Elizabeth Peters
THE
SNAKE, THE CROCODILE AND THE DOG
Copyright © 1992 by Elizabeth Peters
ISBN 0-446-51585-X
Editor's Note 1 2
3 4
5 6
7
8 9
10 11
12 13
14 15
16 Glossary
For
Olivia Grace Brown Mertz
January 18, 1992
with love from Ammie
EDITOR'S
NOTE
A brief explanation of Arabic and ancient Egyptian terms may be in
order for the benefit of readers unfamiliar with those languages. Like
certain other Semitic scripts, Arabic and hieroglyphic Egyptian do not
write the vowels. It is for this reason that English spellings of such
words may legitimately vary. For example: the hieroglyphic writing of
the name of the little servant figurines consists of five signs: sh,
wa, b, t, and i or y. (Some of these may look like vowels, but they
aren't. Take the editor's word for it, will you please? You really
don't want to hear about semi-vowels and weak consonants.) This word
may be transcribed into English as "ushebti," "shawabti," or "shabti."
NOTE: A glossary of Arabic words and phrases can be found on page 339.
Arabic personal and place names are subject to similar variations when
written in English script. Fashions in these things change, the
spellings common in Mrs. Emerson's early days in Egypt have sometimes
been replaced by other, more modern versions. (Dahshoor with Dashur,
Meidum with Medum, and so on.) Like most of us, Mrs. Emerson tends to
cling doggedly to the habits of her youth. In some cases she has
modernized her spellings, in other cases she has not. Since this does
not bother her, the editor sees no reason why it should bother the
reader and feels that a sterile consistency in these matters might mar
to some extent the dashing spontaneity of Mrs. Emerson's prose.
(The editor also wishes to remark that she is not the individual
referred to in Chapter One. She has absolutely nothing against poetry.)
The quotations at the head of each chapter are from The Collected Works
of Amelia Peabody Emerson, Oxford University Press, 8th ed.,
1990.
"Some
concessions to temperament are necessary if the marital state is to
flourish."
I believe I may truthfully claim that I have never been daunted by
danger or drudgery. Of the two I much prefer the former. As the only
unmarried offspring of my widowed and extremely absentminded father, I
was held responsible for the management of the household— which, as
every woman knows, is the most difficult, unappreciated, and lowest
paid (i.e., not paid) of all occupations. Thanks to the above mentioned
absentmindedness of my paternal parent I managed to avoid boredom by
pursuing such unwomanly studies as history and languages, for Papa
never minded what I did so long as his meals were on time, his clothing
was clean and pressed, and he was not disturbed by anyone for any
reason whatever. At least I thought I was not bored. The truth is, I
had nothing with which to compare that life, and no hope of a better
one. In those declining years of the nineteenth century, marriage was
not an alternative that appealed to me; it would have been to exchange
comfortable serfdom for absolute slavery— or so I believed. (And I am
still of that opinion as regards the majority of women.) My case was to
be the exception that proves the rule, and had I but known what
unimagined and unimaginable delights awaited me, the bonds that chafed
me would have been unendurable. Those bonds were not broken until the
death of my poor papa left me the possessor of a modest fortune and I
set out to see the ancient sites I knew only from books and
photographs. In the antique land of Egypt I learned at last what I had
been missing— adventure, excitement, danger, a life's work that
employed all my considerable intellectual powers, and the companionship
of that remarkable man who was destined for me as I was for him.
What mad pursuits! What struggles to escape! What wild ecstasy!
* * *
I am informed, by a certain person of the publishing persuasion, that I
have not set about this in the right way She maintains that if an
author wishes to capture the attention of her readers she must begin
with a scene of violence and/or passion.
"I mentioned— er— 'wild ecstasy,'" I said.
The person gave me a kindly smile. "Poetry, I believe? We do not allow
poetry, Mrs. Emerson It slows the narrative and confuses the Average
Reader." (This apocryphal individual is always referred to by persons
of the publishing persuasion with a blend of condescension and
superstitious awe, hence my capital letters.)
"What we want is blood," she continued, with mounting enthusiasm. "And
a lot of it! That should be
easy for you, Mrs. Emerson. I believe you have encountered a good many
murderers."
This was not the first time I had considered editing my journals for
eventual publication, but never before had I gone so far as to confer
with an editor, as these individuals are called. I was forced to
explain that if her views were characteristic of the publishing
industry today, that industry would have to muddle along without Amelia
P. Emerson. How I scorn the shoddy tricks of sensationalism which
characterize modern literary productions! To what a state has the noble
art of literature fallen in recent years! No longer is a reasoned,
leisurely exposition admired, instead the reader is to be bludgeoned
into attention by devices that appeal to the lowest and most degraded
of human instincts.
The publishing person went away shaking her head and mumbling about
murder. I was sorry to disappoint her, for she was a pleasant enough
individual— for an American. I trust that remark will not leave me open
to an accusation of chauvinism, Americans have many admirable
characteristics, but literary taste is rare among them. If I consider
this procedure again, I will consult a British publisher.
* * *
I suppose I might have pointed out to the naive publishing person that
there are worse things than murder. Dead bodies I have learned to take
in my stride, so to speak, but some of the worst moments of my life
occurred last winter when I crawled on all fours through indescribable
refuse toward the place where I hoped, and feared, to find the
individual dearer to me than life itself. He had been missing for
almost a week I could not believe any prison could hold a man of his
intelligence and strength so long unless . . . The hideous
possibilities were too painful to contemplate, mental anguish
overwhelmed the physical pain of bruised knees and scratched palms, and
rendered inconsequential the fear of enemies on every hand. Already the
swollen orb of day hung low in the west. The shadows of the coarse
weeds stretched gray across the grass, touching the walls of the
structure that was our goal. It was a small low building of stained
mud-brick that seemed to squat sullenly in its patch of refuse-strewn
dirt. The two walls visible
to me had neither windows nor doors. A sadistic owner might keep a dog
in such a kennel . . .
Swallowing hard, I turned to my faithful reis Abdullah, who was close
at my heels. He shook his head warningly and placed a finger on his
lips. A gesture conveyed his message: the roof was our goal. He
gave me a hand up and then followed.
A crumbling parapet shielded us from sight, and Abdullah let out his
breath in a gasp. He was an old man, the strain of suspense and effort
had taken their toll. I had no sympathy to give him then, nor would he
have wanted it. Scarcely pausing, he crawled toward the middle of the
roof, where there was an opening little more than a foot square. A
grille of rusted metal covered it, resting on a ledge or lip just below
the surface of the roof. The bars were thick and close together.
Were the long days of suspense at an end? Was he within? Those final
seconds before I reached the aperture seemed to stretch on
interminably. But they were not the worst. That was yet to come.
The only other light in the foul den below came from a slit over the
door. In the gloom of the opposite corner I saw a motionless form. I
knew that form, I would have recognized it in darkest night, though I
could not make out his features. My senses swam. Then a shaft of dying
sunlight struck through the narrow opening and fell upon him. It was
he! My prayers had been answered! But— oh, Heaven— had we come too
late? Stiff and unmoving, he lay stretched out upon the filthy cot. The
features might have been those of a waxen death mask, yellow and rigid.
My straining eyes sought some sign of life, of breath . . . and found
none.
But that was not the worst It was yet to come.
Yes, indeed, if I were to resort to contemptible devices of the sort
the young person suggested, I could
a tale unfold ... I refuse to insult the intelligence of my (as yet)
hypothetical reader by doing so, however. I now resume my ordered
narrative.
* * *
As I was saying: "What mad pursuits! What struggles to escape! What
wild ecstasy!" Keats was speaking in quite another context, of course.
However, I have been often pursued (sometimes madly) and struggled
(successfully) to escape on more than one occasion. The last phrase is
also appropriate, though I would not have put it quite that way myself.
Pursuits, struggles and the other sentiment referred to began in Egypt,
where I encountered for the first time the ancient civilization that
was to inspire my life's work, and the remarkable man who was to share
it. Egyptology and Radcliffe Emerson! The two are inseparable, not only
in my heart but in the estimation of the scholarly world It may be
said— in fact, I have often said it— that Emerson is Egyptology, the
finest scholar of this or any other era. At the time of which I write
we stood on the threshold of a new century, and I did not doubt that
Emerson would dominate the twentieth as he had the nineteenth. When
I add that Emerson's physical attributes include sapphire-blue eyes,
thick raven locks, and a form that is the epitome of manly strength and
grace, I believe the sensitive reader will understand why our union had
proved so thoroughly satisfactory.
Emerson dislikes his first name, for reasons which I have never
entirely understood. I have never inquired into them because I myself
prefer to address him by the appellation that indicates comradeship and
equality, and that recalls fond memories of the days of our earliest
acquaintance. Emerson also dislikes titles, his reasons for this
prejudice stem from his radical social views, for he judges a man (and
a woman, I hardly need add) by ability rather than worldly position.
Unlike most archaeologists he refuses to respond to the fawning titles
used by the fellahin toward foreigners, his admiring Egyptian workmen
had honored him with the appellation of "Father of Curses," and I must
say no man deserved it more.
My union with this admirable individual had resulted in a life
particularly suited to my tastes. Emerson accepted me as a full partner
professionally as well as matrimonially, and we spent the winter
seasons excavating at various sites in Egypt. I may add that I was the
only woman engaged in that activity— a
sad commentary on the restricted condition of females in the
late-nineteenth century of our era— and
that I could never have done it without the wholehearted cooperation of
my remarkable spouse. Emerson did not so much insist upon my
participation as take it for granted. (I took it for granted too, which
may have contributed to Emerson's attitude.)
For some reason I have never been able to explain, our excavations were
often interrupted by activities
of a criminous nature. Murderers, animated mummies, and Master
Criminals had interfered with us, we seemed to attract tomb-robbers and
homicidally inclined individuals. All in all it had been a delightful
existence, marred by only one minor flaw. That flaw was our son, Walter
Peabody Emerson, known
to friends and foes alike by his sobriquet of "Ramses."
All young boys are savages, this is an admitted fact. Ramses, whose
nickname derived from a pharaoh as single-minded and arrogant as
himself, had all the failings of his gender and age: an incredible
attraction to dirt and dead, smelly objects, a superb disregard for his
own survival, and utter contempt for the rules of civilized behavior.
Certain characteristics unique to Ramses made him even more difficult
to deal with. His intelligence was (not surprisingly) of a high order,
but it exhibited itself in rather disconcerting ways. His Arabic was of
appalling fluency (how he kept coming up with words like those I cannot
imagine, he certainly never heard them from me), his knowledge of
hieroglyphic Egyptian was as great as that of many adult scholars, and
he had an almost uncanny ability to communicate with animals of all
species (except the human). He . . . But to describe the eccentricities
of Ramses would tax even my literary skill.
In the year preceding the present narrative, Ramses had shown signs of
improvement. He no longer rushed headlong into danger, and his
atrocious loquacity had diminished somewhat. A certain resemblance
to his handsome sire was beginning to emerge, though his coloring more
resembled that of an ancient Egyptian than a young English lad. (I
cannot account for this any more than I can account for our constant
encounters with the criminal element. Some things are beyond the
comprehension of our limited senses, and probably that is just as
well.) A recent development had had a profound though as yet
undetermined effect on my son. Our latest and perhaps most remarkable
adventure had occurred the previous winter, when an appeal for help
from an old friend of Emerson's had led us into the western deserts of
Nubia to a remote oasis where the dying remnants of the ancient
Meroitic civilization yet lingered. We encountered the usual
catastrophes— near death by thirst after the demise of our last
camel, attempted kidnapping and violent assaults— nothing out of the
ordinary, and when we reached
our destination we found that those whom we had come to save were no
more. The unfortunate couple had left a child, however— a young girl
whom, with the aid of her chivalrous and princely foster brother, we
were able to save from the hideous fate that threatened her. Her
deceased father had called her "Nefret," most appropriately, for the
ancient Egyptian word means "beautiful." The first sight of her struck
Ramses dumb— a condition I never expected to see— and he had remained
in that condition ever since I could only regard this with the direst
of forebodings. Ramses was ten years old, Nefret was thirteen, but the
difference in their ages would be inconsequential when they reached
adulthood, and I knew my son too well to dismiss his sentiments as
juvenile romanticism. His emotions were intense, his character (to put
it mildly) determined. Once he got an idea into his head, it was fixed
in cement. He had been raised among Egyptians, who mature earlier,
physically and emotionally, than the cold English,
some of his friends had fathered children by the time they reached
their teens. Add to this the dramatic circumstances under which he
first set eyes on the girl . . .
We had not even known such an individual existed until we entered the
barren, lamplit chamber where she awaited us. To see her there in all
her radiant youth, with her red-gold hair streaming down over her filmy
white robes, to behold the brave smile that defied the dangers that
surrounded her . . . Well. Even
I had been deeply affected.
We had brought the girl back to England with us and taken her into our
home. This was Emerson's idea.
I must admit we had very little choice, her grandfather, her only
surviving relative, was a man so steeped in vice as to be an unfit
guardian for a cat, much less an innocent young girl. How Emerson
persuaded Lord Blacktower to relinquish her I did not inquire. I doubt
that "persuaded" is an appropriate word. Blacktower was dying (indeed,
he completed the process a few months later), or even Emerson's
considerable powers of eloquence might not have prevailed. Nefret clung
to us— figuratively speaking,
for she was not a demonstrative child— as the only familiar objects in
a world as alien to her as Martian society (assuming such exists) would
be to me. All she knew of the modern world she had learned from us and
from her father's books, and in that world she was not High Priestess
of Isis, the incarnation of
the goddess, but something less— not even a woman, which Heaven knows
was low enough, but a girl-child, a little higher than a pet and
considerably lower than a male of any age. As Emerson did not need to
point out (though he did so in wearying detail), we were peculiarly
equipped to deal with a young person raised in such extraordinary
circumstances
Emerson is a remarkable man, but he is a man. I need say no more, I
believe Having made his decision and persuaded me to accept it, he
admitted to no forebodings. Emerson never admits to having forebodings,
and he becomes incensed when I mention mine. In this case I had a good
number of them.
One subject of considerable concern was how we were to explain where
Nefret had been for the past thirteen years. At least it concerned me.
Emerson tried to dismiss the subject as he does other difficulties "Why
should we explain anything? If anyone has the impertinence to ask, tell
them to go to the devil."
Fortunately Emerson is more sensible than he often sounds, and even
before we left Egypt he was forced to admit that we had to concoct a
story of some kind Our reappearance out of the desert with a young
girl of obviously English parentage would have attracted the curiosity
of the dullest, her real identity had to be admitted if she was to
claim her rightful position as heiress to her grandfather's fortune.
The story contained all the features journalists dote on— youthful
beauty, mystery, aristocracy, and great amounts of money— and, as I
pointed out to Emerson, our own activities had not infrequently
attracted the attentions of the jackals of the press, as he was pleased
to call them.
I prefer to tell the truth whenever possible. Not only is honesty
enjoined upon us by the superior moral code of our society, but it is
much easier to stick to the facts than remain consistent in falsehood.
In this case the truth was not possible. Upon leaving the Lost Oasis
(or the City of the Holy Mountain,
as its citizens called it), we had sworn to keep not only its location
but its very existence a secret. The people of that dying civilization
were few in number and unacquainted with firearms, they would have been
easy prey for adventurers and treasure hunters, not to mention
unscrupulous archaeologists. There was also the less imperative but
nonetheless important question of Nefret's reputation to be considered.
If it were known that she had been reared among so-called primitive
peoples, where she had been the high priestess of a pagan goddess, the
rude speculation and unseemly jests such ideas inspire in the ignorant
would have made her life unbearable. No, the true facts could not be
made public. It was necessary to invent a convincing lie, and when
forced to depart from my usual standards of candor, I can invent as
good a lie as anyone.
Luckily the historical events then ensuing provided us with a
reasonable rationale. The Mahdist rebellion in the Sudan, which began
in 1881 and had kept that unhappy country in a state of turmoil for
over a decade, was ending Egyptian troops (led, of course, by British
officers) had reconquered most of the lost territory, and some persons
who had been given up for lost had miraculously reappeared The escape
of Slatin Pasha, formerly Slatin Bey, was perhaps the most astonishing
example of well-nigh miraculous survival, but there were others,
including that of Father Ohrwalder and two of the nuns of his mission,
who had endured seven years of slavery and torture before making good
their escape.
It was this last case that gave me the idea of inventing a family of
kindly missionaries as foster parents
for Nefret, both of whose real parents (I explained) had perished of
disease and hardship shortly after their arrival. Protected by their
loyal converts, the kindly religious persons had escaped the ravages of
the dervishes but had not dared leave the security of their remote and
humble village while the country was so disturbed.
Emerson remarked that in his experience loyal converts were usually the
first to pop their spiritual leaders into the cook pot, but I thought
it a most convincing fabrication and so, to judge by the results, did
the press. I had stuck to the truth whenever I could— a paramount rule
when one concocts a fictional fabrication— and there was no need to
falsify the details of the desert journey itself. Stranded in the
empty waste, abandoned by our servants, our camels dead or dying ... It
was a dramatic story, and, I believe, distracted the press to such an
extent that they did not question other more important details. I threw
in a sandstorm and an attack by wandering Bedouin for good measure.
The one journalist I feared most we managed to elude. Kevin O'Connell,
the brash young star reporter
of the Daily Yell, was on his way to the Sudan even as we left it, for
the campaign was proceeding apace and the recapture of Khartoum was
expected at any time. I was fond of Kevin (Emerson was not), but when
his journalistic instincts were in the ascendancy I would not have
trusted him any farther than I could have thrown him.
So that was all right. The biggest difficulty was Nefret herself.
I would be the first to admit that I am not a maternal woman. I venture
to remark, however, that the Divine Mother herself might have found her
maternal instincts weakened by prolonged exposure to my son. Ten years
of Ramses had convinced me that my inability to have more children was
not, as I had first viewed it, a sad disappointment, but rather a
kindly disposition of all-knowing Providence. One Ramses was enough Two
or more would have finished me.
(I understand that there has been a certain amount of impertinent
speculation regarding the fact that Ramses is an only child. I will
only say that his birth resulted in certain complications which I will
not describe in detail, since they are no one's business but my own.)
Now I found myself with another child on my hands, not a malleable
infant but a girl on the threshold
of womanhood, and one whose background was even more unusual than that
of my catastrophically precocious son. What on earth was I to do with
her? How could I teach her the social graces, and complete the enormous
gaps in her education that would be necessary if she was to find
happiness in
her new life?
Most women, I daresay, would have sent her off to school. But I hope I
know my duty when it is forced upon me. It would have been cruelty of
the most exquisite variety to consign Nefret to the narrow female world
of a boarding school. I was better equipped to deal with her than any
teacher, because I understood the world from which she had come and
because I shared her contempt for the absurd standards the so-called
civilized world imposes on the female sex. And ... I rather liked the
girl.
If I were not an honest woman, I would say I loved her. No doubt that
is how I ought to have felt. She had qualities any woman would wish in
a daughter— sweetness of character, intelligence, honesty, and, of
course, extraordinary beauty. This quality, which many in society would
rank first, does not count so high with me, but I appreciated it.
Hers was the style of looks I had always envied. It is so unlike my
own. My hair is black and coarse. Hers flowed like a river of gold. Her
skin was creamy fair, her eyes cornflower-blue. Mine . . . are not. Her
slim little figure would probably never develop the protuberances that
mark my own. Emerson had always insisted these characteristics of mine
pleased him, but I noted how appreciatively his eyes followed Nefret's
dainty form.
We had returned to England in April and settled down at Amarna House,
our home in Kent, as usual.
Not quite as usual, though, normally we would have set to work
immediately on our annual excavation reports, for Emerson prided
himself on publishing them as soon as possible. This year we would have
less to write about than usual, for our expedition into the desert had
occupied most of the winter season. However, after our return to Nubia
we had put in several productive weeks in the pyramid fields of Napata.
(In which activity, I must add, Nefret had been a great help. She
showed a considerable
aptitude for archaeology.)
I was unable to assist Emerson as I usually did. I am sure I need not
explain why I was distracted. This placed a considerable burden on
Emerson, but for once he did not complain, waving aside my apologies
with (ominous) good nature. "It is quite all right, Peabody, the
child's needs come first. Let me know if there is anything I can do to
help." This uncharacteristic affability, and the use of my maiden name—
which Emerson employs when he is feeling particularly affectionate or
when he wishes to persuade me into some course of action to which I am
opposed— aroused the direst of suspicions.
"There is nothing you can do," I retorted. "What do men know of women's
affairs?"
"Hmmm," said Emerson, retreating in haste to the library. I confess
that I enjoyed fitting the girl out with a proper wardrobe. When we
arrived in London she had hardly a stitch of clothing to her name,
except for the brightly colored robes worn by Nubian women, and a few
cheap ready-made garments I had purchased for her in Cairo. An interest
in fashion, I believe, is not incompatible with intellectual ability
equaling or exceeding that of any man, so I wallowed (the word, I
hardly need say, is Emerson's) in tucked nightgowns and lace-trimmed
petticoats, frilly unmentionables and ruffled blouses, in gloves and
hats and pocket handkerchiefs, bathing costumes and cycling bloomers,
wrappers and buttoned boots,
and a rainbow assortment of satin sashes with matching ribbons.
I indulged in a few purchases for myself, since a winter in Egypt
always has a deplorable effect on my wardrobe. The styles in vogue that
year were less ridiculous than in the past, bustles were gone, the
balloon sleeves of the past had shrunk to a reasonable size, and skirts
were soft and trailing instead of bunched up over layers of petticoats.
They were particularly suited to persons who did not require
"artificial additions" to assist in delineating certain areas of the
body.
At least I thought the styles were less ridiculous until I heard
Nefret's comments on them. The very idea of a bathing costume struck
her as hilarious. "What is the point of putting on clothes that will
get soaking wet?" she inquired (with some reason, I had to admit). "Do
women here wear washing costumes when they take a bath?" As for her
remarks on the subject of underdrawers . . . Fortunately she did not
address them to the clerk, or to Emerson and Ramses. (At least I hope
she did not. Emerson is easily embarrassed by such matters— and Ramses
is never embarrassed by anything.)
She fit into our household better than I had expected, for all our
servants have become more or less accustomed to eccentric visitors.
(Either they become accustomed or they leave our service, usually at
their own request.) Gargery, our butler, succumbed at once to her
charm, he followed her as devotedly as did Ramses, and never
tired of hearing the (revised) story of how we had found her. Gargery
is, I am sorry to say, a romantic person. (Romanticism is not a quality
I despise, but it is inconvenient in a butler.) His fists would clench
and his eyes would flash as he declared (forgetting diction in his
enthusiasm),"
'Ow I wish I could 'ave been with you, madam! I'd 'ave thrashed those
treacherous servants and fought those beastly Bedouins! I'd 'ave—"
"I am sure you would have been a great help, Gargery," I replied.
"Another time, perhaps."
(Little did I know when that careless comment passed my lips that it
was in the nature of prophecy!)
The only member of the household who did not fall victim to Nefret was
dear Rose, our devoted housemaid. In Rose's case it was jealousy, pure
and simple. She had helped raise Ramses and had a wholly unaccountable
affection for him— an affection that was, or had been, reciprocated.
Now
Ramses's offerings of flowers and interesting scientific specimens
(weeds, bones, and mummified mice) were bestowed upon another. Rose
felt it, I could see she did. I found Rose a great comfort whenever
the combined adulation of the male members of the household got too
much for me.
The cat Bastet was no comfort, though she was female. She had been
somewhat slow to discover the attractions of the opposite sex, but she
had made up for her delay with such enthusiasm that the place
was overrun with her progeny. Her latest litter had been born in April,
just before our arrival, and Nefret spent some of her happiest hours
playing with the kittens. One of her responsibilities as High Priestess
of Isis had been the care of the sacred cats, perhaps this explained
not only her fondness for felines but her almost uncanny powers of
communication with them. The way to get on with a cat is to treat it as
an equal— or even better, as the superior it knows itself to be.
The only persons who knew Nefret's true story were Emerson's younger
brother Walter and his wife,
my dear friend Evelyn. It would have been impossible to conceal the
truth from them even if we had not had complete confidence in their
discretion, and indeed I counted on Evelyn to advise me in the proper
care and rearing of a young female. She had had considerable
experience, being the mother of six children, three of them girls, and
she had the kindest heart in the world. I well remember one beautiful
day in June, when we four adults sat on the terrace at Amarna House
watching the children at play upon the lawn. The great Constable might
have captured the idyllic beauty of the landscape— blue skies and
fleecy white clouds, emerald grass and stately trees— but the talents
of quite another sort of painter would have been necessary to limn the
laughing children who adorned the scene like living flowers. Sunlight
turned their tossing curls to bright gold and lay caressingly on limbs
pink and plump with health. My namesake, little Amelia, followed the
toddling steps of her year-old sister with motherly care, Raddie, the
eldest of Evelyn's brood, whose features were a youthful version of his
father's gentle countenance, attempted to restrain the exuberance of
the twins, who were tossing a ball back and forth. The image of
innocent youth blessed with health, fortune, and tender love was one I
will long cherish.
Yet I fancy mine were the only eyes fixed upon the charming figures of
my nieces and nephews. Even their mother, whose youngest child lay
sleeping on her breast, looked elsewhere.
Nefret sat apart, under one of the great oaks. Her legs were crossed
and her bare feet peeped out from under the hem of her dress— one of
the
native Nubian garments in which I had clothed her, for want of anything
better, while we worked at Napata. The background color was a strident
parrot-green, with great splashes of color— scarlet, mustard-yellow;
turquoise-blue. A braid of red-gold hair hung over one shoulder, and
she was teasing the kitten in her lap with the end of it. Ramses,
her inevitable shadow, squatted nearby. From time to time Nefret looked
up, smiling as she watched the children's play, but Ramses's steady
dark eyes never left her face.
Walter put his cup down and reached for the notebook he had refused to
relinquish even upon this social occasion. Thumbing through it, he
remarked, "I believe I see now how the function of the infinitival form
has developed. I would like to ask Nefret— "
"Leave the child alone." It was Evelyn who interrupted her husband, her
tone so sharp I turned to look
at her in amazement. Evelyn never spoke
sharply to anyone, much less to her husband, on whom she doted with (in
my opinion) uncritical adoration.
Walter glanced at her in hurt surprise. "My dear, I only want— "
"We know what you want," Emerson said with a laugh. "To be known and
honored as the man who deciphered ancient Meroitic. Encountering a
living speaker of that supposedly dead language is enough
to turn the
brain of any scholar."
"She is a human Rosetta Stone," Walter murmured. "Certainly the
language has changed almost beyond recognition over a thousand years,
but to a trained scholar the clues she can offer— "
"She is not a stone," Evelyn said. "She is a young girl."
A second interruption! It was unheard of. Emerson stared at Evelyn in
surprise and some admiration, he had always considered her deplorably
mild-tempered. Walter gulped, and then said meekly, "You are quite
right, my dear Evelyn. Not for the world would I ever do anything to— "
"Then go away," said his wife. "Go to the library, both of you, and
immerse yourselves in dead languages and dusty books. That is all you
care about, you men!"
"Come along, Walter." Emerson rose. "We are in disgrace and may as well
spare ourselves the trouble of self-defense. A woman convinced against
her will— "
I threw a muffin at him. He caught it neatly in midair, grinned, and
walked off, trailed unwillingly by Walter.
"I do beg your pardon, Amelia," Evelyn said. "If I have put Radcliffe
in a bad humor . . ."
"Nonsense, your criticism was much milder than the sort he is
accustomed to receive from me. As for being in a bad humor, have you
ever seen him more pleased with himself, more cursedly complacent, more
infuriatingly good-natured?"
"Most women would not find that a source of complaint," Evelyn said,
smiling.
"It is not the Emerson I know. Why, Evelyn, he has not used bad
language— not a single, solitary 'damnation!'— since we returned from
Egypt." Evelyn laughed,I went on in mounting indignation,
"The truth
is, he simply refuses to admit that we have a serious problem on our
hands."
"Or rather, under the oak tree." Evelyn's smile faded as she
contemplated the girl's graceful figure. The kitten had wandered off
and Nefret sat perfectly still, her hands in her lap, looking out
across the lawn. Sunlight sifting through the leaves struck sparks from
her hair, and the diffusion of light made her look
as if she were
enclosed in a golden shadow.
"She is as remote and beautiful as a young goddess," Evelyn said
softly, echoing my own thought.
"What is to become of such a girl?"
"She is willing and intelligent, she will adjust," I said firmly. "And
she seems happy enough. She has not complained."
"She has learned fortitude in a hard school, I fancy. But then, my dear
Amelia, she has little to complain of so far. You have— quite rightly,
in my opinion— kept her relatively sheltered from the outside world.
All
of us accept her and love her as she is. Sooner or later, however, she
must take her rightful place in the world that is hers by birth, and
that world is pitilessly intolerant of anything different"
"Do you suppose I am unaware of that?" I said, adding with a laugh,
"There are some individuals who actually consider ME eccentric. I pay
no attention to them, of course, but . . . well, I admit I have
wondered if I am the best possible mentor for Nefret."
"She could not do better than emulate you," Evelyn said warmly. "And
you know you can count on me
to help in any way I can."
"We shall get on all right, I expect," I said, my natural optimism
reasserting itself. "After all, I survived
ten years of Ramses. With
your help, and that of Walter . . . You were perhaps a little hard on
him, dearest Evelyn. The decipherment of ancient unknown languages is
not only his profession but his most passionate interest. Next to you,
of course— and the children . . ."
"I wonder." Evelyn looked like a Raphael Madonna, golden-haired and
sweet-faced, with the babe
cradled in her arms, but her voice held a
note I had never heard in it before. "How strangely the years change
us, Amelia ... I dreamed last night of Amarna."
It was the last thing I ever expected to hear her say, and it had the
oddest effect on me. An image flashed across my eyes, so vivid that it
replaced reality: a scene of baking desert sands and frowning cliffs,
as empty of life as a lunar landscape. I could almost feel the hot dry
air against my skin, I seemed to hear again the ghastly moaning cries
of the apparition that had threatened our lives and sanity. . . .
With an effort I shook off this seductive image. Unaware of my
distraction, Evelyn had gone on speaking. "Do you remember how he
looked that day, Amelia— the day he first declared his love? Pale and
handsome as a young god, holding my hands in his as he called me the
loveliest and most courageous
of women? No crumbling papyrus or Rosetta
Stone would have replaced me in his heart then. Danger, doubt, and
discomfort notwithstanding, those were wonderful days! I even find
myself thinking fondly
of that wretched man and his absurd mummy
costume."
I sighed deeply. Evelyn looked at me in surprise. "You too, Amelia?
What can you possibly regret? You have gained everything and lost
nothing. I can hardly pick up a newspaper without finding an account of
some new escapade— pardon me, adventure— of yours."
"Oh, adventures." I gestured dismissively. "It is only natural they
should occur. Emerson attracts them."
"Emerson?" Evelyn smiled.
"Only consider, Evelyn It was to Emerson Lord Blacktower appealed for
assistance in locating his missing son, Emerson who unmasked the
criminal in the case of the British Museum mummy. To whom else would
Lady Baskerville come when seeking a man to continue her husband's
excavations, but to Emerson, the most preeminent scholar of his time?"
"I never thought of it that way," Evelyn admitted. "You have a point,
Amelia. But you have only strengthened my argument. Your life is so
full of the excitement and adventure mine lacks—"
"True. But it is not the same, Evelyn. Dare I confess it? I believe I
do. Like you, I often dream of those long-gone days, when I was
all-in-all to Emerson, the only, the supreme object of his devotion."
"My dear Amelia— "
I sighed again. "He hardly ever calls me Amelia, Evelyn. How well, how
tenderly, I remember his snarl when he addressed me by that name. It is
always Peabody now— my dear Peabody, my darling
Peabody . . ."
"He called you Peabody at Amarna," Evelyn said.
"Yes, but in such a different tone! What began as a challenge has now
become a term of complacent,
lazy affection. He was so masterful then,
so romantic— "
"Romantic?" Evelyn repeated doubtfully.
"You have your fond memories, Evelyn, I have mine. How well I remember
the curl of his handsome lips when he said to me, 'You are no fool,
Peabody, if you are a woman', how his blue eyes blazed on that never
to be forgotten morning after I had nursed him through the crisis of
his fever, and he growled, 'Consider yourself thanked for saving my
life. Now go away.'" I fumbled for a handkerchief. "Oh, dear. Forgive
me, Evelyn. I had not meant to succumb to emotion."
In sympathetic silence she patted one hand, while I applied the
handkerchief to my eyes with the other. The mood was passing, a shriek
from Willie and an answering shriek from his twin brother betokened
one
of the rough-and-tumble encounters that characterized their
affectionate relationship. Raddie rushed to break up the fight and
staggered back, holding a hand to his nose. Simultaneously Evelyn and I
sighed.
"Never believe that I repine," she said gently. "I would not exchange
one curl on Willie's head for a
return to that life. I love my children
dearly. Only— only, dear Amelia— there are so many of them!"
"Yes," I said forlornly. "There are."
Ramses had moved closer to Nefret. The image was irresistible and
unnerving: the goddess and her high priest
And they would be with me, day and night, summer and winter, in Egypt
and in England, for years to come.
"One
may be determined to embrace martyrdom gracefully,
but a day of
reprieve is not to be sneezed at."
I believe in the efficacy of prayer.
As a Christian woman I am obliged to do so. As a rationalist as well as
a Christian (the two are not necessarily incompatible, whatever Emerson
may say), I do not believe that the Almighty takes a direct interest in
my personal affairs. He has too many other people to worry about, most
of them in far greater need of assistance than I.
Yet almost could I believe, on a certain afternoon a few months after
the conversation I have described, that a benevolent Being had
intervened to answer the prayer I had not dared frame even in my most
secret thoughts.
I stood, as I had done so many times before, at the rail of the
steamer, straining my eyes for the first glimpse of the Egyptian coast.
Once again Emerson was at my side, as eager as I to begin another
season of excavation. But for the first time in oh! so many years, we
were alone.
Alone! I do not count the crew or the other passengers. We were ALONE.
Ramses was not with us. Not risking life and limb trying to
climb onto the rail, not with the crew, inciting them to mutiny, not
in his cabin concocting dynamite. He was not on the boat, he was in
England, and we ... were not. I had never dreamed it would come to
pass. I had not ventured to hope, much less pray, for such bliss.
The workings of Providence are truly mysterious, for Nefret, whom I had
expected to be an additional source of distraction, was the one
responsible for this happy event.
* * *
For some days after the younger Emersons left us, I watched Nefret
closely and concluded that the forebodings I had felt that pleasant
June afternoon were no more than melancholy fancies. Evelyn had been in
a strange mood that day, her pessimism had infected me. Nefret seemed
to be getting on quite well. She had learned to manipulate a knife and
fork, a buttonhook and a toothbrush. She had even learned that one is
not supposed to carry on conversations with the servants at the dinner
table. (That
put her one step ahead of Emerson, who could not, or would
not, conform to this rule of accepted social behavior.) In her buttoned
boots and dainty white frocks, with her hair tied back with ribbons,
she looked like any pretty English schoolgirl. She hated the boots, but
she wore them, and at my request she folded away her bright Nubian
robes. She never breathed a word of complaint or disagreed with any of
my suggestions. I therefore concluded it was time to take the next
step. It was time to introduce Nefret into society. Of course the
introduction must be gradual and gentle. What better, gentler
companions, I reasoned, could there be than girls of her own age?
In retrospect, I would be the first to admit that this reasoning was
laughably in error. In my own defense, let me state that I had had very
little to do with girls of that age. I therefore consulted my friend
Miss Helen Mclntosh, the headmistress of a nearby girls' school.
Helen was a Scotswoman, bluff, bustling and brown, from her grizzled
hair to her practical tweeds.
When she accepted my invitation to tea
she made no secret of her curiosity about our new ward.
I took pains to ensure that Nefret would make a good impression,
warning her to avoid inadvertent slips of the tongue that might raise
doubts as to the history we had told. Perhaps I overdid it. Nefret sat
like a statue of propriety the whole time, eyes lowered, hands folded,
speaking only when she was spoken to. The dress I had asked her to wear
was eminently suitable to her age— white lawn, with ruffled cuffs and
a
wide sash. I had pinned up her braids and fastened them with big white
bows.
After I had excused her, Helen turned to me, eyebrows soaring. "My dear
Amelia," she said. "What have you done?"
"Only what Christian charity and common decency demanded," I said,
bristling. "What fault could you possibly find with her? She is
intelligent and anxious to please—"
"My dear, the bows and the ruffles don't do the job. You could dress
her in rags and she would still be
as exotic as a bird of paradise."
I could not deny it. I sat in— I confess— resentful silence while Helen
sipped her tea. Gradually the lines on her forehead smoothed out, and
finally she said thoughtfully, "At least there can be no question as to
the purity of her blood."
"Helen!" I exclaimed.
"Well, but such questions do arise with the offspring of men stationed
in remote areas of the empire. Mothers conveniently deceased, children
with liquid black eyes and sun-kissed cheeks . . . Now don't glower at
me, Amelia, I am not expressing my prejudices but those of society, and
as I said, there can
be no question of Nefret's . . . You must find
another name for her, you know. What about Natalie? It
is uncommon, but
unquestionably English."
Helen's remarks induced certain feelings of uneasiness, but once her
interest was engaged she entered
into the matter with such enthusiasm
that it was hard to differ with her. I am not a humble woman, but
in
this case I felt somewhat insecure. Helen was the expert on young
females, having asked her opinion
I did not feel in a position to
question her advice.
It should have been a lesson to me never to doubt my own judgment.
Since that time I have done so
only once— and that, as you will see,
almost ended in a worse catastrophe.
Nefret's first few meetings with Helen's carefully selected "young
ladies" seemed to go well. I thought them a remarkably silly lot, and
after the first encounter, when one of them responded to Emerson's
polite greeting with a fit of the giggles and another told him he was
much handsomer than any of her teachers, Emerson barricaded himself in
the library and refused to come out when they were there. He agreed,
however, that it was probably a good thing for Nefret to mingle with
her contemporaries. The
girl seemed not to mind them. I had not
expected she would actively enjoy herself at first. Society takes
a
great deal of getting used to.
At last Helen decided the time had come for Nefret to return the
visits, and issued a formal invitation for the girl to take tea with
her and the selected young "ladies" at the school. She did not invite
me. In fact, she flatly refused to allow me to come, adding, in her
bluff fashion, that she wanted Nefret to feel at
ease and behave
naturally. The implication that my presence prevented Nefret from
feeling at ease was
of course ridiculous, but I did not— then!— venture
to differ with such a well-known authority on
young ladies. I felt all
the qualms of any anxious mama when I watched Nefret set off, however,
I assured myself that her appearance left nothing to be desired, from
the crown of her pretty rose-trimmed hat to the soles of her little
slippers. William the coachman was another of her admirers, he had
groomed the horses till their coats shone and the buttons of his coat
positively blazed in the sunlight.
Nefret returned earlier than I had expected. I was in the library,
trying to catch up on a massive accumulation of correspondence, when
Ramses entered.
"Well, what is it, Ramses?" I asked irritably. "Can't you see I am
busy?"
"Nefret has come back," said Ramses.
"So soon?" I put down my pen and turned to look at him. Hands behind
his back, feet apart, he met my gaze with a steady stare. His sable
curls were disheveled (they always were), his shirt was stained with
dirt and chemicals (it always was). His features, particularly his nose
and chin, were still too large for his thin face, but if he continued
to fill out as he was doing, those features might in time appear not
displeasing— especially his chin, which displayed an embryonic dimple
or
cleft like the one I found so charming in the corresponding member of
his father.
"I hope she had a good time," I went on. "No," said Ramses. "She did
not."
The stare was not steady. It was accusing. "Did she say so?"
"SHE would
not say so," said my son, who had not entirely overcome his habit of
referring to Nefret in capital letters. "SHE would consider complaint a
form of cowardice, as well as an expression of disloyalty to you, for
whom she feels, quite properly in my opinion— "
"Ramses, I have often requested you to refrain from using that phrase."
"I beg your pardon, Mama. I will endeavor to comply with your request
in future. Nefret is in her room, with the door closed, I
believe, though I am not in a position to be certain, since she hurried
past me with her face averted, that she was crying"
I started to push my chair back from the desk, and then stopped.
"Should I go to her, do you think?"
The question astonished me as much as it did Ramses. I had not meant to
ask his advice. I never had before. His eyes, of so dark a brown they
looked black, opened very wide. "Are you asking me, Mama?"
"So it seems," I replied. "Though I cannot imagine why."
"Were not the situation one of some urgency," said Ramses, "I would
express at length my appreciation
of your confidence in me. It pleases
and touches me more than I can say."
"I hope so, Ramses. Well? Be succinct, I beg."
Being succinct cost Ramses quite a struggle. It was a token of his
concern for Nefret that on this occasion he was able to succeed. "I
believe you should go, Mama. At once."
So I did.
I found myself strangely ill at ease when I stood before Nefret's door.
Weeping young ladies I had encountered before, and had dealt with them
efficiently. Somehow I doubted the methods I had employed in those
other cases would work so well here. I stood, one might say, in loco
parentis, and that role was not congenial to me. What if she flung
herself sobbing onto my lap?
Squaring my shoulders, I knocked at her door. (Children, I feel, are as
much entitled to privacy as human beings.) When she replied I was
relieved to hear that her voice was perfectly normal and when I
entered, to find her sitting quietly with a book on her lap, I saw no
trace of tears on her smooth cheeks. Then I realized that the book was
upside down, and I saw the crumpled ruin on the floor near the bed. It
had once been her best hat, a confection of fine straw and satin
ribbons, its wide brim heaped with pink silk flowers. No accident could
have reduced it to such a state. She must have stamped on it.
She had forgotten about the hat. When I looked back at her, her lips
had tightened and her frame had stiffened, as if in expectation of a
reprimand or a blow.
"Pink is not your color," I said. "I should never have persuaded you to
wear that absurd object."
I thought for a moment she would break down. Her lips trembled,then
they curved in a smile.
"I jumped on it," she said.
"I thought you must have."
"I am sorry. I know it cost a great deal of money."
"You have a great deal of money. You can stamp on as many hats as you
like." I seated myself at the foot of the chaise longue "However, there
are probably more effective ways of dealing with the matter that
troubles you. What happened? Was someone rude to you?"
