Lower Kingdom, where the common
tastes of the low-bom red pretender were corrupting the classical traditions of
Egyptian art. As for the workmanship, I demonstrated to the king
how it was possible to slip a fragment of papyrus between the joints of the
stone blocks that made up the side-wall of the mortuary temple. Pharaoh ordered
both the pediment and the temple wall to be torn down, and he fined the guild
of masons five hundred deben of gold to be paid into the royal store-rooms. Pharaoh spent the rest of that day and the whole of
the next reviewing the treasures in the store-rooms of the funerary temple.
Here at least he could find very little to complain of. In the history of the
world never had such wealth been assembled in one place at one time. Even I,
who love fine things, was soon jaded by the abundance of it, and my eyes were
pained by the dazzle of gold. The king insisted that the Lady Lostris remain at
his side all this time. I think that his infatuation with her was slowly turning
into real love, or as close a facsimile of it as he was capable of. The
consequence of his affection for her was that when we returned across the river
to Thebes, my mistress was exhausted, and I feared for the child she was
carrying. It was too soon to tell the king of her condition and to suggest that
he showed her more consideration. It was less than a week since she had
returned to his couch, and such an early diagnosis of pregnancy even from me
must arouse his suspicion. To him she was still a healthy and robust young
woman, and he treated her that way. THE FESTIVAL ENDED, AS IT HAD FOR CENTURIES past,
with the assembly of the people in the temple of Osiris to hear the
proclamation from the throne. On the raised stone dais in front of the sanctuary
of Osiris, Pharaoh was seated on his tall throne so that all the congregation
could have a clear view of him. He wore the double crown and carried the crook
and the flail. This time there was an alteration to the usual layout of the
temple, for I had made a suggestion to the king which he had been gracious
enough to adopt. Against three walls of the inner temple he had ordered the
erection of timber scaffolding. These rose in tiers halfway up the massive
stone walls, and provided seating for thousands of the notables of Thebes from
which they had a. privileged and uninterrupted view of the proceedings. I had
suggested that these stands be decorated with coloured bunting and palm-fronds,
to disguise their ugliness. It was the first time that these structures were
built in our land. Thereafter, they were to become commonplace, and they were
built at most public functions, along the routes of royal processions and
around the fields of athletic games. To this day they are known as Taita
stands. There had been much bitter competition for seats
upon these stands, but as their designer, I had been able to procure the very
best for my mistress and myself. We were directly opposite the throne and a
little above the height of the king's head, so we had a fine view of the whole
of the inner courtyard. I had provided a leather cushion stuffed with
lamb's-wool for the Lady Lostris and a basket of fruits and cakes, together
with jars of sherbet and beer, to sustain us during the interminable ceremony. All around us were assembled the noblest in the
land, lords and ladies decked-oat in high fashion. The generals and admirals
carrying their.golden whips and proudly flaunting the honours and standards of
their regiments, the guild masters and the rich merchants, the priests and the
ambassadors from the vassal states of the empire, they were all here. In front of the king extended the courts of the
temple, one opening into another like the boxes in a children's puzzle-game,
but such was the layout of the massive stone walls that the gates were all
perfectly aligned. A worshipper standing in the Avenue of Sacred Rams outside
the pylons of the main gate could look through the inner gates and clearly see
the king on his high throne almost four hundred paces away. All the courts of the temple were packed with the
multitudes of the common people, and the overflow spilled out into the sacred
avenue and the gardens beyond the temple walls. Though I had lived almost my
entire life in Thebes, I had never seen such a gathering. It was not possible
to count their numbers, but I estimated that there must have been two hundred
thousand assembled that day. From them rose such' a hubbub of sound that I felt
myself but a single bee in the vast humming hive. Around the throne was gathered a small group of the
highest dignitaries, their heads at the level of Pharaoh's feet. Of course one
of these was the high priest of Osiris. During the past year the old abbot had
left this transitory world of ours and set off on his journey through the
underworld to the western fields of the eternal paradise. This new abbot was a
younger, firmer man. I knew that he would not be so easily manipulated by Lord
Intef. In fact, he had collaborated with me in certain unusual arrangements for
today's ceremony that I had put in hand while supervising the erection of the
Taita stands. However, the most impressive figure in the group,
rivalling Pharaoh himself, was the grand vizier. Lord Intef drew all eyes. He
was tall and stately in bearing, handsome as a legend. With the heavy chains of
the Gold of Praise lying weightily upon his chest and shoulders, he was like a
figure from the myth of the pantheon. Close behind him loomed the hideous shape
of Rasfer. Lord Intef opened the ceremony in the traditional
manner by stepping into the clear space before the throne and beginning the
address of welcome to the king from the twin cities of Thebes. As he spoke, I
glanced sideways at my mistress, and even though I shared her loathing, I was
shocked by the expression of anger and hatred that she made no attempt to
conceal, and that she directed openly at her own father. I wanted to warn her
to make it less obvious to all about her, but I knew that in doing so, I might
merely draw further attention to her burning antagonism. The grand vizier spoke at length, listing his own
accomplishments and the loyal service he had rendered Pharaoh in the year past.
The crowd murmured and rustled with boredom and discomfort. The heat was rising
from so many bodies, and the rays of the sun beating down into the crowded
courts were trapped within the temple walls. I saw more than one woman in the
press swoon and collapse. When at last Lord Intef finished speaking, the high
priest stepped into his place. While the sun made its noon overhead, he
reported to the king on the ecclesiastical affairs of Thebes. As he spoke, the
heat and the stench increased; perfume and fragrant oils could no longer
disguise the odour of hot, unwashed bodies and running sweat. There was no
escape from the crowd to attend urgent bodily functions. Men and women simply
squatted where they stood. The temple began to stink like a sty or a public
latrine, I handed my mistress a silk kerchief drenched in perfume which she
dabbed to her nose. There was a sigh of relief when at last the high
priest ended his address with a blessing on the king in the name of the god
Osiris, and, with a deep bow, retreated to his place behind the grand vizier.
For the first time since it had begun to assemble before dawn that morning, the
crowd fell completely silent. The boredom and discomfort was forgotten, and
they craned forward eagerly to hear Pharaoh speak. The king rose to his feet. I wondered at the old
man's fortitude, for he had sat all this time like a statue. He spread his arms
in benediction, and at that moment the hallowed chalice of custom and tradition
was shattered by an event that plunged the entire congregation—priests, nobles
and commoners—into consternation. I was one of the few in the crowd who was not
surprised by what followed, for I had done more than my share to arrange it
all. The great burnished capper doors to the sanctuary
swung open. There seemed to be no human agency to the movement, it was as
though the doors opened of their own accord. A gasp, a sigh of expelled breath passed like a
wind through temple courts, and rustled the densely packed ranks as though they
were the leaves of a tamarind tree. Then suddenly a woman screamed, and
immediately a groan of superstitious horror shook them all. Some fell to their knees,
some lifted their hands above their heads in terror, others covered their faces
with their shawls so that they should not be struck blind by looking on sights
that were not for mortal eyes. A god strode out through the sanctuary doors, a
tall and terrifying god, whose cloak swirled about his shoulders as he moved.
His helmet was crowned with a plume of egret's feathers, and his features were
grotesque and metallic, half-eagle and half-man, with a hooked beak and dark
slits for eyes. ' Akh-Horus!' screamed a woman, and she collapsed
in a dead faint upon the stone flags. 'Akh-Horus!' the cry was taken up. 'It is the god!'
Row after row, they fell upon their knees in the attitude of reverence. Those
on the high tiers of stands knelt and many of them made the sign to avert
misfortune. Even the group of nobles around the throne went down. In all the
temple only two persons remained on their feet. Pharaoh posed on the steps of
his throne like a painted statue; and the grand vizier of Thebes stood tall and
arrogant. Akh-Horus stopped in front of the king and looked
up at him through those slitted eyes in the bronze mask, and even then Pharaoh
never flinched. The king's cheeks were painted dead white, so I could not tell
whether he blanched, but there was a glitter in his eyes that may have been
either religious ecstasy, or terror. 'Who are you?' Pharaoh challenged. 'Are you ghost
or man? Why do you disturb our solemn proceedings?' His voice was strong and
clear. I could detect no tremor in it, and my admiration for him was enhanced.
Weak and aging and gullible perhaps, but still the old man had his full share
of courage. He could face up to man or god and stand his ground like a warrior. Akh-Horus answered him in a voice that had
commanded regiments in the desperate din of battle, a voice that echoed amongst
the stone pillars. 'Great Pharaoh, I am a man, not a ghost. I am your man. I
come before you in response to your command. I come before you to account to
you for the duty that you laid upon me in this place on this very day of Osiris
two years ago.' He lifted the helmet from his head, and the fiery
curls tumbled down. The congregation recognized him instantly. A shout went up
that seemed to rock the foundations of the temple. 'Lord Tanus! Tanus! Tanus!' It seemed to me that my mistress screamed the
loudest of them all, fairly deafening me, who sat so close beside her. 'Tanus! Akh-Horus! Akh-Horus!' The two names
mingled and crashed against the temple walls like storm-driven surf. 'He has risen from his tomb! He has become a god
amongst us!' It did not abate until suddenly Tanus drew the
sword from his scabbard and held it aloft in an unmistakable command for
silence. This was obeyed, and in the silence he spoke again. 'Great Egypt, do I have your permission to speak?' I think by now the king could no longer rely on his
powers of speech, for he made a gesture with crook and flail, and then his legs
seemed to give way beneath him and he dropped back on his throne. Tanus addressed him in ringing tones that carried to
the outer court. 'Two years ago you charged me with the destruction of those
viperous nests of murderers and robbers who were threatening the life of the
state. You placed in my trust the royal hawk seal.' From under his cloak, Tanus drew out the blue statuette
and placed it on the steps of the throne. Then he stepped back and spoke again. 'In order better to carry out the king's orders, I
pretended my own death and caused the mummy of a stranger to be sealed in my
tomb.' 'Bak-Her!' shouted a single voice, and they took up
the cry until Tanus once more commanded silence. 'I led a thousand brave men of the Blues into the
deserts and the wild places and sought out the Shrikes in their secret
fortresses. There we slew them in their hundreds and piled their severed heads
at the roadside.' 'Bak-Her!' they screamed. 'It is true. Akh-Horus
has done all these things.' Once again Tanus silenced them. 'I broke the power of the barons. I slaughtered
their followers without mercy. In all this very Egypt of ours there remains
only one who still calls himself a Shrike.' Now at last they were silent, gobbling up every
word he said, fascinated and intent. Even Pharaoh could not hold his impatience
in check. 'Speak, Lord Tanus, whom men now know as Akh-Horus. Name this man. Give
me his name so that he may come to know the wrath of Pharaoh.' 'He hides behind the name of Akh-Seth,' Tanus
roared. 'His deeds of infamy rank with those of his brother, the dark -'Give me his true name,' Pharaoh commanded, rising
once more to his feet in his agitation. 'Name this last of all the Shrikes!' Tanus drew out the moment. He looked around the
temple slowly and deliberately. When our eyes met, I nodded so slightly that
only he saw the movement, but his gaze passed on without a pause and he looked
towards the open doors of the sanctuary. The attention of all the congregation was so fixed
upon Lord Tanus that they did not at first see the file of armed men that
issued swiftly and silently from the sanctuary. Although they wore full armour
and carried their war shields, I recognized most of them under the helmets.
There were Remrem and Astes and fifty other warriors of the Blues. Swiftly,
they formed up around the throne like a royal bodyguard, but, without making it
obvious, Remrem and Astes moved up behind Lord Intef. As soon as they were in
position, Tanus spoke again. 'I will name this Akh-Seth for you, Divine Pharaoh.
He stands unashamedly in the shadow of your throne.' Tanus pointed with his
sword. "There he is, wearing the Gold of Praise about his traitor's
throat. There he stands, Pharaoh's sole companion who has turned your kingdom
into a playground for murderers and bandits. That is Akh-Seth, governor of the
nome of Thebes, grand vizier of the Upper Kingdom.' An awful hush fell upon the temple. There must have
been ten thousand or more in the congregation who had suffered grievously at
Lord Intef's hands and who had every reason to hate him, but not a voice spoke
out in jubilation or in triumph against him. All knew just how terrible was his
wrath, and just how certain his retribution. I could smell the stink of their
fear in the air, thick as the incense smoke. Every one of them understood that
even Tanus' reputation and his mighty deeds were not sufficient for his
unproven accusation to prevail against such a person as Lord Intef. To show joy
or open agreement at this stage would be mortal folly. In that hush Lord Intef laughed. It was a sound
full of disdain, and with a dismissive gesture he turned his back upon Tanus
and spoke directly to the king. 'The desert sun has burned his brain. The poor
lad has gone mad. There is not a single word of truth in all his ravings. I
should be angry, but instead I am saddened that a warrior of reputation has fallen
so low.' He held out both hands to Pharaoh, a dignified and loyal gesture. 'All
my life I have served Pharaoh and my people. My honour is so invulnerable that
I see no need to defend myself against these wild rantings. Without fear I
place my trust in the wisdom and justice of the divine king. I let my deeds and
my love of Pharaoh speak, in place of my tongue.' I saw the confusion and indecision on the king's
painted face. His lips trembled and his brow was furrowed, for he was not
blessed with a swift and incisive mind. After a moment he opened his mouth to
speak, but before he could utter any fateful or irredeemable judgement, Tanus
lifted his sword again and pointed beyond the throne to the open doors of the
sanctuary. Through the doors came another procession of men so
unusual that Pharaoh gaped at them with his mouth still open. Kratas led, with
his visor raised and a sword in his right hand. Those who followed him wore
only loin-cloths, and their heads and feet were bare. Their arms were bound behind
their backs, and they shuffled like slaves on their way to the auction block. I was watching Lord Intef s face, and I saw the
shock assail him and force him to flinch, as though he had received a blow in
the face. He had recognized the captives, but he had obviously believed that
they were long dead, and their skulls grinning at the roadside. He darted a
sideways glance at the small sacristy door in the wall that was almost hidden
by the hanging linen bunting. It was his only escape from the crowded inner
court, but Remrem moved one pace to his right and blocked his path to the
doorway. Lord Intef looked back at the throne and lifted his chin in a
confident and defiant gesture. The six bound captives lined up before the throne and
then, at a quiet order from Kratas, dropped to their knees and bowed their
heads. 'Who are these creatures?' Pharaoh demanded, and
Tanus stood over the first of them, seized his bound wrists and hauled him to
his feet. The captive's skin was studded with the old healed scars of the
smallpox and his blind eye reflected the light like a silver coin. "The divine Pharaoh asks who you are,' Tanus
said softly. 'Reply to the question.' 'Great Egypt, I am Shufti,' he said. 'I was once a
baron of the Shrikes before Akh-Horus scattered and slew my clan at the city of
Gallala.' 'Tell the king who was your overlord,' Tanus
insisted. 'Akh-Seth was my overlord,' Shufti replied. 'I
swore a blood-oath of allegiance to Akh-Seth, and I paid a bounty of
one-quarter of all my plunder to him. In return Akh-Seth gave me immunity from
the forces of law, and provided me with information on my intended victims.' 'Point out to the king the man you know as
Akh-Seth,' Tanus ordered, and Shufti shuffled forward until he faced Lord Intef.
He filled his mouth with spittle and spat it on to the grand vizier's gorgeous
uniform. "This is Akh-Seth,' he cried. 'And may the worms feast on his
guts!' Kratas dragged Shufti to one side and Tanus lifted
the next captive to his feet. 'Tell the king who you are,' he ordered. 'I am Akheku, and I was a baron of the Shrikes, but
all my men are killed.' 'Who was your overlord? To whom did you pay your
bounty?' Tanus demanded. 'Lord Intef was my overlord. I paid my bounty into
the coffers of the grand vizier.' Lord Intef stood proud and aloof, showing no
emotion as these accusation were hurled at him. He offered no defence as, one
after the other, the barons were dragged before him and each made the same
declaration. 'Lord Intef was my overlord. Lord Intef is
Akh-Seth.' The silence of the multitudes in the temple was as oppressive as the
heat. They watched in horror, or in silent hatred, or in confusion and
disbelief. However, not one of them dared yet to speak out against Lord Intef,
or to show emotion until Pharaoh had first spoken. The last of the barons was brought forward to
confront the grand vizier. He was a tall, lean man with stringy muscles and
sun-blasted skin. There was Bedouin blood in his veins, for his eyes were black
and his nose beaked. His beard was thick and curling, and his expression
arrogant. 'My name is Basti.' He spoke more clearly than any of the others.
'Men call me Basti the Cruel, though I know not the reason why.' He grinned
with a raffish hangman's humour. 'I was a baron of the Shrikes until Akh-Horus
destroyed my clan. Lord Intef was my overlord.' This time he was not dragged away as the others had
been. Tanus spoke to him again. 'Tell the king. Did you know Pianki, Lord
Harrab, who in former times was a nobleman of Thebes?' 'I knew him well. I had dealings with him.' 'What were these dealings?' Tanus asked, with death
in his voice. 'I plundered his caravans. I burned his crops in
the fields. I raided his mines at Sestra, and I slew the miners in such amusing
fashion that no others ever came to work the copper there. I burned his villas.
I sent my men into the cities to speak evil of him, so that his honesty and his
loyalty to the state were tarnished. I helped others to destroy him so that in
the end he drank the poisonous Datura seed from his own cup.' I saw the hand of Pharaoh that held the royal flail
shake as he listened, and one of his eyelids twitched in a manner that I had
noticed before-when he was sore distressed. 'Who was it that ordered these things?' 'Lord Intef commanded these things and rewarded me
with a takh of pure gold.' 'What did Lord Intef hope to gain from this
persecution of Lord Harrab?' Basti grinned and shrugged. 'Lord Intef is grand
vizier, while Pianki, Lord Harrab is dead. It seems to me Lord Intef achieved
his purpose.' 'You acknowledge that I have offered you no
clemency in return for this confession? Do you understand that death awaits
you?' 'Death?' Basti laughed. 'I have never been afraid of
that. It is the flour of the loaf I bake. I have fed it to countless others, so
now why should I be afraid to feast on it myself?' Was he fool or brave man, I
wondered, as I listened to the boast. Either way, I could find neither pity nor
admiration for him in my heart. I remembered that Pianki, Lord Harrab had been
a man like his son, and that is where my pity and my admiration lay. I saw the merciless expression in the eyes of
Tanus. I knew that he shared my feelings, and his grip upon the hilt of his sword
tightened until his fingers turned as white as those of a drowned man. 'Take him away!' he grated. 'Let him await the
king's pleasure.' I saw him compose himself with an effort, then he turned back
to face the king. He went down on one knee before him. 'I have done all that you asked of me, Divine
Mamose, god and ruler of Kemit. I wait for you to command me further.' His
dignity and his grace closed up my throat so that I could not swallow. It took
an effort to compose myself. The silence in the temple persisted. I could hear
my mistress's laboured breathing beside me and then I felt her take my hand and
squeeze it with a strength that threatened to crack my finger-bones. At last Pharaoh spoke, but with dismay I heard the
doubt in his voice, and I sensed intuitively that he did not want any of this
to be true. He had trusted Lord Intef so deeply for so long that it shook the
foundations of his faith. 'Lord Intef, you have heard the accusations against
you. How say you to them?' 'Divine Pharaoh, are these indeed accusations? I
thought them merely the fantasies of a young man driven insane with envy and
jealousy. He is the son of a convicted criminal and a traitor. Lord Tanus'
motives are plain to see. He has convinced himself that the traitor Pianki might
have become grand vizier in my place. In some perverse fashion, he holds me
responsible for his father's downfall.' With a wave of his hand he dismissed Tanus. It was
so skilfully done that I saw the king waver. His doubts were growing stronger.
For a lifetime he had implicitly trusted Lord Intef, and it was difficult for
him to adjust his thinking. He wanted to believe in his innocence. 'What of the accusations of the barons?' Pharaoh
asked at last. 'What reply do you make to them?' 'Barons?' Lord Intef asked. 'Must we flatter them
with such a title? By their own testimony they are criminals of the basest
kind—murderers, thieves, violators of women and children. Should we look for
truth in them any more than we should look for honour and conscience in the beasts
of the field?' Lord Intef pointed to them, and they were indeed half-naked and
bound like animals. 'Let us gaze upon them, Divine Majesty. Are these not the
kind of men that can be bribed or beaten into saying anything for the sake of
then-own skins? Would you take the word of one of these against a man who has
served you faithfully all his life?' I saw the small, involuntary nod of the king's head
as he accepted the reasoning of the man he had looked upon as a friend, the man
upon whom he had heaped trust and rewards. 'All you say is true. You have always served me
without vice. These rogues are strangers to truth and honour. It is possible
that they may have been coerced.' He vacillated, and Lord Intef sensed his
advantage. 'So far I have had only words thrown at me. Surely
there must be some other evidence to support such mortal charges against me? Is
there one person in this very Egypt who will bring evidence against me, real
evidence and not mere words? If there is, let him come forward. Then I will
answer this charge. If there is no one who has this evidence, then I have
nothing to answer to>' His words troubled Pharaoh deeply, I could see
that. He gazed about the hall as if seeking the evidence that Lord Intef
demanded, and then he obviously reached a decision. 'Lord Tanus, what proof do you have of these
things, apart from the words of murderers and criminals?' 'The beast has covered his tracks well,' Tanus
admitted, 'and he has taken cover in the densest thicket where it is difficult
to come at him. I have no further evidence against Lord Intef, but there may be
some other who does, somebody who will be inspired by what he has heard here
today. I beg you, Royal Egypt, ask your people if there is not one of them who
can bring forth anything to help us here.' 'Pharaoh, this is provocation. My enemies will be
emboldened to come out of the shadows where they lurk to attack me,' cried Lord
Intef in vehement protest, but Pharaoh silenced him with a brusque gesture.
'They will bear false witness against you at their peril,' he promised, and
then addressed the congregation. 'My people! Citizens of Thebes! You have heard the
accusations made against my trusted and well-beloved grand vizier. Is there one
of you who can provide the proof that Lord Tanus lacks? Can any of you bring
forward evidence against the Lord Intef? If so, I charge you to speak.' I was standing before I realized what I had done,
and my voice was so loud in my own ears that it startled me. 'I am Taita, who was once the slave of Lord Intef,'
I shouted, and Pharaoh looked across at me and frowned. 'I have aught that I
wish to show Your Majesty.' 'You are known to us, Taita the physician. You may
approach.' As I left my seat on the stand and went down to
stand before the king, I looked across at Lord Intef and I missed my step. It
was as though I had walked into a stone wall, so tangible was his hatred. 'Divine Egypt, this thing is a slave.' Lord Intef's
voice was cold and tight. "The word of a slave against a lord of the
Theban circle, and a high officer of the state—what mockery is this?' I was still so conditioned to respond to his voice
and to succumb to his word, that my resolve wavered. Then I felt Tanus' hand on
my arm. It was only a brief touch, but it manned and sustained me. However, Lord
Intef had noticed the gesture, and he pointed it out to the king. 'See how this slave is in the thrall of my accuser.
Here is another one of Lord Tanus' trained monkeys.' Lord In-tef's voice was once
more smooth as warm honey. 'His insolence is unbounded. There are penalties
laid down in the law codes—' Pharaoh silenced him with a gesture of his flail.
'You presume on our good opinion of you, Lord Intef. The codes of law are mine
to interpret or amend. In them there are penalties laid down for the high-born
as well as the common man. You would be well advised to remember that.' Lord Intef bowed in submission and remained silent,
but suddenly his face was haggard and drawn as he realized his predicament. Now the king looked down at me. 'These are unusual
circumstances, such as allow of unprecedented remedy. However, Taita the slave,
let me warn you that if your words should prove frivolous, should they lack proof
or substance, the strangling-rope awaits you.' That threat and the poisonous bane of Lord Intef s
gaze upon me made me stutter. 'While I was the slave of the grand vizier, I was
his messenger and his emissary to the barons. I know all these men.' I pointed
to the captives that Kratas held near to the throne. 'It was I who carried Lord
Intef's commands to them.' 'Lies! More words, lacking proof,' Lord Intef
called out, but now the edge of desperation was in his voice. 'Where is the
proof?' 'Silence!' the king thundered with sudden ferocity.
'We will hear the testimony of Taita the slave.' He was looking directly at me,
and I drew breath to continue. 'It was I who carried the command of Lord Intef to
Basti the Cruel. The command was to destroy the estate and the fortune of
Pianki, Lord Harrab. At that time I was the confidant of Intef, I knew that he
desired the position of grand vizier to himself. All these things that Lord
Intef commanded were accomplished. Lord Harrab was destroyed, and he was deprived
of Pharaoh's favour and love, so that he drank the Datura cup. I, Taita, attest
all these things.' 'It is so.' Basti the Cruel lifted his bound arms
to the throne. 'All that Taita says is the truth.' 'Bah-Her!' shouted the barons. 'It is the truth.
Taita speaks the truth.' 'Still these are only words,' the king mused. 'Lord
Intef has demanded proof. I, your Pharaoh, demand proof.' 'For half my lifetime I was the scribe and the
treasurer of the grand vizier. I kept the record of his fortune. I noted his
profits and his expenses on my scrolls. I gathered in the bounty that the
barons of the Shrikes paid to Lord Intef, and I disposed of all this wealth.' 'Can you show me these scrolls, Taita?' Pharaoh's
expression shone like the full moon at the mention of treasure. Now I had his
avid attention. 'No, Majesty, I cannot do so. The scrolls remained
always in the possession of Lord Intef.' Pharaoh made no effort to conceal his chagrin, his
face hardened towards me, but I went on doggedly, 'I cannot show you the scrolls,
but perhaps I can lead you to the treasure that the grand vizier has stolen
from you, and from the people of your realm. It was I who built his secret
treasuries for him, and hid within them the bounty that I gathered from the
barons. It was in these store-rooms that I placed the wealth that Pharaoh's
tax-collectors never saw.' The king's excitement rekindled, hot as the coals
on the coppersmith's forge. He leaned forward intently. Although every eye in
the temple was fastened upon me, and the nobles were crowding forward the
better to hear each word, I was watching Lord Intef without seeming to look in
his direction. The burnished copper doors of the sanctuary were tall mirrors in
which his reflection was magnified. Every nuance of his expression and every
movement he made, however slight, was clear to me. I had taken a fatal risk in assuming that his
treasure still remained in the secret places where I had stored it for him. He
might have moved it at any time during the past two years. Yet moving such
quantities of treasure would have been a major work and the risk of doing so as
great as letting it rest where it lay. He would have been forced to take others
into his trust, and that was not easy for Lord Intef to do. He was by nature a
suspicious man. Added to which was the fact that, until recently, he had
believed me dead, and my secret with me. I calculated that my chances were evenly balanced,
and I risked my life on it. Now I held my breath as I watched Lord Intef's
reflection in the copper doors. Then my heart raced and my spirits soared on
the wings of eagles. I saw from the pain and panic in his expression that the
arrow I had fired at him had struck the mark. I had won. The treasure was where
I had left it. I knew that I could lead Pharaoh to the plunder and the loot
that Lord Intef had gathered up over his lifetime. But he was not yet defeated. I was rash to believe
it would be so easily accomplished. I saw him make a gesture with his right
hand that puzzled me, and while I dallied, it was almost too late. In my triumph, I had forgotten Rasfer. The signal
that Lord Intef gave him was a flick of the right hand, but Rasfer responded
like a trained boar-hound to the huntsman's command to attack. He launched
himself at me with such sudden ferocity that he took all of us by complete
surprise. He had only ten pace's to cover to reach me, and his sword rasped
from its scabbard as he came. There were two of Kratas' men standing between us,
but their backs were turned to him, and Rasfer barged into them and knocked
them off their feet, so that one of them sprawled across the stone flags in
front of Tanus and blocked his path when he tried to spring to my aid. I was on
my own, defenceless, and Rasfer threw up his sword with both hands to cleave
through my skull to my breast-bone. I lifted my hands to ward off the blow, but
my legs were frozen with shock and terror, and I could not move or duck away
from the hissing blade. I never saw Tanus throw his sword. I had eyes for
nothing but the face of Rasfer, but suddenly the sword was in the air. Terror
had so enhanced my senses that time seemed to pass as slowly as spilled oil
dribbling from the jar. I watched Tanus' sword turning end over end, spinning
slowly on its axis, flashing at each revolution like a sheet of summer
lightning, but it had not completed a full turn when it struck, and it was the
hilt and not the point that crashed into Rasfer's head. It did not kill him,
but it snapped his head over, whipping his neck like the branch of a willow in
the wind, so that his eyes rolled back blindly in their sockets. Rasfer never completed the blow he aimed at me. His
legs collapsed under him and he fell in a pile at my feet. His sword flew from
his nerveless fingers, spinning high in the air, and then fell back. It pegged
into the side of Pharaoh's throne, and quivered there. The king stared at it in
shocked disbelief. The razor edge had touched his arm, and split the skin. As
we all watched, a line of ruby droplets oozed from the shallow wound, and
dripped on to Pharaoh's cloud-white linen kilt. Tanus broke the horrified silence. 'Great Egypt,
you saw who gave the signal for this beast to attack. You know who was to blame
for endangering your royal person.' He leaped over the downed guardsman and
seized Lord Intef by the arm, twisting it until he fell to his knees and cried
out with pain. 'I did not want to believe this of you.' Pharaoh's
expression was sorrowful as he looked down on his grand vizier. 'I have trusted
you all my life, and you have spat upon me.' 'Great Egypt, hear me!' Lord Intef begged on his
knees, but Pharaoh turned his face away from him. 'I have listened to you long enough.' Then he
nodded to Tanus. 'Have your men guard him well, but show him courtesy, for his
guilt is not yet fully proven.' Finally Pharaoh addressed the congregation. 'These
are strange and unprecedented events. I adjourn these proceedings to consider
fully the evidence that Taita the slave will present.to me. The population of
Thebes will assemble once again to hear my judgement in this same place at noon
tomorrow. I have spoken.' WE ENTERED THROUGH THE MAIN DOORWAY to the audience
hall of the grand vizier's palace. Pharaoh paused at the threshold. Although
the wound from Rasfer's sword was slight, I had bandaged it with linen and
placed his arm in a sling. Pharaoh surveyed the hall slowly. At the far end of
the long room stood the grand vizier's throne. Carved from a solid block of
alabaster, it was hardly less imposing than Pharaoh's own in the throne room at
Elephantine. The high walls were plastered with smooth clay and on this
background were painted some of the most impressive frescoes that I had ever
designed. They transformed the huge room into a blazing garden of delights. I
had painted them while I was Lord Intef's slave, and even though they were my
own creations, they still gave me a deep thrill of pleasure when I looked upon
them. I have no doubt that these works alone, without
consideration of any other of my achievements, would support my claim to the
title of the most significant artist in the history of our land. It was sad
that I who had created them was now to demolish them. It detracted from the
triumph of this tumultuous day. I led Pharaoh down the hall. For once we had dispensed
with all protocol, and Pharaoh was as eager as a child. He followed me so
closely that he almost trod upon my heels, and his royal train fell in as
eagerly behind him. I led them to the throne wall and we stopped below
the huge mural depicting the sun god, Ammon-Ra, on his daily journey across the
heavens. Even in his excitement, I could see the reverent expression in the
king's eyes as he looked up at the painting. Behind us, the great hall was half-filled with the
king's train, the courtiers and the warriors and the noble lords, to say
nothing of the royal wives and concubines who would rather have given up all
their rouges and paint-boxes of cosmetics than miss such an exciting moment as
I had promised them. Naturally, my mistress was in the forefront. Tanus marched
only a pace behind the king. He and his Blues had taken over the duties of the
royal bodyguard. The king turned back to Tanus now. 'Have your men
bring forward the Lord Intef!' Treating him with elaborate and icy courtesy,
Kratas led Intef to face the wall, but he interposed himself between the
prisoner and the king and stood with his naked blade at the ready. 'Taita, you may proceed,' the king told me, and I
measured the wall, stepping out exactly thirty paces from the furthest corner
and marking the distance with the lump of chalk that I had brought with me for
the purpose. 'Behind this wall lie the private quarters of the
grand vizier,' I explained to the king. 'Certain alterations were made when
last the palace was renovated. Lord Intef likes to have his wealth close at
hand.' 'Sometimes you are garrulous, Taita.' Pharaoh was
less than captivated by my lecture on the palace architecture. 'Get on with it,
fellow. I am aflame to see what is hidden here.' 'Let the masons approach!' I called out, and a
small band of these sturdy rogues in their leather aprons came down the aisle
and dropped their leather tool-bags at the foot of the throne wall. I had
summoned them across the river from their work on Pharaoh's tomb. The white
stone-dust in their hair gave them an air of age and wisdom that few of them
deserved. I borrowed a wooden set-square from their foreman,
and with it marked out an oblong shape on the clay-plastered wall. Then I
stepped back and addressed the,master mason. 'Gently now! Damage the frescoes as little as you
can. They are great works of art.' With their wooden mallets and their chisels of
flint, they fell upon the wall, and they paid little heed to my strictures.
Paint and plaster flew in clouds as slabs of the outer wall were stripped away
and thumped to the marble floor. The dust offended the ladies and they covered
their mouths and noses with their shawls. Gradually from under the layer of plaster emerged
the outline of the stone blocks. Then Pharaoh exclaimed aloud and, ignoring the
flying dust, he drew closer, and peered at the design that appeared from
beneath the plaster skin. The regular courses of stone blocks were marred by an
oblong of alien-coloured stone that followed almost exactly the outline I had
chalked upon the outer layer of plaster. "There is a hidden door in there,' he cried.
'Open it immediately!' Under the king's urging, the masons attacked the
sealed doorway with a will, and once they had removed the keystone, the other
blocks came out readily. A dark opening was revealed, and Pharaoh, who had by
now taken charge of the work, called excitedly for torches to be lit. 'The entire space behind this wall is a secret
compartment,' I told Pharaoh, while we waited for the torches to be brought to
us. 'I had it constructed on Lord Intef's orders.' When the torches were brought, Tanus took one of
them and lit the king's way into the gaping secret door. The king stepped
through, and I was the next to enter after him and Tanus. It was so long since I had last been in there that
I looked around me'with as much interest as the others. Nothing had changed in
all that time. The chests and casks of cedar and acacia wood were stacked
exactly as I had left them. I pointed out to the king those cases to which he
should first devote his attention, and he ordered, 'Have them carried out into
the audience hall.' 'You will need strong men to carry them,' I
remarked drily. They are rather heavy.' It took three of the biggest men of the Blues to
lift each case and they staggered out through the jagged opening in the wall
with them. 'I have never seen these boxes before,' Lord Intef
protested, as the first of them was carried out and laid on the dais of the
grand vizier's throne. 'I had no knowledge of a secret chamber behind the wall.
It must have been built by my predecessor, and the cases placed there at his
command.' 'Your Majesty, observe the seal on this lid.' I
pointed it out to him and the king peered at the clay tablet. 'Whose seal is this?' he demanded. 'Observe the ring on the left forefinger of the
grand vizier, Majesty,' I murmured. 'May I respectfully suggest that Pharaoh
match it to the seal on this chest?' 'Lord Intef, hand me your ring if you please,' the
king asked with exaggerated courtesy, and the grand vizier hid his left hand
behind his back. 'Great Egypt, the ring has been on my finger for
twenty years. My flesh has grown around it and it cannot now be removed.' 'Lord Tanus.' The king turned to him. 'Take your
sword. Remove Lord Intef's finger and bring it to me with the ring upon it.'
Tanus smiled cruelly as he stepped forward to obey, half-drawing his blade. 'Perhaps I am mistaken,' Lord Intef admitted with
alacrity. 'Let me see if I cannot free it.' The ring slipped readily enough
from his finger, and Tanus went down on one knee to hand it to the king. Pharaoh bent studiously over the chest and made the
comparison of ring to seal. When he straightened up again his face was dark
with anger. 'It is a perfect match. This seal was struck from
your ring, Lord Intef.' But the grand vizier made no reply to the accusation.
He stood with his arms folded and his- expression stony. 'Break the seal. Open the chest!' Pharaoh ordered,
and Tanus cut away the clay tablet and prised up the lid with his sword. The king cried out involuntarily as the lid fell
away and the contents were revealed, 'By all the gods!' And his courtiers
crowded forward without ceremony to gaze into the chest, exclaiming and
jostling each other for a better view. 'Gold!' The king scooped both hands full with the
glittering yellow rings, and then let them cascade back between his fingers. He
kept a single ring in his hand and held it close to his face to study the mint
marks upon it. 'Two deben weight of fine gold. How much will this case contain,
and how many cases are there in the secret store-room?' His question was
rhetorical, and he was not expecting an answer, but I gave him a reply
nevertheless. 'This case contains—' I read the manifest that I
had inscribed on the lid so many years before. 'It contains one takh and three
hundred deben of pure gold. As to how many cases of gold, if my memory serves
me well, there should be fifty-three of gold and twenty-three of silver in this
store. However, I have forgotten exactly how many chests of jewellery we hid
here.' 'Is there no one I can trust? You, Lord Intef, I
treated as my brother. There was no kindness that you did not receive from my
hands, and this is how you have repaid me.' AT MIDNIGHT THE CHANCELLOR AND THE chief inspector
of the royal taxes came to the king's chamber where I was changing the dressing
on his injured arm. They presented their final tally of the amount of the
treasure and Pharaoh read it with awe. Once again, his emotions warred with
each other, outrage vying with euphoria at this staggering windfall. 'The rogue was richer than his own king. There is
no punishment harsh enough for such evil. He has cheated and robbed me and my
tax-collectors.' 'As well as murdering and plundering Lord Harrab
and tens of thousands of your subjects,' I reminded him, as I secured the
bandage on his arm. It was perhaps impudent of me. However, he was by now so
deep in my debt that I could risk it. 'That too,' he agreed readily enough, my sarcasm
wasted upon him. 'His guilt is deep as the sea and high as the heaven. I will
have to devise a suitable punishment. The strangler's rope is too kind for Lord
Intef.' 'Majesty, as your physician, I must insist that you
rest now. It has been a day that has taxed even your great strength and
endurance.' 'Where is Intef? I cannot rest until I am assured
that he is well taken care of.' 'He is under guard in his own quarters, Majesty. A
senior captain and a detachment of the Blues have that duty.' I hesitated
delicately. 'Rasfer is also under guard.' 'Rasfer, that ugly drooling animal of his? The one
who tried to kill you in the temple of Osiris? Did he survive the crack that
Lord Tanus gave him?' 'He is well if not happy, Pharaoh,' I assured him.
'Did Your Majesty know that Rasfer is the one who, so long ago, used the
gelding-knife upon me?' I saw the beam of pity in the king's eye, as I blurted
it out. 'I will deal with him as I deal with his master,'
Pharaoh promised. 'He will suffer the same punishment as Lord Intef. Will that
satisfy you, Taita?' 'Your Majesty is just and omniscient.' I backed out
of his presence and went to find my mistress. She was waiting for me and, although it was after
midnight and I was exhausted, she would not let me sleep. She was far too
overwrought, and she insisted that for the rest of the night I sit beside her
bed and listen to her chatter about Tanus and other topics of lesser
importance. DESPITE THE DEARTH OF SLEEP, I WAS bright and
clear-headed when I took my place in the temple of Osiris the following
morning. If anything, the congregation was even larger than
it had been the day before. There was not a ___ soul in Thebes who had not
heard of the downfall of the grand vizier, and who was not eager to witness his
ultimate humiliation. Even those of his underlings, who had most prospered
under his corrupt administration, now turned upon him, like a pack of hyena who
devour their leader when he is sick and wounded. The barons of the Shrikes were led before the
throne in their rags and bonds, but when Lord Intef entered the temple, he wore
fine linen and silver sandals. His hair was freshly curled, his face painted,
and the chains of the Gold of Praise hung around his neck. The barons knelt before the king, but even when one
of the guards pricked him with the sword, Lord Intef refused to bend the knee,
and the king made a gesture for the guard to desist. 'Let him stand!' the king ordered. 'He will lie in
his tomb long enough.' Then Pharaoh rose and stood before us in all his
grandeur and his rage. This once he seemed a true king, as the first of his
dynasty had been, a man of might and force. I, who had come to know him and his
weaknesses so well, found that I was overcome with a sense of awe. 'Lord Intef, you are accused of treason and murder,
of brigandage and piracy, and of a hundred other crimes no less deserving of
punishment. I have heard the supported testimony of fifty of my subjects from
all walks and stations of life, from lords and freemen and slaves. I have seen the
contents of your secret treasury wherein you hid your stolen wealth from the
royal tax-collectors. I have seen your personal seal upon the treasure chests.
By all these matters your guilt is proven a thousand times over. I, Mamose the
eighth of that name, Pharaoh and ruler of this very Egypt, hereby find you
guilty of all the crimes of which you are accused, and deserving of neither
royal clemency nor mercy.' 'Long live Pharaoh!' shouted Tanus, and the salute
was taken up and repeated ten times by the people of Thebes. 'May he live for
ever!' When silence fell, Pharaoh spoke again. 'Lord
Intef, you wear the Gold of Praise. The sight of that decoration on the breast
of a traitor offends me.' He looked across at Tanus. 'Centurion, remove the
gold from the prisoner.' Tanus lifted the chains from Lord Intef's neck and
carried them to the king. Pharaoh took the gold in his two hands, but when
Tanus started to withdraw, he stayed him with a word. "The name Lord Harrab was tarnished with the slur
of treason. Your father was hounded to a traitor's death. You have proven your
father's innocence. I rescind all sentences passed against Pianki, Lord Harrab,
and posthumously restore to him all his honours and titles that were stripped
from him. Those honours and titles descend to you, his son.' 'Bak-Her!' shouted the congregation. 'May Pharaoh
live for ever! Hail, Tanus, Lord Harrab!' 'In addition to those titles which now come down to
you as your inheritance, I bestow upon you new distinction. You have carried
out my charge to you. You have destroyed the Shrikes and delivered their
overlord to justice. In recognition of this service to the crown, I bestow upon
you the Gold of Valour. Kneel, Lord Harrab, and receive the king's favour.' 'Bak-Her!' they cried, as Pharaoh placed the
jangling gold chains, that had so recently belonged to Lord Intef, but to which
he had now added the star pendant of the warrior's decoration, about Tanus'
neck. 'Hail, Lord Harrab!' As Tanus withdrew, Pharaoh turned his attention
back to the prisoners. 'Lord Intef, you are deprived of your title as a lord of
the Theban circle. Your name and rank will be erased from all the public
monuments, and from your tomb that you have prepared in the Valley of the
Nobles. Your estates and all your possessions, including your illicit treasure,
are forfeited to the crown, except only those estates that once belonged to
Pianki, Lord Harrab, and which by fell means have come into your possession.
These are now returned in their entirety to his heir, my goodly Tanus, Lord
Harrab.' 'Bak-Her! Pharaoh is wise! May he live for ever!'
the people cheered wildly, and beside me my mistress was weeping unashamedly,
but then so were half the royal women. Very few of them could resist that
heroic figure whose golden hair seemed to dim the chains upon his breast. Now the king took me by surprise. He looked
directly at where I sat beside my mistress. 'There is one other who has done
the crown loyal service, the one who revealed the whereabouts of the stolen treasure.
Let the slave, Taita, stand forth.' I went down to stand before the throne, and the
king's voice was gentle. 'You have suffered unspeakable harm at the hands of
the traitor Intef and his henchman Rasfer. You have been forced by them to
commit nefarious deeds and capital crimes against the state, by conniving with
bandits and robbers and by concealing your master's treasure from the royal
tax-collectors. However, these were not crimes of your own inspiration. As a
slave, you were forced to the will of your master. Therefore I absolve you from
all guilt and liability. I find you innocent of any crime, and I reward you for
your service to us with a bounty of two takhs of fine gold to be paid out of
the treasure confiscated from the traitor, Intef.' A murmur of astonishment greeted this announcement,
and I gasped aloud. It was a staggering amount. A fortune to match those of all
but the wealthiest lords in the land, enough to buy -great tracts of the most
fertile land along the river, and to furnish magnificent villas upon that land,
to buy three hundred strong slaves to work the land, enough to fit out a fleet
of trading vessels and send them to the ends of the earth to bring back more
treasure. It was a sum large enough to boggle even my imagination, but the king
had not finished. 'As a slave, this bounty will be paid not to you,
but to your mistress, the Lady Lostris, who is a junior wife of Pharaoh.' I
should have guessed that Pharaoh would keep it in the family. I, who for a fleeting moment had been one of the
richest men in Egypt, bowed to the king and returned to my place beside my
mistress. She squeezed my hand to console me, but in truth I was not unhappy.
Our destinies were so entwined that I was a part of her, and I knew that we
would never again want for any material thing. I was already planning how I
would invest my mistress's fortune for her. At last the king was ready to pass sentence on the
line of prisoners, though he looked only at Intef as he spoke. 'Your crimes are unparalleled. No punishment before
meted out is harsh enough to fit your case. This then is the sentence I pass
upon you. At dawn on the day after the end of the festival of Osiris, you will
be marched through the streets of Thebes, bound and naked. While you still live
you will be nailed by your feet to the main gate of the city, with your heads
hanging downwards. You will be left there until your bones are picked clean by
the crows. Then your bones will be taken down and ground to powder and cast
into Mother Nile.' Even Intef paled and swayed on his feet as he
listened to the sentence. By dispersing their earthly bodies so that they could
never be embalmed and preserved, Pharaoh was condemning the prisoners to
oblivion. For an Egyptian there could be no harsher punishment. They were being
denied for all eternity the fields of paradise. WHEN MY MISTRESS EXPRESSED HER DETERMINATION to
attend the executions and to watch her father being nailed upside-down to the
main gate, I do not think that she truly realized the horror of what she would
witness. I was equally determined that she should not be there to see it. There
had never been a sadistic streak in her. I believe that her decision was
influenced by the fact that most of the other royal women were going to enjoy
the diverting spectacle, and that Tanus would be in command of the execution.
She would never pass up an opportunity to gaze at him, even from a distance. In the end I persuaded her only by employing the
most poignant argument in my arsenal. 'My lady, such cruel sights as these will
certainly affect your unborn son. Surely you do not wish to blight his young
unformed mind.' 'That is not possible,' she faltered for the first
time in our argument. 'My son could know nothing of it.' 'He will see through your eyes, and the screams of
his dying grandfather will pass through the walls of your stomach and enter his
tiny ears.' It was an evocative choice of words, and they had the effect I was
striving for. She thought about it at length, and then sighed.
'Very well then, but I shall expect you to bring me back a full description of
it all. You are not to miss a single detail. Especially I will want to know
what the other royal wives were wearing.' Then she grinned at me wickedly to
prove that she had not been totally gulled by my arguments. 'You can whisper it
all to me, so the child sleeping in my belly cannot overhear us.' At dawn on the day of the execution the gardens of
the palace were still shrouded in darkness when I left the harem. I hurried
through the water-gardens, and the stars were reflected in the black surfaces
of the ponds. As I approached the wing of the palace where Lord Intef was being
held in his own quarters, I saw the blaze of torches and lamps lighting the
windows, and heard the frantic yelling of orders and invective from within. I knew instantly that something was seriously
amiss, and I broke into a run. I was almost speared by the guard at the door to
Lord Intef's private quarters, but he recognized me at the last moment before
he skewered me, and lifted his weapon and let me pass. Tanus was in the centre of the ante-chamber. He was
roaring like a black-maned lion in a trap, and aiming blows with his clenched
fists at whoever came within range. Even though he had always had a stormy
temper, I had never before seen him so incapacitated by rage. He seemed to have
lost the power of reason or of articulate speech. His men, those mighty heroes
of the Blues, cowered away from him, and the rest of the palace wing was in an
uproar. I went straight up to him, ducked under another
wild punch, and shouted in his face, 'Tanus! It is I! Control yourself! In the
name of all the gods, are you mad?' He almost struck me, and I saw him wrestle with his
emotions and at last take control of them. 'See what you can do for them.' He pointed at the
bodies that were scattered about the ante-chamber as though a battle had raged
through it. With horror I recognized that one of them was
Khetkhet, a senior captain of the regiment and a man I respected. He was curled
in the corner clutching his stomach, with such agony etched on his rigid
features that I hoped never to see again. I touched his cheek and the skin was
cold and dead. I shook my head, 'He is past all help that I can
give him.' I lifted his eyelid with my thumb and gazed into his dead eye, then
I leaned forward and smelled his mouth. The faint musty odour of mushrooms on
it was dreadfully familiar. 'Poison.' I stood up. 'The others will be the
same.' There were five of them curled on the tiles. 'How?' asked Tanus, in a tone of forced calm, and I
picked up one of the bowls piled on the low table from which they had obviously
eaten their dinner, and I sniffed it. The smell of mushrooms was stronger. 'Ask the cooks,' I suggested. Then, in a sudden access
of anger, I hurled the bowl against the wall. The crumpled bodies reminded me
of my pets who had died the same death, and Khetkhet had been my friend. I took a deep breath to calm myself before I asked,
'No doubt your prisoner has escaped?' Tanus did not reply, but led me through
into the grand vizier's bedchamber. Immediately I saw the painted panel that
had been removed from the far wall of the empty room, and the opening behind
it. 'Did you know that there was a secret passage?'
Tanus demanded coldly, and I shook my head. 'I thought I knew all his secrets, but I was
wrong.' My voice was resigned. I think that in my heart I had known all along
that we would never bring Intef to justice. He was a favourite of the dark gods
and enjoyed their protection. 'Has Rasfer escaped with him?' I asked, and Tanus
shook his head. 'I have him locked in the arsenal with the barons.
But Intef's two sons, Menset and Sobek, have disappeared. Almost certainly they
were the ones who arranged this murder of my men, and their father's escape.'
Tanus had full control of that wild temper of his once more, but his anger was
still there beneath it. 'You know Intef so well, Taita. What will he do? Where
will he go? How can I catch him?' 'One thing I know, he will have made plans against
such a day as this. I know he has treasure stored for him in the Lower Kingdom,
with merchants and lawyers there. He has even had commerce with the false
pharaoh. I think that he sold military information to him and his generals. He
would receive a friendly welcome in the north.' 'I have already sent five fast galleys to the
north, with orders to search all vessels that they overtake,' Tanus told me. 'He has friends across the Red Sea,' I said. 'And
he has sent treasure to merchants in Gaza on the shores of the northern sea, to
be held for him. He has had dealings with the Bedouin. Many of them are in his
pay. They would help him to cross the desert.' 'By Horus, he is like a rat with a dozen
escape-routes to his hole,' swore Tanus. 'How can I cover all of them?' 'You cannot,' I said. 'And now Pharaoh is waiting
to witness the executions. You will have to report this to him.' 'The king will be angry, and with good reason. By
allowing Intef to escape, I have failed in my duty.' But Tanus was wrong. Pharaoh accepted the news of
Intef's escape with remarkable equanimity. I cannot fathom the reason for this,
except perhaps that the vast quantity of treasure he had acquired so
unexpectedly had mellowed him. Deep in his heart he may still have cherished
some sneaking affection for his grand vizier. On the other hand, Pharaoh was a
kindly man, and may not have truly relished the prospect of watching Lord Intef
being nailed to the city gates. It is true he showed some passing annoyance, and
spoke of justice being cheated, but all the time we were in his presence, he
was surreptitiously studying the manifest of the treasure. Even when Tanus
admitted his responsibility for the prisoner's escape, Pharaoh brushed it
aside. "The fault lies with the captain of the guard,
and he has already been sufficiently punished from the poison bowl that Intef
provided for him. You have sent galleys and troops in pursuit of the fugitive.
You have done all that can be expected of you, Lord Harrab. It remains only for
you to carry out my sentence on these other criminals.' 'Is Pharaoh ready to witness the execution?' Tanus
asked, and Pharaoh looked about him for an excuse to remain with his manifests
and tax-collectors' reports. 'I have much to do here, Lord Tanus. Proceed
without me. Report to me when the sentences have been carried out.' SO GREAT WAS THE PUBLIC INTEREST IN the executions
that the city fathers had erected a Taita stand in front of the main gates.
They charged a silver ring for a seat upon it. There was no lack of customers,
and the stand was packed to capacity. The crowds who could not find a seat upon
it overflowed out into the fields beyond the walls. Many of them had brought
beer and wine to make a celebration of it, and to toast the barons on their
way. Very few of them had not suffered from the ravages of the Shrikes, and
many of them had lost husbands or brothers or sons to them. Stark naked and bound together, as Pharaoh had
ordered, the condemned men were led through the streets of Kamak. The crowd
lined their way and hurled dung and filth at them as they passed, screaming
insults and shaking their fists. The children danced ahead of the procession
singing bits of doggerel made up on the spur of the moment: Nails in my tooties, bare bum to the sky, I am a baron, and that's how I die. Obedient to my mistress's wishes, I had taken up a
place on the stand to watch the sentence carried out. In truth I had no eyes
for the clothing and jewellery of the women of fashion around me when the
prisoners were at last led through the open gates. I looked instead at Rasfer
and I tried to revive and inflate my hatred for him. I forced myself to recite
every cruel and wicked act that he had ever committed against me, to relive the
agony of the lash and the knife that he had inflicted upon me. Yet there he
stood with his white belly sagging almost to his knees, with excrement in his
hair and filth streaking his face and running down his grotesque body. It was
difficult to hate him as much as he deserved. He saw me on the stand and he grinned up at me. The
paralysed muscles on one side of his face made it only half a grin, a sardonic
grimace, and he called, 'Thank you for coming to "wish me godspeed,
eunuch. Perhaps we will meet again in the fields of paradise, where I hope to
have the pleasure of cutting off your balls once again.' That taunt should have made it easier for me to
hate him, but somehow it failed, although I called back to him, 'You are going
no further than the mud in the river bottom, old friend. The next catfish that
I roast on the spit I will call Rasfer.' He was the first prisoner to be lifted on to the
wooden gate. It took three men on the parapet of the wall, straining on the
rope, while at the same time, four more shoved from below. They held him there as
one of the regimental armourers climbed the ladder beside him with a
stone-headed mallet in his fist. There were no more jokes from Rasfer when the first
of the thick copper nails was driven through the flesh and bones of his huge,
callused feet. He roared and swore and twisted in the grip of the men who held
him, and the crowd cheered and laughed and urged on the sweating armourer. It
was only when the nails had been driven home and the hammerman had climbed down
to admire his handiwork that the flaws in this novel form of punishment became
evident. Rasfer howled and roared, swinging upside-down, with the blood
trickling slowly down his legs. The hang of his pendulous paunch was reversed,
and the huge hairy bunch of his genitalia flapped against his belly-button. As
he twisted and struggled, the nails slowly 'ripped through the web of flesh
between his toes, until finally they tore entirely free. Rasfer fell back to
earth and flopped around like a beached fish. The spectators loved the show,
and howled with mirth at his antics. Encouraged by the spectators, his executioners
lifted him back on to the gate, and the armourer with his hammer climbed back
up the ladder to drive in more nails. In order to pin Rasfer more securely and
to prevent him struggling, Tanus ordered his hands as well as his feet to be
nailed to the gate. This time it was more successful. Rasfer hung head
down, his limbs spread like some monstrous star-fish. He was no longer
bellowing, for the mass of intestines in his belly were sagging down and
pressing on his lungs. He struggled for every breath he drew, and had none over
for shouting. One at a time, the other condemned men were lifted
on to the gate and nailed there, and the crowd hooted and applauded. Only Basti
the Cruel made no sound and gave them poor sport. As the day wore on, the sun beat down upon the
crucified victims, and the heat grew steadily stronger. By noon the prisoners
were so weak with pain and thirst and loss of blood that they hung as quietly
as the carcasses on butchers' hooks. The spectators began to lose interest and
drifted away. Some of the barons lasted longer than the others. Basti went on
breathing all that day. Only as the sun was setting did he take one deep
shuddering breath and finally hang inert. Rasfer was the toughest of them all.
Long after Basti was gone, he hung on. His face was filled with dark blood so
it swelled to twice its normal size. His tongue protruded from between his
lips, like a thick slice of purple liver. Once in a while he would utter a deep
groan and his eyes would flutter open. Every time this happened, I shared his
agony. The last of my hatred for him had long ago shrivelled and died, and I
was racked with pity, as I would have been for any other tortured animal. The crowd had long ago dispersed, and I sat alone
on the empty stand. Not attempting to hide his disgust at such a brutal duty
thrust upon him by the royal command, Tanus had stood to his post until sunset.
Then finally he had handed over the death watch to one of his captains, and
strode back into the city, leaving us to our vigil. There were only the ten guards below the gate,
myself on the stand and a few beggars lying like bundles of rags at the foot of
the wall. The torches on either side of the gate guttered and flickered in the
night breeze off the river, casting an eerie light over the macabre scene. Rasfer groaned again, and I could stand it no
longer. I took a jar of beer from my basket and climbed down to speak to the
captain. Wejoiew each other from the desert, and he laughed and shook his head
at my request. 'You are a soft-hearted fool, Taita. The bastard is so far-gone,
he is not worth worrying about,' he told me. 'But I will look the other way for
a while. Be quick about it.' I went to the gate, and Rasfer's head was on a
level with my own. 1 called his name softly, and his eyes fluttered open. I had
no way of telling how much he understood, but I whispered, 'I have a little
beer to wet your tongue. He made a soft gulping sound in his throat. His
eyes were looking at me. If he still had feeling, I knew his thirst must be a
torment of hell. I dribbled a few drops from the jar over his tongue, careful
not to let any of it run back into his nose. He made a weak and futile effort
to swallow. It would have been impossible, even if he had been stronger; the
liquid ran out of the corners of his mouth and down his cheeks into the
dung-caked hair. He closed his eyes, and that was the moment I was
waiting for. I slipped my dagger out of the folds of my shawl. Carefully I
placed the point behind his ear, and then with a sharp movement drove it in to
the hilt. His back arched in the final spasm, and then he relaxed into death. I
drew out the blade. There was very tittle blood, and I hid the dagger in my
shawl and turned away. 'May dreams of paradise waft you through the night,
Taita,' the captain of the guard called after me, but I had lost my voice and
could not reply. I never thought that I would weep for Rasfer, and maybe I
never did so. Perhaps I wept only for myself. AT PHARAOH'S COMMAND THE RETURN of the court to
Elephantine was initially delayed for a month. The king had his new treasure to
dispose of and was in buoyant mood. In all the time I had known him, I had
never seen him so happy and contented. I was pleased for him. By this time I
held the old man in real and warm affection. Some nights I sat up late with him
and his scribes, going over the accounts of the royal treasury, which now
emitted a decidedly rosy glow. At other times, I was summoned by Pharaoh to
consultations on. the alterations to the mortuary temple and the royal tomb
that he was now better able to afford. I calculated that at least half of the
recently revealed treasure would go into the tomb with Pharaoh. He selected all
the finest jewellery from Intef's hoard and sent almost fifteen takhs of
bullion to the goldsmiths in his temple, to be turned into funerary objects. Nevertheless, he found time to send for Tanus to
advise him on military matters. He had now recognized Tanus as one of the
foremost generals in his army. I was present at some of these meetings. The threat
from the false pharaoh in the Lower Kingdom was ever-present and preyed on all
our minds. Such was Tanus' favour with the king that he was able to make the
most of these fears and to persuade Pharaoh to divert a small part of Inters
treasure to the building of five new squadrons of war galleys, and to
re-equipping all the guards regiments with new weapons and sandals—although he
was unable to persuade the king to make up the arrears in pay for the army.
Many of the regiments had not been paid for the last half-year. Morale in the
army was much boosted by these reinforcements, and every soldier knew whom to
thank for them. They roared like lions and raised their clenched right fists in
salute, when Tanus inspected their massed formations. Most times when Tanus was summoned to the royal
audience, my mistress found some excuse to be present. Although she had the
good sense to keep in the background on these occasions, she and Tanus directed
such looks at each other that I feared they might scorch the false beard of the
Pharaoh. Fortunately nobody but myself seemed to notice these flashing messages
of passion. Whenever my mistress knew that I was to see Tanus
in private, she burdened me with long and ardent messages for him. On my return
I carried his replies which matched hers in length and fire. Fortunately these
outpourings were highly repetitive, and memorizing them was not a great
hardship. My Lady Lostris never tired of urging me to find
some subterfuge by which she tod Tanus might be alone together once more. I
admit that I feared enough for my own skin and for the safety of my mistress
and our unborn child, not to devote all my energies and ingenuity to satisfying
this request of hers. Once when I did tentatively approach Tanus with my
mistress's invitation to a meeting, he sighed and refused it with many
protestations of love for her. "That interlude in the tombs of Tras was sheer
madness, Taita. I never intended to compromise the Lady Lostris' honour, but
for the khamsin, it would never have happened. We cannot take that risk again.
Tell her that I love her more than life itself. Tell her our time will come,
for the Mazes of Ammon-Ra have promised it to us. Tell her I will wait for her
through all the days of my life.' On receiving this loving message, my mistress
stamped her foot, called her true love a stubborn fool who cared nothing for
her, broke a cup and two bowls of coloured glass, hurled a jewelled mirror
which had been a gift from the king into the river, and finally threw herself
on the bed where she' wept until suppertime. APART FROM HIS MILITARY DUTIES, which included
supervising the building of the new fleet of galleys, Tanus, these days, was
much occupied with the reorganization of his father's estates that he had at
last inherited. On these matters he consulted me almost daily. Not
surprisingly, the estates had never been preyed upon by the Shrikes while they
belonged to Lord Intef, and accordingly they were all prosperous and in good
repair. Thus Tanus had become overnight one of the most wealthy men in the
Upper Kingdom. Although I tried my best to dissuade him, he spent much of this
private fortune in making up the arrears in pay to his men and in re-equipping
his beloved Blues. Of course his men loved him all the more for this
generosity. Not content with these profligate expenditures,
Tanus sent out his captains, Kratas and Remrem and Astes, to gather up all the
crippled and blinded veterans of the river wars who now existed by begging in
the streets of Thebes. Tanus installed this riff-raff in one of the large
country villas that formed part of his inheritance, and although slops and
kitchen refuse would have been too good for them, he fed them on meat and
corn-cakes and beer. The common soldiers cheered Tanus in the streets and drank
his health in the taverns. When I told my mistress of Tanus' mad
extravagances, she was so encouraged by them that she immediately spent
hundreds of deben of the gold that I had earned for her, in buying and
equipping a dozen buildings which she turned into hospitals and hostels for the
poor people of Thebes. I had already earmarked this gold for investment in the
corn market, and though I wrung my hands and pleaded with her, she could not be
moved. Needless to say, it was the long-suffering slave
Taita who was responsible for the day-to-day management of this latest folly of
his mistress, although she visited her charity homes every day. Thus it was
possible for any loafer and drunkard in the twin cities to scrounge a free meal
and a comfortable bed from us. If that was not enough, they could have their
bowl of soup served to them by my mistress's own fair hand, and their running
sores and purging bowels treated by one of the most eminent physicians in this
very Egypt. I was able to find a few young unemployed scribes
and disenchanted priests who loved people more than gods or money. My mistress
took them into her employ. I led this little band on nocturnal hunts through the
back alleys and slum quarters of the city. Nightly we gathered up the street
orphans. They were a filthy, verminous bunch of little savages, and very few of
them came with us willingly. We had to pursue and catch them like wild cats. I
received many lusty bites and scratches in the process of bathing their
filth-encrusted little bodies and shaving their hair that was so thick with
lice and nits that it was impossible to drag a comb through it. We housed them in one of my mistress's new hostels.
Here the priests began the tedious process of taming them, while the scribes
started on the long road of their education. Most of our captives escaped
within the first few days, and returned to the gutters where they belonged.
However, some of them stayed on in the hostel. Their slow transformation from
animals to human beings delighted my mistress and gave me more pleasure, than I
had suspected could ever come from such an unlikely source. All my protests against the manner in which my
mistress was wasting our substance were in vain, and I vowed that if I were to
be embalmed and laid in my tomb before my allotted time, the blame would surely
rest entirely with these two young idiots whom I had taken under my wing, and
who rewarded me by consistently ignoring my best advice. Needless to say, it was my mistress and not me whom
the widows and the cripples blessed and presented with their pitiful little
gifts of wilting wild flowers, cheap beads and tattered scraps of papyrus
containing poorly written texts from the Book of the Dead. As she walked
abroad, the common people held up their brats for her blessing and tried to
touch the hem of her skirt as though it were some religious talisman. She
kissed the grubby babies, a practice which I warned her would endanger her health,
and she scattered copper pieces to the loafers with as much care as a tree
drops its autumn leaves. 'This is my city,' she told me. 'I love it and I
love every person in it. Oh, Taita, I dread the return to Elephantine. I hate
to leave my beautiful Thebes.' 'Is it the city you hate to leave?' I asked. 'Or is
it a certain uncouth soldier who lives here?' She slapped me, but lightly. 'Is there nothing you hold sacred, not even love
that is pure and true? For all your scrolls and grand language, you are at
heart a barbarian.' THUS THE DAYS PASSED SWIFTLY FOR all of us, until
one morning I consulted my calendar and discovered that over two months had
passed since my Lady Lostris had resumed her marital duties on Pharaoh's couch.
Although she still showed no evidence of her condition, it was time to apprise
the king of his great good fortune, his approaching paternity. When I told my
mistress what I intended, only one matter engaged her consideration. She made
me promise that before I discussed it with the king, I must first tell Tanus
that he was the true father of the child she was carrying. I set out to fulfil
my promise that very afternoon. I found Tanus at the shipyards on the west bank
of the river, where he was swearing at the shipwrights and threatening to throw
them into the river to feed the crocodiles. He forgot his anger when he saw me,
and took me on board the galley that they had launched that morning. Proudly,
he showed me the new pump to remove water from the bilges, if the ship should
ever be damaged in battle. He seemed to have forgotten that I had designed the
equipment for him, and I had to remind him tactfully. 'Next you will want me to pay you for your ideas,
you old rogue. I swear you are as stingy as any Syrian trader.' He clapped me on
the back, and led me to the far end of the deck where none of the sailors could
overhear us. He dropped his voice. 'How goes it with your mistress? I dreamed about
her again last night. Tell me, is she well? How are those little orphans of
hers? What a loving heart she has, what beauty! All of Thebes adores her. I hear her name spoken
wherever I go, and the sbund of it is as sharp as a spear thrust in my chest.' "There will soon be two of her for you to
love,' I told him, and he stared at me with his mouth agape like a man suddenly
bereft of his senses. 'It was much more than just the khamsin that struck that
night in the tombs of Tras.' He seized me in a hug so powerful that I could not
breathe. 'What is this riddle? Speak plainly, or I shall throw you into the
river. What are you saying, you old scallywag? Don't juggle words with me!' "The Lady Lostris is carrying your child. She
sent me to tell you so that you should be the first to know it, even before the
king,' I gasped. 'Now set me free before I am permanently damaged.' He released
me so suddenly, that I almost fell overboard. 'My child! My son!' he cried. It was amazing how
both of them had made that immediate assumption of the poor little mite's
gender. "This is a miracle. This is a direct gift from Horus.' It was
clear to Tanus in that moment that no other man in the history of the world had
ever fathered an infant. 'My son!' he shook his head in wonder. He was
grinning like an idiot. 'My woman and my son! I must go to them this very
moment.' He set off down the deck, and I had to run to catch him. It took all
my powers of persuasion to prevent him from storming the palace and bursting
into the royal harem. In the end, I led him to the nearest riverside tavern to
wet the baby's head. Fortunately a gang of off-duty Blues was already drinking
there. I ordered and paid for a butt of the tavern's best wine and left them to
it. There were men from some of the other regiments in the tavern, so there
would probably be a riot later, for Tanus was in a rumbustious mood and the
Blues never needed much encouragement to fight. I went directly from the tavern to the palace, and
Pharaoh was delighted to see me. 'I was about to send for you, Taita. I have
decided that we have been too niggardly with the entrance-gates to my temple. I
want something grander—' 'Pharaoh!' I cried. 'Great and Divine Egypt! I have
wonderful tidings. The goddess Isis has kept her promise to you. Your dynasty will be eternal. The prophecy of the
Mazes> of Ammon-Ra will be fulfilled. The moon of my mistress; has been
trodden under the hooves of the mighty bull off Egypt! The Lady Lostris is
bearing your son!' For once all thought of funerals and
temple-building was driven from Pharaoh's mind, and, like Tanus, his very first
instinct was to go to her. Led by the king, we rushed through the palace
corridors, a solid stream of nobles and courtiers turbulent as the Nile in
spate, and my mistress was waiting for us in the garden of the harem. With the
natural wiles of the female, she had composed the setting perfectly to show off
hert loveliness to full effect. She was seated on a low bench with flower-beds
around her and the broad river behind her. For ai moment I thought the king
might throw himself to his knees; in front of her, but even the prospect of
immortality could nott cause him to forget his dignity to that extent. Instead, he showered her with congratulations and
compliments and earnest enquiries after her health. All the while: his
fascinated gaze was fastened on her belly from which i the miracle would in the
fullness of time emerge. Finally he; asked her, 'My dear child, is there
anything that you lack: for your happiness? Is there anything I can do to make
you more comfortable during this trying time in your life?' I was filled once more with admiration for my
mistress. She would have made a great general or corn trader, for her sense of
timing was impeccable. 'Your Majesty, Thebes is the city of my birth. I cannot
be truly happy anywhere else in Egypt. I beg you in your generosity and
understanding to allow your son to be born here in Thebes. Please do not make
me return to Elephantine.' I held my breath, the siting of the court was an
affair of state. To remove from one city to another was a decision which
affected the lives of thousands of citizens. It was not one to be made on the
light whim of a child not yet sixteen years of age. Pharaoh looked amazed at the request, and scratched
his false beard. *You want to live in Thebes? Very well, then, the court will
move to Thebes!' He turned to me. 'Taita, design me a new palace.' He looked
back at my mistress. 'Shall we site it there, on the west bank, my dear?' He
pointed across the river. 'It is cool and pretty on the west bank,' my
mistress agreed. 'I shall be very happy there.' 'On the west bank, Taita. Do not stint yourself in
the design. It must be a fitting home for the son of Pharaoh. His name will be
Memnon, the ruler of the dawn. We will call it the Palace of Memnon.' With such simple ease my mistress saddled me with a
mountain of labour, and accustomed the king to the first of many such demands
in the name of the child in her womb. From this moment on, Pharaoh was not
disposed to deny her aught that she asked for, whether it was titles of honour
for those she loved or liked, alms for those she had taken under her
protection, or rare and exotic dishes that were fetched for her from the ends
of the empire. Like a naughty child, I think that she enjoyed testing the
limits of this new power she wielded over the king. She had never seen snow, though she had heard me
speak of it from my fragmentary childhood memories of the mountainous land
where I had been born. My mistress asked for some to be brought to her to cool
her brow in the heat of the Nile valley. Pharaoh immediately commanded a
special athletics games to be held, during which the hundred fastest runners in
the Upper Kingdom were selected. They were despatched to Syria to bring back
snow to my mistress in a special box of my design, which was intended to prevent
it melting. This was probably the only one of all her whims that remained
unsatisfied. All we received back from those far-off mountain peaks was a damp
patch in the bottom of the box. In all other things she was fully accommodated. On one
occasion she was present when Tanus presented a report to the king on the order
of battle of the Egyptian fleet. My mistress sat quietly in the background
until Tanus had finished and taken his leave, then she remarked quietly, 'I
have heard it said that Lord Tanus is the finest general we have. Don't you
think it may be wise, divine husband, to promote him to Great Lion of Egypt and
place him in command of the northern corps?' Once again I gasped at her
effrontery, but Pharaoh nodded thoughtfully. 'That same thought had already occurred to me, my
dear, even though he is still so young for high command.' The following day, Tanus was summoned to a royal
audience, from which he emerged as Great Lion of Egypt and the commander of the
northern wing of the army. The ancient general who had preceded him was palmed
off with a substantial pension and relegated to a sinecure in the royal
household. Tanus now had three hundred galleys and almost thirty thousand men
under his command. The promotion meant that he stood fourth in the army lists,
with only Nem-bet and a couple of old dodderers above him. 'Lord Tanus is a proud man,' the Lady Lostris
informed me, as if I were completely ignorant of this fact. 'If you should ever
tell him that I had any hand in his promotion, I shall sell you to the first
Syrian trader I come upon,' she threatened me ominously. All this time her belly, once so smooth and
shapely, was distending gradually. With all my other work I was obliged to
relay daily bulletins on this progression, not only to the palace, but also to
army headquarters, northern command. I BEGAN WORK ON THE CONSTRUCTION of the Palace of
Memnon five weeks after Pharaoh had given me the original instructions, for it
had taken me that long to draw up the final plans. Both my mistress and the
king agreed that my designs exceeded their expectations, and that it would be
by far the most beautiful building in the land. On the same day that the work began, a blockade
runner who had succeeded in bribing his way past the fleets of the red
pretender in the north docked in Thebes with a cargo of cedar wood from Byblos.
The captain was an old friend of mine and he had interesting news for me. Firstly, he told me that Lord Intef had been seen
in the city of Gaza. It was said that he was travelling in state with a large
bodyguard towards the East. He must therefore have succeeded in crossing the
Sinai desert, or he had found a vessel to carry him through the mouth of the
Nile and thence east along the coast of the great sea. The captain had other news that at the time seemed
insignificant, but which was to change the destiny of this very Egypt and of
all of us who lived along the river. It seemed that a new and warlike tribe had
come out of an unknown land to the east of Syria, carrying all before them.
Nobody knew much about these warrior people, except that they seemed to have
developed a form of warfare that had never been seen before. They could cross
vast distances very swiftly, and no army could stand against them. There were always wild rumours of new enemies about
to assail this very Egypt. I had heard fifty like this one before, and thought
as little of this one as I had of all the others. However, the captain was
usually a reliable source, and so I mentioned his story to Tanus when next we
met. 'No one can stand against this mysterious foe?'
Tanus smiled. 'I would like to see them come against my lads, I'll show them
what the word invincible truly means. What did you say they are called, these
mighty warriors who come like the wind?' 'It seems that they call themselves the Shepherd
Kings,' I replied, 'the Hyksos.' The name would not have slid over my tongue so
smoothly if I understood then what it would mean to our world. "The shepherds, hey? Well, they will not find
my rascals an easy flock to herd? Jie dismissed them lightly, and was much more
interested in my news of Lord Intef. 'If only we could be certain of his true
whereabouts, I could send a detachment of men to arrest him, and bring him back
to face up to justice. Wherever I walk on the estates that once belonged to my
family, I feel the spirit of my father beside me. I know he will never rest
until I avenge him.' 'Would that it were so easy.' I shook my head.