"Rude?" She considered the question with an unnervingly adult
detachment. "I don't know what that means. Is it rude to say things
that make another person feel small and ugly and stupid?"
"Very rude," I said. "But how could you possibly believe such taunts?
You have the use of a mirror, you must know you outshine those plain,
malicious little creatures as the moon dims the stars. Dear me, I
believe I was on the verge of losing my temper. How unusual. What did
they say?"
She studied me seriously. "Will you promise you will not hurry to the
school and beat them with your parasol?"
It took me a moment to realize that the light in her blue eyes was that
of laughter. She hardly ever made jokes, at least not with me.
"Oh, very well," I replied, smiling. "They were jealous, Nefret— the
nasty little toads."
"Perhaps." Her delicate lips curled. "There was a young man there, Aunt
Amelia."
"Oh, good heavens!" I exclaimed. "Had I but known— "
"Miss Mclntosh did
not know he was coming either. He was looking for a school for his
sister, for whom he is guardian, and expressed a wish to meet some of
the other young ladies in order to see if they would be suitable
associates for her. He must be very rich, because Miss Mclntosh was
extremely polite to him. He was also very handsome. One of the girls,
Winifred, desired him." She saw my expression and her smile faded. "I
have said something wrong."
"Er—not wrong. That is not quite the way Winifred would put it . . ."
"You see?" She spread her hands wide in a gesture as graceful as it was
somehow alien. "I cannot speak without making such mistakes. I have not
read the books they have read or heard the music I cannot
play on the
piano or sing as they sing or speak languages— "
"Nor can they," I said with a snort. "A few words of French and German—
"
"Enough to say things I do not understand, and then look at one another
and laugh. They have always acted so, but today, when Sir Henry
sat beside me and looked at me instead of looking at Winifred, every
word was a veiled insult. They talked only of things of which I am
ignorant, and asked me questions—
oh, so sweetly!— to which I did not
know the answers. Winifred asked me to sing. I had already told her I
could not."
"What did you do?"
Nefret's expression was particularly demure "I sang I sang the
Invocation to Isis."
"The ..." I paused to swallow. "The chant you sang in the temple of the
Holy Mountain? Did you . . . dance, as you did then?"
"Oh, yes, it is part of the ritual. Sir Henry said I was enchanting.
But I do not think Miss Mclntosh will ask me to come to tea again."
I could not help it. I laughed till the tears flowed from my eyes.
"Well, never mind," I said, wiping them away. "You will not have to go
there again. I will have a word to say to Helen! Why I ever listened to
her— "
"But I will go back," Nefret said quietly "Not soon, but after I have
learned what I must know, when I have read the books and learned their
silly languages, and how to stick myself with a needle." She leaned
toward me and put her hand on mine— a rare and meaningful gesture from
so undemonstrative a girl
"I have been thinking, Aunt Amelia. This is
my world and I must learn to live in it. The task will not be
so
painful, there are many things I desire to learn. I must go to school.
Oh, not to a place like that, it cannot teach me quickly enough, and I
am not— quite— brave enough to face girls like those every day. You say
I
have a great deal of money. Will it pay for teachers who will come to
me?"
"Yes, of course. I was about to suggest something of the sort, but I
thought you needed time to rest and accustom yourself to— "
"I did, and I have had it These weeks with you, and the professor, and
my brother Ramses, and my friends Gargery and the cat Bastet have been
like the Christian Heaven my father told me about. But I cannot hide in
my secret garden forever You had thought, I believe, to take me with
you to Egypt this winter."
"Had thought . . ." For a moment I could not speak. I conquered the
unworthy, contemptible emotion
that swelled my throat, and forced the
words out. "We had, yes. You seem interested in archaeology— "
"I am, and one day, perhaps, I will pursue that study. But first it is
necessary to learn many other things. Would Mrs. Evelyn and Mr. Walter
Emerson let me stay with them this winter, do you think? If I
have
so much money, I can pay them."
Tactfully, as is my wont, I explained that friends do not accept or
offer payment for acts of kindness,
but in every other way the plan was
exactly what I would have suggested myself, if I had dared to propose
it. I could have hired tutors and teachers who would have stuffed
Nefret with information like
a goose being fed for foie gras, but she
could not learn from them what she really needed— the graciousness and
deportment of a well-bred lady. There could be no better model than
Evelyn, nor a more sympathetic guide. Walter could feed the girl's lust
for learning while satisfying his own In short,
the solution was ideal.
I had not proposed it because I did not wish to be accused, even by my
own conscience, of neglecting my duty. Besides, I had not imagined for
a moment that it would be considered acceptable by any of the parties
concerned.
Now Nefret herself had proposed the scheme, and she stuck to her
decision with a quiet determination that was impossible to combat.
Emerson did his best to persuade her to change her mind, especially
after Ramses, to the astonishment of everyone but myself, concluded
that he would also remain in England
that winter.
"I don't know why you persist in arguing with him," I said to Emerson,
who was storming up and down the library as is his habit when
perturbed. "You know that when Ramses makes up his mind, he never
changes it. Besides, the scheme has a number of things to recommend it."
Emerson stopped pacing and glared at me. "I see none."
"We have often discussed the one-sidedness of Ramses's education.
In some ways he is as ignorant as Nefret. Oh, I grant you, no one
mummifies mice or mixes explosives better than Ramses, but those skills
have limited utility. As for the social graces— "
Emerson let out a growling noise. Any mention of the social graces has
that effect on him. "I told you,"
I went on, "about how the girls taunted Nefret."
My husband's handsome countenance reddened. Thwarted choler was
responsible, he had been unable,
in this case, to apply his favorite
redress for injustice. One cannot punch young ladies on the jaw or
thrash a respectable middle-aged headmistress. He looked rather forlorn
as he stood there, his fists clenched and his shoulders squared, like a
great bull tormented by the pricks and stabs of the picadors. Forlorn,
yet majestic, for, as I have had occasion to remark, Emerson's
impressive muscular development and noble features can never appear
less than magnificant. Rising, I went to him and put my hand on his arm.
"Would it be so terrible, Emerson? Just the two of us, alone, as we
used to be? Is my companionship so displeasing to you?"
The muscles of his arm relaxed. "Don't talk nonsense, Peabody," he
muttered, and, as I had hoped he would, he took me into his embrace.
So it was arranged. Needless to say, Evelyn and Walter entered into the
scheme with delight. I hastened to make the necessary arrangements for
our departure before Emerson could change his mind.
He moped a bit, before and after we left, and I must confess I felt an
unexpected sensation of loss when the steamer pulled away from the dock
and I waved farewell to those who stood below. I had not realized
Ramses had grown so much. He looked sturdy and dependable as he stood
there— next to Nefret, of course. Evelyn was on Nefret's other side,
her
arm around the girl, Walter held his wife's arm and flapped his
handkerchief vigorously. They made a pretty family group.
Since we had been able to get off early in the season, we had
determined to take the boat from London
to Port Sa'id instead of
following the quicker but less convenient route by train to Marseille
or Brindisi before boarding a steamer. I hoped the sea voyage would
reconcile Emerson and put him in a proper frame of mind. The moon
obliged me, spreading ripples of silvery light across the water as we
strolled the deck hand in hand, gliding through the porthole of our
cabin to inspire the tenderest demonstrations of connubial affection
And I must say it was a pleasant change to indulge in those
demonstrations without wondering whether we had forgotten to lock
Ramses in bis cabin.
Emerson did not respond as quickly as I had hoped, being given to
occasional fits of frowning abstraction, but I felt certain his gloomy
mood would lift as soon as we set foot on the soil of Egypt. That
moment was now only hours away, already I fancied I could see the dim
outline of the coast, and I moved my hand closer to the strong brown
hand that lay near it on the rail.
"We are almost there," I said brightly.
"Hmph," said Emerson, frowning.
He did not take my hand. "What the devil is the matter with you?" I
inquired. "Are you still sulking
about Ramses?"
"I never sulk," Emerson grumbled. "What a word! Tact is not one of your
strong points, Peabody, but
I must confess I had expected you to
demonstrate the emphathy of understanding you claim to feel for me and
my thoughts. The truth is, I have a, strange foreboding— "
"Oh, Emerson, how splendid!" I cried, unable to contain my delight. "I
knew that one day you, too— "
"The word was ill-chosen," Emerson said, glowering. "Your forebodings,
Amelia, are solely the products of your rampageous imagination.
My— er— uneasiness stems from rational causes."
"As do all such hints of approaching disaster, including mine. I hope
you do not suppose I am superstitious! I? No, premonitions and
forebodings are the result of clues unnoticed by the waking mind, but
recorded and interpreted by that ulnsleeping portion of the brain
which— "
"Amelia." I was thrilled to observe thait Emerson's blue eyes had taken
on the sapphirine glitter indicative of rising temper. The dimple
(which he prefers to call a "cleft") in his well-shaped chin quivered
ominously. "Amelia, are you interested in hearing my views or
expressing your own?"
Ordinarily I would have enjoyed on,e of those animated discussions that
so often enliven the course of our rtnarital relationship, but I wanted
nothing to mar the bliss of this moment.
"I beg your pardon, my dear Emersoin. pray express your forebodings
without reserve."
"Hmph," said Emerson. For a morrnent he was silent—testing my promise,
or gathering his thoughts— and I occupied myself in gazing upon him
with the admiration that ssight always induces. The wind blew his dark
locks away from his intellectual brow (for he had declined, as usual,
to wear a hat) and molded tlhe linen of his shirt to his broad breast
(for he had refused to put on his coat until we were ready to
disembark). His profile (for he had ttnrned from me, to gaze out across
the blue waters) might have servedl as the model for Praxiteles or
Michelangelo— the boldly sculpturecd arch of the nose, the firm chin
and
jaw, the strong yet sensitive cuirve of the lips. The lips parted.
(Finally!) He spoke.
"We stopped at Gibraltar and Mallta."
"Yes, Emerson, we did." By biting cdown on my lip I managed to say no
more.
"We found letters and newspaper from home awaiting us at both places."
"I know that, Emerson. They came overland by train, more quickly than
we ..." A premonition of
my own made my voice falter. "Pray
continue."
Emerson turned slowly, resting one arm on the rail. "Did you read the
newspapers, Peabody?"
"Some of them."
"The Daily Yell?"
I do not lie unless it is absolutely necessary. "Was the Yell among the
newspapers, Emerson?"
"It is an interesting question, Peabody." Emerson's voice had dropped
to the growling purr that presages an explosion. "I thought you might
know the answer, for I did not until this morning, when I happened to
observe one of the other passengers reading that contemptible rag. When
I inquired where he had got it—for the date was that of the
seventeenth, three days after we left London—he informed me that
several copies had been taken aboard at Malta."
"Indeed?"
"You missed one, Peabody. What did you do with the rest, toss them
overboard?"
The corners of his lips quivered, not with fury but with amusement. I
was somewhat disappointed— for Emerson's outbursts of rage are always
inspiring— but I could not help responding in kind.
"Certainly not. That would have constituted a wanton destruction of the
property of others. They are under our mattress."
"Ah. I might have noticed the crackle of paper had I not been
distracted by other things."
"I did my best to distract you."
Emerson burst out laughing. "You succeeded, my dear. You always do. I
don't know why you were so determined to prevent me from seeing the
story, I cannot accuse you this time of babbling to that fiend
of a
journalist. He only returned to England ten days before we left, and as
soon as I learned of his imminent arrival I made certain you had no
opportunity to see him."
"Oh, you did, did you?"
"Kevin O'Connell"— Emerson's tone, as he pronounced the name, turned it
into an expletive— "Kevin O'Connell is an unscrupulous wretch, for whom
you have an unaccountable affection. He worms information out of you,
Amelia. You know he does. How often in the past has he caused us
trouble?"
As often as he has come nobly to our assistance," I replied. "He would
never do anything deliberately
to harm us, Emerson."
"Well ... I admit the story was not as damaging as I might have
expected."
It would have been a good deal more damaging if I had not warned Kevin
off. Emerson does not believe in telephones. He refuses to have them
installed at Amarna House. However, we were in London for two days
before we left, and I managed to put through a trunk call from the
hotel. I too had seen the notice
of Kevin's impending return, and my
premonitions are as well-founded as Emerson's.
"I suppose he picked up his information while he was in the Sudan,"
Emerson mused. "He was the only one to use it, there was nothing in the
Times or the Mirror."
"Their correspondents were concerned only with the military situation,
I suppose. Kevin, however— "
"Takes a proprietary interest in our affairs," Emerson finished. "Curse
it! I suppose it was unreasonable
to hope O'Connell would not question
the officers at Sanam Abu Dom about us, but one would have thought
military persons would not spread gossip and idle rumors."
"They knew we had gone out into the desert after Reggie Forthright,
whose expedition was ostensibly designed to locate his missing uncle
and aunt," I reminded him. "We could hardly conceal that fact, even if
Reginald himself had not expressed his intentions to every officer at
the camp. And when we returned, Nefret was bound to inspire curiosity
and speculation. But the story we concocted was far more believable
than the truth. Everyone who knew of poor Mr. Perth's quest for the
Lost Oasis considered him a madman or a dreamer."
"O'Connell didn't
mention it," Emerson admitted grudgingly. He had not mentioned it
because I had threatened him with a number of unpleasant things if he
did.
"Nefret's was not the only name to appear in Kevin's story," I
said. "As I suggested . . as I expected of a journalist of his ability,
Kevin took for his theme the miracle of survival. Nefret's story was
only one of many, no one reading the article could possibly suspect
that she was reared, not by kindly American missionaries, but by the
pagan survivors of a lost civilization. Even if the Lost Oasis was not
mentioned, the suggestion that she had been reared among naked
savages—for that is how our enlightened fellow countrymen regard the
members of all cultures except their own—would subject her to ridicule
and rude speculation by society."
"That's what concerns you, is it? Nefret's acceptance into society?"
"She has had trouble enough with narrow-minded fools as it is." The
clouds on Emerson's noble brow cleared. "Your kindly concern for the
child does you credit, my dear. I think it is all a lot of
nonsense, but no doubt the impertinent opinions of the vulgar affect a
young girl more than they would ME. In any case we can't explain her
origins without giving away the secret we have sworn to keep. All in
all, I find I am glad the children are safe at home in England."
"So am
I," I said truthfully.
* * *
The first person I saw as the steamer nosed into the dock at Port Sa'id
was our faithful foreman Abdullah, his snowy-white turban rising a good
six inches over the heads of the crowd that surrounded him.
"Curse it," I exclaimed involuntarily. I had hoped for a few more hours
of Emerson's undivided attention. Fortunately he did not hear me,
raising his hands to his mouth, he let out a ululating call that made
the nearby passengers jump, and brought a broad grin to Abdullah's
face. He had been our reis for years and was far too old and dignified
to express his excitement in violent physical demonstrations, but his
younger relatives were not, their turbans bobbed as they jumped up and
down and shouted their welcome.
"How splendid of Abdullah to come all this way," Emerson said, beaming.
"And Selim," I said, spotting other familiar faces. "And Ali, and
Daoud, and Feisal and— "
"They will be of great help getting our gear to the train," Emerson
said. "I can't think why I didn't suggest they meet us here. But it is
like Abdullah to anticipate our slightest desire."
The train from Port Sa'id to Cairo takes less than six hours. There was
plenty of room in our compartment for Abdullah and his eldest son
Feisal, since the other European passengers refused to
share it with a
"bunch of dirty natives," as one pompous idiot put it. I heard him
expostulating with the conductor. He got nowhere. The conductor knew
Emerson.
So we settled down and had a refreshing gossip. Abdullah was distressed
to learn that Ramses was not with us. At least he put on a good show of
distress, but I thought I detected a certain gleam in his black eyes.
His feelings were clear to me— did I not share them? His devotion to
Emerson combined the reverence of an acolyte with the strong friendship
of a man and a brother. He had not been with us the year before, now
he could look forward to an entire season of his idol's undivided
attention. He would have disposed of ME as well had that been
possible, I thought, without resentment. I felt the same about him. Not
to mention Ali, Daoud, and Feisal.
We parted in Cairo, but only temporarily, before long we would visit
the men at their village of Aziyeh,
to recruit our crew for the
winter's excavations. Emerson was in such a good humor that he
submitted gracefully to being embraced by all the men in turn, for some
time he was virtually invisible in a cloud
of waving sleeves and
flapping robes. The other European travelers stared impertinently.
We had booked rooms at Shepheard's, of course. Our old friend Mr.
Baehler was now the owner, so we had no difficulty on that score,
though Shepheard's is becoming so popular that rooms are hard to
obtain. That year everyone was celebrating the victory in the Sudan. On
September 2, Kitchener's troops had occupied Omdurman and Khartoum,
ending the rebellion and cleansing the British flag of the stain of
dishonor that had blemished it since the gallant Gordon fell to the
hordes of the mad Mahdi. (If my
reader is not familiar with this event,
I refer him or her to any standard history.)
Emerson's amiable mood disintegrated as soon as we entered the hotel.
Shepheard's is always crowded during the winter season and this year
the crush was greater than usual. Sun-bronzed young officers, newly
arrived from the battle zone, flaunted their bandages and gold braid
before the admiring eyes of
the ladies who fluttered around them. One
face, adorned with a particularly impressive set of military mustaches,
looked familiar, but before I could approach the officer— who was
surrounded by a crowd
of civilians, questioning him about
Khartoum— Emerson took me by the arm and dragged me away. Not until we
had reached our rooms— the ones we always had, overlooking Ezbekieh
Gardens— did he speak.
"The place is more confoundedly overcrowded and fashionable every
year," he grumbled, tossing his hat onto the floor and sending his coat
to follow it. "This is the last time, Amelia. I mean it. Next year we
will accept the invitation of Sheikh Mohammed to stay with him."
"Certainly, my dear," I replied, as I did every year. "Shall we go down
for tea, or shall I tell the safragi to bring it to us here?"
"I don't
want any confounded tea," said Emerson. We had our tea on the little
balcony overlooking the gardens. Greatly as I yearned to join the crowd
below, which, I did not doubt, contained many friends and
acquaintances, and catch up on the news, I did not deem it wise to
persuade Emerson back into his coat and hat. I had had a hard enough
time getting the latter object of apparel onto his head
long enough to enter the hotel.
The white-robed servant glided in and out, noiseless on bare feet, and
we took our places at the table. Below us the gardens were bright with
roses and hibiscus, carriages and foot passengers passed to and fro
along the broad avenue in the never-ending panorama of Egyptian life,
as I once termed it. A handsome carriage drew up before the steps of
the hotel, from it descended a stately figure in full dress uniform.
Emerson leaned over the edge of the balcony. "Hi, there," he shouted.
"Essalamu 'aleikum, babibi"
"Emerson," I exclaimed. "That is General Kitchener!"
"Is it? I was not addressing him." He gestured vigorously, to my
chagrin his wave was answered by a picturesque but extremely ragged
individual carrying a tray of cheap souvenirs. Several other equally
picturesque persons in the crowd of would be sellers of flowers, fruit,
trinkets and souvenirs, attracted by the gesture, looked up and joined
in the general shout of welcome. "He has returned, the Father of
Curses! Allah yimessikum bilkheir,
effendi! Marbaba, O Sitt Hakim!"
"Hmph," I said, somewhat flattered at being included in this
accolade—for Sitt Hakim, "Lady Doctor,"
is my own affectionate nickname
among Egyptians. "Do sit down, Emerson, and stop shouting. People are
staring."
"It was my intention that they should," Emerson declared. "I want to
talk with old Ahmet later, he always knows what is going on."
He was persuaded to resume his seat. As the sun sank lower, the horizon
was suffused by the exquisite glow of the dying day, and Emerson's
countenance became pensive. "Do you remember, Peabody, the first time
Ramses stood on this very balcony with us? We watched the sunset over
Cairo together . ."
"As we shall no doubt do again," I said rather sharply. "Now, Emerson,
don't think of Ramses. Tell me the news I have been dying to hear. I
know your engaging habit of keeping our future plans a secret from me
until the last possible moment, you enjoy your little surprises. But
the time has come, I think. Where shall we excavate this winter?"
"The decision is not so easy to make," Emerson replied, holding out his
cup to be refilled. "I was tempted by Sakkara, so little has been done
there, and I am of the opinion that there is a great Eighteenth Dynasty
cemetery somewhere in the vicinity of Memphis."
"That is a logical deduction," I agreed. "Especially in view of the
fact that Lepsius mentions seeing such tombs in 1843."
"Peabody, if you don't refrain from anticipating my brilliarant
deductions I shall divorce you," Emerson said amiably. "Those tombs
of Lepsius's are now lost, it would be quite a coup to find them again,
and perhaps others. However, Thebes also has its attraction.
Most of the royal mummies of the Empire have now been found, but... By
the by, did I tell you I knew of that second cache of mummies, in
the tomb of Amenhotep the Second, fifteen years ago?"
"Yes, my dear, you have mentioned it approximately ten times since
we heard of Loret's discovery
of the tomb last March. Why you didn't
open the tomb yourself and get the credit—"
"Credit be damned. You know my views, Peabody, once a tomb or a site
is uncovered, the scavengers descend. Like most archsiaeologists, that
incompetent idiot Loret doesn't supervise his men aodequately. They
made off with valuable objects from that tomb undeler his very nose;
some have already appeared on the market. Until the Antiquities
Department is properly organized— "
"Yes, my dear, I know your views," I said soothingly, for Emerson was
capable of lecturing on that subject for hours. "So you are
considering the Valley of the Kings? If the royal mummies have all
been
found—"
"But the original tombs have not. We are still missinjng those of
Hatshepsut, Ahmose, Amenhotep the First and Thutmose the Third, to
mention only a few. And I have never been certain that the tomb
we
found was really that of Tutankhamen."
"It could have belonged to no one else," I said. "However, I agree
with you that there are royal tombs
yet to be found. Our old friend
Cyrus Vandergelt will be there again this season, will he not? He has
often asked you to work with him."
"Not with, but for him,"
Emerson answered with a sccowl. "I have
nothing against Americans, even rich Americans— even rich American
dilettantes— but I work for no man. You have too many cursed old
friends, Peabody."
My famous intuition failed on this occasion. No tremor of premonitory
horror ran through me. "I hope you don't harbor any doubts as to Mr.
Vandergelt's intentions, Emerson."
"You mean, am I jealous? My dear, I abjured that unwonrthy emotion long
ago. You convinced me, as I hope I convinced you, that there could
never be the slightest cause. Old married people like ourselves,
Peabody, have passed through the cataracts of youthful passion into
the serene pool of matrimonial affection."
"Hmmm," I said.
"In fact," Emerson went on, "I have been thinking for some time that we
need to examine our plans, not for this year, but for the future.
Archaeology is changing, Peabody. Petrie is still bouncing around like
a rubber ball, tackling a different site each year— "
"We have done the same."
"Yes, but in my opinion this has become increasingly ineffective. Look
at Petrie's excavation reports. They are . . ." Emerson almost choked
on the admission that his chief rival had any good qualities, but
managed to get it out. "They are— er— not bad. Not bad at all. But in a
single season's work he cannot do more than scratch at the site, and
once the monuments are uncovered they are as good as gone."
"I agree, Emerson. What do you propose?"
"Do you mind if I smoke?" Without waiting for an answer he took out his
pipe and tobacco pouch. "What I propose is that we focus on a single
site, not for one season, but until we have found everything that is to
be found and recorded everything in painstaking detail. We will need a
larger staff, of course—experts in the increasingly complex techniques
of excavation. Photographers, artists, an epigrapher to copy and
collate texts, an anatomist to study bones, students who can supervise
the workers and learn excavation procedures. We might even consider
building a permanent house to which we can return every year." He let
out a great puff of smoke and added, "Then we wouldn't have to stay at
this cursed hotel."
For a moment I could think of nothing to say The proposal was so
unexpected, the ramifications so complex, I struggled to take them in.
"Well," I said, on a long breath. "The proposal is so unexpected I can
think of nothing to say."
I fully anticipated Emerson would make some sarcastic remark about my
loquacity, but he did not rise to the bait. "Unexpected, perhaps, but I
hope not unwelcome. You never complain, my dear, but the tasks you have
faced each year would daunt a lesser woman. It is time you had
help— companionship— assistance."
"Of the female variety, I suppose you mean? A secretary would certainly
be useful— "
"Come, Peabody, I had not expected you to be so narrow-minded. We could
certainly use someone to keep the records straight, but why need that
individual be female? And why not women students, excavators and
scholars?"
"Why not indeed?" He had touched a tender chord, the advancement of my
underrated sex has always been of deep importance to me. After
all, I reflected, I had never counted on more than one year of solitary
happiness. I had not even counted on that. Let me enjoy it now and not
think of the depressing future. "Emerson, I have said it before and I
will continue to say it: you are the most remarkable of men."
"As you have also said, you would have accepted nothing less." Emerson
grinned at me.
"Do you have anyone in mind?"
"Nefret and Ramses, of course."
"Of course."
"The girl has demonstrated both interest and aptitude," Emerson went
on. "I am also in hopes of inducing Evelyn and Walter to come out with
us, once we have established a permanent base. There is a young woman
named Murray at University College, a student of Griffith, who shows
great promise . . . That is one of the things I hope to do this season,
Peabody, interview potential staff members."
"Then," I said, rising, "I suggest we begin by dining downstairs."
"Why
the devil should we? Ali's, in the bazaar, has better food— "
"But some
of our colleagues are certain to be dining at Shepheard's. We can
consult them about their more promising students."
Emerson studied me suspiciously. "You always have some excuse for
forcing me into activities I detest. How do you know there will be any
Egyptologists here tonight? You invited them, didn't you? Curse it,
Peabody— "
"I found messages from friends awaiting us, as is always the case. Come
along now. It is getting late
and you will want to bathe and change."
"I won't want to, but I suppose I must," Emerson grumbled.
He began undressing as he stamped across the room, tossing collar,
shirt and cravat in the general direction of the sofa. They fell on the
floor. I was about to expostulate when Emerson came to a sudden stop
and gestured emphatically at me to do the same. Head tilted, ears
almost visibly pricked, he listened for a moment, and then, with the
catlike quickness he could summon when he felt it expedient, he lunged
at the door and flung it open. The corridor was dark, but I made out a
huddled form crouched or collapsed on the floor. Emerson seized it in a
bruising grip and dragged it into the room.
"A
woman's instinct, I always feel, supersedes logic."
"For heaven's sake, Emerson," I exclaimed. "It is Mr. Neville. Drop him
at once!"
Emerson inspected his captive, whom he held by the collar. "So it is,"
he said in mild surprise. "What the devil were you doing down on the
floor, Neville?"
The unfortunate young man inserted a finger between his cravat and his
neck, loosening the former from the latter, before he spoke. "Er . . .
the gaslight in the corridor must have expired, it was extremely dark,
and I could not be certain I had found the correct room When I tried to
look more closely at the number, my spectacles fell off."
Here a fit of coughing overcame him. "Say no more," I said. "Emerson,
go and look for Mr. Neville's eyeglasses. I only hope you didn't step
on them."
As it turned out, he had. Neville studied the ruined objects ruefully.
"Fortunately I have another pair.
I did not bring them with me, however, so perhaps you will be good
enough to guide my steps tonight, Mrs. Emerson."
"Certainly. And of course we will replace your spectacles. Really,
Emerson, you must get over the habit of leaping on people like that."
Neville was one of the younger generation of archaeologists, who had
already demonstrated a remarkable talent for philology. In appearance
he was one of the least memorable individuals of my acquaintance, for
his beard and hair were of the same buff color as his skin, and his
eyes were an indeterminate shade of gray-brown. His character was mild
and accommodating, however, and he had a pleasant smile "It was my
fault, Mrs. Emerson. From the stories I have heard, you and the
professor have good reason to be suspicious of people lurking at your
door."
"That is true," Emerson declared. "In this case, however, I owe you an
apology. No harm done, I hope?"
He began brushing Neville off with such vigorous goodwill that the
young man's head rocked back and forth.
"Stop that, Emerson, and go change," I ordered. "You will have to
excuse us, Mr. Neville, we are later than I had expected. There is a
manuscript on the table that may interest you, it was in the hope of
consulting you about certain passages that I asked you to do me the
favor of coming early "
By the time I had closed the bedroom door Emerson was already in the
bathroom, splashing loudly I concluded he wanted to avoid a lecture— or
inconvenient questions. Emerson is inclined to act hastily,
but he
seldom acts without cause (however inadequate that cause may seem to
persons of duller intellect). Had he cause for apprehension that he had
not seen fit to confide to me?
He gave me no opportunity to pursue the matter at that time, dressing
with uncharacteristic speed and lack of fuss while I was performing my
ablutions. I had to call him back from the sitting room, where he had
gone to entertain our visitor, in order to request his assistance in
buttoning my frock. The distractions that often occur during this
process did not occur on this occasion.
I was wearing a gown of bright crimson, Emerson's favorite color. It
was the latest fashion and I had had to badger my dressmaker to finish
it in time. Emerson gave me a cursory glance and remarked, "You look
very nice, my dear. I have always liked that dress."
When we returned to the sitting room, Mr, Neville was peering
nearsightedly at the manuscript to which
I had directed his attention.
"Fascinating," he exclaimed. "Is this Mr. Walter Emerson's
transliteration of The Tale of the
Doomed Prince'? It seems much more
accurate than Maspero's."
"To compare Maspero's knowledge of hieratic to that of my brother is an
insult in itself," said Emerson rudely. "That is a trivial piece of
work for Walter, he only transcribed it into hieroglyphs as a favor to
Mrs. Emerson. She had a fancy to translate it, and her hieratic— "
"Comparisons are unnecessary as well as invidious, Emerson," I said. "I
have never claimed to be an expert at hieratic."
(For the benefit of the ignorant, I ought to explain that hieratic is
the cursive, abbreviated form of hieroglyphic writing— so abbreviated,
in many cases, that the resemblance to the original form is almost
impossible to make out. Walter was one of the leading authorities on
this, as on other forms of ancient Egyptian. I was not. Neither was
Emerson.)
"It is a fascinating tale," Neville agreed. "What passage in
particular— "
"No time for that now," said Emerson. "If we must do this, let's get it
over with. Lean on me, Neville,
I won't let you fall. Take my other
arm, Amelia, the cursed safragi has let the light go out, I can hardly
see where we are going."
The lights at the other end of the corridor burned bright, and we
proceeded with greater speed. A thrill
of pride ran through me as we
descended the staircase, for all eyes, especially those of the ladies,
focused on the form of my husband. Unconscious of their regard, for he
is in such matters a modest man, he led the way to the dining salon,
where we found our friends waiting.
Such a gathering on the first evening of our return to Egypt had become
a pleasant little tradition. As I took my place I was saddened to see
that some of the familiar friendly faces were missing— gone forever,
alas, until that glorious day when we shall meet again in a better
world. I knew the Reverend
Mr. Sayce would sadly miss his friend Mr.
Wilbour, who had passed on the year before. Their dahabeeyahs, the
Istar and the Seven Hatbors, had been a familiar
sight up and down the
Nile. Now the Istar would
sail alone, until it passed beyond the sunset
and joined the Seven Hathors where
it glided on the broad river of
eternity.
Mr. Sayce's pinched face showed his appreciation when I expressed this
poetic sentiment. (Poetry again! Let the Average Reader beware!)
"However, Mrs. Emerson, we are consoled for our loss not only by
the knowledge that our friends have simply gone on before us, but by
the
appearance of new workers in the fields of knowledge."
There were certainly several unfamiliar faces— a young man named
Davies,
whom Mr. Newberry, the botanist who had worked with Petrie at Hawara,
introduced as a promising painter of Egyptian scenes, a square-jawed,
clean-shaven American named Reisner, who was serving as a member of the
International Catalogue Commission of the Cairo Museum, and a Herr
Bursch, a former student of Ebers at Berlin. Emerson studied them with
a predatory gleam in his eye, he was considering them as prospective
members of our staff.
Another stranger was older and of striking appearance, with golden
locks and dark-fringed brilliant gray eyes any woman might have envied.
His features were entirely masculine, however, indeed, the shape
of his
jaw was almost too rigidly rectangular. Though a stranger to me, he was
not unknown to Emerson, who greeted him with a curt, "So you're back.
This is my wife."
I am accustomed to Emerson's bad manners, I gave the gentleman my hand,
which he took in a firm but gentle grasp "This is a pleasure to which I
have long looked forward, Mrs. Emerson. Your husband neglected to
mention my name, it is Vincey— Leopold Vincey, at your service."
"You could have had the pleasure earlier if you had chosen to," Emerson
grunted, waving me into the chair a waiter was holding. "Where have you
been since that scandalous business in Anatolia? Hiding out?"
Our other friends are also accustomed to Emerson's bad manners, but
this reference— which meant nothing to me— evidently passed even his
normal bounds of tactlessness. A shocked gasp ran around
the table. Mr.
Vincey only smiled, but there was a look of sadness in his gray eyes.
Mr. Neville hastened to change the subject. "I have just been
privileged to see Mr. Walter Emerson's latest transcription from the
hieratic. He has turned The Doomed Prince' into hieroglyphs for Mrs.
Emerson."
"So that is to be your next translation of an Egyptian fairy tale?"
Newberry asked. "You are becoming something of an authority on that
subject, Mrs. Emerson, the— er— poetic liberties you take with the
original text are quite— er— quite . . ."
"In that manner I make them more accessible to the general public," I
replied. "And there is certainly much of interest in such stories. The
parallels to European myth and legend are quite remarkable. You know
the story, of course, Mr. Vincey?"
My attempt to compensate for Emerson's bad manners was understood and
appreciated. Mr. Vincey
gave me a grateful look and replied, "I confess
I have forgotten the details, Mrs. Emerson. It would be
a pleasure to
be reminded of them by you."
"I will be Scheherazade then, and amuse you all," I said playfully.
"There was once a king who had no son— "
"We all know the story," Emerson interrupted. "I would rather ask Mr.
Reisner about his studies at Harvard."
"Later, Emerson So the king prayed to the gods and they granted his— "
It would be senseless to repeat Emerson's interruptions, which broke
the smooth narrative I had intended to produce. I will therefore
produce it here, for as the reader will discover, it had an unexpected
and well-nigh uncanny influence on ensuing events.
"When the young prince was born, the Seven Hathors came to decree his
fate They said: 'He shall die
by the crocodile, the snake, or the dog.'
"Naturally the king was very sad at hearing this. He ordered a stone
house to be built and shut the prince up in it, along with every thing
he could possibly want. But when the prince was older, he went up on
the roof one day and saw a man walking along the road with a dog beside
him, and he asked that a dog be procured for him. His father, who
yearned to please the poor lad, caused a puppy to be given him.
After the prince was grown he demanded his release, saying, "If it is
my doom it will come to me, whatever I do." Sadly his father agreed,
and the boy set forth, accompanied by his dog. At last he came
to the
kingdom of Naharin. The king had only one child, a daughter, and he had
placed her in a tower whose window was seventy cubits from the ground,
and told all the princes who wanted to marry her
that she would be
given to the one who first reached her window.
"Disguised as a chariot driver, the Prince of Egypt joined the young
men who spent all their days jumping up at the window of the princess,
and the princess saw him. When finally he reached the window she kissed
and embraced him. But when the King of Naharin heard that a common
chariot driver had won
his daughter, he tried first to send the boy
away and then to kill him. But the princess clasped the young man in
her arms and said, "I will not stay alive an hour longer than he!"
"So the lovers were wed, and after some time had elapsed, the prince
told his wife about the three fates. 'Have the dog that follows you
killed!' she exclaimed, but he replied, 'I will not allow my dog,
which I raised from a puppy, to be killed.' So she guarded him day and
night. And one night while he slept, she set out jars of beer and wine,
and she waited, and the snake came out of its hole to bite the prince.
But
it drank the wine and became drunk, and rolled over on its back,
and the princess took her ax and chopped it to pieces."
"And that is where it ends," said Emerson loudly. "Now, Mr. Reisner, I
believe you began in Semitic— "
"That is not the ending," I said, even more loudly. "There is a
confused passage which seems to suggest that the faithful dog turned on
his master, and that in fleeing the dog, he fell into the clutches of
the crocodile. The manuscript breaks off at that point, though."
"It is the mystery of the ending that intrigues you, I suppose," said
Mr. Newberry. "Was it the crocodile or the dog that brought the prince
to his death?"
"I believe he escaped those fates as he did the first," I said. "The
ancient Egyptians liked happy endings, and the brave princess must have
played a part in the solution."
"That is the true explanation for your interest, Mrs. Emerson," said
Howard Carter, who had come all
the way from Luxor to join the party.
"The princess is the heroine!"
"And why not?" I said, returning his smile. "The ancient Egyptians were
among the few peoples, ancient or modern, who gave women their due. Not
as often as they deserved, of course . . ."
At this point Emerson demanded the floor and, having had my say, I
yielded it. He explained the plans
we had discussed earlier
"It will take a great deal of money and produce few results," said the
Reverend Sayce. "The public wants monumental statues and jewels,-they
are not interested in pottery scraps."
"But that should not be our concern," declared Howard. He was one of
the youngest of the group and he had not lost his boyish enthusiasm.
"It is a splendid idea, Professor. Exactly what is needed. I don't mean
to criticize M. Loret, but you know how he went about locating the tomb
last year, don't you? Sondages! Pits, dug at random— "
"I know what the word means," Emerson growled, pushing away his plate
of soup. "It is a disastrous technique. The whole area of the Valley
needs to be methodically cleared down to bedrock." He reared back as a
waiter snatched the empty bowl and deposited the fish course in front
of him. "There is small hope of that, though, so long as the
Antiquities Department keeps control over the Valley and gives
concessions only to
its favorites."
"What about Meidum?" the Reverend Sayce suggested. "The pyramid has
never been completely
cleared, and there are certainly more masta-bas
in the cemeteries around it."
"Or Amarna," said Mr. Newberry. "You worked there some years ago, I
believe."
A thrill of emotion ran through me. Pyramids are my passion, as Emerson
quaintly puts it, but the name of Amarna will always hold a special
place in my heart, for it was there Emerson and I came to know
and
appreciate one another. I glanced meaningfully at my husband. He was
looking meaningfully at
Mr. Newberry, and I knew, from the glint in his
eye, that he was about to say something provocative.
"Yes, we did, and I am giving the site serious consideration. It is of
great importance, for it offers clues
to one of the most confusing
periods in Egyptian history. The archaeological remains have gone to
rack and ruin since we left,- no one has done a cursed thing— "
"Now, Emerson, you exaggerate," I said quickly. "Mr. Newberry was
there, and Mr. Petrie was there— "
"For one year. Typical of Petrie." Emerson abandoned his fish. Leaning
back in his chair, he prepared
to enjoy himself by goading his friends.
"I believe you also dropped in for a brief visit, Sayce."
The Reverend Sayce was, I am sorry to say, one of Emerson's favorite
victims. A pinched, meager little man, he was regarded by many as an
excellent scholar, though he had no formal training and never published
anything. This failure would have been enough to inspire Emeron's
contempt, and the reverend's religious convictions, of which Emerson
had none, irritated him equally as much.
"I was with M. Daressy in '91," Sayce replied guardedly.
"When he found the remains of Akhenaton?" Emerson's lips stretched into
the expression one may see
on the face of a dog just before it sinks
its teeth into one's hand. "I read about that incredible discovery and
was surprised that it was not given greater prominence. Did you
actually see the mummy? Daressy mentions only scraps of mummy
wrappings."
"There was a body, or the remains of one," Sayce said warily He had
seen that smile on Emerson's face before.
"You examined it, of course."
Sayce flushed. "It was in wretched condition. Burned, torn to bits— "
"Very distasteful," Emerson agreed gravely. "What became of it?"
"It is in the museum, I suppose."
"No, it is not. I have examined the Journal d'Entm. There is no mention
of it."
"I hope, Professor, you are not implying that my eyesight or my memory
are deficient. I saw that mummy!"
"I am sure you did. I saw it myself, seven years earlier" Emerson
looked at me. He was enjoying himself so much I had not the heart to
reproach him. I decided a little friendly teasing would not do the
reverend any harm. "We didn't bother looking for the cursed thing, did
we, Peabody, after it was stolen from us? The villagers must have
dumped it near the royal tomb after taking it apart looking for
amulets. No loss,
it was only another tedious late mummy, that of some
poor commoner."
Newberry was trying to hide his smile. We had not included the
extraneous mummy in our publication report, since it had nothing to do
with the history of the site, but many of our friends knew of our
strange encounter with it. Carter, less tactful, exclaimed, "Good
heavens! I had forgotten about your peripatetic mummy, Professor. Do
you think it was the one Daressy found?"
"I am certain of it," Emerson replied calmly. "None of the fools who
examined it— excuse me, Sayce, I
do not include you, of course— had the
sense to see that it was of the wrong period. No doubt someone pointed
this out to Daressy later, and he simply disposed of the embarrassing
evidence and kept quiet."
"I am still of the opinion— " Sayce began angrily.
"Well, well." Emerson
waved his opinion away. "Amarna does offer temptations. The Royal Tomb
has never been properly investigated, and there are certainly other
tombs in that remote wadi."
He took a bite of fish. Mr. Vincey, who had been listening in modest
silence, now spoke. "I too have heard rumors of other tombs, but such
rumors are common in Egypt. Have you any evidence?"
His voice was mild and the question was certainly reasonable, I could
not understand why Emerson shot him such a hard look. "I don't deal in
rumors, Vincey, as you should know. I knew of the Royal Tomb
at least a
decade before its 'official' discovery."
It was a testimonial to Emerson's reputation that no one expressed
doubt of this statement, but Newberry exclaimed, with unusual heat,
"You might have had the courtesy to inform your friends, Emerson.
Petrie and I spent hours looking for the confounded place in the winter
of '91, and I got myself in hot water when I wrote that letter to The Academy accusing Grebaut of
falsely claiming credit for discovering the
tomb."
"What's a little hot water, when the cause is just?" demanded Emerson,
who might be said to have spent most of his life up to his neck in
boiling liquid. "Grebaut is the most incompetent, stupid, tactless
nincompoop who ever called himself an archaeologist. Except for Wallis
Budge, of course. I do not announce discoveries until I am in a
position to deal with them myself. The depredations of the natives are
hard enough on the antiquities, the depredations of archaeologists are
even worse. Heaven only
knows what meaningful objects were kicked aside
by Daressy and Sayce when they— "
Sayce began to sputter, and Mr. Reisner said quickly, "Then you won't
be returning to the Sudan? That region fascinates me. There is so much
to be done there."
"It tempts me," Emerson admitted. "But Meroitic culture is not my
field. Curse it, I can't be everywhere!"
I had hoped to avoid mentioning the Sudan, for I knew what would
follow. Archaeologists are no more immune to idle curiosity than the
next man. A general stiffening of attention ran round the table, but
before anyone could frame a question we were distracted by the arrival
of a short, stout individual who swept up to our table with the regal
manner of a viceroy— which, in a professional sense, he was.
"M. Maspero!" I exclaimed. "How delightful! I did not know you were in
Cairo."
"Only passing through, dear lady. I cannot stay, but upon hearing of
your arrival I could not deny myself the pleasure of welcoming you back
to the scene of your many triumphs." Ogling me in his amiable Gallic
fashion, he continued, "You have the secret of eternal youth, chere
madame, indeed you are younger and lovelier than you were that day of
our first meeting in the halls of the museum. Little did I know what a
momentous day it was! You may not think, gentlemen, that I resemble the
little god of love, but I had the honor that day to play Cupid, for it
was I who introduced madame to the gentleman who was to win her heart
and hand."
With a grandiloquent flourish of his hand he indicated Emerson, who
responded to the amused smiles of the others with a stony stare. He had
been extremely critical of Maspero when the latter was Director of the
Department of Antiquities, but he had detested the latter's successors
even more. Now he said grudgingly, "You had better come back to the
job, Maspero. The cursed Department has fallen apart since you left.
Grebaut was a disaster, and de Morgan— "
"Ah, well, we will talk of that another time," said Maspero, who had
learned from painful experience that it was necessary to cut Emerson
short when he began talking about the failings of the Department of
Antiquities. "I am in haste, I must go on to another appointment. So
you must tell me at once, madame, what all Cairo aches to know. How
fares the interesting young lady who owes you so much? Of all your
triumphant adventures, this was surely the most magnificent!"
"She is in excellent health and spirits," I said. "How kind of you to
inquire, monsieur."
"No, no, you cannot stop there, with conventional courtesy. You are too
modest, madame, I will not allow it. We must hear the whole story. How
you learned of her plight, what brilliant deductive methods you applied
in order to locate her, the perils you faced on the dangerous journey."
Emerson's expression had petrified to such an extent his face might
have been carved of granite. The others leaned forward, lips parted and
eyes aglow. They would be able to "dine out" on this story for
the rest
of the season, since no one had heard it firsthand.
I had not looked forward to telling the tale to our professional
colleagues. Unlike the general public, they had the expert knowledge to
find the flaws in our little fiction. However, I had known the moment
must come and I had prepared for it with my usual thoroughness.
"You do me too much credit, monsieur. I had no idea such a person as
Miss Forth existed. As you must have heard, we went in search of her
cousin, who had become lost in the desert after he set out to look for
his uncle and aunt. Like many other rash travelers, they had vanished
when the Mahdi overran the Sudan." I paused to take a sip of wine and
select my words carefully. Then I resumed, "Since the region has been
pacified, there have been rumors that some of these people in fact
survived."
"It was some such idle rumor that sent Mr. Forthright into the desert?"
Maspero shook his head. "Rash and foolish."
"It was Divine Guidance that inspired him," Sayce said reverently. "And
led you to the rescue of this innocent child."
I could have kicked the kindly old man. A remark like this was bound to
break through Emerson's silence, for he particularly dislikes giving
God the credit for his own achievements. Unfortunately I could not kick
Emerson, since he was seated across the table from me.
"Divine Guidance inspired him to lose himself in the desert," said my
husband. "Having better sense,
we did not rely on— "
Since I could not administer a warning kick on the shin, I had to find
another way of stopping him. I knocked over my wineglass. The heavy
damask tablecloth absorbed most of the liquid, but a few drops
spattered my brand-new frock.
"What did you rely on?" Carter asked eagerly.
"If it was not Divine Guidance, it was pure luck," I said, frowning at
Emerson. "We had the usual adventures. You know the sort of thing,
gentlemen— sandstorms, thirst, Bedouin attack. Nothing to speak of.
From
displaced persons we met along the way we heard of the
missionaries— they belong to some strange Protestant sect, like the
Brothers of the New Jerusalem— you remember them, Reverend
— and finally
reached the remote village where they had miraculously survived
fourteen years
of war and misery. Mr. and Mrs Forth had passed on, but
their child lived. We were fortunate enough
to be able to restore her
to her heritage."
The waiter had supplied a fresh glass of wine. I took a hearty swig,
feeling I deserved it.
"So you found no trace of poor Mr. Forthright?" Newbeny shook his head
sadly. "A pity. I fear his
bones are whitening in some remote spot"
I certainly hoped they were. The young villain had done his best to
murder us.
"But did I not hear some story of a map?" Mr. Vincey asked.
My wineglass almost went over again. I managed to get hold of it. It
was Maspero who came to the rescue. Laughing heartily, he said, "Willie
Forth's famous maps! We have all heard of them, have we not?"
"Even I," Carter said, smiling. "And I did not know the gentleman. He
is something of a legend in Egypt, though."
"One of the lunatic fringe always to be found in archaeology,"
Newberry said disapprovingly. "So his fantasies led him, not to the
city of gold he hoped for, but to a village of miserable mud huts and
an
early death."
Maspero took his leave. For the rest of the evening the discussion
focused on purely archaeological matters.
After we had returned to our rooms Emerson wrenched off his stiff
collar. "Thank heaven that is over.
I won't do it again, Amelia. This
suit is as archaic as armor and almost as uncomfortable."
The wine had left visible spots on my skirt. I replied gently, "You
won't have to wear evening kit to a fancy dress ball, my dear. I was
thinking of something along Elizabethan lines. Those close-fitting hose
would set off the handsome shape of your lower limbs."
Emerson had removed his coat. For a moment I thought he would throw it
at me. Eyes blazing, he said in a muted roar, "We are not going to a
fancy dress ball, Amelia. I would as soon attend my own hanging." "It
is in four days' time We can find something in the bazaar, I daresay.
Please help me with my buttons, Emerson. These spots may come out if I
sponge them at once."
However, I was unable to tackle the spots that evening. By the time the
buttons were undone I had other things on my mind.
Some time later, as a pleasant drowsiness wrapped around my weary
frame, I reflected with pardonable complacency upon the events of the
evening. Over the course of the succeeding months, as the story passed
from speaker to listener, it would be altered and embroidered beyond
recognition, but at least the original fiction had been accepted by
those whose opinions counted most. How ironic, I thought, that it was
Willoughby Forth's reputation for eccentricity that was primarily
responsible for saving his daughter from vulgar gossip and the Lost
Oasis from discovery and exploitation.
I was about to remark on this to Emerson when his regular breathing
assured me he had fallen into slumber Turning on my side, I rested my
head against his shoulder and emulated his example.
* * *
I have a methodical mind. Emerson does not. It required prolonged
discussion to convince him we ought to sit down with a map of Egypt and
make a neat list of prospective sites, instead of rushing around at
random. The more I thought about it, the more his plan appealed to me.
Although I had enjoyed our vagabond existence, never knowing from one
year to the next where we would be the following season, and although
no one accepts with greater equanimity the difficulties of setting up a
new camp in a new location yearly, often in places where water and
shelter were inadequate, insects and disease proliferated, and the
chance of snatching a few moments alone with Emerson was slight,
especially with Ramses always underfoot . . . Well, perhaps I had not
enjoyed it as much as I thought I had! Certainly the idea
of a permanent habitation had considerable attraction. I found myself
picturing how it
would be: spacious, comfortable living quarters, a photographic studio,
an office for the keeping of records . . . perhaps even
a writing
machine and a person to operate it. I had mentally selected the pattern
of the draperies for the sitting room by the time Emerson, brooding
over the map, spoke for the first time.
"I don't believe we want to go south of Luxor, do we? Unless there is
some site between there and Assuan that you yearn for."
"None that comes to mind. The Theban area offers a number of
interesting possibilities, however."
We had decided to breakfast in our room, for the sake of greater
privacy and also because Emerson did not want to get dressed to go
downstairs. His shirt was open at the throat and his sleeves had been
pushed up to the elbows, the sight of him lounging at ease, long legs
stretched out, a pipe in one hand and a pen in the other, almost
distracted me from the matter at hand. Unaware of my affectionate
regard, he shoved the map at me. "Have a look, Peabody. I have marked
my choices, add or subtract as you like."
"I think I had better subtract," I said, looking at the emphatic
crosses that marked the map. "We must narrow the possibilities down to
half a dozen or less. Beni Hassan, for instance, would not be my first
choice."
Emerson groaned feelingly. "The tombs have deteriorated badly since I
first saw them. They need to be copied"
"That can be said of almost every site you have marked."
So the discussion proceeded,- after a refreshing hour or so we had
reduced the list to three—Meidum, Annarna and western Thebes— and I had
agreed to Emerson's suggestion that we inspect the sites before making
a final decision.
"It is still early in the season," he reminded me. "And we have not had
the leisure to play tourist for several years. I would like to have a
look at the tomb Loret found last year. He has left some of the mummies
there, bloody fool that he is."
"Language, Emerson," I said automatically. "It would be nice to see the
dear old Valley of the Kings again. What do you say we start with
Meidum, since we are in the neighborhood?"
"Hardly in the neighborhood. Admit it, Peabody, you favor Meidum
because there is a pyramid."
"We must start somewhere. After Meidum we could— "
A knock at the door interrupted me. The safragi entered, carrying a
bouquet of flowers. I had already received several floral offerings
from our guests of the previous evening, M. Maspero's was the largest
and most extravagant. All the vases were in use, so I sent the servant
out to find another while I admired the pretty arrangement of roses and
mimosa.
"No red roses?" Emerson inquired with a smile. "I don't allow you to
accept red roses from gentlemen, Peabody."
In the language of flowers, red roses signify passionate love. It was
reassuring to hear him speak jestingly of a subject that had once
driven him into a jealous rage. So I told myself, at any rate.
"They are white," I replied rather shortly. "I wonder who . . Ah, here
is a card. Mr. Vincey! A gentlemanly gesture, upon my word. I hardly
had a chance to speak to him. By the by, Emerson, I have been meaning
to ask you— what was the disgraceful business you referred to?"
"The Nimrud treasure. You must have read of it."
"I do remember seeing
newspaper accounts, but that was some years ago, before I took a
personal interest in archaeology. The cache was a rich one— gold and
silver vessels, jewelry and the like, it was sold, as I recall, to the
Metropolitan Museum."
"Correct. What the newspapers did not report, because they are well
aware of the laws of libel, was that Vincey was suspected of being the
agent through whom the museum acquired the collection. He was
excavating at Nimrud for Schamburg, the German millionaire"
"You mean he found the gold and did not report the discovery to his
patron or the local authorities?
How shocking!"
"Shocking indeed, but not necessarily illegal. The laws regarding the
disposition of antiquities and the ownership of buried treasure were
even more undefined then than they are today In any case, nothing could
be proved. If Vincey did peddle the loot to the Metropolitan, he did it
through an intermediary,
and the museum was no more anxious than he to
explain the transaction."
I could see that Emerson was beginning to get restless. He tapped out
his pipe, shuffled his feet, and reached again for the map.
Nevertheless I persisted.
"Then that is why I am not familiar with Mr. Vincey's archaeological
career. The mere suspicion of
such dishonesty— "
"Ended that career," Emerson finished. "No one would employ him again.
It was a promising career, too. He began in Egyptology— did good work
at
Kom Ombo and Denderah. There was some talk . . . But
why are we sitting here gossiping like a pair of old ladies? Get
dressed and let us go out."
He rose, stretching. The movement displayed his form to best advantage:
the breadth of his chest and shoulders, the lean, sinewy shape of the
lower portion of his frame. I suspected he had done it to distract me,
for Emerson is well aware of my appreciation of the aesthetic qualities
of his person. I persisted, however, inquiring, "Were you, by any
chance, the one who brought his malfeasance to light?"
"I? Certainly not. In fact, I came to his defense, pointing out that
other excavators, including certain officials of the British Museum,
were equally unscrupulous in their methods of obtaining antiquities."
"Why, Emerson, what a specious argument! I am surprised at you."
"The treasure was better off at the Metropolitan than in some private
collection."
"An even less tenable argument."
Emerson started for the bedroom. It was his little way of indicating he
did not care to discuss the subject further. I had, however, one more
question.
"Why did you bring up the subject in that rude way? The others were
willing to let the past be
forgotten— "
Emerson whirled, his manly countenance aglow with honest indignation.
"I, rude? You know nothing about the traditions of masculine
conversation, Peabody. That was just a friendly jest."
* * *
The succeeding days were very pleasant. It had been a long time since
we had had the leisure to wander around Cairo renewing old
acquaintances, to linger in the coffee shops fahddling with grave
scholars from the university, and to explore the bookshops in the
bazaar. We spent an evening with our old friend Sheikh Mohammed
Bahsoor, and ate far too much. Not to have stuffed ourselves would have
been a grievous breach of good manners, even though I knew I would have
to put up with Emerson's snoring all night as a result. He always
snores when he has taken too much to eat. The sheikh was disappointed
to learn that Ramses was not with us and shook his head disapprovingly
when I explained that the boy had remained in England to pursue his
education. "What useful matters can he learn there? You should let
him
come to me, Sitt Hakim, I will teach him to ride and shoot and govern
the hearts of men."
M. Loret, the Director of the Department of Antiquities, was in Luxor,
so we were unable to call on him as was proper, but we spent time with
other colleagues, bringing ourselves up-to-date on the current state of
archaeological excavation and the availability of trained personnel.
One day we lunched with the Reverend Sayce on his dahabeeyah in order
to meet a student of whom he had great hopes. The Istar was not nearly
so fine a boat as the Pbilae, my own beloved dahabeeyah, but it
recalled poignant memories of that never-to-be forgotten voyage I could
not restrain a sigh when we took our leave, and Emerson glanced
questionirigly at me.
"Why so pensive, Peabody? Were you not impressed with Mr. Jackson's
qualifications?"
"He seems intelligent and well-trained. I was thinking of the past, my
dear Emerson. Do you
remember— "
"Oh, your dahabeeyah. They are picturesque but impractical. We can
reach Luxor by rail in sixteen and
a half hours. Shall we go to Meidum
tomorrow? The nearest station is Rikka,- we can hire donkeys there."
He went on chatting, seemingly unaware of my failure to respond. As we
went along the corridor toward our rooms I began to hear the sounds of
what resembled a miniature war— shouts, crashes, thuds. The door to our
sitting room stood open. It was from this chamber that the noises came
and my astonished gaze fell upon a scene of utter confusion. Striped
galabeeyahs billowed like sails in a storm as their wearers darted to
and fro, cries and fulsome Arabic curses reverberated.
An even more fulsomely profane shout from Emerson, whose powers along
those lines exceed any I
have ever heard, rose over the uproar and
stilled it. The men stood still, panting. I recognized our safragi, who
had evidently recruited several friends to assist him in whatever
endeavor he was pursuing. As their robes fell into place I saw the
object of that endeavor.
It had alighted on the back of the sofa, where it stood at bay, fur
bristling and tail lashing. For a moment
a sensation of superstitious
terror came over me, as if I beheld a supernatural emissary announcing
disaster to one I loved. If the demonic Black Dog appeared to herald
the death of a member of some noble families, what more appropriate
Bane of the Emersons could there be than a large, brindled Egyptian cat?
"Bastet!" I cried. "Oh, Emerson— "
"Don't be absurd, Peabody." Emerson, wise in the ways of cats,
cautiously circled around the animal. Its head swiveled to follow his
movements and I saw its eyes, they were not golden, like those of our
cat Bastet, but a clear pale-green, the color of peridots. "For one
thing," Emerson went on, "Bastet is at Chalfont with Ramses. For
another . . . Nice kitty then, good kitty . . ." He bent down and
squinted at
the posterior of the feline. "It is a male cat. Very
definitely male."
It was also bigger and darker in color. Nor did its countenance exhibit
the benevolence of Bastet's. I have seldom seen a more calculating look
in the eyes of any mammal, human or otherwise.
"Where did it come from?" I asked, and then repeated the question in
Arabic.
The safragi held out his hands in appeal. They were bleeding from
several deep scratches. The cat must have come in through the window,
he had found it there when he entered to deliver a parcel and had tried
in vain to evict it.
"So you enlisted an army of heavy-footed friends to help you," I said
caustically, looking from the smashed vases and scattered flowers to
the shredded curtains. "Go away, all of you. You are only frightening
the poor creature."
The wounded safragi returned the animal's stare with one almost as
malignant. I must say it did not look frightened. I was about to
advance upon it— Emerson, I noticed, had prudently retreated— when the
safragi glanced at the open door and exclaimed, "We have found him,
Effendi. He is here."
"So I see," said Mr. Vincey. He shook his head. "Bad cat! Naughty
Anubis!"
I turned. "Good afternoon, Mr. Vincey. This is your cat?"
His face, so melancholy in repose, brightened in a smile He wore a
well-cut afternoon suit which became his trim form very well, but I
noticed that though neatly brushed and pressed, the once expensive
fabric was sadly worn. "My friend, my companion," he said gently.
"But— oh, dear!— I see he has been very naughty indeed. Is he
responsible
for this chaos?"
"It was not his fault," I replied, approaching the animal "Any
creature, when pursued— "
Mr. Vincey's cry of warning came too late. I withdrew my hand, which
was now marked by a row of bleeding scratches.
"Forgive me, my dear Mrs. Emerson," Vincey exclaimed. He passed me and
scooped the creature into
his arms. It settled down and began to
purr in a deep baritone. "Anubis is what one might call a one-person
cat. I do hope he didn't hurt you?"
"What an asinine question," commented Emerson. "Here, Peabody, take my
handkerchief. Wait a moment— it was here, in my pocket— "
It was not in his pocket. It hardly ever was. I took the one Mr. Vincey
offered me and wrapped it around my hand. "It is not the first time I
have been scratched," I said with a smile. "No hard feelings,
Mr.
Vincey. And Anubis."
"Let me introduce you." Vincey proceeded to do so, addressing the cat
as seriously as he would have done a human being. "This is Mrs.
Emerson, Anubis. She is my friend and she must be yours. Let him sniff
your fingers, Mrs. Emerson . . . There. Now you may stroke his head."
Somewhat amused at the absurdity of the business, I did as he asked,
and was rewarded by a renewal of the deep purr. It sounded so much like
Emerson's softer tones I could not help glancing in his direction.
He was not amused. "Now that that is settled, you will please excuse
us, Vincey. We have just got back and want to change."
Another example of masculine repartee, I assumed I would have called it
rudeness.
"I am very sorry," Mr. Vincey exclaimed. "I came in the hope that you
would take tea with me. I was waiting for you on the terrace when
Anubis slipped his lead and I had to go in search of him. That is how
it all came about But if you have another engagement— "
"I would be delighted to join you for tea," I said.
Mr. Vincey's sad gray eyes lit up. They were most expressive optics.
"Please yourself," Emerson grunted. "I have other things to do. Good
day, Vincey."
He opened the bedroom door and let out a profane exclamation. The
exclamation— though not the profanity— was echoed by Mr. Vincey. "Oh,
dear! Was Anubis in that room as well?"
"It appears he was," I replied, studying the crumpled linens and
scattered papers with some chagrin. "Never mind, Mr. Vincey, the
safragi and his friends did more damage than Anubis, I expect. They
will—"
"Curse it!" shouted Emerson. He slammed the door.
I gathered up my handbag and my parasol, and after directing the
safragi to tidy the rooms, I preceded Mr. Vincey into the hall.
"I need not apologize for my husband, I believe," I said. "You know his
brusque manner conceals a heart of gold."
"Oh, I know Emerson very well," was the laughing reply. "To be honest,
Mrs. Emerson, I am pleased to have you to myself. I have . . . I have a
favor to ask."
I had a premonition of what that favor might be, but like the
gentleman he was, Mr. Vincey waited to propose it until after we had
found a table on the famous terrace and the waiter had taken our order.
We sat in silence for a time, enjoying the balmy afternoon air and
watching the picturesque procession of Egyptian life passing along the
street. Carriages let off passengers and picked up others, water
carriers and vendors crowded around the steps. The tables were almost
filled with ladies in light summer gowns and big hats, gentlemen in
afternoon garb, and the usual sprinkling of officers. From his pocket
Vincey had produced a lead and collar and fastened it on the cat. It
submitted to this indignity more gracefully than its conduct had led me
to expect, and squatted at its master's feet like a dog.
I found Mr. Vincey a pleasant companion. Our mutual affection for the
feline species provided a useful introductory topic of conversation. I
told him of the cat Bastet, and he replied with accounts of Anubis's
intelligence, loyalty and courage. "For a good many years he has been
not only my friend but my best friend, Mrs. Emerson. People talk of the
selfishness of cats, but I have not found human friends so loyal"
I recognized this statement for what it was intended to be— a tentative
reference to his unhappy history— but naturally I was too well-bred to
indicate I knew of that history. I replied with a sympathetic murmur
and a look that invited further confidences.
A flush mantled his cheekbones. "You must have guessed what I am about
to ask, Mrs. Emerson. Your kindness and sympathy are well known. I had
hoped— I am in need ... I beg your pardon. It is difficult for me to
sue
for favors. I have not lost all my pride."
"Pray feel no self-consciousness, Mr. Vincey," I replied warmly.
"Misfortune may come even to the worthy. There is no cause for shame in
seeking honest employment."
"How eloquently and with what exquisite tact you express yourself!"
Vincey exclaimed. I thought I saw
a glimmer as of tears in his eyes. I
looked away until he could conquer his emotion.
It was as I had supposed. Hearing of our plans for an enlarged,
permanent staff, he was seeking employment. Once the difficulty of this
admission was over, he proceeded to recite his qualifications. They
were impressive: ten years of excavation, fluent Arabic, familiarity
with the hieroglyphs, a good sound classical education.
"There is only one difficulty," he concluded, with a smile that shoi
even white teeth. "Whither I go, Anubis goes. I could not abandon h
"I would think less of you if you did," I assured him. "That is no
difficulty, Mr. Vincey. You understand
I cannot promise anything y; our
plans are still in the process of being formulated. However, I will
speak to Emerson and— without wishing in any way to hold out false
hopes— I have every reason to believe
he will be favorably inclined to your offer."
"I cannot thank you enough." His voice broke. "That is the truth,
Mrs. Emerson, you have no idea— "
"Enough said, Mr. Vincey." Touched by his sincerity, respecting his
dignity, I pretended to glance at my watch. "Dear me, it is getting
late. I must hurry and change. Are you coming to the ball?"
"I had not intended to, but if you will be there—"
"Yes, indeed. I look forward to it."
"What costume are you wearing?"
"Ah, that is a secret," I replied gaily. "We are all to be masked and
in disguise. Half the fun will be trying to recognize one's friends."
"I can't believe you have persuaded Emerson to attend," Vincey said.
"He used to roar like a chained
bear at the very prospect of a social
engagement. How you have civilized him!"
"He roared a bit," I admitted, laughing. "But I have found the perfect
costume for him, one he cannot object to assuming"
"An ancient pharaoh?" Relieved of his embarrassment, Vincey was ready
to enter into the spirit of the thing. "He would be a perfect Thutmose
the Third, the great warrior king."
"Now, really, Mr. Vincey, can you picture Emerson appearing in public
attired only in a short kilt and a beaded collar? He is a modest man.
Anyhow, Thutmose was only a few inches over five feet in height."
"He
would look magnificent in armor."
"Suits of armor are not so easily come by in the bazaar. You won't trap
me so easily, Mr. Vincey!
I must be off now."
"And I, if I am to find some fancy dress of my own." He took the hand I
had offered him, with a rueful look at the makeshift bandage around
it, he raised it, bandage and all, to his lips.
* * *
Emerson claimed he had forgotten about the fancy dress ball. Then
he claimed he had never agreed to attend. After being driven back
from both these positions, he retreated to a third line of defense,
objecting to my ensemble. It began, "If you think I am going to
allow my wife to appear in such a costume . . ." and
ended, "I wash my hands of the whole affair. Do as you like, you
always do."
In fact, I was rather pleased with my choice I had dismissed the
idea of some version of ancient Egyptian dress, there would be
dozens of (inappropriate variations of that, by ladies who hoped to
conjure up the seductive image of Cleopatra, the only queen known to
the idle tourist. I had considered Boadicea or some other prominent
defender of women's rights, but it was not so easy to put together a
costume in
the limited time at my disposal. What I wore was not fancy
dress. It would appear as such to the conventional travelers at
Shepheard's, however, for I had determined to take the last, bold
stride in my campaign of suitable working attire for archaeologically
disposed ladies.
My first experiences in Egypt, pursuing mummies and climbing up and
down cliffs, had convinced me that trailing skirts and tight corsets
were a confounded nuisance in that ambience For many years my working
costume had consisted of pith helmet and shirtwaist, boots, and Turkish
trousers, or bloomers. They had caused consternation enough when I
first appeared in them, but eventually ladies adopted divided skirts
and full trousers for sporting activities. They were a good deal more
convenient than skirts, but they had certain disadvantages, on one
memorable occasion I had been unable to defend myself from attack
because I could not locate my pocket (and the revolver in it) among the
voluminous folds of fabric.*
I had always envied gentlemen the abundance and accessibility of their
pockets My belt of tools— knife, waterproof container for matches and
candles, canteen, notebook and pencil, among other useful objects —
substituted for pockets to some extent, but the noise they made
clashing together made it difficult for me to creep up on suspects
unnoticed, and the sharp edges on a number of them impeded the
in.petuous embraces to which Emerson is prone. I did not intend to
abandon my chatelaine, as I jestingly called it, but pockets, large
pockets and many of them, would allow me to carry even more essentials
with me.
The costume my dressmaker had produced, under my direction, was almost
identical with the shooting suits gentlemen had been wearing for some
years. There were pockets everywhere — inside the jacket and on its
upper portion, and all over the skirts or tails of the said
jacket. This object of apparel covered the torso and the adjoining area
of the lower limbs. Beneath it were knickerbockers cut like a man's
(except for being somewhat fuller in the upper part) of a matching
fabric. They were tucked into stout laced boots, and when I had clapped
a pith helmet on my head and put my hair up under it, I felt I was the
very picture of a young gentleman explorer.
Arms folded and head on one side, Emerson watched me assume this garb
with an expression that left
me in some doubt as to his reaction. The
occasional quiver of his lips might have been amusement or repressed
outrage. Pirouetting in front of the mirror, I addressed him over my
shoulder.
"Well? What do you think?"
Emerson's lips parted. "You need a
mustache."
"I have one." I produced it from the lower left-hand pocket
of the jacket and pressed it into place. It was a red mustache. I had
been unable to find a black one.
After Emerson had got himself under control I asked him to study the
effect again and give me his
serious opinion. At his request I removed
the mustache, he claimed that appendage rendered serious consideration
impossible. After circling me two or three times he nodded. "You don't
make a very convincing young gentleman, Peabody. However, the outfit
rather becomes you. You might consider wearing it on the dig, it would
be much more convenient than those cursed bloomers. They have so
many
yards of cloth in them, it takes me forever to— "
"There is no time for that, Emerson," I said, gliding away from the
hand he had extended in order to make his point. "Your costume is
hanging in the wardrobe."
With a dramatic flourish I flung the wardrobe door open.
A number of establishments in the suk sold various versions of
native Egyptian robes, for they were popular with tourists. I had to
search
for some time before I found an ensemble that was not only completely
authentic, but particularly suitable to Emerson's tall frame and
individualistic character. Though he denies it, he has a secret
penchant for disguises and a certain taste for the theatrical. I
fancied this costume would appeal to him, for the embroidered jubba and
woven kaftan, the gold-trimmed hezaam and loose trousers might have
been worn by a prince of the Touareg— those extremely virile
and violent
desert raiders who are known to their despairing victims as "The
Forgotten of God."
They are also called "The Veiled Ones," because of the blue veils that
provide protection against heat and blowing sand. It was this feature
that had determined me to select the costume, for it would serve in
lieu of a mask, which I felt sure Emerson would not consent to wear.
The headdress, called a khafiya, was a square of cloth bound in place
by a rope. It framed the face becomingly and, with the veil, would
leave only his eyes exposed.
Emerson studied it in silence. "We will go well together," I said
cheerfully. "My trousers and your skirts."
* * *
The ballroom was decorated in the style of Louis XVI and featured a
superb chandelier whose thousands of crystals reflected the lights in a
dazzling shimmer. The brilliant and fantastical garb of the guests
filled the room with color. There were plenty of ancient Egyptians
present, but some of the guests had been more inventive, I saw a
Japanese samurai and a bishop of the Eastern Church, complete with
miter. My own dress provoked considerable comment, however. I had no
lack of partners, and as I circled the floor in the respectful grasp
of one gentleman or another, I was delighted at how neatly I could
perform the vigorous steps of polkas and schottisches.
Emerson does not dance. From time to time I would catch a glimpse of
him wandering around the perimeter of the room, or talking to someone
who shared his disinterest in terpsichorean exercise. Then I saw him no
more and concluded he had got bored and gone off in search of more
congenial company.
I was sitting in one of the little alcoves screened by potted plants,
recuperating from my exertions and chatting with Lady Norton, when he
appeared again. "Ah, my dear, there you are," I said, glancing over my
shoulder at the tall veiled form. "Permit me to present you to— "
I was permitted to say no more. Arms like steel snatched me up out of
my chair, stifled, breathless, enveloped in folds of billowing cloth,
I was carried rapidly away. I heard a shriek from Lady Norton, and
exclamations of surprise and amusement from the other guests— for my
abductor's path led him straight across the ballroom toward the door.
I was not amused. Emerson was not the man to play such a silly trick,
and I had known, the moment the person touched me, that the grasp was
not that of my spouse. He felt me stiffen, heard the sharp intake
of my breath without slackening his pace he shifted his hold in such a
fashion that my face was crushed against his breast and my cry was
muffled by folds of fabric.
Astonishment and incredulity weakened my limbs, I could not believe
what was happening. Could a person be abducted out of Shepheard's
Hotel, under the very noses of hundreds of watchers?
The attempt might have succeeded by its very audacity. What else could
the audience assume but that
my notoriously eccentric spouse had
entered into the spirit of the masque and was playing the role his
costume had inspired? I heard one idiotic woman shriek, "How romantic!"
My struggles were taken for part of the charade, and they weakened as I
grew faint from lack of oxygen.
Then a voice rang out— a voice famous throughout the length of Egypt
for
its resonance and audibility.
It reassured, it inspired me, my
strength returned, my struggles were renewed. The grip that held me
loosened. I felt myself flying through the air, reached out, groping
and blinded, braced myself for the impact I knew must follow . . . And
struck a solid but yielding surface with a force that drove the last of
the straining breath from my lungs. I clutched at it, it recoiled from
me with a grunt of effort and then, recovering, caught and held me.
I opened my eyes. I had not needed to see him to know whose arms
enclosed me, but the sight of the beloved face— crimson with choler,
eyes blazing like sapphires— left me too weak to speak. Emerson drew a
deep, shuddering breath. "Damnation!" he roared. "Can't I leave you
alone for five minutes, Peabody?"
"No
woman really wants a man to carry her off,
she only wants him to
want to do it."
"Why didn't you pursue the fellow?" I demanded.
Emerson kicked the bedroom door shut and dropped me unceremoniously
onto the bed. He had carried me straight upstairs and he was breathing
rather heavily. Our rooms were on the third floor, but I fancied it was
exasperation rather than exertion that had quickened his breath. The
tone in which he replied further strengthened this theory.
"Don't ask stupid questions, Peabody! He threw you straight at me, like
a bundle of laundry. Would you rather I had let you fall to the floor?
Even if I had been so cold-blooded, I reacted instinctively, and by
the time I had recovered myself he was long gone."
I sat up and began to straighten my disheveled hair. Somewhere along
the way I had lost my pith helmet. I reminded myself to search for it
next day, it was a new one and very expensive.
"The implied reproach was unfair, Emerson. I apologize. It would take
him only a minute to achieve anonymity by divesting himself of his
robes. They were not an exact copy of yours but they were close
enough."
"Confounded fancy dress!" Emerson had divested himself of bis robe, he
tossed it into a corner and plucked the headdress from his head. I let
out a cry.
"Is that blood on your face? Come here and let me see."
After some masculine grumbling he consented to let me have a look. (He
likes being fussed over but refuses to admit it.) There was only a
small trace of blood on his temple but it marked a tender spot that
would no doubt blossom into a purple bruise before morning. "What the
devil have you been up to?"
I asked.
Emerson stretched out on the bed. "I had a little adventure of my own
You don't suppose it was Divine Guidance that brought me to your rescue
in the traditional nick of time, do you?"
"I could believe in Divine Guidance, my dear. Are you not always at my
side when danger threatens?"
Leaning over him, I pressed my lips to the wound "Ouch," said Emerson.
"What happened?"
"I had gone out for a smoke and some intelligent conversation,"
Emerson explained.
"Out of the hotel?"
"No one in the hotel—saving your presence, my dear—is capable of
intelligent conversation. I thought Abdul or Ali might be hanging
about. As I strolled innocently through the gardens, three men jumped
me.
"Three? Was that all?"
Emerson frowned. "It was rather odd," he said.
"The fellows were, I believe, ordinary Cairene thugs. If they had
intended to murder me, they might have done some damage, for as you
know, they all carry knives. They never used them, only their bare
hands."
"Bare hands did not inflict this wound," I said, indicating his temple.
"One of them had a club. The confounded headdress was of some use, it
deflected the blow. I became a trifle annoyed then, and after
I had
disposed of two of them, the third fled. I would have questioned them,
but it occurred to me that you might be in similar straits and that I
had better see what you were up to."
I got up and went to look for my medical kit. "Why should you suppose
that? Your enemies are not necessarily mine, and I must say, Emerson,
that over the years you have attracted quite a number of ...
Where the devil did I put that box of bandages? The safragi has mixed
up the luggage, nothing is where
I left it."
Emerson sat up. "What makes you think it was the safragi?"
I finally found the medicine box,- it was in the original container,
but not in the original place. Emerson, who had been searching his own
luggage, straightened. "Nothing appears to have been taken."
I nodded agreement. He was holding an article I had not seen before— a
long narrow box of heavy cardboard. "Has something been added? Be
careful opening it, Emerson!"
"No, this is my property. Ours, I should say." He removed the lid, and
I saw a glitter of gold and a rich azure glow.
"Good heavens," I cried.
"It is the regalia Nefret carried away with her from the Holy
Mountain— the royal scepters. Why did you bring them?"
One scepter was shaped like a shepherd's crook, symbolizing the care of
the king for his people. The materials were gold and lapis lazuli in
alternating rings. The other object consisted of a short staff made
of
gold foil and dark-blue glass over a bronze core, from which depended
three flexible thongs of the same materials, gold beads alternating
with blue, and ending in cylindrical rods of solid gold. The flail
represented (as I have always believed) the other aspect of rule: power
and domination. It certainly
would have inflicted a painful blow if it
had been made of more durable materials, as the original whip
undoubtedly was. No such objects had ever been found in Egypt, though
they were known from countless paintings and reliefs.
"We agreed, did we not," said Emerson, "that it would be unconscionable
to keep these remarkable objects from scholars They are unique, and
they are two thousand years old if they are a day—
treasured relics.
They belong not to us but to the world."
"Well, yes— we did agree in theory, and I am of the same mind still,
but
we cannot display them
without explaining where we found them."
"Precisely. We will find them. This season."
I caught my breath. "It is an ingenious idea, Emerson. Brilliant, even.
No one is better able than you to arrange a convincing if misleading
ambience."
Emerson fingered the cleft in his chin and looked a trifle
uncomfortable. "Dishonesty goes against the grain, Peabody, I confess
it,- but what else are we to do? Thebes seems the most likely place for
such a— er— discovery, the Cushite conquerors of the Twenty-Sixth
Dynasty remained there for some time. We must account in some way for
the information about ancient Meroitic culture we acquired last winter.
Sooner or later one of us, or Walter, will let something slip, it is
not humanly possible to write about the subject without displaying
information we ought not to have."
"I agree. In fact, the article you sent to the Zeitschrift in June— "
"Devil take it, Peabody, I said nothing revealing in that article!"
"In
any case," I said soothingly, "it will not be published for some time."
"These scholarly journals are always behind schedule," Emerson agreed.
"So you are thinking along the same lines, Peabody?"
"What lines?" I
began rummaging in my box of medical supplies. "I am surprised at you,
Peabody. Usually you are the first to find portents of danger all
around, and although I admit there are a number
of individuals who have
reason to dislike us, recent incidents are beginning to suggest quite a
different theory."
He sat down on the edge of the bed. I brushed the hair from his brow
and applied antiseptic to his wound. Absorbed in his theory, he ignored
attentions he was not ordinarily willing to receive without complaint.
"Our luggage appears to have been searched. Theft was not the object,
nothing was taken. Tonight we were both attacked. Murder was not the
object, we must assume, I think, that abduction of one or both
of us
was. For what purpose?"
"Some of our old enemies may want to carry us off and watch gloatingly
while hideous tortures are inflicted upon us," I suggested.
"Always cheerful, Peabody," Emerson said, grinning. "What are you
doing? I won't have any confounded bandages."
I cut off a bit of sticking plaster. "Out with it, Emerson. You are
beating around the bush."
"Not at all. I am simply admitting that the evidence is inconclusive.
It is suggestive, though, don't you think?"
"I think this time it is your imagination that has got out of hand." I
sat down next to him. "Unless you know something you haven't told me.
"I don't know anything," Emerson said irritably. "If I did, I would not
be dithering like a nervous old spinster. All the same . . We covered
our tracks as well as we could, Peabody, but there are several weak
spots in the fictional fabric we wove. A good hard shove at any one of
them would leave a gaping hole
of speculation."
"Are you by any chance referring to the Church of the Saints of the Son
of God as a weak spot? Curse it, Emerson, I had to invent a
religious sect, if we had claimed Nefret's kindly foster parents were
Baptists
or Lutherans or Roman Catholics, the most cursory inquiry
would prove no such family existed."
"Especially if you had claimed they were Roman Catholics," Emerson
said. Seeing my expression, he added hastily, "It was very clever of
you, my dear."
"Don't patronize me, Emerson! I cannot imagine what has got you into
this morbid state of mind. The story I— we— invented is no more
unbelievable than many true ... I do wish you would stop mumbling under
your breath It is very rude. Speak up!"
"Map," said Emerson.
"Willoughby Forth's maps? You heard how Maspero and the others laughed
at them the other night— "
"The map," said Emerson loudly, "that Reginald Forthright showed to
half the bloo------- blooming
officers at Sanam Abu Dom. Everyone from General Rundle to the lowest
subaltern knew when he went after his
uncle that he had more to go on than vague rumors. He never came back,
but WE did, with Forth's daughter. How long do you suppose it will take
some inventive journalist to concoct a thrilling scenario out of those
facts? I am only surprised your friend O'Connell hasn't already done
so. His imagination is almost as rampageous as— "
"The implication is insulting and undeserved— especially coming from
YOU. I have never heard such . . You are muttering again, Emerson. What
did you say?"
With a shrug and a smile Emerson turned and answered, not the question
but the underlying emotion
that had prompted it and my other (I admit)
unfair accusations. A soft answer turneth away wrath, as
the Scripture
says, but Emerson's methods were even more efficacious.
* * *
I had hoped to spend the rest of the week in Cairo enjoying the
amenities of the hotel, but Emerson suddenly took it into his head to
visit Meidum I had no objection, though I wished he had given me a
little more notice.
We had spent the morning in the suk, after lunching at the hotel,
Emerson left me reading and resting while he went off on some errand of
his own. Upon his return he calmly announced we would take the evening
train "So hurry up and get your gear together, Peabody."
I dropped my copy of Erman's
Agyptiscbe Grammatik. "What gear? There is
no hotel at Rikka."
Emerson began, "I have a friend— "
"I will not stay with any of your Egyptian friends. They are delightful
people, but they have no notion
of sanitation."
"I thought you might feel that way. I have prepared a little surprise
for you, Peabody. What has happened to your sense of adventure?"
I was unable to resist the challenge, or Emerson's smile. As I packed a
small bag with changes of clothing and toilet articles, my spirits
began to soar. This was like the old days—Emerson and I, alone together
in
the wilderness!
Once we had fought our way through the confusion at the railroad
station and found seats on the train, Emerson relaxed, but none of my
attempts at conversation seemed to please him.
"I hope that poor fellow who collapsed in the suk will be all right,"
was my first attempt. "You should have let me examine him, Emerson."
"His— er— friends were there to attend to him," Emerson said shortly.
After a while I tried again. "Our friends will be surprised to find we
have gone! It was good of so many
of them to come round this morning to
express their concern." Emerson grunted.
"I am inclined to believe Mr. Neville's theory was the right one," I
went on. "How amusingly he put it: 'Some young fellow flushed with wine
and inspired by your charms, Mrs. E., playing a silly trick.'"
"And my charms inspired the attentions of the three young fellows in
the garden," said Emerson, with ineffable sarcasm.
"The timing of the two events may have been pure coincidence." "Pure
balderdash," growled Emerson. "Peabody, why do you insist on discussing
our private affairs in public?"
The only other occupants of the carriage were a group of German
university students, who were carrying on a loud conversation in their
own language, but I took the hint.
By the time we reached Rikka my enthusiasm had dimmed somewhat.
Darkness was complete, and we were the only non-Egyptians to disembark
there. I stumbled over a stone and Emerson, whose spirits had improved
in inverse ratio to the lowering of mine, caught my arm. "There he is.
Hi, Abdullah!"
"I should have known," I muttered, seeing the white shape that hovered,
ghostlike, at the end of the
small platform.
"Quite," said Emerson cheerfully. "We can always count on good old
Abdullah, eh? I sent a message to him this afternoon."
After the appropriate greetings had been exchanged, not only with
Abdullah but with his sons Feisal and Selim and his nephew Daoud, we
mounted the donkeys they had waiting and set out. How the devil the
donkeys saw where they were going I do not know, I certainly could not,
even after the moon rose, for
it was on the wane and gave little light.
The gait of some donkeys is very uneasy when they break into a trot. I
got the distinct impression these donkeys did not like being out at
that hour.