'Intef is as cunning as a desert fox. I don't think we will ever see him in
Egypt again.' As I said this, the dark gods must have chuckled to themselves. AS MY MISTRESS'S PREGNANCY ADVANCED, I was able to
insist that she limited her many activities. I forbade her to visit the
hospitals or the orphanage, for fear of infecting herself and her unborn infant
with the vermin and the diseases of the poor. During the heat of the day I made
her rest under the barrazza that I had built in the water-garden for the grand
vizier. When she protested at the boredom of this enforced inactivity, Pharaoh
sent his musicians to the garden to entertain her, and I was persuaded to leave
my work on the Palace of Memnon to keep her company, to tell her stories and to
discuss Tanus' latest exploits with her. I was very strict with her diet, and allowed her no
wine or beer. I had the palace gardeners provide fresh fruits and vegetables
each day, and I carved all the fat off her meat, for I knew that it would make
the child in her belly sluggish. I prepared each of her meals myself and every
night when I saw her to her bedchamber, I mixed a special potion with herbs and
juices that would strengthen her infant. Of course, when she suddenly declared that she must
have a stew made from the liver and kidneys of a gazelle, or a salad of larks'
tongues or the roasted breast of the wild bustard, the king immediately sent a
hundred of his huntsmen into the desert to procure these delicacies for her. I
refrained from telling Lord Tanus of these strange cravings of my mistress, for
I dreaded to learn that rather than prosecuting the war against the false
pharaoh, the northern army had been sent into the desert to hunt gazelle or
larks or bustard. As the day of her confinement approached, I lay
awake at night worrying. I had promised the king a prince, but he was not
expecting his heir to arrive so expeditiously. Even a god can count the days
from the first of the festival of Osiris. There was nothing that I could do if
the child turned out to be a princess, but at least I could prepare Pharaoh for
her early arrival. Pharaoh had now conceived an interest in the
subject of pregnancy and parturition, which temporarily rivalled his obsession
with temples and tombs. I had to reassure him almost daily that the Lady
Lostris' rather narrow hips were no obstacle to a normal birth, and that her
tender age, far from being prejudicial, was highly favourable to a successful
conclusion to our enterprise. I took the opportunity to inform him of the
interesting but little-known fact that many of the great athletes, warriors and
sages of history had been prematurely exposed to the light of day. 'I believe, Your Majesty, that it's rather like the
case of the sluggard who lies too long abed, and thus wastes his energy, while
the great men are invariably early risers. I have noticed that you, Divine
Pharaoh, are always about before sunrise. It would not surprise me to learn
that you were also a premature birth.' I knew that he was not, but naturally he
could not now contradict me. 'It would be a most propitious circumstance if this
prince of yours should imitate his sire, and start early from his mother's
womb.' I hoped that I had not belaboured my point, but the king seemed
convinced by my eloquence. In the end, the child cooperated most handsomely by
overstaying its allotted term by almost two weeks, and I did nothing to hurry
it along. The time span was so close to the normal that no tongues could wag,
but Pharaoh was blessed with the premature birth that he had come to believe
was sd desirable. It was no surprise to me that my mistress began her
labour at a most inconvenient hour. Her waters broke in the third watch of the
night. She was not in the habit of making matters too easy for me. At least
this gave me the excuse of dispensing with the-services of a midwife, for I had
little faith in those hags with the black, dried blood crusted under their
long, ragged fingernails. Once she had begun, my Lady Lostris carried it off
with her usual despatch and aplomb. I had barely time to shake myself fully
awake, scrub my hands in hot wine and bless my instruments in the flame of the
lamp, before she grunted and said quite cheerfully, 'You had better take
another look, Taita. I think something is happening.' Although I knew it was
much too soon, I humoured her. One glance was enough, and I shouted for her
slave girls. 'Hurry, you lazy strumpets! Fetch the royal wives!' 'Which ones?' The first girl to answer my call
tottered into the room half-naked and half-asleep. 'All of them, any of them.' No prince could inherit
the double crown unless his birth had been witnessed, and it was formally
attested that no exchange had taken place. The royal women began to arrive just as the child
revealed itself for the first time. My lady was seized by an overpowering convulsion,
and then the crown of the head appeared. I had dreaded that it might be
surmounted by a shock of red-gold curls, but what I saw was a thick dark pelt
like that of one of the river otters. It was much later that the colour would
change and the red would begin to sparkle in the black locks, like points of
polished garnets, and then only when the sun shone upon it. 'Push!' I called to my mistress. 'Push hard!' And
she responded lustily. The young bones of her pelvis, not yet tempered to
rigidity by the years, spread to give the infant fair passage, and the way was
well oiled. The child took me unawares. It came out like a stone from a
sling-shot, and the tiny, slippery body almost flew from my hands. Before I had a good hold on it, my mistress struggled
up on her elbows. Her hair was plastered to her scalp with sweat and her
expression was desperate with anxiety. 'Is it a boy? Tell me! Tell me!' The roomful of royal ladies crowding around the bed
were witness to the very first act the child performed, as it entered this
world of ours. From a penis as long as my little finger, the Prince Memnon, the
first of that name, shot a fountain almost as high as the ceiling. I was full
in the path of this warm stream, and it drenched me to the skin. 'Is it a boy?' my mistress cried again, and a dozen
voices answered her together. 'A boy! Hail, Memnon, the royal prince of Egypt!' I could not speak yet, for my eyes burned not only
with royal urine, but with tears of joy and relief as his birth cry rang out,
angry and hot with temper. He waved his arms at me and kicked out so strongly
that I almost lost my grip again. As my vision cleared I was able to make out
the strong, lean body and the small, proud head with the thick pelt of dark
hair. I LOST COUNT LONG AGO OF HOW MANY infants I have
birthed, but there had been nothing in my experience to prepare me for this. I
felt all the love and devotion of which I was capable crystallized into that
moment. I knew that something which would last a lifetime, and which would grow
stronger with each passing day, had begun. I knew that my life had taken
another random turn, and that nothing would ever be the same again. As I cut the cord and bathed the child, I was
filled with a sense of religious awe such as I had never known in the sanctuary
of any one of Egypt's manifold gods. I feasted my eyes and my soul upon that
perfect little body and upon the red and wrinkled face in which the signs of
strength and stubborn courage were stamped as clearly as upon the features of
his true father. I laid him in his mother's arms, and as he found
and latched on to her swollen nipple like a leopard on to the throat of a
gazelle, my mistress looked up at me. I could not speak, but then there were no
words that could frame what passed silently between us. We both knew. It had
begun, something so wonderful that as yet neither of us could fully comprehend
it. I left her to the joy of her son and went to report
to the king. I was in no hurry. I knew that the news would have been carried to
him long since. The royal ladies are not renowned for their reticence. He was
probably on his way to the harem at this very moment. I dawdled in the water-garden, possessed by a
dreaming sense of unreality. The dawn was breaking, and the sun god, Ammon-Ra,
showed the tip of his fiery disc above the eastern hills. I whispered a prayer
of thanks to him. As I stood with my eyes uplifted, a flock of the palace
pigeons circled above the gardens. As they turned, the rays of the sun caught
their wings and they flashed like bright jewels in the sky. Then I saw the dark speck high above the circling
flock, and even at that distance I recognized it immediately. It was a wild
falcon, come out of the desert. It folded back its sharp wings and began its
stoop. It had chosen the leading bird in the flock, and the dive was deadly
accurate and inexorable. It struck the pigeon in a burst of feathers, like a
puff of pale smoke, and the bird was dead in the air. Always a falcon will bind
to its prey and drop to earth with it gripped in its talons. This, time that did not happen. The falcon killed
the pigeon and then opened his talons and released it. The shattered carcass of
the bird fell free, and, with a harsh scream, the falcon circled over my head.
Three times it circled and three times it uttered that thrilling, warlike call.
Three is one of the most potent magical numbers. From all these things I
realized that this was no natural occurrence. The falcon was a messenger, or
even the god Horus in his other form. The carcass of the pigeon fell at my feet, droplets
of its warm blood splattered my sandals. I knew that it was a token from the
god. A sign of his protection, and patronage for the infant prince. I
understood also that it was a charge to me. The god was commending him to my
care. I took the dead pigeon in my hands, and lifted it
to the sky. 'Joyfully I accept this trust that you have placed upon me, oh
Horus. Through all the days of my life I will be true to it.' The falcon called again, one last wild shriek, and
then it banked away and on quick, stabbing wing-beats, flew out across the wide
Nile waters and disappeared into the wilderness, back towards the western
fields of paradise where the gods live. I plucked a single wing-feather from the pigeon.
Later I placed it under the mattress of the prince's cot, for good luck. PHARAOH'S JOY AND PRIDE IN HIS HEIR were unbounded.
He declared a nativity feast in his honour. For one entire night the citizens
of Upper Egypt sang and danced in the streets, and gorged on the meat and wine
that Pharaoh provided, and they blessed the Prince Memnon with every bowlful
that went down their gullets. The fact that he was the son of my Lady Lostris,
whom they loved, made the occasion of his birth all the more joyous. So young and resilient was my mistress that within
days, she was well enough to appear before the full court of Egypt, bearing her
infant at her breast. Seated on the lesser throne below that of the king, she
made a picture of lovely young motherhood. When she opened her robe and lifted
out one of her milk-swollen breasts and before the assembled court gave the
infant suck, they cheered her so loudly as to startle the infant. He spat out
the nipple and roared at them in scarlet-faced outrage, and the nation took him
to its heart. 'He is a lion,' they declared. 'His heart is pumped
up with the blood of kings and warriors.' Once the prince had been quieted again, and his
mouth stopped up with the nipple, Pharaoh rose to address us, his subjects. 'I acknowledge this child to be my issue and the
direct line of my blood and succession. He is my first-born son, and shall be
Pharaoh after me. To you noble lords and ladies, to all my subjects, I commend
the Prince Memnon.' The cheers went on and on, for no one amongst them
wanted to be the first to fall silent and bring his loyalty into question. During all of this I stood with other servants and
slaves of the royal household in one of the upper galleries which overlooked
the hall. By craning my head, I was able to pick out the tall figure of Lord
Tanus. He was standing in the third rank below the throne with Nembet and the
other military commanders. Although he cheered with the rest of them, I could
read the expression on his broad, open face that he strove to disguise. His son
was claimed by another and it was beyond his power to prevent it. Even I, who
knew and understood him so well, could only guess at what agony he was
suffering. When at last the king ordered silence and he had
their attention once more, he continued, 'I commend to you also the mother of
the prince, the Lady Lostris. Know all men that she sits now closest to my
throne. From this day forward she is elevated to the rank of chief consort and
the senior wife of Pharaoh. From henceforth, in name she will become Queen
Lostris, while in precedence and preferment she ranks after the king and his
prince alone. Furthermore, until the prince has reached the age of his
majority, Queen Lostris shall act as my regent and, when I am unable to do so, she
will stand at the head of the nation in my stead.' I did not think there was a soul in all the Upper
Kingdom who did not love my mistress, except perhaps some of the royal wives
who had been unable to provide the king with a male heir, and who now found
themselves outranked by her and superseded in the order of precedence. All the
rest showed their love in the acclaim with which they greeted this
pronouncement. To end the ceremony of the naming of Pharaoh's heir,
the royal family left the hall. In the main courtyard of the palace, Pharaoh
mounted the sledge of state, and with Queen Lostris seated at his side and the
prince in her arms, they were drawn by the span of white bullocks down the
Avenue of Rams to the temple of Osiris to make sacrifice to the god. Both sides
of the sacred avenue were lined a hundred deep by the citizens of Thebes. With
a mighty voice they demonstrated their devotion to the king and their love for
the queen and her new-born prince. That night, as I waited on her and the child, she
whispered to me, 'Oh, Taita, did you see Tanus in the crowd? What a day of
mixed joy and sorrow this has been. I could have wept for my love. He was so
tall and brave, and he had to watch and listen when his son was taken from him.
I wanted to jump to my feet in all that throng and cry out, "This is the
son of Tanus, Lord Harrab, and I love them both." ' 'I am pleased for the sake of all of us, Your
Majesty, that for once you were able to restrain that wayward tongue of yours.' She giggled. 'It is so strange to have you call me
that— Your Majesty—it makes me feel like an impostor.' She transferred the
prince from one breast to the other, and at the movement he released from both
ends of his tiny body a double blast of air which in volume and resonance was
truly imperial. 'It is apparent that he was conceived in a
wind-storm,' I remarked drily, and she giggled again and then immediately
afterwards sighed dolefully. 'My darling Tanus will never share these intimate moments
with us. Do you realize that he has not yet held Memnon in his arms, and it is
possible he never will? I think I am about to cry again.' 'Restrain yourself, mistress. If you weep, it might
sour your milk.' A warning which was untrue but effective in bending her to my
will. She sniffed back her tears. 'Is there no way that we can let Tanus enjoy our
baby as we do?' I thought about it for a while and then made a
suggestion which caused her to cry out with pleasure. As if to endorse what I
had said, the prince broke resounding wind once more. The very next day when Pharaoh came to visit his
son, the queen put my suggestion into effect. 'Dear and divine husband, have
you given thought to selecting official tutors for Prince Memnon?' Pharaoh laughed indulgently. 'He is still only an
infant. Should he not first learn to walk and talk, before he is instructed in
other skills?' 'I think his tutors should be appointed now, so
they can grow to know him, and he them.' 'Very well.' The king smiled, and took the child on
to his knee. 'Who do you suggest?' 'For his schooling we need one of our great
scholars. Some person who understands all the sciences and mysteries.' The king's eyes twinkled. 'I cannot think of one
who answers that description,' and he grinned at me. The child had altered
Pharaoh's disposition; since Memnon's birth, he had become almost jovial, and
for a moment I expected him to wink at me. However, his new, congenial attitude
to life did not extend quite that far. The queen continued, unruffled by this exchange,
"Then we need a soldier well versed in the warlike arts, and the exercise
of arms to train him as a warrior. He should, I think, be young and of good
breeding. Trustworthy, of course, and loyal to the crown.' 'Who do you suggest for that position, my dear?
Very few of my soldiers answer to all those virtues.' I do not think there was
any guile or malice in Pharaoh's question, but nevertheless my mistress was no
fool. She inclined her head gracefully and said, "The king is wise, and
knows who, from all his generals, best suits that role.' At the very next assize the king announced the
prince's tutors. The slave and physician, Taita, was to be responsible for
Memnon's schooling and deportment. This surprised very few, but there was a
buzz of comment when the king went on, 'For his training in arms and in
military tactics and strategy, the Great Lion bf Egypt, Lord Harrab, shall
henceforth be responsible.' Accordingly it became the duty of Lord Harrab, when
he was not on campaign, to wait upon the prince at the beginning of each week. While my mistress waited for her quarters in the
new palace that I was building across the river to be -completed, she had moved
from the harem into a wing of the grand vizier's palace that overlooked the
water-garden I had built for her father. This was in accordance with her new
status as the senior wife and consort. The weekly audience that Prince Memnon
held for his official tutors took place under the barrazza, with Queen Lostris
in attendance. Very often there was a score of other officials or courtiers
present, and occasionally Pharaoh himself arrived with all his train, so we
were under considerable constraint. However, once in a while there were just the four
of us present. On the very first occasion that we had such privacy, Queen
Lostris placed the prince in his father's arms for the first time and I was
witness to the incoherent joy with which Tanus looked down into the face of his
son. Memnon rose to the occasion by puking down the front of his father's uniform,
but even then Tanus would not relinquish him. From then onwards we reserved any special event in
the child's life for when Tanus was with us. Tanus fed him his first spoonful
of gruel, and the prince was so startled by this unaccustomed fare that he screwed
up his face and spat the offending mess down his chin. Then he howled loudly
for his mother's milk to wash the taste from his mouth. Queen Lostris took him
on her lap and while Tanus watched fascinated, she gave him the breast.
Suddenly Tanus reached across and tweaked the nipple from the tiny mouth. This
amused everybody but the prince and me. Memnon was outraged at this cavalier
treatment and made that fact known, while I was shocked. I imagined the king
arriving unexpectedly to find the Great Lion of Egypt with a right royal
handful which he seemed in no hurry to relinquish. When I quite rightly protested, my mistress told,
me, 'Don't be such a prim old woman, Taita. We are only having a little
innocent fun.' 'Fun, yes. However, there is some doubt as to the
innocence of it,' I muttered, for I had seen both their faces light up at the
intimate touch, and sensed their mutual passion like thunder in the air. I knew
that they could not restrain themselves for much longer, and that even Tanus'
sense of duty and honour must in the end succumb to so great a love as theirs. That very evening I visited the temple of Horus and
made a generous sacrifice. Then I prayed and asked the god, 'May the prophecy
of the Mazes be not too long delayed, for they cannot help themselves. It will
mean death and disgrace to all of us.' Sometimes it is best for men not to attempt to
interfere with destiny. Our prayers can be answered in ways which we do not
expect and do not welcome. I WAS PHYSICIAN TO THE PRINCE, BUT IN truth he had
little need of my medical skills. He was blessed with his father's rude and
abundant health, and precocious strength. His appetite and digestion were
Ђxemplary. Anything placed in his mouth was devoured with leonine voracity, and
promptly re-emerged from his nether end in the desired shape and consistency. He slept without interruption and woke bellowing
for food. If I showed him a finger, he would watch it move from side to side
with those huge dark eyes, and the moment it came within range, he would seize
it and attempt to haul himself into a sitting position. In this he succeeded
sooner than any other child that I had attended. He raised himself and crawled
at the age when others had only begun to sit up. He took his first tottering
step when others would only begin to crawl. Tanus was present on that remarkable day. He had
been on campaign for the past two months, for the forces of the red usurper had
captured Asyut. That city was the pivot on which our northern defences turned, and
Pharaoh had ordered Tanus down-river with all his fleet to retake the city.
Much later I heard from Kratas just how terrible had been the fighting, but in
the end Tanus breached the walls and was at the head of his beloved Blues when
they broke in. They drove the pretender from the city and back
beyond his own borders with bloody losses. Tanus sailed back to Thebes and the gratitude of
the kingdom. Pharaoh laid another chain upon his shoulders, the Gold of Valour,
and made up the back-pay of all the troops who had helped him achieve this
victory. Tanus came almost directly from the king to the
barrazza in the water-garden where we were waiting for him. While I stood guard
at the gateway, Tanus and my mistress embraced with all the fire that had
burned up so brightly while they had been apart. At last I had to separate
them, for that embrace could lead in only one direction. 'Lord Tanus,' I called sharply, 'Prince Memnon
grows impatient.' Reluctantly they drew apart, and Tanus went to where the
infant sprawled naked on a robe of jackal skins that I had spread for him in
the shade. Tanus went down on one knee before him. 'Greetings, Your Royal Highness. I bring you
tidings of the triumph of our arms—' Tanus mocked him lovingly, and Memnon gave
a happy shout as he recognized his father, and then the sparkling gold chain
caught his eye. With a mighty heave he hoisted himself to his feet. He took
four lurching steps, seized the chain and clung to it with both hands. All of us applauded this feat, and, supporting
himself by the chain, Memnon beamed about him, accepting this praise as his
due. 'By the wings of Horus, he has as sharp an eye as
you do for the yellow metal, Taita,' Tanus laughed. 'It is not the gold that draws him, but the winning
of it,' my mistress declared. 'One day he too will wear the Gold of Valour upon
his chest.' 'Never doubt it!' Tanus swung the boy high, and
Memnon shrieked with pleasure and kicked his legs to urge Tanus to further
rough play. Thus, for Tanus and me, the child's advances seemed
to mark the change of seasons, just as surely as did the rise and fall of the
river. On the other hand my mistress's life revolved around those hours spent
alone with the child and the man. Each interval between Tanus' visits seemed
too long for my mistress to support, each visit too short for her to bear. THE INUNDATION OF THAT SUMMER WAS as benevolent as
any that we had forecast at the ceremony of the waters in Elephantine. When the
flood receded, the fields glistened under their new coat of black mud. In their
turn, they were soon obliterated by the dense green stands of corn and fruit.
By the time the prince took his first upright step the granaries of Egypt were
brimming, and the larders of even the poorest of her subjects were filled. On
the west bank the Palace of Memnon was taking shape, and the war in the north
was running in our favour. The gods smiled on Pharaoh and all his realm. The only discontent in all this was that the two
lovers, though close enough to touch, were cleaved apart by a gulf wider than
the valley in which we lived. Each of them on separate but numerous occasions
taxed me with the prophecy of the Mazes of Ammon-Ra, as though I were
personally responsible for the fulfilment of the dream visions. It was in vain
to protest that I was merely the mirror in which the future was reflected, and
not the one who moved the stones on the bao board of destiny. The old year died,"~and the river began to
rise once more, completing the endless cycle. This was the fourth flood that
the Mazes had foretold. I, as much as any of them, expected my vision of the
Mazes to be fulfilled before the end of the season. When this did not happen,
both my mistress and Tanus taxed me severely. 'When will I be free to go to Tanus?' Queen Lostris
sighed. 'You must do something, Taita.' 'It is not me, but the gods, whom you must
question. I can pray to them, but that is all I can do.' Then another year passed without any change in our
circumstances, and even Tanus was bitter. 'So much faith I have placed in you
that I have based my future happiness on your word. I swear to you, Taita, that
if you do not do something soon—' He broke off and stared at me. The threat was
all the more forceful for not being spoken. Yet another year drifted past, and even I began to
lose faith in my own prophecy. I came to believe that the gods had changed
their minds, or that what I had seen was my own wishful fantasy. In the end Prince Memnon was almost five years old
and his mother twenty-one, when the messenger came flying wild-eyed from the
north, in one of our scouting galleys. "The Delta had fallen. The red pretender is
dead. The Lower Kingdom is in flames. The cities of Memphis and Avaris are
destroyed. The temples are burned to the ground and the images of the gods
thrown down,' he shouted to the king, and Pharaoh replied 'It is not possible.
I long to believe this despatch, but I cannot. How could this thing come to
pass without our knowledge? The usurper was possessed of great force, for more
than fifteen years we have been unable to overthrow him. How has this been
accomplished in a day, and by whom?' The messenger was shaking with fear and exhaustion,
for his journey had been onerous, and he knew how the bearers of disastrous
tidings were treated in Thebes. 'The red pretender was destroyed with his sword
still in the scabbard. His forces were scattered before the war trumpets could
sound the alarm.' 'How was this accomplished?' 'Divine Egypt, I know not. They say that a new and
terrible enemy has come out of the East, swift as the wind, and no nation can
stand before his wrath. Though they have never seen him, our army is in full
retreat from the northern borders. Even the bravest will not stay to face him.' 'Who is this enemy?' Pharaoh demanded, and for the
first time we heard the fear in his voice. 'They call him the Shepherd King. The Hyksos.' Tanus and I had jested with that name. We would
never do so again. . PHARAOH CALLED HIS WAR COUNCIL into secret conclave.
It was only long afterwards that I learned from Kratas all that transpired in
those deliberations. Tanus, of course, would never break his oath of secrecy,
not even to me or my mistress. But I was able to worm it out of Kratas, for
that lovable, brawling oaf was not proof against my wiles. Tanus had promoted Kratas to the rank of Best of
Ten Thousand, and had given him the command of the Blue Crocodile Guards. The
bond between them was still as solid as a granite stele. Thus, as a regimental
commander, Kratas was entitled to a seat on the war council, and although at
his lowly rank he was not called upon to speak, he faithfully relayed all that
was said, to me and my mistress. The council was divided between the ancients,
headed by Nembet, and the new blood of which Tanus was the leader.
Unfortunately the final authority lay with the old men, and they forced their
archaic views upon the others. Tanus wanted to draw our main forces back from the
frontier and to set up a series of deep defences along the river. At the same
time, he intended sending forward scouting and reconnaissance parties to assess
and study the nature of the mysterious enemy. We had spies in all of the
northern cities, but for some unknown reason no reports from them had as yet been
received. Tanus wanted to gather these in and stiMy them, before he deployed
his main force to battle. 'Until we know what we are facing, we cannot devise
the correct strategy to meet it,' he told the council. Nembet and his faction countered any of Tanus'
suggestions. The old admiral had never forgiven Tanus for his humiliation on
the day he saved the royal barge from destruction. His opposition to Tanus was
based on principle rather than on reason or logic. 'We will not yield a cubit of our sacred soil. To
suggest it is cowardice. We will meet the enemy and destroy him wherever we
find him. We will not dance and flirt with him like a gaggle of village
maidens.' 'My lord!' roared Tanus, incensed by the suggestion
of cowardice. 'Only a fool, and an old fool at that, will make a decision
before he knows the facts. We have no scrap of intelligence to act upon—' It was in vain. The seniority of the three generals
above Tanus on the army lists prevailed in the end. Tanus was ordered north immediately, to steady and
rally the retreating army. He was to hold the frontier, and make his stand on
the boundary stones. He was forbidden to make a strategic withdrawal to the
line of hills before Asyut, which was the natural defensive line, and from
which the city walls provided a second line of defence. He would have the fleet
and the northern army corps under his direct command, with three hundred
warships to provide the transport, and to command the river. In the meantime, Nembet would bring in the rest of
the army, even those regiments on the southern border with Gush. The black
threat from the African interior must be ignored now in the face of this more
pressing danger. As soon as they were assembled, Nembet would rush these
reinforcements northwards to join up with Tanus. Within a month, there would be
an invincible army of sixty thousand men and four hundred galleys lying before
Asyut. In the meantime, Tanus must hold the frontier at all costs. Nembet ended with a strict injunction. 'Lord Harrab
is further ordered to hold all his forces on the border. He is not to indulge
in raids or scouting forays to the north.' 'My Lord Nembet, these orders blindfold me, and
bind my sword-arm. You are denying me the means of conducting this campaign in
a prudent and efficient manner,' Tanus protested in vain. Nembet sneered with
the satisfaction of having forced his authority upon his young rival, and in
having gained a measure of retribution. On such petty human emotions pivots the
destiny of nations. Pharaoh himself announced his intention of taking
his rightful place at the head of his army. For a thousand years the pharaoh
had been present on the field whenever the decisive battles of history had been
fought out. Although I had to admire the king's courage, I wished he had not chosen
this moment to demonstrate it. Pharaoh Mamose was no warrior, and his presence
would do little to enhance our chances of victory. There might be some
bolstering of morale when the troops saw him in the van, but on balance he and
his train would be a greater hindrance than assistance to Lord Tanus. The king would not travel northwards to the
battle-front alone. His entire court would attend him, including his senior
wife and his son. The queen must have her retinue and Prince Memnon his tutors,
and so I would be going north to Asyut and the battle-front. Nobody knew nor understood this enemy. I felt that
my mistress and the prince were being placed in unnecessary danger. On the
other hand, the safety of a slave was of no account, except to the slave himself.
I slept little the night before we sailed northwards on the flood of the river
for Asyut and the battle-front. THE FARTHER NORTH WE SAILED, THE more numerous and
troublesome were the rumours and reports coming down from the front to feed
upon our contentment and confidence, like locusts upon the standing crops.
Often during the voyage, Tanus came aboard our vessel, ostensibly to discuss
these with me. However, on each visit he spent some time with the prince and
his mother. I have never held with the custom of women
following the army into battle. In times of peace or war, they are a marvellous
distraction—even a warrior of Tanus' calibre could be diverted from his main
purpose. All his mind should have been on the task ahead, but when I told him
so, he laughed and clapped my shoulder. "They give me a reason to fight. Don't worry,
old friend, I shall be a lion defending his cub.' Soon we encountered the first elements of the
retreating army, straggling groups of deserters who were looting the villages as
they fled southwards along the banks of the river. With very little ceremony
and no hesitation at all, Tanus beheaded several hundred of them and had their
heads spiked on spears and planted along the bank as an example and a warning.
Then he gathered up the others and regrouped them under reliable officers.
There were no further desertions and the troops stood to the colours with a new
spirit. Our flotilla came to the walled city of Asyut,
overlooking the river. In defiance of his orders from Nembet, Tanus left a
small strategic reserve of five thousand men here under the command of Remrem.
Then we sailed on northwards to take up our positions on the border, there to
await the approach of the mysterious Shepherd King. The fleet lay at anchor across the river in its
battle formations, but the vessels were under skeleton crews. The fighting men
were disembarked with the main body of infantry and deployed upon the east bank
of the river. I prevailed upon Pharaoh to allow my mistress and
the prince to remain on board the large and comfortable barge that had brought
them here. It was cooler and healthier out on the water, and their escape would
be swifter if our army met with any reverse of arms. The king went ashore with the army, and set up his
camp on the higher ground above the inundated fields. There was a deserted
village here; years ago the peasants had fled from this disputed border with
the false pharaoh. There were always foraging troops and bloody little
skirmishes hereabouts, and the farmers had given up any attempts to work these
fertile but dangerous fields. The name of the derelict village was Abnub. The flood of the Nile had begun to subside some
weeks prior to our arrival at Abnub, and although the irrigation canals were
still running strongly, and the fields were morasses of black mud, the main
waters had retreated back between the permanent banks of the Nile. Within the restrictions placed upon him by Nembet,
Tanus set about preparing to meet the threat. The regiments encamped in their
order of battle. Astes commanded the fleet on the river, Tanus himself had the
centre with his left flank anchored on the Nile, while Kratas had the right
wing. The desert stretched to the eastern horizon, dun
and forbidding. No army could survive out in that burning, waterless waste. It
was our right flank, secure and impregnable. All that we knew of the Hyksos was that he had come
overland, and that he possessed no fleet of his own. Tanus expected to meet him
on land, and to fight an infantry engagement. Tanus knew that he could prevent
the Hyksos from crossing the river, and so he should be able to bring him to
battle on the field of his own choice. Ideally, this would not have been at
Abnub, but Nembet had made that decision for him. The village of Abnub stood on a low ridge with open
untended fields around it. At least it commanded a good view, and the enemy
would be under our observation long before it could engage and drive in our
pickets. Tanus had thirty thousand of the finest troops in
Egypt under his command. I had never seen such a large force. Indeed, I doubt
that an army of this size had ever before been assembled in the valley of the
Nile. Soon Nembet would arrive with another thirty thousand. Then it would be
the greatest army in history. I went with Tanus to inspect them, and the troops'
morale had soared since he had taken command in person. Perhaps the presence of
Pharaoh in the camp had also helped to steady them. They cheered Tanus as he
strode along their massed ranks, and I felt much encouraged and relieved at the
multitudes of their host, and the spirit in them. I could not imagine an enemy powerful enough to
overwhelm us. There were twelve thousand archers with polished leather helmets
and padded leather breastplates that would stop an arrow, except if it were
fired at very short range. There were eight thousand heavy spearmen, with long
shields of hippo-skin as tough and hard as bronze. The ten thousand swordsmen
in leopard-skin caps were also armed with sling-shots, the stones from which
could split a skull at fifty paces. I felt more confident with each day that passed, as
I watched Tanus exercising these huge masses of armed men. Yet it worried me
that we still knew so little about the Hyk-sos and the forces that he
commanded. I pointed out to Tanus that the war council had forbidden him to
send land forces forward to reconnoitre, but had said nothing of vessels being
used for this purpose. 'You should have been a law scribe,' Tanus laughed,
'you can make words dance to any tune you play.' But he ordered Hui to take a
single squadron of fast galleys northwards as far as Minieh, or until he
encountered the enemy. This was the same Hui whom we had captured at Gallala,
and who had been one of Basil's Shrikes. Under Tanus' favour, that young rogue
had advanced swiftly, and now commanded a squadron of galleys. Hui had strict orders to avoid action and to report
back within four days. Dutifully, he returned on the fourth day. He had reached
Minieh without seeing another ship or encountering any resistance. The villages
along the river were all deserted, and the town of Minieh itself had been
sacked and was in flames. Hui had, however, captured a handful of deserters
from the false pharaoh's shattered army. These were the first persons we had
questioned who were actual eye-witnesses of the Hyksos invasion. However, none
of them had ever stood to engage and actually fight the Shepherd King. They had
all fled at his first approach. Their reports were therefore so far-fetched and
garbled as to be completely incredible. How could we believe in the existence of an army
that sailed across the open desert on ships that were as swift as the wind?
According to our informants, the dust-clouds that hung over this strange fleet
were so tall as to obscure their numbers and to strike terror into any army
that watched their advance. 'These are not men,' the prisoners reported, 'they
are fiends from the underworld, and they ride on the devil winds out of the
desert.' Having questioned the prisoners carefully, and
finding that even hot coals on their heads could not make them alter their
stories, Tanus ordered their summary execution. He did not want these wild
tales circulating and spreading despondency amongst our forces who had only
recently regained their courage. ON THE TENTH DAY OF WAITING AT ABNUB, we received
word that Nembet was at last on his way with reinforcements, and that he
expected to reach Asyut within the next two weeks. The effect on the men was
marvellous to behold. They were transformed at a stroke from sparrows to
eagles. Tanus issued an extra ration of beer and meat to celebrate the news,
and the cooking-fires were a field of stars upon the plain before Abnub. The
luscious odour of burning mutton fat filled the night, and the sound of
laughter and singing only died away in the final watches. I had left my mistress on board the barge with her
son, and had come ashore in response to a summons from Tanus. He wanted me to
attend the final war council with his regimental commanders. 'You are always a
well of ideas and wisdom, you old rascal. Perhaps you can tell us how to sink a
fleet of ships that comes sailing over dry land?' Our deliberations went on until after midnight, and
for once I was able to contribute very little of value. It was too late to
return to the ship that night, so Tanus gave me a straw mattress in the corner
of his tent. I awoke before dawn, as was my habit, but Tanus was gone from his
bed, and beyond the coarse linen wall of the tent, the camp was already astir.
I felt guilty of indolence, and hastened out to watch the dawn breaking over
the desert. I climbed the hill behind the camp. From there I
looked first towards the river. The blue smoke from the cooking-fires was
smeared out across the surface, mingling with the streamers of river mist. The
riding lamps on board the ships were reflected in the "dark waters. It was
still too dark and far to pick out the vessel upon which my mistress lay. I turned then towards the east and saw the light
bloom over the desert with the nacreous glow of pearly oyster-shells. The light
hardened and the desert was soft and lovely, the hillocks and dunes shaded with
mauve and soft purple. In the limpid air the horizons seemed close enough to
touch with an outstretched hand. Then I saw the cloud suspended on the horizon
beneath the unblemished aquamarine sheen of the sky. It was no larger than the
end of my thumb, and my gaze wandered past it and then drifted back to it. I
felt no initial alarm, for I had to stare at it for a while before I realized
that it was moving. 'How strange,' I murmured aloud. 'The beginning of
the khamsin, perhaps.' But it was out of season, and there had been no charging
of the air with those malevolent forces which herald the desert storms. The
morning was cool and balmy. Even as I pondered it, the distant cloud spread and
grew taller. The base of the cloud was upon the earth, not suspended above it,
and yet it was too swift and wide to be of any earthly origin. A flock of birds
might move that fast, locusts may rise that thickly to the skies, but this was
neither of these things. The cloud was ochre-yellow, but at first I could
not believe it was dust. I have watched herds of scimitar-horned oryx galloping
through the dunes in their hundreds upon their annual migrations, but they had
never raised a dust-cloud such as this. It might have been the smoke from a
fire, but there was nothing out there in the desert to burn. It had to be dust,
and yet I still could not wholly believe it. . Swiftly it grew, and drew ever
closer, while I stared in wonder and in awe. Suddenly I saw reflected light twinkle at the base
of the towering cloud. Instantly I was transported back to the vision of the
Mazes of Ammon-Ra. This was the same scene. The first had been fantasy, but
this was reality. I knew that those beams of light were shot from war armour
and from blades of polished bronze. I started to my feet, and alone upon the
hilltop I shouted to the wind a warning that nobody heard. Then I heard the war trumpets sounding in the camp
below me. The pickets on the heights had at last seen the approaching
dust-cloud and sounded the alarm. The sound of the trumpets was a part of my
vision. Their urgent warning shrilled in my ears and threatened to split my
skull, it thrilled my blood and chilled my heart. I knew from my vision that on
this fateful day a dynasty would fall and the locusts from the East would
devour the substance of this very Egypt. I was filled with dread, and with
terror for my mistress and the child that was part of the dynasty. The camp below me was a tumult of men running to
arms. Their armour glinted and their spear-heads sparkled as they brandished
them on high. They were bees from the overturned hive, massing and swarming in
disarray. The shouts of the sergeants and the rallying cries of the captains
were almost drowned by the braying horns. I saw Pharaoh carried from his tent in the centre
of a knot of armed men. They hustled him up the slope of the hill to where his
throne was set amongst the rocks, overlooking the plain and the wide sweep of
the river. They lifted him to the throne and placed the crook and the flail in
his hands and the tall double crown upon his head. Pharaoh sat like a marble
statue with an ash-white face, while below him his regiments fell into their
battle formations. Tanus had trained and exercised them well, and out of the
confusion of the first alarm, order swiftly emerged. I ran down the hill to be near the king, and so
rapid was the response of Lord Tanus' divisions that by the time I reached the
foot of his throne, his army lay upon the plain like a coiled serpent to meet
the menace of that boiling yellow dust-cloud that swept down upon it. Kratas stood with his division on the right flank.
I could recognize his tall figure on the first slope of the hill. His
regimental officers were grouped around him, their plumes nodding and waving in
the light morning breeze from the river. Tanus and his staff were directly
below me, close enough for me to overhear their conversation. They discussed
the advance of the enemy in cool, academic tones, as though this were a sandbox
problem at an officers' training course. Tanus had disposed his force in the classical
formations. His heavy spearmen formed the front ranks. Their shields were
interlocked and the spears' butts grounded. The bronze spear-heads sparkled in
the early sunlight, and the men's demeanour was calm and grave. Drawn up behind
them were the archers. Their bows were strung and ready. Behind each man stood
his quiver boy with bundles of spare arrows. During the battle they would
gather up the expended arrows of the enemy to replenish their own bundles. The
swordsmen were in reserve, light and quick troops that could rush in to stop a
breach or to exploit a weak point in the enemy formations. The moves of any battle were like those of the bao
board. There were classic openings with set defences that had been developed
over the centuries. I had studied these and written three of the definitive
scrolls on military tactics that were the prescribed reading of officers
training in Thebes. Now, reviewing Tanus' dispositions, I could find no
fault in them, and my confidence soared. How could an enemy preVail against this
mighty host of trained and battle-hardened veterans, and their brilliant young
general, who had never lost a battle? Then I looked once more beyond our ranks at that
ominous, rolling yellow cloud, and my confidence wavered. This was something
beyond military tradition, beyond the experience of any general in all our
long, proud history. Were these mortal men that we were facing, or, as rumour
suggested, were they fiends? When I stared into the swirling clouds, they were
now so close that I could make out dark shapes in the dun and gloomy veils of
dust. My skin crawled with a kind of religious horror as I recognized the
shiplike shapes that our prisoners had warned us of. But these were smaller and
swifter than any vessel that had ever been launched on water, swifter even than
any creature that had ever moved upon the surface of the earth. It was difficult to follow one of these shapes with
the eye, for they were ethereal and quick as moths in the light of a lantern.
They wheeled and wove and disappeared in the moving clouds, so that when they
reappeared, it was impossible to tell whether it was the same or another like
it. There was no way to count their numbers, or even to guess at what followed
the first ranks of their advance. Behind them, the dust-cloud extended back to
the horizon from which they had come. Although our own ranks stood firm and steady in the
sunlight,! could sense the wonder and trepidation that gripped them all. The
studied conversation of Tanus' officers had dried up, and they stood in silent
awe and watched the enemy deploy before us. Then I realized that the dust-cloud was no longer
advancing upon us. It hung in the sky, and gradually began to settle and clear,
so that I was able dimly to make out the stationary vehicles in the vanguard.
But I was now so confused and alarmed that I could not tell whether there were
a thousand of them or more. We would learn later that this hiatus was always
part of the Shepherd King's attack plan. I did not know it then, but during
this lull they were regrouping and watering and gathering themselves for the
final advance. A terrible stillness had fallen on our ranks. It
was so profound that the whisper of the breeze was loud through the rocks and
the wadis of the hill on which we stood. The only movement was the flutter and
swirl of our battle standards at the head of each division. I saw the Blue
Crocodile banner waving in the centre of our line, and I took comfort from it. Slowly, the dust-clouds subsided and row after row
of the Hyksos' craft were revealed to us. They were still too distant to make
out details, but I saw that those in the rear were much larger than those
leading their army. It seemed to me that they were roofed over with sails of
cloth or leather. From these I saw that men were unloading what looked like
large water jars and carrying them forward. I wondered what men could consume
such large quantities of water. Everything these foreigners did was a puzzle
and made no sense to me. The silence and the waiting drew out until every
muscle and nerve in my body screamed out with the -strain. Then suddenly there
was movement again. From the front ranks of the Hyksos formations some
of these strange vehicles started towards us. A murmur went up from our ranks
avwe saw how fast they were moving. After that short period of rest, they
seemed to have doubled their speed. The range closed and another cry went up
from our host as we realized that these vehicles were each being drawn by a
pair of extraordinary beasts. They stood as tall as the wild oryx, with the same
stiff, upstanding mane along the crest of their arched necks. They were not
horned like the oryx, but their heads were more gracefully formed. Their eyes
were large and their nostrils flared. Their legs were long and hoofed. Striding
out with a peculiar daintiness, they seemed merely to brush the surface of the
desert. Even now, after all these years, I can recapture
the thrill of gazing at a horse for the first time. In my mind the beauty of
the hunting cheetah paled beside these marvellous beasts. At the same time we
were all filled with fear of them, and I heard one of the officers near me cry
out, 'Surely these monsters are killers, and eaters of human flesh! What
abomination is this that is visited upon us?' A 'stirring of horror ran through our formations,
as we expected these beasts to fall upon us and devour us, like ravening lions.
But the leading vehicle swung away and sped parallel to our front rank. It
moved on spinning discs, and I stared at it in wonder. For the first few
moments I was so stunned by what I was looking at that my mind refused to
absorb it all. If anything, my first sight of a chariot was almost as moving as
the horses that drew it. There was a long yoke-pole between the galloping pair,
connected to what I later came to know as the axle. The high dashboard was
gilded with gold leaf and the side-panels were cut low to allow the archer to
shoot his arrows to either side. All this I took in at a glance, and then my whole
attention focused on the spinning discs on which the chariot sailed so smoothly
and swiftly over the rough ground. For a thousand years we Egyptians had been
the most cultured and civilized men on earth; in the sciences and the religions
we had far outstripped all other nations. However, in all our learning and
wisdom we had conceived nothing like this. Our sledges churned the earth on
wooden runners that dissipated the strength of the oxen that dragged them, or
we hauled great blocks of stone over wooden rollers without taking the next
logical step. I stared at the first wheel I had ever seen, and
the simplicity and the beauty of it burst in upon me like lightning flaring in
my head. I understood it instantly, and scorned myself for not having
discovered it of my own accord. It was genius of the highest order, and now I
realized that we stood to be destroyed by this wonderful invention in the same
way as it must have annihilated the red usurper in the Lower Kingdom. The golden chariot sped across our front, just out
of bowshot. As it drew opposite us, I dragged my gaze from those miraculously
spinning wheels and the fierce and terrifying Creatures that drew them, and I
looked at the two men in the cockpit of the chariot. One was clearly the
driver. He leaned out over the dashboard and he seemed to control the galloping
team by means of long plaited cords of leather attached to their heads. The
taller man who stood behind him was a king. There was no doubting his imperial
bearing. I saw instantly that he was an Asian, with amber skin
and a hooked, aquiline nose. His beard was black and thick, cut square across
his breastplates, curled and intricately plaited with coloured ribbons. His
body armour was a glittering skin of bronze fish-scales, while his crown was
tall and square; the gold was embossed with images of some strange god and set
with precious stones. His weapons hung on the side-panel of the chariot, close
to his hands. His broad-bladed sword in its leather and gold scabbard had a
handle of ivory and silver. Beside it, two leather quivers bulged with arrows,
and each shaft was fletched with bright feathers. Later I would come to know
how the Hyksos loved gaudy colours. The king's bow on its rack beside him was
of an unusual shape that I had never seen before. It was not the simple, clean
arc of our Egyptian bows; on the Hyksos bow, the upper and lower limbs recurved
at the tips. As the chariot flew down our line, the king leaned
out and planted a lance in the earth. It was tipped with a crimson pennant, and
the men around me growled in perturbation. 'What is he doing? What purpose does
the lance serve? Is it a religious symbol, or is it a challenge?' I gaped at the fluttering pennant, but my wits were
dulled by all that I had seen, it meant nothing to me. The chariot sped on, still
just out of bowshot, and the crowned Asian planted another lance, then wheeled
and came back. He had seen Pharaoh on his throne and he halted below him. The
horses were lathered with sweat, it foamed on their flanks like lace. Their
eyes rolled ferociously and their nostrils flared so that the pink mucous
lining was exposed. They nodded their heads on long, arched necks and their
manes flew like the tresses of a beautiful woman in the sunlight. The Hyksos greeted Pharaoh Mamose, Son of Ra,
Divine Ruler of the Two Kingdoms, May He Live For Ever, with contempt. It was a
laconic and ironic wave of a mailed hand, and he laughed. The challenge was as
clear as if it had been spoken in perfect Egyptian. His mocking laughter
floated across to us, and the ranks of our army growled with anger, a sound
like far-off thunder in the summer air. A small movement below me caught my attention, and
I looked down just as Tanus took one step forward and flung up the great bow
Lanata. He loosed an arrow and it rose in a high arcing trajectory against the
milky-blue sky. The Hyksos was out of range to any other bow, but not to
Lanata. The arrow reached its zenith and then dropped like a stooping falcon,
full at the centre of the Asian king's chest. The watching multitude gasped
with the length and power and aim of that shot. Three hundred paces it flew,
and at the very last moment the Hyksos threw up his bronze shield and the arrow
buried its head in the centre of the target. It was done with such contemptuous
ease that we were all amazed and confounded. Then the Hyksos seized his own strangely shaped bow
from the rack beside him. With one movement he nocked an arrow, and drew and
let it fly. It rose higher than Tanus had reached, and it sailed over his head.
Fluting like the wing of a goose, it dropped towards me. I could not move and
it might have impaled me without my attempting to avoid it, but it passed my
head by an arm's-length and struck the base of Pharaoh's throne behind me. It
quivered in the cedar strut like an insult, and the Hyksos king laughed again
and wheeled his chariot and sped away, back across the plain, to rejoin his own
host. I knew then that we were doomed. How could we stand
against these speeding chariots, and the recurved bows that so easily outranged
the finest archer in our ranks? I was not alone in my dreadful expectations. As
the squadrons of chariots began their final fateful evolutions out on the plain
and sped towards us hi waves, a moan of despair went up from the army of Egypt.
I understood then how the forces of the red pretender had been scattered
without a struggle, and the usurper had died with his sword still in its
scabbard. On the run, the flying chariots merged into columns
four abreast and came directly at us. Only then did my mind clear, and I
started down the slope at full pelt. Panting, I reached Tanus' side and shouted
at him, 'The pennant lances mark the weak points in our line! Their main strike
will come through us there and there!' Somehow the Hyksos had known our battle order, and
had recognized the laps in our formation. Their king had planted his pennants
exactly between our divisions. The idea of a spy or a traitor occurred to me
even then, but in the urgency of the moment I thrust it aside, and it was for
the moment forgotten. Tanus responded to my warning instantly, and
shouted an order for our pickets to race forward and seize the pennants. I
wanted him to move them, so that we could receive the enemy thrust on our
strongest front, but there was no time for that. Before our pickets could reach
and throw down the markers, the spear-head of flying chariots bore down upon
them. Some of our men were shot down with arrows from the bouncing, swerving
chariots. The aim of the enemy charioteers was uncanny. The survivors turned and raced back, trying to
regain the illusory safety of our lines. The chariots overhauled them
effortlessly. The drivers controlled the galloping, plunging teams of horses
with a lover's touch. They did not run their victims down directly, but swerved
to pass them at the length of less than a cubit. It was only then that I
noticed the knives. They were curved outwards from the spinning hub of the
wheels like the fangs of some monstrous crocodile. I saw one of our men struck squarely by the
whirling blades. He seemed to dissolve in a bright cloud of blood. One of his
severed arms was thrown high in the air and the bleeding chunks of his
mutilated torso were dashed into the rocky earth as the chariot flew on without
the least check. The phalanx of chariots was still aimed directly at the lap in
our front line, and though I heard Kratas yelling orders to reinforce it, it
was far too late. The column of chariots crashed into our defensive
wall of shields and spears, and tore through it as though it were as insubstantial
as a drift of river mist. In one instant our formation, that had stood the
assault of the finest Syrian and Human warriors, was cleaved and shattered. The horses spurned our strongest and heaviest men
under their hooves. The whirling wheel-knives hacked through their armour and
lopped off heads and limbs, as though they were the tenderest shoots of the
vine. From the high carriages the charioteers showered arrows and javelins into
our tightly packed ranks, then they tore on through the breach they had forced,
passing entirely through our formations, fanning out behind us and driving at
full tilt along our rear files, still hurling their missiles into our
unprotected rear. When our troops turned to face this assault on
their rear, another phalanx of racing chariots crashed into them from the open
plain. The first assault split our army in twain, dividing Tanus from Kratas on
the right wing. Then those that followed so swiftly cut up the two halves into
smaller, isolated groups. We were no longer a cohesive whole. Little bands of
fifty and a hundred men stood back-to-back and fought with the courage of the
doomed. Across the plain on wings of swirling dust,
the-Hyksos came on endlessly. Behind the light two-wheeled chariots followed
the heavy four-wheeled war carts, each carrying ten men. The sides of the carts
were screened with sheep fleeces. Our arrows slapped ineffectually into the
thick, soft wool, our swords could not reach the men in the high body of the
carts. They shot their points down into us and broke up the confused masses of
our fighting men into scattered knots of terrified survivors. When one of our
captains rallied a few men to counter-attack them, the war carts wheeled away
and stopped out of range. With their awful recurved bows, they broke up our
gallant charges, and the moment we wavered, they came rolling back upon us. I was intensely aware of the moment when the
conflict ceased to be a battle and became nothing more than a massacre. The
remains of Kratas' division out on our right flank had fired the last of their
arrows. The Hyksos had picked out their captains by their plumed helmets and
shot nearly every one of them down. The men were disarmed and lead-erless. They
broke into rout. They threw down their weapons and ran for the river. But it
was not possible to outrun a Hyksos chariot. The broken troops ran into Tanus' division below
the hillock, and tangled with it. With their panicking, struggling masses they
clogged and smothered what little resistance Tanus was still capable of
offering. The terror was infectious and the centre of our line broke and tried
to fly, but the deadly chariots circled them, like wolves around the flock. In all that chaos, in the bloody shambles and the
tumult of defeat, only the Blues stood firm around Tanus and the Crocodile
standard. They were a little island in the torrent of defeated men, even the
chariots could not break them up, for, with the instinct of a great general,
Tanus had gathered them and pulled them back into the one patch of rocks and
gulleys where the Hyksos could not cqme at them. The Blues were a wall, a
bulwark around the throne of Pharaoh. Because I had been at the king's side, I
was in the centre of this ring of heroes. It was difficult to keep my feet, for
all around me men struggled and surged, washed back and forth by the waves of
battle, like seaweed clinging to a rock in the full stream of tide and surf. I saw Kratas fight his way through from the
shattered right whig to join us. His plumed helmet attracted the Hyk-sos arrows
and they flew around his head thickly as locusts, but he came through
unscathed, and our ring opened for him. He saw me, and he laughed with huge
delight. 'By Seth's steaming turds, Taita, this is more fun than building
palaces for little princes, is it not?' He was never famous for his repartee,
was Kratas, and I was too busy staying on my feet to bother with a reply. He and Tanus met close to the throne. Kratas
grinned at him like an idiot. 'I'd not have missed this for all Pharaoh's
treasure. I want one of those Hyksos sledges for myself.' Neither was Kratas
one of Egypt's greatest engineers. Even now he still believed that the chariots
were some type of sledge. That was as far as his imagination reached. Tanus tapped the side of his helmet with the flat
of his sword in greeting, and although his tone was light, his expression was
grim. He was a general who had just lost a battle and an army, and an empire. 'Our work here is finished for today,' he told
Kratas. 'Let us see if these Hyksos monsters can swim as well as they run. Back
to the river!' Then, shoulder-to-shoulder, the two of them shoved their way
through the ranks towards the throne where I still stood. I could see over their heads, over the periphery of
our little defensive ring, out over the plain where our broken army was
streaming away towards the river, still harried by the squadrons of chariots. I saw the golden chariot of the Hyksos king wheel
out of formation and cleave its way towards us, trampling our men under the
flying hooves and chopping them up with the glittering wheel-knives. The driver
brought the horses to a rearing, plunging halt before he reached the barrier of
rocks which, protected us. Balancing easily on the footplates, the Hyksos drew
his recurved bow and aimed at me, or so it seemed. Even as I ducked, I realized
that the arrow was not meant for me. It shrieked over my head and I turned to
watch its flight. It struck Pharaoh high in the chest, and buried half its
length in his flesh. Pharaoh gave a hoarse cry and tottered on his high
throne. There was no blood, for the shaft had plugged the wound, but the
feathers were a pretty scarlet and green. Pharaoh slid sideways and collapsed
forward towards me, and I opened my arms to receive him. His weight bore me to
my knees, so I did not see the Hyksos king's chariot wheel away, but I heard
his mocking laughter receding as he dashed back across the plain to lead the
slaughter. Tanus stooped over me as I held the king. 'How
badly is he struck?' he demanded. 'He is killed,' the reply rose to my lips
unthinkingly. The angle of entry and the depth of the wound could mean that
only one outcome was possible, but I choked off the words before they were
spoken. I knew that our men would lose heart if Great Egypt was slain. Instead
I said, 'He is hard hit. But if we carry him back aboard the state barge, he
may recover.' 'Bring me a shield here!' Tanus roared, and when it
came we gently lifted Pharaoh on to it. There was still no blood, but I knew
his chest was filling like a wine jar. Quickly, I felt for the head of the
arrow, but it had not emerged from his back. The point was still buried deep
within the cage of his ribs. I snapped off the protruding shaft, and covered
him with his linen shawl. 'Taita,' he whispered. 'Will I see my son again?' 'Yes, Mighty Egypt, I swear it to you.' 'And my dynasty will survive?' 'Even as the Mazes of Ammon-Ra have foretold.' 'Ten strong men here!' Tanus bellowed. They crowded
around the makeshift litter, and lifted the king between them. 'Form the tortoise! Close up on me, the Blues!'
With interlocking shields, the Blues formed a wall around the king. Tanus raced to the Blue Crocodile which still waved
in our midst and tore it from its pole. He wound it around his waist and
knotted the ends across his belly. 'If the Hyksos want this rag, they had better come
and take it from me,' he shouted, and his men cheered this piece of foolish
bravado. 'All together now! Back to the ships! At the
double!' The moment we left the shelter of our little rocky
redoubt, the chariots came at us. 'Leave the men!' Tanus had found the key. 'Kill
then-beasts! ' As the first chariot bore down upon us, Tanus flexed Lanata. His
bowmen drew with him, and they all fired on his example. Half our arrows flew wide, for we were running over
uneven ground and the archers were winded. Others struck the bodywork of the
leading chariot, and the shafts snapped or pegged into the wood. Still other
arrows rattled off the bronzed plates that covered the chests of the horses. Only one arrow flew hard and true. From the great
bow Lanata it sang with the wind in its feathers, and struck the offside horse
in the forehead. The creature went down like a rockslide, tangling the traces
and dragging its team-mate down in a cloud of dust and kicking hooves. The
charioteers were hurled from the cockpit as the carriage somersaulted, and the
other chariots veered away to avoid the wreckage. A jubilant shout went up from
our ranks, and our pace picked up. This was our first success in all that
dreadful day, and it manned and encouraged our little band of Blues. 'On me, the Blues!' Tanus roared, and then,
incredibly, he began to sing. Immediately the men around him shouted the
opening chorus of the regimental battle hymn. Their voices were strained and
rough with thirst and effort, and there was little tune or beauty to it, but it
was a sound to lift the heart and thrill the blood. I threw back my head and
sang with them, and my voice soared clear and sweet. 'Horus bless you, my little canary,' Tanus laughed
at me, and we raced for the river. The chariots circled us with the first
wariness to their manoeuvres that they had demonstrated all that day. They had
seen the fate of their comrade. Then three of them swung across the front of
our tortoise, and in vee-formation charged at us head-on. 'Shoot at the heads of the beasts!' Tanus shouted,
and led them with an arrow that brought another horse crashing to its knees.
The chariot overturned and was smashed to pieces on the stony ground, and the
other vehicles in the formation veered away. As our formation passed the shattered chariot, some
of our men ran out to stab the squealing horses that were trapped in the
wreckage. Already they hated and feared these animals with an almost superstitious
dread, which was reflected in this vindictive piece of cruelty. They killed the
fallen charioteers also, but without the same rancour. With two of their chariots destroyed, the Hyksos
seemed reluctant to attack our little formation again, and we were rapidly
approaching the morass of muddy fields and flooded irrigation ditches that
marked the river-bank. I think that at that stage I was the only one of us who
realized that the wheeled enemy could not follow us into the swamp. Although I ran beside the king's litter, I could
see, through the gaps in our ranks, the dying acts of the battle that were
being played out around us. Ours was the only surviving detachment that still
showed any cohesion. The rest of the Egyptian army was a formless and terrified
rabble streaming across the plain. Most of them had thrown aside their weapons.
When one of the chariots drove at them, they dropped to their knees and held up
their hands in supplication. The Hyksos showed them no quarter. They did not
even waste arrows upon them but swung in close to chop them to tatters with the
spinning wheel-knives, or to lean out of the cockpit with the lance and cut
them down, or to smash in their skulls with the stone-headed maces. They
dragged the victim behind them, still spiked on the lance, until the barbed
spear-head disengaged, and only then did they leave the crumpled corpse lying
in their dust. I had never seen such butchery. I had never read of
anything like it in all the accounts of ancient battles. The Hyksos slaughtered
our people in their thousands and their tens of thousands. The plain of Abnub
was like a field of dhurra corn after the reapers had been through it with
their scythes. Our dead were piled in drifts and windows. For one thousand years our armies had been
invincible and our swords had triumphed across the world. Here on the field of
Abnub an age had come to an end. In the midst of this carnage the Blues sang,
and I with them though my eyes burned with tears of shame. The first irrigation ditch was just ahead when
another chariot formation swung out on our flank and came driving hard at us,
three abreast. Our arrows fell all about them, but they came on with the horses
blowing hard through gaping red mouths and with the drivers screaming
encouragement at them. I saw Tanus shoot twice, but each time his arrows were
deflected or were cheated by the erratic swerve and bounce of the chariots. The
formation thundered into us and broke the tortoise of interlocking shields. Two of the men carrying Pharaoh's litter were cut
to shreds by the wheel-knives, and the wounded king was tumbled to the earth. I
dropped to my knees beside him and covered him with my own body to protect him
from the Hyksos lances, but the chariots did not linger. It was then-concern
never to allow themselves to become entangled or surrounded. They raced on and
clear before our men could reach them with the sword. Only then did they wheel
and regroup, and come back. Tanus reached down and hauled me to my feet. 'If
you get yourself killed, who will be left to compose a hero's ode to us?' he
scolded trie, then he shouted for men. Between them they picked up the king's
litter and ran with it for the nearest ditch. I could hear the squeal of the chariot wheels
bearing down on us, but I never looked back. In ordinary circumstances I am a
strong runner, but now I outdistanced the litter-bearers as though their feet
were chained to the earth. I attempted to hurdle the ditch, but it was too wide
for me to cross in a single leap, and I landed knee-deep in the black mud. The
chariot that was following me struck the bank of the ditch and one of its
wheels shattered. The body of the vehicle toppled into the ditch and almost
crushed me, but I managed to throw myself aside. Swiftly the Blues stabbed and hacked the horses and
men as they lay helplessly in the mud, but I took the moment to wade back to
the chariot. The up-ended wheel was still spinning in the air. I
placed my hand upon it as I studied it, and let it rotate beneath my fingers. I
stood there only as long as it took me to draw three'deep breaths, but at the
end of that time I had learned as much about wheel construction as any Hyksos,
and had the first inkling of the improvements I could make to it. 'By Seth's melodious farts, Taita, you'll have us all
killed, if you start daydreaming now!' Kratas yelled at me. I shook myself and seized one of the recurved bows
from the rack on the side of the chariot body and an arrow from the quiver. I
wanted to examine these at my leisure. Then I waded across the ditch with them
in my hand, just as the squadron of chariots came thundering back, running
parallel to the ditch and firing their arrows down amongst us. The men carrying the king were a hundred paces
ahead of me, and I was the last of our little band. Behind me the charioteers
roared with frustration that they were unable to follow us, and they shot their
arrows around me as I ran. One of them struck my shoulder, but the point failed
to penetrate and the shaft glanced away. It left a purple bruise which I only
discovered much later. Although I had started from so far behind them, I
caught up with the litter-bearers by the time we reached the main bank of the
Nile. The river-bank was crowded with the survivors of the battle. Nearly all
of these were weaponless and very few were unwounded. They were all driven by a
single desire, to return as swiftly as possible to the ships that had brought
them down-river from Thebes. Tanus singled me out and called me to him as the
litter-bearers came up. 'I place Pharaoh in your hands now, Taita. Take him on
board the royal barge and do all you can to save his life.' 'When will you come aboard?' I asked him. 'My duty is here, with my men. I must save all of
them mat I can, and get them embarked.' He turned from me and strode away,
picking out the captains and commanders from amongst his beaten rabble, and
shouting his orders. I went to the king and knelt beside the Utter. He
was still alive. I examined him briefly and found that he hovered on the edge
of consciousness. His skin was as clammy-cold as that of a reptile, and his
breathing was shallow. There was only a thin rime of blood around that
arrow-shaft which had seeped up from the wound, but when I laid my ear to his
chest I heard the blood bubbling in his lungs with each breath he drew, and a
thin red snake of it crawled from his mouth down his chin. I knew that whatever
I could do to save him, I must do quickly. I shouted for a boat to take him out
to the barge. The litter-bearers lifted him into the skiff, and I
sat in the bilges beside him as we sculled out to where the great state barge
lay anchored in the main flow of the current. THE KING'S SUITE CROWDED THE SHIP'S side to watch
us approach. There was a gaggle of the royal women and all those courtiers and
priests who had taken no part in the fighting. I recognized my mistress
standing amongst them as we drew closer. Her face was very anxious and pale,
and she held her young son by his hand. As soon as those on board the barge looked down
into our skiff and saw the king on his litter, with the blood on his face that
I had been unable to wipe away, a terrible cry of alarm and mourning went up
from them. The women keened and wailed, and the men howled with despair, like
dogs. Of all the women> my mistress stood closest at
hand as the king was lifted up the ship's side and his Utter laid on the deck.
As the senior wife, hers was the duty to attend him first. The others gave her
space as she stooped over him and wiped the mud and the blood from his haggard
face. He recognized her, for I heard him breathe her name and ask for his son.
My mistress called the prince to him, and he smiled softly and tried to raise
his hand to touch the boy, but he did not have the strength, and the hand
dropped back to his side. I ordered the crew to carry Pharaoh to his
quarters, and my mistress came to me quickly and asked low and urgently, 'What
of Tanus? Is he safe? Oh, Taita, tell me that he is not slain by this dreadful
enemy!' 'He is safe. Nothing can harm him. I have given you
the vision of the Mazes. All this was foreseen. But now I must go to the king,
and I will need your help. Leave Memnon with his nursemaids, and come with me.' I was still black and crusted with river mud, and
so was Pharaoh, for he had fallen in the same ditch as I had. I asked Queen
Lostris and two of the other royal women to strip and bathe him and lay him on
fresh white linen sheets, while I returned to the deck to bathe in buckets of
river water that the sailors hauled up over the side. I never operate in filth,
for I have found by experience that for some reason it affects the patient
adversely and favours the accumulation of the morbid humours. While I was thus occupied, I was watching the east
bank where our broken army was huddled behind the protection of ditch and
swamp. This sorry rabble had once been a proud and mighty force, and I was
filled with shame and fear. Then I saw the tall figure of Tanus striding
amongst them, and wherever he moved, the men stood up out of the mud, and
reassembled into the semblance of military discipline. Once I even caught the
sound of ragged and unconvincing cheers on the wind. If the enemy should send their infantry through the
swamps now, the slaughter and the rout would be complete. Not a man of all our
mighty army would survive, for even Tanus would be able to offer little
resistance. However, although I peered anxiously into the east, I could make
out no sign of infantry shields in phalanx or the sparkle of advancing
spear-heads at the shoulder-slope. There was still that terrible dust-cloud hanging
over the plain of Abnub, so the chariots were at work out there, but without
enemy infantry falling upon him, Tanus could still salvage some little comfort
out of this dreadful day. It was a lesson I was to remember, and which stood us
in good stead in the years ahead. Chariots might win the battle, but only the
foot-soldiers could consolidate it. The battle out there on the river-bank was now
entkely Tanus' affair, while I had another battle to fight with death in the
cabin of the state barge. 'WE ARE NOT ENTIRELY WITHOUT HOPE,' I whispered to
my mistress, when I returned to the king's side. 'Tanus is rallying his troops,
and if any man alive is capable of saving this very Egypt from the Hyksos, he
is the one.' Then I turned to the king, and for the moment all else was
forgotten but my patient. As is often my way, I murmured my thoughts aloud as
I examined the wound. It was less than an hour, measured by a water-clock,
since the fateful arrow had struck, and yet the flesh around the broken-off
stub'of the shaft was swollen and empurpled. 'The arrow must come out. If I leave the barb in
there, he will be dead by tomorrow's dawn.' I had thought the king could no
longer hear me, but as I spoke, he opened his eyes and looked directly into
mine. 'Is there a chance that I will live?' he asked. 'There is always a chance.' I was glib and
insincere. I heard it in my own voice, and the king heard it also. "Thank you, Taita. I know you will strive for
me, and I absolve you now from all blame, if you should fail.' This was
generous of him, for many physicians before me have felt the strangling-rope as
punishment for letting the life of a king slip through their fingers. "The head of the arrow is deeply lodged. There
will be a great deal of pain, but I will give you the powder of the Red
Shepenn, the sleeping-flower, to still it.' 'Where is my senior wife, Queen Lostris?' he asked,
and my mistress replied immediately, 'I am here, my lord.' 'There is aught that I would say. Summon all my
ministers and my scribes, that my proclamation may be witnessed and recorded.'
They crowded into the hot little cabin and stood in silence. Then Pharaoh reached out to my mistress. 'Take my
hand, and listen to my words,' he ordered, and she sank down beside him and did
as she was ordered, while the king went on speaking in a soft and breathless
whisper. 'If I should die, Queen Lostris will stand as
regent for my son. I have learned in the time that I have known her that she is
a person of strength and good sense. If she were not, I would not have laid
this charge upon her.' 'Thank you, Great Egypt, for your trust,' Queen
Lostris murmured low, and now Pharaoh spoke directly to her, although every
person in the cabin could hear him. 'Surround yourself with wise and honest men.
Instruct my son in all the virtues of kingship that you and I have
discussed.'You know my mind on all these matters.' 'I will, Majesty.' 'When he is old enough to take up the flail and the
crook, do not attempt to withhold it from him. He is my lineage and my
dynasty.' 'Willingly I shall do what you order, for he is not
only the son of his father, but my son also.' 'While you rule, rule wisely and care for my people.
There will be many who seek to wrest the emblems of kingship from your
grasp—not only this new and cruel enemy, (his Hyksos, but others who stand even
closer to your throne. But you must oppose them all. Keep the double crown
intact for my son.' ‘Even as you say, divine Pharaoh.' The king fell silent for a while and I thought that
he had slipped over the edge into unconsciousness, but suddenly he groped for
the hand of my mistress again. 'There is one last charge I have for you. My tomb
and my temple are incomplete. Now they are threatened, as is all my realm, by
this terrible defeat that we have suffered. Unless my generals can stop them,
these Hyksos will sweep on to Thebes.' 'Let us petition the gods that it does not come to
pass,' my mistress murmured. 'I charge you most strictly that you will see me
embalmed and interred with all my treasure in accordance with the strictest
protocols of the Book of the Dead.' My mistress was silent. I think that she realized even
then just what an onerous charge this was that Pharaoh had laid upon her. His grip upon her hand tightened until his knuckles
turned white, and she winced. 'Swear this to me on your own life and hope for
immortality. Swear it before my ministers of state and all my royal suite.
Swear it to me in the name of Hapi, your patron god, and on the names of the
blessed trinity, Osiris and Isis and Horus.' Queen Lostris looked across at me with a piteous
appeal in her eyes. I knew that once she had given it, she would honour her
word at all and any cost to herself. In this, she was like her lover. She and
Tanus were bound by the same code of chivalry. I knew also that those close to
her must expect to pay the same price. An oath to theking now might one day return
to burden us all, Prince Memnon and the slave Taita included. And yet there was
no manner in which she could gainsay the king as he lay upon his death-bed. I
nodded to her almost imperceptibly. Later I would examine the finer points of
this oath, and like a law scribe I would mould it a little closer to reasonable
interpretation. 'I swear on Hapi, and on all the gods,' Queen
Lostris said, softly but clearly, and there would be a hundred times in the
years ahead when I would wish she had not done so. The king sighed with satisfaction and let her hand
slip from his. 'Then I am ready for you, Taita. And for whatever fate the gods
have decreed. Only let me kiss my son once more.' While they brought our fine young prince to him, I
drove the crowd of nobles from the cabin with little ceremony. Then I prepared
a draught of the Red Shepenn for him and made it as strong as I dared, for I
knew that pain could undo all my best efforts and destroy my patient as swiftly
as a slip of my scalpel. When he had drunk it all, I waited for the pupils
of his eyes to contract to pinpoints, and for the lids to droop over them. Then
I sent the prince away with his nursemaids. ON LEAVING THEBES I HAD EXPECTED TO have to deal
with arrow wounds, so I had brought my spoons with me. I had designed this
instrument myself, although there was a quack in Gaza and another in Memphis
who both claimed it was their invention. I blessed the spoons and my scalpels
in the lamp flame, and then washed my hands in hot wine. 'I do not think it is wise to use one of your
spoons when the head of the arrow is so deep and so near the heart,' my
mistress told me as she watched my preparations. There are occasions when she
speaks as though the student had outpaced the master. 'If I leave the arrow, it will certainly mortify. I
will have killed him just as surely as if I had chopped his head off his
shoulders. This is the only way that I will have a chance of saving him.' For a moment we looked into each other's eyes, and
we spoke without words. This was the vision of the Mazes of Ammon-Ra. Did we
wish to avoid the benevolent consequences to ourselves? 'He is my husband. He is Pharaoh.' My mistress took
my hand to emphasize her words. 'Save him, Taita. Save him, if you can.' 'You know that I will,' I answered. 'Do you need me to help you?' She had assisted me
so very often before. I nodded my assent, and stooped over the king. There were three ways that I might have attempted
to withdraw the arrow. The first would be to pluck it out. I have heard of a
surgeon in Damascus who bends down the supple branch of a tree and attaches
this to the shaft When lie releases the branch, the arrow is whipped out of the
living flesh by the strength of the sapling. I have never tried such brutal
treatment for I am convinced that very few men would survive it. The second method would be to push the arrow
through the limb or the torso until the barbed head emerges on the far side. To
achieve this, it can be driven along its original path with a mallet, like a
nail through a plank. Then the barb is sawn off and the shaft drawn free. This
treatment is almost as brutal as the first. My method is the Taita spoon. I have named the
spoon after myself in all modesty, for the claims of those others are spurious,
and posterity needs to be informed of my genius. Firstly, I examined the Hyksos arrow that I had
salvaged along with the bow from the overturned chariot. I was surprised to
find that the arrow-head was of worked flint rather than of bronze. Of course,
flint is cheaper and easier to pro-sure in quantity, but I have seldom known a
general who tries |o economize when setting out to seize a kingdom. This flint
i«sow-head spoke eloquently of the Hyksos' limited resources, and suggested a
reason for his savage attack upon :: this very Egypt. Wars are fought for land
or wealth, and it seemed that the Hyksos was short of both these commodities. I had to hope that the arrow-head buried in
Pharaoh's breast was of the same shape and design. I matched a pair of my
spoons to the razor-edged piece of stone. My spoons are of various sizes, and I
selected a pair that enclosed the head snugly, masking the wicked barbs with
smoothly polished metal. By this time, the drug had worked its full magic,
and Pharaoh lay unconscious upon his cloud-white linen sheets, with the
snapped-off arrow standing out as far as my forefinger from the skin, which was
wrinkled with age and covered with the frosted curls of his body hain I laid my
ear on his chest once more and heard his breath sigh and gurgle in his lungs. Satisfied
that he still lived, I greased the spoons that I had selected with mutton fat,
to lubricate their entry into the wound. I laid the spoons close at hand and
took up one of my keenest scalpels. I nodded to the four strong guards that Queen
Lostris had selected for me while I was busy with my preparations, and they
took hold of Pharaoh's wrists and ankles and held him down firmly. Queen
Lostris sat at the king's head and placed the wooden tube from my medical chest
between his lips and deep back into his throat. This would keep his windpipe
clear and open. It would also prevent him from biting or swallowing his own
tongue, or grinding his teeth together and snapping them off, when the pain
assaulted him too fiercely. 'First I have to enlarge the wound around the shaft
to enable me to reach the head of the arrow,' I muttered to myself, and I
pressed the point of the scalpel down along the line of the shaft. Pharaoh's
whole body stiffened, but the men held him down remorselessly. I worked swiftly, for I have learned that speed is
crucial in an operation of this nature, if the patient is to survive. I opened
a slit on each side of the shaft. The human skin is tough and elastic and would
inhibit the entry of the spoons, so I had to get through it. I dropped the knife and took up the pair of
lubricated spoons. Using the arrow-shaft as a guide, I eased them deeper and
deeper into the wound, until only the long handles' still protruded. By this time Pharaoh was writhing and twisting in
the grip of his restrainers. Sweat was pouring from every pore of his skin, and
running back over his shaven skull with its stubble of thin grey hair. His
screams rang through the tube in his mouth, and reverberated through the hull
of the barge. I had taught myself to ignore the agonized distress
of my patients, and I slid the spoons deeper into the widely distended mouth of
the wound until I felt them touch the flint of the arrow-head. This was the
delicate part of the operation. Using the handles like a pair of tweezers, I
levered the spoons apart and worked them over the arrow-head. When I felt them
close of their own accord, I hoped that I had entirely enclosed the coarse
flint and masked the barbs. I took a careful grasp of the handles of the spoons
and of the reed shaft of the arrow, and pulled back on them all together. If
the barbs were still free, they would have immediately snagged in Pharaoh's
flesh and resisted my pull. I could have shouted aloud with relief as I felt it
all begin ter yield. Still, the suction of the wet and clinging flesh was
considerable, and I had to use all my strength to draw the shaft. Pharaoh's agony was dreadful to hear and behold, as
the mass of reed and stone and metal was dragged through his chest. The Red
Shepenn drug had long ago ceased to be of any effect, and the pain was raw and
savage. I knew I was doing fearful damage, and I could feel tissue and sinew
tearing. My own sweat ran down into my eyes and burned and
half-blinded me, but I never released my pull until suddenly the blood-smeared arrow
came free in my hands and I staggered backwards across the cabin and crashed
into the bulkhead. I leaned against it for a moment, exhausted with the effort.
I watched the dark, half-congealed blood trickle and spurt from the wound for a
long moment, before I could rally myself and stagger back to stem it. , I
smeared the wound with precious myrrh and crystallized honey, and then bound it
up tightly with clean linen bandages. As I worked, I recited the incantation
for the binding Up of wounds: I bind thee up, oh creature of Seth. I stop up thy mouth. Retreat before me, red tide. Retire before me, red flower of death. I banish you, oh red dog of Seth. This was the recitation for a bleeding wound caused
by blade or arrow. There are specific verses for all types of wound, from burns
to those inflicted by the fangs or claws of a lion. Learning these is a large
part of the training of a physician. I am never certain in my own mind as to
just how efficacious these incantations are; however, I believe that I owe it
to my patients to employ any possible means at my disposal for their cure. In the event, Pharaoh seemed much easier after the
bind-ing-up, and I could leave him sleeping in the care of his women and go
back on deck. I needed the cool river airs to revive me, for the operation had
drained me almost as much as it had Pharaoh. By this time it was evening, and the sun was
settling wearily upon the stark western hills and throwing its last ruddy glow
over the battlefield. There had been no assault by the Hyksos infantry, and
Tanus was still bringing off the remains of his vanquished army from the
river-bank to the galleys anchored in the stream. I watched the boatloads of wounded and exhausted
men passing our anchored barge, and I felt a deep compassion for them, as I did
for all our people. This would be for ever the most dire day in our history.