After a hideously uncomfortable ride across the cultivated fields I saw
the light of a fire ahead on the edge of the desert. Two more of our
men were waiting for us. The little camp they had set up was better
than Abdullah's usual efforts along those lines, I was relieved to see
that there was a proper tent for us, and
the welcome aroma of
fresh-brewed coffee reached my nostrils.
Emerson lifted me off my donkey. "Do you remember I once threatened to
snatch you up and carry you off into the desert?"
I looked from Abdullah to Feisal to Daoud to Selim to Mahmud to Ali to
Mohammed. They stood round us in an interested circle, their faces
beaming. "You are such a romantic, Emerson," I said.
However, when I emerged from the tent the following morning I was in a
better humor, and the scene before me roused the old thrill of
archaeological fever.
Meidum is one of the most attractive sites in Egypt The remains of the
cemetery are situated on the edge of the low bluff that marks the
beginning of the desert, toward the east the emerald carpet of the
cultivated land stretched out toward the river, whose waters were
stained rosy pink by the rays of the rising sun. On the bluff, rising
high against the sky, was the pyramid, though I must confess it does
not look much like one. The Egyptians call it El Haram el-Kaddab, "The
False Pyramid," for it more resembles a square tower of three
diminishing stages. Once there were seven stages, like those of a step
pyramid. The angles between them had been filled in with stone to give
a smooth slope, but these filling stones and the upper stages had long
since collapsed, forming a frame of detritus all around the giant tomb.
Like the pyramids of Dahshoor and Giza, it was uninscribed. I have
never understood why the kings who went to so much trouble to erect
these grandiose structures did not bother to put their names on them,
for humility was not a notable characteristic of Egyptian pharaohs. It
is also uncharacteristic of tourists, ancient or modern. As soon as
the great art of writing was invented, certain individuals made use
of it tco deface monuments and works of art. Three thousand years
before ouir time, an Egyptian tourist came to Meidum to visit the
"beautiful templle of King Snefru," and left an inscription, or
graffito, to that effect om one of the walls of the temple. Snefru was
known to have had two suc;h tombs,- we had worked at one of them, the
north pyramid of Dahshooir. Petrie, who had discovered the graffito in
question, decided that thiis must be Snefru's second pyramid.
"Bah," said Emerson. "One graffito does not constitute proof of
owrn-ership. The temple was already a thousand years old when the
coim-founded scribbler visited it, the guides of that remote era were
probab>ly as ignorant as those of the present day. Snefru's two
pyramids are the ones at Dahshoor."
When Emerson speaks in that dogmatic tone, few care to contradilict him
I am one of those few, but since I agreed with his views I did not do
so on that occasion.
For the next two days we busied ourselves with the private tomlbs.
There were several groups of them north, south and west of the
pyramid— for the cultivated land eastward was of course unsuitable I
for tombs. We had ample help. I had never really expected to be alcone
with Emerson, the presence of strangers always attracts local villagers
demanding baksheesh or asking for work or simply satisfying thheir
curiosity They began wandering in while we were at breakfast the ffirst
day, and after interviewing them Emerson set some to work umder
Abdullah's direction.
I always say that if one cannot have a pyramid, a nice deep tomhb is
the next best thing. All the pyramids had cemeteries around therm—
tombs of courtiers and princes, nobles and high officials, who were
given the privilege of spending eternity in proximity to the god-king
they had served in life. These Old Kingdom tombs were called masteabas
because the superstructure resembled the flat-topped, sloping-skided
benches found outside modern Egyptian houses. The superstructures,
built of stone or mud-brick, had often disappeared or collapsed into
shapeless mounds, but they were not the parts that interested me.
Under the mastabas were shafts and stairs descending deep intoo the
rock beneath and culminating in the burial chamber. Some of the rricher
tombs had substructures almost as delightfully dark, tortuous and
bat-ridden as those of the pyramids.
Emerson very kindly allowed me to go into one such tomb (because he
knew I would do it anyway).
The steeply sloping entrance ramp was
littered with debris and only four feet high. It ended in a shaft,
which I was obliged to descend by means of a rope held by Selim, who,
at Emerson's insistence, had followed me down. I usually employed Selim
for such work, since he was the youngest and slimmest of the trained
men, one was always encountering holes through which a larger body
could not easily pass, and of course the low ceilings presented a
difficulty for taller individuals. Emerson was not particularly fond of
tombs like these, he kept banging his head and getting stuck in holes.
But I must not allow my enthusiasm to lead me to a more detailed
description, which might bore my duller readers and which is not really
relevant to the tale I am telling. Suffice it to say that when I
emerged, gasping for breath (the air in the lowest portions of such
tombs is extremely hot and very close) and covered with a sort of paste
compounded of perspiration, stone dust, and bat droppings, I could
hardly contain my appreciation.
"It was delightful, Emerson! To be sure, the wall paintings are of poor
quality, but I saw scraps of wood and linen wrappings among the debris
in the burial chamber. I am sure we ought— "
Emerson had been waiting at the entrance to pull me out. Having done
so, he hastily backed away, wrinkling his nose.
"Not now, Peabody. This was intended to be a survey, we haven't the
manpower or the time to excavate. Why don't you amuse yourself with the
pyramid?"
So I did. It was quite a nice pyramid in its own way, though the
passageways were not so extensive or interesting as the ones in the
Giza and Dahshoor monuments. Like them, it had been opened by earlier
explorers who found it had been completely looted in antiquity.
On the afternoon of the second day came a further addition to what had
now become something of a small mob—a pair of what Emerson refers to as
cursed tourists. He unbent a trifle, however, when one
of them
introduced himself as Herr Eberfelt, a German scholar with whom Emerson
had corresponded. He was a virtual caricature of a Prussian, monocled,
stiff as a board, and very formal in his manner.
Herr Schmidt, the
young fellow with him, was one of his students— a plump, pleasant chap
who would have been quite handsome had it not been for the ugly dueling
scar that disfigured one cheek. German students take great pride in
these scars, which they consider evidences of courage rather than of
stupidity, which in fact they are. I am told the students even
employ various painful and unsanitary methods of preventing the wounds
from healing so that the scars will be as conspicuous as possible. Herr
Schmidt's manners were as faultless as his face was not. He addressed
me in broken but delightful English and appeared more than ready to
accept the cup of tea I offered However, Emerson insisted on showing
them around the site and the young man obediently followed his superior.
I had finished my tea and was about to go after them when one of the
workmen sidled up, glancing shyly at me from under his thick lashes.
Like the other men, he had stripped off his robe while working and
was
attired only in a wrapped loincloth. His sleek, smooth body shone with
perspiration.
"I have found a tomb, honored Sitt," he whispered. "Will you come,
before the others find it and claim
a share of the baksheesh?"
I looked around. Emerson must have taken the visitors into the
pyramid,- they were nowhere in sight. Daoud was directing a group of
workers who were investigating the tombs next to the causeway that led
from the pyramid to the river. "Where is it?" I asked
"Not far, honored Sitt. Near the Tomb of the Geese" He was referring to
one of the most famous tombs of Meidum, from which had come the lovely
painting now in the Cairo Museum. It was located in the mastaba field
almost due north of the pyramid A crew under Abdullah was at work in
the area, searching for other tomb entrances, this man must be part of
that crew. His surreptitious manner and look of suppressed excitement
suggested that he had come on something remarkable enough to merit a
sizable reward. Naturally he did not want to share it with the others
Anticipation thrilled through my limbs as I pictured marvels equaling
the geese, or even the life-sized painted statues of a noble couple
that had been found in another mastaba in the same cemetery. Rising,
I
gestured to him to lead on.
The guttural chanting of Daoud's crew gradually faded as we scrambled
over the fallen rocks and rough ground at the base of the pyramid. We
were close to the northeast corner of the structure when my guide
stopped. He held out his hand. "Sitt," he began.
"No," I said in Arabic. "No baksheesh until you have shown me the tomb."
He took a step toward me, smiling as sweetly as a shy maiden.
Then I heard a sound like the sharp crack of a whip. A rolling rumble
of falling stone followed, as a rain of rocks and pebbles struck the
ground behind me. My guide took to his heels. I could hardly blame him.
Looking up in some annoyance, I saw a round, alarmed face peering down
from the top of the slope, which was almost fifty feet above me at that
point.
"Ach, Himmel, Frau Professor—
verzeiben Sie, bitte! I did not see you.
Are you damaged? Are you fainting with fear?"
He came scrambling down the slope as he spoke, waving his arms to keep
his balance, and starting another miniature avalanche.
"Neither," I replied. "No thanks to you, Herr Schmidt. What the
dev------ That is, what were you shooting at? For pity's sake, put your
revolver away before you drill a hole through me or yourself."
Coloring, the young man returned his weapon to its holster. "It was
eine Gazelle— a . . . How do you
call it?"
"Nonsense. It could not have been a gazelle, they are timid creatures
who would not venture so close to humans. You tried to shoot some poor
villager's goat, Herr Schmidt. Luckily for you, you missed it, the
world's finest marksman could not hit such a distant target with a
pistol."
My lecture was interrupted by Emerson, who came rushing toward us
demanding to know who had shot at what and why. My explanation did
nothing to relieve his tender anxiety,- turning to his German
colleague, who had been close on his heels, he burst into a storm of
complaint
"Sie baben recbt, Herr Professor," Schmidt
murmured submissively "Ich
bin tin vollendetes Rindvieb."
"You are making a great fuss about nothing, Emerson," I said. "The
bullet came nowhere near me."
"In short, no harm was done or intended," said Professor Eberfelt,
coming to the defense of his colleague.
"Except that my guide was frightened away," I added. "Let us see if we
can find him and reassure him. He had found a new tomb which he was
about to show me."
But neither the guide nor the tomb he had mentioned was to be found,
though we searched for some time "Perhaps he will return tomorrow, once
he has got over his fright," I said at last "He was young, and appeared
to be very timid."
Our visitors did not linger, the boat they had hired awaited them, and
they meant to return to Cairo that night. Watching the donkeys
disappear into the darkening shadows of the east, Emerson stroked his
chin, as was his habit when deep in thought.
"I think we have done enough here, Peabody," he said "The Luxor-Cairo
train stops at Rikka in the morning. Shall we be on it?"
I could see no reason why not.
* * *
My first act upon reaching the hotel was to request the safragi to run
a nice hot bath for me As I luxuriated in the scented water Emerson
looked through the letters and messages that had arrived in our absence
and reported their contents to me, with appropriate comments "Will we
dine with Lady Wallingford and her daughter? No, we will not. Captain
and Mrs. Richardson look forward to the pleasure of our company at
their soiree . . . They will look in vain. Mr. Vincey hopes we will do
him the honor of lunching with him on Thursday . . It is an honor he
has not earned. The Solicitor General . . Aha! A grain of wheat among
all this chaff! A letter from Chalfont."
"Open it," I called. A ripping sound told me he had already done so.
The epistle was a sort of round-robin, begun by Evelyn and added to by
the others. Evelyn's and Walter's contributions were short, intended
only to reassure us that all was well with them and their charges.
Nefret's brief message was something of a disappointment to me, it
sounded like a duty note from a child to a relation she does not much
like. I reminded myself that I ought not to have expected anything
else. She had been taught to
read and write English by her father, but
she had not had much occasion to practice that skill. It would
be some
time before she learned to express herself gracefully and at length.
Ramses's contribution made up for any deficiency in the latter quality
at least. I could see why he had asked to be the last to write, for his
comments were, to say the least, more candid than those of his aunt.
"Rose
does not like it here. She does not say that, but her mouth
always looks as if she has been eating pickled onions. I think the
difficulty is that she does not get on with Ellis. Ellis is Aunt
Evelyn's new maid. She came from the gutter, like the others."
Emerson stopped to laugh, and I exclaimed, "Good heavens, where does
that child pick up such language? Out of the goodness of her heart
Evelyn employs unfortunate young women whose lives have not been
what they ought, but— "
"The description gains in pungency what it lacks in propriety," said
Emerson. "He goes on:
"Rose
says she does not hold this against Ellis. I certainly would not,
though I am not precisely certain what the term implies. But I do not
get on with Ellis either. She is always following
Nefret trying to get
her to change her clothing and curl her hair.
"Wilkins [our former butler, now
employed by Evelyn and Walter] has not
been well since we arrived. He seems very nervous. The least little
thing makes him start. When I let the lion out
of its cage yesterday
..."
My body lost its purchase on the surface of the tub and my head
went
under water. When I emerged, sputtering and choking, I found that
Emerson had continued reading.
". . . no danger, since as you
know I had been acquainted with the lion
since it was a cub and
had taken pains to renew the acquaintance
whenever possible. Uncle Walter was not nervous but his remarks were
pejorative in the extreme and he set me an additional ten pages of
Caesar to construe. He added that he was sorry I was too old to spank.
He has agreed to build a larger
cage for the lion."
I will spare my Reader Ramses's detailed descriptions of the health and
habits of the other servants (I
had not been aware of the cook's
fondness for gin, nor, I imagine, had Evelyn) He saved HER for last.
"She
has improved in health and spirits since we came here, I believe,
though in my opinion [As
I later discovered, Ramses had scratched the
last three words out, but Emerson read them anyhow] she spends too much
time at her studies. I have come round to your view that mens
Sana in
corpore sano is a good rule, and have adopted it myself. Toward that
end I determined to take up the sport of archery. It is a sport in
which young ladies are encouraged to participate. Aunt Evelyn agreed
with me and Uncle Walter, who can be obliging when he chooses, set up
the butts for us. I discovered that Nefret is already acquainted with
that sport. She has agreed to instruct me. In return I am teaching her
to ride and to fence."
"He doesn't know how to fence," I exclaimed indignantly.
"Er," said Emerson.
I decided not to pursue the subject. I had suspected Emerson was taking
fencing lessons on the sly, but
he never likes admitting he needs
instruction in anything, and his original motive for taking up this
sport was not to his credit, for it arose out of jealousy of an
individual concerning whom he had not the slightest cause to feel that
emotion. I had to admit his skill had proved useful on several
occasions thereafter, though. Apparently he had allowed Ramses to be
instructed as well. He knew I would not have approved, the idea of
Ramses's wielding a long, flexible, sharp instrument made my blood run
cold.
Two more paragraphs described Nefret's activities in far more detail
than they merited. After Emerson had finished he remarked, in tones
fatuous with parental pride, "How well he writes. Quite literary, upon
my word."
"It sounds as if things are going well," I replied. "Hand me that
towel, Emerson, will you please?"
Emerson handed me the towel. He then returned to the sitting room to
peruse the remainder of the post.
* * *
"Well, where next?" Emerson inquired, as we sat down to dinner that
evening. "Luxor or Amarna?"
"Have you eliminated Meidum?"
"No, not at all. But I feel we ought to look at the other possibilities
before we make a decision."
"Very well."
"What is your preference?"
"It is a matter of complete indifference to me."
Emerson peered at me over the top of the ornate menu the waiter had
handed him. "Are you annoyed about something, Peabody? Ramses's letter,
perhaps? You have scarcely spoken to me since I read it."
"What possible cause for annoyance could I have?"
"I can think of none." He waited for a moment. When I did not respond
he shrugged—one of those irritating masculine shrugs that dismisses a
woman's behavior as incomprehensible and/or irrelevant—
and resumed the
discussion. "I suggest we go direct to Luxor, then. I am rather
impatient to rid myself
of certain objects as promptly as I can."
"That makes sense," I agreed. "Have you any ideas as to where we
might— er— discover them?"
We discussed alternatives while we ate. It was still early when we
finished, and I suggested a stroll along the Muski.
"We are not going out this evening," Emerson replied. "I have something
else in mind I hope will please you."
It did. But when Emerson had settled into his usual sleeping
position— flat on his back, arms folded across his breast like a statue
of Osiris— I could not help remembering an occasion when the sight of
me
rising from the bath had prompted comparisons with Aphrodite. This
afternoon he had simply handed me a towel.
* * *
The only invitation Emerson had not thrown away was one from Mr. George
McKenzie. He was one
of those eccentric individuals more common in the
old days of archaeology than they are today: gifted amateurs who had
excavated and studied Egyptology without the restrictions of government
regulation. Some of them had done admirable work despite their.lack of
formal training, and McKenzie's massive three-volume work on ancient
Egyptian culture was an invaluable source, for many of the reliefs and
inscriptions he had copied in the 1850s had vanished forever. He was a
very old man now, and seldom gave or accepted invitations. Even Emerson
admitted this was a most flattering attention and an opportunity we
ought not miss.
He refused to wear evening dress, but he looked very handsome in his
frock coat and matching trousers.
I wore my second-best gown of silver
brocade woven with red roses and trimmed with silver lace at the bosom
and the cuffs of the elbow-length net sleeves. I hope I may not be
accused of vanity when I say that all eyes turned toward us as we
crossed the terrace toward the waiting carriage. A brilliant sunset
blazoned the western sky, the domes and minarets of old Cairo swam in
a dreaming haze.
Old Cairo was our destination— the medieval city with the beautiful
four-story houses and palaces from which the cruel Mamluk warriors had
tyrannized over the city. Many dwellings had fallen into disrepair and
were now inhabited by the poorer classes, whole families to a room, the
elaborately carved latticework which had concealed the beauties of the
hanm from envious eyes had been stripped away,
and the laundered
galabeeyahs of the humble drooped disconsolately from the decayed
screens of mashrabiyya alcoves. McKenzie's house had
belonged, it was said, to Sultan Kait Bey himself, and its
architectural features were well preserved. I quite looked forward to
seeing it
There are no street signs or house numbers in old Cairo. Finally the
driver stopped his horses and admitted what I had suspected for some
time, to wit, that he had no idea where he was going When Emerson
indicated a street, or rather an opening between two houses just ahead,
the driver declared he could not go there. He knew that street, it
narrowed even farther as it proceeded, and there would be no place in
which to turn the horses
"Wait for us here, then," Emerson said. As he helped me down from the
carriage, he was unable to resist remarking, "I told you not to wear
that frock, Peabody. I thought it likely we would have to go partway
on foot."
"Then why didn't you say so?" I demanded, hitching up my skirts.
"You have been here before, haven't you?"
"Some years ago." Emerson offered me his arm and we started off. "Down
this way, I think. McKenzie sent directions, but they were not . . Ah,
yes, here is the sabil he mentioned. First turning to the left."
We had not gone far when the passage narrowed even more, till there was
scarcely room to walk abreast. It was like proceeding through a tunnel,
for the high, secretive facades of the old houses rose sheer
on either
side and their jutting balconies almost met overhead. I said uneasily,
"This cannot be right, Emerson. It is very dark and nasty here, and I
haven't seen a soul since we left the fountain.
Mr. McKenzie would not
live in such a slum, surely."
"There are no architectural class distinctions here, the mansions of
the wealthy adjoin the tenements of the poor." But Emerson's voice
reflected my own doubts. He stopped "Let us go back. There was a coffee
shop near the sabil, we will ask directions there."
It was too late. The narrow way was lighted only by a lantern some
considerate householder had hung over a door a few feet behind us, but
it cast sufficient light to allow us to see, in the shadows beyond,
the
hulking forms of several men Their turbans showed pale in the darkness.
"Damnation," said Emerson calmly "Get behind me, Peabody."
"Back to back," I agreed, taking up that position. "Curse it, why did I
come out without my belt of tools?"
"Try the door there," Emerson said.
"Locked. There are other men ahead," I added. "At least two. And this
is only a flimsy evening parasol, made to match my gown, not the
one I usually carry."
"Good Gad," Emerson exclaimed. "Without your parasol we dare not face
them in the open street. A strategic retreat would seem to be in
order." With a sudden movement he whirled and kicked out at the door I
had tried. The lock gave with a crack, the door swung back, seizing me
around the waist, Emerson thrust me within.
Squeals and flutters greeted my abrupt appearance. The two men who had
occupied the room fled, leaving the narghila they had shared bubbling
gently. Emerson followed me and slammed the door. "It won't hold them
for long," he remarked. "The lock is broken and there is no piece of
furniture heavy enough to serve as a barricade."
"There is surely another way out." I indicated the curtained doorway
through which the men had gone.
"We will investigate that if we must" Emerson leaned against the door,
his shoulders braced. "I don't fancy more dark alleys, though, and I
would rather not rely on the kindness of strangers— especially the sort
of strangers that inhabit a warren like this. Let us consider other
options, now that we have achieved a momentary— "
He broke off as a sound from without reached us through the flimsy
panels of the door. I started, and Emerson swore. "That was a woman's
scream— or worse, that of a child."
I flung myself at him. "No, Emerson! Don't go out there It may be a
trick."
The cry came again— high, shrill, quavering. It rose to a falsetto
shriek and broke off. Emerson tried to loosen my grip, I struggled to
hold on, throwing my full weight against his.
"It is a ruse, I tell you! They know you, they know your chivalrous
nature! Fearing to attack, they hope to lure you out of sanctuary. This
is no simple attempt at robbery, we were deliberately led astray."
My speech was not so measured, for Emerson's hands had closed
bruisingly over mine, and he was employing considerable force to free
himself. It was not until a cry of pain burst from my lips that he
desisted
"The damage is done, whatever it was," he said breathlessly. "She is
silent now ... I am sorry, Peabody,
if I hurt you."
His taut muscles had relaxed. I leaned against him, trying to control
my own ragged breathing My wrists felt as if they had been squeezed in
a vise, but I was conscious of an odd, irrational thrill. "Never mind,
my dear. I know you didn't mean to."
The silence without did not endure. The voice that broke it was the
last I expected to hear— bold, unafraid, official— the voice of a man
giving crisp orders in faulty Arabic.
"Another ruse," I exclaimed.
"I think not," said Emerson, listening. "That chap must be English, no
Egyptian speaks his own language so badly. Have I your permission to
open the door a crack, Peabody?"
He was being sarcastic. Since I knew he would do it anyway, I agreed.
By comparison to the darkness that had prevailed earlier, the street
was now brightly lit by lanterns and torches carried by men whose neat
uniforms made their identity plain. One of them came toward us.
Emerson
had been correct, his ruddy compexion proclaimed his nationality just
as his erect carriage and luxuriant mustache betrayed his military
training.
"Was it you who screamed, madame?" he inquired, politely removing his
cap. "I trust you and this gentleman are unharmed."
"I did not scream, but thanks to you and your men we are quite
unharmed."
"Hmph," said Emerson "What are you doing in this part of the city,
Captain?"
"It is my duty, sir," was the stiff reply "I am serving as an adviser
to the Cairo police force. I might with better cause ask the same
question of you"
Emerson replied that we were paying a social call. The incredulity this
answer provoked was expressed, not in speech, but in the young man's
pursed lips and raised eyebrows. Obviously he did not know who
we were.
He offered to escort us back to our carriage. "Not necessary," said
Emerson. "You seem to have cleared the way very neatly, sir. Not
even a
fallen body in sight. Did they all get away from you?"
"We did not pursue them," was the haughty reply. "The prisons are
overflowing with such riffraff and
we had nothing to charge them with."
"Screaming in public," Emerson suggested.
The fellow had a sense of humor after all, his lips twitched, but he
replied sedately, "It must have been one of them who cried out, if the
lady did not. They did not attack you, then?"
"We cannot charge them with anything," I admitted. "In fact, you could
arrest us, Captain, we forced entry into this house and broke the door."
The officer smiled politely. Emerson took a handful of money from his
pocket and tossed it onto the table. "That should take care of any
complaints about the broken door. Come along, my dear, we are
late for
our appointment."
We had taken the wrong turning at the fountain The proprietor of the
coffee shop knew Mr. McKenzie's house very well, it was only a short
distance away. But somehow I was not surprised when his servant
informed us that he was not expecting guests that evening In fact, he
had already retired. He was, the servant said reproachfully, a very
elderly man.
"Men
are frail creatures, it is true, one does not expect them
to
demonstrate the steadfastness of women."
Not so cursed elderly he had forgotten where he lives," Emerson
remarked. "The directions are clear.
Left at the sabil."
He tossed the crumpled paper onto the breakfast table. It fell into the
cream jug, by the time I had fished it out, the writing was so blurred
as to be indecipherable.
"I will take your word for it," I said, putting the soggy wad onto a
clean saucer. "Nor will I claim that
even a young man might suffer a
momentary lapse of memory or an inadvertent slip of the pen. The fact
that the wrong turning led us into an ambush is proof positive that the
misdirection was intentional. Have you ever done anything to offend Mr
McKenzie?"
"I presume," said my husband, distorting his handsome face into a
hideous scowl, "that you are attempting to be facetious, Amelia. The
invitation did not come from McKenzie."
He had not answered the question. It was a safe assumption that at some
time or other he had offended Mr. McKenzie, because there were few
people he had not offended. The reaction seemed somewhat extreme,
however.
"How do you know it did not come from him?"
"I don't," Emerson
admitted. "I sent round this morning to inquire, but the messenger has
not yet returned."
"He will deny it in any case."
"True" Emerson brooded like a pensive sphinx over the muffin he was
buttering. "There are some curious stories about McKenzie. His age and
the passage of time have given him an air of respectability he did
not
always deserve. In his youth he swaggered around in Turkish
costume— silken robes and a huge turban— and by all accounts behaved
like
a Turk in— er— other ways."
I knew he was referring to women. Emerson is absurdly shy about such
matters— with me, at any rate.
I had some reason to suspect he was not
so reticent with other men, or with some women "Did he keep
a harim?" I
inquired curiously
"Oh, well." Emerson looked uncomfortable. "It was not uncommon at that
time for wild young men encountering a strange culture to adopt some of
its customs. Early archaeologists were no more scrupulous about the
monuments than they were about— er— other things. McKenzie's private
collection of antiquities is said to be— "
"He never married, I believe," I mused. "Perhaps it was not women he
favored. There is one Turkish custom— "
"Good Gad, Peabody!" Emerson shouted, crimsoning. "A well-bred woman
has no business knowing about such things, much less talking of them. I
was speaking of McKenzie's collection."
But I was not to hear of Mr. McKenzie's collection at that time The
safragi entered to announce a visitor.
Mr. Vincey and his cat came in together, the great brindled feline
leashed and walking beside his master like ... I was about to say a
well-trained dog, but there was nothing of canine subservience in the
cat's manner, it was rather as if he had trained Mr. Vincey to take him
for a walk instead of the reverse.
I offered Mr. Vincey coffee, which he accepted, but when I poured a
little cream into a saucer for
Anubis he sniffed it and then gave me a
contemptuous look before sitting down at Vincey's feet and curling his
tail around his haunches. Mr. Vincey apologized at quite excessive
length for his pet's rudeness.
"Cats are never rude," I said. "They act according to their natures,
with a candor humans might well emulate. Many grown cats don't care for
milk."
"This one certainly has the air of a carnivore," added Emerson. He is
more courteous to cats than to people, he went on, "Well, Vincey, what
can we do for you? We were about to go out."
Mr. Vincey explained that he had called to inquire whether I had fully
recovered from my unfortunate adventure. I was about to reply when a
fit of coughing and a pointed stare from Emerson reminded me that
Vincey must be referring to the affair of the masked ball, for our most
recent experience could not be known to him. I assured him I was in
perfect health and spirits. Emerson began to fidget, and after a few
more courteous exchanges Mr. Vincey took the hint. It was not until he
rose and picked up the leash that I realized the cat was not attached
to the other end of it. The collar dangled empty.
With an exclamation of amused chagrin Mr. Vincey surveyed the room.
"Now where has he got to? He seems determined to embarrass me with you,
Mrs. Emerson, I assure you he has never done this before. If you will
forgive me . . ." Puckering his lips, he let out a shrill, sweet
whistle.
The cat promptly emerged from under the breakfast table. Avoiding
Vincey's outstretched hand, it jumped onto my lap, where it settled
down and began to purr. It was clear that efforts to remove it without
damage to my skirt would be in vain, for Mr. Vincey's first attempt
resulted in a low growl
and a delicate but definite insertion of sharp
claws. I scratched it behind its ear,- releasing its grip, it
rolled
its head back and let out a reverberant purr.
"The creature demonstrates excellent taste," said Emerson dryly.
"I have never seen him behave this way," Mr. Vincey murmured, staring.
"Almost I am emboldened
to ask a favor of you."
"We are not adopting any more animals," Emerson declared firmly. He
tickled the cat under its chin. It licked his fingers. "Not under any
circumstances whatever," Emerson went on. The cat butted its head
against his hand.
"Oh, I would never give up my faithful friend," Vincey exclaimed. "But
I am about to leave Egypt—a short journey to Damascus, where a friend
of mine has requested my assistance in a personal matter.
I have been
wondering where to find a temporary home for Anubis. I have not so many
friends to
impose upon."
There was no self-pity in the last statement, only a manly fortitude.
It moved me. Vanity also had some part in my response. The approval of
a cat cannot but flatter the recipient.
"We could take charge of Anubis for a few weeks, couldn't we, Emerson?
I find I miss the cat Bastet more than I had expected."
"Impossible," Emerson declared. "We are about to leave Cairo. We can't
carry a cat to Luxor."
Once the matter was settled, the cat made no further objection to being
removed. It was almost as if it had understood and approved the
arrangements. Mr. Vincey was leaving the following day, he promised to
deliver Anubis next morning. This duly transpired, and that evening
Emerson and I and the cat took
the overnight train to Luxor
The cat was no trouble. It sat bolt upright on the seat opposite ours,
staring out the window like a polite fellow passenger pretending not to
eavesdrop on our conversation. This conversation was not, I am sorry to
say, as free of acrimony as it might have been I admit the fault was
mine. I was in an irritable mood. This had nothing to do with my
discovery, upon arriving at the station, that Emerson had, unbeknownst
to me, invited Abdullah and Daoud to accompany us. Our experienced
foreman could be of great assistance, especially at Luxor, where he had
been born and in which city he still had hordes of relations. There was
no sensible reason why I should resent Abdullah's presence After they
had helped us with our luggage, he and Daoud went off to find their own
places.
"I don't understand why you were in such a hurry to get off," I said.
"Mr. Vandergelt will be arriving in Cairo in a few days' time, we might
have waited and traveled with him."
"You made that point earlier, Peabody. And I replied that I could see
no sense in hanging around Cairo for an indefinite period. Vandergelt
is a hopeless gad, he will want to attend dinner parties and make
eyes
at the ladies. Besides, he will travel south on his cursed dahabeeyah."
"It was kind of him to offer us his house while we are in Luxor."
"It costs him nothing."
"How ungracious you are!"
And so on. Nothing of further interest occurred, even after the porter
had made up our berths, for the surroundings were not conducive to a
display of conjugal affection and Emerson claimed the cat was watching.
"It is on the floor, Emerson. It can't possibly see us— or you it."
"I can feel it watching," said Emerson.
However, I woke early to see the kiss of the sunrise summoning a rosy
flush to the western cliffs, a sight that never fails to raise my
spirits. An exchange of affectionate greetings with my husband (who
took the precaution of draping a sheet over the sleeping cat before
proceeding) completed the cure. We went directly from the station to
the quay and hired a boat to take us and our gear across to the west
bank.
Only an individual devoid of imagination and completely deficient in
artistic appreciation could fail to be moved by the sight that met my
eyes as I sat in the prow with the great sails billowing above and the
morning breeze ruffling my hair On the opposite bank an emerald ribbon
of fields and foliage bordered the river, beyond lay the desert, the
Red Land of the ancient texts, and beyond that pale and sterile stretch
rose the cliffs of the High Desert, through which the Nile had cut its
path in prehistoric times. Gradually there appeared out of the mists
shapes more visible perhaps to the imagination than the sight: magic
castles rising from the foam, as the poet has put it— the ruined but
majestic walls of the ancient temples.
(Upon further investigation I find the quotation is not entirely
accurate. However, my version better captures the impression I was
endeavoring to convey.)
Foremost among the temples, at least in my opinion, were the columned
collonades of Deir el Bahri, the mortuary temple of the great female
pharaoh Hatshepsut Not far from it was a more modern structure,
invisible to my eyes but only too clear in my memory. Baskerville
House, the scene of one of our most extraordinary detectival
adventures. It was now a forlorn and abandoned ruin, for the
present
Lord Baskerville had declined to preserve it, and small wonder,
considering the horrible fate his predecessor had met while in
residence. He had offered it to Cyrus Vandergelt, but the latter's
memories of the ill-fated house were no more pleasant than his. "I
wouldn't set foot in the consarned place for a million dollars," was
how Cyrus put it in his quaint American idiom.
Cyrus had built a house of his own near the entrance to the Valley of
the Kings. Money was no object to him, and I must say that his home was
more notable for extravagance than good taste. It stood on a towering
eminence overlooking the Valley, as our carriage approached, Emerson
studied the turrets and towers and balconies in disgust, and remarked,
"It is a positive monument to extravagance and bad taste.
I trust you
won't take it as a model, Amelia."
"Mr. Vandergelt was inspired, I expect, by Crusaders' castles. There
are a number of them in the Middle East."
"That is no excuse. Well, I suppose I must put up with it." Personally
I did not find it difficult to "put up with" clean comfortable rooms
and excellent service. Cyrus kept a skeleton staff always in residence,
the caretaker greeted us with the assurance that we were expected, and
that our rooms were ready. They were as elegantly appointed as in any
modern hotel. Fine Oriental rugs covered the floors. Windows and doors
were fitted with netting to keep out insects, and the rooms were kept
cool by a method known
since the Middle Ages— porous earthenware jars
in the mashrabiyya alcoves behind the windows.
After asking when we would like luncheon to be served, the major-domo
bowed himself out and I began to strip off my travel-stained garments.
Emerson prowled around opening wardrobe doors and investigating
cabinets. He gave a grunt of satisfaction. "Vandergelt is no fool, if
he is an American There
is a good solid lock on this cupboard. Just
what I hoped to find."
From the small travel case he had carried in his own hand from Cairo he
took the box containing the scepters and stowed it carefully away,
putting the key in his trouser pocket after he had locked the cabinet.
I heard the splash of water from the adjoining bathroom, the servants
were not done filling the tub, so I wrapped myself in a robe and sat
down to wait till they had finished. Cool drinks and an assortment of
little cakes had been brought to us, I poured a glass of soda water
"What a fuss you are making about those scepters! If I had had any idea
they would prey on your mind as they seem to I would have suggested we
'discover' them last spring while we were at Napata. That is the most
logical place for them to be found, after all."
"Do you suppose I did not consider that? I am not such a fool as you
believe."
"Now, Emerson, be calm. I did not mean to imply— "
"Such a discovery at Napata would have drawn every treasure hunter in
Africa and aroused the cupidity of the natives. They would have torn
the pyramids to bits."
"There isn't much left of them now," I pointed out.
Emerson ignored this. Pacing furiously, hands clasped behind his back,
he went on, "There was another consideration I wanted the 'discovery'
to be separated in time from Nefret's reappearance. If these
objects are found at Thebes they cannot possibly be connected with
Willy Forth's lost city."
I saw the sense of his reasoning and candidly confessed as much. This
put him in a better humor, and,
a tap at the door having announced that
my bath was ready, I proceeded to take it.
After luncheon we assumed our working attire and set out for the
Valley, accompanied by Abdullah and Daoud and the cat Abdullah was not
a particular admirer of cats, and he viewed this one askance. Anubis
responded, as cats will, by lavishing attention on poor
Abdullah— twining around his ankles, leaping at
him out of hiding in
kittenish fashion, pretending (I believe he was pretending) to attack
the hem of his robe. Abdullah tried several times to kick him (he did
it when he thought I was not looking, but I was). Needless to say, his
foot never connected.
Though I would have preferred to dispense with Abdullah and Daoud, not
to mention the cat, the expedition could not but delight me. To see
Emerson in the costume that becomes him best, his waving black locks
shining in the sun, his tanned and muscular forearms displayed by the
rolled sleeves of his shirt,- to walk stride by stride with him, agile
in my comfortable trousers to hear the musical clash of the tools
depending from my belt and clasp the sturdy handle of my parasol Mere
words cannot capture the exhilaration of that experience.
Instead of following the tourist road, we set off along a curving track
that led northwest. The Valley of
the Kings— Biban el Muluk, literally
"Gates of the Kings" in Arabic— is not one valley but two The one most
frequently visited is the eastern valley, where the majority of the
royal tombs of the Empire are located. It has been popular with
tourists and explorers since Greek times, and in our own time it had
become too crowded for comfort, thanks to such enterprising merchants
as Mr. Cook, whose steamers brought hundreds of idle visitors to Luxor
each season.
It would require more than unsuitably clad, garrulous crowds to rob the
eastern valley of its grandeur,
but to my mind the western valley is
even more impressive. "Valley" is not really an appropriate word,
suggesting as it does the green and fertile depression watered by a
river or stream. These canyons, or "wadis," as the Arabs call them, are
as rocky and bare as the desert itself. We followed a twisting path
that led through fantastic rock formations into a cup or bowl, floored
with fine white sand and enclosed by rugged limestone cliffs. The only
color was that of the blue sky high above, no green growing thing, not
even
a weed or a blade of grass, refreshed the eye.
Yet there was once water to spare in this arid amphitheater. The wadis
were cut through the soft limestone of the cliffs in prehistoric times,
when the desert bloomed like the rose and floods cascaded down the
Theban hills toward the river. They are still subject to rare but
violent flash floods which
wash debris down the valleys and into the tombs.
A scorpion scuttled away from my foot, the insect, and a hawk hovering
high above, were the only other living creatures in sight, though dark
stains, clearly visible against the sun-whitened limestone, marked the
nesting places of bats. The rock walls rose steep but not smooth,
hundreds, nay thousands, of pockets and crevices, bays and caves turned
the cliffs into a ragged fretwork of stone. The silence was absolute,
for the sand muted even the sound of footsteps One had an eerie
reluctance to break that silence.
I broke it, but not until after Abdullah and Daoud had gone off to
investigate a promising crevice. Neither of them knew our real purpose
that day. We had not taken our loyal men with us to Nubia— it would
have
been impossible to provide transport and supplies for a large group in
that troubled region— and they knew no more of our activities the
previous winter than was known to the general public. The chances of
keeping a secret increase in inverse ratio to the number of people who
are acquainted with
that secret.
"The place is certainly remote and private enough for our purposes," I
said. "But is it a likely spot in which to find Cushite royal
scepters?"
"Egyptology is full of unsolved mysteries," Emerson replied
sententiously. "We will give our colleagues another, and let them
debate endlessly as to how these remarkable objects could have found
their way
to a crevice in the rock."
"Thieves' loot," I suggested, my imagination fired. "Hidden by an
unscrupulous robber who did not want his associates to share in the
proceeds, and who was prevented, by accident or arrest, from returning
to get them."
"That will be the accepted explanation, no doubt. But where did the
thieves find them? I can hear Petrie and Maspero arguing that question
for the next twenty years."
His eyes sparkled with enjoyment. I felt he was beginning to like his
trick a little too much. "It is a pity
we must do this," I said.
Emerson "wiped the grin off his face," as the expressive Americans
phrase has it. "You don't suppose I enjoy it, do you?" He did not give
me a chance to reply, but went on, "Truth is impossible in this case,
nor does it always suffice to end foolish speculation. Don't forget the
mummy in the royal tomb at Amarna. I gave Newberry the facts of that
matter the other night, but I don't suppose for a moment that will end
speculation. Mark my words, scholarly journals for years to come will
repeat the rumor that Akhenaton's mummy was found at Amarna. And
furthermore— "
"Yes, my dear," I said soothingly, for I recognized the symptoms of one
who doth protest too much. Deceit was anathema to that clear, candid
brain, but he was right, what else could he do? "What will be your
theory?" I inquired.
"Another cache of royal mummies, my dear Peabody. Two have been located
so far, as well as a collection of high priests from the later
dynasties. However, we are still deficient in priestesses. Where
are
the burials of the Gods' Wives of Amon— the Adorers of the God— who
ruled
in Thebes during the Twenty-Fifth and Twenty-Sixth Dynasties? Several
of them were Cushite princesses." Emerson turned, shading his eyes with
his hand, and surveyed the cliffs that enclosed the Valley like the
splintered, broken sides of a gigantic bowl. "This is not an unlikely
location for the original tombs."
"No late tombs have been found here," I objected "And aren't we
postulating a reburial, a group of mummies hidden away after their
tombs had been violated by thieves? The other caches were located near
Deir el Bahri."
"The other reburials were done in the Twenty-First and Twenty-Second
Dynasties," Emerson retorted. "The Cushites didn't turn up until much
later. What do you keep raising objections for? We've got to do
something with the cursed things, and unless you can suggest a better
alternative . . ."
In such stimulating if morally questionable debate we passed the next
hours, inspecting the contours of
the base of the cliffs, scrambling
over rocky slopes. The heat was intense, and we consumed quantities
of
the cold tea Daoud carried with him. Anubis refused even the water we
had also brought, but managed to knock Abdullah's cup out of his hand
and deluge his skirts with tea. The cat went off after that to explore
on his own, or, more likely, to hunt.
Emerson had brought along copies of the plans of the Valley made by
earlier scholars. He enjoyed
himself very much finding errors in
srsg' Abdullah and Daoud searched for signs of unknown tombs.
Like most treasure hunts, it was both endlessly enticing and relatively
hopeless, for the rock was as riddled with holes as a sieve. Some
individuals have, or develop, a seemingly uncanny instinct for such
things, Belzoni, the flamboyant Italian strongman who had been one of
the first to work in the Valley
of the Kings, had an extraordinary
talent for locating hidden tomb entrances. He had been a hydraulics
engineer and was one of the first to realize that the floods, which
were more common in his day than now, could leave evidence of
subsidence and displacement. Abdullah and Daoud were not engineers, but
they were descendants of the master tomb robbers of Gurnah, who have
located more tombs than all archaeologists combined. Any hollow among
the rocks might indicate a tomb entrance— or it might indicate only a
natural hollow. We probed several such hollows and investigated a heap
of stones like
the one Belzoni had mentioned in his description of the
discovery of the tomb of King Ay, in this very valley— all without
result, which was what we had expected.
"Shall we have another look at Ay's tomb?" Emerson asked, indicating
the opening that gaped forlornly above.
"The sight would only depress me It was in wretched condition last time
we visited it, and I am sure it
has deteriorated even more But that can
be said of every tomb and every monument in Egypt. It is difficult to
decide where to concentrate our efforts, there is so much to be done."
Not until sunset stretched glowing fingers across the sky did we turn
our steps back toward the house. (It rejoiced, I must add, in the
resounding name of "House of the Doors of the Kings," but this
appellation appeared only on Cyrus's notepaper. Europeans referred to
it as "Vandergelt's place," and Egyptians as "The Castle of the
Amerikani.")
The main valley was deserted, tourists and guides had left for the
landing where boats would carry them across to their hotels on the east
bank. Shadows thickened. Emerson quickened his pace. I heard a rattle
of pebbles, and a strangled Arabic oath from Abdullah, trotting behind
us; it included the word for "cat," so I deduced that Anubis had caused
him to stumble. The animal's tawny-gray fur blended so well with the
twilight that he was almost invisible.
He must have gone ahead after that, for he was waiting for us on the
doorstep. "You see," I exclaimed. "My method was effective after all."
"Hmph," said Emerson. He had jeered at me when I rubbed the cat's paws
with butter during luncheon
in the time-honored and traditional method
of training it to stay in a new home. He had also pointed out
that Vandergelt might not thank us if we turned Anubis into a permanent
resident. I replied that we would deal with that difficulty when and if
it arose.
I had requested that dinner be served early, since I hoped to persuade
Emerson into a moonlit stroll— without Abdullah and Daoud. However,
when
I proposed it he declined. We retired to the library,
therefore— Vandergelt had one of the finest collections of
Egyptological
works in the country— and Emerson took out his pipe.
"Peabody," he said. "Will you come here?"
He had seated himself on the sofa, a large structure in the Turkish
style, with a quantity of soft pillows.
I had chosen a straight-backed
chair and taken up a book.
"No, thank you, Emerson, I prefer this chair."
Emerson rose. Picking up the chair, with me in it, he carried it to the
end of the sofa and set it down
with a thud. "I bow to your wishes, my
dear Peabody."
"Oh, Emerson," I began, and then, as he loomed over me, fists on his
hips and lips curving, I could not but smile. I got up and took my
place on the sofa.
"That is better," said Emerson, joining me and putting his arm around
my shoulders. "Much more friendly. Besides, I don't want to be
overheard."
The cat jumped up onto the other end of the sofa and sat down. Its wide
green eyes regarded us unwinkingly. "Anubis is listening," I said.
"Be serious, Peabody. I want you to promise me something. I do not
order you, I ask you."
"Certainly, my dear Emerson. What is it?"
"Give me your solemn word that you will not go wandering around the
cliffs, or anywhere else, alone.
If you receive a message asking for
your help, or offering to show you where a valuable antiquity is
hidden— "
"Why, Emerson, you make me sound like some silly Gothic heroine instead
of the sensible, rational woman you know me to be. When have I ever
done such a thing?"
Emerson's lips parted and indignation furrowed his noble brow, but
experience had taught him that contradicting my statements led only to
further argument, not to the agreement he wanted. "Let me put it this
way. You have an unnerving self-confidence, Peabody, when armed with
your parasol you consider yourself capable of defeating any number of
adversaries. Have I your word?"
"If you will give me yours, to the same effect." Emerson's brows drew
together. I went on, "You have
an unnerving self-confidence, Emerson, you consider yourself capable— "
Laughing, Emerson stopped my speech in a manner I find particularly
pleasant. It was a rather short embrace, however, the unwinking stare
of the cat seemed to disturb him, for he glanced uneasily at it before
speaking again.
"The cases are hardly the same, Peabody, but I am willing to take some
precautions. I hope you do not suppose I declined your invitation to
walk in the moonlight because the idea was unpleasant to me? No. We are
not going out at night until this matter is settled."
"What matter?"
"Oh, come, Peabody. You are usually the first to find ominous portents
and harbingers of disaster in the accidents that befall us. At the time
we first discussed the situation, the evidence was inconclusive, but
it
is beginning to mount up. The search of our room, three attempts at
assault or abduction in less than
a week— "
"Three? I can only think of
two."
Emerson removed his arm and leaned forward, reaching for his pipe. "The
incident at Meidum had
certain interesting features."
At first I could not think what he meant. Then I laughed "That foolish
young German shooting at a gazelle? I told you, Emerson, the bullet
came nowhere near me. Consider, as well, that only a madman would try
to murder me in broad daylight with witnesses all around Success would
have been tantamount to suicide for the killer, that hasty temper of
yours would have moved you to exact retribution on the spot. Oh, it is
too absurd."
"I am rather inclined to regard the young man as a guardian angel,"
Emerson said slowly. "What became of the workman who promised you an
unknown tomb, Peabody? We never saw him again."
"He was frightened."
"Bah. It seems to be you, my dear, these unknown individuals are after."
"The three men who attacked you in the garden— "
"I told you, they were
uncommonly gentle," Emerson said impatiently "That attack may have been
designed to make sure I was out of the way when my double made off with
you. There must be some underlying motive for all these events, and I
can't think of anything we have done recently to inspire the interest
of the criminal element— except find Willy Forth's lost city of gold."
"Surely you are jumping to unwarranted conclusions, Emerson. You or I
might be able to weave together vague hints and scattered clues, and
arrive at the correct conclusion: that Willoughby Forth's fantasies
were true, and that we had located his treasure hoard. But who else is
capable of such brilliant reasoning?"
Slowly Emerson's head turned, exactly as Bastet's head turns when she
is planning to jump on some unconscious victim. He looked straight into
my eyes.
"No, Emerson," I exclaimed. "It cannot be. We have not seen or heard
from him for years."
"Only a man," said Emerson, "who has far-flung sources of information
covering the world— like a spider's web, I believe you once said, who
is
familiar with the world of archaeology, its practitioners, its history
and its legends, who has good cause to hate one of us and even better
cause to— "
"My abductor was not the Master Criminal, Emerson. I could hardly be
mistaken, after all, I was in intimate if unwilling proximity to the
fellow for quite some time."*
It was not, I admit, the most tactful thing I could have said.
Emerson's response consisted of a string of expletives, including
several that were unfamiliar to me. It took me considerable time and
effort to calm him. My efforts succeeded so well that I was forced to
remind him, after an interval, that the windows were uncurtained and
that the servants had not gone to bed.
"Let us set them an example, then," said Emerson, drawing me to my
feet. As we proceeded up the stairs he said thoughtfully, "Perhaps you
are right, Peabody. I am still inclined to see the dread hand— another
of your literary phrases, is it not?— the dread hand of Sethos
everywhere. I may be mistaken as to the identity of our opponent, but
my theory as to the motive behind these attentions is unshaken. It
would take an archaeologist or a keen student of archaeology to put
those clues together."
"I am sure it was not Mr. Budge who tried carry me off, Emerson."
My little joke had the desired effect. With a smile, Emerson led me
into our room and closed the door.
* * *
For the next three days we worked in the West Valley. They were
halcyon
days, nothing disturbed the peaceful productivity of our work except an
occasional archaeological visitor who had heard of our presence and— as
Emerson put it— came to find out what we were up to, and the cat
Anubis,
who seemed intent on driving Abullah to felinocide. I endeavored to
comfort our afflicted foreman.
"He likes you, Abdullah. It is quite a compliment. The cat Bastet
.never paid you such attentions."
Rubbing his head— which had come into painful contact with a rock when
the cat had suddenly jumped onto his shoulder— Abdullah remained
unconvinced. "She is not an ordinary cat, as we all know, does not she
speak with the young master, and heed his commands? This one is a
servant of evil, as the cat Bastet is a servant of good. Its very name
is a bad omen, was not Anubis the god of cemeteries?"
Emerson's vigilance gradually relaxed as the days passed without any
alarming incident. For all its isolation, the West Valley was safer
than any city. No one could approach without being observed long before
he came close to us.
At the end of the third day Emerson announced that we had almost
completed the task for which we had come. We had corrected numerous
errors in the existing plan of the Valley and located several promising
sites that warranted further investigation— including one that offered
a
suitable hiding place for the scepters Abdullah was pleased to learn we
were nearly finished. Mapmaking was not a favorite activity
of
Abdullah's. Like his master, he preferred to dig.
"How much longer?" he asked, as we started back.
"A week at the outside," Emerson replied. Glancing at me, he added
provocatively, "Vandergelt Effendi
is coming soon. I want to be out of
his house before he arrives."
We had received a telegram from Cyrus the day before, announcing his
imminent arrival in Cairo and saying that he looked forward to seeing
us shortly.
"Perhaps," said Abdullah hopefully, "the cat will stay here with the
Effendi."
"That is a difficulty," Emerson agreed. "We will be camping out at
Amarna, we cannot be bothered feeding and caring for him."
A rattle of rock and a pathetically abbreviated squeak nearby preceded
the appearance of Anubis, with
a limp brown shape in his mouth. "You
needn't worry about feeding him," I said.
Abdullah said something under his breath. Daoud, a big silent man,
whose placidity was seldom ruffled, glanced uneasily at the cat, his
fingers twitched in a ritual gesture designed to ward off evil.
The cat disappeared with its prey and we went on in silence for a time.
Then Abdullah said, "There is
a fantasia tonight at the house of the
brother of my father. It is in honor of my visit to the home of my
ancestors, but it would be a greater honor if the Father of Curses and
you, Sitt Hakim, would come."
"It would honor us," Emerson replied, as courtesy demanded "What do you
say, Peabody?"
The idea appealed to me. I was anxious to meet Abdullah's uncle, who
had a certain reputation in the Luxor area, born and raised in Gurnah,
the notorious village of hereditary tomb robbers on the west bank, he
had acquired, by means no one cared to investigate, wealth enough to
purchase a fine house on the east bank outside Luxor Family pride would
require him to hire the finest entertainers for his fantasia.
The entertainment at these celebrations consists primarily of music and
dancing. In the beginning I had found Egyptian music painful to my
ears, the singers' voices slide up and down a rather limited scale,
and the musical instruments are primitive by Western standards. As with
most art forms, however, prolonged exposure increases appreciation. I
could now listen with relative enjoyment to the nasal singing and the
accompaniment of flute and zither, tambourine and zemr (a form of
oboe). The insistent rhythm of the drums (of which there were many
varieties) had a particularly interesting effect.
I accepted the invitation with proper expressions of gratitude. Taking
Emerson's arm, I let the others draw ahead before I said in a low
voice, "Have you canceled your interdict against evening activities,
then? Nothing has occurred since we arrived in Luxor— "
"I have made certain it would not," Emerson replied haughtily.
"However, this is not the sort of evening activity I was concerned
about. I defy the boldest of abductors to snatch you away when you have
three such defenders." Seeing my expression— for he knows how I dislike
being regarded as a helpless female— he added, "We might have dinner at
the hotel and drop in on the performance later. Carter is in Luxor, I
would like to have a chat with him, and prepare him for the great
discovery we are about to make."
So it was arranged. We sent a message across to Howard inviting him to
dine with us at the Luxor Hotel, and as the sun was setting we stepped
on board the felucca that would take us across the river. Abdullah and
Daoud looked like emirs in their best robes and most enormous turbans,
the former's long white beard had been laundered
till it shone like snow. It was incumbent on us to put on an equally
impressive show,- Emerson accepted the necessity of this, though he
remarked grumpily, as I was trying his cravat, that he felt like a
little boy being taken to visit wealthy godparents.
The gangplank, which served as an oar in times of diminished wind, had
been pulled in and we were gliding away from the quay when a long
sinuous form leapt into the boat. In the gathering dusk it was
difficult to make out immediately what it was, Emerson let out an oath
and tried to push me down onto the filthy bottom of the boat, and
Abdullah would have toppled off the seat if Daoud had not caught him. I
resisted Emerson's efforts, for I had of course immediately identified
the latest passenger.
"It is only the cat," I said loudly. "Abdullah, for pity's sake, stop
thrashing around. You will muss your beautiful robe."
Abdullah had never cursed in my presence. He did not do so now, but he
sounded as if he were
strangling on repressed epithets.
"Damnation," said Emerson. "What a nuisance. I refuse to take a cat to
dine at the Luxor, Amelia."
"Throw it overboard," Abdullah offered.
I ignored this suggestion, as Abdullah no doubt expected I would. "We
haven't time to take it back to
the house. Perhaps the boatman has a
bit of rope we can use as a lead."
"I don't approve of dragging cats around on a lead as one does a dog,"
Emerson declared firmly. "They are independent creatures who do not
deserve such treatment." The cat walked along the bench, balancing like
an acrobat, and settled down next to him. "Such a fuss over a cat,"
Emerson grumbled, scratching Anubis under his chin. "If he wanders
away, he will simply have to fend for himself."
Emerson and I often attract considerable attention when we appear in
public. I hope I may not be accused of vanity when I say that on this
occasion it was no wonder all eyes were drawn to us as, arm in arm, we
swept into the dining salon of the hotel. Emerson's splendid height and
ruggedly handsome features were set off by the stark black-and-white of
his evening dress, and he walked like a king. I fancied I looked rather
well myself. However, I suspected that some of the wide-eyed stares
focused on us— and the smothered laughter that rippled through the
room— were occasioned by something other than admiration. Anubis had
refused to stay in the cloakroom. He stalked along behind us with a
dignity equal to Emerson's— tail erect, eyes straight ahead. His
expression also bore a striking resemblance to that of
Emerson. The phrase "well-bred sneer" comes to mind.
He was better behaved than some of the guests. A party of young male
persons (they did not merit the name of "gentlemen") at a nearby table
had clearly taken too much to drink. One of them leaned so far out of
his chair to watch the cat that he fell to the floor. His companions
were more amused than embarrassed by this performance, with cheers and
comments in the accents of brash young America,
they hauled him upright
and restored him to his place. "Attaboy, Fred," said one of them. "Show
these folks how a sport takes a falls"
Howard arrived in time to see the end of this performance. "Perhaps
Mrs. Emerson would like to move
to another table," he suggested, eyeing
the raucous party askance.
"Mrs. Emerson is not to be disturbed on account of rowdies," said
Emerson, beckoning the waiter. He addressed this individual in tones
loud enough to be heard throughout the dining salon. "Kindly inform
the
manager that if he does not remove the people over there at once, I
will remove them myself."
The young men were duly removed. "There, you see," said Emerson,
smiling at Howard in a kindly fashion. "That is the way to deal with
such things."
We had to explain Anubis, who made his presence known to Carter by
sniffing loudly at his trouser leg.
I suppose the sound and the
accompanying sensation must have been a trifle startling to one who was
unaware that there was a cat under the table. Once the situation was
made clear, Howard laughed and shook his head. I should have learned
not to be surprised at anything you and the professor do,
Mrs. Emerson.
It is like you to take charge of poor Vincey's pet He is fanatically
attached to it, and it does not get on with most people."
"Since you refer to him as 'poor Vincey,' I take it you are of the
opinion that he was treated unjustly?"
I inquired.
Howard looked a little uncomfortable. "I don't know the truth of the
matter. I doubt that anyone does.
He is a pleasant chap— very likable, I
know nothing to his discredit except . . . But that is just gossip,
and
not the sort of thing I should mention in your presence, Mrs. Emerson."
"Ah," I said, motioning to the waiter to refill the young man's glass.
"Cherchez la femme! Or is it les femmes?"
"The plural, decidedly," said Howard. He caught Emerson's eye and added
quickly, "Idle gossip, as
I said. Er— tell me how you are getting on in
the Valley. Any new tombs?"
For the rest of the meal we confined ourselves to professional gossip.
Emerson enjoyed himself, tantalizing our young friend with mysterious
hints and refusing to elaborate on them. Howard was about to explode
with curiosity when Emerson took out his watch and begged he would
excuse us. "One of
our friends is giving a fantasia in our honor," he
explained, stretching the truth a little. "We must not be too late."
We parted at the door of the hotel. Howard set off on foot, whistling
cheerfully, and we bargained for
a carriage. The main street of Luxor,
lined with modern hotels and ancient ruins, runs along the river,
behind it is a typical village, with streets of bare dirt and clustered
huts.
No premonition of disaster troubled my mind. I was more concerned about
my thin evening slippers
and trailing skirts, and with the distance we
had to travel. This does not prove, as some claim, that such
forebodings are only superstition,- it proves that on some occasions
they fail one. I could have wished mine had chosen another occasion on
which to fail
We left the lights of the hotels behind us and turned onto a narrow
lane between fields of sugarcane, higher than a tall man's head. The
leaves whispered softly in the night breeze. From time to time lights
from country houses twinkled through the stalks. The night air was cool
and refreshing,- the mingled odors that mark an Egyptian town— the
smell of donkeys, charcoal fires, and lack of sanitation—faded, to be
replaced by a more salubrious scent of green growing crops and fresh
earth. The carriage was
open, the night air cooled my face, the
rhythmic clop of the horses' hooves, the creak of the leather
seats
blended into a magical mood of romance. I leaned against Emerson's
shoulder,- his arm was
around me. Not even the fixed regard of the cat,
on the seat opposite, could mar the moment
The drive was popular with visitors to Luxor, for it was one of the few
country roads wide enough to
take carriages. We met one or two others
and had to pull off to let them by.
The driver glanced back, cursing in Arabic. I could not see what was
behind us, but I had already heard the sounds: the pound of galloping
hooves and a blurred chorus of voices. Someone was overtaking us, and
presumably they meant to pass us, for the noise swelled rapidly.
"Good Gadl" I exclaimed, trying to look over the high back of the seat.
"It is just a party of young idiot tourists," Emerson said. "They race
on this stretch all the time." He leaned forward and tapped the
driver's shoulder. "Let them go by," he said in Arabic. "There is a
space there
ahead, beyond the wall."
The driver obeyed, pulling over in the nick of time, and the other
carriage thundered past. Shouts and cheers and a snatch of raucous song
hailed us, and someone waved a bottle. Then the carriage lights
disappeared around a curve in the road.
"They will have themselves in the ditch if they go on at that pace,"
Emerson said, settling back.
We proceeded on our way, coming at last into a more thickly settled
area. It was a strange blend of humble huts and walled houses, with
open fields between.
"Not far now," said Emerson. "By Gad, I was right! There is the
carriage that passed us. In the ditch "
"Shall we not stop and offer assistance?" I asked.
"Why the devil should we? Let them walk back, it will sober them."
He had already ascertained, as had I, that the horse was not injured.
It stood patiently by the road,
while the men tried to right the
carriage. They were laughing and cursing, it was clear that no one had
been hurt.
We had left them some distance behind when suddenly the cat sat up on
the seat and stared intently
at the side of the road We were passing a
large building of some sort, it looked like an abandoned warehouse or
factory. Before I could see what had attracted the cat's attention, it
gathered itself together and sprang out of the carriage.
"Confound the confounded beast!" Emerson shouted. "Ukaf, driver— stop
at once."
"Oh, dear, we will never find it in the dark," I lamented. "Here,
Anubis. Here, kitty, kitty."
Two eerily glowing orbs appeared, at ground level. "There he is,"
Emerson said. "That is a door behind him, he is looking for mice, no
doubt. Stay here, Peabody. I'll go after him."
Before I could stop him, he had jumped out of the carriage. Then— when
it was too late— the recognition of peril struck me like a blow in the
face. For as Emerson reached down to take the cat into his arms, the
door behind it swung open. I saw Emerson fall forward and heard the
sickening thud of the club that had struck his bowed head. Wild with
apprehension as to his fate, I could not go to his assistance, for I
was fully occupied in fending off the two men who had rushed at the
carriage. The
driver was face-down in the road, a third man held the head of the
terrified horse. My evening parasol— curse my vanity!— broke
as I brought it down on the turban of one of my assailants. It did no
more than annoy him. Hard hands captured mine and dragged me out of the
carriage.
I screamed— something I seldom do, but the situation seemed to warrant
it. I did not expect a response.
It was with incredulous relief that I
heard, through the extremely filthy bag that had been pulled over my
head, an answering voice. No— voices! Rescue was approaching! I renewed
my struggles, the man who held me had to release one of my hands in
order to hold the bag in place, and I clawed blindly but effectively at
his face. He cried out and called me something rude in Arabic.
"Choke the witch and keep her quiet," exclaimed another voice.
"Hurry, they are— "
He broke off with a pained grunt and the man who held me let me go so
suddenly that I fell to the ground. The bag was twisted around my head,
I could not get it off, when hands seized me again I
struck out as hard as I could.
"Ouch!" was the response— a good, familiar English "ouch." I ceased my
resistance and concentrated
on removing the bag. A voice continued
plaintively, "Confound it, ma'am, that's not a ladylike thing to
do to
a fellow when he was only trying to help."
I did not reply. I did not thank him or stop to see who he was. Leaping
to my feet, I snatched a lantern from the hand of another individual
who stood nearby and dashed toward the door of the warehouse.
It gaped open and empty. The darkness within was not complete;
moonlight entering through holes in
the ruined roof streaked the floor.
Calling and rushing back and forth, I swept every foot of that floor
with the lantern beam before I was forced to admit the truth. The place
was deserted. There was no
trace of Emerson—except for a damp spot,
where some liquid darker and more viscous than water had soaked into
the dirty floor.
CHAPTER 6
"I do not scruple to employ mendacity
and a fictitious appearance
of
female incompetence when the occasion demands it."
I fear my behavior thereafter did me no credit. The sight of the cat
strolling toward me sent me into a
frenzy, I snatched it up and shook it, and I think I shouted at it,
demanding to know what it had done with Emerson This action appeared to
surprise it, instead of struggling and scratching, it hung limp in
my
hands and let out an inquiring mew. When its mouth opened I saw there
was something caught on
one tooth. It was a shred of dirty cotton that
might have come from a native robe.
After a time I heard one of my rescuers remark in a worried voice,
"Say, boys, the lady's gone off her head. She'll hurt herself tearing
around like that, how about I give her a little sock on the jaw?"
"You can't sock a lady, you lummox," was the equally worried reply.
"Damned if I know what to do."
The words penetrated the fog of horror that had enveloped me. Shame
overcame me, common sense returned. I was shaking from head to foot,
the lantern swayed in my hand, but I believe my voice was
fairly steady when I spoke.
"I am not 'tearing around,' gentlemen, I am searching for my husband.
He was here. He is not here now. They have carried him off. There is
another door— they must have gone that way. Pray don't stop me"
— for one
of them had taken hold of my arm— "let me go after them. I must find
him!"
My rescuers were none other than the young Americans who had behaved in
so ungentlemanly a manner at the hotel. They had been in the carriage
that had passed us. Falling into the ditch must have sobered them, for
they were quick to understand and respond to my plea, and very kind, in
their peculiar American fashion. Two of them immediately went off to
follow the trail of the kidnappers and another insisted I return to the
carriage.
"You can't go running around the fields dressed like that, ma'am," he
said, when I would have resisted. "Leave it to Pat and Mike, they're as
good as coon hounds on a trail. How about a nip of brandy? For
medicinal purposes, you know."
Perhaps it was the brandy that cleared my head. I prefer to believe it
was the resurgence of my indomitable will. Though every nerve in my
body ached to join the search, I saw the strength of his argument, and
it then occurred to me that there was better help close at hand. One of
the young men— there were five of them in all— agreed to go to the
house
of Abdullah's uncle and tell our reis what had transpired. It was not
long, though it seemed an interminable interlude to me, before Abdullah
and Daoud were with me. I came perilously close to breaking down when I
saw Abdullah's familiar face, distorted by worry and disbelief, Emerson
had seemed to him like a god, immune to ordinary danger.
Assisted by the young Americans and a posse of their relatives,
Abdullah and Daoud searched the fields and the nearby houses, ignoring
the (legitimate) complaints of their occupants. But too much time had
passed. He had been carried off and by now could be miles away The
dusty road kept its secret, too much traffic had passed along it.
Dawn was pale in the sky before I could be persuaded to return to the
Castle. The driver had only been struck unconscious, restored by brandy
and baksheesh, he turned the horse and the carnage. Daoud and the cat
went with me. Abdullah would not leave the spot. I believe I had the
courtesy to thank the Americans. It was not entirely their fault if
they regarded the business as an exciting adventure.
I find it difficult to recall my sensations during the succeeding days
Events stand out in my memory sharp and clear as detailed engravings,
but it was as if I were enveloped by a shell of clear cold ice that
impeded neither vision nor touch nor hearing, but through which nothing
could penetrate.
When the news of Emerson's disappearance became known, I was
overwhelmed with offers of assistance. This should have touched me. It
did not, nothing could touch me then. I wanted action, not sympathy
The local authorities were hustled and badgered into a show of
efficiency uncommon to them,- they arrested and questioned every man in
Luxor who had cause to hold a grudge against my husband. The list was
fairly extensive. At one time half the population of Gurnah, whose
inhabitants resented Emerson's war against their tomb-robbing habits,
were in the local prison. Hearing of this from Abdullah (several of
whose distant kin were among the prisoners), I was able to bring about
their release Abdullah had his own methods of dealing with the men of
Gurnah, and I knew Emerson would himself have interfered to forbid the
kinds of interrogation the local police employed. Beating the soles of
the feet with splintered reeds was a favorite method.
Our friends rallied around. Howard Carter visited me almost daily
Despite the differences of opinion that had often marked his
relationship with Emerson, Neville was the first to offer his crew to
help in the search. Telegrams arrived from Cairo, and from Cairo came,
in person, Cyrus Vandergelt. He had abandoned his beloved dahabeeyah,
he had not even waited for the regular train. Ordering a special, he
had set out as soon as it was ready, leaving his luggage behind, and
his first words to me were words of comfort and reassurance
"Don't you fret, Mrs. Amelia. We'll get him back if we have to tear
this two-bit town apart. Some good old American know-how is what is
wanted here, and Cyrus Vandergelt, U.S.A., is the man to supply it!"
The years had been kind to my friend. There might be a few more silver
threads in his hair and goatee, but their sun-bleached fairness looked
just the same. His stride was as athletic and vigorous, the clasp of
his hand as strong, and his wits as keen as ever. He brought to our
problem a cynical intelligence and a knowledge of the world no one had
been able to supply When, in answer to his questions, I described the
imprisonment of the Gurnah thieves, he shook his head impatiently.
"Sure, I know those Curnah crooks detest my old pal, but this isn't
their style. They're more inclined to throw knives or rocks. This
smacks of something more sinister. What have you and the professor been
up to lately, Mrs. Amelia? Or has that young rascal Ramses pulled
another shady deal?"
I was tempted to tell him what I suspected, but I did not dare. I
cleared Ramses, as was only proper,
but replied that I could not explain the event.
Cyrus was too shrewd to accept this— or perhaps he knew me so well he
sensed my hesitation. He was also too much of a gentleman to question
my word. "Well, I'll tell you what I think. He isn't dead. They'd have
found the ... er ... found him by now. This has got to be a question of
ransom. Why else would they hold him prisoner?"
"There are other
reasons," I replied, repressing a shudder. "Now put that out of your
head, Mrs. Amelia. Money is a lot more powerful incentive than revenge.
I'll bet you you'll get a ransom note. If you don't, why, we'll offer a
reward."
It was something to do, at least. The following day every tree and wall
in Luxor bore the hastily printed placards. For reasons of my own which
I could not explain to Cyrus, I did not expect results, and indeed, the
message that arrived that evening was only indirectly related, if at
all, to the offer.
It was carried by a ragged fellah, whose willingness to be detained
supported his claim of innocence. He was a messenger only, the man who
had given him the letter, with a modest tip and an assurance of greater
reward upon delivery, had been a stranger to him. Few people are good
observers, but it seemed evident from the messenger's confused
description that there had been nothing distinctive about the
man's dress or appearance.
We sent the messenger away with promises of untold riches if he was
able to supply any further information. I thought he was honest. But if
he was not, we were more likely to win him over by bribes than by
punishment.
Cyrus and I had been in the library. After the messenger had gone, I
sat turning the letter over and over
in my hands. It was addressed to
me, in large printed letters. The envelope bore the name of one of the
Luxor hotels.
"If you would like to be alone when you read it . . ." Cyrus began. He
had asked my permission to
smoke and held one of his long thin cheroots.
"That is not why I hesitate," I admitted. "I am afraid to open it,
Cyrus. It is the first ray of hope I have beheld. If it proves false .
. . But such cowardice does not become me."
With a firm hand I reached for a letter opener.
I read through the letter twice. Cyrus held his tongue, the effort must
have been difficult, for when I looked at him he was leaning forward,
his face drawn with suspense. Silently I handed him the letter.
I might have given it to an individual I trusted less than I did my old
friend without fear of betraying the deadly secret. It was the most
suavely villainous, discreetly threatening epistle I have ever read. I
felt contaminated by the mere touch of the paper.
Your
husband is disinclined to confide in us [it began], He claims his
memory is faulty. It
seems incredible that a man could forget so
remarkable a journey in so short a period of time,
but recent
experiences may well have had an adverse effect upon his mind as well
as his body.
I do not doubt your recollection is more accurate, and
that you would be more than pleased to share it with us, in writing or
in person. I will be sitting on the terrace of the Winter Palace
Hotel
tomorrow evening at five, in the hope that you will join me for an
aperitif. Let me add only that, as one of your greatest admirers, I
would be gravely disappointed if you sent a substitute.
Cyrus flung the paper to the floor. "Amelia," he cried in poignant
accents. "You aren't going, are you? You wouldn't be such a blamed
fool?"
"Why, Cyrus!" I exclaimed.
My friend shook out an enormous snowy-white linen handkerchief and
mopped his forehead. "Pardon me. I took a liberty."
"By using my first name? Dear Cyrus, no one is better entitled than
you. You have been a pillar of strength."
"No, but see here," Cyrus insisted. "You're as smart at reading between
the lines as I am. I don't know what it is this dirty yellow dog wants,
but sure as shooting he isn't going to exchange poor old Emerson for
anything in writing. How'd he know you were telling the truth? This is
just a trick to get ahold of you. Emerson's a tough nut and stubborner
than any mule. You couldn't get him to talk if you stuck his feet in
the fire or pulled out his . . . Oh, shucks, honey, I'm sorry. They
aren't going to do anything like that, they know it wouldn't work. But
if they had you in their filthy hands, he'd spill the beans all right."
"As would I, rather than be forced to watch while they ..." I could not
complete the sentence.
"You've got the idea. This ugly cuss needs both of you. That was a cute
stunt of Emerson's, pretending
to have amnesia, but it won't hold up
for five seconds after he sets eyes on you. You can't take the chance,
Amelia. It's for Emerson's sake as well as yours, they won't damage
him permanently so long
as you're on the loose"
"I realize that, my dear Cyrus. But how can I not go? It is our first,
our only lead. You noted that the— dirty yellow dog seems a fitting
description— that he gave no clue as to how I might identify him. That
implies that he is someone I know."
Cyrus slapped his knee. "I've said it before and I'll say it again—
you're the sharpest little lady of my acquaintance. But we've got to
give this a lot of thought, Amelia. If I were running this scam, I
wouldn't be at the Winter Palace. I'd have some innocent bystander pass
you a note instructing you to go someplace else— someplace not so safe.
You'd do it, too. Wouldn't you?"
I could not, did not, deny it. "But," I argued, "if I were accompanied—
not by you, Cyrus, you are too recognizable— but by Abdullah and his
friends— "
"Abdullah is as easily recognizable as I am. And be sure, my dear, that
you would be led on and on by one means or another until you were
beyond the reach of friends."
I bowed my head. I don't believe I had ever felt such ah agonizing
sense of helplessness By risking capture I would endanger not only
myself but Emerson. Our unknown enemy would have no recourse but to
murder us once we had told him what he wanted to know. Only by
remaining free could I preserve a life dearer to me than my own And the
loathsome letter had given me that much comfort at least He lived.
Cyrus's voice broke in on my painful thoughts. "I haven't asked for
your confidence, Amelia, and
I won't. But if you could tell me what it
is this devil wants, I might be able to come up with an idea."
I shook my head. "It would not help, and it might endanger you as well.
Only two other people . . ."
It was like a hammer smashing through the shell of frozen calm that had
enclosed me. My only excuse
is that I had been so absorbed with Emerson
I had neglected other, if lesser, responsibilies. They now came
crashing in upon me. With a shriek that echoed among the rafters, I
leapt to my feet.
"Ramses! And Nefret! Oh, heaven, what I have I done— or, to be more
accurate, neglected to do? A telegram! Cyrus, I must send a
telegram at once!"
I was rushing toward the door when Cyrus caught me up. Taking me by the
shoulders, he strove to restrain me. "Don't go riding off in all
directions! You shall send your telegram, sit down, compose it, while I
find a man to take it over to Luxor." Leading me to the desk, he thrust
pen and paper into my hands.
Desperation and remorse gave me the strength to write. When Cyrus
returned I had finished the message. I handed it to him. Without
looking at the paper he took it to the servant waiting at the door.
"It will be in London tomorrow," he said, returning.
"If it traveled on the wings of the wind, it could not arrive too soon
for me," I cried. "How could I have failed to realize . . . But it was
not until now that I knew for certain "
"I prescribe a little brandy," Cyrus said.
"I believe ..." I had to stop to collect myself before I went on. "I
believe I would prefer a whiskey and soda, please."
When Cyrus brought it to me, he dropped onto one knee like a medieval
page serving his master.
"You're not only the sharpest little lady I
know, but the coolest and bravest," he said gently. "Don't give way
now. I reckon I've an idea now what this is all about. You and Emerson,
young Ramses and the girl— Willy Perth's daughter, isn't she? Uh-huh.
Say
no more, Mrs. Amelia, my dear And don't worry about the kiddies. If
half of what I've heard about that son of yours is true, he can take
care of himself— and the girl too."
I always say there is nothing like a whiskey and soda to calm the
nerves. After a few sips I was able to speak more composedly. "What a
comfort you are, Cyrus No doubt you are right. All the same, I don't
know how I am going to endure the suspense until I hear from them. It
will take at least three days to
get a reply."
But a benevolent Providence spared me that suspense. No doubt It felt I
had quite enough to bear already When Cyrus's servant returned from
Luxor he carried another telegram with him. I had already retired to my
rooms, but I was not asleep. Cyrus himself brought the message to my
door. How long it had been sitting in the telegraph office I never
determined, Egyptians do not share our Western concern about haste. It
was addressed to Emerson, but I did not let that deter me from opening
it, for I had seen
whence it came.
"Warning received and acted upon," Walter had written. "All is well.
Guard yourselves. Letter follows. Guard yourselves."
I handed it to Cyrus. He had refused the chair I offered him and stood
by the door, hands behind his back, looking extremely uncomfortable.
What Puritans these Americans are, I thought in amusement. Only
affectionate concern could have brought him to the room of an
unchaperoned married lady after nightfall. And I in deshabille, too! I
had snatched up the first garment that came to hand when I heard
his
knock, it was a particularly frivolous, ruffled, beribboned,
lace-trimmed peignoir of yellow silk.
The message made Cyrus forget the ruffles and ribbons. "Thank heaven,"
he said sincerely. "That relieves one source of anxiety. 'All is well,'
he says."
"Evidently I am more skilled at reading between the lines than you,
Cyrus. Why does he repeat
'Guard yourselves?' Something must have happened."
"Now that is just your mother's anxiety, my dear. You don't know what
Emerson said in his message.
He must have sent a telegram to his
brother some days ago, warning him of danger."
"Apparently that is the case. He did not tell me he had done so, no
doubt he supposed I would jeer at his concern, as I did on the
occasions when he tried to convince me of our peril. How cruelly Heaven
has punished me for failing to heed him!" Cyrus's eyes followed me as I
paced back and forth, the skirts of my robe swirling around me. "I will
take what comfort I can from Walter's reassurance," I went on. "There
is nothing more I can do."
"Get some sleep," Cyrus said kindly. "And don't worry. I will do
whatever I can to serve you."
But it was not he who served me best.
Needless to say, I did not sleep. I lay awake as I had done every night
since it happened— not tossing
and turning, for that is an exhibition of
weakness I do not allow myself— but trying to discover a possible
course
of action. At least this night I had new information to consider I went
over and over every word, every phrase, every comma, even, in that
malevolent missive. Every word and every phrase contained
sly threats
all the more terrifying for being left to the imagination of the
reader.
(Especially an imagination as active as mine.) The man who had composed
them must be a veritable fiend.
And an arrogant fiend. He had not even bothered to conceal his
nationality, his English was as good, his syntax as elegant, as my own.
I felt confident he was not a guest at the hotel. Anyone could have
stolen stationery from the writing room. As for his aim in proposing a
rendezvous . . . Well, Cyrus's reasoning was irrefutable. It agreed
with my own. Even if I were cad enough to break my word and betray a
helpless people in exchange for my husband's life . . .
But, oh, Reader! You know little of the human heart if you suppose that
honor is stronger than affection or that cool reason can overcome
loving fear. If the villain had stood before me at that moment with one
hand outstretched and the other holding the key to Emerson's prison, I
would have thrown myself at his feet and begged him to take what he
wanted.
Emerson's suspicions had been logical but unsubstantiated. The letter
had turned them from surmise into certainty. It was the location of the
Lost Oasis the fiend was after. But what, precisely, would satisfy his
demands?
A map? THE map? Either he knew it existed, or he had deduced that it
must. The journey we had made led into the waterless, featureless
desert, and only a madman would set out unless he had precise
directions The dirty yellow dog must know we had followed a map of some
kind.
To the best of my knowledge, only one copy was still in existence.
There had been five to begin with,
and to complicate the matter still
further, two of the five had been deliberately, fatally inaccurate I
had destroyed mine— one of the false maps Ramses's copy, the one we had
used to reach the oasis, had
been lost or mislaid during our rather
precipitate departure from the place. Emerson's copy had disappeared
even before we left Nubia. That left two, one accurate, one false.
The other false copy had belonged to Reggie Forthright. He had left it
with me when he set off on his expedition into the desert, and, as he
had requested, I had passed it on to the military authorities, together
with his last will and testament, before we went into the desert.
Presumably these documents had been sent to his sole heir, his
grandfather, when he failed to return. This copy of the map did not
concern me, for it would only have led the one who followed it to a
very dry, prolonged, and unpleasant death.
The original copy of the map had been in the possession of Lord
Blacktower, Reggie's grandfather It
was now in Emerson's strongbox in
the library at Amarna House. Blacktower had given it up, along with the
guardianship of Nefret, at Emerson's emphatic request. I had urged that
it be destroyed, but Emerson had overruled me. One never knew, he had
said. There might come a time, he had said . .
Had it come? For the second and, I am happy to say, last time, my
integrity wavered under the impact
of overpowering affection. I had to bite down hard on the linen
pillowcase before reason again prevailed.
I could not trust the honor of a man who clearly had none. Nor would he
trust mine. He could not afford to release his hostage until he was
certain the information I had given him was accurate—and how
could he know that until he had made the journey and returned? I could
not have retraced our route or remembered the compass readings, but I
did not doubt that Emerson could. He had held the compass
and followed the directions. The villain did not need a map if he could
force Emerson to speak.
No, the rendezvous was a ruse. Our only hope was to find Emerson and
free him before . . .
Where could he be? Somewhere in the vicinity of Luxor still, I felt
sure. The search had been intensive and was proceeding, but it could
not penetrate into every room in every house, especially the houses of
foreign residents. Egypt enjoyed the blessings of British law, which
proclaims that a man's home is his castle. A noble ideal, and one with
which I thoroughly agree— in principle. Noble ideals are often
inconvenient. I well remembered the story of how Wallis Budge had
smuggled his boxes of illegal antiquities away while the police waited
outside his house, unable to enter until the warrant arrived from Cairo
We needed a warrant, and for that we must have grounds. That was what
my devoted friends
were trying to obtain— talking with their informants
in the villages, following up gossip about strangers
in the city,
investigating rumors of unusual activity— and I pinned my hopes on
their endeavors.
I had especially counted on Abdullah and his influence with the men of
Gurnah, who were reputed to know every secret in Luxor, but as I lay
sleepless in the dark, I had to confess I was sorely disappointed in
him. I had seen very little of him in the past few days. I knew one
reason why he avoided the house, he looked like a white-bearded,
turbaned John Knox when he saw me and Cyrus together. Not that Abdullah
would have insulted me by supposing I had the least interest in another
man. He was jealous of Cyrus on his own account, resenting anyone who
wanted to assist me and Emerson in the slightest way, and resenting
Cyrus all the more because his own efforts had proved futile. Poor
Abdullah. He was old, and this had been a terrible blow to him. I
doubted he would ever fully recover.
God forgive me for such doubts. For it was Abdullah who served me best.
Cyrus and I were seated at luncheon next day, discussing how we should
deal with the matter of the proposed rendezvous, when one of the
servants entered and said that Abdullah wanted to speak with me.
"Have him come in," I said.
The servant looked scandalized. Servants, I have found, are greater
snobs than their masters. I repeated the order,- with a shrug the man
went out and then returned to report Abdullah would not come in. He
wished to speak to me in private
"I can't imagine what he has to say that he could not say in front of
you," I said, rising.
Cyrus smiled. "He wants to be your sole prop and defender, my dear.
Such loyalty is touching, but blamed aggravating. Go ahead."
Abullah was waiting in the hall, exchanging sour glances— and I think
low-voiced insults— with the doorkeeper. He would not speak until I had
followed him out onto the veranda.
When he turned to face me, I caught my breath. His sour frown had
vanished, to be replaced by a
glow of pride and joy that made him look
half his age.
"I have found him, Sitt," he said.
"You must not tell the Amerikani!" Abdullah took hold of my sleeve and
held me back when I would have rushed back into the house with the
news. Drawing me farther away from the door, he went on
in an urgent
whisper, "He would not let you go. It is dangerous, Sitt Hakim. I have
not told you all."
"Then for God's sake, tell me! Have you seen him? Where is he?"
Abdullah's story gave me pause and forced me to curb my raging
impatience. He did not need to caution me that we must move with the
utmost discretion— especially since he had not yet set eyes on his
master.
"But what other closely guarded prisoner could there be, so close to
Luxor? The house is outside the town, near to the village of El
Bayadiya. It is rented by a foreigner, an Alemani or Feransawi. A tall
black-bearded man, an invalid, it is said, for he is pale and walks
with a cane when he goes out, which
is not often. His name is Schlange.
Do you know him, Sitt?"
"No. But it is surely not his real name, nor, perhaps, his true
appearance. Never mind that now,
Abdullah. You have a plan, I know.
Tell me."
His plan was the very one I would have proposed myself. We could not
demand entry to the house until we were certain Emerson was there, and
we could not be certain until we had entered it. "So we will go
ourselves," said Abdullah. "You and I, Sitt. Not the Amerikani."
He went on to list all the reasons why Cyrus should not make one of the
party. Obviously he was reluctant to share the glory, but his arguments
had merit. The strongest of them was that Cyrus would
try to prevent me
from going— and that was unthinkable. I would go mad if I had to sit
waiting for news like some feeble heroine of romantic fiction, and I
could trust no one but myself to act with the ruthlessness and
determination the situation might well demand.