Then I saw that the dust-cloud of the Hyksos chariots was already beginning to
move southwards towards Thebes. The clouds were incarnadined by the sunset to the
colour of blood. It was for me a sign, and my compassion turned to dread. IT WAS DARK BY THE TIME THAT TANUS himself came
aboard the state barge. In the light of the torches he looked like one of the
corpses from the battlefield. He was pale with fatigue and dust. His cloak was
stiff with dried blood and mud, and there were dark, bruised shadows under his
eyes. When he saw me, his first concern was to ask after Pharaoh. 'I have removed the arrow,' I told him. 'But the
wound I is deep and near the heart. He is very weak, but if he survives three
days, then I will be able to save him.' 'What of your mistress and her son?' He always
asked this, whenever we met. 'Queen Lostris is tired, for she helped me with the
operation. But she is with the king now. The prince is as bonny as ever and
sleeps now with his nurses.' I saw Tanus reel on his feet, and knew that he was
close to the end of even his great strength. 'You must rest now—' "t
began, but he shook off my hand. 'Bring lamps here,' he ordered. 'Taita, fetch your
writing-brushes and ink-pots and scrolls. I must send a warning to Nembet, lest
he walk into the Hyksos trap even as I did.' So Tanus and I sat half that night on the open
deck, and this was the despatch for Nembet that he dictated to me: I greet you Lord Nembet, Great Lion of Egypt,
Commander of the Ra division of the army of Pharaoh. May you live for ever! Know you that we have encountered the enemy Hyksos
at the plain of Abnub. The Hyksos in his strength and ferocity is a terrible
foe, and possessed of strange, swift craft that we cannot resist. Know you further that we have suffered a defeat and
that our army is destroyed. We can no longer oppose the Hyksos. Know you further that Pharaoh is gravely wounded
and in danger of his life. We urge you not to meet the Hyksos in an open
field, for his craft are like the wind. Therefore take refuge behind walls of
stone, or wait aboard your ships, to turn the enemy aside. The Hyksos has no ships of his own, and it is by
means of our ships alone that we may prevail against him. We urge you to await our coming before committing
your forces to battle. I call the protection of Horus and all the gods
down upon you. It is Tanus, Lord Harrab, Commander of the Ptah division
of the army of Pharaoh, who speaks thus. I wrote out four copies of this message, and as I
completed each, Tanus called for messengers to carry them to the Lord Nembet,
Great Lion of Egypt, who was advancing from the south to reinforce us. Tanus sent
two fast galleys speeding up-river, each with a fair copy of the despatches.
Then he put his best runners ashore on the west bank, the opposite side of the
river from the Hyksos army, and sent them off to find Nembet. 'Surely one of your scrolls will win through to
Nembet. You can do no more until morning,' I reassured him. 'You must sleep
now, for if you destroy yourself, then all of Egypt is destroyed with you.' Even then he would not go to a cabin, but curled on
the deck like a dog, so that he could be instantly ready for any new emergency.
But I went to the cabin to be near my king " and to give comfort to my
mistress. I was on deck again before the first glimmer of
dawn. I arrived to hear Tanus giving orders to burn our fleet. It was not for
me to question this decision, but he saw me gape incredulously at him, and when
the messengers had been sent away he told me brusquely, 'I have just received
the roll-call from my regimental commanders. Of the thirty thousand of my men
who stood yesterday on the plain of Abnub to meet the chariots of the Hyksos,
only seven thousand remain. Five thousand of those are wounded, and many will
still die. Of those who are unwounded, very few are sailors. I am left with
only sufficient men to work half our j fleet. I must abandon the rest of our
ships, but I cannot let them fall into the hands of the Hyksos.' They used bundles of reeds to start the fires, and
once they were set, they burned fiercely. It was a sad and terrible sight to
watch, even for me and my mistress, who were not sailors. For Tanus it was far
worse. He stood alone in the bows of the state barge, with despair and grief in
every line of his face and in the set of those wide shoulders, as hewatched his
ships bum. For him they were living things, and beautiful. Before all the court my mistress could not go to
his side where she belonged, but she took my hand surreptitiously, and the two
of us mourned for Tanus and for all Egypt as we watched those gallant craft
burn like torches. The roaring pillars of flame from each vessel were sullied
with black smoke, but still their ruddy light rivalled the approach of the
sunrise. At last Tanus gave the order to his hundred
remaining galleys to weigh anchor, and our little fleet, laden with wounded and
dying men, turned back into the south. Behind us, the smoke from the funeral pyre of our
fleet stood high into the early morning sky, while ahead of us fee yellow
dust-cloud stretched taller and wider along the east bank of the Nile as the
chariot squadrons of the Hyksos drove deeper into the Upper Kingdom, towards
helpless Thebes and all her treasures. It seemed that the gods had turned their backs on
Egypt and deserted us completely, for the wind, which usually blew so strongly
from the north at this season of the year, died away completely, and then
sprang up again with re--newed vigour from the south. Thus we were forced to
contend with both current and wind, and our ships were deeply laden with their
cargoes of wounded. We were slow and heavy in the water, with the depleted
crews slaving at the oars. We could not keep pace with the Hyksos army, and it
drew away from us inexorably. I was absorbed with my duties as physician to the
king. However, on every other vessel in the fleet, men whom I could have saved
were dying in their scores. Every time that I went on deck for a little fresh air and a short
break from my vigil at the bedside of Pharaoh, I saw corpses being thrown over
the side of the other galleys near us. At each splash there was a swirl of crocodiles beneath the
surface. Those awful reptiles followed the fleet like vultures. Pharaoh rallied strongly, and on the second day I
was able to feed him a small bowl of broth. That evening he asked to see the
prince again, and Memnon was brought to him. Memnon was already at the age when he was as
restless as a grasshopper and as noisy as a flock of starlings. Pharaoh had
always been good with the boy, if inclined to over-indulgence, and Memnon
delighted in his company. Already he was a beautiful boy, with clean, strong limbs
and his mother's skin and great dark green eyes. His hair was curled like the
pelt of a new-born black lamb, but in the sunlight, it was sparked with the
flames of Tanus's ruddy mop. Pharaoh's delight in Memnon was even more poignant
than usual. The child and the promise that he had wrung from my mistress were
his hope of immortality. Against my wishes he kept the child with him until
after.sunset. I knew that Memnon's boundless energy and his demands for
attention were tiring the king, but I could not intervene until it was time for
the prince's supper and he was led away by his nurses. My mistress and I stayed on at the king's bedside,
but he fell almost instantly into a death-like sleep. Even without his white
make-up, he was as pale as the linen sheets on which he lay. The next day was the third since the wounding, and
therefore the most dangerous. If he could survive this day, then I knew I could
save him. But when I woke in the dawn the cabin was thick with the musky stench
of corruption. When I touched Pharaoh's skin, it burned my fingers like a
kettle from the hearth. I called for my mistress, and she came stumbling
through from her alcove behind the curtain where she slept. 'What is it, Taita?' She got no further, for the
answer was plain upon my face. She stood beside me as I unbound the wound. The
binding-up is a high art of the surgeon's skills, and I had sewn the linen
bandages hi place. Now I snipped the threads that held them and peeled them
away. 'Merciful Hapi, pray for him!' Queen Lostris gagged
at the stench. The crusted black scab that corked the mouth of the wound burst
open, and thick green pus poured out in a slow and viscous stream. 'Mortification!' I whispered. This was the
surgeon's nightmare, this evil humour that struck upon the third day and spread
through the body like winter fire in the dry papyrus beds. 'What can we do?' she asked, and I shook my head. 'He will be dead before nightfall,' I told her, but
we waited beside his bed for the inevitable. As the word spread through the
ship that Pharaoh was dying, so the cabin filled with priests and women and
courtiers. We waited hi silence. Tanus was the last to arrive, and he stood at the
back of the throng with his helmet under his arm, in the position of respect
and mourning. His gaze rested not on the death-bed, but upon Queen Lostris. She
kept her face averted from his, but I knew that she was aware of him in every
fibre of her body. She covered her head with an embroidered linen
shawl, but above the waistband of her skirt, she was naked. Since Ihe prince
had been weaned, her breasts had lost their heavy burden of milk. She was as
slim as a virgin, and childbirth had not scarred her bosom or her supple belly
with silver lines of striae. Her skin was as smooth and unblemished as though
it had been freshly anointed with perfumed oil. I laid wet cloths upon
Pharaoh's burning body in an attempt to cool the fever, but the heat evaporated
the moisture and I was forced to change them at short intervals. Pharaoh tossed
about restlessly and cried out in delirium, haunted by all the terrors and
monsters of the other world, who waited to receive him. At times he recited snatches from the Book of the
Dead. From childhood the priests had taught him to memorize the book that was
the key and the map through the shades to the far fields of paradise: The crystal path has twenty-one turnings. The narrow way is thin as the blade of bronze. The goddess who guards the second pylon is treacherous and her ways are devious. Lady of flame, whore of the universe, with the mouth of a lioness, your vagina swallows men up, they are lost in your milky dugs. Gradually his voice and his movements became weaker,
a little after the sun had made its noon, he gave one t shuddering sigh and was
still. I stooped over him and : for the life-throb in his throat, but there was
none, and skin was cooling under my touch. 'Pharaoh
is dead,' I said softly, and closed the lids over his staring eyes. 'May he
live for ever!' The mourning cry went up from all who were
assembled there, and my mistress led the royal women in the wild ululation of
grief. It was a sound mat chilled me and made invisible insects crawl upon my skin,
so I left the cabin as soon as I was able. Tanus followed me out on to the deck
and seized my arm. 'You did all in your power to save him?' he
demanded roughly. 'This was not another of your devices?' I knew that this unkind treatment of me was an expression
of his own guilt and fear, so I was gentle in my reply. 'He was slain by the
Hyksos arrow. I did all that was in my power to save him. It was the destiny of
the Mazes of Am-mon-Ra, and there is no guilt or fault in any of us.' He sighed and placed one strong arm around my
shoulders. 'I had not foreseen any of this. I thought only of my love for the
queen and for our son. I should rejoice that she is free, but I cannot. Too
much is lost and destroyed. All of us are merely grains of dhurra corn in the
grinding-mill of the Mazes.' "There will be a time of happiness for all of
us hereafter," I reassured him, although I had no basis for this claim.
'But there is still a sacred duty on my mistress, and through her, on you and
me also.' And I reminded him of the oath that Queen Lostris had sworn to the
king, that she would preserve his earthly body and give it proper burial to
allow his Ka to move on to the fields of paradise. 'Tell me how I can help in this,' Tanus replied
simply, 'but remember that the Hyksos is sweeping through the Upper Kingdom
ahead of us, and I cannot guarantee that Pharaoh's tomb will not be violated.' "Then, if needs be, we must find another tomb
for him. Our first concern must be to preserve his body. In this heat it will
be decaying and crawling with maggots before the sun sets. I am not skilled in
the embalmer's art, but I know of only one way in which we can keep our trust.' Tanus sent his sailors down into the barge's hold,
and they swung up one of the huge clay jars of pickled olives from our stores.
Then, under my instructions, he emptied the jar and refilled it with boiling
water. While the water was still hot, he mixed into it three sacks of the
finest-quality sea salt. Then he filled four smaller wine jars with the same brine
and set them all out on the deck to cool. In the meantime I was working alone in the cabin.
My mistress had wanted to help me. She felt that it was part of her duty to her
dead husband, but I sent her away to care for the prince. I slit open Pharaoh's corpse down his left flank
from ribs to hip-bone. Through this opening I removed the contents of chest and
belly, freeing them along the diaphragm with the knife. Naturally, I left his
heart in place, for this is the organ of life and intelligence. I left the
kidneys also, for these are the vessels of water and represent the sacred Nile.
I packed the cavity with salt and then sutured it closed with cat-gut. I did
not have an embalming-spoon to push up through the nostrils and remove that
soft yellow mush from the gourd of the skull, so I left it in place. In any
event, it was of no importance. The viscera I divided into its separate parts:
liver, lungs, stomach and entrails. I washed out the stomach and intestines
with brine, which was a loathsome task. When this was done, I took the opportunity to
examine the king's lungs minutely. The right lung was healthy and pink, but the
left lung had been pierced by the arrow, and had collapsed like a punctured
bladder. It was filled with rotten black blood and pus. I was amazed that trie
old man had lived so long with such an injury. I felt that I was absolved. No
physician could have saved him, and there was no fault or failure in my
treatment. At last I ordered the sailors to bring in the
cooled jars of brine. Tanus helped me to fold Pharaoh's body into the foetal
position and we placed him in the olive vat. I made certain that he was
completely immersed in the strong brine. We packed his viscera into the smaller
Canopic wine jars. We sealed all the jars with pitch and wax, and lashed them
securely into the reinforced compartment below decks in which the king stored
his treasure. I think Pharaoh must have been content to rest thus, surrounded
by gold and bars of silver. I had done my best to help my mistress make good her
vow. In Thebes I would hand the king's body over to the embalmers, if the
Hyksos had not arrived there first, and if the city and its inhabitants still
existed by the time we reached it. WHEN WE REACHED THE WALLED CITY of Asyut, it was apparent
that the Hyksos had left only a small force to invest it, and had continued
southwards with their main army. Even though it was merely a detachment with
less than a hundred chariots, the Hyksos besiegers were far too strong for us
to attack them with our decimated army. Tanus' main aim was to rescue Remrem and his five
thousand, who were within the city walls, and then to push on up-river to join
forces with Lord Nembet and his thirty thousand reinforcements. Anchored out in
the main stream of the river, secure from attack by those deadly chariots,
Tanus was able to signal his intentions to Remrem on the city walls. Years before, I had helped Tanus draw up a system
of signals, using two coloured flags by means of which he could spell out a
message to any other within sight, across a valley, from peak to peak, or from
city wall to plain and river. With the flags Tanus was able to warn Remrem to
be ready for us that night. Then, under cover of darkness, twenty of our
galleys raced into the beach below the city walls. At the same moment, Remrem
threw open the side-gates, and, at the head of his regiment, fought his way
through the Hyksos pickets. Before the enemy were able to harness their horses,
Remrem and all his men were safely embarked. Immediately, Tanus signalled the rest of the
flotilla to weigh anchor. He abandoned the city of Asyut to sack and plunder,
and we bore on upstream under oars. For the rest of that night, whenever we
looked back over the stern, we saw the flames of the burning city lighting the
northern horizon. 'Let those poor bastards forgive me,' Tanus
muttered to me. 'I had no choice but to sacrifice them. My duty lies south of
here in Thebes.' He was soldier enough to make the hard choice
without flinching, but man enough to grieve bitterly over it. I admired him
then as much as I loved him. REMREM TOLD US THAT OUR SIGNAL frigates had sailed
past Asyut the previous day, and that by now the despatches that I had drawn up
on Tanus' behalf must be in Lord Nembet's hands. Remrem was also able to give us some intelligence
and news of the Hyksos, and his sweep to the south. Remrem had captured two
Egyptian deserters and traitors who had gone over to the enemy and who had
entered Asyut to spy on the defenders. Under torture they had howled like the
jackals they were, and before they died, had told Remrem much about the Hyksos
that was of value and interest to us. The Hyksos king, whom we had so disastrously
encountered on the plain of Abnub, was named Salitis. His tribe was of Semitic
blood and originally a nomadic and pastoral people who had lived in the Zagros
mountains near Lake Van. In this my first impression of these terrible Asians
was confirmed. I had guessed at their Semitic origins from their features, but
I wondered how a pastoral people had evolved such an extraordinary vehicle as a
wheeled chariot, and where they had found that marvellous animal that we
Egyptians now spoke of as a horse, and feared as though it were a creature from
the underworld. In other areas it seemed that the Hyksos were a
backward people. They were unable to read or write, and their government was a
harsh tyranny by their single king and ruler, this bearded Salitis. We
Egyptians hated him and feared him even more than we did those wild creatures
that drew his chariot. The chief god of the Hyksos was named Sutekh, the
god of storms. It needed no deep religious instruction to recognize in him our
own dreaded Seth. Their choice of god was fitting, and their behaviour did the
god honour. No civilized people would burn and plunder and
murder as they did. The fact that we torture traitors cannot be weighed in the
same scale as the atrocities committed by these barbarians. It is a truth that I have often observed, that a
nation chooses its gods to suit its own nature. The Philistines worship Baal,
and cast live infants into the fiery furnace that is his mouth. The black
Cushite tribes worship monsters and creatures from the underworld with the most
bizarre rituals. We Egyptians worship just and decent gods who are benevolent
towards mankind and make no demands for human sacrifice. Then the Hyksos have
Sutekh. It seemed that Remrem's captives were not the only
Egyptian traitors travelling with the enemy host. With a hot coal in his anus,
one of Remrem's captives had told of some great Egyptian lord from the Upper
Kingdom who sat upon King Salitis' war council. When I heard this, I remembered
how I had wondered at the knowledge that the Hyksos had displayed of our order
of battle upon the plain of Abnub. I had guessed then at the presence of a spy
among them who knew our secrets. If any of this was true, then we must expect that
the enemy knew all our strengths and weaknesses. They must know the plans and
defences of all our cities. Especially they would know of that rich treasure
that Pharaoh had accumulated in his funerary temple. 'Perhaps this explains the haste with which King
Salitis is driving on towards Thebes,' I suggested to Tanus. 'We can expect
them to attempt a crossing of the Nile at the first opportunity that presents
itself to them.' And Tanus cursed bitterly. 'If Horus is kind, he will deliver this traitorous
Egyptian lord into my hands.' He punched his fist into the palm of his other
hand. 'We must prevent Salitis from crossing the river, our ships are the only
advantage that we hold over him. I must exploit them to full advantage.' He stamped about the deck, and looked up at the
sky. 'When will this foul wind swing back into the north? Every hour the
enemy's chariots draw farther ahead of us. Where is Nembet's fleet? We must
join our forces and hold the river-line.' THAT AFTERNOON ON THE POOP-DECK OF the royal barge
the state council of Upper Egypt convened before the throne. The high priest of
Osiris represented the spiritual body, Lord Merseket: the chancellor stood for
the temporal body of the: state, and Tanus, Lord Harrab stood for the military
authority. Between them the three lords lifted Queen Lostris
to the throne of this very Egypt, and placed her son upon her lap. While every
man and woman on board the barge raised their voices in a loyal salute, the
other ships of the fleet sailed past, and even the wounded soldiers dragged
themselves to the rail to cheer the new regent and the young heir to the great
throne of Egypt. The high priest of Osiris strapped the false beard
of the kingship upon my mistress's chain, and it did nothing to detract from
her beauty and manifest womanhood. Lord Merseket bound the lion's tail around
her waist and settled the tall red and white crown upon her brow. Finally, Tanus
mounted the throne to place the crook and golden flail to her hands. Now Memnon
saw the shining toys that Tanus carried towards him, and reached out to snatch
them from him. 'A king indeed! He knows the crook is his by
right,' Tanus applauded proudly, and the court roared their approval of this
precocious behaviour. I think this was the first time that any of us had
laughed since that dreadful day on the field of Abnub. It seemed to me that the
laughter was a catharsis, and that it marked a new beginning for all of us. Up
until that moment we had been overwhelmed by the shock of defeat and the loss
of Pharaoh. But now, as the great lords of Egypt went forward one at a time to
kneel before the throne on which sat this lovely young woman and her royal child,
a fresh spirit sprang up in all of us. We were rescued from the apathy of
despair, and our will to fight and to endure was resuscitated. Tanus was last
of all of them to kneel before the throne and swear his allegiance. As she
looked down upon him, Queen Lostris' adoration for him was so evident that it
suffused her lovely face and shone like the sunrise from those dark green eyes.
I was amazed that no other in all that throng seemed aware of it. That evening after the sun had set, my mistress
sent me to the bridge of the state barge with a message for the commander of
her armies. She summoned him to a council of war in the main cabin. This time
Tanus dared not refuse her, for he had very recently sworn an oath of
obedience. This extraordinary war council of which I was the
only witness had barely begun, before the new regent of Egypt imperiously
banished me from the cabin, and sent me to guard the door and turn away all
other visitors. The last glimpse that I had of them as I drew the heavy curtain
was as they fell into each other's arms. So great was their need, and so long
had they been denied, that they rushed at each other like deadly enemies
joining in mortal combat, rather than lovers. The happy sounds of this engagement persisted for
most of the night, and I was relieved that we were not at anchor but driving on
up-river in haste to join with Lord Nembet. The clunk and swish of the oars,
the boom of the drum setting the stroke and the chants of the rowers on their
benches almost drowned out the tumult in the royal cabin. When he came to the poop-deck at the change of the
night-watch, Tanus had the smile and the satisfied air of a general who had
just won a famous victory. My mistress followed him on deck shortly afterwards,
and she glowed with a new and ethereal beauty that startled even me, who was
accustomed to her loveliness. For the rest of that day she was loving and kind
to all around her, and found numerous occasions to consult the commander of her
army. Thus Prince Memnon and I were able to spend most of the day together, a
circumstance that suited both of us very well. With the prince's dubious assistance I had already
started carving a series of wooden models. One of these was a chariot and wooden
horses. Another was a wheel on an axle that I was experimenting with. Memnon stood on tiptoe to watch the wheel spin
smoothly on its miniature hub. 'A solid disc is too heavy, don't you agree, Mem?
See how swiftly it loses momentum and slows down.' 'Give it to me!' he demanded, and snatched at the
spinning disc. It flew form his chubby "fingers, dashed to the deck and
shattered into four almost equal segments. 'You are a Hyksos ruffian,' I told him sternly,
which he seemed to take as a great compliment, and I went down on my knees to
gather up my poor model. The broken segments still lay in a circular
pattern, and, before my hand touched them, I had a strange aberration of
vision. In the eye of my mind, the solid segments of wood became spaces, while the
cracks between them appeared solid. 'Sweet Breath of Horus! You've done it,
Mem.' I hugged him. 'A rim supported by struts from the hub! When you are
Pharaoh, what other miracles will you perform for us?' Thus did the Prince Royal, Memnon the first of that
name, Ruler of the Dawn—with just a little help from his friend— conceive of
the spoke wheel. Little did I dream then that one day the two of us together
would ride to glory upon it. WE CAME UPON THE FIRST OF THE EGYPTIAN dead before
noon. He came floating down the river with his bloated belly buoying him up,
and his face gazing blankly at the sky. There was a black crow perched upon his
chest. It picked out his eyes and threw back its head to swallow them one at a
time. In silence we stood at the ship's rail and watched
the dead man float serenely by. 'He wears the kilt of the Lion Guards,' Tanus said
quietly. 'The Lions are the spear-head of Nembet's army. I
pray to Horus that there will be no others following this one down the river.' But there were. Ten more, then a hundred. More and
still more, until the surface of the river from bank to bank was carpeted by
floating corpses. They were thick as the leaves of the water-hyacinth which
clog the irrigation canals in summer. At last we found one who still lived. He was a
captain of the Lion Guards who had been seconded to Nembet's staff. He clung to
a mat of floating papyrus stems in the current. We fished him from the water and I attended to his
wounds. The head of a stone mace had shattered the bones of his shoulder and he
would never use that arm again. When he had recovered sufficiently to speak, Tanus
squatted beside his mattress. 'What of Lord Nembet?' 'Lord Nembet is slain, and all his staff with him,'
the captain told him hoarsely. 'Did Nembet not receive my despatch warning him of
the Hyksos?' 'He received it on the eve of the battle, and he
laughed as he read it.' 'Laughed?' demanded Tanus. 'How could he laugh?' 'He said that the puppy was destroyed—forgive me,
Lord Tanus, but that was what he called you—and now sought to cover his
stupidity and cowardice with spurious messages. He said that he would fight the
battle in the classic manner.' "The arrogant old fool,' Tanus lamented. 'But
tell me the rest of it.' 'Lord Nembet deployed upon the east bank, with the
river at his back. The enemy fell upon us like the wind, and drove us into the
water.' 'How many of our men escaped?' Tanus asked softly. 'I believe that I am the only one of those who went
ashore with Lord Nembet who survived. I saw no other left alive. The slaughter
upon the river-bank was beyond my power to describe to you.' 'All our most famous regiments decimated,' Tanus
mourned. 'We are left defenceless, except for our ships. What happened to
Nembet's fleet? Was it anchored in midstream?' 'Lord Nembet anchored the greater part of the
fleet, but he beached fifty galleys in our rear.' 'Why would he do that?' Tanus stormed. 'The safety
of the ships is the first principle of our standard battle plan.' 'I do not know Lord Nembet's mind, except he may
have kept them at hand to re-embark our troops expeditiously, should your
warning have proved justified.' 'What then is the fate of our fleet? Nembet lost
our army, but did ,he save the ships?' Tanus' tone was rough with anger and
distress. 'Of the ships that were anchored in midstream, most
are scuttled and burned by the skeleton crews. I saw the flames and the smoke
even from where I lay on my papyrus float. A few of the others cut the
anchor-lines and fled south towards Thebes. I shouted to the crews as they
sailed past me, but so great was their terror that they would not heave-to and
pick me from the water.' 'The fifty ships that lay upon the beach—' Tanus
broke off and drew a deep breath before he finished the question. 'What has
become of the squadron that was beached?' 'It has fallen into the hands of the Hyksos.' The
captain trembled as he answered, for he dreaded Tanus' anger. 'I looked back as
I drifted with the current, and I saw the enemy swarming aboard the galleys on
the beach.' Tanus stood up and strode to the bows. He stared
upstream from where the corpses and the scorched and blackened planks of
Nembet's fleet still drifted down upon the steady green flow of the river. I
went to stand at his side, to be ready to halter his rage when it came. 'So the proud old fool has sacrificed his life, and
the lives of all his men, simply to spite me. They should build a pyramid to
his folly, for Egypt has never seen the like of it.' 'That is not all his folly,' I murmured, and Tanus
nodded grimly. 'No, not all his folly. He has given the Hyksos the
means to cross the river. Sweet milk of Isis' breast, but once they are across
the Nile we are truly finished.' Perhaps the goddess heard him call her name, for at
that moment I felt the wind that had blown so long into our faces veer. Tanus
felt it also. He spun on his heel and roared an order to his officers on the
poop-deck. "The wind turns fair. Make a general signal to
the fleet. Set all sail. Relieve the men at the oars every hour by the
water-clock. Drummers, increase the beat to flank speed. Make all haste
southwards.' The wind settled strongly into the north. Our sails
filled and stiffened like the bellies of pregnant women. The drums gave the
rowers the stroke, and we breasted the flow of the river as the whole
battle-fleet raced southwards. 'All thanks to the goddess for this wind,' Tanus
shouted. 'Divine Isis, let us be in time to catch them on the water.' THE STATE BARGE WAS SLOW AND UNGAINLY. She began
falling astern of the fleet. It seemed that the fates has intervened once more,
for Tanus' old galley that he had loved so well, the Breath ofHorus, was
sailing close to us in the formation. She was under a new captain now, but she was still
a formidable little vessel, built for speed and attack. The sharp bronze
ramming-horn protruded from her bows, just above the water line. Tanus hailed
her alongside the barge and transferred his Blue Crocodile standard into her,
taking over the command from her new captain. My place was with my mistress and the prince. I am
not certain how I found myself on board the Breath ofHorus, standing on the
poop beside Tanus, as we tore along upstream. Sometimes I am guilty of folly
almost as monumental as that recently demonstrated by Lord Nembet. I remember
only that as soon as the state barge began to fall away astern, I began
bitterly to regret my impetuosity. I thought of telling Tanus that I had
changed my mind, and asking him to put about and drop me once more on the deck of
the barge. But after one glance at his face, I decided that I would rather face
the Hyksos again. From the deck of the Breath of Horus, Tanus
issued his orders. By flag and voice-hail, they were passed from vessel to
vessel. Without slackening the pace of our advance, Tanus redeployed the fleet.
He gathered up the galleys around him, as he forged his way to the head of the
flotilla. The wounded and those no longer fit to fight were transferred
to the slower vessels which fell back to keep pace with the state barge. The
faster galleys in the van were cleared for action. They were manned mostly by
Remrem's fresh troops whom we had relieved from the siege of Asyut. They were
spoiling for a chance to avenge the disgrace of Abnub. Tanus hoisted the Blue
Crocodile standard at his masthead of the Breath of Horus, and they
roared with the lust of battle. How swiftly he had been able to stiffen their
spirit since that bloody defeat! The signs of Nembet's recent catastrophe became
ever more obvious with each league that we covered. The corpses and wreckage
and all the flotsam of war were stranded in the papyrus beds on each side of
the river. Then, at last, in the sky ahead of us we saw once again the dust of
the chariots mingling with the smoke from the cooking-fires of the Hyksos camp. 'It is as I had hoped,' Tanus exulted. 'They have
halted their headlong advance on Thebes, now that Nembet has presented them
with the means of crossing the river. But they are not sailors, and they will
have difficulty embarking their men and chariots. If Horus is kind, we will
arrive in time to help them on their way.' In extended battle order we swept around the last
wide bend of the river, and we found the Hyksos before us. By one of those
happy freaks of war, we had arrived precisely at the moment that they were
fully committed to the crossing of the Nile. There were the fifty captured galleys straggling
across the river in the most lubberly fashion. The sails and sheets were in a
tangle and every oarsman was keeping his own stroke. The paddles were splashing
and crab-catching. The steering of each vessel was shaky and erratic,
completely out of phase with the ships around it. We could see that most of the Hyksos manning the
decks were in full bronze armour. Clearly they had not realized just how
difficult it is to swim in that state of dress. They stared at us in
consternation as we bore down upon them. Now at last the roles were reversed.
We were in our element, and they were flying in the wind like a torn sail. I had a few moments to study the enemy, as we
closed. The vast bulk of the Hyksos army was still upon the east bank. They had
gone into bivouac, and they were so numerous that their encampment stretched
away to the foothills of the desert, as far as I could see from the deck of the
Breath of Horus. King Salitis was sending only a small force across
the river. Almost certainly they were under orders to race down the west bank
and to capture the funerary temple of Pharaoh Mamose, before we were able to
remove the treasure. We bore down rapidly on the convoy of Hyksos ships,
and I shouted to Tanus above the beat of the drums and the bloodthirsty cheers
of our rascals, "They have taken their horses across already. Look over
there!' Almost unprotected, except for a few armed guards,
there was a huge herd of these terrible animals gathered on the west bank. I
guessed there were several hundred of them; even at this distance, we could
make out their long, flowing manes and tails streaming in the strong north
wind. They were a disturbing sight to us. Some of the men around me shuddered
and swore with loathing of them. I heard one of them mutter darkly, 'The Hyksos
feed those monsters of theirs on human flesh, like tame lions or jackals. That
is the reason for this slaughter. They must have food for them. We can only
guess how many of our comrades are already in their bellies.' I could not contradict him, and I even had a queasy
feeling in my guts that he might be speaking the truth. I turned my attention
from those beautiful but gory monsters to the galleys in the stream ahead of
us. 'We have caught them taking the chariots and the
men over,' I pointed out to Tanus. The decks of Nembet's captured vessels were
piled high with chariots and equipment, and crowded with the Hyksos charioteers
who were being ferried across. As they realized their predicament, some of the
Hyksos tried to turn and run back for the east bank. They collided with the
ships that followed them, and locked together, they drifted helplessly on the
current. Tanus laughed savagely to see their confusion, and
shouted into the wind, 'General signal. Increase the beat to attack speed.
Light the fire-arrows.' The Hyksos had never experienced an attack with
fire-arrows, and at the thought of what was coming, I laughed with Tanus, but
nervously. Then suddenly I stiffened and my laughter choked off. !Tanus!' I seized his arm. 'Look! Look at the
galley dead ahead! On the poop. There is our traitor.' For a moment Tanus did not recognize the tall,
stately figure at the rail of the galley, for he wore fish-scale armour and a
tall Hyksos war helmet. Then abruptly he roared with anger and outrage, 'Intef!
Why did we not guess it was him?' 'I see it so clearly now. He has guided Salitis to
this very Egypt. He went east and deliberately tempted the Hyksos with accounts
of the treasures of Egypt.' My outrage and hatred matched those of Tanus. Tanus threw up the bow Lanata and loosed an arrow,
but the range was long and the point glanced off Lord Intef's armour. I saw his
head jerk round at the shock, and he looked across the water directly at us. He
singled us out, Tanus and myself, and for a moment I thought I saw fear in his
eyes. Then he ducked out of sight below the gunwale of the galley. Our leading squadron flew into the pack of confused
and milling shipping. With a tearing crunch, our bronze ramming-horn struck
Intef's galley amidships, and I was thrown off my feet by the impact. When I
struggled up again, the oarsmen had already backed water, and with another
rending screech of timbers we disengaged from the stricken ship. At the same time, our archers were pouring a heavy
rain of fire-arrows into her. The heads were bound with pitch-soaked papyrus
stems that burned like comets, each leaving a trail of sparks and smoke as they
flew into the sails and top hamper. The north wind fanned the flames and they
leaped up the rigging with a fiendish exuberance. The waters flooded in through the gaping hole we
had ripped in her belly, and she listed over sharply. The sails caught fire and
burned with startling rapidity. The heat singed my eyelashes even at that
distance. The heavy mainsail, burning fiercely, fluttered down over the deck, trapping
the crew and crowded charioteers beneath it. Their screams shrilled in our ears
as their hair and clothing burst into flames. I remembered the plain at Abnub
and felt no pity as they leaped in flames from the ship's side and were drawn
under by the weight of their armour. Only a swirl of ripples and a lingering
puff of steam marked where each of them had disappeared. All down the line, the Hyksos galleys were burning
and sinking. They had neither the experience nor the skill to counter our
attack, and they were as helpless as we had been before the assault of their
chariots. Our ships backed off and charged again, crushing in their hulls and
sending torrents of flaming arrows into them. I was watching the first galley that we had
attacked, seeking another glimpse of Lord Intef. She was almost gone when
suddenly he reappeared. He had thrown off his helmet and his armour, and wore
only a linen breech clout. He balanced easily on the gunwale of the sinking
ship, and then, as the flames reached out to embrace him, he joined his hands
above his head and dived overboard. He was a son of the Nile, at home in her waters. He
knifed through the surface, and came up a minute later and fifty paces from
where he had struck, with his long wet hair sleeked back, so that he looked
like a swimming otter. "There he goes!' I screamed at Tanus. 'Run the
swine under.' Instantly Tanus gave the order to turn the Breath
of Ho-rus, but quick as the helmsman was on the steering-oar, she was slow to
come around. Meanwhile, Lord Intef slipped through the water like a fish,
reaching out overarm for the east bank and the protection of his Hyksos allies. 'Swing hard!' Tanus signalled his starboard bank of
oars, and they thrust the bows around. As soon as we were on line with the
swimmer; JTanus gave the order to pull together, and we shot in pursuit. By now
Lord Intef was far ahead and close in to the bank, where five thousand Hyksos
archers waited with their long recurved bows strung and ready to give him
covering fire. 'Seth piss on them!' Tanus yelled in defiance. 'We
will take Intef out from under their noses.' And he drove the Breath of
Horus directly at them, bearing down upon the lone swimming figure. As we came within range of the shore, the Hyksos
loosed a volley at us that darkened the sky, and their arrows fell in a
whistling cloud around us. They dropped so thickly that the deck soon bristled
with them like the quills in a goose's wing, and some of our sailors were
struck and fell writhing and bleeding from their benches. But we were already close on Intef, and he looked
back over his shoulder and I saw the terror in his face as he realized he could
not escape our sharp prow. I ignored the arrows and ran to the bows to scream
down at him, 'I hated* you from the first day we met. I hated every loathsome
touch. I want to watch you die. You are evil! Evil!' He heard me. I saw it in his eyes, and then his
dark gods intervened yet again. One of the sinking Hyksos galleys drifted down
upon us, spouting fire and smoke. If she had touched us we would have gone up
with her in a tower of flame. Tanus was forced to put the steering-oar over,
and to signal urgently for his oarsmen to back-water. The burning galley
drifted between the shore and where we lay heaved-to. Lord Intef was hidden from
my view, but when the burning galley was past, I saw him again. Three brawny
Hyksos charioteers were dragging him from the water and up the steep bank. He paused at the top of the bank and looked back at
us, and then disappeared from sight, leaving me trembling with rage and
frustration. Our men were still being struck down by the falling arrows, so
Tanus gave the order, and we wheeled away and sped back to join in the
destruction of those few vessels of the convoy that were still afloat. As the last of these listed over and then rolled on
to her back, the green Nile waters poured into her and quenched the flames in a
hissing cloud of steam. Our archers leaned over the side and shot the few
surviving Hyksos who splashed weakly on the surface. Immediately they were all drowned, Tanus turned his
attention to the west bank and to the small party of the enemy and the herd of
horses that were stranded there. As our galley sped in to the shore, the Hyksos
herders scattered and ran, but our men leaped ashore, sword in hand, and raced
after them! The Hyksos were charioteers, and accustomed to riding into battle.
Our lads were foot-soldiers and trained to run. Like a pack of hounds after a
jackal, our men isolated and surrounded them. They hacked them down and left a
hundred bleeding corpses scattered across the green fields of standing dhurra
corn. I had jumped ashore behind the first wave of our
troops. I had serious business in mind. There was no point in making models and
designing chariots without a means of driving the spoked wheels that I had seen
in my imagination. It required an enormous act of courage on my part
to start towards that herd of terrible creatures that the Hyksos herders had
abandoned close to the water's edge. Each step was an effort of will, for there
were many hundreds of them, and they were obviously restless and alarmed by the
shouting and the running of men and the clash of arms. I was certain that at
any moment they would rush at me like wounded lions. I imagined them gobbling
my still warm and twitching flesh, and my courage evaporated and I could go no
closer. From a distance of a hundred paces, I stood staring in dreadful
fascination at these savage predators, but I was poised to turn and rush back
to the safety of the galley at the first sign of an attack. This was the first opportunity that I had been
given to study these animals. They were mostly of a dun colour, but with subtle
shadings of bay and chestnut and roan. One or two of them were as black as
Seth. They stood as tall as a man, with a full barrel-chest, and long necks
that arched gracefully. Their manes were like the tresses of a beautiful woman,
and their hides glowed in the sunlight, as though they had been burnished. One of those nearest to me threw back its head and
rolled its upper lip, and I recoiled as I saw the great square white teeth that
lined its jaw. It kicked its hind-legs and emitted such a terrifying neighing
sound that I turned and started back towards the ship with some alacrity. Then a hoarse yell from one of our soldiers near me
arrested my cowardly retreat. 'Kill the Hyksos monsters!' 'Kill the monsters!' The cry was taken up by the
others. 'No!' I screamed, and my concern for my own safety
was forgotten. 'No! Save the horses. We need them.' My voice was lost in the angry war-cry of our
troops, as they rushed at the herd of horses, with their shields raised and
their swords still dripping with the blood of the herders. Some of the men
paused to nock arrows to the bow and fire them into the herd. 'No!' I cried, as a glossy black stallion reared
and screamed, with an arrow standing out of his withers. 'No! Please, no!' I cried again, as one of the
sailors ran in with a light war-axe and hacked through the fetlock joint of a young
mare. She was crippled by the blow and could not escape the next stroke of the
axe that caught her between the ears and dropped her kicking in the dust. 'Leave them! Leave them!' I pleaded, but the arrows
brought down a dozen of the animals, and the swords and axes maimed and killed
a dozen more before the herd broke under the assault, and three hundred horses
bolted and went galloping out in a mass across the dusty western plain towards
the desert. I shaded my eyes to watch them go, and it seemed to
me that part of my heart went with them. When they had disappeared, I ran to
protect and tend to those animals that were left maimed and arrowed amongst the
papyrus beds. But the soldiers were ahead of me. So great was their fury that
they gathered around the fallen carcasses. In a frenzy of hatred, they plunged
their blades into the unresisting flesh and hacked at the broken heads. A little to one side stood an isolated clump of
papyrus reeds. Behind this, and screened from the rampaging soldiers, stood the
black stallion that I had first seen hit by an arrow. He was sorely struck and
staggering as he limped forward, the arrow deep in his chest. Without thought
for my own safety, I ran towards him, and then stopped as he turned to face me. Only then did I realize my danger. Here was a
wounded beast that, like a lion in the same straits, must surely charge at me.
The stallion and I stared at each other, and I felt fear fall away like a
discarded cloak from my shoulders. His eyes were huge and swimming with pain. Gentle
eyes, beautiful eyes that made my heart swell with pity. He made a soft,
fluttering sound, and limped towards me. I held out my hand and touched his
muzzle and it felt like warm Arabian silk. He came directly to me, and pressed
his forehead to my chest in a gesture of trust and appeal that was almost
human. I knew that he was asking for my help. Instinctively I flung my arms around his neck and
embraced him. I wanted more than anything in my life at that moment to save
him, but from his nostrils warm blood trickled down my chest. I knew he was hit
through the lungs and that he was dying. He was far beyond any help that I
could give him. 'My poor darling. What have those stupid, ignorant
bastards done to you?' I whispered. Dimly in my distress and spiritual agony, I
realized that my life had changed again, and that this dying creature had made
that change. Somehow I seemed to sense that, in the years ahead, wherever I
left my footsteps in the African earth, the hoof-prints of a horse would lie
beside them. I had found another great love to fill my days. The stallion made that fluttering sound once more
and his breath was warm on my skin. Then his legs collapsed under him and he
fell heavily on his side and lay gasping air into his punctured lungs. Bright
red bubbles frothed from the wound in his chest. I went down beside him, and
lifted that noble head into my lap and waited with him until he died. Then I
stood up and went back to where the Breath ofHorus was beached. It was difficult to see my way, for my own hot
tears blinded me. Once again I cursed myself for a soft and sentimental fool,
but that never did much to help me brace myself. I was always so vulnerable to
suffering in another creature, human or otherwise, especially in one that was
noble and beautiful. 'Damn you, Taita! Where have you been?' Tanus
railed at me as I scrambled aboard. 'There is a battle raging. The whole army
cannot wairaround while you have another of your famous daydreams.' Yet for all
his bluster, he had not deserted me. TANUS WOULD NOT EVEN HEAR ME OUT, but cut brusquely
across my request for leave to follow the herd of runaway horses out into the
desert, and for men to go with me. 'I want no truck with those foul and unholy
creatures!' he shouted at me. 'I only regret that my men let them escape and
that they did not slaughter the lot of them. Let us hope that the lions and the
jackals make good that default.' I realized then that he hated them as much as
did the most ignorant lout in his regiments. 'Were you there on the plain of Abnub?' I do not
usually indulge in loud argument, but his intransigence infuriated me. 'Or was
that some other dull-witted oaf standing beside me? Did you not see the future
charge at you on hooves and wheels and chop your men to jackal-food? Do you not
understand that without chariot and horse, you and this Egypt we know are
finished?' This amicable discussion was taking place on the
poop-deck of the Breath ofHorus. Tanus' officers were silent and stiff with
shock to hear a slave address a Great Lion of Egypt and the commander of all
her armies as a dull-witted oaf. However, I was past all restraint and I rushed
on. 'The gods have given you this wonderful gift. Three
hundred horses placed in your hands! I will build you the chariots to go with them.
Are you so blind that you cannot see it?' 'I have my ships!' Tanus roared back at me. 'I
don't need these foul man-eating beasts. They are an abomination in the face of
decent men and all benevolent gods. They are creatures of Seth and Sutekh, and
I want no part of them.' Too late I realized that I had pushed Tanus into a
position from which he could not retreat. He was a clever and intelligent man,
until his pride hamstrung his reason. I moderated my tone and made my voice
mellifluous. 'Tanus, please listen to me. I have held the head
of one of these animals in my hands. They are strong, but strangely gentle.
Their eyes shine with the intelligence of a faithful dog. They do not eat
meat—' 'How could you tell that from one brief touch?' he
sneered at me, still proud and affronted. "The teeth,' I answered. 'They do not possess
the fangs or claws of a carnivore. Pigs are the only hoofed creatures that eat
flesh, and these are no pigs.' I saw him waver at last, and I pressed my
advantage. 'If that is not enough, look then at the stores that the Hyksos have
brought across the river. Do they need that mountain of fodder to feed a pride
of meat-eating lions?' 'Meat or fodder, I will not argue further. You have
heard my decision. We will let those cursed horses perish in the wilderness.
That is my decision, and it is final.' He stamped away, but I muttered under my
breath, 'Final, is it? We will see about that.' There have been very few occasions when I have not
been able to have my own way with my mistress, and hers was now the highest
authority in this very Egypt. I went to her that very evening, as soon as the
royal barge came once more under the protection of the war galleys. Without the knowledge of her commander and lover, I
showed her the tiny working model of a chariot with the miniature carved horses
in the traces, which I had crafted for her. Queen Lostris was enchanted by it.
Naturally she had never seen the squadrons of war chariots in full flight, and
had not conceived for them the same hatred as had the bulk of her army. Having
captured her full attention with the model chariot, I then described the death
of the stallion in such harrowing detail that both of us were reduced to tears.
She can resist my tears as little as I am able to resist hers. 'You must go immediately and rescue these
marvellous animals from the desert. When you have them, I order you to build a
squadron of chariots for my armies,' she cried. If Tanus had spoken to her before I had the chance
to persuade her, I doubt that she would have given that order, and the history
of our world would have been very different. As it was, Tanus was furious with
my deception, and we came as close to a permanent rift in our relationship as
we ever had in all the year. It was fortunate that I had been summarily ordered
ashore by Queen Lostris, and was able to escape the full force of his wrath. I
had only a few hours in which to gather around me a few helpers, and the chief
of these was the most unlikely of them all. I had never taken to Hui, the Shrike whom we had
captured at Gallala and who had commanded one of the galleys which Tanus had
scuttled at Abnub. He was now a captain without a ship, and a man looking for a
reason to go on. He sought me out as soon as rumour of my mission spread
through the fleet. 'What do you know about horses?' he challenged me,
which was a question I was not prepared to answer at that moment. 'Obviously not as much as you do?' I made it a
cautious question. 'I was once a syce,' he boasted, in his usual
endearing fashion. 'And what creature is that?' 'A groom, one who cares for horses,' he replied,
and I stared at him in amazement. 'Where did you ever see a horse before that bloody
day at Abnub?' I demanded. 'As an infant my parents were killed, and I was
captured by a tribe of barbarians who roamed .the plains far to the east, a
year's travel beyond the Euphrates river. My captors were people of the horse
and, as a child, I lived each day with those animals. Mare's milk was my food
and I slept beneath the horses' bellies for shelter in the night, for a slave
was not allowed into the tents of the tribe. When I escaped from slavery, it
was upon the back of my favourite stallion. He carried me fast and far. But he
died long before we reached the Euphrates.' Thus Hui was with me when a galley set down my
small party of reluctant horse-catchers upon the west bank. Sixteen men were
all that I could recruit, and most of them were the dregs and riff-raff of the
army. Tanus had seen to it that none of his best men would join me. He could
not countermand the word of the regent of all Egypt, but he made it as
difficult as he could for me to carry out her orders. At Hui's suggestion, I had equipped my men with
light linen ropes and bags of crushed dhurra corn. All of them, except Hui and
myself, were terrified to the point of incontinence by the mere thought of the
creatures that we had set out to follow. When I woke in the morning after our
first night's camp, I found that every single one of these stalwarts had
disappeared, and I never saw them again. 'We will have to turn back,' I despaired. 'There is
nothing we can do alone. Lord Tanus will be pleased. This was exactly what he
knew would happen.' 'You are not alone,' Hui pointed out cheerfully.
'You have me.' This was the first time that my feelings began to warm towards
the young swaggerer. We divided the load of ropes and the leather bags of
crushed corn, and we went on. By this time the tracks of the horses were three
days old, but they had stayed together in a single herd and so had beaten a
road that was easy to follow. Hui assured me that the herd instinct was strong
amongst them, and that with such lush grazing along the river-bank, they would
not have wandered far. He was certain they would not have gone out into the
desert, as I had feared that they might. 'Why would they do that? There is no food or water
for them out there.' And in the .end Hui proved right. With the coming of the Hyksos, the peasants had
deserted their farms and gone into the shelter of the walled towns. The fields
were untended and the com half-grown. We found the herd before noon the second
day. It was spread out and grazing peacefully in one of the fields. Even after
my experience with the wounded stallion, I was still rather nervous of these
mysterious creatures. 'It will surely be a difficult and dangerous matter
to capture a few of them,' I confided in Hui, seeking his reassurance and
advice. At this stage, the notion of capturing all three hundred horses had not
even occurred to me. I would have been satisfied with twenty, and delighted
with fifty of them. I imagined that we would be forced to run each of them down
and bind it with the ropes we had brought with us for that purpose. 'I have heard that you have the reputation of being
a very clever slave,' Hui grinned at me, cocky and delighted by his superior
understanding of the subject. 'Clearly, it is a reputation that is
ill-founded.' He showed me how to twist and braid a halter from
the ropes. We made a dozen of these before he was satisfied. Then each of us
armed himself with one of these and a leather sack of crushed corn, and we
started towards the grazing herd. Following Hui's example, we never walked
directly towards them, but strolled obliquely at a leisurely pace past the
animals in the fringe of the herd. 'Slowly now,' Hui cautioned me, when they flung up
then-heads and studied us with that peculiarly frank and almost childlike gaze
that I would come to know so well. 'Sit down.' We sank into the standing corn and remained
motionless, until the horses started feeding again. Then we moved forward until
they became restless once more. 'Down,' Hui ordered, and when we were crouched in
the corn, he went on, 'They love the sound of a gentle voice. When I was a
child, I sang to my horses to quieten them. Watch this!' He started to sing a
refrain in a strange language, which I presumed was the barbaric tongue of his
childhood captors. Hui's voice was as melodious as the squawking of
crows squabbling over the rotting carcass of a dead dog. The nearest horses
stared at us curiously. I laid my hand on Hui's arm to quieten him. I was
certain that the herd must find his efforts at song as distressing as I did. 'Let me try,' I whispered. I sang the lullaby that
I had composed for my prince. Sleep, little Mem, who rules the dawn, sleep, little prince, who will rule the world, rest that curly head, filled with wondrous dreams, rest those arms, make them strong for sword and
bow. One of the mares closest to us took a few steps
towards me, and when she stopped, she made that same soft fluttery sound with
her lips. She was inquisitive, and I sang on softly and seductively. She had a
foal at her heels, a lovely little bay-coloured creature with an appealing head
and pricked-up ears. With my special feeling for and understanding of
birds and animals, I was already beginning to recognize the desirable points of
breed in these new animals. I was learning swiftly and instinctively how to
deal with them. I was no longer completely reliant on Hui to instruct me. Still singing gently, I scooped up a handful of the
crushed cornmeal and held it out to the mare. I could see at once that she had
been hand-fed before, and that she understood my offer. She blew noisily
through wide nostrils, and took another few paces towards me. Even now I can
remember the thrill that almost stopped the beating of my heart when she took
the last pace up to me, and delicately lowered her muzzle into my hand to taste
the white meal. It powdered her whiskers as she ate, and I laughed with the joy
and excitement of it. She made no effort to pull away from me as I slipped my
other arm around her neck and laid my cheek softly against hers to inhale the
strange, warm smell of her hide. 'The halter,' Hui reminded me softly, and I slipped
it over her head, as he had shown me. 'She is yours,' Hui said. 'And I am hers,' I replied without thinking, but it
was true. We had captured each other. The rest of the herd had watched all this. As soon
as the halter was on the mare, they settled down and trustingly allowed Hui and
me to walk freely amongst them. They came to eat from the hand and allowed us
to lift their hooves and stroke their necks and massive shoulders. All this seemed to me at the time to be miraculous,
but after only a little consideration I realized that it was quite natural.
They were accustomed from birth to being handled and petted, to being fed and
harnessed. They had lived always with the close and constant presence of man.
The true miracle came later, when I realized that they recognized affection,
and that they were able to return it in full measure. Hui had selected and haltered one of the other
mares, all the time lecturing me and displaying his learning and experience in
matters equine. I was in such a euphoric mood that for once his bumptiousness
did not annoy me. 'Very well,' he said at last, 'we will mount up
now.' And to my utter astonishment he placed both hands on his mare's back,
drew himself up and flung one leg over her, to sit astride her back. I gawked
at him in disbelief, expecting the mare to react violently; $o rear up and dash
Hui to earth, or, at the very least, to seize his naked leg in those powerful
white teeth and drag him from his perch. She did none of these things, but
stood quietly and subserviently. 'Hi up, my darling!' he called to her, and dug his
heels into her ribs. The mare started forward obediently; and when he urged her
on again she broke into a trot and then a gallop. Hui guided her effortlessly
in a manner that was not then apparent to me. Horse and rider traced out
elegant patterns of movement across the field, and then circled back to where I
stood. 'Come up, Taita. Try a gallop!' I could see that he
was expecting me to refuse, and it was that which made me overcome my reluctance.
I would not allow the little whip-persnapper to have the better of me. My first attempt at mounting up was unsuccessful,
but the mare stood stoically, and Hui laughed. 'She has a great deal to teach
you. You should call the poor animal Patience.' I did not see the humour of it
then, but the name stuck and the mare was Patience from then onwards. 'Pull yourself higher before you swing your leg
over, and be careful not to trap your balls under you when you come down,' Hui
counselled, and then howled with laughter. 'And that's a piece of advice that
you need not worry about. My guess is that you would love still to have a pair
of those to sit on!' All the warm feelings I was beginning to have
towards Hui cooled again at that sally, and I threw myself on to the mare's
back and clung with both hands around her neck, in fear of broken limbs and
cracked skull. 'Sit up straight!' Hui began my instruction, and
Patience assisted me with her sweet and forgiving nature. I surprised myself by thinking of these creatures
in human terms, but over the following days as we rode south towards Thebes, I
discovered that they could be stupid or clever, suspicious or trusting, dour or
mischievous, friendly or aloof, brave or timid, nervous or phlegmatic,
long-suffering or impatient, surprising or predictable—in short, as close to
man in temperament as any creature that walks on four legs. The more I learned
about them, the more I wanted to learn. The longer I spent working with them,
the more I grew to love them. I rode ahead on Patience, her foal at heel. The
herd trailed after us compliantly, all three hundred and sixteen of them. Hui
brought up the rear to sweep up any stragglers. With each league we covered, I
became more confident and proficient upon Patience's back, and the rapport
between us became firmer. The mare became an extension of my own body, but so
much swifter and stronger than my own feeble limbs. It felt so natural and
right to be astride that broad and sturdy back that I was amazed that so few
others were willing to share the experience with me. Perhaps it was not only the terror that had struck
them so devastatingly on the plain of Abnub, but also the words and attitude of
Tanus, Lord Harrab that affected the regiments of our army. Whatever the
reason, I could find no Egyptian who would mount upon the back of a horse,
except Hui and, very much later, Prince Memnon. Of course, they learned to
husband and breed the horse and care for him. Under my tutelage they became
dexterous and dashing charioteers, but I never saw a man of them mounted on
horseback, save only myself and Hui and the prince. When the chariots that I
would design with their light, spoked wheels swept all before them, and made
Egypt the master of this creation, Tanus never followed our example, and I
never heard him express a kind sentiment towards those willing and brave
animals who dragged him into battle. Even in later years, when the horse was commonplace
through all our realm, it was considered somehow indecent and obscene to mount
them. When the three of us rode past astride, many of the common people spat on
the ground three times and made the sign against the evil eye. ALL THAT WAS IN THE FUTURE AS I LED my herd up the
west bank of the river towards Thebes, and we arrived to the gratitude of my
mistress, and to a gruff and unenthusiastic welcome from the commander-in-chief
of the Egyptian armies. 'Just keep those evil brutes out of my sight,'
Tanus told me. He still had norforgiven me for going above him to my mistress. In fairness to him, he had more than enough excuse
for his evil temper. The safety of the state and our nation were in the direst
jeopardy. There had never been a time in our history when our civilization was
so threatened by the barbarian. Already Asyut was lost, and the whole east bank of
the river as far as Dendera. Completely undaunted and undeterred by the naval
reverse that Tanus had inflicted upon him, King Salitis with his chariots had
swept on and surrounded the walled city of Thebes. Those walls should have withstood siege for a
decade, but that reckoned without the baleful presence of Lord Intef in the
camp of the enemy. It transpired that while still grand vizier of the Upper
Kingdom, he had secretly ordered the construction of a concealed passage
beneath the city walls. Even I who knew most of his other secrets had never
suspected this, and Lord Intef had murdered the workmen who had carried out
this construction, so that he alone was aware of its existence. I have no idea
why he should have constructed the tunnel in the first place, except that his
devious mind was much given towards such devices. The palace was riddled with
trap-doors and concealed corridors, like the warren of a rabbit or the lair of
a desert fox. When Lord Intef disclosed its existence to him,
King Salitis sent a small party of his best men through the secret passage, and
once within the walls, they stormed the unsuspecting Egyptian guards on the
main gate, slaughtered them and threw the gates wide. The main Hyksos horde
poured into the city, and within days of the siege commencing, the city was
lost and half her inhabitants massacred. From the west bank where Tanus now had his
headquarters in the half-built Palace of Memnon, we could see the burnt and
blackened roofs of those buildings in the city across the river that the Hyksos
had put to the torch. Each day we watched the dust-clouds of their chariots, as
they raced up and down the far bank, and the glint of their spearheads at the
shoulder-slope, as they prepared for the battle that all of us knew was coming. With his sadly depleted fleet, Tanus had thus far
managed to hold the river-line, and during my absence had beaten back another
attempt by the Hyksos to get across the Nile in strength. However, our defences
were thinly spread, for we had to guard a great sweep of the river, while the
Hyksos could make a crossing at any point they chose. We learned from our spies
on the east bank that they had commandeered every single craft they could lay
hands on, from barge to skiff. They had captured many of our boatmakers, and
had them at work in the boatyards of Thebes. Of course, we could be sure that
Lord Intef would give them pertinent advice in all these matters, for he must
have been every bit as eager as the barbarian Salitis to seize Pharaoh's
treasure. The crews of our galleys stood to arms every watch
of the day and night, and Tanus only slept when he could, which was not often.
Neither my mistress nor I saw much of him, and when we did, he was haggard and
short-tempered. Every night saw the arrival on the west bank of
many hundreds of refugees. Of both sexes and all ages, they crossed the Nile in
an odd assortment of rafts and small craft. Many of the stronger ones even swam
the wide stretch of water. All of them were desperate to escape the Hyksos
terror. They brought us horror-stories of rapine and plunder, but also detailed
and up-to-date news of Hyksos movements. Of course we welcomed these people, they were
countrymen and relatives, but their numbers strained our resources. Our main
granaries had all been in Thebes, and most of the herds of cattle and sheep had
fallen into the hands of the enemy. Queen Lostris gave me the responsibility of
gathering up all the supplies of grain and the herds on the west bank. I drew
up lists and rosters for rationing our supplies of meat and grain. Fortunately,
the date palms were in full bearing, and the supply of fish from the river was
inexhaustible. The Hyksos could never starve us out. My mistress had also appointed me Master of the Royal
Horse. There was no intense competition for this appointment, particularly as
no pay or privileges were attached to it. I made Hui my deputy, and he managed,
by means of bribes, threats and blackmail, to recruit a hundred grooms to help
him care for our little herd. Later we would train them as our first
chariot-drivers. It was no hardship for me to make time every day to
visit our makeshift stables in the necropolis. The mare Patience always came
running to greet me, and I carried corn-cakes for her and her foal. Often I was
able to sneak Prince Mem-non away from his mother and his nurses and carry him
into the stables on my shoulders. He squealed with excitement as soon as he saw
the horses. I held the prince on my lap as Patience and I
galloped along the riverbank, and he made clucking noises and rocked his little
backside, imitating the way in which I urged Patience to a harder gallop. I
made certain that the route we followed on these rides would never cross Tanus'
path. He had still not forgiven me, and if he had seen his son on the back of a
cursed horse, I knew that I would have been in physical danger. I also spent a great deal of my time in the armoury
workshop of Pharaoh's funerary temple, where I had the assistance of some of
the finest craftsmen in the world to help me build my first chariot. It was
here, while working on the design of these vehicles, that I conceived devices
that were to become our first line of defence against the Hyksos chariots.
These were simply long wooden staves sharpened at both ends, and with the
points fire-hardened. Each of our infantrymen would carry ten of these in a
bundle upon his back. At the approach of a squadron of cavalry, the staves were
planted in the earth at an angle, with the points at the level of the horses'
chests. Our men took up their positions behind this barrier of wicked spears,
and fired their arrows over them. When I demonstrated these to Tanus, he threw his
arm around my shoulders for the first time since our quarrel over the horses,
and said, 'Well, at least you have not turned senile on me yet,' and I knew
that I had been at least partially forgiven. The ground that I had gained with him here was
almost completely lost over the affair of the Taita chariot. My workmen and I at last completed the first
chariot. The dashboard and sides were of split bamboo, woven into bas-ketwork.
The axle was of acacia wood. The hubs were of hand-forged bronze, greased with
mutton fat, and the spoked wheels were bound with bronze rims. It was so light
that two charioteers could lift it between them, and carry it over broken
ground where the horses could not pull it. Even I realized that it was a
masterpiece, and the workmen called it the Taita chariot. I did not object to
the name. Hui and I harnessed up two of our best horses,
Patience and Blade, and took the Taita chariot for its first gallop. It took us
some time to learn how to control the rig, but we learned swiftly, and the
horses were bred to this and showed us the way. In the end, we were flying
across the ground, and hurtling through tight turns at full gallop. When we drove back into the stables, flushed with
excitement and jubilant with our achievement, both of us were convinced that our
chariot was swifter and handier than any that the Hyksos could send against us.
We tested and modified this creation of mine for ten full days, working by
lamplight in the armoury until the late watches of every night, before I was
satisfied that I could show it to Tanus. Tanus came to the stables with surly reluctance,
and balked at climbing up into the cockpit of the chariot behind me. 'I trust this contraption of yours as much as I
trust those cursed brutes who tow it,' he grumbled, but I was persuasive, and
at last he stepped up gingerly on to the footplate and we were off. At first I kept the horses to an easy trot, until I
felt him relaxing and, despite himself, beginning to enjoy the exhilarating
ride. Then I pushed them into a canter. 'See the speed of it. You can be upon
the enemy before he knows you are there,' I exulted. Tanus laughed for the first time, and I was
encouraged. 'With your ships you rule the river. With this chariot you rule the
land. Between the two, you rule the world. Nothing can stand against you.' I
was careful not to disparage his beloved ships, or to make unfavourable
comparisons. 'Is this your best speed?' he shouted in the wind
and the pounding of hooves. 'With a fair wind, Breath of Horus is faster
than this.' Which was a lie and a challenge. 'Hold on to the sides and take a deep breath,' I
warned him. 'I am going to take you up where the eagles fly,' and I let
Patience and Blade go. No man has ever travelled faster. The wind seared
our eyes, and the tears pouring from them were blown back into our hair. 'Sweet breath of Isis!' Tanus shouted with
excitement. "This is—' I never knew what he thought this was. Tanus never
finished his sentence, for at that instant our off-wheel hit a rock and the rim
exploded. The chariot capsized and somersaulted, and both
Tanus and I were thrown high and clear. I struck the hard earth with a force
that should have crippled me, but I was so concerned with how Tanus would be
affected by this little mishap, and how my dreams and plans would be dashed,
that I felt no pain. I bounded to my feet and saw Tanus crawl to his
bleeding knees twenty paces beyond me. He was coated heavily with dust and
seemed to have lost the skin from one half of his face. He tried to maintain
his dignity as he pushed himself upright and staggered back to the wrecked
chariot, but he was limping heavily. He stood for a long minute gazing down at the
shattered ruins of my creation, and then abruptly he let out a roar like a wounded
bull, and launched such a mighty kick at it that it flipped over again, as
though it were a child's toy. He turned on his heel without even a glance in my
direction and limped away. I did not see him again for a week, and when we did
meet, neither of us mentioned the chariot. I think that might have been the end of the matter,
and we would never have assembled our first chariot squadron, if it had not
been for the fact that the stubbornness of my mistress's pride surpassed even
that of her lover. She had given me the original order, and would not now
retract it. When Tanus tried to inveigle her into doing so, he merely made my
position stronger. Hui and I rebuilt the chariot within three days, and another
identical to it. By the time the embalmers in the funerary chapel
had completed the ritual seventy days of royal mummification, we had our first
squadron of fifty chariots, and had trained drivers for them. SINCE WE HAD RETURNED TO THE PALACE of Memnon from
our defeat at the battle of Abnub, my mistress had been occupied with the
business of state thrust upon her by the regency. Long hours were spent with
her ministers and advisers. It was now that the initial training which I had
given her in the Palace of Elephantine was to bear fruit. I had taught her to
pick her way unerringly through the labyrinth of power and influence/She was
just twenty-one years of age, but she was a queen, and ruled like one. Very occasionally she encountered a problem which
particularly vexed or perplexed her. Then she sent for me. I would drop my work
in the armoury or the stables or in the small scribery that she had set aside
for me just down the corridor from her audience chamber, and I would rush to
her side. On occasion I spent days sitting below her throne
and steering her through some troublesome decisions. Once again, my ability to
read the lips of men without hearing their words stood us in good stead. Some
nobleman at the back of the audience never realized, as he plotted or schemed
with his neighbour, that I was relaying his exact words to my mistress. She
swiftly acquired a reputation of sagacity and prescience. Neither of us enjoyed
much rest during these dark and worrisome days. Even though our days were full, our nights were
long. Those interminable councils of war and of state lasted well past
midnight. No sooner was one crisis averted, than another loomed before us. Each
day the Hyksos threatened us more directly, and Tanus' hold on the river-line
weakened. Slowly, a sense of doom and despair permeated all
of us. Men smiled little and never laughed out loud. Even the play of the
children was muted and subdued. We had only to look across the river, and the
enemy was there, gathering himself, growing stronger each day. After seventy days, the mummification of Pharaoh
was completed. My early efforts in preserving the king's body had been highly
successful, and the grand master of the guild of embalmers had commended me in
the presence of my mistress. He had found no evidence of decay when he removed
the king's corpse from the olive jar, and even his liver, which is the part
most subject to mortification, was well preserved. Once the king had been laid out on the diorite slab
in his mortuary chapel, the grand master had inserted the spoon up his nostril
and scooped out the curdled contents of his skull which the pickle had hardened
to the consistency of cheese. Then, still in the foetal position, the king was
placed in the bath of natron salt with only his head left uncovered by the
harsh fluid. When he was removed from the bath thirty days later, all the fatty
tissue had dissolved, and the outer layers of the skin had peeled off, except
for that of the head. They laid him upon the mottled stone slab once
again and straightened him into an extended position. He was wiped and dried,
and his empty stomach was filled with linen pads soaked in resins and wax and
then sutured closed. Meanwhile, his internal organs were desiccated and placed
in their milk-coloured alabaster Canopic jars, which were then sealed. For the remaining forty days, the body of the king
was allowed to dry out thoroughly. The doors of the chapel had been aligned
with the direction of the warm, dry prevailing winds, so that they blew over
the funeral slab. By the end of the ritual period of seventy days, Pharaoh's
body was as dry as a stick of firewood. His nails, which had been removed before he was
soaked in the natron bath, were replaced and fixed in position on his fingers
and toes with fine threads of gold wire. The first layer of pure white linen bandages
was wound into place around his body, leaving his head and neck exposed. The
binding was meticulous and intricate, with the bandages crossing and
criss-crossing each other in elaborate patterns. Under the bindings were laid
charms and amulets of gold and precious stones. The bandages were then soaked
with lacquer and resins that dried to a stony hardness. Now it was time for the ceremony of
Opening-the-Mouth, which traditionally was performed by the dead pharaoh's next
of kin. Memnon was too young to take this part, so his regent was called in his
stead. My mistress and I went to the chapel together in
the gloom of dawn, and we were witnesses as the linen sheet that covered the
king was drawn aside. Pharaoh's head was miraculously preserved. His eyes were
closed and his expression was serene. The embalmers had rouged and painted his
face, and he looked better in death than he had in life. While the high priest of Ammon-Ra and the grand
master of the guild of embalmers prepared the instruments for the ceremony, we
sang the Incantation against Dying for the Second Time. He is the reflection and not the mirror. He is the music and not the lyre. He is the stone and not the chisel that forms it. He will live for ever. He will not die a second time. Then the high priest handed my mistress the golden
spoon and led her by the hand to the funeral slab. Queen Lostris stooped over the body of Pharaoh and
laid the spoon of life upon his painted lips. I open thy lips that thou
mayest speak once more, I open thy nostrils that
thou mayest breathe. She intoned the words and then touched his eyelids
with the spoon. I open thy eyes that thou
mayest behold once more the glory of this world,
and the nether-world of the gods where you shall dwell from
this day forward. She touched the spoon to his bandaged chest. I quicken your heart, so that you may live for
ever. You shall not die a second time. You shall live for ever! Then we waited while the embalmers bound up
Pharaoh's head in the neat swathes of bandages and painted them with resin.
They moulded the resin-wet bandages to the shape of his face beneath them.
Finally, they placed over his blind bandaged face the first of the four funeral
masks. This was the same funeral mask that we had watched
being fashioned fron\ pure gold. While he was still alive, Pharaoh had posed
for the sculptor, so the mask was amazingly lifelike. The eyes of shining
rock-crystal and obsidian seemed to gaze upon me with all the humanity that the
man beneath the mask had once possessed. The cobra head of the uraeus rose from
the noble brow, regal and mystical. Then the wrapped mummy was placed in the golden
inner coffin, which was sealed, and this went into the second golden coffin
with another death-mask embossed upon the lid. Half the treasure recovered from
Lord Intef's hoard had gone to make up that enormous weight of precious metal
and jewels. There were seven coffins in all, including the
massive stone sarcophagus standing upon the golden sledge, which waited ready
to carry Pharaoh along the causeway to his tomb in the gaunt hills. But my
mistress refused to give her sanction for this to happen. 'I have given my sacred vow. I cannot place my
husband in a tomb that may be plundered by the Hyksos barbarians. Pharaoh will lie here until I am able to make good
my promise to him. I will find a secure tomb in which he may lie through
eternity. I have given my word that no one will disturb his rest.' THE WISDOM OF QUEEN LOSTRIS' DECISION to delay the
entombment was proved three nights later. The Hyksos made a determined effort
to cross the river, and Tanus barely succeeded in turning them back. They made
the attempt on an unguarded stretch of the river two miles north of Esna. They
swam their horses across in a mass, and then followed with an armada of small
boats which they had carried overland from Thebes in order to conceal their
intentions from us. They actually succeeded in making a beachhead on
the west bank before Tanus could rush his galleys to the spot, but he arrived
before they could unload their chariots and harness the horses to them. Tanus
destroyed their boats with the chariots still on board, and he then had almost
three thousand Hyksos stranded on our side of the river. Their horses scattered
and bolted away into the night when Tanus' troops made their first charge. Without their chariots the Hyksos were on even
terms with our troops, but they had no means of escape and they fought with
grim determination. In numbers they were almost evenly matched, for Tanus had
managed to bring up only one full regiment. The rest of his army was thinly
spread along the west bank. The fighting was bloody and ferocious, confused by
the darkness which was lit only by the burning vessels that Tanus had fired on
the beach. It was only by the wildest coincidence, or by
another nudge from the gods, that Hui and I had brought our little squadron of
fifty chariots and fledgling charioteers to Esna on training manoeuvres. In
truth, we had driven these twenty miles from Thebes principally to escape from
Tanus' disapproval and interference. We were encamped in the sacred grove of tamarind
trees beside the temple of Horus at Esna. I was exhausted after a long day of
galloping and manoeuvring at high speed. On return to our encampment, Hui had
produced a jar of remarkably palatable wine, and I had been somewhat
intemperate in my sampling of it. I was dead asleep when Hui staggered into my
tent and shook me awake. 'There are fires burning on the bank of the river
downstream,' he told me, 'and when the wind shifts, you can hear the sound of
cheering, and a little while ago I thought I heard many voices singing the
battle hymn of the Blues. I think there is a fight going on down there.' I was as unsteady on my feet as he was, and
reckless with wine, as I shouted for him to rouse the camp and harness the
horses. We were all still novices, and it was almost dawn by the time we had
caught the horses and put them in the traces. In the chilly drift of the river
mist and the gloomy shiver of dawn, we trotted along the north road in column
of route, two chariots abreast. I was driving the lead chariot, while Hui had
command of the rear-guard. Our fifty chariots had been reduced to thirty by the
previous day's exercises, for I had not yet succeeded in perfecting my spoked
wheels. They had an alarming tendency to fly to pieces when driven at speed,
and almosMialf my force was out of action. The passage of the wind over my bare chest made me
shiver again, and counteracted the bravado of the wine. I was beginning to hope
that Hui had been mistaken, when suddenly from far ahead there came that
unmistakable chorus of shouting and cheering, and the clank and clash of bronze
on bronze that could mean only one thing. Once you have heard them, the sounds
of battle are not readily forgotten or mistaken. The rough farmer's track we
were following along the river-bank took a turn to the left. As we came through
it, the field lay open before us. The sun was just above the horizon, and it had
turned the surface of the river into a shimmering sheet of beaten copper that
was painful to the eye. The ships of Tanus' squadron lay just off-shore,
crowding in close to, in an attempt to bring the archers on the decks in range
of the Hyksos, and to cut off any retreat across the river. The stranded Hyksos regiment was making a stand in
the centre of a field of knee-high green corn. They had formed a circle, facing
outwards, shoulder to shoulder, with their shields locked together and their
spears thrust forward. As we came into view, they had just repulsed another
attempt by Tanus' troops to break their circle. The Egyptian regiment was
pulling back to regroup, leaving their dead and wounded scattered around the
periphery of the enemy circle. I am no soldier, although I have written scrolls on
the conduct of war. I had accepted the rank of Commander of the Royal Horse,
thrust upon me by my mistress, with the deepest reluctance. I had intended
simply to perfect my chariot, train the first squadron, and then hand it over
to Hui or some other person more suited to the warlike professions. I was cold and still half-drunk as I heard my voice
giving the order to deploy in arrow-head formation. It was the evolution that
we had practised the previous day, and the chariots that followed mine flared
out on either side with reasonable proficiency. I was acutely aware of the
sound of hooves in the soft earth and the creak of the chariot harness, the
squeal of the wheels turning on their metal-lined hubs, and the rattle of
javelins as my charioteers drew their darts from the quivers. I looked left and
right, reviewing our little squadron drawn up in the shape of an arrow-head
with my chariot at the apex. It was a formation I had copied from the Hyksos. I
drew a deep breath. 'Squadron will advance!' I screamed, and my voice
shrilled with fear. 'At the gallop, forward!' I had only to lift my left hand that held the
traces, and Patience and Blade bounded forward. I was almost thrown over
backwards, but I grabbed at the dashboard with my free hand, and we went
straight at the Hyksos circle. Beneath me the chariot leaped and jolted over the
lumpy ploughed earth, and I looked over the plunging hindquarters of my horses
and saw the wall of Hyksos shields, glittering and impenetrable in the early
sunlight, drawing closer with every stride we took. On either side of me, men were howling and cheering
to hide their terror, and I howled with them, like a pariah dog at full moon.
The horses were snorting and neighing, and suddenly Patience lifted the long
plume of her tail and began to fart in rhythm and in time to her own stride.
This struck me as immoderately funny. My howls of terror turned to screams of
laughter. The helmet that I had borrowed from Hui was too large for me. It
bounced off my head and the wind flung my hair out behind me. Patience and Blade were the fastest pair in the
squadron, and our chariot pulled ahead of the rest of the formation. I tried to
slow our charge by hauling back on the traces, but Patience would have none of
it. Her glee was evident, she was as excited as any of us, and she straightened
her neck and ran away with me. We tore through the retiring lines of Egyptian
infantry coming back from the failed assault on the Hyksos circle, and they
scattered out of our path and gawked at us in astonishment. 'Come on!' I howled with laughter. 'We will show
you the way!' They turned and followed us back towards the enemy at the run.
Behind me, I heard the trumpeters sounding the charge, and the braying horns
seemed to spur our horses. Out on my right I saw Tanus' battle standard waving,
and recognized his crested helmet standing taller than the other men around
him. 'What do you think of my cursed brutes now?' I
yelled at him, as we tore pa§t, and Patience farted again, bringing on fresh
gales of my nervous laughter. The chariot on my left was running almost level
with me, and then its near-side wheel burst under the strain and it went flying
end over end, throwing the charioteers, and bringing the horses down screaming.