I arranged to meet Abdullah in an hour, in the garden behind the house,
and assured him I would find
a way of deceiving Cyrus. Do I sound calm
and collected? I was— then. I knew I had to be. When I returned to the
table where Cyrus awaited me, I gave one of my most convincing
performances— a
brave, sad smile, a forced cheerfulness.
"He is still pursuing idle rumors," I said, taking up my napkin. "I am
sorry I was so long, Cyrus, but I
had to comfort him and make him feel
his efforts were useful. Poor Abdullah! He takes this very much
to heart."
We returned to discussing our plans (only his part in them, had he but
known) for the afternoon. I allowed myself to become increasingly
agitated as he continued to insist I not keep the appointment. "Someone
must go," I cried at last "I could not bear it if we failed to pursue
even the frailest hope."
"Why, sure, my dear. I have it all figured out. I'll go in person to
direct operations, as soon as you promise me you'll not leave the house
till I get back."
"Very well. I yield only because I must— and because I know it is the
safest course, for him. I shall go
to my room now, Cyrus, and stay
there, with the door locked, until you return. I think I may take a
little something to make me sleep, otherwise the minutes will drag too
slowly. Godspeed and good fortune,
my friend."
Cyrus patted me clumsily on the shoulder. Handkerchief to my eyes,
I fluttered out of the room.
When I reached my room I found Anubis stretched out on the bed. How he
had got there I did not
know, he came and went as he pleased, as
mysteriously as the afreet the servants believed him to be. Abdullah
hated him as much as he feared him, blaming the poor creature for
Emerson's capture. Of course that was nonsense. Cats cannot be held
guilty for their actions, since they have no morals to
speak of. If I
had been given to superstitious fancies, I would have imagined Anubis
regretted his inadvertent involvement in the disaster. He spent a good
deal of time wandering about the house as if in search of something— or
someone?— and he was often in my room, tolerating and even inviting my
caresses. The feel of a compliant cat's fur has a surprisingly soothing
effect
After greeting the cat in an appropriate if hurried manner, I hastened
to change. I dared not wait until
after Cyrus had left the house,
Abdullah and I had to cross the river and travel a considerable
distance, and I wanted to reach the suspected house before nightfall. A
surreptitious entry into unfamiliar territory
is hazardous in the dark.
It took only a few minutes to rip off my ruffled gown and replace it
with my working costume. I reached automatically for my belt, a voice
audible only to my inner ear stopped me. "You jangle like a German
brass band, Peabody," it reminded me. Sternly repressing the emotion
that threatened to overcome me, I abandoned my belt, slipping revolver
and knife into my handy pockets I locked my door— making certain Anubis
was inside— and went onto the balcony. The cursed vine I
had counted
upon to assist my descent proved to be too far away. I had to hang by
my hands and drop
a considerable distance. Fortunately there was a
flower bed below. Cyrus's petunias and hollyhocks cushioned my fall
nicely.
Abdullah was waiting. I did not question or commend at that time the
arrangements he had made—the donkeys, the felucca ready to sail, the
horses waiting on the other side. One thought permeated every
cell in my
frame. Soon I would see him— touch him— feel his arms around me.
For, as I
am sure I
need not say, I did not mean to content myself with a
cautious reconnoiter and strategic withdrawal.
My fingers touched the
pistol in my pocket. If he was there, I would have him out, that day,
that instant, no matter what or who stood between us.
The path Abdullah took followed an irrigation ditch through fields of
cabbages and cotton. Half-naked workers straightened and stared after
us as we galloped past, children playing in the courtyard of a
house
waved and called. Abdullah slackened speed for neither man nor beast.
When a careless billy goat— whose goatee and long face gave it a
certain
resemblance to my friend Cyrus— wandered out
into the road, Abdullah dug
his bare heels into the horse's flank and soared over the goat. I
followed his example.
He drew rein at last amid a huddle of huts, where another path crossed
ours. Following his example,
I dismounted The place was strangely deserted, only a few men, drinking
coffee at tables under a
rude shelter, were to be seen. One of them came to us and handed
Abdullah a bundle of cloth before leading the horses away.
"We must go on foot from here," said Abdullah. "Will you wear this,
Sitt?"
He shook out the bundle—a woman's enveloping robe of somber black, with
the accompanying burko,
or face veil. After I had put it on, he nodded
approval. "It is good. You must walk behind me, Sitt, and not stride
like a man. Can you remember?"
His bearded lips were twitching. I smiled back at him. "If I forget,
Abdullah, you must beat me. But I
will not forget."
"No. Come then. It
is not far."
As we walked, I glanced at the sun. After so many years in Egypt I had
learned to read its position as readily as the hands of a clock, even
now Cyrus's agents must be in their positions on the terrace of the
Winter Palace Hotel. Was he there, the unknown villain who had laid
such a dastardly plot? I prayed he was. If he was absent from his
house, our mission of rescue would be easier.
My heart gave a great leap when I saw a high mud-brick wall ahead.
Palms and dusty-leaved acacias surrounded it, and the tiled roof of a
house showed over the top. It was a sizable establishment— an estate,
in
Egyptian terms— house, gardens and subsidiary buildings surrounded by
an
enclosure wall for privacy and protection Abdullah passed it without
breaking stride, I shuffled humbly after him, my head bowed and my
heart thudding. Out of the corner of my eye I noted that the wall was
high and the wooden gate was closed.
When we reached the end of the wall, some sixty feet farther on,
Abdullah darted a quick glance over
his shoulder and turned aside,
pulling me after him. The wall continued now at right angles to the
road Another turn brought us to the third side of the enclosing wall,
and after a short distance Abdullah stopped, gesturing.
His meaning was plain, and I could only approve his decision. Behind us
a field of sugarcane formed a green wall that hid us from casual
passersby. We were now at the back of the estate, as far from the
main
house as was possible. Mud-brick, the ubiquitous building material of
Upper Egypt, is convenient but impermanent, the bricks and their
plastered outer surface had crumbled, leaving chinks and crevices
"I
will go first," he whispered. "No, you will not," I replied. "We must
reconnoiter before we attempt
to enter, and I am younger . . . that is, I am a lighter weight than
you. Give me a hand up."
I threw off the muffling black robe and veil. No disguise would save us
if we were discovered inside.
I put the toe of my boot into a
convenient hole, Abdullah— who had learned early on that it was a waste
of time to argue with me— cupped his hands under the other boot and
lifted me till I could see over the wall.
I had hoped to see a garden, with shrubs and trees that could offer
concealment. No such amenities appeared, only a bare open space
littered with the usual household discards— scraps of broken pots,
rusty
bits of metal, rotting melon rinds and orange peel. Of such detritus
are formed the kitchen middens dear to the hearts of archaeologists,
and they are still in the process of formation in Egypt, for
householders commonly dump their trash casually in their yards. This
was as nasty a place as any I
had seen— clear evidence that the present
occupant of the house was a transient, unconcerned about sanitation or
appearance. The only unusual feature was the absence of animal life. No
chickens scratched in the dirt, no goats or donkeys nibbled at the
scanty weeds.
An open shed roofed with bundles of reeds had once served as an animal
shelter, to judge by the scattered straw and other evidence. A row of
straggling, dusty tamarisk trees half-hid the back of the mansion.
There
was one other structure visible: a small, windowless building some ten
feet square. Unlike the rest of the place, it showed signs of recent
repair. There were no gaps in those walls, every chink had been filled
with fresh plaster that showed pale against the older gray-brown
surface. The flat roof was solid, not the usual covering of reeds
overlaid with mortar.
Something of value must be within, or the owner of the property would
not have taken such precautions. Hope renewed weakened my limbs,
Abdullah gave a pained grunt as my weight pressed heavily on his hands.
I was on the verge of completing the ascent, for exultation had
momentarily overcome prudence, when a dampening thought occurred to me.
Surely something so valuable would not be left unguarded? I could only
see the back and one side of the building. There were no windows, but
there must be a door on one of the walls I could not see.
I motioned to Abdullah to lower me. He was glad to do so, I believe. He
was perspiring heavily, and not only from my weight, suspense gnawed at
his vitals as it did at mine.
Quickly I described what I had seen. "We must assume there is a guard,"
I whispered. "Can you move like a shadow, Abdullah?"
The old man's hand went to the breast of his robe. "I will deal with
the guard, Sitt."
"No, no! Not unless we must. He may cry out and summon others. We will
have to get on the roof. There is an opening of some kind there—"
"I will go first," said Abdullah, his hand still at the breast of his
robe.
This time I did not argue.
The evening breeze had arisen, rustling through the cane and stirring
the leaves. The small sounds
blended with the equally soft noises we
could not avoid making, but they were few, for all his size Abdullah
glided up the wall and over it like the shadow I had mentioned. He was
waiting to lift me down when I reached the top, without pausing we
crept toward the building It was low— a kennel for a dog or some other
beast. Abdullah lifted me up and followed me onto the roof.
There was a guard Silently though we had moved, something must; have
alerted him, I heard a mutter and the rustle of fabric as he rose and
then the soft pad of bare feet. We flattened ourselves behind the low
parapet and held our breaths. He went round the perimeter of the
building, but it was a perfunctory performance and he did not look up,
people seldom do when they are searching. Finally he settled down again
and lit a cigarette. The smoke rose in a thin gray curl, wavering in
the breeze like a writhing serpent. Then and only then did we dare
crawl toward the opening. It was closed by a rusted grille whose
crossbars were set so close together that a finger could barely be
inserted in the gaps.
I have not described my sensations, nor will I attempt to do so. The
greatest of literary giants could not begin to capture their intensity.
I pressed my face to the rusty metal surface of the grille.
The interior of the place was not entirely dark. There was another
opening, a narrow slit over the door
on the wall opposite the one we
had climbed. Through it enough light entered to enable me to see the
interior of the reeking den. The walls were bare and windowless, the
floor was of beaten earth. There
was no rug or carpet, only a flat
square shape that might have been a piece of matting. The furnishings
consisted of a table holding a few jars and pots and other objects I
could not identify, a single chair— shockingly out of place in that
setting, for it was a comfortable armchair of European style,
upholstered in red plush— and a low bed. On it lay the motionless form
of a
man.
Abdullah's face was so close to mine I felt his breath hot against my
cheek. Then the sinking sun sent a golden arm through the gap over the
door, illumining the interior. I had not needed light to know him. I
would have known that outline, that presence, in the darkest night. But
if there had been breath in my lungs I would not have been able to
restrain a cry when I saw the familiar features— familiar, yet so
dreadfully changed.
The beard banished by my decree had returned, blurring the firm lines
of jaw and chin, spreading up his cheeks toward his hairline. His
closed eyes were sunken and his cheekbones stood out like spars. His
shirt had been opened, baring his throat and breast . .
The memory of another time, another place, assaulted me with such force
my brain reeled. Was THIS how a mocking Providence had answered my
unspoken appeal for a return to those thrilling days of yesteryear,
when Emerson and I had been all in all to one another— before Ramses?
So had he appeared on that never-to-be-forgotten day when I entered
the tomb at Amarna and found him fevered and delirious. I had fought
death to save him then, and won. But now . . . he lay so still, his
features pinched and immobile as yellowed wax. Only eyes as desperately
affectionate as my own could have marked the almost imperceptible rise
and fall of his breast. What had they done to reduce a man of his
strength to such a state in only a few days?
The dying light, glinting off an object on the table, gave me the
answer. It was a hypodermic needle.
Scarce had the horror of that sight penetrated my mind when I saw
something else. I had observed that his arms were stretched over his
head in a stiff, unnatural position. Now I realized why. From the
manacles on his wrists a chain looped over and through the bars of the
headboard of the narrow bed.
I cannot explain why that detail affected me so powerfully. It was
certainly a reasonable precaution, in fact, anyone who wished to keep
Emerson in a place where he did not care to remain would have been
a
fool to neglect such restraints Nevertheless, it did upset me a great
deal, and perhaps the intensity of
my outrage accounts for what— as I am
told— happened next.
I had been vaguely aware of voices at the door The guard had been
joined by another man, they were talking loudly and, I suppose, telling
improper stories, for there was a good deal of raucous laughter. The
sounds faded into a dim insect-buzzing. A black cloud enveloped me, and
a roaring fury filled my ears.
I came back to my senses to find Abdullah's alarmed face nose-to-nose
with mine. One of his hands
was clamped over my mouth. "The guards have
gone, to fetch beer, but they will return," he hissed.
"Do you hear me,
Sitt? Has the demon departed?"
I could not speak, so I blinked at him. Finger by finger, watching me
nervously, he loosened his grip. I became aware of a sharp, shooting
pain in my hands. Looking down, I saw that I had seized the heavy
grille and lifted it up out of the framework on which it rested My
fingers were torn and bleeding.
Abullah was muttering in Arabic—spells and incantations, designed to
ward off the powers of evil
"The— er— demon has gone," I whispered "How very curious. This is the
second time such a thing
has happened, I believe. I laughed at Emerson
when he told me of the first occasion. I must tell him,
and apologize
for doubting him, when he ... when we...
To my consternation, I found I could not control my voice. I lowered my
head onto my folded arms
A hand, gentle as a woman's, stroked my hair. "My daughter, do not
weep. Dost thou believe I would dare to call myself a man and a friend
if I left him to lie there? I have made a plan."
Abdullah had never spoken to me except with formal respect, nor used a
term of endearment. I had known the depth of his regard for Emerson,
"love" would not be too strong a word, had not that word been corrupted
by European romanticism, but I had not been aware that in his own
fashion Abdullah loved me too. Infinitely moved, I replied in kind.
"My father, I thank thee and bless thee. But what shall we do? He is
drugged or sick, he cannot move.
I had counted on his strength to help us."
"I feared we would find him thus," Abdullah replied. "One does not
chain the lion without clipping his claws, or cage the hawk without— "
"Abdullah, I love and honor thee as a father, but if thou dost not get
to the point I am going to scream."
The old man's bearded jaws opened in a smile. "The Sitt is herself
again We must go quickly, before
the guards return. My men wait at the
crossroads."
"What men?"
"Daoud and the sons and grandsons of my uncles. They all have many
sons," Abdullah added proudly. "The sun is setting, it is a good time
to attack, at nightfall."
It did not occur to me for a moment to protest this dangerous and
illegal procedure, but when he tugged
at my sleeve I resisted. "I
cannot leave him, Abdullah. They may carry him away or kill him if they
are attacked."
"But, Sitt, Emerson will have my heart to eat if you— "
"So long as he is alive to eat it. Hurry, Abdullah. And— take care, my
dear friend."
His hand gripped mine for a moment and then he was gone. I twisted
around to watch, and saw him vanish over the wall as silently as he had
come.
I had, of course, no intention of remaining on the roof. My normal
strength might not have sufficed to
lift the grille, fortunately that
little matter had been taken care of. One side of the heavy metal
square
now rested on the lip of the opening, I had only to push it
aside. The opening was, I thought, just large enough to admit my body.
It would have to, for I meant to get in by one means or another.
Before I could carry out this scheme I heard the men returning. Their
voices were more subdued this time, and after a moment another voice
broke in. It spoke Arabic, but I knew from the accent and the tone of
command that the speaker was not an Arab. Fear— for my husband, not for
myself— and fury strengthened every sinew. He was here— the leader, the
unknown villain who had perpetrated this foul deed.
The group paused outside the door and I hesitated, hands clenched on
the metal, scarcely feeling the
pain of my bleeding fingers. I must not
act prematurely They had no reason as yet to suspect rescue
was
imminent.
Then the speaker switched to English "Wait here until I come for you. I
want him wide awake and rational when he sees you"
To my astonishment the voice that responded, in the same language, was
that of a woman. "I tell you,
he is not so easily deceived. He will
know I am not—"
"That, my dear, is the point of this exercise— to test the truth of his
claim of amnesia In that costume
and in the gloom, with a gag hiding
the lower part of your face, you look enough like her to deceive an
affectionate spouse— for long enough, at least, to win a betraying cry
of alarm from him That will tell
me what I want to know. And if he
believes you are she, I will have at last the means of persuading
him
to tell me what I want to know."
A wordless murmur from the woman brought a mocking laugh from the
leader. "The threat will be enough, I believe. If not— well, my dear, I
won't damage you any more than I can help."
Every violent emotion I had repressed during the days of waiting now
boiled within me, with raging curiosity added to the mix. I had an
inkling of what the villain planned, and I was on fire to see my
double. His despicable trick might succeed, if the copy was faithful
enough.
The door swung open, admitting a glow of light. It did not come from
the sun, which was now below
the horizon The man who entered carried a
lamp. You may believe, Reader, I studied his face intently. His voice
had been familiar, but the features I saw did not match the appearance
I expected. They were distorted by shadows, and masked by a heavy black
mustache and imperial It might be he, I could not
be certain.
Putting the lamp on the table, he bent over Emerson and shook him
roughly. There was no response. Straightening, the monster swore under
his breath and turned toward the door. "I told you to keep out!"
The woman's voice was almost inaudible "He lies so still."
"The last
dose of opium must have been too strong. Never mind, I'll have him
awake and cursing in a moment."
He picked up the needle and plunged it into a bottle. The whisper came
again.
"You use too much. He will die."
"Not until it suits my purpose," was the calloused response. "Now get
back. He'll come round before long."
I forced myself to watch and remain passive. The needle went into a
vein, with a careless skill that suggested some medical expertise. I
made a note of this, even while my skin crawled with loathing and
hatred. Whatever the substance was, it was effective. Moments later
Emerson stirred. His first word
was a feeble but heartfelt oath. Tears
came to my eyes, and I promised myself I would never again complain of
any language he chose to employ.
His adversary laughed. "Awake, are we? Another word or two, if you
please, I want to be certain you
are able to appreciate the treat I
have for you."
Emerson obliged with a pithy description of his captor's presumed
parentage. The fellow laughed again.
"Excellent. I presume you are still unwilling to admit me to your
confidence?"
"Your conversation has become tedious," said Emerson. "How many times
must I repeat that I have
not the faintest idea what you are talking
about? Even if I were able to supply the information you want
I would
not, I have taken a dislike to you."
"Give up any hope of rescue." The other man's voice hardened. His toe
nudged the square object,
which I now saw to be a wooden hatch or
cover. "Have you also forgotten what lies beneath this?"
"Again you repeat yourself," was the bored reply "I don't know where
you get these melodramatic notions. Out of some novel, I suppose."
This comment seemed to madden the villain. He darted forward, for a
moment I thought he would strike his helpless prisoner. Mastering
himself with an effort that made his upraised hand quiver, he hissed,
"The well is at least forty feet deep. If anyone attempts to force his
way in here, the guard will see that you have the opportunity to
measure its precise depth."
"Yes, yes, you said that." Emerson yawned.
"Very well. Let us see if I have found a means of persuading you to
change your mind."
Leaving the lamp on the table, he went to the door. Emerson's eyes
followed him, the pupils were so dilated they looked black instead of
blue. After a moment the door opened again and the man entered, pushing
a slighter form before him.
She would have deceived ME. The costume she wore was an exact copy of
my old working uniform— Turkish trousers, boots, and all— even a belt
hung with tools. Her hair was the same jet-black, it
tumbled over her
shoulders, as if it had been loosened in a struggle. Her supposed
captor's arm pinned hers to her sides and held her back out of the
light, so that her features would have been hard to make
out even if a
white cloth had not covered the lower part of her face.
"A visitor to see you, sir," said the unknown, in a mocking parody of a
butler's announcement. "Haven't you an affectionate greeting for your
wife?"
Emerson's face was impassive. Only his eyes moved, from the top of the
woman's head to her boots,
and back again. "She does appear to be
female," he said, in an offensive drawl. "Hard to tell at first, in
that outlandish garb . . ."
"You claim you don't recognize your own wife?"
"I don't have a wife," Emerson said patiently. "I seem to have
forgotten a good many things, but of that
I am certain."
"You contradict yourself, Professor. How can you be certain if you
claim to be suffering from amnesia?"
A gasp of laughter came from Emerson's cracked lips. "Whatever else may
have slipped my mind, I
could hardly forget something so monumentally
stupid. Never in my weakest moment would I be
damned fool enough to
saddle myself with a wife." Narrowing his eyes, he went on, "Is she, by
any chance, the female who brought me food and water yesterday ... or
the day before . . . can't
remember . . ."
His eyes closed. The woman had bowed her head—in shame, I hoped. The
man who held her loosened his grasp. She shrank back against the wall
and pulled the gag from her face.
"He is fainting," she whispered. "Let me give him something—water, at
least . . ."
Fists on his hips, the villain studied her with a sardonic smile. " 'O
Woman! in our hours of ease, Uncertain, coy, and hard to please . . .
When pain and anguish wring the brow, A ministering angel thou!
I
Minister, then. If he dies before I can get that damned woman into my
hands I'll have no means of persuading her to talk." He turned to the
door, adding, over his shoulder, "Don't be long."
She waited until the door had slammed before relaxing. A long sigh
issued from her lips.
"I have never understood the female sex," said a voice from the bed.
"Why do you tolerate such treatment?"
She spun around to face him. "You are awake? I thought so. You only
pretended. . ."
"Not . . . entirely," said Emerson.
She knelt by the bed, holding a cup of water to his lips and supporting
his head while he drank thirstily. He thanked her, in a stronger voice.
She lowered his head gently onto the hard mattress and stared at
her stained fingers.
"It will not heal," she murmured. "Does it pain you?"
"I have the devil of a headache," Emerson admitted.
"And your poor hands . . ." Her fingers slid slowly up his right arm
and touched the swollen, bloody
flesh of his wrist.
"It would be pleasant to stretch a bit." His voice had changed. I knew
that purring note, and a shiver
ran through me. I dislike, even now, admitting the emotion that
prompted it. I believe it is not necessary
for me to do so.
Emerson went on, in the same tone, "If my arms were free I could better
express the appreciation I feel for your kindness."
She let out a little laugh, in which coquetry and defiance were
mingled. "Well, why not? You cannot
pass the guards, you are not strong
enough, and if you think you can win freedom by holding me
hostage you
deceive yourself. No English gentleman would harm a woman. He
knows
that."
The key to his manacles were on the table. I appreciated the refinement
of cruelty that left freedom in sight, but unattainable. As she bent
over him to unlock them a tress of her hair brushed his face.
Well! I would like to believe I could have held firm, even in the face
of what was obviously about to transpire, but I had seized the edge of
the grille with both hands and my muscles were tensed, when
there was
an outcry from the direction of the house. Voices shouting, the rattle
of gunfire! My faithful Abdullah and his valiant friends had arrived!
Rescue was at hand! The time for action had come!
One heave of my shoulders pushed the grille aside. I inserted my feet
into the opening and.. and stuck,
at a region I prefer not to specify.
There was not a moment to lose, gritting my teeth, I squeezed myself
through, landing with bent knees, upright and ready. Pulling out my
pistol, I leveled it at the door.
In the nick of time! And I might not have been in time, owing to that
moment of delay, had she not
flung herself at the yielding door. Her
strength was not great enough, even as I aimed my pistol she
was
crushed behind the opened panel. The sounds of combat rose in pitch and
a dark form rushed in, intent on obeying his leader's dastardly command
There was no time for a reasonable discussion I fired I could hardly
avoid hitting him, for his body filled the doorway, but
the wound was not mortal, his cry, as he recoiled, held more surprise
than pain. Curse it, I thought, and fired again. I believe I missed him
entirely on that occasion. However, the effect was gratifying. With
another howl, he fled. These hired thugs are never reliable
I now turned my attention to the woman, who had emerged from behind the
door and stood watching
me It gave me an odd sensation to see her—the
shadowy image of myself.
Emerson had swung his feet to the floor and sat up. Further effort was
obviously beyond him, his face was ashen and his arms hung
awkwardly at his sides. The very act of moving them must have been
unutterably painful. He looked from me to the woman at the door and
back to me, but he did not speak.
"Let me go," she whispered. "If your people catch me I will go to
prison . . . or worse . . . Please, Sitt!
I have tried to help him."
"Go, then," I said. "Close the door after you." With one last, flashing
look at Emerson, she obeyed.
Then, at last, at last, I could go where I
yearned to go. I rushed to his side and knelt beside him.
Emotion
stifled breath and speech.
He stared blankly at me, a faint frown furrowing his brow. "One female
in trousers is confusing enough, but two is a bit much for a man in my
condition. If you will excuse me, madam, I believe I will take
advantage of my freedom from restraint to ... Oh, damnation!"
It was his last word, a bitter acknowledgment of his inability to do as
he had planned. He fell to his
knees and collapsed face-down onto the floor.
I was too numbed by shock to prevent it The pistol dropped from my
nerveless hand. But I was holding
it leveled at the door, and cradling
Emerson's unconscious head in the other arm, when Abdullah's shout
informed me that our saviors had arrived. He burst through the door and
stopped short, horror replacing the triumph on his face "You weep,
Sitt! Allah be merciful—he is not . . ."
"No, Abdullah, no. It is worse
than that! Oh, Abdullah—he does not know me!"
"Marriage
should be a balanced stalemate between equal adversaries."
Of course I did not mean what I said to Abdullah. There may be
conditions worse than death, but there are few, if any, as
irreversible. Gladly would I have searched the length and breadth of
Egypt for my husband's dismembered body, as Isis did for Osiris,
cheerfully I would have taken up my Orphean lyre and descended into the
nethermost pits of Hades to fetch him back— had such deeds been
possible. Unfortunately they were not, fortunately they were not
necessary There was a light at the end of this Stygian tunnel. So long
as he lived, anything was possible. And if a thing is possible, Amelia
P. Emerson will tackle the job.
It took a while to sort things out. My first task was to comfort
Abdullah, he sat down on the ground and blubbered like a child, with
relief and with distress at seeing his hero laid so low. Then he wanted
to rush out and kill a few more people, but there were none, our
victory had been complete, and since our men had not been concerned
with taking prisoners, the survivors of the battle had run or crawled
or
crept away. Among the fugitives, I was chagrined to learn, was the
leader. "But we will find him," said Abdullah, grinding his teeth. "I
saw him in the fight, before he ran away, it was a bullet from his
weapon that wounded Daoud. I will remember him. And Emerson will know .
. ."
He broke off, with a doubtful glance at me. "Yes," I said firmly. "He
will. Now, Abdullah, stop ranting and be sensible. Daoud is not
seriously injured, I hope? And your other men?"
Miraculously, none of our defenders had been killed, though several had
been wounded. Daoud, who soon joined us, bore his bloody sleeve like a
badge of honor and insisted on helping to carry the litter
on which
Emerson was borne away. I hated to move him, but the alternatives would
have been more dangerous,- we could not remain there, and the village
offered no accommodations in which I would
have put a sick dog. Emerson
was deeply unconscious and did not stir, not even when the cart
Abdullah had commandeered jolted along the path to the riverbank.
It goes without saying that I did not leave his side for an instant.
Though I had not brought my medical kit, my expertise (derided though
it often had been by Emerson) assured me that his heart beat strong
and
steady and his breathing, though shallow, showed no evidence of
distress. The drugs he had been given were enough to account for his
present state, though I had reason to suspect he had been kept
short of
food and water as well. His injuries were superficial except for the
wound on the back of his head. That concerned me most, for it must be
connected with his loss of memory.
What I had taken to be a clever ruse to avoid questioning was the
terrible truth. He had not been
delirious or off his head, his remarks
had been rational, his mind clear. Except in one rather important
particular.
As we approached the Castle I saw that it was lit from cellar to
attics. I ran on ahead, in order to lose
as little time as possible in
making Emerson comfortable. When I reached the gate Cyrus was waiting.
I will not endeavor to reproduce his remarks. American profanity is
apparently unrelated to the mother tongue or to any other language
known to me. Determined as I was to make myself heard, I could not stop
the flow of his eloquence. Not until the litter bearers came in sight
with their precious burden did Cyrus break off, with a sound that must
have hurt his throat.
Taking advantage of his momentary paralysis of speech, I said, "No
questions now, Cyrus. Help me
get him to bed. And make sure the doctor
is admitted at once. I sent Daoud to fetch him when we
passed through
Luxor."
After I had put my stricken spouse to bed (for I would permit no other
than myself to perform that
tender duty), Cyrus joined me. Arms folded,
he stood looking down at Emerson. Then he leaned
forward and lifted one
sunken eyelid.
"Drugged."
"Yes."
"What else is wrong with him?"
I had done all I could. Tucking in the last end of the bandages I had
wrapped around his lacerated
wrists, I sat back and nerved myself to
admit the painful truth.
"Apparently they realized, as anyone who knows Emerson must realize,
that torture would only stiffen
his resistance. He is not seriously
injured, except . . . We agreed, you remember, after we had read the
message, that he must be pretending to have amnesia. He was not
pretending, Cyrus. He— he did not know me."
Cyrus sucked in his breath. Then he said, "Opium produces strange
delusions."
"He was perfectly rational. His replies were sensible— sensible for
Emerson, that is. Hurling insults and sarcastic remarks at a man who
holds one a chained prisoner is not, perhaps, very wise."
Cyrus let out a brief bark of laughter. "Sounds like Emerson, all
right. Still— "
"There can be no mistake, Cyrus. Would that there were! Not only did he
look me straight in the face
and call me 'madam' but earlier he said
.he said he would never be damned fool enough to saddle himself with a
wife."
Cyrus's efforts to comfort me were interrupted by the arrival of the
doctor. He was not the pompous
little Frenchman with whose medical
inexpertise ! had been forced to deal on a previous occasion, but
an
Englishman who had retired, for reasons of health, to a warmer clime.
Evidently the desired effect
had been achieved, though his beard was
gray and his body cadaverously thin, he moved with the vigor
of a young
man, and his diagnosis assured me that we were fortunate to have found
him.
We could only wait, he said, for the effects of the opium to dissipate.
Though the dosage had been large, the patient had not been under its
influence for long, there was every hope, given his splendid physique,
that the process of recovery would be neither prolonged nor unduly
arduous. The only serious injury was the wound on the back of the head,
but this concerned Dr. Wallingford less than it had me. "There is no
fracture of the skull," he murmured, probing the area with sensitive
fingers "A concussion, perhaps . . . We cannot assess that until the
patient has recovered consciousness."
"His loss of memory," I began.
"My dear lady, it would be a wonder if his memory were not confused,
after such a blow on the head
and daily doses of opium! Be of good
heart, I have no doubt he will make a full recovery."
He left after promising to return the following day and after giving me
directions I did not need but which further reassured me, since they
agreed in every particular with my own intentions: Keep the patient
warm and quiet, try to get him to take nourishment. "Chicken broth," I
murmured abstractedly.
A murmurous, musical mew sounded, as if in agreement. The cat Anubis
had entered, as silently as the shadow he resembled. I stiffened as the
animal jumped onto the bed and inspected Emerson from feet
to head,
pausing to sniff curiously at his face. Abdullah's antipathy toward the
beast was based on ignorance and superstition, but— weary and worried
as
I then was— I found myself beginning to sympathize with him. Had the
bearded blackguard who held Emerson captive been Anubis's master?
I had
not been able to make out his features. The voice had reminded me of
Vincey's, but I could not
be certain even of that, for its sneering
tone had been quite unlike the gentle, well-bred accents of the
man I
had known so briefly. Anubis returned to the foot of the bed, where he
lay down and began washing his whiskers. I relaxed, feeling a trifle
foolish.
Cyrus returned after showing the doctor out. He announced that the cook
was boiling a chicken and
asked what else he could do to help me.
"Nothing, thank you. He has taken a little water, that is a good sign.
I am very impressed with
Dr. Wallingford."
"He has an excellent reputation. But if you would like to send to
Cairo—"
"We will wait awhile, I think. I expect you are full of questions,
Cyrus. I will answer some of them
now if you like"
"I know most of the story. I gave myself the pleasure of a little chat
with Abdullah." Seating himself in
an armchair, Cyrus took out one of
his cheroots and asked my permission to smoke.
"By all means. Emerson loves his nasty pipe, the smell of tobacco smoke
may rouse him. I hope you were not too hard on Abdullah."
"I couldn't bawl him out, could I, for succeeding when I failed? Nor
for letting you bully him into going along. You've got him right under
your little thumb, Amelia."
"It was his devotion to Emerson that inspired him. But, yes, I think he
is fond of me too. I never realized that. It was a touching moment when
he opened his heart to me as he had never done before."
"Huh," said Cyrus. "I suppose I can't persuade you to get some rest
while I keep an eye on my old pal."
"You suppose correctly. How could I sleep? Go to bed, Cyrus. You must
be tired. I need not ask if
your mission to the hotel was unsuccessful."
"I'm plumb wore out, it's true, but what did it was coming back here
and finding you gone. I was afraid the message had been a stunt to get
me out of the way so they could carry you off. I don't want to spend
another couple of hours like those."
"Dear Cyrus. But all's well that ends well, you see."
"Let's hope so." Cyrus crushed out the cheroot. His hand was a trifle
unsteady, and this evidence of affectionate concern moved me deeply.
"Well, I'll leave you to your vigil. Call me if ... Oh, shucks, I
almost forgot. The mail came this afternoon. There's a letter for you
from Chalfont."
"The promised letter!" I cried. "Where is it?"
Cyrus indicated a pile of letters on the table The one on top was the
one I wanted,- its bulk suggested
that the writer had quite a story to
tell, and so it proved.
A brief note from Walter introduced the missive
I
have decided to let young Ramses have his say, his epistolatory style
has a panache mine lacks. You know your son well enough not to be
misled by his tendency toward exaggeration. Have no fear for us, we
have taken all precautions, as you will see. It is for you, dear
brother and sister, that we are anxious. Please keep us informed.
There followed several pages closely written in a hand with which
I was
only too familiar. I can do no better than copy out this extraordinary
document in its entirety, for it is impossible to summarize Ramses
Dearest
Mama and Papa [it began],
I trust this finds you well. We are
all well. Aunt Evelyn assures me my hair will soon grow back.
After I had recovered from the effect of this startling statement, I
read on.
< style="font-style: italic;">Your
telegram was of great assistance in preventing a more serious
event than actually occurred, but I already had reasons for suspecting
that a game of some sort was afoot. While making my usual rounds of the
estate in order to run off poachers and look for traps, I came upon a
roughly dressed individual who, instead of running away when I
challenged him, ran at me with the evident intention of taking hold of
me. Retreating, as discretion seemed to indicate (for he was
approximately twice my bulk), I led him through a thorn thicket and
left him hopelessly entangled in the branches my lesser height and
greater knowledge of the terrain enabled me to avoid. He was shouting
loudly and profanely as I departed the scene, but when Uncle Walter and
I and two of the footmen returned, he had fled.
< style="font-style: italic;">
< style="font-style: italic;">Uncle Walter, I regret to
report,
scoffed at my claim that the fellow's
behavior roused the direst suspicions as to his motives for being
there. After Papa's telegram arrived, however, Uncle
Walter was
gentlemanly enough to apologize and intelligent enough to reconsider
the case. After
a council of war we determined to take defensive
measures. As I pointed out, it was safer to err
on the side of excess
than to fail from lack of caution.
< style="font-style: italic;">
< style="font-style: italic;">Aunt Evelyn wanted to call the
constable. She is a very kind person,
but not practical. Uncle Walter and I persuaded her that we had no
grounds for requesting official assistance, and that
in order to
convince officialdom of the validity of our reasons for concern we
would have to disclose matters we had sworn to keep secret. Our
defensive force, therefore, consists of the following:
< style="font-style: italic;">
< style="font-style: italic;">I. Gargery. He was very
pleased to
be asked.
< style="font-style: italic;">
< style="font-style: italic;">2. Bob and Jerry. As you know,
they
are the strongest of the footmen,
and familiar with our habits. You will recall that Bob was of great
assistance in our attack on Mauldy Manor, when
I was fortunate enough
to effect your escape from the dungeon.
< style="font-style: italic;">
< style="font-style: italic;">3. Inspector Cuff. I should
say,
"former Inspector Cuff," since he has retired from the force and
is growing roses in Dorking. I spoke to him
personally on the telephone (a most useful device,
we must install one
at Amarna House], and after he stopped sputtering and listened to what
I
had to say he was persuaded to join us. I believe he is bored with
roses. Do not fear, Mama
and Papa, we did not disclose the SECRET. I
flatter myself that the Inspector has enough confidence in my humble
self to believe my assurance that the matter is serious. Uncle Walter's
confirmation was of some small assistance in this regard.
< style="font-style: italic;">
It was fortunate (or, if you
will permit me to say so, farsighted) that
these measures were instituted/ for Inspector Cuff, the last to arrive,
had not been in the house twenty-four hours
before the anticipated
attack occurred.
It
came about in this wise.
Finally! I thought, turning the page—and ground my teeth when instead
of telling me what I ached to know, Ramses went off on another tangent.
If
I have not mentioned Nefret you may be certain it is not because she
was inactive or
deficient in courage and intelligence. She is ... [Here
several words had been scratched out. Either Ramses's vocabulary had
been inadequate to express his feelings, or he had repented of having
expressed those feelings so openly.] She is a remarkable person. She. .
. But perhaps
an account of what occurred will demonstrate her
Dualities more effectively than mere words
of mine could do.
I had anticipated—erroneously,
as it turned out, but not without
reason—that Nefret would be the person most in need of protection. For,
if Papa's hints in his telegram and my own deductions based on those
hints were correct, she was the one most directly connected with the
aforesaid SECRET. It is true that my theory ignored the fact that the
disheveled gentleman had apparently been intent on seizing ME, so
perhaps chivalry had clouded my ordinarily acute reasoning powers. I
once remember thinking that being a little gentleman seemed more
trouble than it was worth. The incident I am about to relate confirmed
that opinion, as you will see.
"I certainly hope so," I muttered, wishing I had the little "gentleman"
with me so I could shake him and force him to get to the point.
Nefret
had set out in the carriage that day as usual, to go to the
vicarage for a Latin lesson and religious instruction. She was attended
not only by Gargery, who insisted on driving, but by
Bob and Jerry as
well. Uncle Walter felt this would be protection enough, but I had a
certain foreboding (such as Mama often has) about the expedition, and
so I took one of the horses and went after them, remaining at a
discreet distance, for I had reason to suppose that Gargery,
Bob,
Jerry, and perhaps Ne/ret herself, would object to this procedure.
They had let their guard down,
as they later admitted, when they were
almost at their destination. After passing along that deserted stretch
of road (you remember it) where ambush might be expected and where
nothing of the sort ensued, they were within a hundred yards of the
first
house of the village when another carriage appeared around the
curve in the road, coming
toward them at a considerable speed. Gargery
drew to one side to let them by. Instead of doing
so the driver pulled
up and even before the wheels had stopped rolling, men burst out of the
carriage.
I saw everything that
transpired, for the road runs straight at that
point and nothing impeded
my vision. I am sure I need not tell you I
reacted promptly and swiftly, urging my steed to a gallop. Before I was
able to reach the scene of action, Gargery had taken a cudgel (his
favorite weapon) from under his coat and smashed it down on the head of
the individual who was attempting to pull him from the seat. Bob and
Jerry were grappling with three other miscreants.
A fifth man tugged at
the door of the carriage.
A cry burst from me at this
terrible sight and I fear I so forgot
myself as to kick poor Mazeppa
in an attempt to induce greater speed.
This turned out to be unwise as well as unkind. Unaccustomed to such
treatment, Mazeppa came to a sudden halt, and I fell off. I landed on
my head. Undaunted, despite the blood that flowed freely from the
wound, I was crawling toward
the scene of battle when rough hands
seized me and a voice shouted, "I've got him! Come on,
lads, hold 'em
off!"
Or words to that effect. The
lads held them off with such success that
my captor reached the criminous carriage and transferred his grip to
the back of my neck and the seat of my trousers, preparatory, one must
suppose, to pitching me inside.
At that moment, when all seemed
lost, I heard an odd whistling sound,
followed by a soft thud.
The man in whose grip I hung helpless and
dizzy (for a blow on the head, as you know, has the effect of
disorienting the recipient to a considerable degree) shrieked aloud and
dropped me.
I am happy to report that discretion prevailed over the
lust for battle that had brought me to my predicament. I rolled
under the carriage, out the
opposite side, and into a convenient ditch.
I was plucked from this refuge a
few moments later by Gargery, in time
to see the miscreants' vehicle retreating in a cloud of dust. My knees
were a trifle unsteady, so Gargery very kindly
held me up by my collar,
while my eyes sought the object of my chief concern. "Nefret?"
I
gurgled. (I had swallowed a quantity of rather muddy water.)
She was there, leaning over me,
an angelic vision . . . [Ramses had
crossed this out, but the
words were legible.] . . . her face pale with
concern . . . for ME.
"Dear brother," she cried in
poignant accents. "You are wounded: You
are bleeding!" And with her own hand, careless of the mud and gore that
stained her spotless white gloves, she parted
the hair on my brow.
It was not my injury but the
sight of what she held in her other hand
that struck me dumb
(a state, Mama might claim, that is uncommon with
me). The object was a bow.
Swooning, I was carried away by
Gargery and we soon found ourselves
safe at home. Unfortunately I came back to my senses before the doctor
stitched up my head. It was cursed painful. That was when some of my
hair was cut off, but Aunt Evelyn says it will soon grow
back. Everyone
else was unhurt except for bumps and bruises.
It was Nefret herself, as you
may have deduced, who saved the day. The
villain who was attempting to open the carriage door went sprawling,
his nose bloodied, when she slammed it
into his face, and the villain
who carried me off was deterred by an arrow directed with a skill
worthy of Robin Hood himself (if legend is to be trusted, which I doubt
it is).
The bow she had concealed under
her heavy cloak (the weather being
quite chilly) was the one
she had brought with her from Nubia. Unlike
the composite bows carried by the military, hers
is a single-staff
weapon only twenty-nine inches long, employed ordinarily for hunting.
But why, one might ask, had she deemed it expedient to carry such a
weapon? I did in fact ask, and she answered the question after my
affectionate friends had gathered around my bedside for a
council of
war.
"I have kept a weapon close at
hand ever since the Professor's telegram
arrived," she explained coolly. "He is not a man to start at shadows,
and although I am deeply grateful for the loyal protection of our
friends, it is not in my nature to cower in a comer while others risk
their lives
in my defense. The Professor made it clear that Ramses and
I were the ones in danger, not of assassination but of abduction. We
know what the abductors want. Who could give them that information?
Only your mother and father, Ramses, they alone know
the way to the place the
villains seek."