The rest of us tore on without a check. . The first rank of the enemy was now so close that I
could see their eyes staring at me over the top edge of their shields. Their
arrows hissed around my ears. I could make out clearly the figures of beasts
and demons embossed on their tall metal helmets, see the beads of sweat
glittering in their plaited and beribboned beards, hear their chanted war-cry—
and then we were into them. My horses leaped together into the' barrier of
shields and it shattered before the weight and fury of our charge. I saw a man
tossed head-high, and heard his bones crackle like kindling in the fire. On the
footplate behind me, my javel-ineer was making deadly practice. I had chosen
him as the best from amongst all my recruits, and he proved my choice now, as
he stood firm and hurled his darts down into the enemy. In succession the following chariots tore into the
gap' we had opened, and we hardly checked as we raced through, breaking out
through the far side of the Hyksos circle, then wheeling in pods of three and
coming back at them. Tanus seized the moment and threw his infantry into
the breach that we had torn open. The Hyksos formation broke up into knots of
struggling men. These in turn disintegrated, and the Hyksos panicked and ran
for the river. The moment they came within range, the archers on the decks of
our galleys sent clouds of arrows over them. Ahead of me there was an isolated pocket of Hyksos
warriors still fighting back-to-back, and holding off our men. I swerved the
chariot and drove at them in full gallop. Before I reached them, my right wheel
burst asunder, the light carapace of the chariot flipped over, and I soared
free and then, with a gut-tearing lurch, fell back to earth. My head struck
first, and my eyes filled with stars and meteors of bright light. Then there
was only darkness. Iwoke again under the awning on the deck of Tanus'
flagship. I found myself lying on a sheepskin mattress, with Tanus leaning over
me. As soon as he saw that I was conscious, he masked the expression of concern
and worry that had twisted his features. 'You crazy old fool.' He forced a grin at me.
'What, in the name of Horus, were you laughing about?' I tried to sit up, but my head ached abominably and
I groaned, then clutched his arm as it all came back to me. 'Tanus, the enemy horses that swam across last
night—I must have them.' 'Don't worry that battered head of yours'. I have
already sent Hui to gather them up,' he assured me. 'If I am to have five
hundred of those contraptions of yours for my new chariot division, I will need
a thousand of those cursed brutes to pull them. However, those new-fangled
wheels of yours ' are more dangerous than a regiment of Hyksos. I will not ride
with you again until you do something about them.' For a moment it did not penetrate my aching skull,
then I realized that it had happened. Tanus had quashed his pride, and given in
to me. My orphan chariot squadron was at last to be part of the standing army,
and he would give me the men and gold to build five hundred more. He would even
ride with me again, if only I could fix my wheels. But what truly filled me with joy was that he had
forgiven me at last, and we were friends once more. THE SUCCESS OF MY CHARIOTS AT ESNA, and the feeling
of confidence that it instilled in us all, were short-lived. Secretly, I had
expected and dreaded what would happen next. It was the enemy's logical move,
and both Salitis and Lord Intef should have made it much earlier. We knew that
when he swept through the Lower Kingdom, Salitis had captured most of the fleet
of the red pretender intact. Those ships were lying abandoned in the docks of
Memphis and Tanis in the Delta. However, there must be droves of renegade
Egyptians from the usurper's navy available to Salitis, and even if that were
not the case, it would certainly be possible to recruit enough mercenary Syrian
sailors in Gaza and Joppa, and the other ports along the eastern coast of the
great sea, to man several hundred of these galleys and transports. I had realized that this must happen, but I had
refrained from warning either Tanus or my mistress of the likelihood, for I did
not wish to add to the feeling of gloom, and heighten the despondency of our
people. I had searched my heart for a counter to this move when Salitis and
Intef made it, but there was none that I could think of. Therefore, since I
could do nothing to allay these fears, I thought it best to keep them to
myself. When it finally happened, and our spies on the east
side of the river opposite Asyut warned us of the approach of this fleet from
the Delta, Tanus rushed his own ships northwards to meet them. His fleet was
superior in every way to the one which Salitis and Intef had assembled, but the
battle they fought lasted for almost a week before Tanus destroyed or drove
them back into the Delta. However, Salitis had brought his transports up
behind the screen of fighting galleys, and while the river battle still raged,
he was able to embark almost two full regiments of horse and chariot, and ferry
them intact to our side of the river, without our galleys being able to reach
them. These regiments comprised nearly three hundred of
Salitis' fast war chariots, his elite divisions which he led himself. At last
he had turned our flank. There was nothing to stop him now, as his chariots
came bowling southwards along our side of the river. All our galleys could do
was to ny to keep pace with the dust-cloud he threw up, as he raced for the
funerary temple of Mamose and all its treasures. QUEEN LOSTRIS CALLED HER WAR COUNCIL when the news
of the Hyksos crossing reached us in the Palace of Memnon. She addressed her
first question to Tanus. 'Now that he is across the river, can you check the
barbarian?' 'I can slow him down, perhaps,' he replied frankly. 'We have
learned a great deal about him. We can wait for him behind walls of stone, or
behind barriers of the sharp staves that Taita has equipped us with. But
Salitis need not give battle. His chariots are so fast that he can swing around
our positions as he did at Asyut. No, I cannot stop him.' Queen Lostris looked at me. 'Taita, what about your
chariots? Can they not give battle to the Hyksos?' 'Your Majesty, I have forty chariots that I can
send in to meet him. He has three hundred. My chariots are swifter than those
of Salitis, but my men cannot match his in skill and training. There is also
the matter of the wheels. I have not perfected them. Salitis will overwhelm and
destroy us very easily. If I am given the time and the material, I can build new
and better chariots with wheels that do not burst, but I cannot replace the
horses. We dare not risk the horses. They are our only hope for eventual
victory.' While we thus debated, another messenger arrived,
this time from the south. He had fled to us on the current and the wind, so his
news was only a day old. Tanus ordered him into the council chamber, and the
messenger fell to his knees before Queen Lostris. 'Speak, fellow,' Tanus invited him. 'What do you
have to tell us?' The messenger stuttered in fear of his life,
'Divine Majesty, while our fleet was busy at Asyut, the barbarian made another
crossing at Esna. They swam the horses over as they did before, but this time
there were none of our galleys ready to turn back their boats. Two Hyksos
regiments are across. Their horses are in the traces and they are coming on a
cloud of dust, swiftly as the flight of the swallow. They will be here in three
days.' None of us spoke until Tanus had sent the man away
with orders that he be fed and cared for. The messenger, who had expected to be
killed, kissed Queen Lostris' sandals. When we were alone, Tanus said softly, 'Salitis has
four regiments across the river. Six hundred chariots. It is over.' 'No!' my mistress's voice shook with the force of
her denial. "The gods cannot desert this very Egypt now. Our civilization
cannot perish. We have too much to give to the world.' 'I can fight on, of course,' Tanus agreed. 'But in
the end it will all be the same. We cannot prevail against their chariots.' My mistress turned back to me. 'Taita, I have not
asked you before, because I know how dearly it costs you. But I must ask you
now before I make the final decision. I ask you to work the Mazes of Ammon-Ra
for me. I must know what the gods require of us.' I bowed my head in acquiescence, and whispered, 'I
will fetch my chest.' THE SITE THAT I CHOSE FOR THE DIVINATION was the
inner sanctuary of the shrine to Horus in the half-completed Palace of Memnon.
The shrine had not yet been dedicated to the god, and his image had not yet
been set up, but I was certain that Horus had already cast his benevolent
influence over the building. My mistress sat before me with Tanus at her side,
and watched in fascination as I drank the witches' potion to open the eyes of
my soul, my Ka, the little bird-like creature that lives in the heart of every
one of us, and which is our alter ego. I laid the ivory Mazes before them and asked both
Queen Lostris and Tanus to stroke and handle them, to endow them with their
spirit and the spirit of the nation that they represented, this very Egypt. As
I watched them divide the stacks of ivory counters, I felt the drug in my blood
grow stronger, and the beat of my heart slowed as the little death crept over
me. I took up the two remaining Mazes from the last
stack, and I held them to my breast. They began to grow hot against my skin,
and my instinct was to draw back from the darkness that I felt coming over me.
Instead, I surrendered to it and let it carry me away. I heard my mistress's voice, as though from a great
distance. 'What will become of the double crown? How can we resist the
barbarian?' The visions began to form before my eyes, and I was
carried up into the days that were still to come, and I saw events that had not
yet come to pass. The morning sunlight was streaming through the
aperture in the roof and striking the altar of Horus, when at last I returned
from the far journey of the Mazes. I was shaken and nauseated with the effect
of the hallucinatory drug, giddy and trembling with the memories of the strange
sights that I had seen. My mistress and Tanus had stayed with me during the
long night. Their anxious faces were the first things that I saw on my return,
but they were still so distorted and wavering that I thought they were part of
the vision. 'Taita, are you all right? Speak to us. Tell us
what you saw.' My mistress was concerned. She could not hide the guilt she felt
at having forced me to enter the Mazes of Ammon-Ra once more. "There was a serpent.' My voice still echoed strangely
in my own ears, as though I stood apart. 'A great green serpent that crawled
through the desert.' I saw the puzzled expression on their faces, but I
had not yet considered the meaning of it all myself, so I could give them no
guidance. 'I am thirsty,' I whispered. 'My throat is dry and
my tongue like a stone covered with moss.' Tanus fetched a jar of wine and poured it into the
bowl for me, and I drank greedily. Tell us of the serpent,' my mistress demanded, as
soon as I lowered the bowl. 'There was no end to its sinuous body, and it
shimmered green in the sunlight. It crawled through a strange land, in which
lived tall naked men and strange and wonderful beasts.' 'Could you see the head or the tail of the
serpent?' my mistress asked, and I shook my head. 'Where were you? Where did you stand?' she
insisted. I had forgotten how keenly she enjoyed my visions, and what pleasure
she took in interpreting them. 'I was riding upon the back of the serpent,' I
answered. 'But I was not alone.' 'Who was with you?' 'You were at my side, mistress, and Memnon with
you. Tanus was on my other hand, and the serpent carried us all.' "The Nile! The serpent was the river,' she
cried triumphantly. 'You foresaw voyage that we were making upon the river.' 'Which way?' Tanus demanded. He was as rapt as she
was. 'Which way did the river run?' I made an effort to recall every detail. 'I saw the
sun rise on my left hand.' 'South!' he cried. 'Into Africa,' said my mistress. 'At last I saw the heads of the serpent ahead of
us. The body of the serpent was bifurcated, and on each branch was a head.' 'Does the Nile have two branches?' my mistress
wondered aloud. 'Or is there some deeper meaning to the vision?' 'Let us hear the rest of what Taita has to tell
us,' Tanus stopped her speculation. 'Continue, old friend.' 'Then I saw the goddess,' I went on. 'She sat upon
a high mountain. Both the heads of the serpent worshipped her.' My mistress could not restrain herself. 'Which of the
goddesses did you see? Oh, tell me quickly who it was.' 'She had the bearded head of a man but the breasts
and the pudenda of a woman. From her vagina she spurted out two great streams
of water into the open mouths of the double-headed serpent.' 'It is the goddess Hapi, the river god,' Queen
Lostris whispered. 'She generates the river within herself, and pours it out to
flow through the world.' 'What else did the vision show you?' Tanus
demanded. "The goddess smiled at us, and her face shone
with love and benevolence. She spoke in a voice'that was the sound of the wind
and the sea. The sound of thunder on the peaks of far-away mountains.' 'What did she say to us?' Queen Lostris asked in
awe. 'She said, "Let my child come to me. I will
make her strong so that she will prevail and my people will not perish in the
face of the barbarian." * I repeated the words that still beat like a drum
in my head. 'I am the child of the river goddess,' said my
mistress simply. 'At birth I was dedicated to her. Now she summons me, and I
must go to the place where she dwells at the end of the Nile.' 'This is the same voyage that Taita and I
contemplated once before,' Tanus mused. 'And now the goddess commands it. We
cannot refuse her.' 'Yes, we must go, but we will come back,' my
mistress vowed. 'This is my land, this very Egypt. This is my city, this
beautiful Thebes of the hundred gates. I cannot leave them for ever. I will
return to Thebes. This I swear and I call upon the goddess Hapi to witness my
oath. We shall return!' THE DECISION TO FLY TO THE SOUTH, UP above the
cataracts into the wild and unexplored land beyond, was one that Tanus and I
had made once before. The first time had been to escape the wrath and vengeance
of Pharaoh. Now we were flying from an even more merciless foe. It was almost
as though the gods were determined that we should undertake this voyage, and
that they would not be denied. There was little time for us to make our
preparations for such a fateful departure. The Hyksos were coming down on us
from two directions, and our pickets reported that their cohorts would be in
view from the roof of the Palace of Memnon within three days at the very
latest. Tanus placed Kratas in charge of half his available
force and sent him to meet King Salitis who was driving hard from Asyut in the
north and was likely to be the first column to reach the necropolis and the
palace. Kratas had orders to fight a running battle. Using the staves and
defending every fortified position, he was to delay Salitis as long as was
possible, without risking being cut off or overwhelmed. When he could hold them
no longer, he was to evacuate his men on to the galleys. Tanus himself took the other half of our army and
moved south to fight another delaying battle against the Hyksos division coming
at us from Esna. While they were thus engaged, my mistress was to
embark our people and all their possessions aboard the remaining ships of our
fleet. My mistress delegated this duty to Lord Merkeset, but of course she made
me his assistant. Lord Merkeset was not «nly well into his dotage, but had
recently taken to himself a sixteen-year-old wife. He was not, therefore, of
much use either to himself or to me. The entire planning and execution of the
evacuation fell squarely on my shoulders. However, before I could turn my mind to this, I had
to take care of my horses. Even at this early stage I realized with stark
clarity that they were the key to our survival as a, nation and a civilized
people. With those animals that we had captured at Esna, we now had several
thousand in our herd. I split this herd into four parts so that they could more
readily find grazing on the march. Further, the smaller herds would throw up
less dust, and it would be easier for them to avoid the Hyksos scouts. I sent Hui and my charioteers and grooms south with
these herds towards Elephantine, with orders to avoid the river-bank down which
the Hyksos chariots were advancing and to keep inland, closer to the edge of
the desert. Once the horses were despatched, I could turn my
attention to the humans. I realized that we were limited by the number of ships
available as to how many of our people were able to accompany us on the long
voyage. I was certain that almost every Egyptian wanted to be part of the
exodus. The cruelty and ferocity of the Hyksos were evident in every city they
burned and in every atrocity that they inflicted on our people. All the unknown
dangers of the African wilderness were preferable to these bloodthirsty monsters
who were racing down upon us in their chariots. In the end I calculated that we could accommodate
only twelve thousand souls aboard the escaping fleet, and I reported this to my
mistress. 'We will have to be ruthless in those we select and
those we leave behind,' I told her, but she would not listen to my advice. 'These are my people. I would give up my own place
rather than leave one of them to the Hyksos.' 'But, Majesty, what about the old and the decrepit?
The sick and the very young?' 'Every citizen will be given the choice of coming
with us. I will not leave a greybeard or a beggar, a day-old infant or a leper.
They are my people, and if they cannot go, then Prince Memnon and I will stay
with them.' Of course, she mentioned the prince to make doubly certain of her
victory over me. The ships would be gunwale-deep under this great
weight of humanity, but I had no choice. Still, I had some satisfaction in
first embarking all the most useful and creative citizens. I chose men from
every trade and profession, masons and weavers, coppersmiths and potters,
tanners and sail-makers, scribes and artists, shipbuilders and carpenters, all
of them leaders in their particular discipline. These I saw safely on board the
waiting transports. It gave me a particular pleasure to allocate the most
uncomfortable berths in the most squalid vessels to the priesthood and the law
scribes, those blood-sucking fleas on the healthy body of the state. When all of these were boarded, I allowed the
rabble to come swarming on to the wharf below the temple. As a result of my mistress's intransigence, I had
to be careful in choosing what cargo we would load. There would be no room for
idle fripperies. I gathered up the weapons and tools and the raw materials that
we would need to build up another fcivilization in the unknown lands. For the
rest of the cargo I tried in every way to reduce weight and bulk. For instance,
rather than grain and fruits, I loaded the seeds of every desirable plant in
clay jars sealed with pitch and wax. Every deben-weight of cargo that we loaded in our
holds meant that something else must be left behind. Our voyage might last ten
years or a lifetime. The road would be hard. We knew that the great cataracts
lay ahead of us. We dared not burden ourselves with anything but the most
essential, but then there remained my mistress's promise to Pharaoh. There was
barely room for the living—how much space could we afford to give over to the
dead? 'I gave my vow to the king as he lay dying,' my
mistress insisted. 'I cannot leave him here.' 'Your Majesty, I will find a secure hiding-place
for the king's body, an unmarked grave in the hills where no man will find him.
When we return to Thebes, we will exhume him, and give him the royal burial
that you promised him.' 'If I break my vow, the gods will desert us and our
voyage will be doomed. The, body of the king must go with us.' One glance at her expression warned me that there
would be no profit in further argument. We opened the massive granite
sarcophagus and lifted out the six inner coffins. Even these were so bulky that
it would have needed a galley to carry them alone. I made a decision without consulting Queen Lostris.
I had the workmen remove only the two innermost golden coffins. These we
covered with a thick linen canvas shroud which we stitched over them as
protection. The size and weight were thus reduced to acceptable proportions,
and we stowed these two canvas-covered coffins in the hold of the Breath of
Horus. The bulk of Pharaoh's treasure, all the gold and
silver and the precious stones, was packed into cedar-wood boxes. I ordered the
goldsmiths to strip the bullion from the discarded coffins and from the wooden
frame of the great funeral sledge, and melt it down into bars. I was secretly
delighted to be the instrument of destruction of that tasteless monstrosity.
The treasure chests and the bars of bullion were carried down to the wharf and
loaded on board the waiting ships. I distributed these so that every ship
carried at least one chest or a stack of bullion bars. In this way, the risk
that the entire treasure could be lost at a single stroke of misfortune was
greatly reduced. There was much of the funerary treasure that we
could not take with us, all the furniture and the statuary, the ceremonial
armour and the boxes of ushabti statues, and of course the ungainly framework
of the hearse from which I had stripped the gold. Rather than have it fall into
the hands of the Hyksos, we piled all of this in the temple courtyard, and I
personally hurled a burning torch OH top of the mountain of treasure, and
watched it burn to ashes. All this was done in dreadful haste, and before the
last ship was loaded the lookouts on the roof of the palace shouted the warning
that the dust-clouds of the Hyksos chariots were in sight. Within the hour, our
exhausted and battle-weary troops who, under command of Tanus and Kratas, had
been fighting the long grim rear-guard action, began to pull back into the
necropolis, and to embark on the waiting galleys. I met Tanus as he came up on to the causeway at the
head of a squad of the guards. So far, by dint of courage and sacrifice, he and
his men had managed to win a few extra days for us to complete the evacuation.
They could do no more, and the enemy was driving them in. When I waved and called his name, Tanus saw me and
shouted over the heads of the crowd, 'Queen Lostris and the prince? Have they
gone aboard the Breath of Horus?' I forced my way through the throng to his side. 'My
mistress will not leave until all her people are on board the ships. She
ordered me to take you to her as soon as you arrived. She is waiting for you in
her quarters in the palace.' He looked at me aghast. 'The enemy are pressing us
hard. Queen Lostris and the prince are more precious than all this rabble. Why
did you not force her?' I laughed. 'She is not an easy lady to force. You
should know that as well as I do. She will leave none of her people to the
Hyksos.' 'Seth blast that woman's pride! She will get all of
us killed.' But his harsh words were belied by the expression of pride and
admiration on his dusty, sweat-streaked face, and he grinned at me. 'Well, if
she will not come on her own, we shall have to go and fetch her.' We pushed our way through the long lines of
passengers, laden with bundles of their possessions and carrying their infants,
that were streaming down to the dock to go aboard the ships. As we hurried
along the causeway, Tanus pointed over the battlements at the ominous clouds of
dust bearing down upon us from both directions. 'They are moving faster than I had believed
possible. They have not even halted to water their horses. Unless we speed up
the embarkation, they will catch us with half our people still ashore,' he said
grimly, and pointed down on to the wharf below us. The wharf was wide enough to allow only two vessels
to come alongside at one time. The masses of refugees clogged the causeway and
congested the entrance gates to the dock. Their weeping and lamentation added
to the confusion, and at that moment someone at the rear of the column
screamed, "The Hyksos are here! Run! Save yourselves! The Hyksos are
here!' The panic spread through the crowd and it surged
forward mindlessly. Women were crushed against the stone gates, and children
were trampled under foot. All order and control were breaking down, decent and
dignified citizens and disciplined soldiers were being reduced to a desperate
mob struggling for survival. I had to use the sharpened stave I carried to force
a way through them, as Tanus and I fought our way back towards the palace. At
last we broke out of the crowd and ran to the palace gates. The halls and corridors were empty and deserted
except for a few looters who were picking through the empty rooms. They ran
when they saw Tanus. He was a dreadful sight, gaunt and dusty and battle-worn,
with a ruddy stubble of beard covering his jaw. Ahead of me, he burst into the
private quarters of the queen, and we found her chamber unguarded and the door
standing wide. We rushed through it. My mistress sat alone on the terrace under the
spreading vine, with Prince Memnon on her lap. She was pointing out to him the
fleet of ships on the Nile below the terrace, and the two of them were
enthusing over the spectacle. 'Look at the pretty ships.' Queen Lostris stood up smiling when she saw us, and
Memnon slid off her lap and ran to Tanus. Tanus swung him up on to his shoulder, and then
embraced my mistress with his free hand. 'Where are your slaves? Where are Aton and Lord
Merseket?' Tanus demanded. 'I sent them to the ships.' 'Taita says that you refused to go yourself. He is
very angry with you, and rightly so.' 'Forgive me, dear Taita.' Her smile could light my
life, or break my heart. 'Rather beg the forgiveness of King Salitis,' I
suggested stiffly. 'He will be here soon enough.' I seized her arm. 'Now that
this rude soldier of yours has at last arrived, can we please go to the ships?' We hurried from the terrace and back through the
palace corridors. We were entirely alone, even the looters and the thieves had
disappeared like rats into their holes. The only one of us who was completely
unconcerned was Prince Memnon. For him it was another jolly game. Sitting
astride Tanus' shoulders, he dug in his heels and shouted, 'Hi up!' as he had
learned from me when we were riding Patience. We raced across the palace gardens to the stone
staircase that led up on to the causeway. That was the shortest way to the
temple dock. As we hurried along the causeway, I realized that circumstances
had changed drastically in the time that had passed since we had left to fetch
my mistress and the prince from the palace. Ahead of us the causeway was
deserted, the last of the refugees had gone on board the ships in the dock.
Beyond the stone battlements I could see their masts moving slowly down the
canal towards the open river. With a hollow feeling in the pit of my stomach, I
realized that we were the last persons left ashore, and that we still had half
a mile to cover before we reached the empty dock. All of us stopped together,
and watched the last galleys sail away. 'I told the captain to wait,' I groaned, 'but with
the Hyksos so close, their only concern is with then1 own safety.' 'What can we do now?' my mistress breathed, and
even Memnon's happy cries dried up. 'If we can reach the river-bank, surely Remrem or
Kratas will see us and send in a skiff to pick us up?' I suggested, and Tanus
agreed immediately. 'This way! Follow me!' he cried. 'Taita, see to
your mistress.' I took her arm to help her along, but she was as
strong and agile as a shepherd boy and ran easily at my side. Then suddenly I
heard the horses, and the squeal of chariot wheels. The sounds were
unmistakable and terrifyingly near at hand. Our own horses had left three days ago, and must be
well on their way to Elephantine by this time. Our own chariots were dismantled
and loaded in the holds of the departing fleet. The chariots I heard now were
still out of sight below the wall of the causeway, but we knew to whom they
belonged. 'The Hyksos!' I said softly, and we stopped in a tight
little group. 'It must be one of their advance scouting parties.' 'It sounds like only two or three of their
chariots,' Tanus agreed, 'but that is enough. We are cut off.' 'It seems that we have left it a little late,' said
my mistress with a calmness that I knew was feigned, and she looked at Tanus
and myself with complete trust. 'What do you suggest now?' Her effrontery flabbergasted me. Her obstinacy was
entirely responsible for our predicament. If she had followed my urging we
would all of us have been on the Breath of Horus and making our way
up-river to Elephantine by this time. Tanus held up his hand for silence, and we stood
and listened to the sounds of the enemy chariots driving along the pathway at
the foot of the wall. The closer they came, the more certain it became that
this was only a small advance party. Suddenly the sounds of turning wheels stopped, and
we heard the horses blowing and stamping, then men's voices speaking a harsh
and guttural tongue. They were just below us, and Tanus made another urgent
signal for silence. Prince Memnon was not accustomed to restraint, nor to
keeping the peace against his inclinations. He also had heard and recognized
the sounds. 'Horses!' he shouted in his usual high and ringing
tones. 'I want to see the horses.' There was an instant outcry. Hyksos voices shouted
orders, and weapons rattled in their scabbards. Then heavy footfalls pounded
upon the stone staircase as a party of the enemy came dashing up on to the
causeway. Their tall helmets appeared above the stone
balustrade just ahead of us, and then the rest of them came into view. There
were five of them in a body and they rushed up at us with drawn swords, big men
with fish-scale shirts of mail and brightly coloured ribbons in their beards.
But one of them was taller than the rest. I did not recognize him at first, for
he had grown a beard and decorated it with ribbons in the Hyksos fashion, and
the visor of his helmet hid half his face. Then he shouted in that voice that I
would never forget, 'So it's you, young Harrab! I killed the old dog, and now I
will kill his puppy!' I should have known that Lord Intef would be the
very first of them to come sniffing like a hungry hyena after Phar-aoh's
treasure. He must have raced ahead of the main Hyksos division to be the first
into the funerary temple. Despite his boast, he did not rush to meet Tanus, but
waved the band of Hyksos charioteers forward to do the job for him. Tanus swept Prince Memnon from his shoulders and
tossed him to me as though he were a doll. 'Run!' he ordered. 'I will buy you a little time
here.' He rushed the Hyksos while they were still bunched on the staircase and
had no room to wield their swords. He killed the first one cleanly, with that
thrust through the throat which he always performed so skilfully. 'Don't stand there gawking,' he shouted over his
shoulder. 'Run!* I was not gawking, but with the child clutched to
my chest, I knew how futile was his command. Burdened as I was, I would never
reach the river-bank. I stepped to the parapet of the causeway and
glanced over. There were two Hyksos chariots parked directly below me, with the
horses blowing and stamping in the traces. Only one man had been left to hold
them, while his companions rushed up the staircase. He stood at the heads of
the two teams and his whole attention was fixed on his charges. He had not seen
me on the causeway above his head. Still clutching Memnon, I threw my legs over the
parapet and pushed myself outwards. The prince shrieked with alarm as we
dropped. From the top of the causeway to where the Hyksos charioteer stood was
four times the height of a tall man. I might easily have broken a leg in the
fall, except that I landed neatly on the unsuspecting Hyksos's head. The impact
broke his neck; clearly I heard the vertebrae snap, and he crumpled under us,
breaking our fall. I scrambled to my feet, with Memnon howling in
outrage at this rough treatment, but there was more of it to follow. I dropped
him into the cockpit of the nearest chariot and looked up at my mistress. She
was peeping over the parapet high above me. 'Jump!' I shouted. 'I will catch you!' She never
even hesitated, but flung herself over the edge so promptly that I was not yet
braced to receive her. She came hurtling down on top of me, witirher short
skirts blowing up and exposing those long sleek thighs. She hit me squarely and
knocked the wind out of my lungs. We went down together in a heap. I scrambled up wheezing for breath, and dragged her
to her feet. I shoved her roughly over the footplate of the chariot and shouted
at her, 'See to Memnon!' She grabbed him just as he tried to escape from the
cockpit of the chariot. He was still howling with anger and fright. I had to
scramble over the top of them to reach the reins and take control of the horses. 'Hang on tight!' The pair of horses responded
instantly to my hands, and I wheeled the whole rig smartly under the wall. One
wheel bounced over the body of the man that I had killed with my fall. 'Tanus!' I screamed. 'This way!' High above us he jumped up on to the parapet, and
balanced there easily, exchanging parry and thrust with the group of
charioteers who bayed around him, like hounds around a treed leopard. Tump, Tanus, jump!' I yelled, and he stepped out
over the edge of the stone wall and let himself drop. With his cloak billowing
around his head and shoulders, he landed astride the back of the off-side
horse. His sword jerked out of his hand and clattered on the hard earth, and
Tanus threw both arms around the animal's neck. 'Hi up!' I called to the pair, and whipped the end
of the reins around their hindquarters. They surged forward into a full gallop.
I steered them across the pathway and into the open fields that led down to the
river-bank. I could see the sails of our fleet out there in midstream, and I
could even recognize the pennant of the Breath ofHorus flying amongst the
forest of masts. We had half a mile to go to reach the bank, and I glanced over
my shoulder. Lord Intef and his men had rushed down the staircase.
Even as I watched, they were climbing up into the other chariot. I cursed
myself that I had not disabled it. It would have taken only a moment to cut the
traces and chase away the horses, but I had been in a panic to get my mistress
and the prince away. Now Lord Intef was coming after us. His chariot had
not covered a hundred paces before I realized that it was faster than the one I
was driving. Tanus' weight on the back of the off-side horse was hampering its
gallop; he was a heavy man and he still clung to its neck with both arms. He
seemed frozen with terror. I think that this was the first time that I had ever
seen him truly afraid. I have seen him stand firm and shoot down a charging
lion with his bow, but the horse terrified him. I tried to ignore the following chariot, and I
looked ahead and concentrated all my newly acquired skill on piloting us over
the open cultivated fields and through the maze of irrigation canals and
ditches to the bank of the Nile. The Hyksos chariot was heavy and unwieldy,
compared to my Taita vehicle. The solid wooden wheels with their glinting and
turning knives around the rims bit deeply into the clay loam of the ploughed
lands, and all that bronze armour and Ornamentation on the dashboard and
side-frames weighed us down. The horses must have been driven hard before I
took control of them. They were lathered with sweat and white froth dripped
from their muzzles. We had not covered half the distance to the
river-bank when I heard the shouts of the Hyksos charioteer closing with us,
and the pounding of hooves. I glanced back to see them not three lengths
behind. The driver was lashing the horses with a whip of knotted leather tails
and yelling at them in that coarse and ugly language. Beside him, Lord Intef
was leaning out eagerly over the dashboard. His ribboned beard was streaming
back on either side of his jaw, and his handsome features were lit by the
rapture of the hunter. He shouted at me, and his voice carried over the
sounds of the two labouring teams of horses. 'Taita, my old darling, do you
still love me? I want you to prove it once more before you die.' And he
laughed. 'You are going to kneel in front of me and die with your mouth full.'
My skin prickled with insects' feet of horror at the image his words conjured
up. There was an irrigation ditch ahead of us, and I
swerved to run alongside it, for the sides were deep and sheer. The Hyksos
chariot followed us round, gaining on us with every stride. 'And you, my lovely daughter, I will give you to the
Hyksos soldiers to play-with. They will teach you a few tricks that Harrab
forgot to show you. I don't need you, now that I have your brat.' Queen Lostris
clutched the prince closer to her chest and her face was pale and set. I understood Lord Intef's design immediately. A
child of the royal blood of Egypt, even as a satrap of the Hyksos, would
command the loyalty of all our people. Prince Mem-non was the puppet through
which King Salitis and Lord Intef intended to rule the two kingdoms. It was an
ancient and effective device of the conqueror. I pushed my horses to their
utmost, but they were tiring and slowing, and Lord Intef closed with us so
swiftly that he no longer needed to shout to make himself heard. 'Lord Harrab, this is a pleasure long delayed. What
shall we do with you? I wonder. First, you and I will watch the soldiers
entertain my daughter—' I tried to stop my ears to his filth, but his voice was
insidious. I was still gazing ahead, concentrating on the
rough and dangerous ground, but from the corner of my eye I saw the heads of
the Hyksos pair draw level with our vehicle. Their manes flowed back, and their
eyes were wild as they tore up beside us at full gallop. I looked back at them. The burly Hyksos archer on
the footplate behind Intef nocked an arrow to his short recurved bow. The range
was so short that even from the bouncing and leaping platform, he could not
miss hitting one of us. Tanus was out of the fight. He had dropped his
sword. He was still clinging to the neck of the horse on the side furthest from
the overtaking chariot. I had only my little dagger, and Queen Lostris was down
on her knees trying to shield the prince with her own body. It was only then that I realized the mistake that
the Hyksos driver had made. He had pushed his team of horses into the gap
between us and the deep irrigation ditch. He had left himself no room to
manoeuvre. The archer lifted his bow and drew the fletchings
of the arrow to his lips. He aimed at me. I was looking into his eyes over the
barbed flint of the arrow-head. His brows were black and dense and bushy, his
eyes as dark and implacable as those of a lizard. The Hyksos horses were
running level with the hub of my near-side wheel, and I gathered my reins and
swerved towards them. The flashing bronze knives that stood out of my
wheel-rims buzzed softly as they spun towards the legs of the horses. The Hyksos driver shouted with consternation as he
realized his error. His horses were trapped between the ditch and those cruel
knives. The blades were less than a hand-span from the knees of the big bay
stallion running nearest to me. At that same instant, the Hyksos archer loosed his
arrow, but my sudden swerve had beaten him also. The arrow seemed to fly quite
slowly towards my head, but this was an illusion produced by my terror. In
reality it flashed like a beam of sunlight over my shoulder, the flint edge
touched my ear, and a drop of blood dripped from the grazed skin on to my
chest. The other driver had tried to counter my swerve by
turning away from me, but now his far wheel was running along the lip of the
irrigation ditch. It was crumbling away beneath the bronze-bound rim, and the
chariot lurched and teetered on the edge. I gathered my horses and swung them again, turning
into the other chariot. My wheel-blades hacked into the legs of the nearest
horse, and the poor beast squealed with agony. I saw pieces of skin and hair
fly into the air above the sideboard of my chariot, and I steeled myself to the
whinnying cry of the horse, and turned hard into him again. This time blood and
bone chips flew in a mush from the broken legs, and the horse went down,
kicking and squealing, pulling his team-mate down with him. The Hyksos chariot
went over the edge of the ditch. I saw the two passengers in the cockpit thrown
clear, but the driver was carried over and crushed beneath the capsized truck
and the heavy, spinning wheels. Our own chariot was now tearing along dangerously
close to the edge of the ditch, but I managed to gather the horses and bring
them back in hand. 'Whoa!' I slowed them, and turned to look back. A
cloud of dust hung over the ditch where the Hyksos chariot had disappeared. I
brought my team down to a trot. The river-bank was two hundred paces ahead, and
nothing stood hi our way to safety. I turned for one last look behind me. The Hyksos
archer, who had fired his arrow'at me, lay in a crumpled and broken heap where
he had been thrown. Lord Intef lay a little further from the edge of the ditch.
I truly believe I might have left him there if he had not stirred, but at that
moment he sat up and then pushed himself unsteadily to his feet. Suddenly all my hatred of him came back to me with
such force and clarity that my mind seethed with it. It was. as though a vein
had burst behind my eyes, for my vision darkened, and was glazed over with the
reddish sheen of blood. A savage, incoherent cry burst from my throat, and I
wheeled the horses in a tight circle until we were headed back towards the
causeway. Lord Intef stood directly in my path. He had lost
his helmet and his weapons in the fall, and he seemed half-dazed, for he swayed
upon his feet. I whipped the horses up into a gallop once more, and the heavy
wheels rumbled forward. I aimed the chariot directly at him. His beard was
dishevelled and the ribbons in it sullied with dust. His eyes also were dull
and bemused, but as I drove the horses down on him, suddenly they cleared and
his head came up. 'No!' he shouted, and began to back away, throwing
out his hands towards me as if to fend off the massive carriage and the running
horses. I aimed directly for him, but at the last moment, his dark gods
defended him one last time. As I was right upon him, he threw himself to one
side. I had seen him staggering and I had supposed that he was weak and
helpless. Instead, he was quick and nimble as a jackal pursued by the hounds.
The chariot was heavy and unwieldy, and I could not turn it swiftly enough to
follow his side-step and dodge. I missed him and went on by. I wrestled with the
reins, but the horses carried me on a hundred paces before I could get them
under control and swing the heavy vehicle round again. By the time we came
around, Intef was running for the shelter of the ditch. If he reached it, he
would be safe— I realized that. I swore bitterly as I drove the team after him. It was then that his gods finally abandoned him. He
had almost reached the ditch, but he was looking back over his shoulder at me,
and he was not watching his footing. He ran into a patch of clay clods, hard as
rocks, and his ankle turned under him. He fell heavily but rolled back on to
his feet like an acrobat. He tried to run again, but the pain in his broken
ankle brought him up. He hobbled a pace or two and then tried to hop forward
towards the ditch on one leg. 'You are mine at last!' I screamed at him, and he
spun around to face me, balanced on one leg as I drove the chariot down on him.
His face was pale, but those leopard eyes blazed up at me with all the
bitterness and hatred of his cruel and twisted soul. 'He is my father!' my mistress cried at my side,
holding the prince's face to her bosom so that he would not see it. 'Leave him,
Taita. He is of my blood.' I had never disobeyed her in my life, this was the
first time. I made no move to check the horses, but gazed into Lord Intef's
eyes, for once without fear. At the very end, he almost cheated me again. He
flung himself sideways, and such were his agility and his strength that he
twisted himself clear of the truck and the wheels of the chariot, but he could
not quite avoid the wheel-knives. One of the spinning blades hooked in the
fish-scale links of his coat of mail. The point of the Joufe tore through the
armour and hooked in the flesh of his belly. The knife was spinning and his
entrails snagged and wrapped around it, so that his guts were drawn out of him,
as though he was one of those big blue perch from the river being disembowelled
by a fishwife on the market block. He was towed along behind us by the slippery ropes
of his own entrails, but he fell slowly behind as more coils and tangles of his
gut were torn from his open stomach cavity. He clutched at them with both
hands, as they were stripped out of him, but they slid through his fingers like
some grotesque umbilical cord that bound him to the turning wheel of the chariot. His screams were a sound that I wish never to hear
again as long as I live. The echoes of them still sometimes haunt my
nightmares, so that in the end he inflicted his last cruelty upon me. I have
never been able to forget him, as I would so dearly have wished. When at last the gruesome rope by which he was
being dragged across the black earth snapped, he was left lying in the centre
of the field. At last those cries of his were stilled, and he lay without
movement. I pulled up the horses and Tanus slid down off the.
back of his mount and came back to the chariot. He lifted my mistress and the
prince down and held them close to his chest. My mistress was weeping. 'Oh, it was so terrible! Whatever he did to us, he
was still my father.' 'It's all right now,' Tanus hugged her. 'It's all
over now.' Prince Memnon was peering back over his mother's
shoulder at the sprawling figure of his grandfather with all the fascination
that children have with the macabre. Suddenly he piped up in that ringing
treble, 'He was a nasty man.' 'Yes,' I agreed softly, 'he was a very nasty man.' 'Is the nasty man dead now?' 'Yes, Mem, he is dead. Now we can all sleep better
at nights.' I had to drive the horses hard along the river-bank
to catch up with our departing flotilla, but at last I drew level with Kratas'
galley, and he recognized us in the unfamiliar vehicle. Even across that wide
stretch of water, his astonishment was apparent. Later he told me that he had
believed we were safely aboard one of the leading ships of the flotilla. I turned the horses loose before I left the
chariot. Then we waded out into the water to reach the small boat which Kratas
sent in to pick us up. THE HYKSOS WOULD NOT LET US GO that easily. Day
after day, their chariots pursued our flotilla down both banks of the Nile as
we fled southwards. Whenever we looked back over the stern of the Breath
of Horus, we saw the dust of the enemy columns following us. Very often the
dust was mingled with the darker clouds of smoke that rose from the towns and
villages on the river-banks which the Hyksos burned as they sacked them. As we
passed each of the Egyptian towns, a flock of small craft sailed out to join
our fleet, so that our armada increased in numbers with each day that passed. There were times, when the wind was unfavourable,
that the columns of chariots overhauled us. Then we saw then-cohorts gleaming
on the banks on either side of us, and heard their harsh but futile jeers and
challenges ring out across the water. However, eternal Mother Nile gave us her
protection, as she had over the centuries, and they could not reach us out on
the stream. Then the wind would veer back into the north and we drew ahead of
them once more, and the dust-clouds fell back on to the northern horizon. "Their horses cannot keep up this chase much
longer,' I told Tanus on the morning of the twelfth day. 'Don't be too smug about it. Salitis has the lure
of the treasure of Pharaoh Mamose and the legitimate heir to the double crown,'
Tanus replied simply. 'Gold and power have a marvellous way of stiffening a
man's resolve. We have not seen the last of the barbarian yet.' The next morning the wind had changed again, and
the chariots slowly gained upon us once more, and overtook the leading ships of
our flotilla just as we approached the Gates of Hapi, the first of the granite
walls that constricted the river below Elephantine. Between them the Nile
narrowed to less than four hundred paces across from bank to bank, and the
black granite cliffs rose almost sheer on each side. The flow of the current
was full against us as it swirled through the Gates of Hapi, so that our speed
bled off and Tanus ordered fresh men to the rowing-benches. 'I think you are right, Taita. This is where they
will be waiting,' he told me grimly, and then almost immediately afterwards he
pointed ahead. 'There they are.' Leading the fleet, the Breath of Horus was
just entering the gates, so we had to throw our heads back to look up the
cliff-faces. The figures of the Hyksos archers high up on the rocky ledges were
foreshortened by the angle, so that they appeared as grotesque dwarfs. 'From that height they could shoot their arrows
clear across from bank to bank,' Tanus muttered. 'We will be in easy range for
most of this day. It will be hard on all of us, but more especially on the
women and the children.' It was even worse than Tanus expected. The first
arrow, fired at our galley from the cliffs above us, left a trail of smoke
against the blue vault of the sky as it arced down and struck the water only a
cubit ahead of our bows. 'Fire-arrows,' Tanus nodded. 'You were right once
again, Taita. The barbarian does learn quickly.' 'It's easy enough to teach an ape new tricks.' I
hated the Hyksos as much as any man in the fleet. 'Now let us see if your bellows can pump water into
a ship as well as they pump it out,' Tanus said. I had anticipated this attack with fire and so, for
the last four days, I had been working on those galleys that Tanus had fitted
with the water-pumps which I had designed for him. Now, as each of our vessels
came up, Tanus ordered the captain to lower his sails, and we pumped water over
the decks and soaked the rigging. Leather buckets were filled and placed ready
upon the decks, and then one of the galleys escorted the ship into the
granite-lined gut of the river and the rain of Hyksos fire-arrows. It took two full days to get the flotilla through,
for the cliffs blanketed the wind. It was hot and still in the gap, and each
ship had to be rowed all the way against the current The arrows fell upon us in
pretty, sparking parabolas, rapping into the masts and the decks. Each of them
started its own blaze that had to be quenched by the bucket chains or by the
leather hoses of the pumps on the escort galley. There was no way for us to
retaliate against this attack, for the archers were high up on the cliff-faces.
They were well out of range of our own less powerful bows. When Remrem led a
shore party to dislodge them from their perches, they were able to fire down on
his men and drive them back into the boats with heavy losses. Those vessels that won through were all scarred
with black scorched patches. Many others were less fortunate. The flames aboard
them had beaten the buckets and the pumps and engulfed them. They had to be cut
free and left to drift down on the current, causing pandemonium amongst the
rest of the fleet coming up into the gap. In most cases we managed to take the
crew and passengers off before the flames were out of hand, but with some we
were too late. The screams of the women and the children in the heart of the
flames were enough to stop the blood in my heart. I am left for ever with an
image from that dreadful day of a young woman leaping from the deck of a
burning barge with her long hair wreathed in flames, like a wedding garland. We lost over fifty ships in the Gates of Hapi.
There were mourning banners flying on every ship as we sailed on towards
Elephantine, but at least the Hyksos seemed to have exhausted themselves and
their horses in this long chase southwards. The dust-clouds no longer
besmirched our northern horizon, and we had a respite in which to mourn our
dead and repair our vessels. However, none of us believed that they had given up
entirely. In the end, the lure of Pharaoh's treasure must prove too much to
resist. CONFINED AS WE WERE TO THE DECK OF the galley,
Prince Memnon and I spent much time together sitting under the awning on the
poop-deck. There he listened avidly to my stories, or watched me design and
whittle the first model of a new bow for our army, based on the Hyksos recurved
type. He had by now learned the old trick of asking questions to keep my
attention focused upon him. 'What are you doing now, Tata?' 'I am making a new bow.' 'Yes, but why?' 'All right, I will tell you. Our own single-curve
bows, apart from lacking the same power and carry, are too long to be used from
the chariot.' He listened gravely. Even when he was an infant I had tried never
to indulge in baby-talk with him, and I always addressed him as an equal. If
sometimes he did not understand, at least he was happy with the sound of my
voice. 'I am now totally convinced that our future lies
with the horse and chariot, I am sure that Your Royal Highness agrees with me.'
I looked up at him. 'You love horses too, don't you, Mem?' He understood that well enough. 'I love horses,
especially Patience and Blade,' he nodded vehemently. I had already filled three scrolls with my musings
and diagrams of how I conceived these military assets could be used to best
advantage. I wished that I was able to discuss these in detail with Tanus, but
the Great Lion of Egypt's interest in matters equine was grudging and
superficial. 'Build the cursed things if you must, but don't
keep chattering about them,' Tanus told me. The prince was a much more receptive audience, and
while I worked, we conducted these long discussions, which were only much later
to bear their full harvest. As a companion, Memnon's first choice was always
Tanus, but I was not far behind in his affections, and we spent long, happy
hours in each other's company. From the very first he was an exceptionally
precocious and intelligent child, and under my influence he developed his gifts
more swiftly than any other I had ever instructed. Even my mistress at the same
age had not been as quick to learn. I had made Memnon a toy bow of the design I was
studying, and he mastered it almost immediately and could soon, shoot one of
his tiny arrows the full length of the galley's deck, much to the agitation of
the slave girls and nursemaids who were usually his targets. None of them dared
bend over when the prince was armed with his bow, he seldom missed an inviting
pair of feminine buttocks at under twenty paces. After his bow, his favourite toy was the miniature
chariot and horse that I had carved for him. I had even made the tiny figure of
a charioteer to stand in the cockpit, and reins for him to drive the pair. The
prince promptly named the mannikin Mem, and the horses were christened Patience
and Blade. He crawled tirelessly up and down the deck, pushing the chariot in
front of him, making appropriate horsey noises and uttering cries of 'Hi up!'
and 'Whoa!' For such a small boy he was always aware of his
surroundings. Those sparkling dark eyes missed very little of what was
happening around him. It was no surprise to me when he was the first of any of
the crew of the Breath of Horns to spot the strange figure far ahead of us on
the right bank of the river. 'Horses!' he shrieked, and then moments later,
'Look, look! It is Hui!' I rushed up to where he stood in the bows, and my
heart soared as I realized that he was right. It was Hui astride Blade coming
down the river-bank to meet us at a full gallop. 'Hui has got the horses through to Elephantine. I
forgive him all his other sins and stupidities. Hui has saved my horses.' 'I am very proud of Hui,' said the prince gravely,
imitating my words and intonation so exactly that my mistress and all those
around us burst out laughing. WE WERE GIVEN A RESPITE ONCE WE reached
Elephantine. There had been no sign of the pursuing chariots for so many days
that a new optimism spread through the fleet and the city. Men started speaking
of abandoning the flight to the south, and of remaining here below the
cataracts to build up a new army with which to oppose the invader. I never allowed my mistress to be seduced by this
spirit of confidence which was rooted in such shallow soil. I convinced her
that my vision of the Mazes had shown us the true path and that our destiny
still lay to the south. In the meantime, I continued my preparations for the
voyage unabated. I think that by this time, it was the adventure itself that
had cast its spell over me, even more than the necessity of running from the
Hyksos. I wanted to see what lay beyond the cataracts, and
in the nights after a full day's work in the docks, I sat up into the late
watches in the palace library, reading the accounts of men who had taken that
first step into the unknown before us. They wrote that the river had no end, that it ran
on to the very ends of the earth. They wrote that after the first cataract,
there was another more formidable, one that no man or ship could ever surmount.
They said that to voyage from the first cataract to the next was a full year of
travel, and still the river ran on. I wanted to see it. More than anything in my life I
wanted to see where this great river, that was our life, began. When at last I fell asleep in the lamplight over
the scrolls, I saw again in my dream the vision of the welcoming goddess seated
on a mountain-top, with the twin spouts of water gushing from her great vagina.
Although I had slept but little, I awoke with the dawn, refreshed and excited,
and I rushed back to the docks to continue the preparations for the journey. I was fortunate in that most of the ropes for our
shipping were woven and braided in the sail-yards here in Elephantine. Thus I
had the pick of the finest linen cables at my disposal. Some of these were as
thick as my finger, and others as thick as my thigh. With them I filled every
available space in the holds of the ships not already crammed with stores. I
knew just how desperately we would need these, when we came to the cataracts. It was not surprising that here in Elephantine
those of our company with faint hearts and weak resolve made themselves known.
The rigours of the flight from Thebes had convinced many of these that the
compassion and mercy of the Hyksos were preferable to a continuation of the
voyage into the burning southern deserts where even more savage men and beasts
awaited them. When, Tanus heard that there were so many thousands
of these citizens anxious to desert from the fleet, he roared, 'Damned traitors
and renegades! I know what to do with them.' And he expressed his intention of
turning his legions upon them, and driving them back on board the ships. At first he had my mistress's support in this. Her
motives were very different from his. She was concerned only with the welfare
of her subjects, and her vow that she would leave none of them to the Hyksos
terror. I had to spend half the night arguing with both of
them before I could convince them that we were better off without reluctant
passengers. In the end, Queen Lostris issued a decree that any person who
wished to remain in Elephantine might do so, but she added a neat little touch
of her own to the proclamation. This was read aloud in every street of the
city, and upon the docks where our ships lay. I, Queen Lostris, regent of this very Egypt, mother
of Prince Memnon, the heir to the double crown of the two kingdoms, now deliver
to the people of this land my solemn promise. I make oath before the gods
and call upon them to witness it. I swear to you that on the majority of the
prince, I shall return with him to this city of Elephantine, here to elevate
him to the throne of Egypt and place the double crown upon his brow that he may
cast out the oppressor and rule over you with justice and in mercy all the days
of his life. It is I, Queen Lostris,
regent of this very Egypt, who speaks thus. This act and declaration increased one hundredfold
the love and the loyalty that the common people felt towards my mistress and
the prince. I doubt that in all our history mere had ever been a ruler so
cherished as was she. When the lists were drawn up of those who would
come with us beyond the cataracts, I was not surprised to see that it comprised
most of those whose loyalty and skills we most valued. Those who wished to stay
in Elephantine were the ones we were happiest to lose, including most of the
priesthood. However, time would prove that those who remained
behind us in Elephantine were of great value to us also. During the long years
of the exodus they kept alive the flame in the hearts of the people, the memory
of Prince Memnon and the promise of Queen Lostris to return to them. Gradually, through all the long, bitter years of
the Hyksos tyranny, the legend of the return of the prince spread through the
two kingdoms. In the end, all the people of Egypt, from the first cataract to
the seven mouths of the Nile in the great Delta, believed that he would come
back, and they prayed for that day. HUI HAD MY HORSES WAITING FOR ME ON the fields of
the west bank, below the orange dunes hard by the river. The prince and I
visited them every day, and although he was growing heavier, Memnon rode upon
my shoulder to have a better view over the herd. By now Memnon knew all his
favourites by name, and Patience and Blade came to eat corn-cakes from his hand
when he called them. The first time he rode upon her back without my hand to
steady him, Patience was as gentle with him as she was with her own foal, and
the prince shouted out loud with the thrill of cantering alone around the
field. Hui had learned a great deal about the management of the herds on the
march, and using this knowledge, we planned in detail for their welfare on the
next stage of the journey. I also explained to Hui the role that I wished the
horses to play in the passage of the cataracts, and set him and the charioteers
and grooms to work plaiting and splicing harness. At the very first opportunity, Tanus and I went
up-river to scout the cataract. The water was so low that all the islands were
exposed. The channels between them were so shallow that in places it was
possible for a man to wade through without the water covering his head. The cataracts extended for many miles, a vast
confusion of shining, water-worn granite boulders and serpentine streams that
wriggled and twisted their way between them. Even I was daunted and discouraged
by the task that lay ahead of us, while Tanus was his usual brutally
straightforward self. 'You won't be able to push a skiff through here
without ripping the belly out of it. What will you do with a heavily laden
galley? Carry it through on the back of one of your cursed horses?' he laughed,
but without the least trace of humour. We started back to Elephantine, but before I
reached the city, I had made up my mind that the only way forward was to
abandon the ships and go on overland. The hardships that this course would
bring down upon us were difficult to imagine. However, I reckoned that we might
be able to rebuild the flotilla on the river-banks above the cataracts. When we returned to the palace on Elephantine
Island, Tanus and I went directly to the audience chamber to report to Queen
Lostris. She listened to everything that we told her, and then shook her head. 'I do not believe that the goddess has deserted us
so soon,' and she led us and all her court to the temple of Hapi on the south
tip of the island. She made a generous sacrifice to the goddess, and
we prayed all that night and asked for the guidance of Hapi. I do not believe
that the favour of the gods can be bought by cutting the throats of a few goats
and placing bunches of grapes upon the stone altar, nevertheless, I prayed with
all the fervour of the high priest, although by dawn my buttocks ached
hideously from the long vigil on the stone benches. As soon as the rays of the rising sun struck
through the doors of the sanctuary and illuminated the altar, my mistress sent
me down the shaft of the Nilometer. I had not reached the bottom step before I
found myself ankle-deep in water. Hapi had listened to our prayers. Although it was
weeks early, the Nile had begun to rise. THE VERY DAY AFTER THE WATERS BEGAN to rise, one of
our fast scouting galleys that Tanus had left to watch the movements of the
Hyksos cohorts came speeding up-river on the wings of the north wind. The
Hyksos were on the march again. They would be in Elephantine within the week. Lord Tanus left immediately with his main force to
prepare for the defence of the cataracts, leaving Lord Merkeset and myself to
see to the embarkation 6f our people. I was able to prise Lord Merkeset off the
belly of his young wife just long enough for him to sign the orders which I had
prepared for him so meticulously. This time we were able to avoid the chaos and
panic that had overtaken us at Thebes, and the fleet prepared to sail for the
tail of the cataracts in good order. Fifty thousand Egyptians lined both banks of the
river, weeping and singing psalms to Hapi and waving palm-fronds in farewell as
we sailed away. Queen Lostris stood in the bows of the Breath ofHorus with the
little prince at her side, and both of them waved to the crowds on the bank as
they passed slowly up-river. At twenty-one years of age, my mistress was at the
zenith of her beauty. Those who gazed upon her were struck with an almost
religious awe. That beauty was echoed in the face of the child at her side, who
held the crook and the flail of Egypt hi his small, determined hands. 'We will return,' my mistress called to them, and
the prince echoed her, 'We will return. Wait for us. We will return.' The legend that would sustain our blighted and
oppressed land through its darkest times was born that day on the banks of the
mother river. WHEN WE REACHED THE TAIL OF THE cataract the
following noon, the rock-studded gorge had been transformed into a smooth green
chute of rushing waters. In places it tumbled and growled in white water and
froth, but it had not yet unleashed its full and terrible power. This was the
moment in the life-cycle of the river most favourable to our enterprise. The
waters were high enough to allow our ships through without grounding in the
shallows, but the flood was not yet so wild and headstrong as to hurl them back
and dash them to driftwood on the granite steps of the cataract. Tanus himself managed the ships, while Hui and I,
under the nominal command of Lord Merkeset, managed the shore party. I placed
the jovial old man, with a large jar of the very best wine on his one hand and
his pretty little sixteen-year-old wife on the other, under a thatched shelter
on the high ground above the gorge. I ignored the garbled and contradictory
orders that the noble lord sent down to me from time to time over the ensuing
days, and we got on with the business of the transit of the first cataract. The heaviest linen lines were laid out upon the
bank, and our horses were harnessed in teams of ten. We found out quickly
enough that we were able to bring forward ten teams at a time—one hundred
horses—and couple them to the main ropes. Any greater numbers were
unmanageable. In addition to the horses, we had almost two
thousand men upon the secondary ropes and the guide-lines. Horses and men were
changed every hour so that the teams were always fresh. At every dangerous turn
and twist of the river, we stationed other parties upon the bank, and on the
exposed granite islands. These were all armed with long poles to fend the hulls
off the rocks as they were dragged through. Our men had been born on the river-banks and
understood men- boats and the moods of the Nile better than they did their own
wives'. Tanus and I arranged a system of hom signals between the ships and the
shore party that functioned more smoothly even than I had hoped. On board the vessels, the sailors were also armed
with poles to punt themselves forward and to fend off the bows. They sang the
ancient river shanties as they worked, and the Breath ofHorus was the first to
make the attempt. The sound of song and the cries of the horse-handlers mingled
with the muted thunder of the Nile waters as we hauled her forward and she
thrust her bows into the first chute of smoothly racing waters. The green waters piled up against her bows, but
their thrust was unable to overcome our determination and the strength of two
thousand men and one hundred straining horses. We dragged the Breath ofHorus up
the first rapid, and we cheered when she glided into the deep green pool at the
head. But there were six miles still to go. We changed
the men and horses and dragged her bows into the next tumbling, swirling
stretch of broken water in which the rocks stood like the heads of gigantic
hippopotami ready to rip out her frail timbers with fangs of granite. There
were six miles of these hellish rapids to negotiate, with death and disaster
swirling around every rock. But the ropes held, and the men and the horses
plodded on and upwards in relays. My mistress walked along the bank beside the teams
of sweating men. She looked as fresh and cool as a flower, even in the baking
sunlight, and her laughter and banter gave them fresh purpose. She sang the
working songs with them, and I joined with her in the chorus. We made up fresh
words as we went along. The men laughed at the saucy couplets and hauled on the
ropes with renewed strength. Prince Memnon rode on the back of Blade, in the
leading team of horses. Hui had tiei a rope around the horse's chest behind the
front legs to give him a hand-hold, because Memnon's legs were still too short
to afford him a firm grip, and stuck out at an undignified angle on each side
of Blade's broad back. The prince waved back proudly at his father on the
poop-deck of the galley. When at last we broke out into the deep, unruffled
flow of the main river above the rapids, the working chant of the boatmen
turned to a hymn of praise to Hapi, who had seen us through. Once my mistress had gone back on board the galley,
she called for the master mason. She ordered him to cut an obelisk from the
granite massif that hemmed in the gorge. While we laboured to bring the rest of
the fleet through the gorge, the masons worked with fire and chisel to lift a
long, slender column of mottled stone from the mother lode. When they had freed
it from the matrix, they chiselled the words that my mistress dictated to them,
using the pharaonic hieroglyphics in which her name and that of the prince were
enclosed in the royal cartouche. AS WE PROCEEDED WITH THE TRANSIT OF the cataract,
we became more expert with each pace we gained against the river. It had taken us a full day to bring the Breath
of Horus up the rapids. Within the following week we were making the
transit in half that time, and we had five or six vessels in the gorge
simultaneously. It was almost a royal procession with one galley coming up
behind the other, stem to stern. Ten thousand men and nearly a thousand horses
were in the traces at any one time. There were over a hundred vessels moored along the
bank in the quiet, deep green reach of the Nile above the rapids, when the
Hyksos fell upon us once more. King Salitis had been delayed by his sack and
plunder of the city of Elephantine, and he had not realized immediately that we
had continued on up-river with the great bulk of Pharaoh's treasure in the
holds of our galleys. Everything that he knew about the river, all that his
spies and Lord Intef had been able to tell him, had convinced him that the
cataracts were a barrier that could not be navigated. He had wasted all that
time in the city of Elephantine before setting after us again. He had ransacked the city and the palace on the
island; he had paid informers and tortured captives in an attempt to learn what
had become of the treasure and the prince. The citizens of Elephantine had
served their prince well. They had held out against the Hyksos in order to give
our flotilla a chance to complete the transit. Of course, it could not last indefinitely, and at
last some poor soul broke under the torture of the tyrant. King Salitis
harnessed up his horses yet again and came storming after us into the gorge of
the cataract. However, Tanus was well prepared to meet him. Under
his command, Kratas and Remrem and Astes had made their dispositions with care.
Every single man who could be spared from the work of hauling the ships through
the gorge was sent back to help defend it. The terrain was our greatest ally. The gorge was
steep and rocky. The path along the bank was narrow and twisted with the broken
ground crowding down upon it. At every turn of the river there rose high bluffs
and cave-riddled cliffs, each of them a natural fortress for us to exploit. In the confines of the gorge the chariots were
unable to manoeuvre. They were unable to leave the river and make a detour
around the gorge through the open desert. There was neither water nor fodder
for their horses out there in the sandy wastes, and the going was soft and
treacherous. Their heavy chariots would have bogged down and been lost in the
trackless desert, before they could reach the river again. There was no
alternative for them, they were forced to come at us in single file along the
narrow river-bank. On the other hand, Kratas had been given ample
grace in which to improve the natural defences of the ground by building stone
walls in the most readily defensible places. He positioned his archers in the
cliffs above these obstacles, and set up man-made rock-slides on the high
ground overlooking the pathway. As the Hyksos vanguard came up the gorge, they were
met with a downpour of arrows from stone-walled redoubts on the high ground
above them. Then, when they dismounted from their chariots and went forward to
clear the stone barriers that had been placed across the track, Kratas yelled
the order and the wedges were knocked from under the rock-slides balanced on
the lip of the precipice. The landslides came tumbling and rolling down upon
the Hyksos, sweeping men and horses and chariots off the bank into the surging
green waters of the Nile. Standing on the top of the cliff with Kratas, I
watched their heads go bobbing and spinning through the cascades, and heard
their faint and desperate cries echoing from the cliffs, before the weight of
their armour pulled them below the surface and the river overwhelmed them. King Salitis was tenacious. He sent still more of
his legions forward to clear the pathway, and others to climb up the cliffs and
dislodge our troops from the heights. The Hyksos' losses in men and horses were
frightful, while we were almost unscathed. When they laboured up the cliffs in
their heavy bronze armour, we rained our arrows down upon them. Then, before
they could reach our positions, Kratas ordered our men to fall back to the next
prepared strong-point. There'could be only one outcome to this one-sided
encounter. Before he had fought his way halfway up the gorge, King Salitis was
forced to abandon the pursuit. Tanus and my mistress were with us on the
cliff-tops when the Hyksos began their retreat back down the gorge. They left
the path strewn with the wreckage of then- chariots and cluttered with
abandoned equipment and the detritus of their defeat. 'Sound the trumpets!' Tanus gave the order, and the
gorge echoed to the mocking fanfare that he sent after the retreating Hyksos
legions. The last chariot in that sorry cavalcade was the gilded and embossed
vehicle of the king himself. Even from our perch on top of the precipice, we
could recognize the tall and savage figure of Salitis, with his high bronze
helmet and his black beard flowing back over his shoulders. He raised his bow,
that he held in his right hand, and shook it at us. His face was contorted with
frustration and rage. We watched him out of sight. Then Tanus sent our
scouts after them to follow them back to Elephantine, in case this was a ruse,
a false withdrawal. In my heart I knew that Salitis would not come after us
again. Hapi had fulfilled her promise, and offered us her protection once more. Then we turned, and followed the pathway made by
the wild goats along the precipice, back to where the flotilla was moored. THE MASONS HAD FINISHED WORK ON the obelisk. It was
a shaft of solid granite three times the height of a man. I had marked out the
proportions and the shape of it upon the mother rock before the masons had made
their first cut. Because of this, the lines of the monument were so elegant and
pleasing that it appeared to be much taller, once it was set on the summit of
the bluff above the last wild stretch of the cataract, overlooking the scene of
our triumph. All our people gathered below it, as Queen Lostris dedicated the
stone to the goddess of the river. She read aloud the inscription that the
masons had engraved upon the polished stone. I, Queen Lostris, Regent of Egypt and widow of
Pharaoh Mamose, the eighth of that name, mother of the Crown Prince Memnon, who
shall rule the two kingdoms after me, have ordained the raising of this
monument. This is the mark and covenant of my vow to the
people of this very Egypt, that I shall return to them from the wilderness
whence I have been driven by the barbarian. This stone was placed here in the first year of my
rule, the nine-hundredth year after the building of the great pyramid of Pharaoh
Cheops. Let this stone stand immovable as the pyramid until
I make good my promise to return. Then, in sight of all the people, she placed the
Gold of Valour upon the shoulders of Tanus and Kratas and Remrem and Astes, all
those heroes who had made possible the transit of the cataract. Then, last of all, she called me to her, and as I
knelt at her feet, she whispered so I alone might hear, 'How could I forget
you, my dear and faithful Taita? We could never have come this far without your
help,' she touched my cheek lightly, 'and I know how dearly you love these
pretty baubles.' And she placed around my neck the heavy Gold of Praise. I
weighed it later at thirty deben, five deben heavier than the chain that
Pharaoh had bestowed upon me. On the way back down the side of the gorge, I
walked beside my mistress to hold the sun-shade of ostrich feathers over her
head, and she smiled at me more than once. Each smile was more precious to me
than the heavy chain upon my shoulders. The following morning we went back on board the
Breath of Horns and turned our bows once more towards the south. The long
voyage had begun. WE FOUND THAT THE RIVER HAD changed its mien and
character. It was no longer the broad and serene presence that had comforted
and sustained us all our lives. This was a sterner, wilder being. There was
little gentleness and compassion in its spirit. It was narrower and deeper. The land on each side of it was steeper and more
rugged, and the gorges and nullahs were crudely gouged from the harsh earth.
The brooding and darkling cliffs frowned down upon us with furrowed brows. In some places the bottom lands along the banks
narrowed down so that the horses and cattle and sheep had to pass in single
file along the crude track that the wild goats had trodden between the cliffs
and the water. In other places the track disappeared completely, as the bluffs
and the cliffs pushed boldly into the flood of the Nile. Then there was no way
forward for our herds. Hui was forced to drive them into the river and swim
them across the green expanse of water to the far bank, where the cliffs had
retreated and left the way open for them to pass. As the weeks wore on, we saw little sign of any
human presence. Once, our scouts found the worm-eaten hull of a crude dugout
canoe washed up on a sand-bank, and upon the bottom land an abandoned cluster
of huts. The sagging roofs were thatched with reeds and the sides were open.
There were the remains of fish-smoking racks and the ashes of the fires, but
that was all. Not a shard of pottery or a bead to hint at who these people
might be. We were anxious to make our first contact with the
tribes of Cush, for we needed slaves. Our entire civilization was based on the
keeping of slaves, and we had been able to bring very few of them with us from
Egypt. Tanus sent his scouts far ahead of the fleet, so that we might have good
warning of the first human habitations in ample time to organize our
slave-catchers. I found no irony in the fact that I, a slave myself, spent so
much of my time and thought in planning the taking of other slaves. All wealth can be counted in four commodities, land
and gold and slaves and ivory. We believed that the land that lay ahead of us
was rich in all of these. If we were to grow strong enough to return and drive
the Hyksos from our very Egypt, then we must discover this wealth in the
unexplored land to which we were sailing. Queen Lostris sent out her gold-finders into the
hills along the river as we passed. They climbed up through the gorges and the
dry nullahs, scratching and digging in every likely spot, chipping fragments
off the exposed reefs of quartz and schist, crushing these to powder, and
washing away the dross in a shallow clay dish, hoping always to see the
gleaming precious tail remaining in the bottom of the dish. The royal huntsmen went out with them to search for
game with which to feed our multitudes. They searched also for the first sign
of those great grey beasts who carry the precious teeth of ivory in their
monstrous heads. I made vigorous enquiry through the fleet for any man who had
ever seen one of these elephant alive, or even dead. Though their teeth were a
commonplace throughout the civilized world, there was not a single man who
could help me in my enquiries. I felt a strange and unaccountable excitement at
the thought of our first encounter with these fabulous beasts. There was a host of other creatures inhabiting this
wild land, some of them familiar to us and many that were strange and new. Wherever reeds grew upon the river-bank, we found
herds of hippopotami lying like rounded granite boulders in the shallows. After
long and erudite theological debate, it was still uncertain whether these
beasts above the cataract belonged to the goddess; as did those below, or
whether they were royal game belonging to the crown. The priests of Hapi were
strongly of one persuasion, and the rest of us, with an appetite for the rich
fat and tender flesh of these animals, were of the opposite opinion. It was entirely by coincidence that at this point
the goddess Hapi chose to appear to me in one of my celebrated dreams. I saw
her rise from *he green waters, smiling beneficently, and place in my
mistress's hand a tiny hippopotamus no bigger than a wild partridge. As soon as
I awoke, I lost no time in relaying the substance of this weird and thrilling
dream to the regent. By now my dreams and divination were accepted by my
mistress, and therefore by the rest of our company, as the manifest will and
law of the gods. That evening we all feasted on luscious river-cow
steaks grilled on the open coals on the sand-bank against which the ships had
moored. My reputation and popularity, which were already high throughout the
fleet, were much enhanced by this dream. The priests of Hapi alone were not
carried along by the general warmth of feeling towards me. The river teemed with fish. Below the cataract, our
people had fished the river for a thousand years and longer. These waters were
untouched by man or his nets. We drew from the river shining blue perch heavier
than the fattest man in our company, and there were huge catfish, with
barbellate whiskers as long as my arm, that were too strong and weighty to be
captured in the nets. With a flick of their great tails they ripped the linen
threads as though they were the fragile webs of spiders. Our men hunted them in
the shallows with spears, as though they were river-cows. One of these giants
could feed fifty men with rich yellow flesh that dripped fat into the
cooking-fires. In the cliffs above the river hung the nests of
eagles and vultures. From below they appeared like masses of driftwood, and the
droppings of the huge birds painted the rocks beneath them with streaks of
shining white. The birds floated above us on wide pinions, circling and swaying
on the heated air that rose from the black rocks of the gorge. From the heights, flocks of wild goats watched us
pass with regal and disdainful mien. Tanus went out to hunt them on their airy
crags, but it was many weeks before he succeeded in bringing back one of these
trophies. They had the eyesight of vultures and the agility of the blue-headed
rock lizards that could run effortlessly up a vertical wall of granite. One of these old rams stood as tall as a man's shoulder.
His beard flowed from his chin and throat to sweep the rock on which he posed.
His horns curled upon themselves from mighty crenellated bases. When Tanus
finally brought him down, it was with an arrow shot across a gorge a hundred
paces deep, from peak to pinnacle of these rugged hills. The goat dropped into
the gulf and twisted over and over in the air before it hit the rocks below. Because of my passionate interest in all wild
things, after he had skinned out and butchered the carcass, Tanus carried the
head and the horns home for me. It took all his vast strength to bring down
such a burden from those murderous crags. I cleaned and bleached the skull and
set it up on the bows of our galley as a figurehead, as we sailed on into the
unknown. THE MONTHS PASSED, AND BELOW OUR keels the river
began to dwindle away as the inundation abated. As we passed the sheer
headlands, we could see the height of the river measured upon the cliff where
all the previous inundations had left their watermarks. At night Memnon and I sat up on deck as late as his
mother would allow us, and together we studied the stars that illuminated the
firmament of the sky with a milky radiance. I taught him the name and the
nature of each of these fiery points of light and how they affected the destiny
of every man born under them. By watching the heavenly bodies, I was able to
determine that the river was no longer taking us directly into the south, but
that we were veering towards the west. These observations stirred up another heated
controversy amongst the scholars and the wise men of our company. 'The river is taking us directly to the western
fields of paradise,' suggested the -priests of Osiris and Ammon-Ra. 'It is a
ruse of Seth. He wishes to confuse and confound us,' argued the priests of
Hapi, who up until now had exerted undue influence over our councils. Queen
Lostris was a child of their goddess, and it had been generally accepted by
most of us that Hapi was the patron of our expedition. The priests were angry
to see their position weakened by this wayward perambulation of the river.
'Soon the river will turn south once more,' they promised. It always appalls me
to watch how unscrupulous men manipulate the wishes of the gods to coincide
with their own. Before the matter could be resolved, we came to the
second cataract. This was as far as any civilized man had ever
ventured, and not one of them had reached further. When we scouted and surveyed
the cataract, the reason for this was abundantly evident. These rapids were
more extensive and formidable than those we had already negotiated. Over a vast area, the stream of the Nile was split
by several massive Islands and hundreds of smaller ones. It was low-water now,
and at most places the bed of the river was exposed. A maze of rock-strewn
canals and branches extended for miles ahead of us. We were awed by the
grandeur and menace of it. 'How do we know that there is not another cataract,
and men another, guarding the river?' those who were easily discouraged asked each
other. 'We will expend our strength and in the end find ourselves trapped
between the rapids without the strength to advance or retreat. We should turn
back now, before it is too late,' they agreed amongst themselves. 'We will go on,' decreed my mistress. 'Those who
wish to turn back now, are free to do so. However, there will be no vessels to
carry them nor horses to draw them. They will return on their own, and I am
certain the Hyksos will bid them a hearty welcome.' There were none who accepted her magnanimous offer.
Instead, they went ashore on the fertile islands that choked the course of the
river. The spray from the rapids during the flood, and the
water filtering up through the soil during low ebb, had transformed these
islands into verdant forests, in stark contrast to the dry and terrible deserts
on either bank. Springing from seeds brought down by the waters from the ends
of the earth, tall trees, of a kind that none of us had ever seen before, grew
on the silt that Mother Nile had piled up on the granite foundation of the
islands. We could not attempt a transit of these rapids
until the Nile brought down her next inundation and gave us sufficient depth of
water for our galleys. That was still many months away. Our farmers went ashore and cleared land to plant
the seeds that we had brought with us. Within days the seed had sprouted, and
in the hot sunlight the plants seemed to grow taller under our eyes. Within a
few short months the dhurra corn was ready to be harvested, and we were gorging
on the sweet fruits and vegetables that we had missed so much since leaving
Egypt. The muttering amongst our people died away. In fact these islands were so attractive, and the
soil so fertile, that some of our people began to talk about settling here
permanently. A delegation from the priests of Ammon-Ra went to the queen and
asked for her permission to erect a temple to the god on one of the islands. My
mistress replied, 'We are travellers here. In the end we will return to Egypt.
That is my vow and promise to all my people. We will build no temples or other
permanent habitation. Until we return to Egypt we will live as the Bedouin, in
tents and huts.' I NOW HAD AT MY DISPOSAL THE TIMBER from those
trees we had felled upon the islands. I was able to experiment with these and
to explore their various properties. There was an acacia whose wood was resilient and
strong. It made the finest spokes for my chariot wheels of any material which I
had so far tested. I put my carpenters and weavers to work on reassembling the
chariots that we had brought with us, and building new-ones from the woods and
bamboos that grew on the islands. The flat bottom lands were several miles wide on
the left bank below the cataract. Soon our squadrons of chariots were training
and exercising upon these smooth and open plains once more. The spokes of the
wheels still broke under hard driving, but not as frequently as they once had.
I was able to entice Tanus back on to the footplate; however, he would not ride
with any driver but myself. At the same time, I was able to complete the first
successful recurved bow upon which I had been working since we had left
Elephantine. It was made from the same composite materials as was Lanata, wood
and ivory and hom. However, the shape was different. When it was unstrung, the
upper and lower limbs were curved out and away from the archer. It was only
when the weapon was strung that they were forced back into the familiar bow
shape, but the tension in the stock and the string was multiplied out of all proportion
to the much shorter length of the bow. At my gentle insistence, Tanus finally agreed to
shoot the bow at a series of targets that I had erected upon the east bank.
After he had shot twenty arrows he said little, but I could see that he was
astonished by the range and accuracy of it. I knew my Tanus so well. He was a
conservative and a reactionary to the marrow of his bones. Lanata was his first
love, both the woman and the bow. I knew it would be a wrench for him to
acknowledge a new love, so I did not pester him for an opinion, but let him
come to it in his own time. It was then that our scouts came in to report a
migration of oryx from out of the desert. We had seen several small herds of
these magnificent animals since we had passed the first cataract. Usually they
were grazing upon the river-bank, but they fled back into the desert as our
ships sailed towards them. What our scouts reported now was a massive movement
of these animals such as took place only very occasionally. I had witnessed it just
once before. With the freak occurrence of a thunderstorm in the desert
fastnesses once in twenty years or so, the flush of green grass that sprang
from the wet earth would attract the scattered herds of oryx from hundreds of
miles around. As they moved towards the fresh grazing grounds,
the herds amalgamated into one massive movement of animals across the desert.