"I could retrace my steps— " I
began with some indignation. She raised a
finger to her lips.
"I know that, dear brother. But in this world
children are treated like pet animals, without sense or memory, and you
are one of the few who could do what you claim. I could not. If they
want
you, it can only be as a hostage, to wring information from those
who love you."
"And you," I hastened to assure
her.
"Those who threaten us may
reason so. Fear not, I will defend myself/ I
carry a knife as well as
a bow and will use either if I must." Her face
grew grave. "It is not for us I fear, but for the Professor and Aunt
Amelia. They have not our strong protectors. They are in the greatest
danger." Her wise words made me realize, dear Mama and Papa, that in my
concern for her I had not given enough attention to your predicament. I
should be at your side. I proposed this to Uncle Walter, but he
absolutely refused to buy a steamship ticket for me, and since I only
possess one pound eleven shillings sixpence I cannot carry out the
transaction without his financial assistance. Please telegraph at once
and tell him to let me come. I am reluctant to leave Nefret, but the
duty (and of course affection of a son supersedes all other
responsibilities. Besides, she has Gargery and the others. Besides, she
does very well without me. Please telegraph immediately. Please be
careful.
Your loving (and at this point
in time extremely anxious) son,
Ramses.
P.S. Gargery was very
disappointed that he could not rescue Nefret like Sir Galahad.
P.P.S. If you telegraph
immediately I can be with you in ten days' time.
P.P.P.S. Or thirteen at the
most.
P.P.P.P.S. Please be careful.
It would have required a great deal to turn my attention from Emerson
at that moment, but this astonishing epistle almost succeeded. I
recalled having mentioned to Ramses, on one occasion, that literary
flourishes were best restricted to the written form. Obviously he had
taken the suggestion to
heart, but his questionable literary devices
(swooning, indeed! What had the child been reading?) did
not conceal
his genuine emotion. Poor Ramses! To be rescued instead of rescuer— to
fall off a horse,
to be dragged out of a ditch and held up like a sack
of dirty laundry, dripping with muddy water, before the eyes of the
girl he
yearned to impress . . . His humiliation had been complete.
And he had taken it like a man and an Emerson! He had only praise for
her whose achievements had
cast his into the shade. And how touching to
a maternal heart was that piteous admission: "She does
very well
without me." Poor Ramses indeed.
As for Nefret, her behavior confirmed my initial impression of her
character and convinced me that she would be a worthy addition to our
little family. She had acted with the same vigor and independence I
would have displayed, and as effectively. I am not accustomed to cower
in corners either.
The very idea of Ramses at my side trying to protect me chilled the
blood in my veins, and I only hoped Walter could prevent him from
robbing a bank or playing highwayman in order to get the money. Not
that I doubted the sincerity of his protestations. I must remember to
telegraph next day, though how precisely to couch the message presented
some difficulty. To inform without alarming them . . .
At that moment the rustle of linen brought me flying to Emerson's side.
He had turned his head! It was only a slight movement and he did not
stir again, but I hovered over him the rest of the night counting every
breath and tracing every line of that beloved face with gentle fingers.
The beard would have to go, of course. Unlike his hair, Emerson's beard
is very stiff and prickly. I objected to it as well on aesthetic
grounds, for it hid the admirable contours of his jaw and chin, as
well
as the cleft in the latter organ.
In time of emotional distress the mind tends to focus on petty details.
That is a well-known fact and accounts, I believe, for my failure to
consider several problems rather more important than Emerson's beard.
They were brought to my attention the following morning, when Cyrus
entered to fetch me a breakfast tray and inquire how we had passed the
night. I persuaded him— without difficulty— to join
me in a cup of
coffee, and entertained him by reading excerpts from Ramses's letter.
"I must telegraph at once, to reassure them," I said. "The question is,
how much shall I tell them?
They know nothing of what has transpired— "
"My dear Amelia!" Cyrus, who had been chuckling and shaking his head
over the letter, immediately sobered. "If they don't know already, they
soon will. We made no secret of his disappearance— heck,
we plastered
the whole town with notices. Unless I miss my guess, the English
newspapers will get
wind of the story from their Cairo correspondents and then we'll be in
the headlines. You and your husband are
news, you know."
The seriousness of the matter was immediately apparent to me. With
Cyrus's help I determined on a course of action. We must telegraph at
once, assuring our loved ones that Emerson had been found
and that we
were both safe and well, and warning them not to believe anything they
read in the newspapers. "For I shudder to think what garbled versions
of the facts those confounded journalists
will report," I said
bitterly. "Curse it, Cyrus, I ought to have anticipated this I have had
enough
unpleasant encounters with the 'gentlemen' of the press."
"You had other things on your mind, my dear. The most important thing
is to get poor old Emerson
back on his feet and in possession of his
senses He'll take care of the reporters."
"No one does it better," I replied, with a lingering glance at the
still face of my spouse. "But the danger is not over. The man
responsible for this dastardly act got clean away. We dare not assume
he will abandon the scheme. We cannot relax our vigilance for an
instant, especially while Emerson lies helpless."
"Don't worry about that" Cyrus stroked his goatee. "Abdullah's
relatives have surrounded the place like
a band of Apaches besieging a
fort. They've already manhandled my cook and beat up a date peddler."
With my mind at ease on this point, and the telegram having been
dispatched, I could return my attention to where my heart already lay.
It was a trying time, for as the effects of the opium wore off, other,
more alarming, symptoms appeared. They were due, Dr. Wallingford
thought, to the other drugs Emerson had been given, but treatment was
impossible since we did not know what they were.
Abdullah had returned to the prison to find the place swept clean. The
police denied having taken anything away, and I was prepared to believe
them, since they would not have had the sense to search
the scene of
the crime. It was evident that the kidnapper had returned to remove any
evidence that might incriminate him. This was an ominous sign, but I
had no leisure to consider the ramifications or contend with the
reporters who, as Cyrus had predicted, besieged us clamoring for news.
Dr Wallingford moved into one of the guest rooms and concentrated on
his most interesting patient. His full attention was required, for coma
was succeeded by delirium, and for two days it required all our efforts
to prevent Emerson from harming himself or us. "At least we know his
physical strength is not seriously impaired,"
I remarked, picking myself up off the floor where Emerson's flailing
arm
had flung me.
"It is the unnatural strength of mania," declared Dr. Wallingford,
rubbing his bruised shoulder.
"Nevertheless, I find it reassuring," I said. "I have seen him this way
before. It is my own fault, I ought
to have known better than . . . Get
hold of his feet, Cyrus, he is trying to get out of bed again!"
Anubis had prudently retired to the top of the dresser, where he
squatted, watching with wide green eyes. In the brief lull that
followed Emerson's fit of agitation I became aware of a low rumbling
sound. The cat was purring! Abdullah would have taken it for another
sign of diabolical intelligence, but I felt a strange, irrational surge
of renewed hope— as if the creature's purr were a good omen rather than
the reverse.
I needed all the encouragement I could find during the dreadful hours
that followed, but finally, after midnight on the third night, I dared
to believe the worst was over. At last Emerson lay still. The rest of
us
sat round the bed, nursing our bruises and catching our breath. My eyes
blurred, I was giddy and light-headed from lack of sleep. The scene
was unreal, like a two-dimensional photograph of some
past event— the
smoky lamplight casting its shadows over the strained faces of the
watchers and the emaciated features of the sick man, the silence
unbroken except for the rustle of leaves outside the
open window and
Emerson's slow, regular breathing.
My senses did not dare to register that sign at first. When I rose and
tiptoed to the bed, Dr. Wallingford came with me His examination was
brief. When he straightened, his tired face wore a smile.
"It is sleep— sound, natural sleep. Get some rest now, Mrs. Emerson He
will want to see you smiling
and well when he wakes in the morning."
I would have resisted, but I could not, Cyrus had to half-carry me into
the adjoining dressing room,
where a cot had been placed for me. The
unconscious mind— in which I firmly believe, despite its questionable
status— knew I could now abandon my vigil, and I slept like the dead
for
six hours.
Waking, filled with energy, I bounded from bed and rushed to
the next room.
At least such was my intention. I was brought to a sudden stop by an
apparition that appeared before me— shockingly pale, dreadfully
disheveled, wild-eyed and unkempt. It was several seconds before I
recognized my own image, reflected in the mirror over the dressing
table.
A quick glance into the adjoining chamber assured me that Emerson still
slept and that the good doctor, eyeglasses askew and cravat loosened,
dozed in the chair next to the bed Hastily I set about making a
few
essential repairs, smoothing my hair, pinching color into my cheeks,
assuming my most elaborately ruffled and beribboned dressing gown. My
hands shook, I was as tremulous as a young girl preparing
for an
assignation with her lover.
Sounds from the next room brought me flying to the door, for I
recognized the querulous grunts and groans with which Emerson was wont
to greet the day. If he was not himself again, he was producing
a good
imitation.
Cyrus, who must have been listening outside the door, entered when I
did. Dr. Wallingford waved us back. Leaning over the bed, he said, "Do
you know who you are?"
He was weary, poor fellow, or no doubt he would have found more
felicitous phraseology. Emerson stared at him. "What a damned fool
question," he replied. "Of course I know who I am. More to the point,
sir, who the devil are you?"
"Please, Professor," Wallingford exclaimed. "Your language! There is a
lady present."
Emerson's eyes swept the room in a slow survey and came to rest on me
where I stood with hands clasped to my breast in order to still the
telltale flutter of the ruffles that betrayed my wildly beating
heart.
"If she doesn't care for my language she can leave the room. I did not
invite her."
Cyrus could contain himself no longer. "You blamed fool," he burst out,
clenching his fists. "Don't you recognize her? If she had not dropped
in uninvited a few days ago, you wouldn't be alive and
blaspheming this
morning."
"Another confounded intruder," Emerson muttered, glowering at Cyrus. He
looked back at me ... And
this time there could be no mistake. The
brilliant blue orbs were clear and conscious, and cool with
indifference. They narrowed and his brows drew together. "Wait, though—
the features are familiar, though the costume is not. Is she the
unsuitably attired female who popped into my pleasant little room last
night, like a cork forced into a bottle, and then proceeded to pepper
the empty doorway with bullets? Females should not be allowed to handle
firearms."
"It wasn't last night, it was three days ago," snapped Cyrus, his
goatee quivering. "She saved your life with that pistol, you— you— " He
broke off, with an apologetic glance at me.
A gleam of white teeth appeared amid the tangle of Emerson's beard. "I
do not know you, sir, but you appear to be a hot-tempered fellow—
unlike myself. I am always calm and reasonable. Reason compels me to
confess that the doorway may not have been empty, and that this lady
may have rendered me some small assistance. Thank you, madam. Now go
away."
His eyes closed. A peremptory gesture from the doctor sent both of us
from the room. Cyrus, still quivering with indignation, put a
protective arm around me. Gently but decisively I removed it.
"I am quite composed, Cyrus. I do not require to be soothed."
"Your courage amazes me," Cyrus exclaimed. "To hear him deny you— sneer
at your devotion and daring— "
"Well, you see," I said with a faint smile, "it isn't the first time I
have heard such remarks from
Emerson. I had hoped, Cyrus, but I had not
really expected anything else. Having nerved myself to
expect the
worst, I was prepared for it."
In silence he placed his hand on my shoulder. I allowed it to remain,
and neither of us spoke again until the doctor emerged from Emerson's
room.
"I am sorry, Mrs. Emerson," he said gently. "Pray don't be
disheartened. He has not forgotten everything. He knows his name and
his profession. He asked after his brother Walter, and declared his
intention of proceeding at once to his excavations."
"Where?" I asked intently. "Did he say where he intended to work this
season?"
"Amarna," was the reply. "Is that important?"
"It was at Amarna that he was working when we became . . . well
acquainted."
"Hmmm. Yes. You may have found the clue, Mrs. Emerson. His memory of
events is clear and precise up to a period approximately thirteen years
ago. He remembers nothing that has happened since that time."
"Since the day we . . became acquainted," I said thoughtfully.
The doctor put his hand on my other shoulder. Men seem to think this
gesture has a soothing effect. "Don't despair, Mrs. Emerson. He is out
of danger, but he is still much weaker than his— er— peremptory manner
might lead you to believe. It may be that his memory will return
as his health improves"
"And maybe it won't," muttered Cyrus. "You're pretty doggoned
nonchalant about it, Doc, isn't there anything you can do?"
"I am not a specialist in nervous disorders," was the huffy reply. "I
would certainly welcome a second opinion "
"No offense meant," Cyrus said quickly. "I guess we're all pretty tired
and short-tempered. A specialist
in nervous disorders, you said . . Hey! Wait a minute!"
His face lit up and he stopped twisting his goatee, which had gone
quite limp under his attentions.
"I guess the good Lord must be on our
side after all. One of the world's greatest experts in mental disorders
is on his way to Luxor at this very moment, if he is not already here.
Talk about the luck
of the devil!"
"What is his name?" the doctor asked skeptically.
"Schadenfreude. Sigismund Schadenfreude. He's a crackerjack, take my
word for it."
"The Viennese specialist? His theories are somewhat unorthodox— "
"But
they work," Cyrus declared enthusiastically. "I was a patient of his
myself a few years ago."
"You, Cyrus?" I exclaimed.
Cyrus looked down and shuffled his feet like a guilty schoolboy. "You
remember, Amelia— that business with Lady Baskerville? I gave my heart
to that woman, and she smashed it to smithereens. I went around like a
droopy-eared hound dog for quite a while, and then I heard about
Schadenfreude. He set me straight in a matter of weeks."
"I am very
sorry, Cyrus I had no idea."
"Water over the dam, my dear. I've been footloose and fancy-free ever
since. I told Schadenfreude
when we parted company to let me know if he
was ever in Egypt and I'd show him what an archaeological dig was like.
He must have arrived in Cairo right after I left Got his letter a few
days ago—paid no attention to it at the time—other things on my
mind— but if I remember rightly, he
planned to be in Luxor sometime this
week. What do you say I run over and see if he's available?"
Of course the matter was not so easily arranged as Cyrus's sympathetic
enthusiasm led him to hope.
It was evening before he returned, towing
the famous Viennese physician along like a pet dog
Schadenfreude was a curious figure— very thin in the face and very
round
in the stomach, his cheeks
so pink they looked rouged, his beard so silvery-bright it suggested a
halo that had slipped its moorings.
Myopic brown eyes peered uncertainly through his thick spectacles.
There was nothing uncertain about his professional manner, however.
"A most interrrresting case, to be sure," he declared. "Herr Vandergelt
has given me some of the particulars. You have not forced yourself upon
him, gnadige Frau?"
I stiffened with indignation, but a wink and a nod from Cyrus reminded
me that the famous doctor's imperfect command of English must be
responsible for this rude question.
"He has slept most of the day," I replied. "I have not insisted upon my
relationship with him, if that is what you mean. Dr. Wallingford felt
that might be unwise, at this stage."
"Sehr gut, sehr gut."
Schadenfreude rubbed his hands together and
showed me a set of perfect white teeth. "I will alone the patient
examine. You permit, Frau Professor?"
He did not wait for my permission, but flung the door open and vanished
within, closing said door
with a slam.
"Peculiar little guy, isn't he?" Cyrus said proudly, as if
Schadenfreude's eccentricities proved his medical prowess.
"Er— quite. Cyrus, are you certain— "
"My dear, he's a wonder. I'm a living testimonial to his talents."
Schadenfreude was inside quite a long time. Not a sound emerged— not
even the shouts I fully
expected to hear from Emerson— and I was getting
rather fidgety before the door finally opened
"Nein, nein, gnadige Frau" said Schadenfreude, holding
me back when I
would have entered. "It is
a discussion we must have before you speak
so much as a single word to the afflicted one. Lead us,
Herr
Vandergelt, to a place of discussion and supply, bitte, something of
refreshment for the lady."
We retired to my sitting room. I refused the brandy the doctor tried to
press upon me— the situation was too serious for the temporary
consolation of spirits— and he applied himself to the beer he had
requested with such gusto that when he emerged from the glass his
mustache was frosted with foam. However, when he began to speak I had
no inclination to laugh at him.
Many people at that time were skeptical about the theories of
psychotherapy. My own mind is always receptive to new ideas, however
repellent they may be, and I had read with interest the works of
psychologists such as William James and Wilhelm Wundt. Since some of
their axioms— particularly Herbart's concept of the threshold of
consciousness— agreed with my own observations of human nature, I was
inclined to believe that the discipline, when refined and developed,
might offer useful insights. Herr Doktor Schadenfreude's theories were
certainly unorthodox, but I found them horribly plausible.
"The immediate cause of your husband's amnesia is physical trauma— a
blow on the head. Has he
often suffered injury to that region?"
"Why— not to an excessive degree," I began.
"I don't know about that," Cyrus demurred. "I can remember at least two
occasions during the few
weeks we were together at Baskerville House
There's something about my old pal that makes people want to beat him
over the head."
"He does not avoid physical encounters when he is defending the
helpless or righting a wrong," I declared.
"Also. But the blow was only the catalyst, the immediate cause. It
broke not only his head but the invisible membrane of the unconscious
mind, and from this rent, this weakened part of the fabric,
rushed
fears and desires long suppressed by the conscious will. In short— in
lay terms, gnadige Frau
und Herr Vandergelt— he has
forgotten the things
he does not want to remember!"
"You mean," I said painfully, "he does not want to remember ME."
"Not
you as yourself, Frau Emerson. It is the symbol he rejects." When a man
gets to talking about his own subject he is inclined to be verbose. I
will therefore summarize the doctor's lecture. (I must warn
the Reader
that some of his statements were quite shocking.)
Man and woman, he declared, were natural enemies. Marriage was at best
an armed truce between individuals whose basic natures were totally
opposed. The need of Woman, the homemaker, was for peace and security.
The need of Man, the hunter, was for the freedom to prey upon his
fellowmen and upon women (the doctor put this more politely, but I
caught his meaning). Society aimed to control these natural desires of
man, religion forbade them. But the walls of constraint were constantly
under attack by the brute nature of Man, and when there was a rent in
the fabric, the brute burst forth
"Good gracious," I murmured, when the doctor paused to wipe his
perspiring brow.
Cyrus had gone beet-red and was biting his lip to repress strangled
noises of indignation and denial. "Doggone it, Doctor, I have to object
to your language in the presence of Mrs. Emerson— and to your slur upon
the masculine gender. We aren't all— er— ravening beasts. You did
say 'ravening,' didn't you?"
"Ravening and lusting," said Schadenfreude happily. "Yes, yes, that is
the nature of man. Some of you repress your true natures successfully,
mein Freund; but beware! The
greater the control, the more the pressure
builds, and if there is a rent in the fabric of the walls— BOOM!"
Cyrus jumped. "Now see here, Doc— "
"Be calm, Cyrus," I urged "The doctor is not being rude, he is being
scientific. I am not offended, and indeed, I find some sense in his
diagnosis. However, I am not so much interested in a diagnosis as in a
cure. To employ your own metaphor, Doctor (and a striking one it is),
how do we force the— er—
beast back behind the wall and what kind of
plaster do we use to mend it?"
Schadenfreude beamed approvingly at me. "You have an almost masculine
directness, Frau Emerson
The procedure is obvious. One does not employ
brute force against brute force, the ensuing struggle might wound both
combatants mortally."
"Striking as the metaphor is, I would prefer a more practical
suggestion," I said. "What am I to do?
Would hypnosis— "
Schadenfreude shook a playful finger at me. "Aha, Frau Emerson! You
have been reading the works of my more imaginative colleagues. Breuer
and Freud are correct in stating that the operative force of the idea
which was not abreacted by allowing its strangulated effect to find a
way out in speech or action must be relived—brought back, in other
words—to its status nascendi. But hypnosis is only a showman's toy that
may do more harm than good by substituting the practitioner's own
preconceptions for the psychical processes of the patient."
I believe I have rendered accurately the general sense of his
discourse. He had to pause for breath at this point—not
surprisingly—and when he went on, it was in more specific terms.
"The memory is like a lovely Rower, gnadige
Frau it cannot be brought
into existence fully formed, it must grow slowly and naturally from the
seed. The seed is there in his mind. Return him to the scenes
he does
remember. Do not force memories upon him. Do not insist on facts he
honestly, sincerely, believes to be false. This would be disastrous in
his case, for if I read his character correctly, he is the
sort of man
who will insist on doing precisely the opposite of what you have told
him to do."
"You've got that right," Cyrus agreed.
"But your suggestions are still too general," I complained. "Are you
saying that we ought to take him
back to Amarna?"
"Nein, nein! You take him
nowhere. He goes where he wishes to go, and you
accompany him. Amarna was the place he kept mentioning. An
archaeological site, is it?"
"It's just about the most remote, desolate site in Egypt," Cyrus said
slowly. "I don't think it would be
such a smart idea for— for various reasons."
The doctor folded his delicate hands across his rounded stomach and
smiled placidly at us. "You have
no choice, my friend Vandergelt. Short
of imprisonment, which is against the law, your only alternative
is to
have him declared incompetent. No reputable physician would sign such
papers. I would not. He is not incompetent. He is not insane, within
the legal definition of the word. If it is the unavailability of
medical attention at this place— Amarna— that concerns you, do not be
concerned. Physically he is
on the road to recovery and will soon be
himself again. There is no danger of a recurrence."
There was danger, however, though not of the sort of recurrence the
good doctor meant After he had departed Cyrus burst out, "I'm sadly
disappointed in Schadenfreude. Of all the insulting theories . He never
told me I was a ravening beast."
"He is an enthusiast. Enthusiasts tend to exaggerate. But I am forced
to agree with some of his theories. What he said about marriage being a
truce . . ."
"Hmph. That's not my notion of what the wedded state ought to be, but I
guess you know more about
the condition than a sorry old bachelor like
me. But I'm dead-set against Amarna. You and Emerson would be like
ducks in a shooting gallery out in that wilderness."
"I disagree, Cyrus. It is easier to guard oneself in a howling
wilderness than in a teeming metropolis."
"In some ways, maybe. But— "
"Now, Cyrus, argument is a waste of time. As the doctor said, we have
no choice. It will be good," I mused, "to see dear Amarna again."
Cyrus's stern face softened "You don't fool me, Amelia. You are the
bravest little woman I know, and that stiff upper lip of yours is a
credit to the whole British nation, but it isn't healthy, my dear, to
suppress your feelings this way. I've got a pretty broad shoulder if
you want one to cry on "
I declined the offer, with proper expressions of gratitude. But if
Cyrus had seen me later that night, he would not have had such a high
opinion of my courage. Huddled on the floor of the bath chamber, with
the door locked and a towel pressed to my face to muffle my sobs, I
wept until I could weep no more. It did me good, I suppose. Finally I
rose shakily to my feet and went to the window. The first pale streaks
of dawn outlined the eastern mountains. Drained and exhausted, I leaned
on the sill looking out, and as the light strengthened I felt a slow
renewing trickle of the courage and hope that had temporarily abandoned
me. My fists clenched, my lips tightened I had won the first battle,
against all odds, I had found him and brought him back to me. If other
battles had to be fought, I would fight and win them too.
"When
one is striding bravely into the future, one cannot watch one's
footing."
Years had passed since I last beheld the plain of Amarna, yet in
eternal Egypt a decade is no more than the blink of an eye. Nothing had
changed— the same wretched villages, the same narrow strip of green
along the riverbank, the same empty arid plain behind, enclosed by
frowning cliffs like the fingers of a cupped, stony hand.
It might have been only yesterday that my eyes last rested upon the
scene, and this impression was further strengthened by the fact that I
saw it from the deck of a dahabeeyah—not my beloved Philae,
on which I
had traveled during my first visit to Egypt, but an even grander and
more luxuriously appointed sailing vessel.
These graceful floating apartments, once the most popular means of
travel for well-to-do tourists, were fast disappearing. Cook's steamers
plied the river, the railroad offered quick if uncomfortable travel
between Cairo and Luxor. The spirit of the new century was already upon
us, and although modern devices were no doubt more convenient, it was
with a sigh that I contemplated the loss of dignity,
leisure, and charm
the dahabeeyahs had emplified.
A few traditionalists clung to the old customs. The Reverend Mr.
Sayce's boat was still a familiar sight along the river, and Cyrus also
preferred the comfort of a dahabeeyah when traveling and when visiting
sites where suitable accommodations were lacking. In fact, there was
not a clean, much less comfortable, hotel to be found between Cairo and
Luxor. Visitors who wished to stay at Amarna overnight had to camp out
or request the hospitality of the local magistrate. This individual's
house was only a little larger and hardly less filthy than those of the
fellahin, so I was extremely pleased when Cyrus announced he
had
ordered his reis to bring his dahabeeyah to Luxor so that we might
travel on it to Amarna.
I had seen The Valley of the Kings,
as his boat was named, before, so
you may conceive of my surprise when I beheld a new and astonishing
sailing vessel awaiting us at the dock the day we left Luxor. Twice the
length of the other boat, gleaming with fresh paint, it bore the name
Nefertiti in elaborate gilt
lettering on the prow.
"I figured it was time the old Valley was retired," Cyrus said
negligently, after I had expressed my admiration "Hope the decor meets
with your approval, my dear, I had one suite fixed up to suit a lady's
taste, in the hope that one day you might do me the honor of sailing
with me."
I concealed a smile, for I doubted I was the only lady Cyrus had hoped
to entertain. He was, as he had once said, "a connoisseur, in the most
respectable sense, of female loveliness" Certainly no female could have
been other than delighted at the facilities this rough-hewn but gallant
American had provided, from the lace-trimmed curtains at the wide
windows to the daintily appointed dressing room adjoining the bath,
everything was of the finest quality and most exquisite taste.
The other guest rooms— for the boat had eight— were equally splendid.
After a silent, contemptuous survey of the accommodations, Emerson
selected the smallest of the chambers.
He had not accepted this means of transport without a considerable
fuss. The arguments of
Dr. Wallingford, who insisted that a few more
days' recuperation would be advisable, had their effect,
so did the
arguments of Cyrus, who had presented himself to Emerson as the
financier of that season's work.
It was in matters such as these that my afflicted husband's loss of
memory served to our advantage. He knew there were gaps in his memory,
the (to him) overnight whitening of Abdullah's grizzled beard
would
have been proof enough had there been no other evidence. He dealt with
this difficulty, as I
might have expected Emerson to do, by coolly
ignoring it. However, he was thus forced to accept
certain statements
as true because he could not assert they were false. It was quite the
usual thing for wealthy individuals to finance archaeological
expeditions. Emerson disapproved of the practice— and
said so, rather
emphatically— but being unaware of his own financial situation, he was
forced in this
case to agree.
Did I hope that the tranquil voyage, the moonlight rippling along the
water, would bring back fond memories of our first such journey
together— the journey that had culminated in that romantic moment when
Emerson had asked me to be his? No, I did not. And it is just as well I
didn't, for my dream would have been doomed to disappointment. In vain
did I flaunt my crimson flounces and my low-cut gowns (for I thought it
would not hurt to try). Emerson fled from them like a man pursued by
pariah dogs. The only time he condescended to notice my existence was
when I wore trousers and talked of archaeology.
I wore my new working costume at luncheon the day after we left Luxor
(the crimson gown having had the aforesaid result the previous night).
I was late joining the others, for I had, I admit, gone through my
entire wardrobe before deciding what to wear. Cyrus got to his feet
when I entered. Emerson was slow
to follow his example, and he gave me
a long look, from boots to neatly netted hair, before doing so
"This is just the sort of inconsistency I object to," he remarked to
Cyrus. "If she dresses like a man and insists on doing a man's work,
why the devil should she expect me to jump to my feet when she enters a
room? And," he added, anticipating the reproof that was hovering on
Cyrus's lips, "why the devil can't
I speak as I would to another
fellow?"
"You can say anything you like," I replied, thanking Cyrus with a smile
as he helped me into my chair. "And I will say what I like, so if my
language offends you, you will have to put up with it. Times have
changed, Professor Emerson."
Emerson grinned. "Professor, eh? Never mind the academic titles, they
aren't worth— er— considering. Times certainly have changed, if, as
Vandergelt here tells me, I have employed a female for the past several
years. An artist, are you?"
Women had occasionally served in that capacity on archaeological digs,
they were generally considered unfit for more intellectually tax
ing activities. I decided not to remind Emerson of the two ladies who
had excavated the temple of Mut at Karnak a few years earlier, for even
at the time he had been critical of their methods. But to do him and
them justice, he was equally critical of the efforts of most male
archaeologists.
Calmly I replied, "I am an excavator, like yourself. I am a fair
draftsman, I am acquainted with the use
of surveying instruments, and I
can read the hieroglyphs. I speak Arabic. I am familiar with the
principles of scientific excavation and I can tell a pre-dynastic pot
from a piece of Meidum ware. In short, I can do anything you ... or any
other excavator . . . can do."
Emerson's eyes narrowed. "That," he said, "remains to be seen." To my
affectionate eyes he was still painfully thin, and his face had not
regained its healthy tan. Not much of it was visible, he had irritably
refused to trim his beard, and it had spread up his cheeks and formed a
jetty bush around jaws and chin. It looked even worse than it had when
I first met him. But his eyes had regained their old sapphirine fire,
they shot a challenging look at me before he applied himself to his
soup and relapsed into ominous silence.
No one broke it. Emerson might not be entirely himself again, but there
was enough of him to dominate any group of which he made a part, and
the two young men who were at the table with us shrank into near
invisibility in his presence.
I beg leave to introduce to the Reader Mr. Charles H. Holly and M. Rene
D'Arcy, two of Cyrus's assistants. If I have not presented them before,
it is because I had never met either of them, they were
of the new
generation of archaeologists, and this was Charlie's first season in
Egypt. A mining engineer
by profession, he was a ruddy-cheeked cheerful
young man with hair the color of Egyptian sand. At
least he had been
cheerful until Emerson got at him.
Rene, as pale and soulful-looking as a poet, was a graduate of the
Sorbonne and a skilled draftsman. The ebon locks that fell gracefully
over his brow matched the mustache that drooped with corresponding
grace over his upper lip He had a very pleasant smile. I had not seen
the smile since Emerson got at him.
Emerson had quizzed them like students at a viva-voce examination,
criticizing their translations of hieroglyphic texts, correcting their
Arabic, and deriding their stumbling descriptions of excavation
technique. One could hardly blame them for not coming off well under
that blistering interrogation,
I had heard distinguished scholars
stutter like schoolboys when Emerson challenged their theories. The
poor lads could
not know that, and they took pains to avoid my husband thereafter.
Neither of them
knew the SECRET, as Ramses would have called it, but
they were aware of the fact that the peril
from which Emerson had
escaped might still pursue us. Cyrus assured me they were devoted to
him,
and good men in a fight, as he put it.
Not until he had finished eating— with good appetite, I was happy to
see— did Emerson speak again. Throwing down his napkin, he rose and
fixed a stern look on me. "Come along, Miss— er— Peabody.
It is time we
had a a little chat."
I followed him, smiling to myself. If Emerson thought to catch me out
or intimidate me as he had the
poor young men, he was in for a salutary
shock.
The Reader may be surprised at my calm acceptance of a situation that
should have induced the strongest feelings of anguish and distress.
Fortitude in the face of adversity has always been my way, tears and
hysteria are foreign to my nature. Could I ever forget that supreme
accolade I had once received from Emerson himself? "One of the reasons
I love you is that you are more inclined to whack people over
the head
with your parasol than fling yourself weeping onto your bed, like other
women."
I had had my night of weeping— not on a comfortable bed, but on the
hard
floor of the bathroom at the Castle, huddled in a corner like a beaten
dog. Never doubt that there were other moments of pain and despair. But
what purpose would a description of them serve? None were as severe as
that first uncontrolled outburst of anguish, I had purged myself of
useless emotions that terrible night, now every nerve, every sinew,
every thought, was bent on a single purpose. It was as if I had forced
myself to lose those same years Emerson had lost— to return in my mind
to the past. In this I was following the dictates of Dr. Schadenfreude.
"You," he had informed me, on the eve of our departure, "you, Frau
Emerson,
are the crux. My initial impression has been confirmed by all
that I have seen since. It is from the bonds of matrimony that his
memory retreats. In all else he is receptive, he accepts with relative
equanimity what he is told. On that subject alone he remains obdurate.
Follow him into the past. Recapture the indifference with which you
once regarded him. Act upon it. And then . . . act upon what follows."
Cyrus had become sadly disenchanted with Dr. Schadenfreude since that
distinguished gentleman expressed his views on marriage and the
reprehensible habits of the male sex. Like most men, Cyrus was a secret
romantic, and hopelessly naive about people. Women are more realistic —
and I, I believe I may say without fear of contradiction, am a supreme
realist. The doctor's advice appealed to certain elements of my
character. I enjoy a challenge, the more difficult the task, the more
eager I am to roll up my
sleeves and pitch in. I had won Emerson's
heart before, against considerable odds, for he had been a confirmed
misogynist and I am not and have never been beautiful. If the spiritual
bond between us, a bond transcending the limits of time and the flesh,
was as strong as I believed, then I could win him
again. If that bond
existed only in my imagination ... I would not, could not, concede it
was so.
So with limbs atingle and brain alert I followed him to the saloon,
which also served as a library and Cyrus's study. It was a symphony in
crimson and cream, with touches of gold. Even the grand piano
had been
gilded — one of Cyrus's few descents into execrable trans-Atlantic
taste. Emerson flung
himself into an armchair and took out his pipe.
While he was messing with it, I took up a manuscript
from the table. It
was the little fairy tale I had been reading in Cairo, I had taken it
up again in order
to distract my mind.
"It is my turn to be tested, I presume," I said composedly. "Shall I
translate? This is The Doomed
Prince,' a tale with which you are no doubt familiar."
Emerson glanced up from poking at his pipe. "You read hieratic?"
"Not
well," I admitted. "This is Walt — er — Maspero's hieroglyphic
transliteration." And without
further ado I began, "There was once a
king to whom no son was born. So he prayed the gods he
served for a
son, and they decreed that one should be born to him. Then the Hathors
came to decree
his destiny. They said, 'He shall die by the crocodile
or the snake or the —
An invisible hand gripped my throat. Superstition is not a weakness to
which I am prone, but the parallel suddenly struck me with such force I
felt like the unhappy parents hearing the doom prophesied for
their child.
At the beginning of our acquaintance at Amarna, Emerson and I had faced
an adversary I had described as a veritable crocodile, waiting on the
sandbank to destroy the lover seeking his sweetheart. Now
another enemy
threatened us — a man who had used the name Schlange. In German,
Schlange
means snake.
Nonsense, said the rational part of my much-tried brain. Fanciful you
may be, but this is the grossest
kind of pagan morbidity. Dismiss
it! Let common sense prevail over the affectionate fear that has
weakened the ratiocinative process!
Unaware of the painful struggle going on under his very eyes, Emerson
said sarcastically, "Is that the extent of your preparation?"
"I can go on if you like."
"Never mind. I did not request a private interview in order to review
your qualifications. If Vandergelt
can be believed, I have already
accepted them."
"You have."
"And you were present on the presumed expedition concerning which my
gentle host was so curious?"
"I was."
"It did take place?"
"It did."
"At least she doesn't talk as incessantly as most women," Emerson
muttered to himself. "Very well,
then, Miss— er— Peabody. Where the devil
did we go, and why? Vandergelt claims to be ignorant
of those facts."
I told him.
Emerson's eyebrows performed a series of alarming movements. "Willie
Forth? It seems only yesterday
I spoke with him . . . You say he is
dead?"
"And his wife. The details do not matter," I continued, for I was not
anxious to recall some of those details. "What does matter is that
someone has learned that Mr. Forth's lost civilization is not a
fantasy, and that we alone can lead him to it. We swore we would never
disclose its location— "
"Yes, yes, you explained that. Forgive me," Emerson continued, with
poisonous politeness, "If I express
a certain degree of skepticism
about the whole affair. I told Willie Forth he was mad, and thus far I
have seen no evidence that contradicts that judgment. You and your dear
friend Vandergelt might have invented this story for reasons of your
own."
"You still bear the evidence of someone's interest in your affairs," I
said indignantly. "Your bruised head and that horrible beard— "
"What does my beard have to do with it?" Emerson clutched protectively
at the appendage in question. "Leave my beard out of this, if you
please. I grant you that someone appears to be taking an impertinent
interest in my personal affairs, but he was not as specific as you— "
"How could he be? He knows nothing about the place except that it holds
incredible riches— "
"Do you always interrupt people when they are talking?"
"No more than
you. If people go on and on— "
"I never interrupt," Emerson shouted.
"Pray allow me to finish the point I am endeavoring to make."
"Pray
make it," I snapped.
Emerson drew a deep breath. "There are a number of individuals who hold
grudges against me. I am not ashamed of that, indeed, it is a source
of modest pride to me, for in all cases their resentment stems
from my
interference with their illegal or immoral activities. I am also, as
you may have observed, close-mouthed— discreet— taciturn. I don't tell
people everything I know. I don't trumpet my
knowledge to the world. I
never speak unless— "
"Oh, good Gad," I exclaimed, jumping to my feet "I quite agree with the
premise you are suggesting,
at such unnecessary length: there are
undoubtedly dozens of people who would like to murder you for dozens of
different reasons. You want evidence that this particular individual is
after one particular
piece of information? I will give you evidence. Come with me."
He had no choice but to obey or leave his curiosity unsatisfied, for I
was on my way to the door even
as I spoke. Stamping heavily and
muttering under his breath, he followed me until I reached my room
and
flung the door open.
"Here!" he exclaimed, starting back. "I refuse to— "
Exhilarated,
amused, and exasperated, I got behind him and gave him a shove. "If I
make a rude
advance you can scream for help. When you see what I have
to show you, you will understand why
I prefer not to remove it from
this room. Sit down."
Eyeing the canopied bed as if it might extend ruffled tentacles to
grasp him, Emerson circled around
it and lowered himself cautiously
into a chair. He stiffened when I went to the bed, but relaxed a little
after I had taken the box out from under the mattress and handed it to
him.
The sight of the contents brought a soft whistle to his lips, but he
did not comment until after he had examined both scepters
thoroughly, and when he raised his eyes to my face they glittered with
the old blue fire of archaeological fever. "If they are fakes they are
the finest I have ever seen, and you and Vandergelt have gone to
considerable trouble to deceive me."
"They are genuine. We are not deceiving you. Not even Cyrus has seen
these, Emerson. He knows no more about the matter than does our unknown
enemy, who put together the same clues Cyrus— "
"Unknown? Not to me."
"What?" I cried. "You recognized him?"
"Of course. He had grown a beard and dyed it and his hair, and he
looked older . . . which," Emerson mused, "is only to be expected,
since he was older. No doubt about it, though. Well, well. This
explains why he was so bad-mannered. I could not imagine why he was put
out with me, since I had been one
of the few to defend him. What a sad
world it is, when greed proves stronger than gratitude and the
lust for
gold overcomes friendship— "
"Men are so naive," I exclaimed. "The commonest reaction to favors
rendered is resentment, not gratitude. He probably detests you even
more than he does those who condemned him. So it was
Mr. Vincey. I
thought I recognized his voice."
"You know him?"
"Yes. That is his cat." I indicated Anubis, who was curled up on the
sofa. "He asked us— curse his insolence!— to care for the animal while
he
went to Damascus."
"He certainly was not in Damascus," Emerson said. "Very well, let us
get down to business instead of wandering all around the subject the
way you women are inclined to do. Vincey is on the loose and it would
be extremely careless of us to assume he has given up his little
project. He has all the more
reason to be vexed with me now, after I
got away from him so neatly. I could . . . What's the matter? Something
caught in your throat? Have a glass of water and don't distract me."
It did not seem an opportune moment to remind him that his escape had
been neither neat nor due to
his efforts. Choking on my indignation, I
remained silent. Emerson went on thoughtfully, "I could track him down,
I suppose, but I will be damned if I allow him to interfere with my
professional activities any more than he already has. If he wants me,
he will come after me. Yes, that will be best. I can get on
with my
work, and if he turns up, I'll settle the fellow."
I was meditating how best to respond to this complacent statement when
I heard someone approaching. The steps were those of Cyrus, the
rapidity of their pace made my scalp prickle with apprehension. He was
almost running, and as he neared my door he began to call out.
"Amelia! Are you there?"
"Just a moment," I called, snatching the box from Emerson and hastening
to restore it to its hiding place. "What is it, Cyrus? What has
happened?"
"Big trouble, I opine. We have found a stowaway!"
* * *
As soon as I had the box concealed, I admitted Cyrus. In my excitement
I had overlooked the fact that Emerson's presence might cause some
embarrassment— particularly to Emerson—until I saw Cyrus's
jaw drop and
color flood his lean cheeks. Emerson had gone equally red in the face,
but he decided to brazen it out.
"You are interrupting a professional discussion," he growled. "What's
all the fuss about?"
"A stowaway," I reminded him. "Who? Where?"
"Here," Cyrus said.
One of the sailors pushed her into the room. One had to assume she was
female from her dress, though the worn black robes completely covered
her shape and the dusty veil hid all but a pair of terrified dark
eyes.
"It is some poor village woman fleeing a cruel husband or tyrannical
father," I cried, my sympathies immediately engaged.
"Hell and damnation," Emerson exclaimed.
Her eyes found him where he sat bolt upright, hands clutching the arms
of his chair. With a sudden
effort she tore herself free and flung herself at his feet.
"Save me, O Father of Curses! I risked my life for you, and now it
hangs by a thread."
Exaggeration seemed to be in the air that day, I thought to myself. She
had tried to keep the murderous guard from entering Emerson's prison,
but how could her dread master know of that? Was this even the same
woman? Her voice sounded different—huskier, deeper, and with a distinct
accent.
"You are safe with me," Emerson said, studying the bent black head
with— I was happy to observe—
a rather skeptical expression. "If you speak the truth."
"You doubt me?" Still on her knees, she sat back and wrenched the veil
from her face.
I cried out in horror. No wonder I had not recognized her voice, the
prints of fingers showed dark on
her bruised throat. Her face was equally unrecognizable, swollen and
stained by the marks of brutal
blows.
"This is what he did to me when he learned you had escaped," she
whispered.
Pity had not altogether wiped out my suspicions. "How did he learn ..."
I began.
Replacing the veil, she turned to me. "He beat me because I had shown
compassion and because . . . because he was angry."