This was happening now, and it offered us the chance of a change of diet and
the opportunity to run our chariots in earnest. For the first time, Tanus showed a real interest in
my chariots, now that there was game to pursue with them. As he took his place
on the footplate of my vehicle, I noticed mat it was the new recurved bow that
he hung on the rack, and not his faithful old Lanata. I said not a word, but
shook up the horses and headed them towards the gap irt the hills mat offered
us a route out of the narrow valley of the Nile and gave access to the open
desert. We were fifty chariots in the squadron, followed by
a dozen heavy carts with solid wheels that carried sufficient fodder and water
for five days. We trotted in column of route, two vehicles abreast, and with
three lengths between the files. This had already become our standard
travelling formation. To keep down the weight, we were stripped to
loin-cloths, and all our men were in superb physical condition from long months
of work on the rowing-benches of the galleys. Their muscled torsos were all
freshly oiled and gleamed in the sunlight, like the bodies of young gods. Each
chariot carried its brightly coloured recognition pennant on a long, whippy
bamboo rod. We made a brave show as we came up the goat track through the
hills. When I looked back down the column, even I, who never was a soldier, was
affected by the spectacle. I did not clearly recognize the truth then, but the
Hyksos and the exodus had forced a new military spirit upon the nation. We had
been a race of scholars and traders and priests, but now, with the
determination of Queen Lostris to expel the tyrant, and led by Lord Tanus, we
were fast becoming a warlike people. As we led the column over the crest of the hills,
and the open desert lay ahead of us, a small figure stepped out from behind the
last pile of rocks where it had been lying in ambush. 'Whoa!' I reined down the horses. 'What are you
doing out here so far from the ships?' I had not seen thexprince since the previous
evening, and had believed that he was safe with his nursemaids. To come across
him here on the edge of the desert was a shock, and my tone was outraged. At
that time he was not quite six years of age, but he had his toy bow over his
shoulder and a determined expression on his face that mirrored that of his
father, when Tanus was in one of his most intractable moods. 'I am coming on the hunt with you,' said Memnon. 'No, you are not,' I contradicted him. 'I am
sending you back to your mother this very instant. She will know how to deal
with small boys who sneak out of the camp without telling their tutors where
they are going.' 'I am the crown prince of Egypt,' declared Memnon,
but his lip trembled despite this weighty declaration. 'No man durst forbid me.
It is my right and my sacred duty to lead my people in time of need.' We had now moved on to dangerous ground. The prince
knew his rights and his responsibilities. It was I who had taughf them to him.
However, in all truth, I had not expected him to exercise them so soon. He had
made it an affair of royal protocol, and it was difficult, even impossible, to
argue with him. Desperately I sought for an escape. 'Why did you not ask me before?' I was merely
bidding for time. 'Because you would have gone to my mother,' he said
with simple honesty, 'and she would have supported you, as she always does.' 'I can still go to the queen,' I threatened, but he
looked back into the valley where the ships were small as toys, and he grinned
at me. We both knew that I could not order the entire squadron to drive all
that way back. 'Please let me come with you, Tata,' he changed his
tune. The little devil was attacking me on all fronts. I found it impossible to
resist him when he exerted all his charm. Then I was struck with inspiration.
'Lord Harrab is the commander of this expedition. You must ask him.' The relationship between these two was a strange
one. Only three of us—the two parents and myself—were aware of Memnon's true
paternity. The prince himself thought of Tanus as his tutor and the commander
of his armies. Although he had come to love Tanus, he still held him in
considerable awe. Tanus was not the type of man that a small boy, even a
prince, would trifle with. The two of them looked at each other now. I could
see Memnon was pondering his best plan of attack, while I could feel Tanus
trembling with the effort of holding back his laughter. 'Lord Harrab,' Memnon had decided on the formal
approach, 'I wish to come with you. I think it will be a very useful lesson for
me, After all, one day I will have to lead the army.' I had taught him logic
and dialectic. He was a student to be proud of. 'Prince Memnon, are you giving me an order?' Tanus
managed to cover his amusement with a horrific scowl, and I saw tears begin to
well up in the prince's eyes. He shook his head miserably. 'No, my lord.' He was
a small boy once more. 'But I would very much like to come hunting with you,
please.' 'The queen will have me strangled,' said Tanus,
'but hop up here in front of me, you little ruffian.' The prince loved Tanus to call him a ruffian. It
was a term that he usually reserved for the men of his old Blues regiment, and
it made Memnon feel that he was one of them. He let out a yelp of glee and
almost tripped over his own feet in his haste to obey. Tanus reached down and
caught his arm. He swung him up and placed him securely between us on the
footplate. 'Hi up!' Memnon shouted to Patience and Blade, and
we drove out into the open desert, but not before I had sent a messenger back
to the fleet with a message for the queen to tell her that the prince was safe.
No lioness could be as fierce as my mistress in the care of its cub. When we struck the migration road, it was a broad
swathe of churned sand many hundreds of yards wide. The hooves of the oryx are
broad and splayed to cover the soft desert sands. They leave a distinctive
track, the shape of a Hyksos spear-head. Many thousands of the huge antelope
had passed this way. 'When?' Tanus asked, and I dismounted to examine
the trail. I took Memnon down with me, for I never missed an opportunity to
instruct him. I showed him how the night breeze had eroded the spoor, and how
small insects and lizards had superimposed their own tracks over those of the
herd. "They passed here yesterday evening at
sunset,' I gave my opinion, and had it endorsed by the prince. 'But they are
travelling slowly. With luck we can catch them before noon.' We waited for the wagons to come up. We watered the
horses, and then went on, following the broad trodden road through the dunes. Soon we found the carcasses of the weaker animals
that had succumbed. They were the very young and the oldest, and now the crows
and the vultures squawked and squabbled over their remains, while the little
red jackals slunk around the fringes, hoping for a mouthful. We followed the broad road until at last we saw the
thin filtering of dust upon the southern horizon, and we quickened our pace.
When we topped a line of rugged hills whose crests danced in the heat-mirage,
we saw the herds spread out below us. We had reached the area where the
thunderstorm had broken weeks before. As far ahead as we could see, the desert had
been transformed into a garden of flowers. The last rains might have fallen here a hundred
years ago. It seemed impossible, but the seeds of that harvest had lain
sleeping all that time. They had been burned and desiccated by sun and desert
wind, while they waited for the rains to come once again. For any who doubted
the existence of the gods, this miracle was proof. For any man who doubted that
life was eternal, this held out the promise of immortality. If the flowers
could survive thus, then surely the soul of man, which is infinitely more
wonderful and valuable, must also live for ever. The landscape below us was painted with shades of
soft greens, the contours and the outlines of the hills were picked out with
sweeps of darker green. This formed a background to the wonderful rainbow of
colour that lit the earth. The flowers grew in banks and drifts. The blooms of
each variety seemed to seek the company of their own kind, as do the herds of
antelope and the flocks of birds. The orange-coloured daisies grew in pools and
lakes together, those with white petals frosted entire hillsides. There were
fields of blue gladiolus, scarlet lilies and yellow ericas. Even the wiry brush plants in the gorges and
nullahs, that had seemed seared and dried as mummies of men dead a thousand
years, were now decked in fresh robes of green, with wreaths of yellow blooms
crowning their ancient blasted heads. Lovely as it now was, I knew that it was
ephemeral. Another month and the desert would triumph again. The flowers would wither
on the stem, and the grass would turn to dust and blow away on the furnace
blasts of the winds. Nothing would remain of this splendour except the seeds,
tiny as grains of sand, waiting out the years with a monumental patience. 'Such beauty should be shared with the one you
love,' Tanus breathed in awe. 'Would that the queen were with me now!' That Tanus had been so moved by it proved the glory
of the spectacle. He was a soldier and a hunter, but for once he gave no
thought to the quarry, but gazed upon the spectacle with a religious awe. It was a shout from Kratas in one of the following
chariots that roused us from this reverie of beauty. 'By Seth's stinking
breath, there must be ten thousand of them down there.' The oryx were spread out to the green silhouette of
the farther hills. Some of the old bulls were solitary, keeping all others
away, but the rest of them were in herds of ten or a hundred, and some of the
herds were beyond count. They were merely huge tawny stains, like cloud shadow
upon the plains. It seemed to me that every oryx in all of Africa was gathered
here. We watered the horses again before the hunt began.
This gave me a chance to go forward and to gaze down upon this great concourse
of living things. Of course, I took Mem-non with me, but when I tried to lead
him by the hand he disentangled his fingers from my grip. 'Don't hold my hand
in front of the men, Tata,' he told me solemnly. 'They will think I am still a
baby.' As we stood on the sky-line, the nearest animals
raised their heads and regarded us with mild curiosity. It occurred to me that
they had probably never before seen a human being, and that they detected no
danger in our presence. The oryx is a magnificent creature, standing as
tall as a horse, with the same full, flowing, dark tail that sweeps the ground.
Its face is painted with intricate whorls and slashes of black upon a pale,
sand-coloured mask. A stiff, dark mane runs down the neck, enhancing the
horse-like appearance, but its horns are like those of no other animal created
by the gods. They are slim and straight and tipped like the dagger on my belt.
Almost as long as the animal that bears them is tall, they are formidable
weapons. Whereas all other antelope are meek and inoffensive, preferring flight
to aggression, the oryx will defend itself even against the attack of the lion. I told Memnon of their courage and their powers of
endurance, and explained how they could live their entire lives without
drinking water from pool or river. "They take then-water from the dew, and
from the desert roots and tubers which theyidig out of the earth with their
hooves.' He listened avidly, for he had inherited the love
of the chase in his father's blood, and I had taught him to revere all wild things. 'The true huntsman understands and respects the
birds and the animals that he hunts,' I told him, and he nodded seriously. 'I want to be a true huntsman and a soldier, just
like Lord Tanus.' 'A man is not born with such gifts. He must learn
them, in the same way that you must learn to be a great and just ruler.' I felt a pang of regret when Tanus called to me
that the horses were watered, and I looked back to see the charioteers mounting
up. I would have preferred to spend the rest of that day with my prince
watching the royal show upon the plains below me. I went back reluctantly to
take up the reins and to drive our chariot back to the head of the column. On the footplates of the other chariots, the
archers had their bows strung, and the fever of the hunt gripped every man.
They were like hounds on a short leash with the scent in their nostrils. 'Ho, Lord Tanus!' Kratas shouted across to us. 'A
wager on the outcome?' Before Tanus could reply, I murmured, 'Take one for
me. The old braggart has never shot from the back of a flying chariot.' 'Clean kills only,' Tanus called back to him. 'Any
animal with another man's arrow in it, not to count.' Every archer marked the
shaft of his arrow with his own motif, so that he might claim it later. Tanus'
mark was the Wadjet, the wounded Eye of Horus. 'One gold deben for each oryx
with your arrow in it.' 'Make it two,' I suggested. 'One for me.' I am not
a gambling man, but this was not a gamble. Tanus had his new recurved bow, and
I was the best charioteer in the whole of our army. We were still novices, but I had studied the
Hyksos' use of the chariot. Every evolution that their squadrons had performed
on that terrible day on the plain of Abnub was graven on my memory. To me this
was not merely a hunt for meat and sport, but practice and training for the
much greater game of war. We had to learn to run our formations to the very
best advantage and to control them in the full flight and confusion of battle,
while circumstances changed with every movement of the enemy, and every chance
and hazard of war. As we trotted down on to the plain, I gave the
first signal, and the column split into three files. Smoothly we opened up like
the petals of a lily. The flankers curled out like the horns of a bull to
surround the quarry, while my column in the centre deployed into line abreast,
with three chariot lengths between our wheel-hubs. We were the chest of the
bull. The horns would hold the enemy while we came up and crushed him in our
savage embrace. Ahead of us, the scattered herds of gazelle threw
up their heads and gazed at us with the first stirring of alarm. They began to
drift away, gathering up their fellows as they passed, small herds combining
into larger, the way that a single boulder rolling down the slope will bring
down the landslide. Soon the entire plain was alive with moving oryx. They
cantered with a peculiar rocking motion, and dust rose in a pale mist and hung
over their swaying backs. Their long, dark tails swished from side to side. I held my own squadron down to a walk. I did not
want to tire the horses too soon with a long, stern chase. I was watching the
denser, taller dust-clouds thrown up by the two flanking columns circling
swiftly out on each side of the herd. At last they came together far ahead, and the ring
was closed. The herds of oryx slowed down as they found their escape-route
blocked. They began to mill in confusion as those in the lead turned back and
ran into the ranks that followed. Obedient to my orders, once the flanking columns
had completed the encircling movement, they also slowed to an easy walk, and
turned in towards the centre of the circle. We had the huge herd of oryx in our
fist, and slowly we closed our grip upon them. Most of the bewildered animals
came to a halt, uncertain in which direction to run. Every way they gazed, they
saw the lines of chariots bearing down upon them. Closer we came, at a steady walk, and our horses
were still fresh and eager to run. They had sensed the excitement, and threw
their heads, fighting with the traces, snorting and rolling their eyes until
the whites showed. The oryx herd began to move again, but in no definite
direction. They milled upon themselves, making uncertain dashes in one
direction before coming up short and then swinging around and rushing back
again. I was pleased with the control and discipline of
our squadrons. They held their formations rigidly, without bunching up and
leaving gaps in the ranks. The signals that I gave were repeated down the line
and acted upon instantly. We were at last becoming an army. Soon we would be
able to meet any foe on favourable terms, even the Hyksos veterans who had
spent their entire lives on the footplate of a chariot. I reached behind me and took Prince Memnon by the
arm. I drew him forward and placed him against the dashboard. I wedged him
there with my own body, and he gripped the front panel. Now Tanus had both
hands free to shoot his bow, and the prince was safe. 'Let me take the reins, Tata. I will drive,' Memnon
pleaded. I had let him drive before, so he meant it seriously, though he was
barely tall enough to see over the dashboard. I dared not laugh at him, for he
took himself very seriously. 'Next time, Mem. This time just watch and learn.' At last we were less than a hundred paces from the
nearest oryx, the pressure was too great for them to tolerate. Led by one
scarred old cow, a hundred of them charged straight at our line in a mass. At
my signal we shortened Our line until we were running hub to hub, a solid wall
of horses and men, and the trumpeters sounded the charge. I lashed my team into
a full gallop and we raced headlong to meet them. Tanus was firing past my right shoulder. I could
watch each of his arrows fly out across the closing gap. This was the first
time he had shot from a running chariot, and his first three arrows flew wide
of the mark, as the chariot careered into the herd of racing oryx. But he was a
master archer, and he adjusted his aim swiftly. His next arrow took the old
cow, who was still leading the charge, full in the chest. It must have split
her heart, for she went down, nose into the sand, and rolled over her own head.
The animals following her swerved out on either side of her, offering Tanus
broadside targets. It was fascinating to watch his next two arrows curl away
and fall behind the racing oryx. The temptation is always to shoot directly at a
running target, and not at the place in the empty air ahead of it, where it
will be when the arrow reaches it. This calculation of forward aim is further complicated
by the movement of the chariot in relation to the target. I was trying to give
him the easiest shot by turning the chariot with the run of the game. All the
same, I was not surprised when two more of Tanus' arrows missed behind the
target. Then, like the master of the bow that he is, he
adjusted his aim, and the following arrow plunged feathers-deep into the chest
of the next oryx. He killed three more with three arrows, while all around us
the hunt disintegrated into the wild confusion of battle, and dust obscured all
but the closest glimpses of running chariots and racing animals. I was driving close behind a pair of oryx,
overhauling them slowly, when the flying hooves of one of them threw up a chip
of sharp flint the size of the last joint of my thumb. Before he could duck, it
struck Memnon on the forehead, and when he looked up at me I saw the blood
trickling from the shallow cut above his eye. 'You are hurt, Mem,' I cried, and started to rein
down the horses. 'It is nothing,' he told me, and used the corner of
his shawl to mop the blood. 'Don't stop, Tata! Keep after them. Kratas will
beat us, if you don't.' So I drove on into the dust, and beside me Tanus'
bow sang its awful song, and the prince yipped and yelped with excitement like
a puppy the first time that it chases a rabbit. Some of the oryx broke free of our lines and
escaped into the open desert, while others were turned back into the trap. Men
shouted with excitement and triumph, horses whinnied, and the oryx snorted and
bellowed as the arrows slapped into them and brought them crashing down in a
tangle of flying hooves and scimitar horns. All around us was the thunder of
hooves and wheels, and we were immersed in the yellow fog of dust. There is a limit to how long even the finest and
most willing team of horses can be driven at full gallop. When finally I reined
Patience and Blade down to a walk, the dust had caked like mud in the sweat
that lathered their flanks, and they hung their heads with exhaustion. Slowly, the dust-clouds that had obscured the field
drifted aside and dissipated. The field was a terrible sight. Our squadron was scattered over the entire plain. I
counted five chariots whose wheels had shattered during the chase, and the
up-ended vehicles looked like the broken toys of a petulant giant. The injured
men lay on the sandy earth beside their shattered chariots, with their comrades
kneeling over them as they tended their wounds. Even those chariots that had survived undamaged
were halted. The horses were blown and exhausted. Their flanks heaved as they
strained for breath, and the white froth dripped from their muzzles. Each one
of them was soaked with sweat, as though it had swum across the river. The game was scattered upon the field in the same
disorder and lack of purpose or design. Many of the great beasts were dead, and
their carcasses lay stretched out on their sides. Many others were crippled and
maimed. Some stood with their heads hanging. Others limped away through the
dunes with slow and halting gait. Each arrow-shaft left a dark stain of wet
blood upon the pale, roan-coloured hide. This was the pitiful end to every hunt, when the
heat and excitement have cooled and the wounded game has to be gathered up and
put out of its misery. Near us I saw one old bull oryx sitting on his
paralysed haunches with his front legs stiff in front of him. The arrow that
had crippled him stood out so high from his back that I knew that die point had
severed his spine. I took the second bow from the rack on the side-panel of our
chariot, and I jumped down from the footplate to the ground. As I walked
towards the crippled bull, he swung his head to watch me. Then he made one last
courageous effort, and dragged his crippled back legs as he came at me. He
slashed those long black horns at me, but his eyes swam with the tears of
mortal agony. I was forced to drive two arrows deep into the cavity of his
chest before he gave one last groan and rolled over on to his side, kicked once
convulsively, and was still. When I climbed back into the chariot, I glanced at
the prince's face. His eyes were wet with tears and his blood-smeared face was
crumpled into an expression of pity for the oryx. He turned his face away from
me, so that I could not see his tears, but I was proud of them. He who lacks
compassion for the game he pursues is no true huntsman. I took his curly head in my hands and turned his
face back to me. Gently, I cleaned the wound on his forehead and bandaged it
with a strip of linen. We camped that night upon the plain of flowers, and
their sweet perfume scented the darkness, and overlaid the smell of
fresh-spilled blood. There was no moon, but the stars filled the entire
sky. The hills were bathed in their silver luminosity. We sat late at the
camp-fires and feasted on the livers and hearts of oryx roasted on the coals.
To begin with, the prince sat between Tanus and me at the fireside, but the
officers and men vied for his attention. He had stolen all their hearts, and at
their invitation he moved easily from one group to the next. They mended their
language and banter to fit his ears, and the prince was at ease in their
company. They made a great fuss of his bandaged head. 'Now
you are a real soldier,' they, told him, 'just like one of us.' And they showed
him their own scars. 'You did the right thing by allowing him to come
with us,' I told Tanus, as we both watched him proudly. "This is the best
training any young cadet can ever have.' 'The men love him already,' Tanus agreed. "There
are two things that a general needs. One is luck and the other is the devotion
of his troops.' 'Memnon must be allowed to go out with every
expedition, just as long as it is not too dangerous,' I decided, and Tanus
chuckled. 'I leave you to convince his mother of that. There
are some things that are beyond my powers of persuasion.' On the other side of the camp-fire, Kratas was
teaching Memnon the expurgated version of the lyrics of the regimental marching
songs. The prince had a sweet, clear voice, and the men clapped the time, and
came in on the chorus. They protested loudly and rudely when at last I tried to
send Memnon to the bed I had prepared for him under the body of the chariot,
and even Tanus supported them. 'Let the boy stay with us a little longer,' he
ordered, and it was well after midnight when at last I was able to roll the
prince in my sheepskin rug. 'Tata, will I ever be able to shoot the way that
Lord Tanus does?' he asked sleepily. 'You will be one of the great generals of our very
Egypt, and one day I will carve an account of your victories on obelisks of
stone, so that all the world will know of them.' He thought about that for a while and then sighed.
'When will you make me a real bow, not just a baby's toy?' 'As soon as you can draw it,' I promised. 'Thank you, Tata. I should like that.' And he went
to sleep as suddenly as I would blow out the flame of a lamp. WE RETURNED IN TRIUMPH TO THE fleet, the wagons loaded
with the salted and sun-dried meat of the oryx herd. I had expected my mistress
to tax me severely for having abducted the prince. I had prepared my defence
and was determined to place the blame squarely on the broader shoulders of Lord
Harrab. However, her censure was milder than I had
anticipated. She told Memnon that he was a wicked child for having caused her
worry, and then hugged him until he was in danger of suffocation. When she
turned to me, I launched into a long explanation of Tanus' role in the affair,
and the valuable training and experience that the prince had received, but she
seemed to have dismissed the entire episode. 'When did you and I last go
fishing together?' she asked. 'Fetch your fishing-spears, Taita. We will take
one of the skiffs. Just the two of us on the river, the way we used to be in
the old days.' I knew that we would do little fishing. She wanted
me alone on the water where we could not be overheard. Whatever was troubling
her was of serious importance. I paddled downstream on the shrunken and slow green
waters until the bend of the river and the high rocky bluff hid us from the
fleet. All my attempts at conversation had failed, so I put aside my paddle and
took up my lute. I strummed and sang the tunes she loved best, and waited for
her to speak. At last she looked up at me, and her eyes were
filled with a strange mixture of joy and worry. 'Taita, I think I am going to have another baby.' I can think of no reason why this statement should
have surprised me so. After all, every night since we had left Elephantine, she
and the commander of her army had been locked in secret conclave, while I kept
guard at the door of her cabin. Nevertheless, I was so alarmed that my hand
froze on the lute strings and the song died in my throat. It was some moments
before I could regain my voice. 'My lady, did you use the infusion of herbs that I
prepared for you?' I asked diffidently. 'At times I did, but at others I forgot.' She
smiled shyly. 'Lord Tanus can be a very impatient man. Besides which, it is so
unromantic to fiddle with pots and jars, when there are better and more urgent
things waiting to be done.' 'Things like making babies who have no royal father
to claim them.' 'It is rather serious, isn't it, Taita?' I struck a chord on the rate while I framed a
reply. 'Rather serious? Oh, I think that is the wrong word. If you give birth
to a bastard, or if you take a husband, then you will be obliged to relinquish
the regency. That is the custom and the law. Lord Merkeset would be the next in
line as regent, but there will be covert warfare amongst all the nobility for
the position. Without your protection as regent, the prince would be in great
danger. We would be torn by internecine strife—' I broke off, and shuddered at
the prospect of it. 'Tanus could become regent in my stead, and then I
could marry him,' she suggested brightly. 'Don't think I have not thought of that before,' I
told her sombrely. 'It would be the solution to all our difficulties. But then
there is Tanus.' 'If I ask him, he will do it gladly, I am sure of
that,' she smiled with relief, 'and I will be his wife. We need no longer play
these shams and subterfuges to be alone together.' 'I wish it were that easy. But Tanus will never
agree. He cannot—'' 'What is this silliness?' The first sparks of anger
lit her eyes, and I hurried on. 'That night at Thebes, the night that Pharaoh sent
men to arrest Tanus on charges of sedition, we tried to force Tanus to declare
for the crown. Kratas and all his officers swore their support, and that of all
the army. They wanted to march on the palace and place Tanus on the throne.' 'Why did Tanus not agree to them? He would have
been a fine king, and it would have saved all of us so much heartache.' 'Tanus spurned their offer. He declared that he was
not a traitor, and that he would never mount the throne of Egypt.' "That was long ago. Things have all changed,'
she cried with exasperation. 'No, they have not changed. Tanus swore an oath
that day, and he called on the god Horus to witness it. He swore that he would
never take the crown.' 'But it no longer counts. He can go back on that
oath.' 'Would you go back on an oath that you had sworn in
the sight of the god Horus?' I demanded, and she looked away and hung her head. 'Would you?' I insisted, and she shook her head
reluctantly. 'No,' she whispered, 'I could not.' 'The same code of honour binds Tanus. You cannot
call upon him to do what you dare not do yourself,' I explained gently. 'Of
course, we can put it to him, but you and I both know what his reply must
surely be.' "There must be something that you can do?' She
looked at me with that blind trust that angered me. Whenever she had run
herself into the deepest danger, she simply turned to me and said, 'There must be
something that you can do?' "There is something, but you will not agree to
it, any more than Tanus will agree to wear the crown.' 'If you care anything for me, you will not even
suggest it.' She understood me immediately, and recoiled from me as though I
had struck her. 'I would rather die myself than kill this miracle of love that
Tanus has placed in my womb. The child is him and me and our love. I could
never murder all of that.' "Then, Your Majesty, there is nothing more
that I can suggest to you.' She smiled at me with such sublime trust and
confidence that it took my breath away. 'I know you will think of something, my
darling Taita. You always do.' And so I had a dream. I RELATED MY DREAM BEFORE A FULL SESSION of the
council of state called by the regent of this very Egypt. Queen Lostris and Prince Memnon were seated upon
the throne high on the poop-deck of the Breath of Horus. The galley was
moored to the west bank of the Nile. The members of the council were seated
upon the beach below her. Lord Merkeset and the nobility represented the
secular arm of the state. The high priests of Ammon-Ra and Osiris and Hapi
represented the sacred arm. Lord Harrab and fifty of his senior officers stood
for the military. I stood upon the opemdeck below the throne and
faced this distinguished gathering. I had taken even greater pains than usual
with my appearance. My make-up was subtle and cunning. My hair was dressed with
fragrant oils, and coiled in the fashion that I had made popular. I wore the
two chains of the Gold of Praise around my neck, and my chest and arms were
shaped and hardened by chariot-driving. I must have presented an extraordinary
figure of beauty to them, for many of them gaped at me, and I saw the lust in
the eyes of those whose inclinations ran in that direction. 'Your Majesties,' I made the low salutation to the
pair upon the throne, and Prince Memnon grinned at me cheekily. His head was
still bandaged, although it was no longer necessary. He was so proud of his war
wound that I had let him keep it on. I frowned at him, and he adjusted his
expression to be more in keeping with the occasion. 'Your Majesties, last night I dreamed a strange and
wonderful dream which I feel it is my duty to relate. I beg your leave to
speak.' Queen Lostris replied graciously, 'Every person in
this company is aware of the sacred gift that you have. The prince and I know
that you are able to see into the future, and to divine the will and the wishes
of the gods through dreams and visions. I command you now to speak of these
mysteries.' I bowed again and turned to face the council. 'Last night I slept at the door to the royal cabin,
as is my duty. Queen Lostris lay alone upon her couch, and the prince slept in
his alcove beyond her bed.' Even Lord Merkeset leaned forward and held his
cupped hand behind his good ear, the other being stone-deaf. They all loved a
good story and a fruity prophecy. 'In the third watch of the night I awoke, and there
was a strange light glowing throughout the ship. I felt a cold wind blowing
upon my cheek although every door and porthole was closed.' My audience stirred with interest. I had struck the
right ghostly tone. "Then I heard footsteps echoing through the
hull, slow and majestic footsteps, such as never were made by mortal man.' I
paused dramatically. 'These weird and eerie sounds came from the hold of the
galley.' I paused again for them to absorb this. 'Yes, my lords, from the hold where the gold coffin
of Pharaoh Mamose, the eighth of that name, lies awaiting burial.' Some of my audience shuddered with awe, while
others made the sign against evil. "These footsteps drew closer to where I lay at
the queen's door. The heavenly glow of light grew stronger, and while I
trembled, a figure appeared before me. It was the shape of a man, but it was
not human, for it glowed like the full moon and its face was a divine
reincarnation of the king as I had known him, yet altered and filled with all
the terrible divinity of his godhead.' They were rapt and silent. Not a man stirred. I
searched their faces for any sign of incredulity, but I found none. Then suddenly a child's voice broke the silence, as
the prince cried out high and clear, 'Bak-Her! It was my father. Bak-Her! It
was Pharaoh!' They took up the cry, 'Bak-Her! It was Pharaoh. May
he live for ever!' I waited for the silence, and when it returned I
let it draw out to the point where they were almost overwhelmed by the
suspense. 'Pharaoh came towards me, and I could not move. He
passed me and entered the cabin of Her Gracious Majesty, Queen Lostris. Though
I could neither move nor utter a sound, I saw all that came to pass. While the
queen still slept, the divine pharaoh mounted upon her in all his splendour,
and he took his husbandly pleasure with her. Their bodies were joined as man and
woman.' There was still no sign of disbelief on any face. I
waited for the full effect of my words and then I went on, 'Pharaoh rose from
the bosom of the sleeping queen, and he looked upon me and he spoke thus.' I am able to mimic the sound of other men's voices
so faithfully that others believe they hear the one I am imitating. I spoke now
in the voice of Pharaoh Mamose. 'I have endowed the queen with my godhead. She has
become one with me and the gods. I have impregnated her with my divine seed.
She who has known no man but me, will bear a child of my royal blood. This will
be a sign to all men that she enjoys my protection, and that I will watch over
her still.' I bowed once more to the royal pair upon the throne.
'Then the king passed back through the ship, and entered once more his golden
coffin where he now rests. That was all my vision.' 'May Pharaoh live for ever!' shouted Lord Tanus, as
I had coached him, and the cry was taken up. 'Hail, Queen Lostris! May she live for ever! Hail,
the divine child she bears! May all her children live for ever!' That night when I prepared to retire, my mistress
called me to her, and she whispered, 'Your vision was so vivid and you told it
so well that I shall not be able to sleep lest Pharaoh come again. Guard the
door well.' 'I dare say there may be one bold and importunate
enough to disturb your royal slumber, but I doubt that it will be Pharaph
Mamose. If some rascal does come to take advantage of your kind and loving
nature, what should I do?' 'Sleep soundly, dear Taita, and stop your ears.'
Her cheeks glowed pink in the lamplight as she blushed. Once again my premonition of future events was
proved accurate. That night there came a secret visitor to my mistress's cabin,
and it was not the ghost of Pharaoh. I did what Queen Lostris had ordered. I
stopped my ears. THE NILE FLOODED ONCE AGAIN, REMINDING us that
another year had passed. We had reaped the corn that we had planted upon the
islands, and we gathered in our herds. We broke down the chariots and packed
them on the open decks of the galleys. We rolled up the tents and stowed them
in the holds. Finally, when all was ready for our departure, we laid out the
ropes upon the bank and put every able-bodied man and horse into the traces. It took us almost a month of heart-breaking labour
to make the transit of this fearsome cataract. We lost sixteen men drowned, and
five galleys broken and chewed to splinters by the fangs of black rock. But at
last we were through, and we set sail upon the smooth flow of the river above
the rapids. As the weeks turned to months, the Nile described a
slow and majestic bend beneath our keels. Since leaving Elephantine, I had
charted the course of the river. I had used the sun and the stars to give me
direction, but I had come upon a great difficulty in measuring the distance
that we travelled. At first I had ordered one of the slaves to walk along the
bank and count every pace he took, but I knew that this method was so
inaccurate that it would set all my calculations to nought. The solution came to me one morning while we were
out on chariot manoeuvres. I watched my right-hand wheel turning, and realized
that each revolution of the rim made an exact measure of the ground that it had
covered. Thereafter a chariot followed the bank of the river. One wheel had a
flag on the rim, and a reliable man sat on the footplate and made a mark on a
scroll for each time the flag came around. Each evening I calculated the direction and
distance we had travelled during the day, and marked it up on my chart. Slowly,
the design and shape of the river made itself clear to me. I saw that we had
made a vast loop out into the west, but that now the river had turned back into
the south, as the priests of Hapi had predicted. I showed my findings to Tanus and the queen. Many
nights we sat late in the royal cabin, discussing the course of the river and
how it would affect our plans to return to Egypt. It seemed that every mile
along the river that we travelled, far from dimming my mistress's
determination, served but to enhance the force of the vow she had made to
return. 'We will build no temple nor palace of stone in the
wilderness,' she ordered. 'We will set up no monument or obelisk. Our sojourn
here is transitory. We will build no cities, but will live in our ships, or
under tents and huts made of grass and reeds. We are a caravan on a journey
that in the end will take us back to the city of my birth, beautiful Thebes of
a hundred gates.' In private she counselled me, 'Keep your charts
well, Taita. I trust you to find the easy way home for us.' So our river caravan journeyed onwards, and the
desert on either hand changed its face with every mile, and yet in the end was
unchanged. We who sailed upon the river had become a close-knit
community, almost an itinerant city without walls or permanent structure. Life
burgeoned and faded. Our numbers increased, for most of those who had come with
us from Elephantine were in the full bloom of life, and the women were
fruitful. Young couples married upon the river-bank, and broke the jar of Nile
water between them. Children were born, and we watched them grow. Some of our old people died, and there were
accidents and dangers that took toll of the younger ones. We embalmed them and
dug tombs for them in the wild hills and left them to their slumber, and went
onwards. We observed the festivals and prayed to our gods.
We feasted and fasted in the correct season, and danced and sang and studied
the sciences. I held lessons for the older children upon the deck of the
galley, and Memnon was the prize of all my students. Before the year had run out, and whHe the course of
the river still ran southwards, we came upon the third cataract that bestrode
the course of the Nile. Once again we went ashore and cleared the land and
planted our crops, while we waited for the Nile to rise and help us through. IT WAS HERE AT THE THIRD GREAT CATARACT that
another joy came to fill my life to overflowing. In a linen tent upon the bank of the river, I
attended my mistress in her labour, and brought forth into this world the
Princess Tehuti, the acknowledged daughter of the long-dead Pharaoh Mamose. In my eyes Tehuti was beautiful as only a miracle might
be. Whenever I had the opportunity, I sat beside her cot and examined her tiny
feet and hands with wonder and awe. When she was hungry and waited for her
mother's nipple, I would sometimes place my little finger in her mouth for the
pleasure of feeling her chewing on it with her bald gums. The river rose at last and allowed us to make the
transit of the third cataract. We sailed onwards, and almost imperceptibly the
river turned back into the east, describing a vast loop beneath our keels. Before the year was out it was necessary for me to
dream another of my famous dreams, for my mistress had once more suffered a
virgin pregnancy that could only be explained by supernatural means. The ghost
of the dead phar aoh had been on the prowl again. My mistress was huge with child when we reached the
fourth great cataract of the river. This chute of tumbling waters and rocks
like the teeth of crocodiles was even more formidable than those that had come
before, and there was much despondency in our company. When they thought that
no one could overhear them they complained to each other, 'We are beset by
these infernal rock barriers. The gods have placed them across the river to
prevent us going onwards.' I read their lips as they huddled together on the
bank of the river. None of them realized that I was able to understand what
they said without hearing their words. 'We will be trapped behind these terrible rapids,
and we will never be able to return down-river. We should turn back now, before
it is too late.' Even at the councils of state, I saw the words on
the lips of some of the great lords of Egypt who sat at the back of the
gathering and spoke to each other in muted tones. 'If we go on, we shall all
die in this desert, and our souls will wander eternally through it without
rest.' There was an element amongst the young nobility
that was both arrogant and headstrong. They were fostering discontent, and
hatching insurrection. I knew that we had to act swiftly and with resolution,
when I saw the Lord Aqer say to one of his henchmen, 'We are in the hands of
this woman, this little harlot of a dead king, when what we really need is a
strong man to lead us. There must be some way we can rid ourselves of her.' Firstly, with the help of my old friend Aton, I ferreted
out the names of all the malcontents and potential traitors. It did not
surprise me that at the head of this list was this same Lord Aqer, the eldest
son of Lord Merkeset, on whose lips I had read those traitorous sentiments.
Aqer was an angry young man with inflated ideas of his own worth and
importance. I suspected that he had the gall to see a vision of himself seated
upon the throne of the two kingdoms with the double crown upon his head. When I explained to Tanus and my mistress what I
thought must be done, they called a full and solemn state council on the
river-bank. Queen Lostris opened the conclave. 'I know very
well how you pine for your own land, and how you weary of this long voyage. I
share with you every dream of Thebes.' I saw Aqer exchange meaningful glances with his
cronies, and had my suspicions strengthened. 'However, citizens of Egypt, nothing is as bad as
it seems. Hapi has watched over our expedition, as he promised. We are much
closer to Thebes than any one of you can imagine. When we return to our beloved
city, we will not have to retrace our same weary footsteps. We will not have to
face once again the dangers and the hardships of those hellish cataracts that
block the course of the river.' There was a stirring through her audience, and
whispers of doubt and disbelief. Aqer laughed, not loud enough to cross the
borders of respect and propriety, nevertheless my mistress singled him out. 'I
see, Lord Aqer, that you question my word?' 'By no means, Your Majesty. I curse such a disloyal
thought.' Aqer made a hasty retreat. He was not yet strong enough, nor sure
enough of his support, to force a confrontation. I had caught him out before he
was prepared. 'My slave, Taita, has plotted the course of the
river that we have covered in these last years,' Queen Lostris went on. 'You
have all seen the chariot with the flagged wheel that has measured the ground,
and Taita has studied the heavenly bodies to find the direction of our journey.
I order him now to arise before the council and reveal to us his calculations.' Prince Memnon had helped me to trace copies of my
chart on to twenty new scrolls. At nine years of age, the prince was already a
fine pen-man. I passed these out to all the senior nobles, so that they might
follow my lecture more clearly. I drew their attention to the almost circular
course that we had followed since we had left Elephantine. Their astonishment was evident. Only the priests
had some prior knowledge of what had occurred, they also studied the stars and
had some expertise in navigation. But even they were taken aback by the extent
of the river's loop. This was not surprising, since the copies of the map that
I showed them were not entirely accurate. I had taken certain liberties with
the facts for the benefit of Aqer and his faction, and made the distance across
the bight seem shorter than my calculations suggested was the case. 'My lords, as you can see by these charts, since we
left the second cataract we have travelled very nearly a thousand miles, but we
stand now not much more than a few hundred miles from the point of our
departure.' Kratas rose to his feet to ask a question that I
had placed in his mouth before the meeting began. 'Does this mean that it
should be possible to take this short cut across the desert and reach the
second cataract in the same time as it takes to travel from Thebes to the Red
Sea and return? I have made that journey several times.' I turned to him. 'I was your companion on that same
journey. Ten days in each direction it took us, and we did not have horses
then. The crossing of this narrow strip of desert would be no more onerous. It
means that from here one could be back in the city of Elephantine within a few
short months, and it would be necessary to transit only the first cataract at Assoun.' There was a buzz of comment and amazement. The maps
were passed from hand to hand and scrutinized avidly. The entire mood of the
assembly changed, as I watched. There was a pathetic eagerness amongst all of
them to accept my theory. This unexpected proximity to home and the land they
knew cheered all of them. Only Aqer and his friends were out of countenance.
He had been deprived of the top dice in the game he was playing. As I had hoped
he would do, he rose angrily to his feet now to put the next question to me. 'How accurate are this slave's scribblings?' His
tone was offensive and his expression haughty. 'It is a simple matter to make a
few pen-strokes on a scroll, but when those are turned into miles of sand and
rock, it is another matter entirely. How will this slave prove that these wild
theories of his are fact?' 'My lord Aqer has come to the very heart of the
matter,' my mistress intervened pleasantly, 'and, in so doing, has proven his
astute grasp of the problem that faces us. I intend to send an expedition of
good men to cross the neck of the desert and to open up our return route to the
north, the road home to beautiful Thebes.' I saw Aqer's expression change suddenly as he
caught the slant of the queen's speech and realized the trap that had been set
for him. He sat down again hurriedly, and tried to appear remote and
disinterested. However, my mistress continued remorselessly, 'I was undecided
as to who was best suited to lead this expedition, but now Lord Aqer has, by
his perception and understanding, proposed himself for this vital task. Is that
not the case, my lord?' she asked sweetly, and then went on smoothly before he
could refuse. 'We are grateful to you, Lord Aqer. You are to have
whatever'men and equipment you require. I command that you make your departure
before the next full moon. The moon will make it easier for you to travel
during the night, and so avoid the heat of the day. I will send with you men
who are able to navigate by the stars. You could win through to the second cataract
and be back here before the end of the month, and, if you succeed, I will place
the Gold of Praise upon your shoulders.' Lord Aqer stared at her with open mouth, and he was
still sitting rigid with shock on his stool after all his companions had dispersed.
I fully expected him to find some excuse to back out of the task that we had
tricked him into, but in the end he surprised me by coming to me to ask for my
advice and help in arranging the scouting party. It seemed that I might have
misjudged him, and that now he had been given some worthwhile mission, there
was a chance that he would change from a trouble-maker to a useful member of
the company. I selected some of our best men and horses for him
and gave him five of our most sturdy carts, which could carry water-skins that,
if used sparingly, would last them for thirty days. By the time the full moon
came around, Aqer was quite cheerful and optimistic, and I felt guilty about
having minimized the distance and the hazards of the journey. When the expedition set out, I went a short way
into the desert with them to point them on the right road, and then I stood
alone and watched them merge into the silvery moonlit wastes, aimed at that set
of stars we call the Lute which marks the northern horizon. I thought of Aqer every day over the weeks that
followed while we lay below the fourth cataract, and I hoped that the map I had
given him was not as inaccurate as I feared it was. At least the immediate
threat of a rebellion had disappeared with him into the north. While we waited, we planted our crops on the
cleared islands and the river-banks. However, the lie of the land was steeper
than at the other sites lower down the river. It was more difficult to raise
the water to irrigate our crops, and I could see that the quantity and the
quality of the harvest must suffer in consequence. Naturally, we had set up the traditional shadoofs
on their long, counter-balanced arms to lift the water from the river. These were
worked by a slave who swung the clay pot at the end of the arm into the water
and then lifted and spilled it into the irrigation ditch on the bank. It was a
slow and back-breaking task. When the bank was high, as it was here, it was
also an extremely wasteful method of collecting water. Each evening Memnon and I drove our chariot along
the river-bank, and I was troubled by the paucity of the harvest that we
watched growing there. We had many thousands of mouths to feed, and cornmeal
was still the staple of our diet. I foresaw a time of famine, unless we were
able to bring more water to the fields. I do not know what made me think of the wheel for
this purpose, except that the science of the wheel had by this time become an
obsession and a passion in my life. I was still plagued by the problem of the
bursting of the wheels of our chariots. My dreams were filled with turning and
spinning and shattering wheels, wheels with bronze knives on the rim or with
flags to measure the distance run. Large wheels and small, the images haunted
me and troubled my sleep. I had heard from one of the priests of Hapi that
some varieties of timber can be made harder and more resilient by soaking them
in water for a long period, so I was driven to experiment with this idea. As we
were lowering one of the chariot wheels into the river for this purpose, the
current playing on the rim began to turn the wheel on its hub. I watched this
idly, but as the wheel sank lower in the water, the movement ceased, and I
thought no more about it. Some days later, one of the small boats crossing
between the islands capsized, and the two men in it were swept into the rapids
and drowned. Memnon and I watched this tragedy from the bank, and we were both
distressed by it. I took the opportunity to warn the prince once more of the
danger and the power of the river. 'It is so strong that it will even turn the wheel
of a chariot.' 'I don't believe you, Tata. You are saying that to
frighten me. You know how I love to swim in the river.' So I arranged an exhibition for him, and we were
both duly impressed by the wheel turning, seemingly of its own accord, when it
was dipped into the running water. 'It would go faster, Tata, if it had paddles fixed
around the rim,' Memnon gave his opinion at last, and I stared at him in
wonder. He was a little over ten years old at the time, and yet he saw all
things with a fresh and enquiring eye. By the time the full moon came around again, we had
built a wheel driven by the river which lifted the water in a series of small
baked-clay jars and spilled it into a canal lined with clay tiles at the top of
the high Nile bank. Even with her big belly, my mistress came ashore to watch
this wondrous contraption. She was delighted by it. 'You are so clever with the things you do with
water, Taita,' she told me. 'Do you remember the water-stool you built for me
at Elephantine?' 'I could make another for you now, if only you
would allow us to live in a decent home like civilized people.' Tanus was similarly impressed with the water-wheel,
though of course he would not show it. Instead, he grinned at me. 'Very clever, but when will it burst like one of
your famous chariot wheels?' he demanded, and Kratas and those other military
oafs thought that was hugely funny. Thereafter, whenever a chariot wheel broke,
they said that it had 'gone Tata', the pet name that the prince called me. Despite this levity, the fields of dhurra soon grew
dense and green in the loamy soil on the high banks, and the ears of golden
corn drooped heavily in the bright Nile sunlight. This was not the only harvest
that we gathered in at the fourth cataract. Queen Lostris gave birth to another
little royal princess. If anything, the infant was more exquisite than her
elder sister. It was passing strange that Princess Bekatha was
born with a cap of golden-red curls. Her divine and ghostly father, Pharaoh
Mamose, had been of swarthy cast, and her mother's hair was dark as the wing of
the black eagle. No one could think of any reason for this aberrant coloration,
but all agreed how pretty it was. Princess Bekatha was two months old when the Nile
began to rise once more, and we made our preparation for the transit of the
fourth cataract. By now we were experienced in what had become an annual
labour, and we had learned every trick and artifice to beat the rapacious
river. WE HAD NOT YET BEGUN THE TRANSIT, when there was
tremendous excitement in the encampment. I heard the shouting and the cheering
from the far bank of the river where Prince Mem-non and I were inspecting the
horses and making certain that all was ready for the ascent of the cataract. We hurried back to the boats and crossed to the
east bank, to find the camp in an uproar. We pushed our way through the crowds
who were all waving palm-fronds and singing the songs of welcome and honour. At
the centre of all this we found a small caravan of battered wagons and skeletal
horses, and a band of lean, travel-hardened veterans, burned black by the sun
and tempered by the desert. 'Seth damn you and that map of yours, Taita,' Lord
Aqer shouted at me from the leading wagon. 'I don't know which of you lies
worst. It was almost twice as far as you promised us.' 'Did you truly reach the north side of the river
loop?' I shouted back at him, hopping with excitement and trying to fight my
way through the crowd. "There and back!' he laughed, mightily pleased
with his accomplishment. 'We camped at the second cataract and dined on fresh
fish from the Nile. The road back to Thebes is open.' My mistress ordered a feast to welcome back the
travellers, and Lord Aqer was the man of the day. At the height of the
celebration, Queen Lostris placed the Gold of Praise around his neck, and
promoted him to the rank of Best of Ten Thousand. My gorge rose to see the
fellow preen and strut. As if that was not enough, she gave him command of the
fourth division of chariots, and issued him a warrant that would entitle him to
one hundred feddan of prime land on the river-bank when we returned to Thebes. I thought all this a little excessive, especially the
gift of so much land which must come out of my mistress's own estate. After
all, Aqer had been on the brink of mutiny, and though his achievement had been
laudable, it was I who had proposed and planned the expedition. In the
circumstances, it seemed to me that another gold chain for the poor slave Taita
might not have been out of place. Nevertheless, I had to applaud my mistress's
cunning and statesmanship. She had transformed Lord Aqer, who had been
potentially one of her most dangerous enemies, into an ardent and loyal
adherent who would prove his value to her many times in the years ahead. She
had a way with all men, and was gaining in statecraft each day. The taming of Lord Aqer and the discovery of the
route across the bight had secured our rear, and we could go on above the
fourth cataract with high spirits and brave heart. WE HAD NOT TRAVELLED MORE THAN A month before we
realized how our fortunes had changed and how the goddess had made good her
promise. It was clearer each day that we had come through
the worst. The desert was behind us at last, and the broad, smooth flow of the
river turned into the south once more and carried us into a land such as none
of us had seen before. It was here that for the first time many of our
company witnessed the miracle of rain. Although of course I had seen it in the
Lower Kingdom, they had never seen water fall from the sky. The rain beat down
into our upturned and astonished faces, while the thunder rolled across the heavens
and the lightning blinded us with its white fire. These copious and regular rains engendered a new
and exciting landscape, the like of which we could only wonder at. On either
bank of the Nile, as far as we could see from the deck of the leading galley,
stretched a broad savannah grassland. This magnificent plain, rich with grazing
for our horses, set no boundaries to the range of our chariots. We could drive
out at will, with no dunes or rocky hills to block our progress. This was not the only blessing that the goddess had
bestowed. There were trees. In the narrow valley that was bur home, there might
once have been forests, no man could tell. But they had fallen centuries before
to the appetite and axes of man. Wood was to us Egyptians a rare and treasured
commodity. Each stick of it had to be carried in by ship or on the back of
beasts of burden, from far and foreign lands. Now, wherever we looked, we saw great trees. They
grew, not in the same dense forests that we had found on the islands in the cataracts,
but in lofty groves with broad grassy spaces between the majestic trunks. There
was timber enough upon these plains to rebuild all the fleets of all the
nations on all the seas of the worlds. More than that, there was enough to
rebuild the cities of all the civilized world, and to roof and furnish every
room in them. After that there would still be enough left over to burn as fuel
over the centuries to come. We who all our lives had cooked our food on bricks
made from the dung of our animals, stared around us in wonder. This was not the only treasure that we found for
our taking in this legendary land of Cush that we had reached at last. I saw them first in the distance and thought that
they were monuments of grey granite. They stood upon the yellow grass plains
and in the shade beneath the spreading branches of the acacia groves. Then, as
we watched in perplexity, these great rocks began to move. 'Elephants!' I had never seen one before, but they
could be nothing else. The cry was taken up by those on the deck around me. 'Elephants! Ivory!' These were riches that Pharaoh
Ma-mose, with all his funerary treasure, could not have dreamed of. Wherever we
looked, the vast herds stood. 'There are thousands of them.' Tanus gazed around
him, the passion of the huntsman beginning to dawn in his eyes. 'Just look at
them, Taita. There is no end to their numbers.' The plains were thronged with living creatures, not
only the herds of elephant. There were antelopes and gazelle, some of which we
knew, and others that we had never seen or heard of before. We would come to
know all of them well in the future, and find names for their abundant and
diverse species. Oryx mingled with herds of purple waterbuck whose
horns curved like the bow that I had built for Tanus. There were spotted
giraffe with necks that reached to the top branches of the acacia trees. The
horns that grew from the snouts of the rhinoceros were as tall as a man and as
sharp as his spear. The buffalo wallowed in the mud at the river's edge. They
were huge bovine beasts, black as Seth's beard, and every bit as ugly. We would
soon learn the malevolence behind that melancholy stare with which they
regarded our passing, and the menace of those drooping black horns. 'Unload the chariots from the holds,' Tanus roared
with impatience. 'Put the horses into the traces. The hunt is on!' If I had known the danger that we were riding into,
I would never have allowed Prince Memnon to mount the footplate behind me as we
drove out on our first elephant hunt. To us who knew no better, they appeared
such docile brutes, slow and clumsy and stupid. Surely they would be easy game. Tanus was bristling with impatience to go out
against this new quarry, and he would not wait for all four divisions of our
chariots to be reassembled. As soon as the first division of fifty vehicles was
ready, he gave the order to mount up. We shouted challenges to the other
drivers, and made our wagers on the outcome of the hunt as the long columns of
chariots rolled out through the groves along the river-bank. 'Let me drive, Tata,' the prince demanded. 'You
know I drive as well as you do.' Although he was a natural horseman with gentle
hands and an instinctive way with his team, and he practised the art almost
every day, the prince's boast was unfounded. He certainly was not as good a
charioteer as I was, no man in the army could make that claim, certainly not a
scamp of eleven years. 'Watch me and learn,' I told him sternly, and when
Memnon turned to Tanus, he supported me for once. 'Taita is right. This is something none of us has
done before. Keep your mouth closed and your eyes open, boy.' Ahead of us a small herd of these strange grey
beasts were feasting on the seed-pods that had fallen from the top branches of
the trees. I studied them with avid curiosity as we approached at a trot. Their
ears were enormous, and they fanned them out and turned to face us. They lifted
their trunks high, and I guessed that they were taking up our scent. Had they
ever smelled a man or a horse before, I wondered. There were small calves with them, and the mothers
gathered them into the centre of the herd and stood guard over them. I was
touched to see this maternal concern, and I had the first inkling then that
these animals were not as slow and stupid as they appeared to be. "These
are all females,' I called over my shoulder to Tanus on the footplate. 'They
have young at heel, and their ivory is small and of little value.' 'You are right.' Tanus pointed over my shoulder.
'But look beyond them. Those two must surely be bulls. See how tall they stand
and how massive is their girth. Look how their tusks shine in the sun.' I gave the signal to the chariots that followed us,
and we veered away from the breeding herd of cows and calves. We ran on, still
in column, through the acacia grove towards those two great bulls. As we drove
forward, we were forced to swerve around the branches that had been torn from
the trees, and to dodge the trunks of giant acacia that had been uprooted. As
yet we knew nothing of the unbelievable strength of these creatures, and I
called back to Tanus, 'There must have been a great storm through this forest
to wreak such destruction.' It did not even occur to me then that the elephant
herds were responsible; they seemed so mild and defenceless. The two old bulls we had selected had sensed our
approach and turned to face us. It was only then that I realized the true size
of them. When they spread their ears they seemed to block out the sky, like a
dark grey thundercloud. 'Just look at that ivory!' Tanus shouted. He was
unperturbed, and concerned only with the trophy of the chase, but the horses
were nervous and skittish. They had picked up the scent of this strange quarry,
and they threw their heads up and crabbed in the traces. It was hard to control
them and keep them running straight. "That one on the right is the biggest,'
squeaked Memnon. 'We should take him first.' The pup was every bit
as keen as his sire. 'You heard the royal command,' Tanus laughed. 'We
will take the one on the right. Let Kratas have the other, it's good enough for
him.' So I raised my fist and gave the hand-command that
split the column into two files. Kratas wheeled away on our left with
twenty-five chariots following him in line astern, while we ran on straight at
the huge grey beast that confronted us with the yellow shafts of ivory, thick
as the columns of the temple of Horus, standing out from his vast grey head. 'Go hard at him!' Tanus shouted. 'Take him before
he turns to run.' 'Hi up!' I called to Patience and Blade, and they
opened up into a gallop. We both expected the huge animal to run from us as
soon as he realized that we menaced him. No other game we had ever hunted had
stood to receive our first charge. Even the lion runs from the hunter until he
is wounded or cornered. How could these obese animals behave differently? 'His head is so big, it will make a fine target,'
Tanus exulted, as he nocked an arrow. 'I will kill him with a single shaft,
before he can escape. Run in close under that long, ridiculous nose of his.' Behind us the rest of our column was strung out in
single file. Our plan was to come in and split on each side of the bull, firing
our arrows into him as we passed, then wheeling around and coming back in classic
chariot tactics. We were right on the bull now, but still he stood
his ground. Perhaps these animals were every bit as dull-witted as they looked.
This would be an easy kill, and I sensed Tanus' disappointment at the prospect
of such poor sport. 'Come on, you old fool!' he shouted contemptuously.
'Don't just stand there. Defend yourself!' It was as though the bull heard and understood the
challenge. . He threw up his trunk and loosed a blast of sound that stunned and
deafened us. The horses shied wildly, so that I was thrown against the
dashboard with a force that bruised my ribs. For a moment I lost control of the
team, and we swerved away. Then the bull squealed again, and he ran. 'By Horus, look at him come!' Tanus roared with
astonishment, for the beast was not running from us, but directly at us, in a
furious charge. He was swifter than any horse, and nimble as an angry leopard
set upon by the hounds. He kicked up bursts of dust with each long flying
stride, and was on us before I could get the horses under control again. I looked up at him, for he towered directly over
us, reaching out with his trunk to pluck us from the cockpit of the chariot,
and I could not believe the size of him, nor the fury in those eyes. They were not
the eyes of an animal, but those of an intelligent and alert human being. This
was no porcine sloth, but a courageous and terrible adversary that we had
challenged in our arrogance and ignorance. Tanus got off a single arrow. It struck the bull in
the centre of his forehead, and I expected to see him collapse as the bronze
point pierced the brain. We did not know then that the brain of the elephant is
not situated where you would expect it to be, but is far back in the
mountainous skull and protected by a mass of spongy bone that no arrow can
penetrate. The bull did not even check or swerve. He merely
reached up with his trunk and -gripped the shaft of the arrow with the tip, as
a man might do with his hand. He pulled the shaft from his own flesh and threw
it aside and came on after us, reaching out towards us with the blood-smeared
trunk. Hui in the second chariot of our line saved us, for
we were defenceless against the old bull's fury. Hui came in from the side,
lashing his horses and yelling like a demon. His archer from the footplate
behind him fired an arrow into the bull's cheek a hand's-span below the eye,
and that pulled his attention from us. The elephant wheeled to chase after Hui, but he was
at full gallop and raced clean away. The next chariot in line was not so
fortunate. The driver lacked Hui's skill, and his turn away was inept. The bull
lifted his trunk high and then swung it down like an executioner's axe. He struck the near-side horse across the back, just
behind the withers, and broke its spine so cleanly that I heard the vertebrae
shatter like a brittle potsherd. The maimed horse went down and dragged its
teammate down with it. The chariot rolled over and the men were hurled from it.
The elephant placed one forefoot on the body of the fallen charioteer and, with
its trunk, plucked off his head and tossed it aloft like a child's ball. It
spun in the air spraying a bright feather of pink blood from the severed neck. Then the next chariot in line tore in, distracting
the bull from his victim. I pulled up my horses at the edge of the grove, and
we stared back aghast at the carnage of our shattered squadron. There were
broken chariots scattered across the field, for Kratas out on the left had
fared no better than we had. The two great bull elephants bristled with
arrow-shafts, and the blood streamed down their bodies, leaving wet streaks on
their dusty grey hide. However, the wounds had not weakened them, but seemed
only to have aggravated their fury. They rampaged through the grove, smashing up
the capsized chariots, stamping the carcasses of the horses under those massive
padded feet, throwing the bodies of screaming men high in the air and trampling
them as they fell back to earth. Kratas raced up alongside us, and shouted across at
us, 'By the itching crabs in Seth's crotch, this is hot work! We have lost
eight chariots in the first charge.' 'Better sport than you expected, Captain Kratas,'
Prince Memnon yelled back at him. He would have done better to keep his opinion
to himself, for up until that moment we had forgotten about the boy in the
confusion. Now, however, both Tanus and I rounded on him together. 'As for you, my lad, you have had enough sport for
one day,' I told him firmly. 'It's back to the fleet with you, and that right
swiftly,' agreed Tanus, and at that moment an empty chariot cantered by. I do
not know what had happened to the crew, they had probably been thrown from the
cockpit or been plucked out of it bodily by one of the infuriated beasts. 'Catch those horses!' Tanus ordered, and when the
empty chariot was brought back to us, he told the prince, 'Out you get. Take
that chariot back to the beach and wait there for our return.' 'My Lord Tanus,' Prince Memnon drew himself to his
full height, reaching as high as his father's shoulder, 'I protest—' 'None of your royal airs with me, young man. Go
back and protest to your mother, if you must.' He lifted the prince with one
hand and dropped him into the vacant cockpit of the other vehicle. 'Lord Tanus, it is my right—' Memnon made one last
despairing attempt to remain in the hunt. 'And it is my right to wrap the scabbard of my
sword around your royal backside, if you are still here when I look around
again,' said Tanus, and turned his back on him. Both of us put the boy out of
our minds. 'Gathering ivory is not quite as easy as picking up
mushrooms,' I remarked. 'We will have to think up a better plan than this.' 'You cannot kill these creatures by shooting them
in the head,' Tanus growled. 'We will go in again and try an arrow through the
ribs. If they have no brain in their skull, then surely they have lungs and a
heart.' I gathered up the reins, and lifted the heads of
the team, but I could feel that Patience and Blade were as nervous as I was at
the prospect of returning to the field. None of us had enjoyed our first taste
of elephant hunting. Til go at him head-on,' I told Tanus, 'and then
turn out to give you a broadside shot into his ribs.' I put the horses into a trot, and then gradually pushed
up their speed as we entered the acacia grove. Dead ahead of us our bull
rampaged over the ground that was littered with the wreckage of overturned
chariots and the bodies of dead men and broken horses. He saw us coming and let
out another of those terrible squeals that chilled my blood, and the horses
flicked their ears and shied again. I gathered them up with the reins and drove
them on. The bull charged to meet us, like a landslide of
rock down a steep hillside. He was a terrible sight in his rage and his agony,
but I held my team steady, not yet pushing them to the top of their speed.
Then, as we came together, I lashed them up and yelled them into a full, mad
gallop. At the same moment I swung out hard left, opening the bull's flank. At a range of less than twenty paces, Tanus fired
three arrows in quick succession into his chest. All of them went in behind the
shoulder, finding the gaps between the ribs, and burying themselves full-length
in the seared grey skin. The bull squealed again, but this time in mortal
agony. Though he reached out for us, we raced clear of the stretch of his
trunk. I looked back and saw him standing in our dust, but when he bellowed
again, the blood spurted from the end of his trunk, like steam from a kettle. "The lungs,' I shouted. 'Good work, Tanus. You
have hit him through the lungs.' 'We have found the trick of it now,' Tanus exulted.
'Take us back. I will give him another one through the heart.' I wheeled about and the horses were still strong
and willing. 'Gome on, my beauties,' I called to them. 'One more
time. Hi up!' Though he was mortally struck, the old bull was
still far from death. I would learn just how tenacious of life these
magnificent beasts were, but now he charged to meet us once again with a
courage and splendour that filled me with reverence. Even in the heat of the
hunt and terror for my own safety, I felt shame at the torture we were
inflicting on him. Perhaps it was because of this that I let the
horses go in very close. Out of respect for him, I wanted to match his courage
with my own. When it was almost too late, I swung my horses out of the charge,
meaning to pass him just out of reach of that wicked trunk. Just then the off-side wheel of the chariot burst
under us. There was that giddy moment as I somersaulted through the air like an
acrobat, but this was not the first time I had been thrown, and I had learned
to fall like a cat. I rode the shock and let myself roll twice. The earth was
soft and the grass as thick as a mattress. I came up on my feet unhurt and with
my wits still all about me. I saw at a glance that Tanus had not come through
as well as I had. He was sprawled flat out and unmoving. The horses were up, but anchored by the dead weight
of the broken chariot. The bull elephant attacked them. Blade was nearest to
him and he broke my darling mare's back with a single blow of the trunk. Blade
went down on her knees screaming, and Patience was still linked to her. The
bull thrust one thick tusk through Blade's chest and jerked his head up, lifting
the kicking and struggling animal high in the air. I should have run then, while the bull was so
distracted, but Patience was still unhurt. I could not leave her. The elephant
was turned half-away from me, his own ears, spread like a ship's sail, blanketed
me from his view, and he did not see me run in. I snatched Tanus' sword from
the scabbard on the rack of the capsized chariot, and darted to Patience's
side. Although the great bull was dragging her along by
the leather harness that attached her to Blade, and although the blood from the
other horse splashed over her neck and shoulders, she was still unhurt. Of
course, she was wild with terror, squealing and kicking out with both back
legs, so that she almost cracked my skull as I darted up behind her. I ducked
as her hooves flew past my head and grazed my cheek. I hacked at the rawhide tackle that pinned her to
the drive-shaft of the chariot. The sword was sharp enough to shave the hair
from my head, and the leather split under that bright edge. Three hard strokes,
and Patience was free to run. I snatched at her mane- to pull myself up on to
her back, but she was so terror-struck that she bounded away before I could
find a grip. Her shoulder crashed into me and sent me spinning away. I was
thrown heavily to the ground, under the side of the wrecked chariot. I struggled up to see Patience dashing off through
the grove; she ran with a free and light stride, so I knew she was unhurt. I
looked for Tanus next. He lay ten paces away from the chariot, face down
against the earth, and I thought he was dead, but at that moment he raised his
head and looked around at me with a bewildered and groggy expression. I knew
that any sudden movement might draw the bull elephant's attention to him, and I
willed him to lie still. I dared not utter a sound, for the enraged animal was
still standing over me. I looked up at the bull. Poor Blade was impaled
upon his tusk, and the rawhide traces were entangled with his trunk. The bull
started to move off, dragging the battered chariot with him. He was attempting
to dislodge the weight of Blade's dangling carcass from his tusk. The point of
the tusk had ripped open the horse's belly, and the stink of the stomach
contents mingled with the reek of blood and the elephant's peculiar rank and
gamey odour. Stronger than all that, the stench of the sweat of my own fear
filled my nostrils. I made sure that the bull's head was still turned
away from me, before I pushed myself up and ran doubted-over to where Tanus
lay. 'Up! Get up!' I croaked in a hoarse whisper, and I tried to lift him to
his feet, but he was a heavy man and still only half-conscious. Desperately I
looked back at the bull. He was moving away from us, still dragging the whole
tangle of broken equipment and the dead horse with him. I draped Tanus' arm around my neck and put my
shoulder into his armpit. With all my strength I managed to lever him to his
feet, and he hung against me unsteadily. I swayed under his weight. 'Brace up!'
I whispered urgently. 'The bull will spot us at any moment.' I tried to drag Tanus along with me, but he took
only one pace before he gave a groan and fell back against me. 'My |:, leg,' he
grunted. 'Can't move. Knee gone. Twisted the | cursed thing.' The full realization of our predicament struck me then,
as I it had not before. My old sin of cowardice overwhelmed me once more, and
the strength went out of my own legs. 'Get out of it, you old fool,' Tanus grated in my
ear. 'Leave me. Run for it!' The elephant lifted his head and shook it in the
same way that a dog shakes the water from its ears after it has swum back to
the shore. Those vast leathery ears slapped and rat-| tied against his own
shoulders, and Blade's crushed carcass slid off the tusk and was hurled aside
as if it were no heavier I than a dead rabbit. The strength of the elephant
bull was I past all belief. If he could toss the weight of horse and | chariot
so easily, what might he do with my own frail body? 'Run, for the love of
Horus, run, you fool!' Tanus urged |. me, and tried to push me away, but some
strange obstinacy prevented me from leaving him, and I hung on to his shoul-|
der. Afraid as I was, I could not leave him. The bull had heard the sound of Tanus' voice and he
swung around with those ears flaring wide open like the mainsail of a fighting
galley. He stared full at us, and we were less than fifty paces from him. I did not know then, as I would learn later, that
the eyesight of the elephant is so poor that he is almost blind. He relies
almost entirely on his hearing and his sense of smell. Only movement attracts
him, and if we had stood still he would not have seen us. 'He has seen us,' I gasped, and I dragged Tanus
with me, forcing him to hop on his good leg beside me. The bull saw the
movement and he squealed. I shall never forget that sound. It deafened and
stunned me, sending us both reeling so that we staggered together and almost
fell. Then the bull charged straight at us. He came with long, driving strides, and his ears
flapped about his head. Arrows bristled from the great weathered forehead, and
blood streamed down his face like tears. Each time he squealed, the lung blood
spurted in a cloud from his trunk. As tall as a cliff, and as black as death,
he came at us in full charge. I could see every seam and crease in the folded
skin around his eyes. The lashes of his eyes were thick as those of a beautiful
girl, but such a glare of rage shone through them that my heart turned to a
stone in my chest, and weighed down my legs so I could not move. The passage of time seemed to slow down, and I was
overcome with a sense of dreamlike unreality. I stood and watched death bear
down upon us with a slow and stately deliberation, and could make no move to
avoid it. 'Tata!' A child's voice rang in my head, and I knew
that it was a delusion of my terror. 'Tata, I am coming!' In total disbelief I swung my head away from the
vision of death before me. Across the open ground of the grove a chariot was
tearing towards us at full gallop. The horses were stretched out and their
heads were going like the hammers on a coppersmith's anvil. Their ears were
laid back, and their nostrils flared wide open, pink and wet. I could see no
driver at the reins. 'Get ready, Tata!' Only then did I see the neat
little head, barely showing above the dashboard. The reins were gripped in two
small fists, the knuckles white with tension. 'Mem,' I cried, 'go back! Turn back!' The wind blew his hair out in a cloud behind his
head, and the sunlight struck ruby sparks from the thick dark curls. He came on
without a pause or check. 'I'll thrash the little ruffian for disobeying me,'
growled Tanus, as he teetered on one leg. We had both of us forgotten our own
danger. 'Whoa!' Memnon cried, and brought the team down
from a full gallop. He wheeled the carriage into such a sharp turn that the
inside wheel stopped dead and swivelled on its rim. He had cut in front of the
two of us, shielding us for an instant from the charging bull, and as the
chariot spun about there was a moment when it was standing still. It was
beautifully done. I heaved my shoulder up under Tanus' armpit and
threw him sprawling on the footplate. The very next instant I hurled myself
headlong on top of him. As I landed, Memnon gave the horses their heads, and we
bounded forward so sharply that I was almost jerked backwards off the platform,
but I grabbed at the side-panel and steadied myself. 'Go, Mem,' I screamed, 'for all you're worth!' 'Hi-up!' Memnon screamed. 'Yah hah!' The chariot careered
away with the frightened horses driven to full flight by the enraged squeals of
the charging bull close behind. All three of us stared back over the tail-board.
The head of the bull hung over us, seeming to fill all my vision. The trunk
reached out for us, so close that each time the bull squealed, the bloody cloud
sprayed over us and speckled our upturned faces, so that we looked like the
victims of some horrible plague. We could not draw clear of his rush, and he was
unable to overtake us. Matched in speed, we went racing through the glade with
the great bloody head hanging over us as we cowered on the floorboards of the
bouncing chariot. It needed only one small mistake from our driver to send us
into a hole or rip our wheels off against a stump of a fallen tree, and the
bull would have been upon us in an instant. But the prince handled the traces
like a veteran, picking his route through the grove with a cool hand and
practised eye. He sent the chariot careening through the turns on one wheel, within
an ace of capsizing, holding off the bull's mad charge. He never faltered once,
and then suddenly it was all over. One of the arrows buried in the bull's chest had
worked itself in deeper and sliced open the heart. The elephant opened his
mouth wide, and a flood of bright blood shot up his throat and he died in his
tracks. His legs went out from under him and he came down with a crash that
jarred the earth under us, and lay upon his side with one long curved tusk
thrust up in the air as if in a last defiant and regal gesture. Memnon pulled in the horses, and Tanus and I
stumbled down out of the carriage and stood together staring back at that
mountainous carcass. Tanus clung to the side of the chariot to favour his
damaged leg, and slowly turned back to look at the boy who did not know he was
his father. 'By Horus, I have known some brave men in my time,
but none of them better than you, lad,' he said simply, and then he lifted
Memnon in his arms and hugged him to his chest. I did not see much more of it, for those
everlasting and tedious tears of mine blotted out my vision. Even though I knew
myself for a sentimental fool, I could not staunch them. I had waited too long
to see this happen, to watch the father embrace his son.v -. I only managed to regain control of my errant
emotions when I heard the faint sound of distant cheers. What none of us had
realized was that the chase had taken place in full view of the fleet. The Breath
of Horus lay close in against the bank of the Nile, and I could see the
slim figure of the queen upon the high poop. Even at this distance her face
looked pale and her expression set. THE GOLD OF VALOUR IS THE WARRIOR'S prize, higher
in honour and in esteem than the Gold of Praise. It is only ever worn by
heroes. We gathered on the deck of the galley, those
closest to the queen and the commanders of all the divisions of her army.
Stacked against the mast, the tusks of the elephants were on display like the
spoils of war, and the officers wore all their regimental finery. The standard-bearers
stood to attention behind the throne, and the trumpeters blew a fanfare as the
prince knelt before the queen. 'My beloved subjects!' the queen spoke out clearly.
'Noble officers of my council, generals and officers of my army, I commend to
you the crown prince, Memnon, who has found favour in my sight and in the sight
of you all.' She smiled down on the eleven-year-old boy who was being treated
like a victorious general. 'For his courageous conduct in the field, I command
that he be received into the regiment of the Blue Crocodile Guards, with the
rank of subaltern of the second class, and I bestow upon him the Gold of
Valour, that he may wear it with pride and distinction.' The chain had been especially forged by the royal
goldsmiths to fit the neck of a boy of Memnon's age, but with my own hands I
had sculpted the tiny golden elephant that was suspended from the chain. It was
perfect in every detail, a miniature masterpiece with garnet chips for eyes and
real ivory tusks. It looked well as it hung against the smooth, unblemished
skin of the prince's chest. I felt my tears coming on again as the men cheered
mv beautiful prince, but I fought them back with an effort." I was not the
only one who was wallowing in sentiment like a wart-hog in a mud bath; even
Kratas and Remrem and Astes, for all their hardbitten and cavalier attitudes
which they usually cultivated so assiduously, were grinning like idiots, and I
swear I saw more than one pair of wet eyes in their ranks. In the same way as
his parents, the boy had a way with the affections and loyalties of men. Every
officer of the Blues came forward at the end to salute the prince and embrace
him gravely as a comrade-in-arms. That evening, as we drove together along the bank
of the Nile in the sunset, Memnon suddenly reined in the horses and turned to
me. 'I have been called to my regiment. I am a soldier at last, so you must
make me my own bow now, Tata.' 'I will make you the finest bow that any archer has
ever drawn,' I promised. He considered me gravely for a while, and then he
sighed, 'Thank you, Tata. I think this is the happiest day of all my life.' The
way he said it made eleven years seem like hoary old age. The next day after the fleet had moored for the
night, I went to look for the prince and found him alone upon the bank in a
spot that was hidden from casual observation. He had not seen me, so I could
observe him for a while. He was stark naked. Despite my warnings about currents
and crocodiles, it was obvious that he had been swimming in the river, for his
hair was sopping wet upon his shoulders. However, I was puzzled by his
behaviour, for he had selected two large round stones from the beach and was
holding one of these in each hand, raising and lowering them in some strange
ritual. 'Tata, you are spying on me,' he said suddenly,
without turning his head. 'Do you want something from me?' 'I want to know what you are doing with those
stones. Are you worshipping some strange new Cushite god?' 'I am making my arms strong so that I can draw my
new bow. I want it to have a full draw-weight. You are not to fob me off with
another toy, Tata, do you hear?' THERE WAS ONE MORE CATARACT across the river, the
fifth and what would later prove to be the penultimate that we would encounter
upon our voyage. However, this was not the same barrier to our progress that
the other four had been. With the change in the surrounding terrain, we were no
longer restricted to the course of the river. While we waited for the Nile to rise again, we
planted our crops as usual, but we were able to send out our chariots to range
far and wide across the savannah. My mistress despatched expeditions southwards
to pursue the elephant herds and bring back the ivory. Those vast herds of the magnificent grey beasts
that had greeted us so trustingly when first we had sailed into Cush, were now
flown and scattered. We had hunted them ruthlessly wherever we found them, but
these sage creatures learned their lesson well and right swiftly. When we arrived at the fifth cataract, we found the
herds grazing in the groves on either bank. The elephant were in their
thousands, and Tanus ordered the chariots into action immediately. We had
refined our tactics of hunting them and we had learned how to avoid the losses
that those first two bulls had inflicted upon us. At the fifth cataract, on the
very first day, we killed one hundred and seven elephant, for the loss of only
three chariots. The following day there was not a single elephant
in sight from the decks of the ships. Although the chariots pursued the herds,
following the roads they had left through the forest as they fled, it was five
days before they caught up with them again. Very often now the hunting expeditions returned to
our encampment below the cataract after being out for many weeks on end without
having found a single elephant or gathered a single tusk. What had seemed to us
at first to be an endless supply of ivory had proved an illusion. As the L
prince had remarked on that very first day, elephant-hunting was not as simple
as it first seemed. However, those chariots ranging southwards did not
return entirely empty-handed. They had found something even more valuable to us
than ivory. They had found men. I had not left the encampment for several months
for I had been involved in the eternal experimentation with my chariot wheels.
It was at this period that I at last found the solutions to the problem which
had plagued me from the very beginning, and which had been such a source of
amusement and ridicule to Tanus and his military cronies—the occasional failure
of some of my designs. In the end, it was not a single answer, but a
combination of factors, beginning with the material from which the spokes of
the wheels were made. I now had an almost unlimited selection of various types
of wood to work with, and ' the horn of oryx and rhinoceros which we hunted
close to our settlement, and which, unlike the elephant herds, did not move
away after being harassed. I found that soaking the red heartwood of the
giraffe acacia rendered it so hard that it would turn the edge of the sharpest
bronze axe-head. I compounded this wood with layers of horn and bound it all up
together with bronze wire, very much in the same fashion as I had done with the
bowstock of Lanata. The result was that at last I had a wheel that could be
driven to the utmost over any type of terrain without collapsing. When Hui and
I had completed the first ten chariots with these new wheels, I challenged Kratas
and Remrem, who were the most notoriously heavy-handed and destructive drivers
in all the army, to try to smash them up. The wager that we agreed on was ten
deben of gold a side. This was a game much to the liking of those two overgrown
children, and they entered into the spirit of it with boyish gusto. For weeks
thereafter, their raucous cries and the sound of pounding hooves rang through
the groves on the banks of the Nile. By the time their limit was up, Hui came
to me complaining bitterly that they had worn out twenty teams of horses.
However, it was some consolation to him that we had won the wager. Our new
wheels had stood the most stringent test. 'If you had given us a few days more,' Kratas
groused as he handed over his gold with a marked lack of sporting grace, 'I
know I would have managed another Tata.' And he treated us to a pantomime which
he thought amusing and which was supposed to suggest a shattering wheel and a
somersaulting driver. 'You are a gifted clown, brave Kratas, but I have
your gold.' I jingled it under his nose. 'All you have is a tired old jest that
has gone sour on you.' It was then that the scouting expedition, led by
Lord Aqer, that had gone out to find elephant, came back with the news that
instead they had found human habitation further to the south. We had expected to come across the tribes as soon
as we passed the first cataract. For centuries the land of Cush had produced
slaves. These had been captured by their own people, probably in tribal warfare,
and carried down with other commodities of trade—ivory and ostrich feathers and
rhinoceros horn and gold dust—to the outposts of our empire. Queen Lostris'
saucy black handmaidens were natives of this land and had come to her from the
slave-markets in Elephantine. I still cannot explain why we had not found people
before this. Perhaps they had been driven back by wars and slave raids,' in the
same way as we had scattered the elephant herds. They may have been wiped out
by famine or plague, it was impossible to say. Up until now we had found scant
evidence of human presence. However, now that we had finally caught up with
them, the excitement was an epidemic in our company. We needed slaves more even
than we needed ivory or gold. Our whole civilization and way of life was based
upon the system of slave ownership, a system that was condoned by the gods and
sanctified by ancient usage. We had been able to bring very few of our own
slaves with us from Egypt, and now it was imperative for our survival and growth
as a nation that we capture more to replace those we had been forced to
abandon. Tanus ordered a full-scale expeditionary force to
be sent out immediately. He would lead it himself, for we were uncertain what
we would find up-river. Apart from those taken as prisoners of war, we
Egyptians had always purchased our slaves from foreign traders, and this was
the first time in centuries, as far as I knew, that we were forced to resort to
catching our own. It was sport as new to us as elephant-hunting, but at least
this time we did not expect our quarry to be either docile or dull-witted. Tanus would still not ride with any other driver
than me, and even Kratas' and Remrem's unsuccessful efforts to destroy them had
not yet convinced him of the virtue of my new chariots. We led the column, but
the second chariot in line was driven by the youngest subaltern of the Blues,
the crown prince, Memnon. I had chosen the two very best charioteers to act
as crew for Memnon. His own weight was so light that the chariot could carry an
extra man, and the prince's strength had not developed sufficiently for him to
be able to lift his end of the chariot when it was necessary to dismount and
carry it over the obstacles that could not be driven over. He needed that extra
man to help him. The first villages we came across were on the
river-bank, three days' travel above the cataract. They were groups of
miserable grass shelters too rudimentary to be called huts. Tanus sent scouts
forward to reconnoitre, and then in the dawn we surrounded them with a single
swift rush. The people that stumbled out of these crude
shelters were too dazed and shocked to offer any resistance, or even attempt to
run from us. They clung together and chattered and gaped at the ring of
chariots and shields that we had thrown around them. 'A fine catch!' Tanus was delighted as we looked
them over. The men were tall and lean, with long, slim limbs. They towered over
most of the men in our ranks; even Tanus seemed short in comparison as we
walked amongst them, sorting them into groups as a farmer might apportion his
herds. 'There are some really good specimens,' he
enthused. 'Look at that beauty.' He had picked out a young man of exceptional
physique. 'He would fetch ten rings of gold on the slave-market at Elephantine
on any day.' Their women were strong and healthy. Their backs
were straight and their teeth were white and even. Every mature female carried
an infant on her hip and led another by the hand. Yet they were the most primitive peoples I had ever
encountered. Neither men nor women wore a shred of clothing, and they left
their pudenda shamelessly bared, though the younger girls wtire. a single
string of beads made from the shells of ostrich eggs around their waist. I
could see at once that the mature women had all been circumcised in the most
brutal fashion. Later I learned that either a flint knife or a sliver of bamboo
was used for this operation. Their vaginas were scarred and deformed into open
pits, and then infibulated with slivers of bone or ivory. The younger girls had
not yet suffered this mutilation, and I determined that this custom would be
outlawed in the future. I was certain that I could rely on the support of my
mistress in this. Their skins were so dark that their naked bodies
appeared purple in the early sunlight, the colour of an over-ripe black grape.
Some of them had smeared themselves with a paste of ashes and white clay, on
which they had daubed crude patterns with their fingertips. They had dressed
their hair with a mixture of ox-blood and clay into a tall, shiny helmet which
exaggerated their already impressive height. One thing that struck me immediately was that there
were no old people among them. I learned later that it was their custom to
break the legs of the elderly with their war clubs and leave them on the bank
of the river as a sacrifice to the crocodiles. They believed that the
crocodiles were reincarnations of their dead ancestors, and that by feeding
them, the victim became a part of this process. They had forged no metal artefacts. Their weapons
were wooden clubs and sharpened sticks. The potter's art had eluded them and
their vessels were the gourds of wild plants. They planted no crops, but lived
on the fish they caught in basket-traps, and on the herds of stunted long-horned
cattle , which were their most prized possessions. They bled them from a vein
in the neck and mixed the blood with milk warm from the udder, and drank the
curdled mess with the utmost relish. When I studied them over the months that followed,
I found that they could neither read nor write. Their only musical instrument
was a drum hollowed from a tree-trunk, and their songs were the grunting and
braying of wild animals. Their dances were flagrant parodies of the sexual act
in which ranks of naked men and women approached each other, stamping and
grinding their hips until they met. When this happened, the imitation was
transformed into reality, and the most licentious debaucheries were enacted. When Prince Memnon questioned me as to what right
we had to capture these people and take possession of them like cattle, I told
him, 'They are savages, and we are civilized people. As a father has a duty to
his son, it is our duty to lift them from their brutish state, and to show them
the true gods. Their part of the bargain is that they repay us with their
labour.' Memnon was a bright lad, and after I had explained it to him he never
again questioned the logic or the morality of it. At my suggestion, my mistress had allowed two of
her black hand-maidens to accompany the expedition. My personal relationship
with these little hussies had not been entirely untroubled, but now they
rendered invaluable service. Both these girls had childhood memories of the
time before their capture, and they retained a rudimentary knowledge of the
language of these tribes of Cush. This was just sufficient for us to begin the
process of taming our captives. As a musician, I have an ear tuned to the
sounds of the human voice; added to this, I have also a natural linguistic
ability. Within a very few weeks I was able to speak the
language of the Shilluk, which was what these people were called. Their language was as primitive as their customs
and their way of life. Their entire vocabulary did not exceed five hundred
words, which I recorded on my scrolls and taught to the slave-masters and to
the army instructors whom Tanus appointed over the fresh-caught slaves. For
among these people Tanus had found his infantry regiments to complement the
chariot divisions. This first raid gave us no real warning of the true
warlike nature of the Shilluk. It had all gone too easily, and we were
unprepared for what followed when we swept down on the next straggle of
villages. By this time the Shilluk had been alerted, and they were ready to
meet us. They had driven away their cattle herds and hidden
their women and children. Naked and armed only with wooden clubs, they came in
their hordes against our chariots and recurved bows and swords, with a courage
and tenacity that surpassed belief. 'By the putrid wax in Seth's ear-hole,' Kratas
swore with delight after we had driven back another charge, 'every one of these
black devils is a soldier born.' 'Trained and armed with bronze, these Shilluk will
stand out against any other foot-soldiers in the world,' Tanus agreed. 'Leave
the bows on the racks. I want as many of them as we can catch alive.' In the end, Tanus ran them to exhaustion with the
chariots, and only when they fell to their knees with even their extraordinary
stamina and reckless courage totally expended, could the slave-masters put the
ropes on them. Tanus selected the best of them for his infantry
regiments, and he learned their language as readily as I did. The Shilluk soon
looked upon him as a god to replace their crocodiles, and Tanus came to love
them almost as much as I loved my horses. In the end it was no longer necessary
to catch the Shilluk like animals. These marvellously tall and willowy spearmen
came out of their hiding-places in the reeds and bushy gulleys of their own
accord, to seek Tanus out and to beg to be allowed to join his regiments. Tamis armed them with long bronze-tipped spears and
shields made from elephant Viide, and he uniformed them in kilts of wild-cat
tails and head-dresses of ostrich feathers. His sergeants drilled them in all
the classic evolutions of war, and we learned swiftly to integrate these
tactics with those of the chariots. Not all the Shilluk were selected for the army. The
others proved to be indefatigable oarsmen on the rowing-benches of the galleys,
and dedicated herdsmen and grooms, for they were born to tend their herds. We very soon learned that their hereditary enemies
were the tribes that lived further to the south, the Dinka and the Mandari.
These other tribes were even more primitive, and lacked the righting instincts
of our Shilluk. Nothing pleased Tanus' new Shilluk regiments better than to be
sent south with their Egyptian officers and supported by the chariots against
their ancient foes. They rounded up the Dinka and Mandari in their thousands.
We used them for the heavy unskilled work. None of them came in willingly, as
some of our Shilluk had done. ONCE WE HAD BROUGHT THE FLEET UP through the fifth
cataract, the entire land of Cush lay open to us. With our Shilluk now to guide
us, the fleet sailed on up-river, while our chariot divisions ranged widely
along each bank, and returned with more ivory and fresh levies of slaves. Soon
we reached a wide river-course that joined the main flow of the Nile from the
east. The flow of this river was restricted to a sullen trickle down its
shrunken pools. However, the Shilluk assured us that in its season this river,
which we named the Atbara, would become a raging torrent, and its waters would
augment the annual flood of the Nile. Queen Lostris despatched an expedition of
gold-seekers, with Shilluk guides, to follow the Atbara as far as they were
able. The fleet sailed on southwards, hunting and slave-raiding along the way. I worried to see it, and tried to prevent it, but
so often these days Prince Memnon's chariot was at the head of one of these
flying columns. Naturally, he was supported by good men, I could at least see
to that, but there was constant hazard and danger out there in the African
bush, and he was still only a boy. I felt he should spend more time with me and his
scrolls studying on the deck of the Breath of Horus, rather than
disporting himself with the likes of Kratas and Remrem. Those two hooligans had
as little concern for the prince's safety as they had for their own. They egged
him on with wagers and challenges and extravagant praise for his more daring
feats. He was soon as much of a dare-devil as any of them, and when he returned
from these forays, he took great pleasure in horrifying me with accounts of his
escapades. When I protested to Tanus, he merely laughed. 'If
he is to wear the double crown one day, he must learn to spurn danger and lead
men.' My mistress agreed with Tanus in the training of Memnon. I had to content
myself with making the most of what time I still had to be alone with my
prince. At least I had my two little princesses. They were
a wonderful consolation. Tehuti and Bakatha grew more enchanting each day, and
I was their slave in more than name alone. Because of our peculiar
circumstances I was closer to them than their true father could be. The first
word that Bakatha ever said was 'Tata', and Tehuti refused to sleep unless I
first told her a story. She pined when I was obliged to leave the fleet on
other business. I think that this was the most happy period of my life. I felt
that I was at the centre of my family, and solid in the affections of all of
them. The fortunes of our nation were almost as bright as
my own. Soon one of our gold-seekers returned from the expedition up the Atbara
river. He knelt before Queen Lostris and laid a small leather bag at her feet.
Then, at her bidding, he opened the neck of the bag and poured from it a stream
of gleaming pebbles. Some of these were as small as grains of sand, and others
as large as the end of my thumb. All of them shone with that peculiar radiance
that cannot be mistaken. The goldsmiths were summoned and they worked with
their furnaces and clay crucibles, and finally declared these nuggets to be
veritable gold of an extraordinary purity. Tanus and I rode back up the Atbara
to the site where this gold had been discovered. I helped to plan the methods
that were used to mine the gravel-beds in the water-course of the river in
which the gold had been trapped. We used thousands of Mandari and Dinka slaves to
scoop out basketloads of gravel and carry these up to the sluices that the
masons had carved out of the granite slopes in the hills above the river. To take back to my mistress I sketched pictures of
the long lines of naked black slaves, their wet skins gleaming in the sunlight,
toiling up the hillside, each with a heavy basket balanced on his head. When we
left the miners hard at work and went back to rejoin the fleet, we carried with
us five hundred deben of newly smelted gold rings. WE ENCOUNTERED YET ANOTHER CATARACT on our voyage
southwards. This was the sixth and final set of rapids, but this transit proved
swifter and easier than any of the others. Our chariots and wagons were able to
detour around the rapids, and so at last we reached the mystical confluence of
two mighty rivers that between them became the Nile we knew and loved so well. 'This is the place that Taita saw in his vision of
the Mazes of Ammon-Ra. Here Hapi lets her waters flow and mingle. This is the
sacred site of the goddess,' Queen Lostris declared. 'We have completed our
voyage. It is at this place that the goddess will strengthen us for the return
to Egypt. I name it Qebui, the Place of the North Wind, for it is that wind
which blew us here.' 'It is a propitious place. Already the goddess has
shown her favour by providing us with slaves and gold,' the great lords of the
state council agreed. 'We should voyage no further.' 'It remains only to find a site for the tomb of my husband,
Pharaoh Mamose,' Queen Lostris decreed. 'Once the tomb is built and Pharaoh
sealed in it, then my vow will have been fulfilled and it will be time to
return in triumph to our very Egypt. Only once that has been done can we go up
against the Hyksos tyrant and drive him from our motherland.' I think that I was one of the very few of all our
company who was not happy and relieved by this decision. The others were
consumed by home-sickness and weary of the long years of travel. I, on the
other hand, had been stricken by a malady even more pernicious, that of
wanderlust. I wanted to see what lay beyond the next bend of the river and over
the crest of the next hill. I wanted to go on and on, to the very end of the
world. Therefore I was delighted when my mistress chose me as the one to seek
out the site of the royal tomb, and ordered Prince Memnon to escort me on this
expedition with his squadron of chariots. Not only would I be able to indulge
this new appetite of mine for travel, but I would once more have the undiluted
pleasure of the prince's company. At fourteen years of age, Prince Memnon was placed
in command of the expedition. This was not exceptional. There have been
pharaohs in our history who commanded great armies in battle when they were no
older. The prince took his responsibilities on this his first independent
command most seriously. The chariots were made ready, and Memnon inspected each
horse and vehicle personally. We had two spare teams of horses for each
chariot, so that these could be changed and rested regularly. Then the two of us deliberated at great length and
in even greater detail as to which direction we should follow in our search for
the ideal site for the king's tomb. This should be in some rugged and
uninhabited area not readily accessible to grave-robbers. There must be a cliff
into which the tomb with all the subsidiary passages could be cut. There was no area that we had come upon since we
had entered the land of Cush that satisfied these requirements. We reviewed
what we knew of the land behind us and tried to divine what lay ahead. Where we
stood now at Qebui, the meeting-point of the two rivers, was the loveliest
place we had visited on all the long voyage. It seemed that all the birds of the air had
gathered here, from tiny jewelled kingfishers to stately blue cranes, from
whistling flocks of duck that darkened the sun in their multitudes to plovers
and lapwings that scurried along the water's edge, pausing only to ask the
plaintive question, 'Pee-wit? Pee-wit?' In the silvery acacia groves and out on
the open savannah, the herds of antelope grazed in their countless millions. It
was almost as though this seat of the goddess was sacred to all degrees of
life. The waters below the juncture of the rivers roiled with shoals of fish,
while in the sky above the white-headed fish eagles turned slow circles against
the startling blue of the African sky and uttered their weird, yelping chant. Each of these twin rivers expressed a different
character and mood, just as two infants sprung from the same womb can vary in
every detail of body and mind. The right-hand branch was slow and yellow,
greater in volume than the other, but not so assertive. The eastern branch was
a murky grey-blue, an angry, overbearing flood that shoved its twin aside when
they met, refusing to mingle its waters, crowding the other against the bank
and retaining its own turbid character for many miles down-stream before
sullenly allowing itself to be absorbed by the gentler yellow stream. 'Which river must we follow, Tata?' Memnon
demanded, and I sent for the Shilluk guides. 'The yellow river comes out of a vast and pestilent
swamp that has no end. No man can enter there. It is a place of crocodiles and
hippopotamus and stinging insects. It is a place of fever where a man might
lose his way and wander for ever,' the Shilluk told us. 'What of the other river?' we asked. "The dark river comes out of the sky, down
cliffs of stone that rise up into the clouds. No man can climb the dreadful
gorges.' 'We will follow the dark left-hand fork,' the
prince decided. 'In those rocky places we will find a resting-place for my
father.' So we journeyed into the east until we saw the
mountains rise on the horizon. They formed a blue rampart so tall and
formidable as to surpass anything that we had ever seen or believed possible.
Beside these great mountains, the hills we had known in the Nile valley were
like the scratching of little birds in the sand-banks of the river. Each day as
we journeyed towards them they climbed higher into the heavens and dwarfed all
the world below. 'No man can go up there,' Memnon marvelled.
"That must be the abode of the gods.' We watched the lightning play upon the mountains,
flickering and flaring inside the tumbling banks of cloud that blanketed the peaks
from our view. We listened to the thunder growling like a hunting lion amongst
the gorges and the sheer valleys, and we were awestruck. We ventured no further than the foothills of this
terrible range, and then the cliffs and gorges barred our way and turned our
chariots back. In these foothills we found a hidden valley with vertical sides
of stone. For twenty days the prince and I explored this wild place, until at
last we stood before a black cliff-face and Memnon spoke quietly. 'This is
where my father's earthly body will rest for all eternity.' He stared up at the
sheer stone with a dreamy and mystical expression. 'It is as though I can hear
his voice speaking in my head. He will be happy here.' So I surveyed this place and marked out the cliff,
driving bronze pegs into the cracks in the rock, setting out the direction and
the angle of the entrance passage for the masons who would come to begin this
work. When this was done, we extricated ourselves, from the maze of valleys and
snarling gorges, and returned down the Nile to the meeting-place of the rivers,
where our fleet lay. WE WERE CAMPED ON THE GREAT PLAINS only a few days'
travel from Qebui when I was awakened in the night by the eerie grunting cries
and the sound of a moving mass of animals that seemed to come from the darkness
all around us. Memnon ordered the trumpeter to blow the call to arms, and we
stood to, within the circle of chariots. We threw wood on the watch-fires and
stared out into the night. In the flicker of the flames we saw a dark flood,
like the spate of the Nile, streaming past us. The eerie honking cries and the
snorting sounds were almost deafening, and the press of animals in this throng
was so heavy that they bumped into the outer ring of chariots, and some of the
vehicles were thrown over on their sides. It was not possible to rest in this
uproar, and we stood to arms all the rest of that night. The flood of living
creatures never abated in all that time. When dawn lit the scene, we were presented with the
most extraordinary spectacle. In every direction as far as the eye could see,
the plains were covered with a carpet of moving animals. They were all
travelling in the same direction, trudging onwards with a strange fatalistic
determination, heads hanging, shrouded in the dust of their own passage,
uttering those weird, mournful cries. Every so often, some section of this
endless herd took fright, for no reason, and tossed up their heels. They
cavorted and snorted and chased each other in aimless circles, like whirlpools in
the surface of a smoothly flowing river. Then they would settle back into the
same plodding gait and follow the swarms ahead of them into the hazy distance. We stood and stared in amazement. Every animal in
this vast concourse was of the same species, and each individual was identical
in every respect to the next. They were all of a dark purplish hue, with a
shaggy-maned dewlap and horns shaped like the crescent moon. Their heads were
misshapen, with ugly bulbous noses, while their bodies sloped back from high
shoulders to spindly hindquarters. When at last we harnessed the chariots and resumed
our own journey, we passed through this living sea of animals like a fleet of
galleys. They opened to allow us passage, streaming by on either hand so close
that we could reach out and touch them. They were completely unafraid, and
stared at us with dull, incurious eyes. When it was time for the midday meal, Memnon strung
his bow and killed five of these antelope with as many arrows. We skinned and
butchered the carcasses as their fellows streamed by us at arm's-length.
Despite the animals' strange appearance, their flesh, when grilled on the coals
of an open fire, was as good to eat as any wild game I had tasted. 'This is another gift from the gods,' Memnon
declared. 'As soon as we rejoin the main army, we will send out an expedition
to follow these herds. We will be able to smoke enough meat to feed all our
armies and our slaves from now until these beasts come again next year.' From our Shilluk guides we learned that this
incredible migration was an annual occurrence as the herds moved from one
grazing-ground to another, several hundred miles apart. The Shilluk called
these beasts gnu, in imitation of their strange honking cry. 'This will be a
never-ending supply, one that is replenished each year,' I informed the prince. None of us was then able to foresee the
catastrophic events which would flow from this visitation of the ungainly gnu.
I might have been warned by the manner in which they threw up their heads and
snorted without reason, or by the discharge of mucus from the nostrils of some
of these beasts, that I noticed as they streamed past us. However, I gave
little thought to this behaviour, and judged them to be mild and harmless
creatures who could bring us nothing but great benefit. As soon as we reached the twin rivers, we reported
the migration of gnu to Queen Lostris, and she agreed with Prince Memnon's
suggestion. Assisted by Kratas and Rem-rem, she put him in command of a column of
two hundred chariots, supported by wagons and several thousand Shilluk. She
ordered him to slaughter as many gnu as could be cut up and smoked for army
rations. I did not accompany the expedition, for the role of
butcher's assistant was not to my fancy. However, we could soon see the smoke
from the fires, on which the meat was curing, darkening the horizon, and before
many more days had passed, the wagons started to return, each one loaded high
with blackened slabs of cured meat. Exactly twenty days from our first encounter with
the gnu herds, I was sitting under a shady tree on the bank of the Nile,
playing bao with my old and dear friend Aton. As a small indulgence to myself
and out of deference to Aton, I had opened one of the precious jars of three-palm
quality wine that remained from the stock which I had brought from Egypt. Aton
and I played and haggled as old friends do, and sipped the wine with deep
appreciation. We had no means of knowing that catastrophe was
rushing down upon us to overwhelm us all. On the contrary, I had every reason
to be pleased with myself. The previous day I had completed the drawings and
plans for the building of Pharaoh's tomb, in which I had incorporated several
features to deter and frustrate the depredations of any grave-robber. Queen
Lostris had approved these plans and appointed one of the master masons as the
overseer. She told me that I might requisition all the slaves and equipment
that I needed. My mistress was determined that she would not stint in making
good her vow to her dead husband. She would build him the finest tomb that my
genius could design. I had just won the third successive board of bao
from Aton and was pouring another jar of the truly excellent wine, when I heard
the beat of hooves and looked up to see a horseman coming at full gallop from
the direction of the chariot lines. When he was still at a distance I
recognized Hui. Very few others rode astride, and certainly not at such a
headlong pace. As he raced towards where we sat, I saw the expression on his
face, and it alarmed me so that I stood up abruptly enough to spill the wine
and upset the bao board. 'Taita!' he screamed at me from a hundred yards.
'The horses! Sweet Isis have mercy on us! The horses!' He reined down his mount, and I swung up behind him
and seized him around the waist. 'Don't waste time talking,' I shouted in his
ear. 'Ride, fellow, ride!' I went to Patience first. Half the herd was down,
but she was my first love. The mare lay upon her side with her chest heaving.
She was old now, with grey hairs frosting her muzzle. I had not used her in the
traces since the day that Blade had been killed by the elephant bull. Although
she no longer pulled a chariot, she was the finest brood mare in all our herds.
Her foals all inherited her great heart and vivid .intelligence. She had just
weaned a beautiful little colt who stood near her now, watching her anxiously. I knelt beside her. 'What is it, my brave darling?'
I asked softly, and she recognized my voice, and opened her eyes. The lids were gummed with mucus. I was appalled by
her condition. Her neck and throat were swollen to almost twice their normal
girth. A vile-smelling stream of yellow pus streamed from her mouth and
nostrils. The fever was burning her up, so that I could feel the heat radiate
from her, as though from a campfire. She tried to rise when I stroked her neck, but she
was too weak. She fell back, and her breath gurgled and wheezed in her throat.
The thick, creamy pus bubbled out of her nostrils, and I could hear that she
was drowning in it. Her throat was closing, so that she had to battle for each
breath. She was watching me with an almost human expression
of trust and appeal. I was overcome with a sense of helplessness. This
affliction was beyond my previous experience. I slipped the snowy-white linen
shawl from my shoulder and used it to mop the streaming pus from her nostrils.
It was a pathetically inadequate attempt, for as fast as I wiped it away, fresh
trickles of the stinking stuff poured from her. 'Taita!' Hui called to me. 'Every one of our
animals has been stricken by this pestilence.' Grateful for the distraction, I
left Patience and went through the rest of the herd. Half of them were down
already, and those still upright were mostly staggering or beginning to drool
the thick yellow pus from their mouths. 'What must we do?' Hui and all the charioteers
appealed to me. I was burdened with their trust. They expected me alone to
avert this terrible disaster, and I knew that it was beyond my powers. I knew
of no remedy, and could not think of even the most drastic and unlikely
treatment. I stumbled back to where Patience lay, and wiped
away the latest flood of stinking discharge from her muzzle. I could see that
she was sinking away swiftly. Each breath she drew now was a terrible struggle.
My grief weakened me, and I knew that in my helplessness I would soon melt into
tears and be of no further use to any of them, neither horses nor men. Somebody knelt beside me, and I looked up to see
that it was one of the Shilluk grooms, a willing and likely fellow whom I had
befriended and who now looked upon me as his master. 'It is the sickness of the
gnu,' he told me in his simple language. 'Many will die.' I stared at him, as what he said began to make
sense in my muddled mind. I remembered the snorting, drooling herds of
slate-coloured animals darkening the plains with their numbers, and how we had
thought it a gift of the benevolent gods. "This sickness kills our cattle when the gnu
come. Those that live through it are safe. They are never sick again.' 'What can we do to save them, Habani?' I demanded,
but he shook his head. "There is nothing to be done.' I was holding Patience's head in my arms when she
died. The breath choked away in her throat and she shuddered and her legs stiffened
and then relaxed. I let out a low moan of grief and was on the very edge of the
abyss of despair, when I looked up and through my tears saw that Patience's
colt was down, with the yellow slime bubbling up from his throat. In that moment my despair was replaced with a
burning anger. 'No!' I shouted. 'I will not let you die also.' I ran to the foal's side and shouted to Habani to
bring leather buckets of hot water. With a linen cloth I bathed the colt's
throat in an attempt to reduce the swelling, but it had no effect. The pus
still poured from his nostrils, and the hot skin of his neck stretched out as
the flesh ballooned like a bladder filling with air. 'He is dying.' Habani shook his head. 'Many will
die.' 'I will not let it happen,' I swore grimly, and
sent Hui to the galley to fetch my medicine chest. By the time he returned, it was almost too late.
The colt was in extremis. His breath was choking out of him and I could feel
his strength draining away under my frantic hands. I felt for the ridged rings
of his windpipe at the juncture of his throat and his chest. With one shallow
cut through the skin I exposed the white sinewy pipe, and then I pressed the
point of my scalpel into it and pierced the tough sheath. Immediately air
hissed through the aperture and I saw the colt's chest swell as his lungs
inflated. He began to breathe again to a steady and even rhythm, but I saw
almost immediately that the puncture-wound in his throat was closing again with
blood and mucus. In frantic haste I hacked a length of bamboo from
the framework of the nearest chariot, and I cut a hollow tube from the end of
it and pushed this into the wound. The bamboo tube held the wound open and the
colt relaxed his struggles as the air sucked and blew unimpeded through it. 'Hui!' I yelled for him. 'I will show you how to
save them.' Before night fell, I had trained a hundred or more
of the charioteers and grooms to perform this crude but effective surgery, and
we worked on through the night by the wavering, uncertain light of the oil
lamps. There were over thirteen thousand horses in the
royal herds by this time. We could not save them all, although we tried. We
worked on, with the blood from the severed throats caking black up to our elbows.
When exhaustion overcame us, we fell on a bale of hay and slept for an hour and
then staggered up and went back to work. Some of the horses were not as badly affected by
this pestilence, which I had named the Yellow Strangler. They seemed to have an
in-born resistance to its ravages. The discharge from their nostrils was no
more copious than I had seen in the gnu herds, and many of these remained on
their feet and threw off the disease within days. Many others died before we were able to open the windpipe,
and even some of those, on which we had successfully operated, died later from
mortification and complication of the wound which we had inflicted. Of course,
many of our horses were out on expeditions into the plains and beyond my help.
Prince Memnon lost two out of every three of his steeds and had to abandon his
chariots and return to the Qebui rivers on foot. In the end we lost over half our horses, seven
thousand dead, and those that survived were so weakened and cast down that it
was many months before they were strong and fit enough to pull a chariot.
Patience's colt survived and replaced his old dam in my affections. He took the
right-hand trace in my chariot, and was so strong and reliable that I -called
him Rock. 'How has this pestilence affected our hopes of a
swift return to Egypt?' my mistress asked me. 'It has set us back many years,' I told her, and
saw the pain in her eyes. 'We lost most of our best-trained old horses, those
like Patience. We will have to breed up the royal herds all over again, and
train young horses to take their places in the traces of the chariots.' I waited for the annual migration of the gnu the
following year with dread, but when it came and their multitudes once more
darkened the plains, Habani was proved correct. Only a few of our horses
developed the symptoms of the Yellow Strangler, and these in a mild form that
set them back for only a few weeks before they were strong enough to work
again. What struck me as strange was that the foals born
in the period after the first infection of the Yellow Strangler, those who had
never been exposed to the actual disease, were as immune as their dams who had
contracted a full dose. It was as though the immunity had been transferred to
them in the milk that they sucked from their mother's udder. I was certain that
we would never again have to experience the full force of the plague. MY MAJOR DUTY NOW, LAID UPON ME BY my mistress, was
the construction of Pharaoh's tomb in the mountains. I was obliged to spend
much of my time in that wild and forbidding place, and I became fascinated by
those mountains and all their moods. Like a beautiful woman, the mountains were
unpredictable, sometimes remote and hidden in dense moving veils of clouds that
were shot through with lightning and riven with thunder. At other times they
were lovely and seductive, beckoning to me, challenging me to discover all
their secrets and experience all their dangerous delights. Although I had eight thousand slaves to prosecute
the task, and the unstinted assistance of all our finest craftsmen and artists,
the work on the tomb went slowly. I knew it would take many years to complete
the elaborate mausoleum which my mistress insisted we must build, and to
decorate it in a fashion fit for the Lord of the Two Kingdoms. In truth there
was no point in hurrying the work, for it would take as long to rebuild the
royal horse herds and train the Shilluk infantry regiments until they were a
match for the Hyksos squadrons against which they would one day be matched. When I was not up in the mountains working at the
tomb, I spent my time at Qebui, where there were myriad different tasks and
pleasures awaiting me. These ranged from the education of my two little
princesses to devising new military tactics with Lord Tanus and the prince. By this time it was clear that, whereas Memnon
would one day command all the chariot divisions, Tanus had never outgrown his
first distrust of the horse. He was a sailor and an infantryman to the bone,
and as he grew older, he was ever more conservative and traditional in his use
of his new Shilluk regiments. The prince was growing into a dashing and
innovative charioteer. Each day he came to me with a dozen new ideas, some of
them farfetched, but others quite brilliant. We tried them all, even the ones
that I knew were impossible. He was sixteen years old when Queen Lostris
promoted him to the rank of Best of Ten Thousand. Now that Tanus rode with me so seldom, I slowly
took over the role of Memnon's principal driver. We developed a rapport which
became almost instinctive, and which extended to our favourite team of horses,
Rock and Chain. When we were on the march, Memnon still liked to drive, and I
stood on the footplate behind him. However, as soon as we engaged in action, he
would toss me the reins and seize his bow or his javelins from the rack. I
would take the chariot into the fray and steer it through the evolutions we had
dreamed up together. As Memnon matured and his strength increased, we
began to win some of the prizes at the games and the military tattoos that were
a feature of our lives at Qebui. First, we triumphed in the flat races where
our team of Rock and Chain could display its paces to the full; then we began
to win the shooting and javelin contests. Soon we were known as the chariot
that had to be beaten before anyone could claim the champion's ribbon from
Queen Lostris. I remember the cheers as our chariot flew through
the final gate of the course, myself at the traces and Memnon on the footplate
hurling a javelin right and left into the two straw-filled dummies as we
passed, then the mad dash down the straight, with the prince howling like a
demon and the long wind-blown plait of his hair standing out behind his head,
like the tail of a charging lion. Soon there were other encounters in which the
prince began to distinguish himself, and those without any assistance from me.
'Whenever he strode past the young girls, with the Gold of Valour gleaming on
his chest and the champion's ribbon knotted into his plait, they giggled and
blushed and slanted their eyes in his direction. Once I entered his tent in
haste with some important news for him, only to come up short as I found my
prince well mounted and oblivious to all but the tender young body and the
pretty face beneath him. I withdrew silently, a little saddened that the age of
his innocence was past. Of all these pleasures, none for me could compare
with those precious hours that I was still able to spend with my mistress. In
this her thirty-third year she was in the very high summer of her beauty. Her
allure was enhanced by her sophistication and her poise. She had become a queen
indeed, and a woman without peer. All her people loved her, but none of them as much
as I did. Not even Tanus was able to surpass me in my devotion to her. It was
my pride that she still needed me so much, and relied upon me and my judgement
and my advice so trustingly. Notwithstanding the other blessings that I had to
adorn my existence, she would ever be the one great love of my life. I SHOULD HAVE BEEN CONTENTED AND replete, but there
is a restlessness in my nature that was exacerbated by this new wanderlust that
had come to plague me. Whenever I paused from my labours at Pharaoh's tomb, and
looked up at them, the mountains beckoned me. I began to make short excursions
into their lonely gorges, often alone but sometimes with Hui or some other
companion. Hui was with me when I first saw the herds of wild
ibex high above us in the lofty crags of the mountain. They were of a species
we had never seen before. They stood twice as tall as the wild goats that we
knew from the Nile valley, and some of the old billy-goats carried such a mass
of curling horn that they seemed as monstrous as some fabulous beast. It was Hui who carried reports of these huge ibex
back to the twin rivers where the fleet lay at Qebui, and within the month,
Lord Tanus arrived at the valley of the king's tomb, with his bow over his
shoulder and Prince Memnon at his side. The prince was fast becoming as ardent
a huntsman as his father, and was every bit as eager for the chase. As for
myself, I welcomed the chance to explore those fascinating highlands in such
company. We had meant to venture only as far as the first
line of peaks, but when we climbed to their crest, we were presented with a
vista that was breathtaking. We saw other mountains against the sky that were
shaped like flat-topped anvils, and were the tawny colour of lions. They
dwarfed the peaks on which we stood and lured us onwards. The Nile climbed in concert with us up through
precipitous valleys and dark gorges that churned its waters to gleaming white.
We could not always follow its course, but in places were forced to climb above
it and follow giddy goat-tracks across the face of a frowning mountain. Then, when we had been lured deep into its maw, the
mountain loosed its full fury upon us. We were one hundred men in our company, with ten
pack-horses to carry our provisions. We were camped in the depths of one of
these fathomless gorges, with the fresh trophies of Tanus' and Memnon's latest
hunt laid out upon the rocky floor for our appraisal and admiration. These were
two goat's heads, the largest we had seen in all our travels, so heavy in horn
that it took two slaves to lift one of them. Suddenly it began to rain. In our Egyptian valley it may rain once in twenty
years. None of us had ever imagined anything even remotely like the rain that
fell upon us now. First, dense black clouds roofed over the narrow
strip of sky that showed between the cliffs that walled us in, so that we were
plunged from sunny noon into deep twilight. A cold wind raced down the valley
and chilled our bodies and our spirits. We huddled together in dismay. Then lightning lanced from the sombre belly of the
clouds and shattered the rocks around us, filling the air with the smell of
sulphur and sparks struck from flint. Thunder burst upon us, magnified as it
rolled from cliff to cliff, and the earth jumped and trembled beneath our feet. Then the rain fell. It did not come down upon us in
the form of drops. It was as though we stood under one of the cataracts of the
Nile when the river was in full flood. There was no longer ah- to breathe,
water filled our mouths and our nostrils so that we felt that we were drowning.
The rain was so thick that we could see only the blurred outline of the man who
stood an arm's-length away. It battered us so that we were thrown down and
cringed beneath the nearest rock for shelter. Still it assaulted all the senses
and stung our exposed skin like a swarm of angry hornets. It was cold. I had never known such cold, and we
were covered only with our thin linen shawls. The cold sucked the force out of
my limbs, and we shivered until our teeth clattered together in our mouths, and
we could not still them even though we bit down with all the strength of our
jaws. Then, above the sound of the falling rain, I heard
a new sound. It was the sound of water which had become a ravening monster.
Down the narrow valley where we lay swept a wall of grey water. It stretched
from cliff to cliff, and carried everything before it. I was caught up in it and tumbled end over end. I
felt life being beaten out of me as I was thrown against the rocks, and icy
water filled my throat. Darkness overwhelmed me, and I thought that I was dead. I have a vague recollection of hands dragging me
from the flood, and then I was wafted away to some dark and distant shore. The
voice of my prince called me back. Before I could open my eyes I smelled
wood-smoke, and felt the warmth of the flames on one side of my body. 'Tata, wake up! Speak to me.' The voice was
insistent, and I opened my eyes. Memnon's face floated before me, and he smiled
at me. Then he called over his shoulder, 'He is awake, Lord Tanus.' I found that we were in a rock cave and that
outside, the night had fallen. Tanus came across from the smoky fire of damp
wood and squatted beside the prince. 'How are you, old friend? I don't think you have
broken any bones.' I struggled into a sitting position, and gingerly
tested every part of my body before I replied, 'My head is cracked through, and
every limb aches. Apart from that, I am cold and hungry.' 'You will live then,' Tanus chuckled, 'though a
while ago I doubted any of us would. We have to get out of these cursed
mountains before something worse happens. It was madness ever to venture into a
place where the rivers come out of the sky.' 'What about the others?' I asked. Tanus shook his head. "They are all drowned.
You were the only one that we were able to drag from the flood.' 'What about the horses?' 'Gone,' he grunted. 'All gone.' 'Food?' 'Nothing,' Tanus replied. 'Even my bow is lost in
the river. I have only the sword at my side and the clothes on my body.' AT DAWN WE LEFT OUR ROCK SHELTER and started back
down that treacherous valley. At the foot of the gorge we found the bodies of
some of our men and the horses strewn upon the rocks where they had been
stranded when the flood receded. We scavenged amongst the rocks and scree, and we
managed to recover some of our stores and equipment. To my great joy I found my
medicine chest still intact, though flooded with water. I laid out the contents
on a rock, and while they dried, I fashioned a sling from a leather harness to
carry the chest upon my back. In the meantime, Memnon had cut strips of meat from
the carcass of one of the horses and grilled them over another fire of
driftwood. When we had eaten our fill, we saved the rest of the meat, and set
out on the return. The journey slowly descended into nightmare as we
scaled steep rocky slopes and dropped into the gorges beyond. There seemed to
be no end to this terrible wilderness, and our bruised feet in open sandals
protested each step. At night we shivered miserably around a smoky little fire
of driftwood. By the second day we all knew that we had lost the
way, and that we were wandering aimlessly. I was certain that we were doomed to
die in these terrible mountains. Then we heard the river and, as we topped the
next saddle between peaks, we found the infant Nile winding through the depths
of the gorge below us. That was not all. On the banks of the river we saw a
collection of coloured tents, and amongst them moved the shapes of men. 'Civilized men,' I said immediately, 'for those
tents must be of woven cloth.' 'And those are horses,' Memnon agreed eagerly,
pointing out the animals tethered on the lines beyond the encampment. 'There!' Tanus pointed. 'That was the flash of
sunlight off a sword-blade or a spear-head. They are metal-workers.' 'We must
find out who these people are.' I was fascinated by what tribe could live in
such an inhospitable land. 'We will get our throats cut,' Tanus growled. 'What
makes you believe these mountaineers are not as savage as the land in which
they live?' Only later would we come to know these people as Ethiopians. 'Those are magnificent horses,' Memnon whispered.
'Our own are not so tall, or so sturdy. We must go down and study them.' The
prince was a horseman above all else. 'Lord Tanus is right.' His warning had aroused my usual
prudent nature, and I was ready to counsel caution. These might be dangerous
savages, with but the trappings of civilized men.' We sat upon the shoulder of the mountain and
debated, for a while longer, but in the end curiosity got the better of all three
of us and we crept down through one of the ravines to spy upon these strangers. As we drew closer, we saw that they were tall,
well-built people, probably more robust in stature than we Egyptians are. Their
hair was thick and dark and curled profusely. The men were bearded, and we are
clean-shaven. They wore full-length robes, probably woven of wool, and brightly
coloured. We go bare-chested and our kilts are usually pure white in colour.
They wore soft leather boots, as opposed to our sandals, and a bright cloth
wound around their heads. The women we saw working amongst the tents were
unveiled and cheerful. They sang and called to each other in a language I had
never heard before, but their voices were melodious as they drew water, or
squatted over the cooking-fires, or ground corn on the millstones. One group of men was playing a board-game that,
from where I hid, looked very much like bao. They were wagering and arguing
over the play of the stones. At one stage, two of them leapt to their feet and
drew curved daggers from their belts. They confronted each other snarling and
hissing, like a pair of angry tom-cats. At that stage a third man, who had been sitting
alone, rose to his feet and stretched, like a lazy leopard. He sauntered across
and, with his sword, knocked up the daggers. Immediately the two protagonists
subsided and slunk away. The peace-maker was clearly the chief of the party.
He was a tall man, with the wiry frame of a mountain goat. He was goat-like in
other ways. His beard was as long and thick as that of an ibex ram, and his
features were coarse and goaty; he had a heavy, hooked nose and a wide mouth
with a cruel slant to it. I thought that he probably stank like one of the old
rams that Tanus had shot from the cliff-face. Suddenly I felt Tanus grip my arm, and he whispered
in my ear, 'Look at that!' This chieftain wore the richest apparel of any of
them. His robe was striped in scarlet and blue and his earrings were stones
that glowed like the full moon. But I could not see what had excited Tanus. 'His sword,' Tanus hissed. 'Look at his sword.' I studied it for the first time. It was longer than
one of our weapons and the pommel was obviously of pure gold filigree-work, of
a delicacy that I had never seen before. The hand-guard was studded with
precious stones. It was a masterpiece that clearly had occupied some master
craftsman his lifetime. This was not what had captured Tanus' attention,
however. It was the blade. As long as the chief's own arm, it was made of a
metal that was neither yellow bronze nor red copper. In colour it was a strange
silvery glittering blue, like the living scales of a Nile perch taken fresh
from the river. It was inlaid with gold, as if to highlight its unique value. 'What is it?' Tanus breathed. 'What metal is that?' 'I do not know.' The chief resumed his seat in front of his tent,
but now he laid the sword across his lap, and, with a phallus-shaped piece of
volcanic rock, began lovingly to stroke the edge of the blade. The metal
emitted a ringing thrill of sound to each touch of the stone. No bronze ever
resounded like that. It was the purr of a resting lion. 'I want it,' Tanus whispered. 'I will never rest
until I have that sword.' I gave him a startled glance, for I had never heard
such a tone in his voice. I saw that he meant what he said. He was a man struck
with a sudden overpowering passion. 'We cannot remain here longer,' I told him softly.
'We will be discovered.' I took his arm, but he resisted. He was staring at the
weapon. 'Let us go to look at their horses,' I insisted,
and at last he allowed me to draw him away. I led Memnon by the other hand. At
a safe distance we circled the camp, and crept back towards the horse-lines. When I saw the horses close up, I was struck with a
passion as fierce as Tanus had conceived for the blue sword. These were a
different breed from our Hyksos horses. They were taller and more elegantly
proportioned. Their heads were noble and their nostrils wider. I knew those
nostrils were the mark of stamina and good wind. Their eyes were situated
further forward in the skull and were more prominent than those of our animals.
They were great soft eyes, shining with intelligence. 'They are beautiful,' whispered Memnon at my side.
'Look at the way they hold their heads and arch their necks.' Tanus longed for the sword, we coveted the horses
with a passion that equalled his. 'Just one stallion like that to put to our mares,'
I pleaded to any god who was listening. 'I would exchange my hope of eternal
life for a single one.' One of the foreign grooms glanced in our direction,
then said something to the fellow beside him and began to walk in our
direction. This time I had no need to insist, and all three of us ducked down
behind the boulder that sheltered us and crawled away. We found a secure
hiding-place further down-river, amongst a tumbled heap of boulders, and
immediately launched into one of those discussions in which all spoke together
and none listened. 'I will go in and offer him a thousand deben of
gold,' Tanus swore, 'I must have that sword.' 'He would kill you first. Did you not see him
stroke it as though it was his first-born son?' 'Those horses!' marvelled Memnon. 'I never dreamed
of such beauty. Horus must have beasts like that to draw his chariot.' 'Did you see those two fly at each other?' I
cautioned. "They are savage men, and bloodthirsty. They would rip out your
guts before you opened your mouth to utter a word. Besides, what do you have to
offer in return? They will see we are destitute beggars.' 'We could steal three of their stallions tonight
and ride them down on to the plain,' Memnon suggested, and though the idea had
appeal, I told him sternly, 'You are the crown prince of Egypt, not a common
thief.' He grinned at me. 'For one of those horses, I would
cut throats like the worst footpad in Thebes.' As we debated thus, we were suddenly aware of the
sound of voices approaching along the river-bank from the direction of the
foreign camp. We looked about for better concealment and hid away. The voices drew closer. A party of women came into
view and they stopped below us at the water's edge. There were three older
women, and a girl. The women wore robes of a drab hue, and cloths of black
around their hair. I thought that they were servants or nursemaids. It did not
occur to me then that they were gaolers, for they treated the girl with unusual
deference. The girl was tall and slim, so that when she
walked, she moved like a papyrus stem in the Nile breeze. She wore a short robe
of rich wool, striped in yellow and sky blue, which left her knees bared.
Though she wore short boots of soft stitched leather, I could see that her legs
were lithe and smooth. The women stopped below our hiding-place, and one
of the older women began to disrobe the girl. The other two filled the clay
jars that they had carried down on their heads with water from the Nile. The
river was still swollen with flood-water. No one could safely enter that icy
torrent. It was clear that they intended bathing the girl from the jars. One of the women lifted the girl's robe over her
head and she stood naked at the water's edge. I heard Memnon gasp. I looked at
him and saw that he had forgotten entirely about stealing horses. While two of the women poured the water from the
jars over the girl, the third woman wiped her down with a folded cloth. The
girl held her hands above her head and circled slowly to allow them to wet
every part of her body. She laughed and squealed at the cold, and I saw tiny
goose-bumps rise around her nipples, which were the rich ruby of polished
garnets, mounted like jewels on the peak of each smooth, round breast. Her hair was a dark bush of tight curls, her skin
was the colour of the heart-wood of the acacia, when it has been buffed and
oiled to a high patina. It was a rich, ruddy brown, that glowed in the high
sunlight of the mountains. Her features were delicate, her nose narrow and
chiselled. Her lips were soft and full, but without any thickness. Her eyes
were large and dark, slanted above high cheek-bones. Her lashes were so thick
that they tangled together. She was beautiful. I have only known one other
woman who was more so. Suddenly she said something to the women with her.
They stood aside, and she left them and climbed on those long naked legs
towards us. But before she reached our hiding-place, she stepped behind a
boulder that shielded her from her companions, but left her full in our view.
She glanced around quickly, but did not see us. The cold water must have
affected her, for she squatted quickly and her own water tinkled on the rock
beneath her. Memnon groaned softly. It was instinctive, not
intentional, a sound of longing so intense as to have become agony. The girl
sprang to her feet and stared directly at him. Memnon was standing a little to
one side of Tanus and me. While we were concealed, he was full in her view. The two of them stared at each other. The girl was
trembling, her dark eyes enormous. I expected her to run or scream. Instead,
she looked back over her shoulder in a conspiratorial gesture, as if to make
certain that the women had not followed her. Then she turned back to Memnon
and, in a soft sweet voice, asked a question, at the same time holding out her
hand to him in a gesture of appeal. 'I do not understand,' Memnon whispered, and spread
his own hands in a gesture of incomprehension. The girl stepped up to him and repeated the
question impatiently, and when Memnon shook his head, she seized his hand and'
shook it. In her agitation, her voice rose as she demanded something of him. 'Masara!' One of her attendants had heard her.
'Masara!' It was obviously the girl's name, for she made a gesture of silence
and caution to Memnon and turned to go back. However, the three women had all started up the
slope after Masara. They were chattering with alarm and agitation, and they
came round the side of the boulder in a pack and stopped when they saw Memnon. For a moment nobody moved, and then all three women
screamed in unison. The naked girl seemed poised to run to Memnon's side, but
as she started forward, two of the women seized her; all four of them were
screaming now, as the girl struggled to be free. 'Time to go home,' Tanus jerked my arm, and I was
after him in a bound. From the direction of the camp came the shouts of
many men aroused by the screams of the women. When I paused to look back, I saw
them coming over the ridge in a body. I saw also that Memnon had not followed
us, but had leaped forward to the girl's assistance. They were all big women and held the girl hard,
redoubling their screams. Although Masara was trying desperately to pull free,
Memnon could not get her away from them. 'Tanus!' I yelled. 'Memnon is in trouble.' We turned back and between us grabbed him and
hauled him away. He came reluctantly. 'I will come back for you,' he shouted to
the girl, looking back over his shoulder as we ran with him between us. 'Be
brave. I will come back for you.' When somebody tells me nowadays that there is no
such thing as love at first sight, I smile quietly to myself and think of the
day that Memnon first saw Masara. We had lost time in the struggle to get Memnon
away, and our pursuers were already pressing us hard as we took to one of the
goat-tracks and ran for the crest of the slope. An arrow flitted past Memnon's shoulder and
clattered against the rocks beside the path. It spurred us to greater speed. We were in single file along the narrow path.
Memnon led us and Tanus followed him. I was last in the file, and, burdened by
the heavy medicine chest on my back, I began to fall further behind. Another
arrow passed over our heads, and then the third struck the pack on my back with
a force that made me stagger. But the chest stopped the arrow that would
otherwise have transfixed my body. 'Come on, Taita,' Tanus shouted back at me. 'Throw
off that cursed box of yours, or they will have you.' He and Memnon were fifty paces ahead of me and
drawing away, but I could not discard my precious chest. At that moment the
next arrow struck, and this time I was not so fortunate. It hit me in the leg,
in the fleshy part of the thigh, and I went tumbling across the path and fell
hard. I rolled into a sitting position and looked with
horror at the reed shaft of the arrow that protruded from my leg. Then I looked
back at our pursuers. The bearded chieftain in the striped robe led them, and
he had outdistanced his own men by a hundred paces. He was coming up the track
in a series of great elastic bounds, covering the ground as swiftly as one of
the ibex rams that he resembled in so many other ways. 'Taita!' Tanus called back at me. 'Are you all
right?' He had paused on the brow of the slope, and was looking back anxiously.
Memnon had crossed over and was out of sight. 'I am arrowed!' I yelled back. 'Go on and leave me.
I cannot follow.' Without a moment's hesitation, Tanus turned back,
and came leaping down towards where I lay. The Ethiopian chieftain saw him
coming and bellowed a challenge. He . drew the glittering blue sword and
brandished it as he came on up the hillside. Tanus reached the spot where I sat, and tried to
lift me to my feet. 'It's no use. I am hard hit. Save yourself,' I told him,
but the Ethiopian was almost upon us. Tanus dropped my arm, and drew his own
sword. The two of them came together, going for each other
in a murderous rush. I was not in any doubt as to the outcome of this duel, for
Tanus was the strongest and most skilled swordsman in all Egypt. When he killed
the Ethiopian, we would all be doomed, for we could expect no mercy from his
henchmen. The Ethiopian swung first with a full-blooded
overhand cut at Tanus' head. It was an imprudent stroke to aim at a swordsman
of his opponent's calibre. I knew that Tanus' response would be a parry in the
line of the head and a natural riposte, with all the momentum of his shoulder
behind it, that would drive the point through the chieftain's beard and into
his throat. It was one of Tanus' favourite strokes. The two blades met, but there was no ringing clash.
The blue blade hacked clean through Tanus' yellow bronze, as though it were a wand
of green willow. Tanus was left with the hilt in his hand and a finger's-length
remaining from that once long and deadly bronze blade. Tanus was stunned by the ease with which the
Ethiopian had disarmed him, and he was slow to defend himself from the next
stroke that followed like a thunderbolt. He leaped backwards just in time, but
the blue point opened a long, shallow cut across the bulging muscles of his
naked chest, and the blood came swiftly. 'Run, Tanus!' I screamed. 'Or he will kill us
both.' The Ethiopian went for him again, but I was lying
in the middle of the narrow path. He was forced to leap over me to get at
Tanus. I seized him around the knees with both arms, and brought him down on
top of me in a snarling, thrashing heap. The Ethiopian was trying to drive the point of the
blue sword into my belly, as I lay under him, and I twisted so violently aside
that both of us rolled off the path and began to slide away down the steep
slope of loose scree. As we rolled more swiftly, gathering momentum, I had one
last glimpse of Tanus peering down over the edge of the path, and I screamed in
a despairing wail, 'Run! Take care of Memnon!' The shale and loose scree were as treacherous as
swamp quicksands, and gave no anchor or purchase. The Ethiopian and I were
flung apart, but both of us were carried to the edge of the torrent. I was
battered and hammered to the edge of consciousness, and lay there groaning
until rough hands dragged me to my feet, and blows and harsh curses rained upon
my head. The chieftain stopped them from killing me and
throwing my body into the river. He was covered with dust, as I was, and his
robe was torn and filthy from the fall, but the blue sword was still gripped in
his right fist and he snarled at his men. They began to drag me away towards
the encampment, but I looked around me desperately and saw my medicine chest
amongst the rocks. The leather harness had snapped, and it had come off my
back. 'Bring that,' I ordered my captors with as much
force and dignity as I could muster, and pointed to the chest. They laughed at
my insolence, but the chieftain sent one of his men to retrieve it. Two men were obliged to support me, for the shaft
in my thigh was beginning to cause me crippling pain. Every pace back to the
camp was agony, and when they reached it, they threw me roughly to the ground
in the open space in the centre of the ring of tents. Then they argued long and fiercely. It was obvious
that they were puzzling over my origins and my motives, and trying to decide
what they should do with me. Every once in a while, one of them would stand
over me and kick me in the ribs, while he shouted questions at me. I lay as
quietly as I could, so as not to provoke further violence. There was a distraction when the party that had
pursued Tanus and Memnon returned empty-handed. There was more shouting and
arm-waving as bitter recriminations and insults were exchanged. I was cheered
by the thought that the two of them had got clean away. After a while my captors remembered me, and they
came back to vent their frustration on me with more kicks and blows. In the end
their chieftain called them off, and ordered them not to torment me further.
After that, most of them lost interest in me and wandered away. I was left
lying on the bare ground, covered with dirt and bruises, with the arrow still
lodged in my flesh. The Ethiopian chieftain resumed his seat in front
of the largest tent, which was clearly his own, and while he stropped the edge
of his sword, he regarded me with a steady but inscrutable expression.
Occasionally he exchanged a few low words with one of his men, but it seemed
that my immediate danger was past. I judged my moment carefully, and then addressed
him directly. I pointed to my medicine chest, which had been thrown against one
of the tents, and I made my voice mild and placatory. 'I need my chest. I must
tend this wound.' Although the chieftain did not understand the
words, he understood my gestures. He ordered one of his men to bring the chest
across to him. He made them set it down in front of him and opened the lid. He
unpacked the chest methodically, examining each separate item. Anything that
particularly caught his attention he held up, and asked a question to which I
tried to give an answer with signs. He seemed satisfied that, apart from my scalpels,
the chest contained no dangerous weapon. I am not sure if he realized at this
stage that these were medical items. However, with signs I showed him what I
needed to do, pointing to my leg and making a pantomime of pulling the arrow.
He stood over me with the sword in his hand, and made it clear that he would
lop off my head at the first sign of treachery, but he allowed me to use my
instruments. The arrow had entered at an angle and position
which made it awkward for me to reach. In addition to this, the pain that I
inflicted upon myself, as I used the Taita spoons to trap and mask the barbs
that were buried deep in my flesh, brought me more than once to the point of
fainting away. I was panting and drenched in sheets of sweat when
at last I was ready to draw the arrow-head. By this time I had an audience of
half the men in camp. They had returned to crowd around me and watch my surgery
with garrulous interest. I took a firm hold on the handles of the spoons,
placed a wooden wedge between my teeth and bit down on it hard, and drew the
clamped arrow-head out of the wound. There were shouts of wonder and amazement
from my audience. Obviously none of them had ever seen a barb drawn with such
ease and with so little damage to the victim. They were impressed even further
when they watched the skill and dexterity with which I laid on the linen
bandages. In any nation and in any culture, even the most
primitive, the healer and the physician have a special place of honour and esteem.
I had demonstrated my credentials in the most convincing manner, and my status
in the Ethiopian camp was drastically altered. At the orders of the chief, I was carried to one of
the tents and laid on a straw mattress. My medicine chest was placed at the
head of my bed, and one of the women brought me a meal of corn-bread and
chicken stew and thick sour milk. In the morning, when the tents were struck, I was
placed in a pole-litter behind one of the horses in the long caravan, and
pulled along the rough and precipitous tracks. To my dismay, I saw from the
angle of the sun that we were headed back into the fastness of the mountains,
and I feared that I was lost to my own people, probably for all time. The fact
that I was a physician had probably saved my life, but it had also placed such
value on me that I would never be turned free. I knew that I was now a slave in
more than name alone. DESPITE THE JOLTING OF THE LITTER, MY leg began to heal
cleanly. This further impressed my captors, and soon they were bringing to me
any member of the band who was sick or injured. I cured a ringworm and lanced a whitlow under a
thumbnail. I sewed together a man who had won too much gambling with his quick-tempered
friends. These Ethiopians had a penchant for settling arguments with the
dagger. When one of the horses threw its rider down a gul-ley, I set his broken
arm. It knitted straight, and my reputation was enhanced. The Ethiopian
chieftain looked at me with a new respect, and I was offered the food-bowl
after he had made his selection of the choice cuts, before any of the other men
were allowed to eat. When* my leg had healed sufficiently for me to walk
again, I was given the run of the camp. However, I was not allowed out of
sight. An armed man followed me and stood over me, even when I was on the most
private and intimate business amongst the rocks. I was kept away from Masara and only saw her from
afar at the start of each day's journey, and again when we camped for the
night. During the long day's ride through the mountains we were separated; I
rode near the head of the caravan, while she was brought along at the rear. She
was always accompanied by her female gaolers, and usually surrounded by armed
guards. Whenever we did catch sight of each other, Masara
cast the most desperate and appealing looks at me, as though I would be able to
help her in some way. It was obvious that she was a prisoner of rank and of
importance. She was such a lovely young woman that I often found myself
thinking of her during the day, and trying to fathom the reason for her
captivity. I decided she was either an unwilling bride, being taken to meet her
future husband, or that she was a pawn in some political intrigue. Without a knowledge of the language I could not
hope to understand what was taking place, or to learn anything about these
Ethiopians. I set out to learn the Geez tongue. I have the ear of a musician, and I played my
tricks upon them. I listened attentively to all the chatter around me, and
picked up the cadence and the rhythm of their speech. Very early on, I was able
to deduce that the chieftain's name was Arkoun. One morning before the caravan
set out, Arkoun was giving orders for the day's march to his assembled band. I
waited until he had delivered a long and heated harangue, and then I repeated
it in precisely the same tone and cadence. They listened to me in stunned silence, and then
burst into uproar. They roared with laughter and beat each other on the back,
tears of mirth streamed down their cheeks, for they had a direct and
uncomplicated sense of humour. I had not the least idea what I had said, but it
was obvious that I had got it exactly right. They shouted excerpts from my speech at each other,
and wagged their heads, mimicking Arkoun's pompous manner. It took a long time
for order to be restored, but at last Arkoun strutted up to me and shouted an
accusatory question at me. I did not understand a word of it, but I shouted the
same question back at him, word for exact word. This time there was pandemonium. The joke of it was
too rich to be borne. Grown men clung to each other for support, they screamed
and wiped their streaming eyes. One of them fell into the fire and singed his
beard. Even though the joke was on him, Arkoun laughed
along with them and patted me on the back. From then onwards, every man and
woman in the camp was my teacher. I had only to point at any object and the
Geez word for it was shouted at me. When I began to string those words into
sentences, they corrected me eagerly, and were inordinately proud of my
progress. It took me some time to fathom the grammar. The
verbs were declined in a manner which had no relationship to Egyptian, and the
gender and plurals of the nouns were strange. However, within ten days I was
speaking intelligible Geez, and had even built up a good selection of choice
curses and invective. While I learned the language and treated their
ailments, I studied their mores and manners. I learned that they were inveterate
gamblers, and that the board-game that they played endlessly was a passion.
They called it dom, but it was a simplified and rudimentary form of bao. The
number of cups in the board and the quantity of stones brought into play varied
from bao. However, all the objects and the principles were similar. Arkoun himself was the dom champion of the band,
but as I studied his play, I saw that he had no inkling of the classic rule of
seven stones. Nor did he understand the protocol of the four bulls. Without a thorough
knowledge of these, no bao player could aspire to even the lowly third grade of
masters. I debated with myself the risk that I would run in humiliating such a
vain and overbearing tyrant as Arkoun, but in the end I decided that it was the
only way to gain ascendancy over him. The next time he sat in front of his tent and set
up the board, smirking and twirling his moustaches as he waited for a
challenger to step forward, I elbowed aside the first aspirant and settled
myself cross-legged opposite Arkoun. 'I have no silver to wager,' I told him in my still
rudimentary Geez. 'I play for love of the stones.' He nodded gravely. As an addict of the board, he
understood that sentiment. The news that I was taking the board against Arkoun
ran through the camp, and they all came laughing and jostling to watch. When I allowed Arkoun to lay three stones in the
east castle they nudged each other and chuckled with disappointment that the
game would be so swiftly lost. One more stone in the east, and the board was his.
They did not understand the significance of the four bulls that I had banked in
the south. When I loosed my bulls, they strode invincibly across the board,
splitting his unsupported stones and isolating the east castle. He was
powerless to prevent it. Four moves and the board was mine. I had not even been
called upon to demonstrate the rule of seven stones. For some moments they all sat in shocked silence. I
do not think that Arkoun realized the extent of his defeat for a while. Then,
when it sank in upon him, he stood up and drew the terrible blue sword. I
thought that I had miscalculated, and that he was about to lop my head, or at
least an arm. He lifted the sword high and then swung it down
with a shout of fury. With a dozen strokes he hacked the board to kindling and
scattered the stones about the camp. Then he strode out into the rocks, tearing
his beard and shouting my death threats to the towering cliffs, that hurled
them onwards down the valleys in a series of diminishing echoes. It was three days before Arkoun set up the board
again, and gestured to me to take my seat opposite him. The poor fellow had no
inkling of what lay in store for him. EACH DAY MY COMMAND OF THE GEEZ language increased,
and I was at last able to glean some understanding of my captor and the reason
for this long journey through the canyons and gorges. I had underrated Arkoun. He was not a chieftain but
a king. His full name was Arkoun Gannouchi Maryam, Negusa Naghast, King of
Kings and ruler of the Ethiopic state of Aksum. It was only later that I
learned that in this land any mountain brigand with a hundred horses and fifty
wives was likely to set himself up as a king, and that at any one time there
might be as many as twenty Kings of Kings on the rampage for land and loot. Arkoun's nearest neighbour was one Prester
Beni-Jon, also claiming to be King of Kings and ruler of the Ethiopic state of
Aksum. There appeared to be a certain amount of ill-feeling and rivalry between
these two monarchs. They had already fought a number of inconclusive battles. Masara was the favourite daughter of Prester
Beni-Jon. She had been kidnapped by one of the other robber chieftains, one of
those who had not yet crowned himself, nor taken the obligatory title of King
of Kings. In a straightforward trading arrangement, Masara had been sold to
Arkoun for a horse-load of silver bars. Arkoun intended using her to gain
political ground from her doting father. It seemed that hostage-taking and
ransom were very much a part of Ethiopian statesmanship. Not trusting any of his own men with such a
valuable commodity, Arkoun had gone himself to take possession of Princess
Masara. Our caravan was carrying her back to Arkoun's stronghold. I gathered
this and other information from the gossipy women slaves who brought me my
meals, or in casual conversation over the dom board. By the time we reached
Amba Kamara, the mountain fortress of King Arkoun Gannouchi Maryam, I was an
expert on the complicated and shifting politics of the various Ethiopic states
of Aksum, and the numerous claimants to the throne of the empire. I was aware of an increasing excitement running
through our caravan as we approached our journey's end, and at last we climbed
the narrow winding pathway, no more than just another goat-track, to the summit
of yet another amba. These ambas were the massifs that made up the mountain
ranges of central Ethiopia. Each of them was a flat-topped mountain with sheer
sides that plunged like a wall into the valley that divided it from the next
mountain. It was easy to see, when I stood at the top of the
precipice, how the land was fragmented into so many tiny kingdoms and
principalities. Each amba was a natural and impregnable fortress. The man on
top of it was invincible, and might call himself a king without fear of being
challenged. Arkoun rode up beside me and pointed to the
mountains on the southern sky-line. 'That is the hiding-place of that
horse-thief and scoundrel, Prester Beni-Jon. He is a man of unsurpassed treachery.'
He hawked in his throat and spat over the edge of the cliff in the direction of
his rival. I had come to know Arkoun as a man of not
inconsiderable cruelty and treachery himself. If he conceded Prester Beni-Jon
as his master in these fields, Masara's father must be a formidable man indeed. We crossed the tableland of the Amba Kamara,
passing through a few villages of stone-walled hovels, and fields of sorghum
and dhurra corn. The peasants in the fields were all tall, bushy-haired
ruffians, armed with swords and round copper shields. They appeared as fierce
and warlike as any of the men in our caravan. At the far end of the amba, the path led us to the
most extraordinary natural stronghold that I had ever seen. From the main table
of the mountain a buttress had eroded until it stood alone, a sheer pinnacle of
rock with precipitous sides, separated from the table by an awe-inspiring
abyss. This gulf was bridged by a narrow causeway, a
natural arch of stone, that joined it to the tableland. It was so narrow that
two horses could not pass each other on the pathway, so narrow that once a
horse started out across the bridge, it could not turn round and return, until
it had reached the other side. The drop under the causeway was a thousand feet,
straight into the river gorge below. It was so unnerving to the horses that the
riders were forced to dismount, blindfold them, and lead them over. When I was
halfway across, I found myself trembling with vertigo, and I dared not peer
over the edge of the pathway into the void. It required all my self-control to
keep walking, and not to throw myself flat and cling to the rocks beneath my
feet. Perched on top of this pinnacle of rock was an
ungainly, lopsided castle of stone blocks and reed thatch. The open windows were
covered with curtains of rawhide, and the raw sewage and odious refuse running
from the fortress stained and littered the cliff beneath it. Festooning the walls and battlements like pennants
and decorations celebrating some macabre festival, were the corpses of men and
women. Some had hung there so long that their bones had been picked white by
the flocks of crows that circled above the abyss or roosted squawking upon the
roofs. Other victims were still alive, and I watched their feeble last
movements with horror as they hung by their heels. However, most of them were
already dead and in various stages of decomposition. The smell of rotting human
carcasses was so thick that even the wind that whined eternally around the
cliffs could not disperse it. King Arkoun called the crows his chickens.
Sometimes he fed them on the walls, and at other times he threw their food from
the causeway into the gorge. The dwindling wail of another unfortunate victim
falling away into the depths was a feature of our life on the pinnacle of Adbar
Seged, the House of the Wind Song. These executions and the daily floggings and
chopping-off of hands or feet, or the pulling-out of tongues with red-hot tongs
were King Arkoun's principal diversions when he was not playing dom, or planning
a raid on one of the other neighbouring king of kings. Very often Arkoun
wielded the axe or the tongs in person, and his roars of laughter were as loud
as the screams of his victims. As soon as our caravan had crossed the causeway and
pulled into the central courtyard of Adbar Seged, Masara was whisked away by
her female gaolers into the labyrinth of stone passageways, and I was led to my
new quarters which abutted those of Arkoun. I was allotted a single stone cell. It was dark and
draughty. The open fireplace blackened the walls with soot and gave out little
heat. Though I wore the woollen robes of the land, I was never warm in Adbar
Seged. How I longed for the sunlight on the Nile and the bright oasis of my
very Egypt! I sat on those wind-swept battlements and pined for my family, for
Memnon and Tanus, for my little princesses, but most of all for my mistress.
Sometimes I woke in the night with the tears chilling my face, and I had to
cover my head with my sheepskin blanket, so that Arkoun would not hear my sobs
through the thick stone wall. Often I pleaded with him to release me. 'But why do you want to leave me, Taita?' 'I want to go back to my family.' 'I am your family now,' he laughed. 'I am your
father.' I made a wager with him. If I won a hundred
successive boards of dom from him, he agreed that he would let me go and give
me an escort back down the Nile to the great plains. When I won the hundredth
game, he chuckled and shook his head at my naivety. 'Did I say a hundred? I think not. Surely it was a
thousand?' He turned to his henchmen. 'Was the bargain a thousand?' 'A thousand!' they chanted. 'It was a thousand!' They all thought it a grand joke. When in a pique I
refused to play another board with Arkoun, he hung me naked from the walls of
the citadel by my heels until I squealed for him to set up the board. When Arkoun saw me naked, he laughed and prodded
me. 'You may have a way with the dom board, but it seems you have lost your own
stones, Egyptian.' This was the first time since my capture that my physical
mutilation had been revealed. Once again, men called me 'eunuch', much to my
shame and mortification. However, in the end the consequences were
beneficial. If I had been a man entire, they would never have let me go to
Masara. THEY CAME FOR ME IN THE NIGHT AND led me shivering
through the passages to Masara's cell. The room was lit by a dim oil lamp and
smelled of vomit. The girl was curled on a straw mattress in the centre of the
floor, with her vomit puddled on the stone floor beside her. She was in
terrible pain, groaning and weeping and holding her stomach. I set to work immediately, and examined her
carefully. I was afraid that I would find her stomach as hard as a stone, the
symptom of the swelling and bursting of the gut that would drench her insides
with the contents of her intestines. There was no remedy for this condition.
Not even I, with all my skills, could save her, if this was her affliction. To my great relief I found her stomach warm and
soft. There was no fever in her blood. I continued my examination, and though
she groaned and screamed with agony when I touched her, I could not find any
cause for her condition. I was puzzled and I sat back to think about it. Then I
realized that although her face was contorted with agony, she was watching me
with a candid gaze. 'This is worse than I feared.' I turned to her two
female attendants and spoke in Geez. 'If I am to save her, I must have my
chest. Fetch it immediately.' They scrambled for the door, and I lowered my head
to hers and whispered, 'You are a clever girl and a good actress. Did you
tickle your throat with a feather?' She smiled up at me and whispered back, 'I could
think of no other way to meet you. When the women told me that you had learned
to speak Geez, I knew that we could help each other.' 'I hope that is possible.' 'I have been so lonely. Even to speak to a friend
will be a joy to me.' Her trust was so spontaneous that I was touched. 'Perhaps
between us we will find a way to escape from this dreadful place.' At that moment we heard the women returning, their
voices echoing along the outside passage. Masara seized my hand. 'You are my friend, aren't you? You will come to me
again?' 'I am and I will.' 'Quickly, tell me before you must go. What was his
name?' 'Who?' "The one who was with you on that first day
beside the river. The one who looks like a young god.' 'His name is Memnon.' 'Memnon!' She repeated it with a peculiar
reverence. 'It is a beautiful name. It suits him.' The women burst into the room, and Masara clutched
her healthy little belly and groaned as though she were at the point of death.
While I clucked and shook my head with worry for the benefit of her women, I
mixed a tonic of herbs that would do her some good, and told them that I would
return in the morning. In the morning Masara's condition had improved, and
I was able to spend a little longer with her. Only one of the women was
present, and she soon became bored and wandered away to the far side of the
room. Masara and I exchanged a few quiet words. 'Memnon said something to me. I could not
understand. What was it he said?' 'He said, "I will come back for you. Be brave.
I will come back for you." ' 'He could not mean that. He does not know me. He
had met me only fleetingly.' She shook her head, and tears filled her eyes. 'Do
you think he meant it, Taita?' There was a haunting plea in her tone that moved
me, and I could not allow her to suffer more than she had already. 'He is crown prince of Egypt, and a man of honour.
Memnon would not have said it unless he meant every word.' That was all we could say then, but I came back the
next day. The very first thing she asked of me was, 'Tell me again what Memnon
said to me,' and I had to repeat his promise. I told Arkoun that Masara was improving in health,
but that she must be allowed out each day to walk on the battlements.
'Otherwise I cannot answer for her health.' He thought about that for a day. However, Masara
was a valuable asset for which he had paid a horse-load of silver bars, and at
last he gave his permission. Our daily exercise periods slowly extended, as the
guards became accustomed to seeing us together. In the end Masara and I were
able to spend most mornings hi each other's company, strolling around the walls
of Adbar Seged and talking endlessly. Masara wanted to know everything that I had to tell
about Memnon, and I racked my memory for anecdotes about him to entertain her.
She had favourite stories which I was obliged to repeat until she knew them by
heart, and she corrected me when I erred in the retelling. She particularly
enjoyed the account of how he had rescued Tanus and me from the wounded bull
elephant, and how he had received the Gold of Valour for his deed. 'Tell me about his mother the queen,' she demanded,
and then, 'Tell me about Egypt. Tell me about your gods. Tell me about when
Memnon was a baby.' Always her questions returned to him, and I was glad to
appease her demands, for I longed for my family. Speaking about them made them
seem closer to me. One morning she came to me distraught. 'Last night
I had a dreadful dream. I dreamed that Memnon came back to me, but I could not
understand what he said to me. You must teach me to speak Egyptian, Taita. We
will start today, this very minute!' She was desperate to learn and she was a clever
little thing. It went very quickly. Soon we were talking only Egyptian between
ourselves, and it was useful to be able to speak privately in front of her
guards. When we were not talking about Memnon, we were
discussing our plans to escape. Of course, I had been thinking of this ever
since our arrival at Adbar Seged, but it helped to have her thoughts on the
same subject to compare with my own. 'Even if you escape from this fortress, you will
never pass through the mountains without help,' she warned me. "The paths
are like a skein of twisted wool. You will never unravel them. Every clan is at
war with the next. They trust no strangers, and they will cut your throat as a
spy.' 'What must we do, then?' I asked. 'If you are able to get away, you must go to my
father. He will protect you and guide you back to your own people. You will
tell Memnon where I am, and he will come to save me.' She said this with such
shining confidence that I could not meet her eyes. I realized then that Masara had built up an image
of Memnon in her mind that was not based on reality. She was in love with a
god, not a stripling as young and untried as she was herself. I was responsible
for this, with my clever stories about the prince. I could not wound her now
and shatter her hope by telling her how forlorn all these imaginings truly
were. 'If I go to Prester Beni-Jon, your father, he will think
I am one of Arkoun's spies. He will have my head.' I tried to extricate myself
from the responsibilities she had laid upon me. 'I will tell you what to say to him. Things that
only he and I know. That will prove to him that you come from me.' She had blocked me there, so I tried a different
escape. 'How would I find my way to your father's fortress? You have told me
that the path is a tangled skein.' 'I will explain the way to you. Because you are so
clever you will remember everything I tell you.' By this time, naturally, I loved her almost as much
as I loved my own little princesses. I would take any risk to shield her from
hurt. She reminded me so strongly of my mistress at the same age that I could
deny her nothing. 'Very well. Tell it to me.' And so we began to plan
our escape. It was a game for me, which I played mostly to keep her hopes alive
and her spirits buoyant. I had no serious expectation of finding a way off this
pinnacle of rock. We discussed ways of making a rope to lower
ourselves down the cliff, although every time I looked over the causeway from
the terrace outside her cell, I shuddered at that gaping void of space. She
began to collect scraps of wool and cloth which she hid under her mattress.
From these she planned to plait a rope. I could not tell her that a rope long
enough and strong enough to support our weight and take us down to the floor of
the valley would fill her cell to the ceiling. For two long years we languished on the height of Adbar
Seged, and we never were able to devise a plan of escape, but Masara never lost
faith. Every day she asked me, 'What did Memnon say to me? Tell me again what
he promised.' 'He said, "I will come back for you. Be
brave." ' 'Yes. I am brave, am I not, Taita?' 'You are the bravest girl I know.' 'Tell me what you will say to my father when you
meet him.' I repeated her instructions, and then she would
reveal to me her latest plan of escape. 'I will catch the little sparrows that I feed on
the terrace. You will write a letter to my father to tell him where I am. We
will tie it to the sparrow's leg, and it will fly to him.' 'It is more likely to fly to Arkoun, who will have
us both thrashed, and we will not be allowed to see each other again.' In the end I escaped from Adbar Seged by riding out
on a fine horse. Arkoun was going out on another raid against King Prester
BeniJon. I was commanded to accompany him, in the capacity of personal
physician and dom player. As I walked my blindfolded horse across the causeway,
I looked back and saw Masara standing on her terrace looking down at me. She
was a lovely, lonely figure. She called to me in Egyptian. I could just make
out her words above the sough of the wind. 'Tell him I am waiting for him. Tell him I have been
brave.' And then softly, so I was not certain that I had heard the words right,
'Tell him I love him.' The wind turned the tears upon my cheeks as cold as
ice, as I rode away across Amba Kamara. THE NIGHT BEFORE THE BATTLE, ARKOUN kept me sitting
late in his tent. While he gave his last orders to his commanders, he stropped
the edge of the blue sword. Once in a while he would shave a few hairs off his
wrist with the steely, glittering blade to test the edge, and nod with
satisfaction. At last he rubbed down the blade with clarified mutton fat. This
strange, silver-blue metal had to be kept well greased, otherwise a red powder
would form upon it, almost as though it was bleeding. The blue sword had come to exert the same
fascination on me as it had on Tanus. Occasionally, when he was in a specially
benevolent mood, Arkoun would allow me to handle it. The weight of the metal
was surprising, and the sharpness of the edge was incredible. I imagined what
havoc it could wreak in the hands of a swordsman like Tanus. I knew that if we
ever met again, Tanus would want every detail of it, and so I questioned
Arkoun, who never tired of boasting about it. He told me that the sword had been forged in the
heart of a volcano by one of the pagan gods of Ethiopia. Arkoun's
great-grandfather had won it from the god in a game of dom that had lasted for
twenty days and twenty nights. I found all this quite plausible, except the
part of the legend about winning the weapon in a dom game. If Arkoun's
greatgrandfather had played dom at the same standard as Arkoun, then it must
have been a very stupid god who lost the sword to him. Arkoun asked my opinion of his battle plan for the
next day. He had learned that I was a student of military tactics. I told him
his plan was brilliant. These Ethiopians had as much grasp of military tactics
as they had of the play of the dom stones. Of course, the terrain would not
allow full use of the horses, and they had no chariots. Nevertheless, their
battles were fought in a haphazard and desultory manner. Arkoun's grand strategy for the morrow would be to
split his forces into four raiding parties. They would hide among the rocks and
rush out, seize a few hostages, slit a few throats, and then run for it. 'You are one of the great generals of history,' I
told Arkoun, 'I would like to write a scroll to extol your genius.' He liked
the idea, and promised to provide me with whatever materials I required for the
project, as soon as we returned to Adbar Seged. It seemed that King Prester Beni-Jon was a commander
of equal panache and vision. We met his forces the following day in a wide
valley with steep sides. The battlefield had been mutually agreed upon some
months in advance, and Prester Beni-Jon had taken up his position at the head
of the valley before we arrived. He came forward to shout insults and
challenges at Arkoun from a safe distance. Prester Beni-Jon was a stick of a man, thin as a
staff, with a long white beard and silver locks down to his waist. I could not
make out his features over that distance, but the women had told me that as a
young man he had been the most handsome swain in Ethiopia and that he had two
hundred wives. Some women had killed themselves for love of him. It seemed
clear to me that his talents might be more gainfully employed in the harem than
on the battlefield. Once Prester Beni-Jon had had his say, Arkoun went
forward and replied at length. His insults were flowery and poetic, they rolled
off the cliffs and echoed down the gorge. I committed some of his pithier
remarks to memory, for they were worth recording. When Arkoun subsided at last, I expected that
battle would be joined, but I was mistaken. There were several other warriors
on both sides who wished to speak. I fell asleep against a rock in the warm sun,
smiling to myself as I imagined what sport Tanus and a company of his Blues
would enjoy against these Ethiopian champions of rhetoric. It was afternoon when I woke and started up at the
clash of arms. Arkoun had loosed his first assault. One of his detachments
raced forward against Prester Beni-Jon's positions, beating their swords
against their copper shields. Within a remarkably short space of time they
returned with great alacrity to their starting-point, without having inflicted
or suffered casualties. Further insults were exchanged, and then it was
Prester Beni-Jon's turn to attack. He charged and retired with equal verve and
similar results. So the day passed, insult for insult, charge for charge. At
nightfall both armies retired. We camped at the foot of the valley and Arkoun
sent for me. 'What a battle!' he greeted me triumphantly, as I
entered his tent. 'It will be many months before Prester Beni-Jon will dare
take the field again.' 'There will be no battle on the morrow?' I asked. 'Tomorrow we will return to Adbar Seged,' he told
me, 'and you will write a full account of my victory in your scrolls. I expect
that after this salutary defeat Prester Beni-Jon will soon sue for peace.' Seven of our men had been wounded in this ferocious
encounter, all by arrows fired at extreme range. I drew the barbs and dressed
and bandaged the wounds. The following day I saw the wounded loaded on to the
litters and walked beside them, as we started back. One of the men had received a stomach wound and was
in much pain. I knew he would be dead from gangrene within the week, but I did
my best to ease his suffering and to cushion the bouncing of the litter over
the rougher sections of the track. Late that afternoon we came to a ford in the river,
one that we had crossed on our way to give battle to Prester Beni-Jon. I had
recognized this ford from the description that Masara had given me of the
countryside and the route to her father's stronghold. The river was one of the
numerous tributaries of the Nile that descended from the mountains. There had
been rain over the preceding days, and the level of the ford was high. I began the crossing, wading beside the litter of
my patient with the stomach wound. He was already delirious. Halfway across the
ford I realized that we had underestimated the height and strength of the
water. The flood caught the side of the litter and swung it sideways. It
twisted the horse around, dragging the poor animal into deeper water where its
hooves lost purchase on the gravel bottom. I was hanging on to the harness, and the next
moment the horse and I were both swimming. We were washed away downstream in
the icy green flood. The wounded man was tumbled out of the litter, and when I
tried to reach him, I lost my hold on the horse's harness. We were swept apart. The wounded man's head disappeared below the
surface, but by this time I was swimming for my own life. I rolled on to my
back and pointed my feet downstream. This way I was able to fend off the rocks
with my feet, as the current hurled me against them. For a short while some of
Ar-koun's men ran along the bank beside me, but soon the river swept me through
a bend and they could not find a way around the base of the cliff. The horse
and I were alone in the river. Below the bend, the speed of the current slackened,
and I was able to swim back to the horse and throw one arm over its neck. For
the moment I was safe. For the first time I thought of escape, and realized
that the gods had made an opportunity for me. I muttered a prayer of thanks, and
used a handful of the horse's mane to steer it on down the middle of the river. We had come downstream several miles and it was
dark before I steered my horse into the bank. We clambered ashore on a
sand-bar. I judged that I was safe from pursuit and recapture until morning.
None of Arkoun's men would venture down the gorge in darkness. However, I was
so chilled that my whole body shivered in uncontrollable spasms. I led the horse to a sheltered place out of the
wind, and then pressed my body to his flank. His wet hide steamed in the
moonlight. Gradually the warmth of the animal permeated me, and my shivering
subsided. Once I was half-warmed, I was able to gather up driftwood from the
sand-bank. Using the Shilluk method, I managed with much difficulty to start a
fire. I spread my robes out to dry, and crouched over the fire for the rest of
that night. As soon as it was light enough to see the path, I
dressed myself and mounted the horse. I headed away from the river, for I knew
that Arkoun's men would concentrate their search along the banks. Two days later, following the directions that
Masara had given me, I reached one of the fortified hilltop villages in the
domain of Prester Beni-Jon. The headman of the village expressed the intention
of cutting my throat immediately and taking my horse. I made full use of all my
persuasive gifts, and eventually he agreed to keep the horse but lead me to the
fortress of Prester Beni-Jon. THE GUIDES WHO WERE ESCORTING ME to King Prester
Beni-Jon spoke of him in warm and affectionate terms. The villages that we
passed along the way were cleaner and more prosperous than those of Arkoun. The
herds of kine were fatter, the crops well cultivated and the people better fed.
The horses I saw were magnificent. Their beauty brought tears to my eyes. When at last we came in sight of the castle high on
another amba, it was in a better state of repair than that of Arkoun, and no
grisly trophies decorated the walls. From close at hand, King Prester Beni-Jon was
indeed an extremely handsome man. His silver hair and beard endowed him with a
singular air of dignity. His complexion was fair and his eyes dark and
intelligent. At first he was highly sceptical of my story, but gradually his
manner changed towards me, as I recited the intimate knowledge with which
Masara had armed me. He was deeply affected by the messages of love and
duty that I brought to him from his daughter, and he questioned me eagerly as
to her health and welfare. Then his servants led me to quarters that, by
Ethiopian standards, were sumptuous, and I was provided with fresh woollen
robes to replace my rags. After I had eaten and rested, the servants led me
back to the dank and smoky cell that was Prester Beni-Jon's audience chamber. 'Your Majesty, Masara has been a prisoner of Arkoun
these past two years,' I pointed out to him immediately. 'She is a young and
tender girl. She pines away in his stinking dungeons.' I embroidered the facts
a trifle, to bring home to him the urgency of her plight. 'I have tried to assemble the ransom that Arkoun
demands for my daughter,' Prester Beni-Jon excused himself. 'But I would have
to melt down every plate and bowl in Aksum to put together such a hoard of
silver as would satisfy his greed. In addition, he demands great tracts of my
land and scores of my principal villages. To relinquish these to him would
weaken my realm and condemn tens of thousands of my subjects to his tyranny.' 'I could lead your army to his stronghold of Adbar
Seged. You could lay siege to the castle and force him to hand over Masara to
you.' Prester Beni-Jon looked startled by this proposal.
I do not think such a course of action had occurred to him. It was not the
Ethiopian way of waging war. 'I know Adbar Seged very well, but it is impregnable,'
he answered me primly. 'Arkoun has a mighty army at his back. We have fought
many fierce battles against him. My men are lions, but we have never been able
to defeat him.' I had seen the lions of Prester Beni-Jon in battle, and I saw
that his estimate of the situation was correct. The army he commanded could
never hope to storm Adbar Seged and free Masara by force of arms. The following day I returned with another proposal.
'Great Emperor of Aksum, King of Kings, as you well know, I am of the Egyptian
nation. Queen Lostris, the regent of Egypt, lies with her armies at the
confluence of the two rivers, where the Nile meets its twin.' He nodded. 'This I know. These Egyptians have entered
my territory without my leave. They are digging mines in my valleys. Soon I
will fall upon them and annihilate them.' It was my turn to be startled. Prester Beni-Jon was
aware of the work on Pharaoh's tomb, and our people there were in danger of attack.
Accordingly, I modified the suggestion that I was about to put to him. 'My people are skilled in the art of siege and
war,' I explained. 'I have influence with Queen Lostris. If you send me safely
back to her side, I will prevail on her to extend you her friendship. Her
troops will storm the fortress of Adbar Seged and free your daughter.' Although Prester Beni-Jon tried to disguise the
fact, I saw that my suggestion appealed to him. 'What would your queen require
in return for her friendship?' he asked carefully. We haggled for five days, but in the end the
bargain was struck. 'You will allow Queen Lostris to continue the mining work
in your valley, and you will declare those valleys a prohibited area. Your own
people will be forbidden to enter there on pain of death,' I told him. This was
for my mistress. It would secure the tomb of Pharaoh from desecration. 'I agree,' said Prester Beni-Jon. 'You will deliver to Queen Lostris two thousand
horses that I will choose from your herds.' This was for me. 'One thousand,' said the king. 'Two thousand.' I was firm. 'I agree,' said Prester Beni-Jon. 'Once she is free, the Princess Masara shall be
allowed to marry any man she chooses. You will not forbid it.' That was for
Memnon and the girl. 'It is against our custom,' he sighed. 'But
lagree.' 'When we capture them, Arkoun and the stronghold of
Adbar Seged will be handed over to you.' He looked more cheerful and nodded
vigorously. 'Finally, we Egyptians shall be allowed to keep all
the spoils of war that we capture from Arkoun, including the legendary blue
sword.' That was for Tanus. 'I agree,' said Prester Beni-Jon, and I could see
that he thought that he had made a bargain. He gave me an escort of fifty men, and I set out
the following day on the return to Qebui, riding a fine stallion that was the
king's parting gift to me. WE WERE STILL FIVE DAYS' RIDE FROM Qebui, when I
saw the swift dust-cloud ahead of us, racing towards us across the plain. Then
I saw the chariots dancing through the heat-mirage. As they approached, the
columns deployed into attack formation at the gallop. It was beautiful to
watch. The dressing was perfect, and the spacing between each vehicle so exact
that they looked like a string of beads. I wondered who commanded them. I shaded my -eyes as they drew closer, and my heart
leaped as I recognized the horses of the leading chariot. They were Rock and
Chain, my own darlings. However, I did not immediately recognize the charioteer
behind them. It was almost three years since last I had laid eyes on Mem-non.
The difference in age between seventeen and twenty is the difference between
the boy and the man. I had taken to riding with saddle-cloth and
stirrups, in the Ethiopian manner, and so now I stood high in the stirrups and
waved. I saw the chariot swerve, as Memnon recognized me and whipped up the
team to full charge. 'Mem!' I howled. 'Mem!' and his answering shout
came back to me on the wind. 'Tata! By the sweet milk of Isis, it's you!' He
pulled up the horses, sprang from the footplate and dragged me from my horse.
First he hugged me, then he held me at arm's-length and we studied each other
avidly. 'You are pale and thin, Tata. The bones are sticking out of you. Are
those grey hairs I see here?' He tugged at my temples. He was taller than I was now, lean in the waist and
broad in the shoulder. His skin was tanned and oiled to the colour of burnished
amber, and cords of muscle stood out in his throat when he laughed. He wore
wrist-guards of gold and the Gold of Valour on his bared chest. Although it
seemed impossible, he was more handsome than when I had last seen him. He
reminded me of a leopard, supple and sleek. He lifted me bodily and set me on the footplate of
the chariot. 'Take up the traces,' he ordered. 'I want to see if you have,lost
any of your old skill.' 'Which way?' I asked. 'West, to Qebui, of course,' he ordered. 'My mother
will be angry if I do not bring you directly to her.' That night we sat at a camp-fire together, away
from the other officers, so that we could talk in private. We sat in silence
for a while, looking up at the silver blaze of stars, and then Memnon said,
'When I thought I had lost you, it was as though I had lost a part of myself.
You are woven into my very first memory of life.' I, who deal in words, could find no words to answer
him. We were silent again, and then at last he laid a hand on my shoulder. 'Did you ever see the girl again?' he asked, and
though his tone was casual, his grip upon my shoulder was not. 'Which girl?' I
asked, to tease him. 'The girl at the river, on the day we were parted.' 'Was
there a girl?' I frowned, as I tried to remember. 'What did she look like?' 'Her face was a dark lily, and her skin was the
colour of wild honey. They called her Masara, and the memory of her still
troubles my sleep.' 'Her name is Masara Beni-Jon,' I told him, 'and I
have spent two years imprisoned with her in the fortress of Adbar Seged. There
I learned to love her, for her nature is even sweeter than her face.' He seized me with both hands now and shook me without
mercy. 'Tell me about her, Tata! Tell me everything. Leave nothing out.' So we sat the rest of that night beside the fire
and we talked about the girl. I told him how she had learned to speak Egyptian
for his sake. I told him how his promise to her had sustained her through the
dark, lonely days, and in the end I told" him the message that she had
sent to him, the message she had called out to me from the battlements of Adbar
Seged as I rode away and left her. 'Tell him I was brave. Tell him I love him.'
He was silent for a long while, staring into the flames, and then he said
softly, 'How can she love me? She does not know me.' 'Do you know her any better than she knows you?' I
asked, and he shook his head. 'Do you love her?' 'Yes,' he answered simply. 'Then she loves you in
the same way.' 'I made her a promise. Will you help me make good my promise to
her, Tata?' I HAVE NEVER IN MY LIFE KNOWN SUCH joy as was mine
on my return to Qebui when I went aboard the Breath of Horus. Memnon had sent a messenger ahead to warn them of
my return, and they were all waiting for me. 'By the stinking crust between
Seth's toes!' Kra-tas shouted. 'I thought we had got rid of you at last, you
old rogue.' And he crushed me to his chest until I thought my ribs were all staved
in. Tanus seized my shoulders and stared into my eyes
for a moment before he grinned, 'But for you, that hairy Ethiop would have had
me. He got the better bargain when he took you instead. Thank you, old friend.'
I saw how Tanus had aged. Like me, there was grey in his hair now, and his face
was weather-beaten, beginning to erode like a granite cliff. My little princesses were no longer little, but
they were still adorable. They were shy towards me, for their memory of me had
faded. They stared at me with big eyes as I made my obeisance. The colour of
Bekatha's hair had darkened to copper. I looked forward to rekindling her
affection. Tehuti recognized me at last. 'Tata!' she said.
'Did you bring me a present?' 'Yes, Your Highness,' I replied, 'I have brought
you my heart.' My mistress smiled at me as I walked towards her
along the deck. She wore the light nemes crown and the golden head of the cobra
on her brow. When she smiled, I saw that she had lost her first tooth, and the
gap marred her smile. She had thickened around the waist, and the heavy affairs
of state had furrowed her brow and etched crow's feet at the corners of her
eyes. To me, however, she was still the most lovely woman in the world. She stood up from the throne as I knelt before her.
This was the highest mark of her favour. She laid her hand on my bowed head,
and it was a caress. 'You have been away from us too long, Taita,' she
said, so softly that only I could hear her. 'Tonight you will sleep at the foot
of my bed once more.' That night, when she had drunk the bowl of herb
broth that I had prepared for her, and I had covered her with a fur blanket,
she murmured softly as she closed her eyes, 'Can I trust you not to kiss me
when I am asleep?' 'No, Your Majesty,' I replied, and stooped over
her. She smiled as my lips touched hers. 'Never leave us again for so long, Taita,' she
said. MEMNON AND I HAD PLANNED OUR TACTICS meticulously,
and we executed them with the same precision as one of our chariot manoeuvres.
Tanus was easy to convince. His defeat by Ar-koun still rankled. In his
presence Memnon and I discussed the ease with which the blue sword had sheered
his bronze blade, and how Arkoun would certainly have killed him, if I had not
intervened. Tanus bristled with humiliation. Then Memnon questioned me on the magical origins
and properties of the legendary weapon. Tanus forgot his pique and joined in
with avid questions of his own. 'This Prester Beni-Jon has declared the blue sword
a prize of war. Whoever can seize it, may hold it,' I told them. 'If we went against Arkoun, we would not be able to
use chariots in those valleys,' Memnon mused. 'It would have to be the
infantry. How do you think your Shilluk would fare against the Ethiops, Lord
Tanus?' Memnon still addressed Tanus formally. "Obviously he had not
learned in my absence that Tanus was his real father. By the time we had finished with him, Tanus was as
hot for the venture as either of us. He was totally in league with us as we
started our campaign on Queen Lostris. From the very beginning my mistress had understood,
as Tanus never had, just how vital the horses and chariots would be, if ever we
were to fulfil the dream of the return to our very Egypt. I displayed the
stallion that Prester Beni-Jon had given me, and pointed out to my mistress his
finer points of breed. 'Look at his nostrils, Majesty. See the depth of
his chest, and the balance of muscle to bone. The Hyksos have nothing to match
these Ethiopian horses.' Then I reminded her of her promise to the dead
pharaoh, and told her, 'Prester Beni-Jon will cede the valley of the tomb to
you. His warriors will guard it against the grave-robbers. He will place a
taboo upon the valley, and these Ethiops are superstitious people. They will
respect the prohibition even long after we have returned to Thebes.' I warned Memnon not to mention to Queen Lostris his
amorous interest in an expedition against Arkoun. It would do our cause no
good. Every mother is also a lover; she seldom takes any pleasure in seeing her
son led away by another younger woman. No woman, not even a queen, could resist the
combined charm and cunning of the three of us, Tanus and Memnon and myself.
Queen Lostris gave her consent to our expeditionary force marching on Adbar
Seged. WE LEFT THE WAGONS AND THE CHARIOTS at the valley
of Pharaoh's tomb, and struck out into the mountains. Prester Beni-Jon had sent
a company of guides to meet us. They were a hundred of his best and most
reliable men. Tanus had selected a full division of his wild and
bloodthirsty Shilluk, and promised them all the cattle they could capture. Each
of these black pagans carried a cloak of thick jackal fur rolled upon his back,
for we remembered the cold wind of the mountain passes. For support we had three companies of Egyptian
archers, led by Lord Kratas. That old ruffian had joined the company of nobles
during my sojourn in Adbar Seged. He was spoiling for a real fight. He and
every one of his men were armed with the new compound recurved bows that could
outdrive the Ethiopian long-bows by two hundred paces. Memnon had selected a small band of the finest
swordsmen and rough fighters that we had. Remrem was one of these, of course,
as were Lord Aqer and Astes. I was part of this special detachment, not for my
warlike skills, but simply because I was the only one who had ever entered the
fortress of Adbar Seged. Hui wanted to come with us and offered me every
bribe at his disposal. In the end I gave in to him, mainly because I needed an
expert to help me select the horses that Prester Beni-Jon had promised me. I impressed on both Tanus and the prince how vital
it was to move swiftly, not only for reasons of surprise, but also because the
rains must soon break upon the mountains. During my days in Adbar Seged I had
studied the patterns of the weather and the seasons. If the rains caught us in
the valleys, they would prove a more dangerous enemy than any Ethiop army. We made the approach march to Amba Kamara in less
than a month. Our column wound through the passes like a long, deadly cobra.
The bronze spear-heads of the Shilluk glittered in the high sunlight like the
scales of the serpent. We met no person to oppose us. The villages we passed
through were deserted. The inhabitants had fled and taken their herds and their
women with them. Although each day the clouds gathered black and sullen on the
mountain peaks, and at night the thunder muttered at us, the rains held off and
the fords of the rivers were low. Twenty-five days after setting out, we stood in the
valley below the massif of Amba Kamara, and looked up the winding track to the
heights looming over us. On my previous journeys up and down the mountain I
had studied the defences that Arkoun had erected along the pathway. These
comprised rockfalls and stone-walled redoubts. I pointed these out to Tanus,
and we could make out the bushy, unhelmeted heads of the defenders showing
above the walls of the strongpoints. 'The weakness of a roekfall is that you can only
let it come down once, and my Shilluk are quick enough on their feet to dodge a
charging buffalo,' Tanus said thoughtfully. He sent them up the path in small parties, and when
the defenders knocked out the wedges from under the roekfall and sent it
rolling down on the track, those long-legged black spearmen ran out to the side
with the agility of mountain goats. Once the slide of boulders had rumbled past
them, they turned straight up the almost sheer mountainside. Bounding from rock
to rock, and howling in such a horrible fashion that they started the hair on
the nape of my neck, they drove the defenders up the mountain and over the
crest. They were held up only by Arkoun's archers hidden
behind the walls of the stone redoubts. When this happened, Kratas led his
archers up the mountain. With their superior bow-range, the Egyptians were able
to stand back and shoot massed volleys, almost straight into the sky. It was fascinating to watch a swarm of arrows climb
into the air like a flock of black birds and then drop down on to the redoubt
so steeply that the stone wall afforded the men behind it no protection. We
heard their screams and then saw them break and scurry away up the slope.
Immediately the Shilluk were after them, baying like a pack of hunting dogs.
Even from the bottom of the valley I could hear their battle cry, 'Kajan!
Kajan! Kill! Kill!' Though my legs were hard and my wind strong with so
much marching, I had difficulty keeping up with Memnon and the rest of our
small group. The years were beginning to take their toll. We were all wearing long woollen Ethiopic robes,
and we carried the traditional round shields of our enemies. However, we had
not yet placed the horse-hair wigs on our heads. It would have been extremely
unwise to resemble the Ethiopian too closely while the Shilluk were in their present
mood. When at last I came out on the flat tableland of
the amba, I saw at a glance that Tanus was rallying and regrouping his
infantry. The one fault of the Shilluk as fighting men is that once they have
wet their spears with blood, they go berserk, and it is almost impossible to
control them. Tanus was roaring like a bull elephant and laying about him with
his golden whip of rank. Once more in hand, the Shilluk formed ranks and moved
forward against the first village where the Ethiopians were waiting behind the
stone walls. As the wave of tall black figures, topped by a foam of white
ostrich-feather head-dresses, washed towards them, they loosed a shower of
arrows from their long bows. But the Shilluk had their tall shields up. As the Shilluk charge burst upon them, some of the
Ethiopians rushed forward, brandishing their swords. They were not lacking in
courage, but this type of warfare was new to them. They had never been forced
to meet a charge that was carried through to the death. I stayed long enough to see them heavily engaged,
and then I called to Memnon and his band, 'The wigs!' Each of them pulled one
of the wigs of black horse-hair over his scalp. I had made these with my own
hands, and styled them on the Ethiopian model of beauty, full and floccose.
Clad in the long striped robes and with the wigs on our heads, we could pass as
a mob of Arkoun's clansmen. "This way! Follow me!' I cried, and let out an
ululating Ethiopic war cry. They yodelled and howled behind me, as we skirted
the village where the fight was still raging, and ran in a disorderly bunch
through the cornfields. We had to reach the fortress and be at Masara's
side to protect her when Arkoun finally realized that he had lost the day. I
knew that he would not hesitate to kill her as soon as she was no longer of
value to him. I thought that he would probably take the blue sword to her or
throw her from the causeway into the gorge. Those were his favourite means of
despatching his victims. As we made our way across the amba, we found the
entire tableland in turmoil. Bands of bushy-headed warriors milled about in
confusion. Women dragged their children by the arm, their possessions piled on
their heads, wailing with terror as they ran about like frightened chickens who
smell the fox. Herds of goats bleated, and cattle lowed and churned the dust.
The herd-boys had fled. Nobody paid us the least attention as we trotted
through the fields and kept clear of the villages. We followed the general movement towards Adbar
Seged at the far end of the table, and as we neared the causeway the crowds
thickened and congealed until we were obliged to force our way through them.
There were guards at the head of the causeway. They were turning the fugitives
back with drawn swords and clubs. Women were screaming and pleading for shelter
in the fortress, holding up their babies for mercy's sake. Some of them were
knocked down in the press and were trampled under the feet of those coming on
from behind. 'Form the tortoise.' Memnon gave the order quietly,
and our small band closed up and locked the edges of our Ethiopian shields. We
cut through the crowd like a shark through a shoal of sardines. Some of the
weaker ones at the front were pushed forward and forced over the edge of the
precipice. Their screams added to the panic. When we reached the head of the
causeway, the guards there tried to stop us, but they were themselves so
crowded by the mob that they could not swing their weapons, and were in danger
of being overwhelmed and thrown over the cliff. 'We are under King Arkoun's direct orders. Stand
aside!' I shouted at them in Geez. "The password?' the captain of the guard
yelled at me, as he struggled to stay on his feet. The crowd surged back and
forward in panic. 'You must give the password.' He poked his sword at me, but
Memnon struck the blade aside. During my imprisonment I had heard the password
repeated a thousand times, for my cell had been above the main gate. It might
have been changed since then, and I was ready to have the captain killed, as I
yelled the old password at him: "The mountain is high!' 'Go across!' He stood aside, and we struggled out
of the throng, kicking and shoving back those who tried to follow us. We ran
out on to the bridge. So urgent was the need to reach Masara that I barely noticed
the drop on either hand, and without a qualm I led them across the gaping void. 'Where is King Arkoun?' I shouted at the guards who
blocked the gateway. When they hesitated, I told them, "The mountain is
high! I have urgent despatches for the king. Stand aside! Let us pass!' We
barged through the open gate before they could decide to oppose us, and, with
twelve good men at my back, I raced for the outer staircase that led to the
upper terrace. There were two armed men at the door to Masara's
chamber, and I rejoiced to see them. I had worried that the girl might have
been moved to another part of the fort, but the presence of the guards assured
me that she had not. 'Who are you?' one of them shouted, and drew his sword.
'By wh'at authority—' He did not finish the challenge. I stepped aside and
allowed Memnon and Remrem to brush past me. They flew at the guards and cut
them down before they could defend themselves. The door to Masara's chamber was barred from within,
and when we hurled our combined weight against it, there came a chorus of
feminine screams and wails from the other side. At the third attempt the door
gave way and I was propelled through the opening into the room beyond. It was.
in deep gloom, and I could barely make out the huddle of women in the far
corner. 'Masara!' I called her name, as I plucked the wig
from my head, and let my own hair fall around my shoulders. She recognized me
by it. 'Taita!' She bit the wrist of the woman who tried
to hold her, and ran to me. She flung both arms around my neck, and then she
looked over my shoulder and her grip slackened, her dark eyes opened wide and
the colour flooded her cheeks. Memnon had pulled off his wig. Without it, he was
strikingly and unmistakably a prince. I stepped aside and left Masara standing
alone. The two of them stared at each other. Neither of them moved or spoke for
what seemed like an eternity, but was a moment only. Then Masara said softly
and shyly in Egyptian, 'You came. You kept your promise. I knew that you
would.' I think that this was the only time that I ever saw
Memnon at a loss. He could only nod his head, and then I witnessed an amazing
phenomenon. Blood flooded up his neck and suffused his face, so that even in the
gloom of the chamber it glowed. The Crown Prince of Egypt, son of Pharaoh,
commander of the first division of chariots, Best of Ten Thousand, holder of
the Gold of Valour, stood there blushing and as tongue-tied as a peasant clod. Behind me one of the women squawked like a startled
hen, and before I could put out a hand to hold her, she had ducked under my arm
and darted down the inner staircase. Her screams reverberated up the stairwell.
'Guards! The enemy has broken into the east wing. Come quickly!' and almost
immediately there was a rush of booted feet on the staircase. On the instant, Memnon was transformed from the
blushing young lover to a hard-faced guardsman. 'Take care of her, Tata, Let no
harm come to her,' he told me grimly, and stepped past me to the head of the
stairs. He killed the first man coming up with that classic
thrust to the throat that Tanus had taught him. Then he placed his foot in the
centre of his chest. As he jerked his blade free, he kicked the dead man
backwards down the stair-well. The falling corpse tumbled into the other men
coming up from below, and swept the stairs clean. Memnon looked at me. 'Do you think we can reach the
gate before they close it?' 'We must,' I answered. 'Our best route is back down
the outer staircase.' 'Remrem, lead us. Tata and the princess in the
centre. I will bring up the rear-guard,' he said crisply, and stabbed the next
man coming up the stairs in the eye. The Ethiopian dropped his weapon and clutched his
face with both hands. Memnon stabbed him again through the chest and pushed him
backwards down the stairs, clearing them a second time. 'Follow Remrem,' he
shouted at me. 'Don't stand there. After him as fast as you can.' I grabbed Masara's arm, but there was no need to
pull her along. She came with me readily, so quick and agile that she was
leading me. The sunlight struck us as we ran out on to the
terrace. After the dark room it dazzled me. I blinked to clear my vision, and
then I looked across the causeway to the edge of the tableland on the far side
of the gulf. Tanus' Shilluks were there. I saw their feathers dancing and their
shields held high. 'Kajan! Kill! Kill!' they sang, and their
spear-heads were dulled with fresh blood. The panic-stricken peasants scattered
before them, and they reached the head of the causeway. There were two or three hundred of Arkoun's
soldiers there. They had the abyss at their backs, and necessity made heroes of
every one of them. Now they had truly become lions. Although a score of them
were driven back over the edge, and plunged to their death in the valley far
below, the survivors hurled back the first charge of the Shilluk. I saw Tanus then, exactly where I expected him to
be, holding the centre. His helmet shone like a beacon in the dark sea of
Shilluk warriors. I saw him throw back his head and begin to sing. The savage Shilluk words carried over the gulf to
where I stood on the terrace of the fortress. The men around him took up the
chorus, and they surged forward, still singing. This time nothing could stand
before them. They stabbed and hacked their way through the defenders, and Tanus
was the first man on to the causeway. He ran lightly for such a big man, and he
was still singing. His Shilluk followed him on to the stone arch, but it was so
narrow that they were forced into single file. Tanus was halfway across, when the song died on his
lips, and he stopped. From the gateway of Adbar Seged, below where I
stood, another man stepped out on to the causeway to confront Tanus. I was
looking down and so could not see his face, but there was no mistaking the
weapon in his right hand. The blue sword caught the sunlight and flashed like a
sheet of summer lightning. 'Arkoun!' Tanus bellowed. 'I have been looking for
you.' Arkoun could not understand the words, but the
sense of them was unmistakable. He laughed into the wind, and his beard blew
out like smoke around his goaty face. 'I know you!' He swung the silver-blue blade around
his head, and it hissed and whined in the air. 'This time I will kill you.' He
started forward, out along the narrow arch of stone, running with long, lithe
strides straight at Tanus. Tanus altered his grip on the handle of his bronze
shield, and tucked his head in behind it. He now knew the power in that
glittering blade, and I saw that he did not intend meeting it with his own
softer bronze. Arkoun had also learned discretion from their last brief
encounter. From the way he carried the blue sword, I guessed that he would not
attempt another rash overhand stroke. As they came together, Arkoun gathered himself. I
saw his shoulders brace and his weight swing forward. He used the impetus of
his charge to send the straight thrust at Tanus' head. Tanus lifted the shield
and caught the blue blade in the centre of the heavy bronze target. It would have
snapped a sword of inferior metal, but the blue sword sheared through it as if
it were goat-skin. Half its silver length was buried in the yellow bronze. Then I realized Tanus' intention. He twisted the
shield at an angle so that the blade was trapped. Arkoun struggled to withdraw
his weapon, he wrestled and heaved, throwing his full weight backwards, but
Tanus had the blue sword in a vice of bronze. Arkoun gathered all his strength and pulled back
again. This time Tanus did not resist him. He leaped forward in the direction
that Arkoun was heaving, and this unexpected move threw Arkoun off-balance. Arkoun staggered away, tripped and teetered on the
brink of the chasm. In order to keep his balance, he was forced to relinquish
his grip on the hilt of the blue sword, and to leave it still embedded in the
shield. He windmilled his arms as he swayed out over the
drop. Then Tanus shifted his ground, put his shoulder behind the shield and barged
forward. The shield crashed into Arkoun's chest, and the pommel of the blue
sword caught him in the pit of his belly with all Tanus' weight and strength
behind it. Arkoun was thrown backwards, out into empty space.
He turned a slow somersault in the air and then went straight down, with his
robe ballooning around him, and his beard streaming like a chariot pennant in
the wind of his fall. From where I stood, I watched him make the same
last journey on which he had sent so many other unfortunate souls. From the
causeway until he struck the rocks a thousand feet below, he screamed all the
way down, on a high, receding note that was cut off abruptly at the end. Tanus stood alone in the middle of the causeway. He
still held the shield on high with the sword buried in the metal. Slowly the tumult and the fighting died away. The
Ethiopians had seen their king vanquished and cast down. The heart went out of
them. They threw down their weapons and grovelled for mercy. The Egyptian
officers were able to save some of them from the blood-crazed Shilluk, and
these were dragged away to where the slave-masters waited to bind them. I had no eyes for any of this, for I was watching
Tanus out there on the bridge. He began to walk towards the gateway, of the
fortress, and the men cheered him and raised their weapons in salute. 'There is plenty of fight in the old bull yet,'
Memnon laughed in admiration, but I did not laugh with him. I felt the chill
premonition of some awful tragedy, like the air stirred by the beat of vultures'
wings as they settle to their gruesome feast. 'Tanus,' I whispered. He walked with a slow and
hampered gait. He lowered the shield as he came down the bridge of stone, and
only then did I see the stain spreading on his breastplate. I thrust Masara into Memnon's arms and ran down the
outer staircase. The Ethiopian guards at the gate tried to surrender their
weapons to me, but I pushed my way past them and ran out on to the causeway. Tanus saw me running towards him and he smiled at
me, but the smile was lop-sided. He stopped walking and slowly his legs buckled
beneath him, and he sat down heavily in the middle of the bridge. I dropped on
my knees beside him, and saw the rent in the crocodile-skin of his breastplate.
Blood oozed from it, and I knew that the blue sword had bitten deeper than I
had believed possible. Arkoun had driven the point through the bronze shield,
on through the tough leather breastplate, and into Tanus' chest. Carefully I untied the straps that held his armour,
and lifted away the breastplate. Tanus and I both looked down at the wound. It
was a penetrating slit the exact width of the blade, like a tiny mouth with wet
red lips. Every breath that Tanus drew frothed through that horrid opening in a
rash of pink bubbles. It was a lung wound, but I could not bring myself to say
it. No man can survive a sword-cut through one of his lungs. 'You are wounded.' It was an asinine remark, and I
could not look at his face as I said it. 'No, old friend, I am not wounded,' he replied
softly. 'I am killed.' TANUS' SHILLUK MADE A LITTER WITH their spears, and
covered it with a rug of sheepskin. They lifted him and carried him, gently and
slowly, into the fortress of Adbar Seged. We laid him on the bed of King Arkoun, and then I
sent them all away. When they were gone, I placed the blue sword upon the bed
beside him. He smiled and laid his hand on the gold and jewelled hilt. 'I have
paid a high price for this treasure,' he murmured. 'I would have liked to wield
it just once upon the battlefield.' I could offer him no hope or comfort. He was an old
soldier, and he had seen too many lung wounds. I could not hope to deceive him
as to the final outcome. I bound up the wound with a pad of wool and a linen
bandage. While I worked, I recited the incantation to quell the bleeding,
'Retreat from me, creature of Seth—' But he was sinking away from me. Each breath he
drew was an effort, and I could hear the blood stirring in his lungs like a
hidden creature in the deep swamps. I mixed a draught of the sleeping-flower, but he
would not drink it. 'I will live every minute of my life,' he told me. 'Even
the very last one.' 'What else is there that I can do for you?' 'You have done so much already,' he said. 'But
there is no end to the demands that we all make upon you.' ' I shook my head,
'There is no end to what I would give.' 'These last things then I ask of you. Firstly, you
will never tell Mernnon that I am his sire. He must always believe that the
blood of the pharaohs runs in his veins. He will need every strength to meet
the destiny that awaits him.' 'He would be as proud to share your blood as that
of any king.' 'Swear to me you will not tell him.' 'I swear it,' I replied, and he lay a while
gathering his strength. 'There is one other boon.' 'I grant it before you name it,' I said. 'Take care of my woman who was never my wife.
Shield and succour her as you have done all these years past.' 'You know I will.' 'Yes, I know you will, for you have always loved her
as much as I have. Take care of Lostris and of our children. I give them all
into your hands.' He closed his eyes, and I thought that the end was
close, but his strength surpassed that of other men. After a while he opened
them again. 'I wish to see the prince,' he said. 'He waits for you on the terrace,' I answered, and
went to the curtained doorway. Memnon stood at the far end of the terrace. Masara
was with him, and the two of them stood close together but not touching. Their
expressions were grave and their voices muted. They both looked up as I called. Memnon came immediately, leaving the girl standing
alone. He went directly to Tanus' bed and stood looking down at him. Tanus
smiled up at him, but the smile was unsteady. I knew what effort it had cost
him. 'Your Highness, I have taught you all I know of
war, but I cannot teach you about life. Each man must learn that for himself.
There is nothing else I have to tell you before I start out on this new
journey, except to thank you for the gift of knowing and serving you.' 'You were ever more than a tutor to me,' Memnon
answered softly. 'You were the father I never knew.' Tanus closed his eyes, and his expression twisted. Memnon stooped and took his arm in a firm grip.
'Pain is just another enemy to be met and overcome. You taught me that, Lord
Tanus.' The prince thought it was the wound that had affected him, but I knew
that it was the pain of the word 'father'. Tanus opened his eyes. 'Thank you, Your Highness.
It is good to have you to help me through this last agony.' 'Call me friend, rather than highness.' Memnon sank
on one knee beside the bed, and he did not release the grip on Tanus' arm. 'I have a gift for you, friend.' The congealing
blood in Tanus' lungs blurred his voice. He groped for the handle of the blue
sword that still lay on the mattress beside him, but he did not have the
strength to lift it. He took Memnon's hand from his arm and placed it
upon the jewelled hilt. "This is yours now,' he whispered. 'I will think of you whenever I draw it from its
scabbard. I will call your name whenever I wield it on the battlefield.' Memnon
took up the weapon. 'You do me great honour.' Memnon stood up, and with the sword in his right
hand took the classic opening stance in the centre of the room. He touched the
blade to his lips, saluting the man lying on the bed. 'This is the way you taught me to do it.' Then he began the exercise of arms, in which Tanus
had drilled him when he was still a child. He performed the twelve parries, and
then the cuts and the lunges with an unhurried perfection. The silver blade
circled and swooped like a glittering eagle. It fluted and whined through the
air, and lit the gloom of the chamber with darting beams of light. Memnon ended it with the straight thrust, aimed at
the throat of an imaginary enemy. Then he placed the point between his feet and
rested both hands upon the pommel. 'You have learned well,' Tanus nodded. 'There is
nothing more that I can teach you. It is not too soon for me to go.' 'I will wait with you,' Memnon said. 'No.' Tanus made a weary gesture. 'Your destiny
waits for you beyond the walls of this dreary room. You must go forward to meet
it without looking back. Taita will stay with me. Take the girl with you. Go to
Queen Lostris and prepare her for the news of my death.' 'Go in peace, Lord Tanus.' Memnon would not degrade
that solemn moment with futile argument. He crossed to the bed and kissed his
father on the lips. Then he turned and, without a backward glance, he strode
from the room with the blue sword in his hand. 'Go on to glory, my son,' Tanus whispered, and
turned to face the stone wall. I sat at the foot of his bed and looked at the
dirty stone floor. I did not want to watch a man like Tanus weep. I WOKE IN THE NIGHT TO THE SOUND OF drums, those
crude wooden drums of the Shilluk, beating out there in the darkness. The
doleful sound of the Shilluk's voices chanting their savage dirge made me
shudder with dread. The lamp had burned low, and was guttering beside
the bed. It threw grotesque shadows on the ceiling, like the beating and
fluttering of the wings of vultures. I crossed slowly and reluctantly to where
Tanus lay. I knew that the Shilluk were not mistaken—they have a way of sensing
these things. Tanus lay as I had lastvseen him, with his face to
the wall, but when I touched his shoulder I felt the chill in his flesh. That
indomitable spirit had gone on. I sat beside him for the remainder of that night
and I lamented and mourned for him, as his Shilluk were doing. In the dawn I sent for the embalmers. I would not let those crude butchers eviscerate my
friend. I made the incision in His left flank. It was not a long, ugly slash,
such as the undertakers are wont to perform, but the work of a surgeon. Through it I drew his viscera. When I held Tanus'
great heart in my hands, I trembled. It was as though I could still feel all
his strength and power beat in this casket of flesh. I replaced it with
reverence and love in the cage of his ribs, and I closed the gash in his side
and the wound in his chest, that the blue sword had made, with all the skill at
my command. I took up the bronze spoon, and pressed it up his
nostril until I felt it touch the thin wall of bone at the end of the passage.
This flimsy partition I pierced with one hard thrust, and scooped out the soft
matter from the cavity of his skull. Only then was I content to deliver him
over to the embalmers. Even though there was no more for me to do, I
waited with Tanus through the forty long days of the mummification in the cold
and gloomy castle of Adbar Seged. Looking back upon it now, I realize that this
was weakness. I could not bear the burden of my mistress's grief when first she
heard the news of Tanus' death. I had allowed Memnon to assume the duty that was
rightfully mine. I hid with the dead, when I should have been with the living
who needed me more. I have ever been a coward. There was no coffin to hold Tanus' mummified body.
I would make him one when at last we reached the fleet at Qebui. I had the Ethiopian
women weave a long basket for him. The mesh of the weave was so fine that it
resembled linen. It would hold water like a pot of fired clay. WE CARRIED HIM DOWN FROM THE mountains. His Shilluk
easily bore the weight of his desiccated body. They fought each other for the
honour. Sometimes they sang their wild songs of mourning as we wound our way
through the gorges and over the windswept passes. At other times they sang the
fighting songs that Tanus had taught them. I walked beside his bier all that weary way. The
rains broke on the peaks and drenched us. They flooded the fords so that we had
to swim ropes across. In my tent at night, Tanus' reed coffin stood beside my
own cot. I spoke aloud to him in the darkness, as if he could hear and answer
me, just as we had done in the old days. At last we descended through the last pass, and the
great plains lay before us. As we approached Qebui, my mistress came to meet
our sad caravan. She rode on the footplate of the chariot behind Prince Memnon. As they came towards us through the grassland, I
ordered the Shilluk bearers to lay Tanus' reed coffin under the spreading
branches of a giant giraffe acacia. My mistress dismounted from the chariot and
went to the coffin. She placed one hand upon it, and bowed her head in silence. I was shocked to see what ravages sorrow had
wrought upon her. There were streaks of grey in her hair, and her eyes were
dulled. The sparkle and the zest had gone out of them. I realized that the days
of her youth and her great beauty were gone for ever. She was a lonely and
tragic figure. Her bereavement was so evident, that no person who looked upon
her now could doubt that she was a widow. I went to her side to warn her. 'Mistress, you must
not make your grief clear for all to see. They must never know that he was more
than just your friend and the general of your armies. For the sake of his
memory and the honour that he held so dear, hold back your tears.' 'I have no tears left,' she answered me quietly.
'My grief is all cried out. Only you and I will ever know the truth.' We placed Tanus' humble reed coffin in the hold of
the Breath ofHorus, beside the magnificent gold coffin of Phar-oah. I stayed at
the side of my mistress, as I had promised Tanus I would, until the worst
agonies of her mourning had subsided into' the dull eternal pain that would
never leave her again. Then, at her orders, I returned to the valley of the
tomb to supervise the completion of Pharaoh's sepulchre. Obedient to my mistress, I also selected a site further
down the valley for the tomb of Tanus. Though I did my very best with the
material and craftsmen available to me, Tanus' resting-place would be the hut
of a peasant compared to the funerary palace of Pharaoh Mamose. An army of craftsmen had laboured all these years
to complete the magnificent murals that decorated the passages and the
subterranean chambers of the king's tomb. The store-rooms of the tomb were
crammed with all the treasure that we had carried with us from Thebes. Tanus' tomb had been built in haste. He had
accumulated no treasure in his lifetime of service to the state and the crown.
I painted scenes upon the walls that depicted the events of his earthly
existence, his hunting of mighty beasts and his battles with the red pretender
and the Hyk-sos, and the last assault on the fortress of Adbar Seged. However,
I dared not show his nobler accomplishments, his love for my mistress and his
steadfast friendship to me. The love of a queen is treason, the friendship of a
slave is degrading. When at last it was completed, I stood alone in
Tanus' modest tomb, where he would spend all eternity, and I was suddenly
consumed by anger that this was all I could do for him. In my eyes he was more
a man than any pharaoh who had ever worn the double crown. That crown could
have been his, it should have been his, but he had spurned it. To me he was
more a king than ever Pharaoh had been. It was then that the thought first dawned upon me.
It was so outrageous that I thrust it from me. Even to contemplate it seriously
was a terrible treason, and offence in the eyes of men and the gods. However, over the weeks that followed, the thought
kept creeping back into my mind. I owed Tanus so much, and Pharaoh so little.
Even if I was damned to perdition, it would be a fair price to pay. Tanus had
given me more than that over my lifetime. I could not accomplish it alone. I needed help, but
who was there to turn to? I could not enlist either Queen Lostris or the
prince. My mistress was bound by the oath she had sworn to Pharaoh, and Memnon
did not know which of the two men was his natural father. I could not tell him
without breaking my oath to Tanus. In the end there was one person only who had loved
Tanus almost as much as I had, who feared neither god nor man, and who had the
brute physical strength I lacked. 'By Seth's unwiped backside!' Lord Kratas roared
with laughter when I revealed my plan to him. 'No one else but you could have
dreamed up such a scheme. You are the biggest rogue alive, Taita, but I love
you for giving me this last chance to honour Tanus.' The two of us planned it carefully. I even went to
the lengths of sending the guards at the entrance to the hold of the Breath
of Horus a jug of wine heavily laced with the powder of the
sleeping-flower. When Kratas and I at last entered the hold of the
ship where the two coffins lay, my resolve wavered. I sensed that the Ka of
Pharaoh Mamose watched me from the shadows and that his baleful spirit would
follow me all the days of my life, seeking vengeance for this sacrilege. Big, bluff Kratas had no such qualms, and he set to
work with such a will that several times during the course of the night, I had
to caution him against the noise he was making as we opened the golden lids to
the royal coffin and lifted out the mummy of the king. Tanus was a bigger man than Pharaoh, but
fortunately the coffin-makers had left us some space, and Tanus' body had
shrunk during the embalming. Even so, we were obliged to unwind several layers
of his wrappings before he fitted snugly into the great golden cask. I mumbled an apology to Pharaoh Mamose as we lifted
him into the humble wooden coffin, painted on the outside with a likeness of
the Great Lion of Egypt. There was room to spare, and before we sealed the lid we
packed this with the linen bandages that we had unwrapped from Tanus. AFTER THE RAINS HAD PASSED AND THE cool season of
the year returned, my mistress ordered the funeral procession to leave Qebui
and set out for the valley of the tomb. The first division of chariots, headed by Prince
Memnon, led us. Behind followed fifty carts loaded with the funerary treasure
of Pharaoh Mamose. The royal widow, Queen Lostris, rode on the wagon that
carried the golden coffin. I rejoiced to see her take this last journey in the
company of the one man she had loved, even though she thought it was another. I
saw her glance back more than once towards the end of the long caravan that
crept dolefully across the plains, five miles from its head to its tail. The wagon at the rear of the column that carried
the lighter wooden coffin was followed by a regiment of Shil-luk. Their
magnificent voices carried clearly to us at the head of the column as they sang
the last farewell. I knew that Tanus would hear them and know for whom the song
was sung. WHEN WE AT LAST REACHED THE VALLEY of the tomb, the
golden coffin was placed beneath a tabernacle outside the entrance to the royal
mausoleum. The linen roof of the tent was illuminated with texts and
illustrations from the Book of the Dead. There were to be two separate funerals. The first
was the lesser, that of the Great Lion of Egypt. The second would be the
grander and more elaborate royal funeral. So it was that three days after our arrival at the
valley, the wooden coffin was placed in the tomb that I had prepared for Tanus,
and the tomb was consecrated by the priests of Horus, who was Tanus' patron,
and then sealed. During this ritual, my mistress was able to
restrain her grief and to show nothing more than the decent sorrow of a queen
towards a faithful servant, although I knew that inside her something was dying
that would never be reborn. All that night the valley resounded to the chant of
the Shilluk regiment as they mourned for the man who had now become one of
their gods. To this day they still shout his name in battle. Ten days after the first funeral, the golden coffin
was placed on its wooden sledge and dragged into the vast royal tomb. It
required the efforts of three hundred slaves to manoeuvre the coffin through
the passageways. I had designed the tomb so precisely that there was only the
breadth of a hand between the sides and the lid of the coffin and the stone
walls and roof. To thwart all future grave-robbers and any others
who would desecrate the royal tomb, I had built a labyrinth of tunnels beneath
the mountain. From the entrance in the cliff-face, a wide passage led directly
to an impressive burial vault that was decorated with marvellous murals. In the
centre of this room stood an empty granite sarcophagus, with the lid removed
and cast dramatically aside. The first grave-robber to enter here would believe
that he was too late and that some other had plundered the tomb before him. In fact, there was another tunnel leading off at
right-angles from the entrance passage. The mouth of this was disguised as a
store-room for the funerary treasure. The coffin had to be turned and eased
into this secondary passage. From there it entered a maze of false passages and
dummy burial vaults, each'more serpentine and devious than the last. In all there were four burial chambers, but three
of these would remain forever empty. There were three hidden doors and two
vertical shafts. The coffin had to be lifted up one of these, and lowered down
the other. It took fifteen days for the coffin to be inched
through this maze, and installed at last in its final resting-place. The roof
and walls of this tomb were painted with all the skill and genius with which
the gods have gifted me. There was not a space the size of my thumbnail that
was not blazing with colour and movement. Five store-rooms led off from the chamber. Into
these were packed that treasure which Pharaoh Mamose had accumulated over his
lifetime, and which had come close to beggaring bur very Egypt. I had argued
with my mistress that, instead of being buried in the earth, this treasure
should be used to pay for the army and the struggle that lay ahead of us in our
efforts to expel the Hyksos tyrant and to liberate our people and our land. "The treasure belongs to Pharaoh,' she had
replied. 'We have built up another treasure of gold and slaves and ivory here
in Cush. That will suffice. Let the divine Mamose have what is his—I have given
him my oath on it.' Thus on the fifteenth day, the golden coffin was
placed within the stone sarcophagus that had been hewn out of the native rock.
With a system of ropes and levers, the heavy lid was lifted over it and lowered
into place. The royal family and the priests and the nobles
entered the tomb to perform the last rites. My mistress and the prince stood at the head of the
sarcophagus, and the priests droned on with their incantations and their
readings from the Book of the Dead. The sooty smoke from the lamps and the
breathing of the throng of people in the confined space soured the air, so it
was soon difficult to breathe. In the dim yellow light I saw my mistress turn pale
and the perspiration bead on her forehead. I worked my way through the tightly
packed ranks, and I reached her side just as she swayed and collapsed. I was
able to catch her before she struck her head on the granite edge of the
sarcophagus. We carried her out of the tomb on a litter. In the
fresh mountain air she recovered swiftly, but still I confined her to her bed
in her tent for the rest of that day. That night as I prepared her tonic of herbs, she
lay quietly and thoughtfully, and after she had drunk the infusion she
whispered to me, 'I had the most extraordinary sensation. As I stood in
Pharaoh's tomb, I felt suddenly that Tanus was very close to me. I felt his
hand touch my face and his voice murmur in my ear. That was when I fainted
away.' 'He will always be close to you,' I told her. 'I believe that,' she said simply. I can see now, though I could not see it then, that
her decline began on the day that we laid Tanus in his grave. She had lost the
joy of living and the will to go on. I WENT BACK INTO THE ROYAL TOMB THE next day with
the masons and the corps of slave labourers to seal the doorways and the
shafts, and to arm the devices that would guard the burial chamber. As we retreated through the maze of passageways, we
blocked the secret doorways with cunningly laid stone and plaster, and painted
murals over them. We sealed the mouths of the vertical shafts so that they
appeared to be smooth floor and roof. I set rockfalls that would be triggered by a
footstep on a loose paving slab, and I packed the vertical shafts with balks of
timber. As these decayed over the centuries and the fungus devoured them, they
would emit noxious vapours that would suffocate any intruder who succeeded in
finding his way through the secret doorways. But before we did all this, I went to the actual
burial chamber to take leave of Tanus. I carried with me a long bundle wrapped
in a linen sheet. When I stood for the last time beside the royal sarcophagus,
I sent all the workmen away. I would be the very last to leave the tomb, and
after me the entrance would be sealed. When I was alone I opened the bundle I carried.
From it I took the long bow, Lanata. Tanus had named it after my mistress and I
had made it for him. It was a last gift from the two of us. I placed it upon
the sealed stone lid of his coffin. There was one other item in my bundle. It was the
wooden ushabti figure that I had carved. I placed it at the foot of the sarcophagus.
While I carved it, I had set up three copper mirrors so that I could study my
own features from every angle and reproduce them faithfully. The doll was a
miniature Taita. Upon the base I had inscribed the words: 'My name
is Taita. I am a physician and a poet. I am an architect and a philosopher. I
am your friend. I will answer for you.' As I left the tomb, I paused at the entrance and
looked back for the last time. 'Farewell, old friend,' I said. 'I am richer for
having known you. Wait for us on the other side.' IT TOOK ME MANY MONTHS TO COMPLETE the work on the
royal tomb. As we retreated through the labyrinth, I personally inspected every
sealed doorway and every secret device that we left behind us. I was alone, for my mistress and the prince had
gone up into the mountains to the fortress of Prester Beni-Jon. They had gone
with all the court to prepare for the wedding of Memnon and Masara. Hui had
accompanied them to select the horses from the Ethiopian herds that were part
of our payment for the storming of Adbar Seged, and the recovery of Masara. When at last my work in the tomb was completed and
my workmen had sealed the outer entrance in the cliff-face, I also set off into
the mountains, over those cold and windy passes. I was anxious not to miss the
wedding feast, but I had left it late. The completion of the tomb had taken
longer than I had planned. I travelled as hard as the horses could stand. I reached Prester Beni-Jon's palace five days
before the wedding, and I went directly to that part of the fortress where my
mistress and her suite were lodged. 'I have not smiled since last I saw you, Taita,'
she greeted me. 'Sing for me. Tell me your stories. Make me laugh.' It was not an easy task she set me, for the
melancholy had entered deeply into her soul, and the truth was that I was not
myself cheerful or light-hearted. I sensed that more than sorrow alone was
affecting her. Soon we abandoned our attempts at merriment, and fell to
discussing affairs of state. It might have been a love match, and a meeting of
twin souls blessed by the gods as far as the two lovers were concerned, but for
the rest of us, the joining of Memnon and Masara was a royal wedding and a
contract between nations. There were agreements and treaties to negotiate, dowries
to be decided, trade agreements to draw up between the King of Kings and ruler
of Aksum, and the regent of Egypt and the wearer of the double crown of the two
kingdoms. As I had predicted, my mistress had been at first
less than enchanted by the prospect of her only son marrying a woman of a
different race. 'In all things they are different, Taita. The gods
they worship, the language they speak, the colour of their skins— oh! I wish he
had chosen a girl of our own people.' 'He will,' I reassured her. 'He will marry fifty,
perhaps a hundred Egyptians. He will also marry Libyans and Hurri-ans and
Hyksos. All the races and nations he conquers in the years to come will provide
him with wives, Cushites and Hittites and Assyrians—' 'Stop your teasing, Taita.' She stamped her foot
with something of her old fire. 'You know full well what I mean. Those others
will all be marriages of state. This, his first, is a marriage of two hearts.' What she said was true. The promise of love that
Mem-non and Masara had exchanged in those fleeting moments beside the river was
now blossoming. I was especially privileged to be close to them in
these heady days. They both acknowledged and were grateful for my part in
bringing them together. I was for both of them a friend of long standing,
somebody that they trusted without question. I did not share my mistress's misgivings. Though
they were different in every way that she had listed, their hearts were turned
from the same mould. They both possessed a sense of dedication, a fierceness of
the spirit, a touch of the ruthlessness and the cruelty that a ruler must have.
They were a matched pair, he the tiercel and she the falcon. I knew that she
would not distract him from his destiny, but rather that she would encourage
and incite him to greater endeavour. I was content with my efforts as a
matchmaker. One bright mountain day, watched by twenty thousand
men and women of Ethiopia and of Egypt who crowded the slopes of the hills
around them, Memnon and Masara stood together on the river-bank and broke the
jar of water that the high priest of Osiris had scooped from the infant Nile. The bride and the groom led our caravan down from
the mountains, -laden with the dowry of a princess and the treaties and the
protocols of kinship sealed between our two nations. Hui and his grooms drove a herd of five thousand
horses behind us. Some of these were in payment for our mercenary services, and
the rest made up Masara's dowry. However, before we reached the junction of the
two rivers at Qebui, we saw the dark stain on the plains ahead as though a
cloud had cast its shadow over the savannah—but the sun shone out of a
cloudless sky. The gnu herds had returned on their annual
migration. Within weeks of this contact with the gnu, the
Yellow Strangler disease fell upon our herd of Ethiopian horses, and it swept
through them like a flash-flood in one of the valleys of the high mountains. Naturally, Hui and I had been expecting the plague
to strike when the gnu returned, and we had made our preparations. We had trained
every groom and charioteer to perform the tracheotomy, and to treat the wound
with hot pitch to prevent mortification until the animal had a chance to
recover from the Strangler. For many weeks none of us enjoyed much sleep, but in
the end, fewer than two thousand of our new horses died of the disease, and
before the next flooding of the Nile, those that survived were strong enough to
begin training in the chariot traces. WHEN THE FLOODS CAME, THE PRIESTS sacrificed on the
banks of the river, each to his own god, and they consulted the auguries for
the year ahead. Some consulted the entrails of the sacrificial sheep, others
watched the flight of the wild birds, still others stared into vessels filled
with water from the Nile. They divined in their separate ways. Queen Lostris sacrificed to Hapi. Although I
attended the service with her and joined in the liturgy and the responses of
the congregation, my heart was elsewhere. I am a Horus man, and so are Lord
Kratas and Prince Memnon. We made a sacrifice of gold and ivory to our god and
prayed for guidance. It is not usual for the gods to agree with each
other, any more than it is for men to do so. However, this year was different
from any other that I had known. With the exception of the gods Anubis and
Thoth and the goddess Nut, the heavenly host spoke with one voice. Those three,
Anubis and Thoth and Nut, are all lesser deities. Their counsel could be safely
discounted. All the great gods, Ammon-Ra and Osiris and Horus and Hapi and Isis
and two hundred others, both great and small, gave the same counsel: 'The time
has come for the return to the holy black earth of Kemit.' Lord Kratas, who is a pagan at heart and a cynic by
nature, suggested that the entire priesthood had conspired to place these words
in the mouths of their patron gods. Although I expressed shocked indignation at
this blasphemy, I was secretly inclined to agree with Kratas' opinion. The priests are soft and luxurious men, and for
almost two decades we had lived the hard lives of wanderers and warriors in the
wild land of Cush. I think they hungered for fair Thebes even more than did my
mistress. Perhaps it was not gods, but men who had given this advice to return
northwards. Queen Lostris summoned the high council of state,
and when she made the proclamation that endorsed the dictates of the gods, the
nobles and the priests stood and cheered her to a man. I cheered as loud and as
long as any of them, and that night my dreams were filled with visions of
Thebes, and images of those far-off days when Tanus and Lostris and I had been
young and happy. SINCE THE DEATH OF TANUS, THERE HAD been no supreme
commander of our armies, and the war council met in secret conclave. Of course,
I was excluded from this assembly, but my mistress repeated to me every word
that was spoken. After long argument and debate, the command was
offered to Kratas. He stood before them, grizzled and scarred like an old
liori, and he laughed that great laugh of his and he said, 'I am a soldier. I
follow. I do not lead. Give me the command of the Shilluk, and I will follow
one man to the borders of death and beyond.' He drew his sword then and pointed
with it at the prince. 'That is the man I will follow. Hail, Memnon! May he
live for ever.' 'May he live for ever!' they shouted, and my
mistress smiled. She and I had arranged exactly this outcome. At the age of twenty-two years Prince Memnon was
elevated to the rank of Great Lion of Egypt and commander of all her armies.
Immediately he began to plan the Return. Though my rank was only that of Master of the Royal
Horse, I was on Prince Memnon's staff. Often he appealed to me to solve the
logistical problems that we encountered. During the day I drove his chariot
with the blue pennant fluttering over our heads as he reviewed the regiments,
and led them in exercises of war. Many nights the three of us, the prince and Kratas
and I, sat up late over a jar of wine as we discussed the Return. On those
nights Princess Masara waited upon us, filling the cups with her own graceful
brown hand. Then she sat on a sheep-skin cushion at Memnon's feet and listened
to every word. When our eyes met, she smiled at me. Our main concern was to avoid the hazardous and
onerous transit of all the cataracts on the way down-river. These could only be
navigated in flood season, and would thus limit the periods in which we could
travel. I proposed that we build another fleet of barges
below the fifth cataract; with these we could transport our army down to the
departure-point for the desert crossing of the great bight. When we regained
the river above the first cataract, we would rebuild another squadron of fast
fighting galleys and barges to carry us down to Elephantine. I was sure that if we timed it correctly, and if we
could shoot the rapids and surprise the Hyksos fleet anchored in the roads of
Elephantine, we would be able to deal the enemy a painful blow and capture the
galleys we needed to augment our force of fighting ships. Once we had secured a
foothold, we would then be able to bring down our infantry and our chariots
through the gorge of the first cataract, and engage the Hyksos on the
flood-plains of Egypt, We began the first stage of the Return the
following flood season. At Qebui, which had been our capital seat for so many years,
we left only a garrison force. Qebui would become merely a trading outpost of
the empire. The riches of Cush and Ethiopia would flow northwards to Thebes
through this entrepot. When the main fleet sailed back into the north, Hui
and I, with five hundred grooms and a squadron of chariots, remained behind to
await the return of the gnu migration. They came as suddenly as they always
did, a vast black stain spreading over the golden savannah grasslands. We went
out to meet them in the chariots. It was a simple matter to capture these ungainly
brutes. We ran them down with the chariots, and dropped a noose of rope over
their ugly heads as we ran alongside them. The gnu lacked the speed and the
spirit of our horses. They fought the ropes only briefly and then resigned
themselves to capture. Within ten days, we had penned over six thousand of them
in the stockades on the bank of the Nile which we had built for this purpose. It was here in the stockades that their lack of
stamina and strength was most apparent. Without cause or reason, they died in
their hundreds. We treated them kindly and gently. We fed them and watered them
as we would our horses. It was as though their wild wandering spirits would not
be fettered, and they pined away. In the end we lost over half of those that we had
captured, and many more died on the long voyage to the north. TWO FULL YEARS AFTER QUEEN LOSTRIS had commanded
the Return, our people assembled on the east bank of the Nile above the fourth cataract.
Before us lay the desert road across the great bight of the river. For the whole of the previous year the caravans of
wagons had set out from here. Each of them had been laden with clay jars filled
to the brim with Nile water, and sealed with wooden plugs and hot pitch. Every
ten miles along the dusty road we had set up watering stations. At each of
these, thirty thousand water jars had been buried to prevent them cracking and
bursting in the rays of that furious sun. We were nearly fifty thousand souls and as many
animals, including my dwindling herd of captured gnu. The water-carts set out
from the river each evening. Their task was unending. We waited on the river-bank for the rise of the new
moon to light our way across the wilderness. Although we had planned our
departure for this the coolest season of the year, still the heat and the sun
would be deadly to both man and beast. We would travel only at night. Two days before we were due to begin the crossing,
my mistress said, 'Taita, when did you and I last spend a day together fishing
on the river? Make ready your fish-spears and a skiff.' I knew that she had something of deep import that
she wished to discuss with me. We drifted down on those green waters until I could
moor the skiff to a willow tree on the far bank, where we were out of earshot
of the inquisitive. First we spoke of the imminent departure along the
desert road, and the prospects of the return to Thebes. 'When will I see her shining walls again, Taita?'
my mistress sighed, and I could only tell her that I did not know. 'If the gods are kind, we might be in Elephantine
by this time next season when the Nile flood carries our ships down the first
cataract. After that, our fortunes will ebb and flow like the river, with the
hazards and fortunes of war.' However, this was not what she had brought me out
on to the river to discuss, and now her eyes swam with tears as she asked, 'How
long has Tanus been gone from us, Taita?' My voice choked as I answered, 'He set out on his
journey to the fields of paradise over three years ago, mistress.' 'So it is longer than that by many months that I
last lay in his arms,' she mused, and I nodded. I was uncertain in which
direction her questions were leading us. 'I have dreamed of him almost every night since
then, Taita. Is it possible that he might have returned to leave his seed in my
womb while I still slept?' 'All things in heaven are possible,' I replied
carefully. 'We told the people that was how Tehuti and Bekatha were conceived.
However, in all truth and seriousness, I have never heard of it happening
before.' We were both silent for a while, and she trailed
her hand in the water and then lifted it to watch the drops fall from her
fingertips. Then she spoke again without looking at me. 'I think I am to have
another child,' she whispered. 'My red moon has waned and withered away.' 'Mistress,' I answered her quietly, and with tact,
'you are approaching that time of your life when the rivers of your womb will
begin to dry up.' Our Egyptian women are like desert flowers that bloom early
but fade as swiftly. She shook her head. 'No, Taita. It is not that. I
feel the infant growing within me.' I stared at her silently. Once again I felt the
wings of tragedy brush lightly past me, stirring the air and raising the hair
upon my forearms. 'You do not have to ask me if I have known another
man.' This time she looked directly into my eyes as she spoke. 'You know that I
have not.' 'This I know full well. Yet I cannot believe that
you have been impregnated by a ghost, no matter how beloved and welcome that
ghost might be. Perhaps your desire for another child has fathered your
imagination.' 'Feel my womb, Taita,' she commanded. 'This is a
living thing within me. Each day it grows.' 'I will do so tonight, in the privacy of your
cabin. Not here upon the river where prying eyes might discover us.' MY MISTRESS LAY NAKED UPON THE linen sheets, and I
studied first her face and then her body. When I looked upon her with the eyes
of a man, she was still lovely to me, but as a physician I could see clearly
how the years and the hardships of this life in the wilderness had wrought
their cruel change. Her hair was more silver than sable now, and bereavement
and the cares of the regency had chiselled their grim message on her brow. She
was growing old. Her body was the vessel which had given life to
three other lives.'But her breasts were empty now, there was none of the milk
of a new pregnancy swelling them. She was thin. I should have noticed that
before. It was an unnatural thinness, almost an emaciation. Yet her belly
protruded like a pale ivory ball out of proportion to those slim arms and legs. I laid my hands lightly upon her belly, upon the
silvery streaks where the skin had once stretched to accommodate a joyful
burden. I felt the thing within her and I knew at once that this was not life
beneath my fingers. This was death. I could not find words. I turned away from her and
went out on to the deck and I looked up at the night stars. They were cold and
very far away. Like the gods, they did not care. There was no profit in
appealing to them, gods or stars. I knew this thing that was growing within my
mistress. I had felt it in the bodies of other women. When they died, I had
opened the dead womb and seen the thing that had killed them. It was horrible
and deformed, bearing no resemblance to anything human or even animal. It was a
shapeless ball of red and angry flesh. It was a thing of Seth. It was a long time before I could gather the courage
to return to the cabin. My mistress had covered herself with a robe. She
sat in the centre of the bed and looked at me with those huge, dark green eyes
that had never aged. She looked like the little girl I once had known. 'Mistress, why did you not tell me about the pain?'
I asked gently. 'How do you know about the pain?' she whispered
back. 'I tried to hide it from you.' OUR CARAVAN SET OUT INTO THE DESERT, traveling by
moonlight across the silver sands. Sometimes my mistress walked at my side, and
the two princesses frolicked along with us, laughing and excited by the
adventure. At other times, when the pain was bad, my mistress rode in the wagon
that I had equipped for her comfort. Then I sat beside her and held her hand
until the powder of the sleeping-flower worked its magic and gave her surcease. Every night we travelled just as far as the next
watering-station along the road that was now well beaten by the thousands of
vehicles that had preceded us. During the long days we lay beneath the awning
of the wagon and drowsed in the sweltering heat. We had been thirty days and nights upon the road
when in the dawn we saw a remarkable sight. A disembodied sail upon the desert,
moving gently southwards over the sands. It was not until we had journeyed on
for many more miles that we saw how we had been deceived. The hull of the
galley had been hidden from us by the bank of the Nile, and below the dunes the
river ran on eternally. We had crossed the loop. Prince Memnon and all his staff were there to greet
us. Already the squadron of new galleys had almost completed fitting out. It
was the sail of one of these that we had first descried as we approached the
river again. Every plank and mast had been cut and sawn on the great plains of
Cush, and transported across the loop of the river. All the chariots were
assembled. Hui had herded all the horses across the desert, and the wagons had
carried their fodder with them. Even my gnu were waiting in their stockades
upon the river-bank. Although the wagon caravans carrying the women and
the children still followed, the main body of our nation had been brought
across. It had been an undertaking that almost defied belief, a labour of
godlike proportions. Only men like Kratas and Remrem and Memnon could have
accomplished it in so short a time. Now only the first cataract still stood between us
and the sacred earth of our very Egypt. We went on northwards again. My mistress sailed in
the new barge that had been built for her and the princesses. There was a large
and airy cabin for her, and I had equipped it with every luxury that was
available to us. The hangings were of embroidered Ethiopian wool, and the
furniture was of dark acacia wood inlaid with ivory and the gold of Cush. I
decorated the bulkheads with paintings of flowers and birds and other pretty
things. As always, I slept at the foot of my mistress's
bed. Three nights after we sailed, I woke in the night. She was weeping
silently. Although she had stifled her sobs with a pillow, the shaking of her
shoulders had awakened me. I went to her immediately. 'The pain has come again?' I asked. 'I did not mean to wake you, but it is like a sword
in my belly.' I mixed her a draught of the sleeping-flower,
stronger than I had ever given to her before. The pain was beginning to triumph
over the flower. She drank it and lay quietly for a while. Then she
said, 'Can you not cut this thing out of my body, Taita?' 'No, mistress. I cannot.' 'Then hold me, Taita. Hold me the way you used to
do when I was a little girl.' I went into her bed, and I took her in my arms. I
cradled her, and she was as thin and light as a child. I rocked her tenderly,
and after a while she slept. THE FLEET REACHED THE HEAD OF THE first cataract
above Elephantine, and we moored against the bank in the quiet flow of the
river before the Nile felt the urging of the cascades and plunged into the
gorge. We waited for the rest of the army to be ferried
down to us, all the horses and the chariots and Lord Kratas' pagan Shilluk
regiments. We waited also for the Nile to rise and open the cataract for us to
pass down into Egypt. While we waited, we sent spies down through the
gorge. They were dressed as peasants and priests and merchants with goods to
trade. I went down with Kratas into the gorge to map and mark the passage. Now,
at low water, every hazard was exposed. We painted channel-markers on the rocks
above the high-water line, so that even when the flood covered them, we would
still know where those obstacles lurked. We were many weeks at this labour, and when we
returned to where the fleet was moored, the army was assembled there. We sent
out scouting parties to find a route for the chariots and the horses through
the rock desert down into Egypt. We could not risk such a precious cargo to the
wild waters of the cataract. Our spies began to return from Elephantine. They
came in secretly and singly, usually in the night. They brought us the very
first news of our mother-land that we had heard in all the years of exile. King Salitis still reigned, but he was old now, and
his beard had turned silver-white. His two sons were the mighty men of the
Hyksos legions. Prince Beon commanded the infantry and Prince Apachan commanded
the chariots. The might of the Hyksos exceeded all our estimates.
Our spies reported that Apachan disposed of twelve thousand chariots. We had
brought down only four thousand from Cush. Beon had forty thousand archers and
infantry. Even with Kratas' Shilluk, we could muster only fifteen thousand. We
were heavily outnumbered. There was cheering news also. The great bulk of the
Hyksos force was held in the Delta, and Salitis had made his capital at the
city of Memphis. It would take months for him to move his forces south to
Elephantine and Thebes. He would not be able to bring his chariots up-river
until the floods abated and the land dried. There was only a single squadron of
chariots guarding the city of Elephantine, one hundred chariots to oppose our
entry. They were of the old solid-wheel type. It seemed that the Hyksos had not
yet perfected the spoked wheel. Prince Memnon laid out his battle plan for us. We
would pass through the cataract on the flood, and seize Elephantine. Then,
while Salitis moved southwards to oppose us, we would march on Thebes, raising
the populace in insurrection as we went. We could expect Salitis to give battle with his
full army on the flood-plains before Thebes, once the Nile waters had subsided.
By then we could hope that the disparity in the numbers of the two armies would
be redressed in part by the Egyptian troops that would rally to our standard. We learned from our spies that the Hyksos did not
suspect the presence of our army of liberation so close to their border, and
tha.t we could expect to gain the element of surprise with our first assault.
We learned also that Salitis had adopted our Egyptian way of life. These days
he lived in our palaces and worshipped our gods. Even his old Sutekh had
changed his name to Seth, and was, very appropriately, still his principal god. Although all his senior officers were Hyksos, many
of Salitis' captains and sergeants had been recruited from amongst the
Egyptians, and half the common soldiers were of our own nation. Most of these
would have been infants or not yet born at the time of our exodus. We wondered
where their loyalties would lie, when Prince Memnon led our army down into
Egypt. All was in readiness now. The scouts had marked a
road through the desert of the west bank, and the water wagons had laid down
stores of fodder and water jars along the length of it, enough to see our
chariots through to the fertile plains of our very Egypt. Our galleys were
rigged and manned for battle. When the Nile flooded, we would sail, but in the
meantime there was one last ritual to complete. We climbed the bluff above the river to where the
obelisk that my mistress had raised over two decades before, still stood, a
tall and elegant finger of stone pointing into the cloudless blue of the
African sky. My mistress was too weak to climb the rugged
pathway to the summit. Ten slaves carried her up in a sedan-chair, and set her
down below the tall monument. She walked painfully slowly to the foot of the
pillar on the arm of Prince Memnon, and gazed up at the inscription carved in
the granite. Our whole nation watched her, all those souls who had found their
way back to this point from which we had set out so long ago. My mistress read the inscription aloud. Her voice
was soft, but still so musical that it carried clearly to where I stood behind
the great lords and the generals. 'I, Queen Lostris, Regent of Egypt and widow of
Pharaoh Mamose, the eighth of that name, mother of the Crown Prince Memnon, who
shall rule the two kingdoms after me, have ordained the raising of this
monument. When she had finished the reading, she turned to
face her people and spread her arms. 'I have done that which was required of me,' she
said, and her voice regained some of its old power. 'I have led you back to the
border of your land. My task is completed and I relinquish the regency.' She
paused, and for a moment her eyes met mine over the heads of the nobles. I
nodded slightly to encourage her, and she went on. 'Citizens of Egypt, it is fitting that you have a
true Pharaoh to lead you the last steps of the way home. I give to you the
divine Pharaoh Tamose, who once was the Crown Prince Memnon. May he live for
ever!' 'May he live for ever!' the nation roared in one
voice. 'May he live for ever!' Pharaoh Tamose stepped forward to face his people.
'May he live for ever!' they shouted the third time, and our new pharaoh drew
the blue sword from its jewelled scabbard and saluted them with it. In the silence that followed, his voice rang and
echoed from the gaunt red crags of the hills. 'I take up this sacred trust. I swear on my hope of
eternal life to serve my people and my land all my days. I shall not flinch
from this duty, and I call upon all the gods to witness my oath.' THE FLOOD CAME. THE WATERS ROSE UP the rocks that
guarded the entrance to the gorge, and the colour changed from green to grey.
The cataract began to growl like a beast in its lair and the spray-cloud rose
into the sky and' stood as high as the hills that flanked the Nile. I went
aboard the leading galley with Lord Kratas and Pharaoh. We dropped our mooring
and shoved off into the stream. The rowers on the benches were stripped to
their breech-clouts, their faces turned up to watch Kratas as he stood high in
the stern, gripping the steering-oar in his bear-like fists. In the bows two teams of sailors under the king
stood ready with heavy oars to fend off. I stood beside Kratas, with the map of
the rapids spread on the deck in front of me, ready to call the twists and
turns of the channel to him as we came to them. I did not really need the map,
for I had memorized every line drawn upon it. In addition to which, I had
stationed reliable men on the sides of the gorge and on the islands in the main
stream ahead of us. They would use signal flags to show us the way through. As the current quickened beneath our keel, I cast
one last glance backwards and saw the rest of the squadron fall into line
astern behind us, ready to follow us down the cataract. Then I looked forward
again, and felt the fist of fear tighten on my bowels so that I was forced to
squeeze my buttocks together. Ahead of us the gorge smoked like the mouth of a
furnace. Our speed built up with deceptive stealth. The
rowers touched the surface lightly with the blades of the oars, just enough to
keep our bows pointed downstream. We floated so lightly and so smoothly that we
seemed to be drifting. It was only when I looked at the banks, and saw them
streaming past us, that I realized how fast we were running. The rock portals
of the gorge flew to meet us. None the less, it was only when I noticed the
grin on Kratas' craggy face that I realized the true danger of what we were
attempting. Kratas only grinned like that when he saw death crook a bony finger
at him. 'Come on, you rogues!' he shouted at his crew.
"This day I'll make your mothers proud of you, or I'll find work for the
embalmers.' The river was split by three islands, and the
channel narrowed. 'Bear to port, and steer for the blue cross.' I
tried to sound casual, but at that moment I felt the deck tip beneath my feet,
and I clutched at the rail. We flew down a chute of grey water, and our bows
swung giddily. I thought that we were already out of control, and waited for
the crunch of rock and for the deck to burst open beneath my feet. Then I saw
the bows steady, and the blue cross painted on the wall of rock was dead ahead. 'Hard to starboard as we come up to the flag!' my
voice squeaked, but I picked out the man on the centre island flagging us into
the turn, and Kratas put the steering-oar over and yelled at the benches, 'All
back right, pull together left!' The deck canted sharply as we spun into the
turn. The wall of rock flashed past us, and we were going
at the speed of a galloping horse. One more turn and the first rapids lay
ahead. Black rock stood across our path, and the waters piled upon it. The
water took on the shape of the rocks beneath it. It bulged and stood in tall
static waves. It opened into smooth green gulleys. It curled upon itself and
exploded into veils of white through which the rock snarled at us with black
fangs. My stomach clenched as we leaped over the edge and dropped down the
slope. At the bottom we -wallowed and spun, like a stalk of dry grass in a
whirlwind. 'Pull left!' Kratas bellowed. 'Pull till your balls
bounce!' We steadied and aimed for the next gap in the rock, and the white
water dashed over the deck and into my eyes. It hissed alongside, running in
tandem with us, and the waves stood taller than our poop-deck. 'By Seth's tattered and festering foreskin, I've
not had so much sport since I tupped my first ewe!' Kratas laughed, and the
rock sprang at us like a charging bull elephant. We touched once, and the rock rasped along our
belly. The deck shuddered beneath our feet, and I was too afraid to scream.
Then Memnon's team poled us free and we raced on down. Behind us I heard the shattering crash as one of
the other galleys struck hard. I dared not look round as I judged our next
turn, but soon there were wreckage and the heads of drowning men bobbing and
swirling in the torrent on both sides of us. They screamed to us as they were
borne away and dashed upon the spurs of rock, but we could offer them no
succour. Death pressed hard upon our heels and we ran on with the stench of it
in our nostrils. In that hour I lived a hundred lives, and died in
every one of them. But at last we were hurled from the bottom of the cataract
into the main body of the river. Of the twenty-three galleys that had entered
the gorge, eighteen followed us out. The others had been smashed to flotsam, and
the corpses of their drowned crew washed down beside us in the grey Nile flood. There was not time for us to celebrate our
deliverance. Dead ahead lay the Island of Elephantine, and on both banks of the
river stood the well-remembered walls and buildings of the city. 'Archers, string your bows!' King Tamose called
from the bows. 'Hoist the blue pennant! Drummer, increase the beat to attack
speed!' Our tiny squadron flew into the mass of shipping
that clogged the roads of Elephantine. Most of it was made up of trade barges
and transports. We passed these by, and went for the Hyksos galleys. The Hyksos
had manned their fighting ships with Egyptian sailors, for nobody knew the
river better. Only their officers were Hyksos. Most of them were ashore, carousing
in the pleasure-palaces of the docks. Our spies had told us which was the flag of the
southern admiral, a swallowtail of scarlet and gold so long that the end of it
dipped in the water. We steered for the ship that flew her, and Memnon boarded her
over the side with twenty men at his back. 'Freedom from the Hyksos tyrant!' they roared.
'Stand up for this very Egypt!' The crew gaped at them. They had been taken
completely by surprise, and most of them were unarmed. Their weapons were
locked away below decks, for the Hyksos officers trusted them not at all. The other galleys of our squadron had each picked
out one of the enemy fighting-ships and boarded it as swiftly. On all of them
the reaction of the crew was the same. After the first surprise they shouted
the question, 'Who are you?' And the reply was, 'Egyptian! The army of the true
Pharaoh Tamose. Join with us, countrymen! Cast out the tyrant!' They turned on their Hyksos officers and cut them
down before we could reach them. Then they embraced our men, roaring out a
welcome. 'For Egypt!' they cheered. 'For Tamose! For Egypt
and Tamose!' The cheering jumped from ship to ship. Men danced
upon the rails and swarmed up the masts to tear down the Hyksos banners. They broke
open the arms stores and passed out bows and swords. Then they poured ashore. They dragged the Hyksos
from the taverns and hacked them to bloody shreds, so that the gutters
discharged a scarlet flood into the harbour waters. They ran through the streets
to the barracks of the garrison, and fell upon the guard. 'For Egypt and Tamose!' they chanted. Some of the Hyksos officers rallied their men, and
held out for a while in pockets surrounded by the rabble. Then Kratas and
Memnon came ashore with their veterans, and within two hours the city was ours. Most of the Hyksos chariots were abandoned in their
lines, but half a squadron was escaping through the east gate and galloping
away over the causeway that crossed the inundated fields to the dry ground beyond. I had left the ship and hurried through the back
alleys, that I knew so well, to the north tower on the city walls. From there I
knew I would have the best view over the city and the surrounding countryside.
Bitterly, I watched the escaping detachment of chariots. Every one that got
away now would have to be fought later, and I wanted those horses. I was about
to turn away and watch what was happening in the city below me, when I saw a
little finger of dust rising from the foot of the harsh southern hills. I shaded my eyes and stared at it. I felt the
quickening of excitement. The dust was coming towards us swiftly, I could make
out the dark shapes beneath it. 'By Horus, it's Remrem!' I whispered with delight.
The old warrior had brought the first division of chariots through the bad
ground of the hills quicker than I would have believed possible. It was only
two days since we had parted. I watched with professional pride as the first
division opened from columns of four into line abreast. Hui and I had trained
them well. It was perfectly done, and Remrem had the Hyksos in enfilade. Half
their vehicles were still on the causeway. It seemed to me that the enemy
commander was not even aware of the massed squadrons bearing down upon his
exposed flank. I think he must still have been looking back over his shoulder.
At the very last moment he tried to swing into line abreast to meet Remrem's
charge, but it was far too late. He would have done better to have turned tail
and run for it. Remrem's chariots poured over him in a wave, and he
was washed away like debris in the stream of the Nile. I watched until I was
certain that Remrem had captured most of the Hyksos horses, and only then did I
sigh with relief and turn to look down into the city. The populace had gone wild with the joy of
liberation. They were dancing through the streets, waving any
piece of blue cloth that came to hand. Blue was the colour of Pharaoh Tamose.
The women tied blue ribbons in their hair, and the men wound blue sashes around
their waists and tied on blue arm-bands. There was still some isolated fighting, but
gradually the surviving Hyksos were cut down or dragged from the buildings they
were trying to defend. One of the barracks with several hundred men still
inside it was put to the torch. I heard the screams of the men as they burned,
and soon the aroma of scorched flesh drifted up to me. It smelled like roasting
pork. Of course there was looting, and some of our
upstanding citizens broke into the taverns and the wine shops and carried the
jars out into the street. When one of the jars broke, they went down on all
fours and guzzled the wine out of the gutter like hogs. I saw three men chase a girl down the alley below
where I stood. When they caught her they threw her down and ripped her skirt
away. Two of them pinned her limbs and held her spread-eagled while the third
man mounted her. I did not watch the rest of it. As soon as Memnon and Kratas had stamped out the
last pockets of Hyksos resistance, they set about restoring order to the city.
Squads of disciplined troops trotted through the streets, using the shafts of
their war spears as clubs to beat sense into the drunken and delirious mob. Memnon ordered a handful of those taken in the act
of rape and looting to be strangled on the spot, and their corpses were hung by
the heels from the city gates. By nightfall the city was quiet, and decent men
and women could once more safely walk her streets. Memnon set up his headquarters in Pharaoh Mamose's
palace, which had once been our home on Elephantine Island. The moment I
stepped ashore I hurried to our old quarters in the harem. They were still luxuriously appointed and had
escaped the looters. Whoever had occupied them had treated my murals with the
respect they warranted. The water-garden was a profusion of lovely plants, and
the ponds were filled with fish and lotus. The Egyptian gardener told me that
the Hyksos garrison commander who had lived here had admired our Egyptian ways,
and had tried to ape them. I was thankful for that. Within days I had restored the rooms and garden to
a state in which they were once more fit to receive my mistress. Then I went to
Memnon to ask permission to bring the queen home. Pharaoh was distracted by the burden of taking firm
hold of his kingdom. There were ten thousand matters that demanded his
attention, but he put them aside for the moment and embraced me. 'It all goes well, Tata.' 'A happy return, Your Majesty,' I replied, 'but
there is still so much to do.' 'It is my royal command that when you and I are
alone like this, you continue to call me Mem.' He smiled at me. 'But you are
right, there is much to do, and little time left to us before Salitis and all
his host marches up from the Delta to oppose us. We have won the first little
skirmish. The great battles lie ahead of us.' 'There is one duty that will give me great
pleasure, Mem. I have prepared quarters for the queen mother. May I go up-river
and bring her home to Elephantine? She has waited too long already to set foot
on Egyptian soil.' 'Leave at once, Tata,' he commanded, 'and bring
Queen Masara down with you.' The river was too high and the desert road too
rough. One hundred slaves carried the litters of the two queens along the banks
of the Nile, through the gorge and down into our green valley. It was not pure coincidence that the first building
we came to as we crossed the border was a small temple. I had planned our route
to bring us here. 'What shrine is this, Taita?' my mistress drew
aside the curtain of her litter to ask. 'It is the temple of the god Akh-Horus, mistress.
Do you wish to pray here?' 'Thank you,' she whispered. She knew what I had
done. I helped her down from the litter, and she leaned heavily upon me as we
entered the cool gloom of the stone building. We prayed together, and I felt certain that Tanus
was listening to the voices of the two people in all the world who had loved
him most. Before we went on, my mistress ordered me to hand over all the gold
that we had with us to the priests, and promised to send more for the upkeep and
the beautification of the temple. By the time we reached the Palace of Elephantine,
she was exhausted. Each day the thing in her womb grew larger as it fed upon
her wasting body. I laid her on a couch under the barrazza in the water-garden,
and she closed her eyes and rested for a while. Then she opened them again and
smiled at me softly. 'We were happy here once, but will I ever see Thebes again
before I die?' I could not answer her. It was idle to make promises to her that
were not mine to keep. 'If I die before that, will you promise to take me
back and build me a tomb in the hills from where I can look across and see my
beautiful city?' 'That I promise you with all my heart,' I replied. IN THE DAYS THAT FOLLOWED, ATON and I resuscitated
our old spider's web of spies and informers across the Upper Kingdom. Many of
those who4iad once worked for us were long dead, but there were also many who
were not. With the bait of gold and patriotism, they recruited other younger
spies in every village and city. Soon we had spies in the palace of the Hyksos
satrap in Thebes, and others as far north as the Delta of the Lower Kingdom.
Through them we learned which Hyksos regiments were billeted in each town, and
which of them were on the march. We learned their strength, and the names and
foibles of their commanders. We had an exact count of the numbers of their
ships and their chariots, and as the flood-waters of the Nile receded, we were
able to follow the southward movement of this huge mass of men and fighting machines,
as King Salitis marched on Thebes. I smuggled secret messages in the name of Pharaoh
Ta-mose to those Egyptians in the regiments of the enemy, urging them to
revolt. They started to trickle in through our lines, bringing more valuable
intelligence with them. Soon the trickle of deserters from the Hyksos armies
became a flood. Two full regiments of archers came marching in under arms, with
the blue banner waving over them, and chanting, 'Egypt and Tamose!' The crews of a hundred fighting galleys mutinied
and slew their Hyksos officers. When they came sailing up-river to join us,
they drove before them a fleet of barges that they had captured in the port of
Thebes. These were laden with grain and oil and salt and flax and timber, all
the sinews of war. By this time, all our own forces were down through
the cataract and deployed around the city, except only the small herd of tame
gnu. These I had left until the very last. From my lookout in the north tower,
I could see the horse-lines extending for miles along both banks, and the smoke
from the cooking-fires of the regimental encampments turned the air blue. Each day we were growing stronger, and the whole of
Egypt was in a ferment of excitement and anticipation. The heady aroma of
freedom perfumed each breath we drew. Kemit was a nation in the process of
rebirth. They sang the patriotic anthems in the streets and the taverns, and
the harlots and the wine merchants grew fat. Aton and I, poring over our maps and secret
despatches, saw a different picture emerging. We saw the Hyksos giant shaking
itself awake, and stretching out a mailed fist towards us. From Memphis and
every city and town in the Delta, King Salitis' regiments were on the march.
Every road was crowded with his chariots, and the river ran with his shipping.
All of this was moving south upon Thebes. I waited until \ knew that Lord Apachan, the
commander of the Hyksos chariots, had reached Thebes and was encamped outside
the city walls with all his vehicles and all his horses. Then I went before the
war council of Pharaoh Tamose. 'Your Majesty, I have come to report that the enemy
now have one hundred and twenty thousand horses and twelve thousand chariots
massed at Thebes. Within two months, the Nile will have subsided to the level
that will enable Apachan to begin his final advance.' Even Kratas looked grave. 'We have known worse
odds—' he began, but the king cut him short. 'I can tell by his face that the Master of the
Royal Horse has more to tell us. Am I right, Taita?' 'Pharaoh is always right,' I agreed. 'I beg your
permission to bring down my gnu from above the cataract.' Kratas laughed. 'By Seth's bald head, Taita, do you
intend riding out against the Hyksos on one of those clownish brutes of yours?'
I laughed with him politely. His sense of humour has the same subtlety as that
of the savage Shilluk he commands. The next morning Hui and I set off up-river to
bring down the gnu. By this time there were only three hundred of these sorry
creatures left alive out of the original six thousand, but they were quite tame
and could be fed from the hand. We herded them down at a gentle pace, so as not
to weaken them further. The horses that Remrem had captured in that first
brief battle with the escaping Hyksos chariots had on my orders been kept
separated from our own horses that we had brought down with us from Cush. Hui
and I moved the gnu into the same pasture with them, and after the first
uneasiness between the two species, they were all feeding peaceably together.
That night we penned gnu and Hyksos horses in the same stockade. I left Hui to
watch over them and returned to the palace on Elephantine Island. I will admit now to a great deal of uncertainty and
worry over the days that followed. I had invested so much faith in the success
of this ruse, which, after all, depended on a natural event that I did not
fully understand. If it failed, we would be faced with the full fury of an
enemy that outnumbered us by at least four to one. I had worked late with Aton and had fallen asleep
over my scrolls in the palace library, when I was shaken awake by uncouth
hands, and Hui was shouting in my ear. 'Come on, you lazy old rascal! Wake up!
I have something for you.' He had horses waiting at the landing. We hurried to
them as soon as the ferry put us ashore, and mounted up. We galloped all the
way along the river-bank in the moonlight, and rode into the horse-lines with
our mounts in a lather. The grooms had lamps lit and were working in the
stockade by their feeble yellow light. Seven of the Hyksos horses were down already with
the thick yellow pus pouring from their mouths and nostrils. The grooms were
cutting into their windpipes and placing the hollow reeds to save them from
choking and suffocating. 'It worked!' Hui shouted, and seized me in a coarse
embrace and danced me in a circle. 'The Yellow Strangled It worked! It worked!' 'I thought of it, didn't I?' I told him with all
the dignity that his antics allowed me. 'Of course it worked.' The barges had been moored against the bank these
weeks past, ready for this day. We loaded the horses immediately, all of those
who could still stand upright. The gnu we left in the stockade. Their presence
would be too difficult to explain where we were going. With one of the captured Hyksos galleys towing each
of the barges, we rowed out into the current and turned northwards. With fifty
oars a side and the wind and current behind us, we made good speed as we
hurried down to Thebes to deliver our gift to Lord Apachan. AS SOON AS WE PASSED KOM-OMBO WE lowered the blue
flag, and hoisted captured Hyksos banners. Most of the crew of the galleys that
were towing the barges had been born under Hyksos rule, some of them were of
mixed parentage and spoke the foreign language with colloquial fluency. Two
nights north of Kom-Ombo, we were hailed by a Hyksos galley. They laid
alongside and sent a boarding party over to inspect our cargo. 'Horses for the chariots of Lord Apachan,' our
captain told them. His father was Hyksos but his mother was an Egyptian
noblewoman. His deportment was natural and his credentials convincing. After a
cursory inspection they passed us through. We were stopped and boarded twice
more before we reached Thebes, but each time our captain was able to deceive
the Hyksos officers who came aboard. My chief concern by this time was the
state of the horses. Despite our best efforts, they were beginning to
die, and half of those still alive were in a pitiful condition. We threw the
carcasses overboard, and ran on northwards at our best speed. My original plan had been to sell the horses to the
Hyksos quartermasters in the port of Thebes, but no man who knew horseflesh
would look at this pitiful herd. Hui and I decided upon another course. We timed the last leg of our voyage to arrive at
Thebes as the sun was setting. My heart ached as I recognized all the familiar
landmarks. The walls of the citadel glowed pinkly in the last rays of the sun.
Those three elegant towers that I had built for Lord Intef still pointed to the
sky, they were aptly named the Fingers of Horus. The Palace of Memnon on the west bank, which I had
left uncompleted, had been rebuilt by the Hyksos. Even I had to admit that the
Asiatic influence was pleasing. In this light the spires and watch-towers were
endowed with a mysterious and exotic quality. I wished that my mistress was
there to share this moment of homecoming with me. We had both longed for it
over half her lifetime. In the fading light we were still able to make out
the vast concourse of men and horses and chariots and wagons that lay outside
the city walls. Although I had received accurate reports, it had not been
possible to visualize such multitudes. My spirits quailed as I looked upon
them, and remembered the gallant little army I had left at Elephantine. We would need every favour of the gods, and more
than a little good fortune to triumph against such a host.' As the last light
faded into night, the fires of the Hyksos bloomed and twinkled upon the plain,
like a field of stars. There was no end to them—they stretched away to the
limit of the eye. As we sailed closer, we smelled them. There is a
peculiar odour that a standing army exudes. It is a blend of many smells, of
dung-fires and of cooking food, the sweet smell of new-cut hay and the
ammoniacal smell of the horses, and the stench of human sewage in open pits, of
leather and pitch and horse-sweat and woodshavings and sour beer. Most of all
it is the smell of men, tens of thousands of men, living close to each other in
tents and huts and hovels. We sailed on, and the sounds floated across the
star-lit waters to our silent ship; the snort and the whinny of horses, the
sound of the coppersmiths' hammers on the anvil beating our spear-heads and
blades, the challenges of the sentries, and the voices of men singing and
arguing and laughing. I stood beside the captain on the deck of the
leading galley and guided him in towards the east bank. I remembered the wharf
of the timber merchants outside the city walls. If it still stood, it would be
the best point at which to disembark our herd. I picked out the entrance to the dock, and we
pushed in under oars. The wharf was exactly as I remembered it. As we came
alongside, the harbour-master came fussing on board, demanding our papers and
our licence to trade. I fawned upon him, bowing and grinning
obsequiously. 'Excellency, there has been a terrible accident. My licences were
blown from my hand by the wind, a trick of Seth, no doubt.' He blew himself up like an angry bullfrog, and then
subsided again as I pressed a heavy gold ring into his fat paw. He tested the
metal between his teeth, and went away smiling. I sent one of the grooms ashore to douse the
torches that illuminated the wharf. I did not want curious eyes to see the
condition of the horses that we brought ashore. Some of our animals were too
weak to rise, others staggered and wheezed, they drooled the stinking mucus
from mouth and nostrils. We were forced to place head-halters on them and coax
them out of the barge on to the wharf. In the end there were only a hundred
horses strong enough to walk. We led them down the wagon-track to the high ground
where our spies had told us the main horse-lines were laid out. Our spies had
also provided us with the password of the Hyksos first division of chariots,
and the linguists among us replied to the challenges of the sentries. We walked our horses the entire length of the enemy
encampment. As we went, we began to turn our stricken animals loose, leaving a
few of them to wander through the lines of every one of the Hyksos' twenty
chariot divisions. We moved so casually and naturally that no alarm was raised,
we 'even chatted and joked with the enemy grooms and horse-handlers we met
along the way. As the first streaks of dawn showed in the eastern
sky, we trudged back to the timber wharf on which we had disembarked. Only one
of the galleys had waited to take us off, the rest of the flotilla had cast off
and turned back southwards as soon as they had discharged their cargo of
diseased horses. We went aboard the remaining ship, and although Hui
and the other grooms threw themselves exhausted upon the deck, I stood at the
stern-rail and watched the walls of my beautiful Thebes, washed by the pure
early light, sink from view behind us. Ten days later, we sailed into the port of
Elephantine, and after I had reported to Pharaoh Tamose, I hurried to the
water-garden in the harem. My mistress lay in the shade of the barrazza. She was
pale and so thin that I could not keep my hands from trembling as I stretched
out to her in obeisance. She wept when she saw me. 'I missed you, Taita. There is so little time left
for us to be together.' THE NILE BEGAN TO SHRINK BACK INTO her bed. The
fields emerged from under the inundation, glistening black under a thick new
coat of rich mud. The roads began to dry out, opening the way northwards. Soon
it would be time for the plough, and the time for war. Aton and I waited
anxiously, perusing every report from our spies in the north. It came at last,
the intelligence for which we had waited and prayed. The news was carried by a
fast felucca, flying to us on the wings of the north wind. It docked in the
third watch of the night, but the messenger found Aton and me still working by
lamplight in his cell. I hurried with the dirty scrap of papyrus to the
royal apartments. The guards had orders to let me pass at any hour, but Queen
Masara met me at the curtained doorway to the king's bedchamber. 'I will not let you wake him now, Taita. The king
is exhausted. This is his first night's uninterrupted sleep in a month.' 'Your Majesty, I must see him. I am under his
direct orders—' While we still argued, a deep young voice called to
me from beyond the curtain, 'Is that you, Tata?' The curtain was thrown aside
and the king stood before us in all his naked splendour. He was a man as few
others I have ever known, lean and hard as the blade of the blue sword,
majestic in all his manly parts, so that I was all the more conscious of my own
disability when I looked upon him. 'What is it, Tata?' 'Despatches from the north. From the camp of the
Hyk-sos. A terrible pestilence is sweeping through the lines of the Hyksos.
Half their horses are stricken, and thousands of others fall prey to the
disease with each new day.' 'You are a magician, Tata. How could we have ever
mocked you and your gnu!' He gripped my shoulders and stared into my eyes. 'Are
you ready to ride to glory with me?' 'I am ready, Pharaoh.' 'Then put Rock and Chain into the traces, and fly
the blue pennant over my chariot. We are going home to Thebes.' SO WE STOOD AT LAST BEFORE THE CITY of a hundred
gates with four divisions of chariots and thirty thousand foot. King Salitis'
host lay before us, but beyond his multitudes the Fingers of Horus beckoned to
us, and the walls of Thebes shone with a pearly radiance in the dawn light. The
Hyksos army deployed ponderously in front of us, like the uncoiling of some
gigantic python, column after column, rank upon rank. Then- spear-heads
glittered and the golden helmets of the officers blazed in the early sunlight.
'Where is Apachan and his chariots?' the king demanded, and I stared at the
Finger of Horus that stood nearest the river. I had to strain my eyesight to make
out the tiny coloured scraps that waved from the top of the tower. 'Apachan has five divisions in the centre, and he
holds six more in reserve. They are hidden beyond the city wall.' I read the flag signals of the spy I had posted in
the tallest of the three towers. I knew that from there he had a falcon's view
across the battlefield. 'That is only eleven divisions, Tata,' the king
fumed. 'We know he has twenty. Where are the others?' 'The Yellow Strangler,' I answered him. 'He has fielded
every horse that can still stand.' 'By Horus, I hope you are right. I hope that
Apachan is not planning a pretty little surprise for us.' He touched my
shoulder. 'The dice are hi the cup, Tata. It is too late to change them now. We
must play this coup with what the gods have given us. Drive out in review.' I took up the reins and wheeled the chariot out in
front of our army. The king was showing himself to his troops. His presence
would give them heart, and stiffen their spines. I took the horses down the
long ranks at a tight hand-trot. Rock and Chain were brushed until their coats
shone like polished copper in the sunlight. The carriage of the royal chariot
was dressed in a thin skin of gold-leaf. This was the only concession I had
made, in my quest for lightness. The gold was beaten thinner than a papyrus sheet,
and it added less than a hundred deben to the overall weight of our vehicle,
yet it made a dazzling display. Friend or enemy who looked upon it could not
doubt that this was Pharaoh's chariot, and take heart or be struck by awe in
the thick of battle. On its long, whippy bamboo rod the blue pennant nodded and
streamed in the breeze high above our heads, and the men cheered us as we drove
down their ranks. On the day we had left Qebui to begin the Return, I
had made a vow not to cut my hah- until I had made sacrifice in the temple of
Horus in the centre of Thebes. Now my hah- reached to my waist, and to hide the
streaks of grey hi it, I had dyed it with henna imported from those lands
beyond the Indus river. It was a ruddy gold mane that set off my beauty to
perfection. I wore a simple starched kilt of the whitest linen, and the Gold of
Praise upon my naked chest. I did not wish in any way to detract from the glory
of my young pharaoh, so I wore no make-up and no other ornament. We passed in front of the massed regiments of the
Shilluk spearmen in the centre. Those magnificent bloodthirsty pagans were the
rock that anchored our line. They cheered us as we rode by, 'Kajan! Tanus!
Kajan! Tamose!' Their ostrich feathers seethed white as the foam of the river
in the cataracts as they raised their spears in salute. I saw Lord Kratas there
in the midst of them, and he shouted at me. His words were lost in the roar of
ten thousand voices, but I read his lips: 'You and I will get puking drunk
tonight in Thebes, you old hooligan.' The Shilluk were stacked in depth, file upon file
and regiment upon regiment. Kratas had exercised them ceaselessly in the
tactics that I had helped him evolve to deal with chariots. Apart from their
long spears, each of them carried a bundle of javelins, and a sling of wood and
leather to launch these with added power. They had set the sharpened wooden
staves into the earth to form a palisade in front of then" line. The Hyksos
chariots had to break through that spiny barrier to reach them. The Egyptian archers were drawn up behind them,
ready to move forward through their ranks or retreat again, as the vagaries of
the battle called for each differing tactic. They raised their recurved bows on
high and cheered Pharaoh. 'Tamose! Egypt and Tamose!' Pharaoh wore the blue war crown, with the golden
circlet of the uraeus around his brow, the heads of the vulture and the cobra
of the two kingdoms entwined, their jewelled eyes glittering. He returned their
salute with the bare blade of the blue sword held high. We wheeled around our own left flank, and before we
started back, Memnon stopped me with a hand on my shoulder. For a short while
we looked back over the field. The Hyksos were moving forward already. Their
front line was twice the length of our own. 'From your own treatise, Tata,' he quoted, '
"A circumspect defence until the enemy is committed, and then the rapid
and audacious attack." ' 'You have remembered the lesson well, sire.' 'It is certain we will be outflanked, and Apachan
will probably throw in his first five chariot divisions at the start.' 'I agree with you, Mem.' 'But we know what we have to do, don't we, Tata?'
He tapped my shoulder and we started back to where our own chariots were
holding in the rear. Remrem headed the first division, Astes had the
second, and Lord Aqer the third. Newly promoted to the rank of Best of Ten
Thousand, Captain Hui commanded the fourth division. Two regiments of Shilluk
guarded our baggage and the spare horses. 'Look at that old hunting dog,' Memnon nodded at
Remrem. 'He is chafing to be away. By Horus, I'll teach him a little patience
before this day is done.' We heard the horns sounding in the centre. 'It begins now.' Memnon pointed to the front, and
we saw the Hyksos chariots looming through the dust-clouds. 'Yes, Apachan has
turned loose his chariots.' He looked back at our divisions, and Remrem raised
his sword high. "The first is ready, Majesty,' he called «agerly, but
Memnon ignored him and signalled to Lord Aqer. The third division came forward
in column of fours behind us, and Pharaoh led them out. The Hyksos chariots lumbered forward, heavy and
majestic, aimed at the centre of our line. Memnon cut across in front of them,
interposing our thin column between their hordes and the infantry. Then, at his
signal, we wheeled into line abreast and we flew straight at them. It seemed
suicidal, as futile as charging one of our frail wooden galleys at the rocks of
the cataract. As we came together, our archers fired head-on into
the Hyksos, aiming for the horses. Gaps opened in their line as the animals
were brought down by our arrows, then at the last possible moment our own line
dissolved like wind-driven smoke. Our drivers used their superior speed and
manoeuvrability. Instead of coming into collision with the Hyksos line and
being crushed beneath the juggernaut, we swerved into the gaps and raced
through them. Not all our chariots escaped, and some were broken and
overturned, but Lord Aqer led four out of every five of them through. We emerged in the rear of the Hyksos charge and
spun around in a full-locked turn, re-forming the line at the gallop and again
using our speed to overhaul the Hyksos, coming into them from the rear, firing
our arrows into them at shortening range. The Hyksos chariots were designed to give
protection to the crew from the front, and their archers were stationed on the
footplate to fire their arrows forward. Confusion spread down their line as
they tried to meet our attack from the rear. Hard-pressed, some of the drivers
attempted to turn back to confront us, and they collided with the chariots
alongside. Those fearsome wheel-scythes cut into the legs of the neighbouring
horses, and brought them down in a screaming, whinnying tangle. The confusion spread among them just as the first
volley of arrows from the Egyptian archers rose up over the massed ranks of
Shilluk and dropped among the Hyksos. Immediately this happened, Memnon gave
the order, and we wheeled away and let them run down on that palisade of
sharpened staves. Half their horses were maimed or killed by those fierce
points. Those who broke through were met by the Shilluk and a cloud of
javelins. Struck by stake and arrow and javelin, their horses panicked, kicking
and rearing in the traces. Those chariots that were still under control hurled
themselves into the Shilluk phalanx. They met no resistance. The black ranks
opened before them, allowing the horses to run through, but then they closed up
behind them. Every one of those tall, willowy black devils was
an athlete and an acrobat. They leaped up on to the footplate of the racing
chariots from behind, and they stabbed and hacked at the crew with dagger and
spear. They swallowed that first charge of chariots the same way a jellyfish
engulfs a swift silver sardine in its myriad arms and amorphous body. The Hyksos spearmen were moving forward to follow
up and exploit the chariot charge, but now they were exposed. Loose horses and
the surviving chariots tore back into their massed ranks, and forced them to
open up and let them through. For the moment they were stranded in disorder in
the middle of the field, and Memnon skilfully seized the opportunity. Lord Aqer's horses were blown, and Memnon led them
back into reserve. He and I changed teams. It was but a moment's work for the
grooms to loosen the tack that coupled Rock and Chain, and to lead in a fresh
team from the horses being held in reserve. We had six thousand fresh horses
ready in the rear. I wondered how many Hyksos horses had escaped the Strangler,
how many fresh teams they were holding. As we wheeled back into line, Remrem called to us
desperately, 'Your Majesty! The first! Let my first division go!' Pharaoh ignored him and signalled to Astes. The
second moved forward behind us and formed up at the trot. The Hyksos infantry was still tangled in the middle
of the field. They had extended to overlap our shorter line, but had lost their
dressing. The line was crumpled and twisted. With a general's eye, Memnon picked
out the weakest point, a salient in their left flank. 'The second division will advance. Trot-march!
Forward! Pods of eight, charge!' We tore into the salient in the line, eight
chariots abreast. Pod after pod, we crashed into them and ripped them open.
Their left flank buckled, while their right still pressed forward. We had them
canted across the field, their centre was shearing, and Memnon re-formed the
third division at the gallop, and set them up to tear open the enemy centre. At the moment before we were committed to the
charge, I glanced across at the city. Dust had almost obscured the range, but I
glimpsed the two white flags on the summit of the Finger of Horus. It was the
warning signal from my lookout posted there, and I swivelled round and looked
back at the eastern fort of the city. 'Sire!' I cried, and pointed back. The king
followed my arm, and saw the first squadron of Hyksos chariots trot out from
concealment behind the curve of the wall. The others followed, like a column of
black warrior ants on the march. 'Apachan is throwing in his reserves to save his
infantry,' Memnon shouted, above the din of battle. 'A moment more, and he
would have had us in enfilade. Well done, Tata.' We had to let the infantry escape, as we wheeled
into line to face Apachan's chariots. We charged at each other across a field
littered with smashed and overturned chariots, loose arrows and javelins, dead
and wounded horses and dying men. As we came together, I stood taller on the
footplate and peered ahead. There was something unusual about the run of the
enemy chariots, and then it dawned upon me. 'Sire,' I cried, 'look at the horses! They are
running sick animals.' The chests of the leading teams were painted with a
glistening coat of yellow mucus that streamed from their gaping mouths. Even as
I watched, one of the horses coming towards us staggered and fell headlong,
bringing its teammate down with it. 'Sweet Isis, you are right. Their horses are
finished before they have begun,' Memnon answered. He saw instantly what he had
to do. It was the measure of his superb control that he was able to deflect a
charge of his chariots once it was fully launched. At this very last moment he
declined the head-on engagement. We opened like a flower before their charge, peeling
away on either side of them, turning and running back for our own lines,
drawing them on, straining their sick and gasping horses to their utmost. We ran before them in a tight, compact formation.
Their own line began to waver and fall apart as the weaker horses broke down.
Some of them fell as though struck in the head by an arrow. Others merely
slowed and stopped, standing with their heads hanging, mucus pouring from their
mouths in shiny golden ropes. Lord Aqer's own horses were almost blown by now.
They had driven two furious charges without a rest. Still pursued by the
remnants of Apachan's division, Memnon led them back to where Hui's fourth
division was drawn up alongside Remrem and his first. 'Pharaoh! The first is ready. Let me go! In the name
of all the gods, let me go!' Remrem howled with frustration. Memnon hardly glanced in his direction. I turned my
chariot in alongside that of Hui. A team of grooms slipped our sweat-soaked
horses from the traces and led in a fresh pair. While Lord Aqer's exhausted
division streamed back past us, we faced the oncoming Hyksos. 'Are you ready, Captain Hui?' Memnon called to him,
and Hui raised his bow in salute. 'For Egypt and Tamose!' he shouted. 'Then forward march. Charge!' Memnon laughed, and
our horses jumped against the traces and we shot forward. There were six full divisions of Apachan's chariots
scattered across the field in front of us. Half of them were broken down, with
the horses fallen or drooping in the traces, suffocated and dying from the Yellow
Strangler. Most of the others were reduced to a walk, the horses staggering and
wheezing. However, the remaining chariots came on in good order. We went out to meet them face to face. In the
centre of their charge rode a tall chariot, its coachwork clad in shining
bronze. On the footplate stood a man so tall that he towered above his driver.
He wore the high golden helmet of Hyksos royalty, and his dark beard was
plaited with coloured ribbons that fluttered in the wind like pretty
butterflies hovering over a flowering shrub. 'Apachan!' Memnon challenged him. 'You are a dead
man.' Apachan heard him, and he picked out our golden
chariot. He swerved to meet us, and Memnon tapped my shoulder. 'Lay me alongside the bearded hog. It's time for
the sword, at last.' Apachan loosed two arrows at us as we closed.
Memnon caught one on his shield. I ducked under the other, but I never lost my
concentration. I was watching those terrible spinning scythes on the hubs of
Apachan's wheels. They could hack my horses' legs out from under them. Behind me I heard the gravelly rasp as Memnon drew
the blue sword from its scabbard on the side panel, and from the corner of my
eye I caught the steely flash of the blade as he went on guard. I swung my horses' heads over, feinting to the
right to confuse the Hyksos driver, but the instant we started to turn away, I
changed direction again. I avoided his scythes and passed him close, then I
turned in sharply behind him. With my free hand I snatched up the
grappling-hook and tossed it over the side-panel of the other chariot. Now we
were locked together, but I had achieved the advantage, for we lay across his
stern. Apachan swivelled around, and aimed a sword-cut at
me, but I fell to my knees under it, and Memnon gathered up the blow on his
shield, then swung the blue sword. A shard of bronze curled from the edge of
Apachan's weapon, sliced away by the steel, and he shouted in angry disbelief,
and flung up his copper shield at the next blow. Apachan was a superb swordsman, but no match for my
king and the blue sword. Memnon mangled his shield to strips, and then swung
hard at his bronze blade, as Apachan tried to defend his head. The blue blade
sheared the bronze cleanly, and Apachan was left with only the hilt in his
fist. He opened his mouth wide and bellowed at us. The
teeth in the back of his jaw were black and rotten, and his spittle blew into
my face in a cloud. Memnon used that classic straight thrust to end it. He
drove the point of the blue blade through Apachan's open mouth, deeply into the
back of his throat. His angry bellow was drowned out by the torrent of bright
blood that burst through his hairy lips. I cut the rope of the grappling-hook, and let the
Hyksos chariot run free. The horses were out of control and they slewed away
and ran down the line of locked and battling chariots. Apachan clutched at the
dashboard, holding himself erect even though he was dying, and the blood
spurted from his mouth and cascaded down his breastplate. It was a sight that struck dismay into the hearts
of his charioteers. They tried to disengage their sick and staggering-horses,
but we ran hub-to-hub with them and hurled our javelins into them. We followed
them all the way back, until we came within range of their archers, and flocks
of arrows fell around us and forced us to break off. 'It is not over yet,' I warned Memnon, as we walked
our tired horses back. 'You have broken Apachan's chariots, but you still have
to deal with Beon's infantry.' 'Take me to Kratas,' Pharaoh ordered. I stopped our chariot in front of the massed
regiments of Shilluk, and Memnon called across to Kratas, 'What heart, my
Lord?' 'I fear, sire, that my fellows will fall asleep if
you cannot find a little work for us to do.' 'Then let us hear a tune from them as you take them
forward to seek employment.' The Shilluk began their advance. They moved with a
curious shuffling gait, and every third pace they stamped in unison with a
force that made the ground jump beneath their horny bare feet. They sang in
those deep, melodious African voices, a sound like a swarm of angry black bees,
and they drummed their spears upon their rawhide shields. The Hyksos were disciplined and brave, they could
not have conquered half the world if they had not been so. We had smashed up
their chariots, but they stood to meet Kratas' advance behind a wall of bronze
shields. The two armies came together like fighting temple
bulls. The black and the white bulls locked horns and fought it out
breast-to-breast and spear-to-spear. While the two armies of foot-soldiers mauled each
other, Pharaoh held back his chariots, using them with skill and daring only
when there was an opening or a weakness in the enemy positions. When a pocket
of the Hyksos infantry was isolated on the left, he sent in Aqer's division,
and annihilated them with two swift charges. When Lord Beon tried to send
reinforcements forward to assist his beleaguered front, Pharaoh despatched
Astes with five hundred chariots to frustrate him. The Hyksos rallied every one of their remaining
chariots, and every one of their horses that could still stand, and threw them
against our right. Memnon sent Hui and Astes out to meet them, and to break up
their attack. He left Remrem cursing and pleading and stamping up and down beside
his chariot, and ignored his pleas. Pharaoh and I circled the fighting in the golden
chariot, watching each shift and change in the conflict. He pushed in his
reserves in exactly those places where they were most needed, and with the
timing and anticipation that can never be taught or learned. It was as though
the pulse and the tempo of the battle beat in his heart, and he sensed it in
his blood. Always I looked for Kratas in the thick of it. Many
times I lost him, and I dreaded that he was down, but then his helmet showed
again with the ostrich-feather plume cut away, and the bronze splattered with
his own blood and the blood of other men. It was there in the centre where Kratas fought that
the Hyksos ranks began to give. It was like the first trickle through the earth
wall of a dam, their line bulged and stretched to the breaking-point. Their
rear ranks began to fall in upon themselves under the relentless pressure. 'By the love of Horus and the compassion of all the
gods, Tata, this is the moment of our victory.' Memnon saw it even before I
did. We galloped across to where Remrem still waited,
and Pharaoh hailed him, 'Are you ready, my Lord Remrem?' 'I have been ready since dawn, sire, but I am no
lord.' 'Would you argue with your king, sir? You are a lord
now. The enemy centre is breaking. Take your chariots and chase them back to
Memphis!' 'May you live for ever, Pharaoh!' Lord Remrem
roared, and he sprang to the footplate. He led out the first. Their horses were
fresh and strong, and their fighting spirit was chafed raw and angry with long
restraint. They crashed into the Hyksos right flank. They cut
through them with barely a check, and swung round1 and went into the enemy
centre from the rear. It was the perfect moment when the battle teetered, and
the Hyksos centre broke. Within the time it takes to draw and hold a long
breath, they were in rout. They streamed back towards the city gates, but even
Kra-tas' Shilluk were too far-gone to follow them. They stood knee-deep in the
piles of dead and dying men, they rested on their spears and let the Hyksos go.
This was when the genius of Memnon was made apparent. He had kept the first in
hand for this moment. They took up the chase, and I saw Remrem's sword rise and
fall to a terrible rhythm as he drove them on. The first of the fleeing enemy reached the city
gates, but they found them slammed closed in their faces. My spies and agents
had done their work well. The populace of Thebes was in revolt, and the city
was ours. They barred the gates to the broken Hyksos legions. Remrem pursued the Hyksos until night fell and his
horses were exhausted. He drove them back thirty miles, and every yard of the
north road was littered with their discarded weapons and the bodies of the
slain. I DROVE PHARAOH'S GOLDEN CHARIOT up to the main
gate of the city, and he stood tall on the footplate and shouted to the
sentinels on the parapet above us. 'Open the gates! Let me pass through!' 'Who is it that demands entry to Thebes?' they
called down. 'I am Tamose, ruler of the two kingdoms.' 'Hail Pharaoh! May you live for ever!' The gates swung open, and Memnon touched my
shoulder. 'Drive through, Tata.' I turned to face him. 'Forgive me, Majesty. I have
taken oath that I will not enter the city, except at the side of my mistress,
Queen Lostris. I must pass the reins to you.' 'Dismount,' he ordered me gently. 'Go! Fetch your
mistress and make good your oath.' He took the reins from my hand, and I climbed down
into the dusty roadway. I watched him drive the golden chariot through the gateway,
and the sound of cheering was like the thunder of waters in the cataracts at
high flood. The people of Thebes greeted their king. I stood at the roadside as our depleted and
battered army followed Pharaoh into the city. I realized what a bitter price we
had paid for our victory. We would not be fit to pursue the Hyksos until we had
rebuilt our army. By this time King Salitis would be strong again, and his
horses recovered from the Yellow Strangler. We had won the first battle, but I
knew that many more lay ahead of us before the tyrant could be cast out of this
very Egypt. I looked for Kratas as the Shilluk regiments
marched past, but he was not there. Hui had a chariot and fresh horses for me. 'I will
ride with you, Taita,' he offered, but I shook my head. 'I will travel faster alone,' I told him. 'Go into
the city and enjoy your triumph. A thousand pretty maids are waiting to welcome
you home.' Before I took the south road, I drove first to the
battlefield. The jackals and the hyena were already at the feast that we had
set for them, their growls and howls blended with the groans of the dying. The
dead were piled like the flotsam on the river-bank when the flood-waters
recede. I drove the chariot through to where I had last seen
Kratas, but this was the most gruesome corner of that awful field. The corpses
were piled high as my chariot wheels. I saw his helmet lying in the dust that
blood had turned to thick mud. I dismounted and took it up. The crest was gone
and the helm was all dented and battered in by heavy blows. I threw the helmet aside and began to search for
Kratas' body. I saw his leg protruding like the branch of a giant acacia from
beneath a pile of bodies. They were Shilluk and Hyksos lying together in the truce
of death. I dragged them aside and found Kratas on his back. He was drenched in
clotted black blood, his hair was matted with it and his face was a black,
crusted mask. I knelt beside him, and I whispered softly, 'Must
they all die? Every one I truly love, must they all die?' I leaned forward and
kissed his bloody lips. He sat up and stared at me. Then he grinned that
wide boyish grin of his. 'By the plug of dried snot in Seth's left nostril,
that was a real fight,' he greeted me. 'Kratas!' I stared at him with delight. 'You will
truly live for ever.' 'Never doubt it for a moment, my lad. But right now
I need a noggin.' I ran to the chariot and fetched the wine flask. He
held it at arm's-length and let the red wine squirt down his throat without
swallowing. When the flask was empty he threw it aside and belched. 'That will do well enough for a start,' he winked
at me. 'Now point me towards the nearest tavern, you old reprobate.' FASTER THAN ANY SHIP COULD SAIL against the
current, I carried the news to Elephantine. I was one man in the chariot, and
the horses ran lightly. I changed the teams at every relay station along the
south road, and galloped on without a check. The grooms handed me a flask or a
crust of corn-bread and cheese as they changed the horses, and I never slept or
even rested. During the night, the stars and the moon revealed
the path to me, and Horus guided my weary hands upon the traces, for though' I ached in every limb and I reeled on
the footplate with fatigue, I met with no mishap. At each relay station and in each village along the
way, I shouted the joyous news. 'A victory! A mighty victory! Pharaoh has
triumphed at Thebes. The Hyksos is cast down.' 'Praise to all the gods!' they cheered me. 'Egypt
and Ta-mose.' I galloped on, and they still speak of my ride to
this day along the south road. They tell of the gaunt rider with wild bloodshot
eyes, his robe thick with dust and the stains of dried blood, his long hair
blowing in the wind, the harbinger of victory, bringing the news to Elephantine
of the battle that set Egypt on the road to freedom. I drove from Thebes to Elephantine in two days and
two nights, and when I reached the palace, I barely had the strength left to
stagger into the water-garden where my mistress lay, and throw myself down
beside her couch. 'Mistress,' I croaked through cracked lips and a
throat that was parched with dust, 'Pharaoh has won a mighty victory. I have
come to take you home.' WE SAILED DOWN-RIVER TO THEBES. THE princesses were
with me to keep their mother company and to cheer her. They sat with her on the
open deck and sang to her. They rhymed and riddled and laughed, but there were
tones of sadness in their laughter and deep concern in their eyes as they
watched over my mistress. Queen Lostris was as frail as a wounded bird. There
was no weight to her bones and her flesh was as translucent as mother-of-pearl.
I could lift and carry her as easily as I had done when she was ten years of
age. The powder of the sleeping-flower was no longer able to still the pain
that gnawed into her belly like some terrible clawed crab. I carried her to the bows of the galley when at
last the walls of Thebes opened to our view around the last bend in the river.
With an arm around her thin shoulders I supported her, as we delighted together
in all those long-remembered scenes, and lived again a thousand joyous memories
of our youth. But the effort tired her. When we docked below the
Palace of Memnon, half the populace of Thebes was waiting to welcome her.
Pharaoh Tamose stood at the head of this vast throng. When the litter-bearers carried her ashore, they
cheered her. Although most of them had never laid eyes upon her, the legend of
the compassionate queen had persisted during her long exile. Mothers lifted up
their infants for her blessing, and they reached out to touch her hand as it
trailed from the edge of the litter. 'Pray to Hapi for us,' they pleaded. 'Pray for us,
Mother of Egypt.' Pharaoh Tamose walked beside her litter like the
son of a commoner, and Tehuti and Bekatha followed close behind. Both the
princesses smiled brightly, though the tears jewelled their eyelids. Aton had prepared quarters for the queen. At the
door I sent them all away, even the king. I laid her on the couch beneath the
vine arbour on the terrace. From there she could look across the river to the
shining walls of her beloved Thebes. When darkness fell, I carried her to her
bedchamber. As she lay upon the linen sheets, she looked up at me. 'Taita,' she
murmured, 'one last time, will you work the Mazes of Ammon-Ra for me?' 'Mistress, I can refuse you nothing.' I bowed my
head and went to fetch my medicine chest. I sat beside her bed, cross-legged upon the stone
slabs, and she watched me prepare the herbs. I crushed them in the alabaster
pestle and mortar, and heated the water in the copper kettle. I raised the steaming cup and saluted her with it. 'Thank you,' she whispered, and I drained the cup.
I closed my eyes and waited for the familiar but dreaded slide, over the edge of
reality, into the world of dreams and visions. When I returned, the lamps were guttering and
smoking in their brackets, and the palace was silent. There was no sound from
the river or from the sleeping city on the far bank, only the sweet trill of a
nightingale in the gardens, and the light breath of my mistress as she lay upon
her silken pillow. I thought she was sleeping. But the moment I lifted
my trembling hand to wipe the cold and nauseous sweat from my face, she opened
her eyes. 'Poor Taita, was it so bad?' It had been worse than ever before. My head ached
and my vision swam. I knew that I would never work the Mazes again. This was
the last time, and I had done it for her alone. 'I saw the vulture and the cobra stand on either
side of the river, divided by the waters. I saw the waters rise and fall one
hundred seasons. I saw one hundred sheaths of corn, and one hundred birds fly
over the river. Below them, I saw the dust of battle and the flash of swords. I
saw the smoke of burning cities mingle with the dust. 'At last I saw the cobra and the vulture come
together in congress. I saw them mating and entwined on a sheet of pure blue
silk. There were blue banners on the city walls and banners of blue flew on the
temple pylons. 'I saw the blue pennants on the chariots that drove
out across the world. I saw monuments so tall and mighty that they would stand
for ten thousand years. I saw the peoples of fifty different nations bow down
before them.' I sighed and pressed my fingers into my temples to
still the throbbing in my skull, and then I said, 'That was all my vision.' Neither of us spoke or moved for a long while
thereafter, then my mistress said quietly, 'One hundred seasons must pass
before the two kingdoms are united, one hundred years of war and striving
before the Hyksos are at last driven from the sacred soil of this very Egypt.
It will be hard and bitter for my people to bear.' 'But they will be united under the blue banner, and
the kings of your line will conquer the world. All the nations of the world
will pay homage to them,' I interpreted the rest of my vision for her. 'With this I am content.' She sighed and fell
asleep. I did not sleep, for I knew that she still needed
me near her. She woke again in that hour before dawn which is
the darkest of the night. She cried Out, 'The pain! Sweet Isis, the pain!' I mixed the Red Shepenn for her. After a while she
said, 'The pain has passed, but I am cold. Hold me, Taita, warm me with your
body.' I took her in my arms and held her while she slept. She awoke once more as the first timid rays of dawn
crept in through the doorway from the terrace. 'I have loved only two men in my life,' she
murmured, 'and you were one of those. Perhaps in the next life, the gods will
treat our love more kindly.' There was no reply I could give. She closed her
eyes for the last time. She stole away quietly and left me. Her last breath was
no louder than the one before, but I felt the chill in her lips when I kissed
them. 'Goodbye, my mistress,' I whispered. 'Farewell, my.
heart.' I HAVE WRITTEN THESE SCROLLS DURING the seventy
days and nights of the royal embalming. They are my last tribute to my
mistress. Before the undertakers took her away from me, I made
the incision in her left flank, as I had done for Tanus. I opened her womb and
took from it that terrible incubus that had killed her. It was a thing of flesh
and blood, but it was not human. When I cast it into the fire, I cursed it, and
I cursed the foul god Seth who had placed it in her. I have prepared ten alabaster jars to hold these
scrolls. I will leave them with her. I am painting all the murals of her tomb
with my own hand. They are the finest I have ever created. Each stroke of my
brush is an expression of my love. I wish that I could rest with her in this tomb, for
I am sick and weary with grief. But I still have my two princesses and my king
to care for. They need me. AUTHOR'S NOTE On 5 January 1988, Doctor Duraid ibn al Simma of
the Egyptian Department of Antiquities opened and entered a tomb on the west
bank of the Nile in the Valley of the Nobles. The reason why this tomb had not
been previously excavated was that in the ninth century AD an Islamic mosque
had been built over the site. It was only after long and delicate negotiations
with the religious authorities that the excavation was permitted. Immediately upon entering the passage that led to
the burial chamber, Dr Al Simma was greeted by a marvellous display of murals
which covered all the walls and the ceilings. They were the most elaborate and
vivacious that he had ever encountered in a lifetime spent studying the
monuments. He told me that he knew at once that he had made a
significant find, for from amongst the hieroglyphics on the walls stood out the
royal cartouche of an Egyptian queen who had not been previously recorded. His excitement and anticipation increased as he
approached the burial chamber, only to be dashed as he saw that the seals upon the
doorway had been damaged, and the entrance had been forced. In ancient times,
the tomb had been robbed and stripped of its sarcophagus and all its treasures. Nevertheless, Dr Al Simma was able to date the tomb
with reasonable accuracy to that dark night of strife and disaster that
overwhelmed Egypt in about 1780 BC. For the next century the Two Kingdoms were
in a state of flux. We have little record of the events of this period, but
from the chaos eventually rose a line of princes and pharaohs that finally
expelled the Hyksos invader, and lifted Egypt into its period of greatest
glory. It gives me pleasure to think that the blood of Lostris and Tanus and
Memnon ran strongly in their veins. It was almost a year after the tomb was first
opened, while Dr Al Simma's assistants were copying and photographing the
decorations of the walls, that a section of the plaster fell away to reveal a
hidden niche in which stood ten sealed alabaster vases. When Dr Al Simma asked me to assist in the
transcription of the scrolls contained in the vases, I was both honoured and
filled with trepidation. I was not, of course, qualified to work on the
original scrolls, which were written in the hieratic script. This work was done
at Cairo Museum by a team of international Egyptologists. Dr Al Simma asked me to rewrite this original
transcription in a style that would make it more accessible to the modern
reader. With this end in view I have included some anachronisms in the text.
For instance I have, in places, used such comparatively modern measures of
distance and weight as miles and ounces. I have also indulged myself with words
such as 'djinn' and 'houri' and 'hooligan' which Taita never employed, but
which, I feel certain, he would have used if they had formed part of his vocabulary. Very soon after beginning work on the texts all my
reservations began to evaporate as I became totally involved in the times and
character of the ancient author. Despite all his bombast and vainglory, I
developed an affinity and affection for the slave Taita that reached back over
the millennium. I am left with a realization of how little the
emotions and aspirations of man have changed in all that time, and a lingering
excitement that to this day somewhere in the Abyssinian mountains near the
source of the Blue Nile the mummy of Tanus still lies in the unviolated tomb of
Pharaoh Mamose. EXPLORE THE MYSTERIES OF THE SEVENTH SCROLL— WILBUR SMITH'S NEXT UNFORGETTABLE EPIC NOVEL, COMING SOON FROM ST. MARTIN'S PRESS. AN EXCERPT FOLLOWS: "The Seventh Scroll." She whispered, and
steeled herself to touch it. It was three thousand years old, written by a
genius out of time with history, a man who had been dust for all these
millennia, but who she had come to know and respect as she did her own husband.
His words were eternal, and they spoke to her clearly from beyond the grave,
from the fields of paradise, from the presence of the great Trinity, Osiris and
Isis and Horus, in whom he had believed so devoutly. As devoutly as she
believed in another more recent Trinity. She carried the scroll to the long table at which
Duraid, her husband, was already at work. He looked up as she laid it on the
table-top before him and for a moment she saw the same mystical mood in his
eyes that had affected her. He always wanted the scroll there on the table,
even when there was no real call for it. He had the photographs and the
microfilm to work with. It was as though he needed the unseen presence of the
ancient author close to him as he studied the texts. Then he threw off the mood and was the
dispassionate scientist once more. "Your eyes are better than mine, my
flower," he said. "What do you make of this letter?" She leaned over his shoulder and studied the
hieroglyph on the photograph of the scroll that he pointed out to her. She
puzzled over the character for a moment before she took the magnifying glass
from Duraid's hand, and peered through it again. "It looks as though Taita has thrown in
another cryptic of his own creation just to bedevil us." She spoke of the
ancient author as though he were a dear, but sometimes exasperating, friend who
still lived and breathed, and played tricks upon them. "We'll just have to puzzle it out, then,"
Duraid declared with obvious relish. He loved the ancient game. It was his
life's work. The two of them laboured on into the cool of the
night. This was when they did their best work. Sometimes they spoke Arabic and
sometimes English; for them the two languages were as one. Less often they used
French, which was their third common language. They had both received their
education at universities in England and the United States, so far from this
Very Egypt of theirs. Royan loved the expression "This Very Egypt"
that Taita used so often in the scrolls. She felt a peculiar affinity with this ancient
Egyptian in so many ways. After all she was his direct descendant. She was a
Coptic Christian, not of the Arab line that had so recently conquered Egypt,
less than two thousand years ago. The Arabs were newcomers in this Very Egypt
of hers; while her own blood line ran back to the dawn of sanguine man, to the
time of the pharaohs and the great pyramids. At ten o'clock Royan made coffee for them, heating
it on the charcoal stove that Alia had left for them before she went off to her
own family in the village. They drank the sweet strong brew from thin cups that
were half filled with the heavy grounds. While they sipped they talked as old
friends. For Royan that was their relationship, old friends.
She had known Duraid ever since she had returned from England with her
doctorate in archaeology and won her job with the Department of Antiquities, of
which he was the director and professor. She had been his assistant when he had opened the
tomb in the Valley of the Nobles; the tomb of Queen Lostris of the Ramessidian
line of pharaohs, the tomb that dated from 1780 BC. She had shared his disappointment when they
discovered that the tomb had been robbed in ancient times and all its treasures
plundered. All that remained were the marvellous murals that covered the walls
and the ceilings of the tomb. It was Royan herself who had been working at the
wall behind the plinth on which the sarcophagus had once stood, photographing
the murals, when a section of the plaster had fallen away to reveal in their
niche the ten alabaster jars. Each of the jars had contained a papyrus scroll.
Every one of them had been written and placed there by Taita, the slave of the
queen. Since then their lives, Duraid's and her own,
seemed to have revolved around those scraps of parchment. Although there was
some damage and deterioration, in the main they had survived three and a half
thousand years remarkably intact. What a fascinating story they contained of a nation
attacked by a superior enemy, armed with horse and chariot that were still alien
to the Egyptians of that time. Crushed by the Hyksos hordes, the people of the
Nile were forced to flee. Led by their queen, Lostris of the tomb, they
followed the great river southwards almost to its source amongst the brutal
mountains of the Ethiopian highlands. Here amongst those forbidding mountains, Lostris
had entombed the mummified body of her husband, the Pharaoh Mamose, who had
been slain in battle against the Hyksos. Long afterwards Queen Lostris had led her people
back northwards to this Very Egypt. Armed now with their own horses and
chariots, forged into hard warriors in the African wilderness they had come
storming back down the cataracts of the great river to challenge once more the
Hyksos invader, and in the end to triumph over him and wrest the double crown
of upper and lower Egypt from his grasp. It was a story that appealed to every fibre of her
being, and that had fascinated her as they had unravelled each hieroglyph that
the old slave had penned on the papyrus. It had taken them all these years, working at night
here in the villa of the oasis after all their daily routine work at the museum
in Cairo was done, but at last all of the ten scrolls had been deciphered, all
except the seventh scroll. This was the one that was the enigma, the one which
the author had cloaked in layers of esoteric shorthand and allusions so obscure
that they were unfathomable at this remove of time. Some of the symbols he used
they had never encountered before in all the thousands of texts that they had
studied in their combined lifetimes. It was obvious to them both that Taita had
not intended that the scrolls should be read and understood by any eyes other
than those of his beloved queen. These were his last gift for her to take with
her beyond the grave. It had taken all their combined skills, all their
imagination and ingenuity, but at last they were approaching the conclusion of
the task. There were still many gaps in the translation and many areas where
they were uncertain whether or not they had captured the true meaning, but they
had laid out the bones of the manuscript in such order that they were able to
discern the outline of the creature it represented. Now Duraid sipped his coffee and shook his head as
he had done so often before as he said, "It frightens me. The
responsibility. What to do with this knowledge we have gleaned? If it should
fall into the wrong hands." He sipped and sighed before he spoke again.
"Even if we take it to the right people, will they believe this story that
is three and a half thousand years old?" "Why must we bring in others?" Royan
asked with an edge of exasperation in her voice. "Why can we not do alone
what has to be done?" At times like these the differences between them
were most apparent. His was the caution of age, while hers was the impetuosity
of youth. "You do not understand," he said. It
always annoyed her when he said that; when he treated her as the Arabs treated
their women in a totally masculine world. She had known the other world where
women demanded and received the right to be treated as equals. She was a
creature caught between those worlds—the Western world and the Arab world. Duraid was still speaking and she had not been
listening to him. She gave him her full attention once more. "I have
spoken to the Minister again, but I do not think he believes in me. I think
that Nahoot has convinced him that I am a little mad." He smiled sadly.
Nahoot Guddabi was his ambitious and well-connected deputy. "At any rate
the minister says that there are no government funds available, and that I will
have to seek outside finance. So, I have been over the list of possible
sponsors again, and have narrowed it down to four. There is the Getty Museum,
of course—but I never like to work with a big impersonal institution. I prefer
to have a single man to answer to. Decisions are always easier to reach."
None of this was new to her, but she listened dutifully. "Then there is Herr Von Schiller. He has the
money and the interest in the subject, but I do not know him well enough to
trust him entirely." He paused, and Royan had listened to these musings so
often before that she could anticipate him. "What about the American? He is a famous
collector." She forestalled him. "Peter Walsh is a difficult man to work with.
His passion to accumulate makes him unscrupulous. He frightens me a
little." "So who does that leave?" she asked. He did not answer for they both knew the answer to
her question. Instead he turned his attention back to the material mat littered
the working table. "It looks so innocent, so mundane. An old
papyrus scroll, a few photographs and notebooks, a computer print-out. It is
difficult to believer how dangerous these might be in the wrong hands." He
sighed again. "You might almost say that they are deadly dangerous." Then he laughed. "I am being fanciful. Perhaps
it is the late hour. Shall we get back to work? We can worry about these other
matters once we have worked out all the conundrums set for us by this old
rogue, Taita, and completed the translation." He picked up the top photograph from the pile in
front of him. It was an extract from the central section of the scroll.
"It is the worst luck that the damaged piece of papyrus falls where it
does." He picked up his reading glasses and placed them on his nose before
he read aloud. "There are many steps to ascend on the
staircase to the abode of Hapi. With much hardship and endeavour we reached the
second step and proceeded no further, for it was here that the prince received
a divine revelation. In a dream his father, the dead God Pharaoh visited him
and commanded him, 'I have travelled far and I am grown weary. It is here that
I will rest for all eternity.' " Duraid removed his glasses and looked across at
Royan. "The second step. It is a very precise description for once. Taita
is not being his usual devious self." "Let's go back to the satellite
photographs," Royan suggested, and drew the glossy sheets toward her.
Duraid came around the table to stand behind her. "To me it seems most logical that the natural
feature that would obstruct them in the gorge would be something like a set of
rapids or a waterfall. If it were the second waterfall that would put them
here—" Royan placed her finger on a spot on the satellite photograph where
the narrow snake of the river threaded itself through the dark massifs of the
mountains on either hand. At that moment she was distracted and she lifted
her head. "Listen!" Her voice changed, sharpening with alarm. "What is it?" Duraid looked up also. "The dog." She answered. "That damn mongrel." He agreed.
"It's always making the night hideous with its yapping. I have promised
myself to get rid of it." At that moment the lights went out. They froze with surprise in the darkness. The soft
thudding of the decrepit diesel generator in its shed at the back of the palm
grove had ceased. It was so much a part of the oasis night that they noticed it
only when it was silent. Their eyes adjusted to the faint starlight that
came in through the terrace doors. Duraid crossed the room and took the oil
lamp down from the shelf beside the door where it waited for just such a
contingency. He lit it, and looked across at Royan with an expression of
comical resignation. "I will have to go down—" "Duraid." She interrupted him. "The
dog!" He listened for a moment, and his expression
changed to mild concern. The dog was silent out there in the night. "I am sure it is nothing to be alarmed
about." He went to the door, and for no good reason she suddenly called
after him. "Duraid, be careful!" He shrugged
dismissively and stepped out onto the terrace. She thought for an instant that it was the shadow
of the vine over the trellis moving in the night breeze off the desert, but the
night was still. Then she realized that it was a human figure crossing the
flagstones silently and swiftly,coming in behind Duraid as he skirted the fish
pond in the centre of the paved terrace. "Duraid!" She screamed a warning, and he
spun around, lifting the lamp high. "Who are you?" he shouted. "What do
you want here?" The intruder closed with him silently. The
traditional full length dishdaasha robe swirled around his legs, and the white
ghutrah head cloth covered his head. In the light of the lamp Duraid saw that
he had drawn the corner of the head cloth over his face to mask his features. The intruder's back was turned towards her so Royan
did not see the knife in his right hand, but she could not mistake the upward
stabbing motion that he aimed at Duraid's stomach. Duraid grunted with pain and
doubled up at the blow, and his attacker drew the blade free and stabbed again,
but this time Duraid dropped the lamp and seized the knife arm. The flame of the fallen oil lamp was guttering and
flaring. The two men struggled in the gloom, but Royan saw a dark stain
spreading over her husband's white shirt front. "Run!" He bellowed at her. "Go!
fetch help! I cannot hold him—" The Duraid she knew was a gentle person, a
soft man of books and learning. She could see that he was outmatched by his
assailant. The pain roused Duraid. It had to be that intense
to bring him back from that far place on the very edge of life to which he had
drifted. He groaned. The first thing he was aware of as he
regained consciousness was the smell of his own flesh burning, and then the
agony struck him with full force. A violent tremor shook his whole body and he
opened his eyes and looked down at himself. His clothing was blackening and smouldering, and
the pain was as nothing he had ever experienced in his entire life. He realized
in a vague way that the room was on fire all around him. Smoke and waves of
heat washed over him so that he could barely make out the shape of the doorway
through them. The pain was so terrible that he wanted it to end.
He wanted to die then and not to have to endure it further. Then he remembered
Royan. He tried to say her name through his scorched and blackened lips but no
sound came. Only the thought of her gave him the strength to
move. He rolled over once and the heat attacked his back that up until that
moment had been shielded. He groaned aloud and rolled again, just a little
nearer to the doorway. Each movement was a mighty effort and evoked fresh
paroxysms of agony, but when he rolled onto his back again he realized that a
gale of fresh air was being sucked through the open doorway to feed the flames.
A lungful of the sweet desert air revived him and gave him just sufficient
strength to lunge down the step onto the cool stones of the terrace. His
clothes and his body were still on fire. He beat feebly at his chest to try to
extinguish them but his hands were black burning claws. Then he remembered the fish pond. The thought of
plunging his tortured body into that cold water spurred him to one last effort
and he wriggled and wormed his way across the flags like a snake with a crushed
spine. The pungent smoke from his still cremating flesh
choked him and he coughed weakly, but kept doggedly on. He left slabs of his
own grilled skin on the stone coping as he rolled across it and flopped into
the pond. There was a hiss of steam and a pale cloud of it obscured his vision
so that for a moment he thought he was blinded. The agony of cold water on his
raw burned flesh was so intense that he slid back over the edge of
consciousness. When he came back to reality through the dark
clouds he raised his dripping head, and he saw a figure staggering up the steps
at the far end of the terrace, coming up out of the garden. For a moment he thought it was a phantom of his
agony, but when the light of the burning villa fell full upon her, he
recognized Royan. Her wet hair hung in tangled disarray over her face, and her
clothing was torn and running with lake water and stained with mud and green
algae. Her right arm was wrapped in muddy rags and her blood oozed through,
diluted pink by the dirty water. She did not see him. She stopped in the centre of
the terrace and stared in horror into the burning room. It was like looking
into the depths of a furnace, and she believed Duraid must still be in there.
She started forward but the heat was like a solid wall and it stopped her dead.
At that moment the roof collapsed, sending a roaring column of sparks and
flames high into the night sky. She backed away from it, shielding her face
with an upraised arm. Duraid tried to call to her but no sound issued
from his smoke-scorched throat. Royan turned away and started down the steps.
He realized that she must be going to call help. Duraid made a supreme effort
and a crow-like croak came out between his black and blistered lips. Royan spun around and stared at him, and then she
screamed. His head was not human. His hair was gone, frizzled away, and his
skin hung in tatters from his cheeks and chin. Patches of raw meat showed
through the black crusted mask. She backed away from him as though he were some
hideous monster. "Royan." He croaked and his voice was
just recognizable. He lifted one hand towards her in appeal and she ran to the
pond and seized the outstretched hand. "In the name of the Virgin, what have they
done to you?" She sobbed, but when she tried to pull him from the pond the
skin of his hand came away in hers in a single piece, like some horrible
surgical rubber glove, leaving the bleeding claw naked and raw. Royan fell on her knees beside the coping and
leaned over the pond to take him in her arms. She knew that she did not have
the strength to lift him out without doing him further dreadful injury. All she
could do was hold him and try to comfort him. She realized that he was dying;
no man could survive such fearsome injury. "They will come soon to help us," she
whispered to him in Arabic. "Someone must see the flames. Be brave, my
husband, help will come very soon." He was twitching and convulsing in her arm,
tortured by his mortal injuries and racked by the effort to speak. "The scroll?" His voice was barely
intelligible. Royan looked up at the holocaust that enveloped their home, and
she shook her head. "It's gone," she said. "Burned or
stolen." "Don't give it up." He mumbled, "All
our work—" "It's gone," she repeated. "No one will
believe us without—" " No." His voice was faint but fierce.''
For me, my last—'' "Don't say that." She pleaded, "You will be
all right." "Promise." He demanded, "Promise me!"
"We have no sponsor. I am alone. I cannot dp it alone."
"Harper!" he said. Royan leaned closer so that her ear touched his
fire-ravaged lips. "I don't understand." She told him.
"Harper." He repeated, "Strong—hard—clever man—" and she
understood then. Harper was the fourth and last name on the list of sponsors
that he had drawn up. Although he was the last on the list, somehow she had
always known that Duraid's order of preference was inverted. Nicholas
Quenton-Harper was his first choice. He had spoken so often of this man with
respect and warmth, and sometimes even with awe. "But what do I tell him? He does not know me.
How will I convince him? The seventh Scroll is gone—" "Trust him." He whispered, "Good
man. Trust him—" There was a terrible appeal in his, "Promise
me!" Then she remembered the notebook in the Giza flat,
and the Taita material on the hard drive of her P.C. Not everything was gone.
"Yes," she agreed, "I promise you, My Husband, I promise
you." THE SEVENTH SCROLL BY WILBUR SMITH— A MAY HARDCOVER FROM ST. MARTIN'S PRESS! WILBUR SMITH has written twenty-four novels,
meticulously researched during his numerous world-wide expeditions. His books are now
published in twenty-seven countries and have sold more than 65 million copies. |
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