Emerson's face was impassive. Those who had never beheld a
demonstration of the seething sea of sentiment his sardonic exterior
conceals might have believed him to be unmoved,- but I knew he was
thinking of the child-woman he had been unable to save from her
murderous father.* Nothing of this showed in his voice when he said
gruffly, "Find her a room, Vandergelt. God knows you've enough useless
space on this boat."
She kissed his hand, though he tried to stop her, and followed Cyrus
out. Frowning, Emerson took out
his pipe. I heard Cyrus summon his
steward after directing the fellow to show the lady (he stumbled a
bit
over the word, but I had to give him credit for the effort) to a vacant
stateroom, he returned.
"Are you loony, Emerson? The da— er— darned woman's a spy."
"And her bruises were incurred in an effort to give verisimilitude to
an otherwise unconvincing story?" Emerson asked dryly. "How devotedly
she must love her tormentor."
Cyrus's lean face darkened. "That's not love. It's a kind of fear
you'll never know."
"You are right, Cyrus," I said. "Many women know it— not only the
helpless slaves of a society such
as this, but Englishwomen as well.
Some of the girls Evelyn has taken in off the streets ... It does you
credit, Cyrus, that you can understand and sympathize with a condition
so alien from any you could
ever have experienced."
"I was thinking of dogs," Cyrus said, blushing at my praise but too
honest to accept it when it was undeserved. "I've seen 'em come fawning
back to the feet of the varmint that had beaten and kicked them. You
can reduce a man to that state too, if you go about it right."
Emerson blew out a great cloud of blue smoke. "If you two have quite
finished your philosophical discussion, we might try to settle this
matter. The girl's arrival raises another point which I was about
to
make when Miss— er— Peabody got me off the track. Vincey may not be the
only
one involved."
Cyrus expressed surprise at the name, and I took it upon myself to
explain. "I thought at the time his voice was familiar, Cyrus, but he
had disguised his appearance so well I could not be certain. Emerson
has just now confirmed my assumption, and I suppose he could hardly be
mistaken. Do you know
Mr. Vincey?"
"By reputation," Cyrus replied, frowning. "From what I've heard I
wouldn't put such a trick past him "
"He certainly was not the only one involved," I went on. "Abdullah
claims to have killed at least ten
of the enemy."
This little sally produced a smile from Cyrus, but not from Emerson.
"Local thugs," he said curtly.
"Such men can be hired in any city in
Egypt or in the world. The girl is another such tool. Vincey has
an
unsavory reputation as regards women."
"Women of the— of that class, you mean," I said, remembering Vincey's
grave courtesy toward me,
and remembering as well Howard's veiled hints
about his reputation. Repressing my indignation, I went on, "I find
your use of the word 'tool' interesting. She may still be serving him
in that capacity. Cyrus is right— "
"I am not so naive"— Emerson shot me a malignant glance— "as to accept
the girl's story unreservedly.
If she is a spy, we can deal with her.
If she is telling the truth, she needs help"
"Must have been a good-looking woman before he got to work on her,"
said Cyrus.
This apparent non sequitur,
which was of course nothing of the kind,
did not escape Emerson. His
teeth showed in a particularly unpleasant
smile. "She was, yes. And will be again. So behave yourself,
Vandergelt, I don't allow distractions of that nature to interfere with
my expeditions."
"If it were up to me, I'd kick her off the boat tonight," Cyrus
declared indignantly.
"No, no. Where's that famous American gallantry? She stays." Emerson
turned the singularly unpleasant smile on me. "She will be company for
Miss Peabody."
* * *
After they had gone, I gathered up a few things and went to the woman's
room. The door was locked from the outside, but the key was in the
lock. I turned it, announced my presence, and entered.
She was sprawled across the bed, still swathed in her dusty black robe.
It was with some difficulty that
I persuaded her to discard it, and she
refused to allow me to attend to her injuries, so I handed her the
clean nightgown I had brought and allowed her to attend to her
ablutions in private. When she emerged from the bathroom she seemed
startled to see me still there. Averting her face and cringing like the
dog with which Cyrus had compared her, she hurried to the bed and got
under the covers.
"I don't know what we are to do about clothing," I said, hoping to put
her more at ease by discussing a subject that seldom fails to interest
females. "My traveling wardrobe is not extensive enough to equip
you as
well."
"Your gowns would not fit me," she muttered. "I am taller than you, and
not— not so— "
"Hmph," I said. "I will procure fresh robes for you when we stop at the
next town, then. This one is filthy."
"And a veil— please! It would hide me from watching eyes."
I doubted it would prove a sufficient disguise to deceive the man she
feared so desperately, but since
my aim was to soothe her and win her
confidence, I decided not to raise unpleasant subjects. Under
my
tactful questioning she unbent so far as to tell me something of her
history.
It was a sad story and, sadly, not uncommon. The child of a European
father and an Egyptian mother, she had fared better than the offspring
of most such alliances, for her German father had at least had
the
decency to provide a home for her until she reached the age of
eighteen. His death left her at the mercy of his heirs, who disclaimed
any responsibility and denied any relationship. Her efforts to support
herself in a respectable occupation had been frustrated by her age and
her sex, while employed as a housemaid she had been seduced by the
eldest son of the family and cast out onto the street when his parents
discovered the affair. Naturally they blamed her and not their child.
She had used the last of her savings to return to the land of her
birth, where she found her maternal relatives as hostile as those of
her father, alone and despairing in Cairo, she had met . . . HIM.
Seeing she was trembling with fatigue and agitation, I bade her rest.
Her reticence could not be allowed
to continue indefinitely, of course.
I was determined to know all she knew. But that could wait till
another
time and, perhaps, a more persuasive questioner.
When we tied up for the night I sent one of the servants to the village
bazaar to purchase clothing for Bertha—for such, she claimed, was her
name. It certainly did not suit her, conjuring up (to me at
least) images of blond Germanic placidity.
I had not achieved my aim of picking Bertha's brain by the time we
arrived at our destination. Emerson refused to have anything to do with
the matter. "What can she tell us— that Vincey is a brute, a liar, and
a
seducer of women? His past activities, criminal or otherwise, are of no
interest to me, I am not a police officer. His present address— even
supposing he were fool enough to return to any location known to her—
is
equally irrelevant. When I want the bastard, I will find him. Just now
I don't want him. I want
to get on with my work, and I will do it, come
hell or high water, miscellaneous criminals, or female busybodies!"
* * *
For a stretch of almost forty miles along the Nile in Middle Egypt the
cliffs of the high Eastern Desert
rise sheer from the water's edge
except in a single spot where they curve back to form a semicircular
bay some six miles long by three miles deep. The barren, level plain
seems even more forbidding than
do other abandoned sites, for this is a
haunted place— the site of short-lived splendor, of a royal city
now
vanished forever from the face of the earth.
Here, equidistant from the ancient capitals of Thebes to the south and
Memphis to the north, the most enigmatic of Egyptian pharaohs,
Akhenaton, built a new city and named it Akhetaton after his god
Aton— "the only one, beside whom there is no other." By pharaoh's order
the temples of other gods were closed even their names were
obliterated from the monuments. His insistence on the uniqueness of his
deity made him a heretic in ancient Egyptian terms— and in our terms
the
first monotheist in history.
The portraits of Akhenaton show a strange haggard face and an almost
feminine body, with broad hips and fleshy torso. Yet he was not
deficient in masculine attributes, as the existence of at least six
children proves. Their mother was Akhenaton's queen Nefertiti— "lady of
grace, sweet of hands, his beloved", and his romantic attachment to
this lovely lady, whose very name meant "the beautiful woman has come,"
is shown in numerous reliefs and paintings. Tenderly he turns to
embrace her,, gracefully she perches on his knee. These depictions of
marital accord are unique in Egyptian art, and uncommon anywhere.
They had a particular attraction for me. I do not believe it is
necessary for me to explain why that was so.
Some scholars view Akhenaton as morally perverse and physically
deformed, and decry his religious reformation as nothing more than a
cynical political maneuver. This is nonsense, of course. I do not
apologize for preferring a more uplifting interpretation.
I trust the Reader has not skipped over the preceding paragraphs. The
aim of literature is to improve
the understanding, not provide idle
entertainment.
We were all at the rail on the day of our arrival, watching as the
crewmen maneuvered the dahabeeyah
in toward the dock at the village of
Haggi Qandil. The period of rest had done Emerson good, tanned
and
bursting with energy, he was almost his old self again— except for the
confounded beard. He was
also in a high good humor for, though it had
almost choked me to do it, I had not pressed him on the subject of Mr.
Vincey and Bertha. However, Cyrus and I had discussed the matter at
length and had agreed upon certain precautions.
Waiting on the quay were twenty of our faithful men from Aziyeh, the
little village near Cairo which produced some of the most skilled
diggers in Egypt. I had sent Abdullah to fetch them to Amarna,
and the
sight of their keen, smiling faces was more reassuring to me than that
of a troop of soldiers
would have been. They had worked for us for
years, Emerson had trained them himself, and they
were devoted to him
body and soul.
Emerson climbed over the rail and jumped ashore. He was still thumping
backs and shaking hands and submitting to fervent embraces when I
joined the group. I was not the second one ashore, however.
The cat
Anubis preceded me down the gangplank.
Abdullah drew me aside and gestured at the cat, which was giving each
set of sandaled feet a thorough inspection. "Have you not rid yourself
of that four-footed afreet, Sitt Hakim? He was the betrayer of Emerson—
"
"If he was, it was inadvertent, Abdullah. Cats cannot be trained to
lead people into ambushes— or to
do anything else they don't want to do.
Anubis has become very attached to Emerson, he stayed with him, on the
foot of his bed, all the while he was ill. Now, Abdullah, have you
warned the other men
that Emerson is still in danger from the man who
called himself Schlange, and told them of the subjects they must not
mention?"
"Such as the subject that you are the wife of the Father of Curses?"
Abdullah spoke with a sarcasm worthy of Emerson himself, and his
prominent hawklike nose wrinkled critically. "I have told them Sitt.
They will obey, as they would obey any command you gave, though they do
not understand your reasons. Nor do I. To me, this is a foolish way of
bringing back a man's memory."
"For once we see eye to eye, Abdullah," said Cyrus, joining us. But I
reckon we've got to go along.
When the Sitt Hakim speaks, the whole
world listens and obeys."
"No man knows that better than I," said Abdullah. Emerson's shout
brought us gathering around "Abdullah has set up camp for us," he
announced.
"And I have washed the donkeys," said Abdullah.
Emerson stared at him.
"Washed the donkeys? What for?"
"He was following my orders," I said.
"The little animals are always in wretched condition, covered
with
sores and inadequately tended. I do not allow . . Well, that is
beside
the point. Will you now condescend to tell us where we are going and
what you propose to do— and why we require a
campsite when we have the
dahabeeyah?"
Emerson turned the stare on me. "I have no intention of staying on that
cursed boat. It is too far
from the tombs."
"Which tombs?" I asked, stepping heavily on Cyrus's foot to still the
objection he was about to make.
"All the tombs. The southern group is a good three miles from her and
the northern group is even farther There is another interesting area in
a hollow behind that low hill near the center of the arc of the
cliffs."
"There are no tombs there," I objected. "Unless the brickwork..."
Emerson
gestured impatiently. "I will make my final decision tonight. My object
today is to make a preliminary survey, and the sooner you stop arguing,
the sooner we can get at it. Well? Any further objections?' He wheeled
suddenly on Rene, who had edged closer. There were no further
objections.
Before the day was over, any doubts as to Emerson's physical condition
were removed. He declared we did not need the donkeys— a statement with
which everyone disagreed but to which everyone except myself was too
cowed to object. I knew perfectly well that he was testing us— me,
especially— and so
I did not object either. We must have walked almost
twenty miles, counting the perpendicular distances
we covered scrambling over piles of rocky scree and climbing up and
down the cliffs.
The easiest way of describing this hegira is to envision the area as a
semicircle, with the Nile forming the straight side. The cliffs of the
high desert curve like a bow, at the extreme north and south ends they
almost touch the riverbank. Haggi Qandil is somewhat south of the
midpoint of the straight line, so we were a good three miles from the
nearest section of the cliffs.
The path led through the village and the surrounding fields out onto
the plain— an undulating, barren surface littered with pebbles and
potsherds. The ruined foundations of Akhenaton's holy city lay under
the drifted sand. It had stretched the entire distance from the north
end of the plain to the south. The portion we had excavated during the
years we worked at Amarna lay farther to the south, but I felt sure the
slow, inexorable hand of nature had reclaimed the site and buried all
evidence of our labor as it had that of the ancient builders.
Emerson struck briskly out across the plain. Quickening my pace, I
caught up to him. "I take it,
Emerson, that we are going to the
northern tombs?"
"No," said Emerson.
I glanced at Cyrus, who shrugged and smiled and invited me, with a
gesture, to walk with him. We allowed Emerson to forge ahead, with only
Abdullah close on his heels. No one else seemed eager for
his company.
We did, in fact, visit some of the northern tombs, but not until after
Emerson had indicated another
kind of monument he wanted to examine in
detail that season.
Around the rocky perimeter of his city Akhenaton had carved a number of
commemorative markers defining its boundaries and dedicating it to his
god. Emerson and I had found and copied three of them ourselves. These
stelae, as they are called, were similar in form, a central
round-topped marker bearing a long hieroglyphic inscription under a
scene in bas-relief that depicted the king and his family worshiping
their god Aton, in the form of a sun-disk extending rays that ended in
small human hands. Statues of the royal family stood on either side.
Most of the boundary stelae were in ruinous condition,- some portions
had been deliberately destroyed by the royal heretic's enemies after
his death and the restoration of the old gods he had denied.
"There are two series of inscriptions, one earlier in time than the
other," said Emerson. Hands on his
hips, bareheaded in the baking sunlight, he stood staring up at the
cliff that towered over us. "This
is one of the earlier,- there are two princesses shown with their
parents. The later stelae show three daughters."
Cyrus took off his solar topi and fanned himself with it. "How the
dickens you make that out I don't know. The top of the darned thing has
to be thirty feet off the ground and the cliff is absolutely sheer."
"It cannot be approached except from above," said Emerson. He turned.
Charlie was trying to hide
behind Abdullah, whose tall form and
voluminous robes offered a good-sized shelter, but Emerson's
eyes went
straight to him. With ferocious good humor Emerson said, "The boundary
stela are your responsibility, Holly. A healthy young fellow like you
should enjoy the challenge of copying texts while you dangle at the end
of a rope."
A precipitous path led us up to the ledge on which the northern group
of nobles' tombs were located. Once they had gaped open, vulnerable to
the depredations of time and tomb-robbers. Recently the Antiquities
Department had put up iron gates at the entrances to the most
interesting of them. Emerson studied these gates, which had not been
there in our time, with critical curiosity.
"Isn't there an American saying about locking the barn door after the
horse is stolen? Ah, well, better
late than never, I suppose. Who has
the keys?"
"I can get them," Cyrus replied. "Since I did not know— "
"I may want them later," was the curt reply.
He refused to say more until we had reached Abdullah's campsite.
Knowing Abdullah, I was not surprised to see that his efforts had
consisted of putting up a few tents and gathering camel dung for a fire.
"Very nice, Abdullah," I said. The reis, who had been watching me out
of the corner of his eye, relaxed, and then stiffened again as I went
on, "Of course nothing is as commodious as a nice, convenient tomb. Why
can't we— "
"Because we are not going to work at the tombs," said Emerson. "This
site is equidistant between the
two groups, northern and southern."
"Site?" Cyrus repeated indignantly. "What the dev------ the dickens do
you want to waste your time on
this area for? There can't be any
houses out here, so far from the main city, and no one has found any
evidence of tomb shafts."
Emerson's well-shaped lips— now, alas, virtually hidden from my fond
eyes by bristling black hair— curled in a sneer. "Most of my colleagues
couldn't find a tomb shaft if they fell into it. I told you,
Vandergelt, explanations will have to wait till this evening. We have
quite a distance yet to cover,
follow me."
The sun was now directly overhead and we had been walking (to use that
term loosely) for several
hours. "Lead on," I said, taking a firm grip
on my parasol.
Emerson had already eyed this appendage askance, but had not asked
about it, so I saw no reason to explain that a parasol is one of the
most useful objects an individual can carry on such an expedition.
Not
only does it provide shade, but it can be used as a walking stick or,
if need be, as a weapon. My parasols had frequently been employed in
the latter capacity. They were specially made, with a heavy steel shaft
and a pointed tip.
Like the gallant gentleman he was, Cyrus came to my rescue. "No, sir,"
he declared. "It's high noon
and I'm famished. I want my lunch before I
stir another step."
Emerson was ungraciously pleased to agree.
The shade of the tents was welcome. One of Cyrus's servants unpacked
the hampers his chef had provided, and we consumed a luncheon far more
elegant than most field archaeologists enjoy. While we ate, Emerson
condescended to lecture again. He directed most of his remarks at the
two young men.
"The brickwork Miss— er— Peabody referred to is on the slopes and at
the
bottom of the hollow behind us. Some of it probably belongs to tomb
chapels. The ruins on the floor of the hollow are clearly of another
nature. I will start there tomorrow with a full crew. You, Vandergelt,
and Miss —er— "
"If the title bothers you so much, you may dispense with it," I said
calmly.
"Hmph," said Emerson. "You two will assist me. I trust this meets with
your approval, Miss Peabody?"
"Quite," I said.
"Vandergelt?"
"I can hardly wait," said Cyrus, with a grimace
"Very well." Emerson jumped to his feet. "We have dawdled long enough.
Let us be off."
"Back to the dahabeeyah?" Cyrus asked hopefully. "Since you have
decided where you mean to excavate— "
"Good God, man, there are a good six hours of daylight left, and we
have seen less than half of the area. Hurry up, can't you?"
Enviously the others watched Cyrus's servant strike off toward the
river with the empty hampers then
the procession formed again, with
Emerson's entourage trailing after him.
I presumed he meant to complete the circuit of the cliffs, and my heart
beat high at the thought of seeing again the southern tombs where we
had dwelt for so many happy years. But somehow I was not surprised when
he led us into the foothills toward an opening in the rocky ramparts.
Cyrus, ever at my side, let out a stifled American oath.
"Great jumping Jehoshaphat! I had a horrible premonition about this.
The royal wadi! It's a three-mile hike each way and I'll bet you the
temperature is high enough to fry an egg on a rock."
"I'll bet you it is," I agreed.
As I have already explained, but will reiterate for the benefit of less
attentive readers, the wadis are canyons cut through the high desert
plateau by past floods. The entrance to this one was located midway
between the southern and northern groups of tombs. Its proper name is
the Wadi Abu Hasah el-Bahri,
but for reasons that should be evident, it
is commonly referred to as the main wadi. The royal wadi proper is a
narrow offshoot of this larger canyon, approximately three miles from
the entrance to the latter. Here, in a spot as remote and desolate as a
lunar valley, Akhenaton had caused his own tomb to
be built.
If the southern tombs brought back poignant memories, the royal tomb
recalled scenes that had impressed themselves indelibly upon my heart.
In the gloomy corridor of that sepulcher I had felt Emerson's arms
about me for the first time, along the rubble-strewn floor of the wadi
we had raced by moonlight to save those we loved from a hideous death.
Every foot of the way was familiar to me, and the spot was as fraught
with romance as a garden of roses might be to one who had led a more
boring life
Shortly after we entered it the valley curved, cutting off our view of
the plain and the cultivation beyond. After approximately three miles
the rocky sides closed in and smaller wadis opened up on either side.
Emerson had already disappeared,- following, we saw him trotting along
one of the narrow side canyons, whose floor rose as it proceeded to the
northeast.
"There it is," I said, in a voice pent with emotion. "Ahead and to the
left."
Soon the others saw it too—a dark opening framed by masonry, above a
scree of tumbled rock. Charlie groaned. His clean-shaven countenance
already showed signs of what promised to be a painful
sunburn. Even a hat cannot entirely protect those of fair complexion
from the effects of Egypt's burning solar orb.
When we had climbed to the ledge in front of the tomb, Emerson was
there, glowering at the iron gate that barred entry. "We will certainly
need this key," he said to Cyrus. "Make sure I have it tomorrow
morning."
By the time Emerson announced we were finished for the day, I was as
much in the dark about his intentions as was Cyrus. He had scrambled
around the foot of the cliffs to the north and south of the royal tomb
for over an hour, poking into holes like a ferret after a rat.
"Where are we going?" Cyrus asked, as we trudged wearily back along the
rock-strewn path. "See here, Emerson, there's no earthly reason why we
can't spend the night on the dahabeeyah."
"I never said there was," said Emerson, with an air of innocent
astonishment that left Cyrus gnashing
his teeth.
When we reached the gangplank I saw that Anubis was waiting for us.
Where he had been or how he
had spent his time I could not imagine, but
when we approached he rose, stretched, yawned, and accompanied us onto
the boat.
"We will meet in the saloon in half an hour," said Emerson, heading for
his room. The cat followed him.
I heard him say "Nice kitty," as he
stumbled over it.
I had barely time to bathe and change in the time he had arbitrarily
allotted, but I managed it, hastily selecting a garment that required
no prolonged process of hooking up, and no assistance with regard to
buttons. (I cannot imagine how women lacking husbands or personal maids
ever manage to get dressed. Gowns that fasten up the back are
impossible except for a contortionist.)
Emerson was already there, brooding over a heap of papers and plans
spread across the table. His eyebrows lifted when he saw my pink
flounces and ruffles (the garment to which I have referred was
a tea
gown), but he made no comment, and only grunted when I ordered the
steward to serve tea.
I was pouring when Cyrus came in, followed closely by the two young
men. Apparently they felt there was safety in numbers. Poor Charlie was
as red as an English brick, and Rene's mouth repeated the downward
droop of his mustache.
Emerson sat tapping his fingers on the table and looking pointedly
patient while I dispensed the genial beverage. Then he said, "If the
cursed social amenities are concluded to your satisfaction, MISS
Peabody, I would like to get on with it."
"Nothing has prevented you from doing so," I said mildly. "Take this to
Professor Emerson, Rene,
will you please?"
"I don't want any damned tea," said Emerson, taking the cup. "I thought
you were all burning to know where we are going to excavate."
"You told us," Cyrus said, while Emerson sipped his tea. "The stelae— "
"No, no, they won't occupy us for the entire season," Emerson
interrupted. "You American dilettantes
are always after royal tombs.
What do you say to the tomb of Nefertiti?"
CHAPTER 9
"Martyrdom is often the result of
excessive gullibility."
Emerson enjoys making dramatic announcements. I fear the results of
this one disappointed him. Instead of expressions of rapturous
enthusiasm or scornful disbelief (he is quite happy with either), he
got only a skeptical grunt from Cyrus The two young men were afraid to
commit themselves by speaking at all, and I raised my eyebrows and
remarked, "She was buried in the royal tomb, with her husband and
child."
Emerson had finished his tea. He held out his cup to be refilled and
girded himself for the kind of battle
he much enjoys and in which (I
must confess) he generally triumphs.
"Fragments of his sarcophagus have been found, none that might have
been hers. If Nefertiti died before her husband—"
"No one knows when she died," I said. "If she survived into the reign
of Tutankhamon, she may have gone with him to Thebes and been buried— "
"Yes, yes," Emerson said impatiently. "All that is idle speculation.
But it was you who informed me that in recent years objects bearing her
name have appeared on the antiquities market, and that there are rumors
of fellahin carrying a golden coffin across the high desert behind the
royal valley."
(It was Charlie who had informed him, actually, hoping to distract him
from the evening inquisition by relating archaeological gossip. The
distraction had not succeeded.)
"There are rumors like that about every site in Egypt," said Cyrus— but
though his tone dismissed the story, the light in his eyes indicated
his rising interest. To a man of Cyrus's romantic temperament there
could be no more thrilling discovery than the last resting place of the
heretic pharaoh's exquisite queen.
"Certainly," said Emerson. "And I put no great faith in the golden
coffin. Such a unique object could
not have been marketed without
leaving signs of its passage through the dirty world of dealers and
collectors. Note, however, the significant word 'gold.' Any artifact
made of or covered with gold could start the gossip mills grinding and
lead to the usual exaggeration that distinguishes their operation. The
appearance of inscribed objects on the antiquities market is even more
significant. That, if you recall,
was how Maspero got onto the cache of
royal mummies in 1883. The Gurnawis who had found the hiding place
began marketing objects from it, the names on those objects indicated
they must have
come from a tomb unknown to archaeologists."
"Yes, but— " I began.
"But me no buts, MISS Peabody. There are other tombs in the royal wadi.
I have known of some of them for years, and I feel certain there are
others. The royal tomb itself has not been properly explored, are there
passages and chambers as yet undiscovered? Certain of the existing ones
seem strangely incomplete. Curse it, Akhenaton had thirteen years after
his arrival at Amarna in which to prepare a
tomb. It would have been
one of his first acts. The boundary stelae mention his intention of
doing so— "
"Those same inscriptions suggest that the queen shared his tomb," I
interrupted." There shall be made
for me a tomb in the eastern
mountain; my burial shall be therein . . . and the burial of the Great
Royal Wife Nefertiti shall be therein— '"
"Ah, but does 'in it' refer to the tomb itself or to the eastern
mountain?" Emerson leaned forward, his
eyes glittering with the joy of argument— or, I should say, learned
debate. "He goes on to say, 'If she
(Nefertiti, that is) shall die in any town north, south, west or east,
she shall be brought and buried in Akhetaton.' He does not say 'in my
tomb in Akhetaton— '"
"There was no need for him to say it, given the context. He meant— "
"Will you two stop that?" Cyrus demanded. His goatee quivered with the
muscular contractions of his jaws and chin. "The man's been dead for
over three thousand years, and anyhow, his original intentions don't
mean a curse. What I want to know is, where are those other tombs you
were talking about, and why the— er— dickens haven't you excavated
them?"
"You know my methods, Vandergelt," said Emerson. "Or at least you claim
to. I never excavate unless
I can finish the job without delay. Opening
a site or a tomb invites the attentions of thieves, or of other
archaeologists, who are almost as destructive. I have knowledge of or
strong suspicions about at least
six other sites . . ."
He let the words trail off. Then he said deliberately, "We will excuse
you, Charles and Rene. No doubt you want to freshen up before dinner."
Two men cannot constitute a stampede, but they tried.
Emerson had reached for his pipe and was spilling tobacco all over his
papers. As soon as the door closed he said, "I trust you have no
objection to my dismissing your employees, Vandergelt?"
"It wouldn't do a whoop of good if I did object," said Cyrus. "But I
think I see where you're heading,
and the less those two innocents know
about the other business, the better. Are you suggesting Vincey was
trying to pick your brain about those unknown tombs?"
"Nonsense," I exclaimed. "We know exactly what Vincey wants, and it has
nothing to do with— "
"May I remind you," said Emerson, in the growling purr that usually
heralded a particularly devastating remark, "that it was I the
gentleman questioned, not you."
"You need not remind me, since I was the first to observe the results
of his questioning," I snapped.
"But may I remind you that you have not
seen fit to confide the details to me or to Cyrus. What the
devil did
he ask you?"
"My state of mind was a trifle confused," said Emerson, with one of
those infuriating volte-faces men employ to avoid a direct answer. "The
details elude me."
"Oh, really!" I exclaimed. "Now see here, Emerson— "
"Don't waste your time, my dear," said Cyrus, as Emerson grinned at me
in a particularly trying fashion. "Can we get back to the question
of the tombs in the royal wadi? I take it that is your real goal this
season. So what's the point of messing around with that brickwork in
the hollow?"
Emerson opened his eyes very wide. "Why, I intend to do both, of
course. And copy the boundary
stelae. We'll start in the hollow, as I
said." He rose, stretching like a great cat. "I must change for dinner.
I trust, MISS Peabody, that you intend to do the same, that garment
seems more suitable to the boudoir than the dinner table. The
proprieties must be observed, you know."
After he had gone, Cyrus and I stared silently at one another. His
craggy face was soft with the sympathy he dared not express aloud, and
since I felt no desire for sympathy I did not invite him to express it.
"Curse the man," I said pleasantly. "You know what he is up to, I
suppose."
"Oh, yes. Emerson's mind is an open book to me. His memory may be
flawed, but his essential
character is unaltered."
"What are you going
to do about it?"
"As is my habit whenever possible, I am going to follow the advice set
forth in Scripture. 'Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof is, in
my opinion, one of the wisest statements in that wonderful Book. I will
deal with Emerson's lunatic scheme when he tries to put it into effect.
Who knows what may transpire before that time? And now, if you will
excuse me— "
"Are you going to change?" Cyrus asked.
I smiled. "Certainly not."
* * *
I had left our uninvited guest to herself, since she had intimated that
she did not find my company desirable. So far as I was aware, she had
not emerged from her room. Her meals were carried to her
and Cyrus
insisted that her door be locked at night. That evening I decided that
a serious discussion with the young woman could not be postponed any
longer. I had hoped Emerson would want to question her, but to the best
of my knowledge he had not done so. His intent was clear to me now. I
had suspected from the moment he expressed it that his proclaimed
intention of ignoring Vincey unless the latter again attempted to
interfere with him was a flat-out lie. "If he turns up, I'll settle the
fellow," indeed! He expected Vincey would "turn up", he fully
intended to "settle the fellow," and in order to hasten the
confrontation he meant to leave the safety of the dahabeeyah and
station himself somewhere in the desert, like a tethered goat staked
out as a lure for a tiger, in the hope Vincey would initiate another
assault. It was also clear to me that Emerson was still skeptical about
the Lost Oasis. (I had to admit I would have doubted the story myself
if I had not actually been there.) Hence his references to hidden tombs
and Nefertiti's treasures. He would employ any means possible to
intrigue an enemy and encourage him to attack. He meant to go his
solitary, stubborn way without consulting the rest of us or taking us
into his confidence. It left me with no choice but to do the same, and
since I was cognizant of facts Emerson did not know and would not have
admitted if he had, the burden was as usual on my shoulders.
Bertha was sitting by the open window. The cool night breeze stirred
the muslin curtains. A single lamp burned by the bed. In its light I
saw that she was wearing one of the robes I had purchased at a village
bazaar. It was black— only young unmarried girls wore colors— but
unlike
her original garment it was clean and unworn. She looked like a giant
crow huddling against an approaching storm, and as she
turned toward me
I saw her lower her hand from her face. The veil was in place.
"Why do you feel it necessary to hide your face from me?" I asked,
seating myself in the chair next to hers.
"It is not a pretty sight."
"Still? The swelling should have gone down by now. Let me have a
look."
"I do not need your medicine, Sitt Hakim. Only time— if you will allow
me that."
"For your face to heal, yes. For other things— no. Not while the life
of
the Father of Curses is still in danger."
"And yours, Sitt Hakim." There was a strange note in her voice, as if
she smiled as she spoke.
"Yes, I suppose so. Bertha"— I still stumbled over that inappropriate
name— "we have left you in
peace, to rest and recover your health. Now
it is time for you to prove yourself. Mr. Vandergelt believes you were
sent here to spy on us."
"I swear to you— "
"My dear girl, you are not speaking to some gullible man, but to
another woman. I have excellent
reasons, unknown to Mr. Vandergelt, for believing in your good
intentions but for your own sake as
well as
ours you must give me more active assistance."
"What do you want, then? I have told you all I know."
"You have told me
nothing. I want dates, names, addresses, facts. We have learned— no
thanks to you!— the identity of the man who was your master and your
tormentor. Do you know him by his true name of Vincey, or only as
Schlange, the name he used in Luxor? Were you in Cairo with him? When
did he leave for Luxor? Where did he go after he was driven from the
villa? Where is he now?"
I had brought pencil and notepaper. From the way she responded to my
questions, I had the impression she was no stranger to official
interrogation, but she answered me readily enough. Those answers
confirmed what I already suspected, but were of little use in planning
future strategy.
"Does a hammer driving nails into a piece of wood know the plan of the
house?" she asked bitterly. "I was not good enough to share his
apartment in Cairo. He called himself Schlange there too, I know him by
no other name. He came to my house when he wanted ... In Luxor I lived
at the villa, it is true. No one knew him there, his reputation was not
damaged by my presence, and he needed me to help him break the Father
of Curses. After I left you that night I went to my room, I was
packing my clothes
when he came, and forced me to go with him. I had to
leave everything, my jewelry, my money! We stayed for a week in a cheap
hotel in Luxor, when he left it, which was seldom, he locked me in the
room. I could not go out, I had nothing to wear but the clothes that
were like yours, and I dared not appear in them on the streets of
Luxor."
"A week, you said. But your bruises were fresh when you came to us. He
did not abuse you at first?"
The veil quivered, as if her lips writhed under it. "No more than
usual. He was waiting, I think, to see whether the Professor would
recover, and to learn what you meant to do next. One day, when he
returned, he brought the robe you saw me wearing and told me to put it
on. We would go that night— "
"Where?"
"Does a man who carries a piece of luggage inform it of its
destination? He was very angry. He had learned something— no, don't ask
me what, how would I know?— something that drove him wild. He uttered
only vile curses and threats, and complaints about those who had failed
him. They, whoever
they may have been, were not there. I was there. So
. . ."
"Yes, I see." The news that had driven Vincey to violence must have
been the failure of his people in England to kidnap Ramses and Nefret.
Ramses's letter had reached me at about that time. "How did
you get
away from him?" I asked.
"He slept heavily that night," she said. "And the garments he had
brought were the very disguise I would have chosen. Veiled and in black
I looked like any woman of Luxor. He thought I would never have the
will or the courage to leave him, but fear, when it reaches a certain
point, can inspire courage. I knew
that night what I had been unwilling
to admit before: that one day he would kill me, out of rage or
suspicion of betrayal."
She had spoken with a passion and seeming candor that could not fail to
move a sympathetic hearer.
The story made sense, too, as far as it
went. I waited for a moment to allow her to calm herself, for
her voice
had grown hoarse and tremulous with remembered terror.
"You do not appear to be in a position to betray very much," I said.
"You don't know where he intended to go, or what he intended to do. You
cannot describe any of his friends or associates?"
"Only the men he hired in Luxor. They could not betray him either, they
never knew his real name,
only the one he used when he rented the
villa."
"Schlange," I murmured. "I wonder why . . Well. Is that all you can
tell me, then?"
She nodded vehemently. "Do you believe me? You will not abandon me,
unprotected and alone?"
"You don't mean to insult me, I suppose," I said calmly. "But if you
imagine I would betray even an enemy to death or torture, you cannot be
familiar with the moral code that guides a Briton. The beautiful tenets
of the Christian faith require that we forgive our enemies. To that
creed we all adhere ... At least,"
I amended, remembering Emerson's
unorthodox views on the subject of organized religion, "most of us do."
"You are right," she murmured, bowing her head submissively. "He would
not abandon me."
I knew to whom she referred. "None of us would," I said somewhat
sharply. "But we face a difficulty. Tomorrow we begin our excavations
and for long hours, perhaps for days at a time, we will be away
from
the dahabeeyah. Are you afraid to stay here alone, with only the crew?"
She indicated, with considerable vehemence, that she was. "He is here,
I know it! I have seen shadows moving in the night . . ."
"In your head, you mean. Our guards have seen nothing out of the way.
Well, I suppose you will have
to come with us. Though heaven knows what
I am going to do with you."
* * *
In fact, when we left the boat the following morning she blended in
quite well with the interested villagers who gathered around our little
group. There were women among them, I would not have been able to
distinguish her from the other black-robed figures had she not stayed
close to me. I had expected she would dog Emerson's heels, but she did
not, perhaps because she would have had to contend with the
cat for
that position.
Our entourage followed us as we passed through the village. Some of
them hoped to be employed on the dig, others were drawn by idle
curiosity. The people of Haggi Qandil had become more accustomed to
visitors since the days when we had first worked there, for many of the
tourist steamers stopped on their way upriver, but life in these small
settlements is extremely dull, any new face, especially that of a
foreigner, attracts a crowd. How these people had changed since our
first visit! Fair dealing and kindly treatment had converted a once
sullen population into ardent supporters, smiles and waves and Arabic
greetings— and the conventional demands for baksheesh— followed us
along
the way. Even the lean, abused dogs slunk along behind at a safe
distance,- they had learned that visitors sometimes threw scraps of
food to them. I always made a habit of doing so.
A number of men and children continued to follow as we left the village
and headed for the cliffs. Emerson led the way as usual. The morning
was pleasantly cool and he was still wearing his tweed jacket. I
observed with a start of surprise that he had taken the cat up on his
shoulder. Ramses had trained the cat Bastet to do the same, but owing
to the meager dimensions of that portion of Ramses's anatomy Bastet had
to drape herself around his neck. Emerson's frame suffered no such
disadvantage,- Anubis sat bolt upright, leaning slightly forward like
the figurehead on a ship. I must say they presented an extremely odd
appearance, and I wondered how Emerson had won the animal's confidence
to such an extent.
Emerson glanced back at the ragtag, cheerful straggle of people and
called to Abdullah, "We shan't want diggers and basket children till
tomorrow or the next day. Tell them to go back,- we will let them know
when we intend to begin hiring."
"I am hiring today," said Cyrus, strolling along with his hands in his
pockets.
Emerson slowed his steps and allowed Cyrus to catch him up. They made
an amusing contrast, Cyrus in his immaculate white linen suit and solar
topi, his lean cheeks closely shaved and his goatee as precisely
barbered as the artificial beards worn by Egyptian pharaohs, Emerson
in creased coat and trousers, his shirt open at the neck, his boots
scuffed and dusty, his uncovered black head shining in the sunlight.
The cat was much better groomed
"May I inquire whom you are hiring, and for what purpose?" Emerson
inquired politely.
"Allow me to surprise you," Cyrus replied with equal politeness.
As soon as we arrived at the site, Cyrus took his recruits aside and
began lecturing them in ungrammatical but effective Arabic. It was not
long before the results became apparent. Construction is quick and easy
in Egypt, where the most common building material is mud, formed into
sun-dried bricks or used as mortar over a foundation of reeds. The
architectural techniques are equally simple, and have been employed
since time immemorial. It does not require complex equipment to design
a square flat-roofed house with
a door and a few ventilation slits high
up under the eaves. Wide windows are not an advantage in that climate,
they admit heat rather than air, and allow the entrance of creatures
with whom one would not care to share living quarters.
Emerson ostentatiously ignored the furious activity going on a short
distance away, busying himself with
a preliminary survey and plan of
the area, nor did he refer to it immediately when we stopped for a spot
of lunch. Accepting a plate from Bertha, who had appointed herself
cook's helper, he spoke to her for
the first time that day.
"Sit down and eat. Who told you to wait on us?"
"It was her own idea," I said, knowing full well whom he suspected of
having given the order. "And I agree with her, that under the present
circumstances anonymity is to be preferred to the equality of
station I
would otherwise insist upon."
"Hmph," said Emerson. Taking this for what it was—a tacit admission of
the wisdom of my decision— Bertha quietly withdrew.
Cyrus watched her retreating form with narrowed eyes. I had passed on
to him the information, such as
it was, Bertha had given me the
night before. Now he said, "I still don't trust the darned woman. I
want her watched day and night. I want her inside four walls where
nobody can get at her without making a racket."
"Ah, it is a prison you are building," Emerson said, gesturing toward
the rising walls.
"Cut it out, Emerson, I'm getting tired of your sarcasm. These darned
tents aren't my idea of a proper headquarters, canvas walls won't keep
out scorpions or sand fleas, much less thieves. If you won't
spend the
nights on the dahabeeyah— "
"Wherever did you get that idea?" Emerson asked.
"From you, you
stubborn, bullheaded— "
"Language, Vandergelt! There are ladies present. You must have
misunderstood me." He rose. "But go ahead and build your expedition
house if you like. The rest of us have work to do. Charles— Rene—
Abdullah— "
So we spent the next three nights on the dahabeeyah. Emerson's
experienced eye had been right again,
the bricks in the hollow were the
foundations of houses— one house, at least— for by the end of the
third
day the men had uncovered most of it and found part of a thick
enclosure wall that must have surrounded the entire area.
Evening social activities were negligible, the two young men were so
exhausted they kept slumping forward onto the table during dinner, and
sought their beds immediately thereafter. Cyrus avoided me, explaining
ingenuously that Emerson had him in such a temper he could not speak
civilly even to me. Emerson locked himself in his room and Bertha was
locked into hers. I was, of course, perfectly fit and ready for any
interesting activity that presented itself, so for me the evenings were
extremely tedious—
not even an attempted burglary or armed attack to
break the monotony.
I was therefore delighted when Cyrus joined me in the saloon on the
third evening, looking very elegant
in the evening kit he always wore
in my honor, and with an expression that suggested his mood had
improved. "The mail-boy has just arrived from Derut," he announced, his
srnile anticipating the pleasure he hoped to bestow upon me.
The thick packet he handed me did indeed bear the Chalfont crest. I
hastened to open it, but I suspected my pleasure might not be entirely
unalloyed.
There had been a frantic flurry of telegrams before we departed from
Luxor. Unhappily, my message announcing Emerson's rescue did not arrive
in England until after our dear ones had learned of his disappearance,
and the first telegram I received from them was so agitated as to be
virtually unintelligible. A second message announced the arrival of
mine, expressed relief, and demanded further details. These
I supplied
as best I could, given the limitations of the medium and the necessity
for reticence. I knew perfectly well that the telegraph operators in
Luxor were susceptible to bribery, and that the jackals of
the press
were well aware of this deplorable habit— which is, however, only to be
expected in a country whose inhabitants do not possess the advantages
of British moral training, or a living wage.
I had promised to write, and had, of course, done so. However, I
doubted my letter could have arrived
by this time, certainly it had
not arrived in time to elicit a response from Ramses. He must have
written this even before the dreadful news of his father's
disappearance became known to him.
In this last assumption I was mistaken, as the date heading the letter
proved. I looked up at Cyrus, who was still on his feet, unwilling to
seat himself until I had invited him to do so, but fairly quivering
with
the curiosity he was too courteous to express.
"Stay, dear friend," I said. "I have no secrets from you. But first
tell me how this missive reached me so quickly. It is dated only eight
days ago, and the mail boat takes eleven to reach Port Sa'id. Have you
a genie in your employ, or have you hired an inventor to perfect one of
those flying machines I have read about? For I know it must be to your
good offices, in some manner or other, that I owe this— er— treat."
Cyrus looked embarrassed, as he always did when I praised him. "It must
have come overland to Marseilles or Naples, the express takes one or
two days, and a fast boat can reach Alexandria in another three. I
asked a friend in Cairo to collect your mail the instant it arrived and
send it off by the next train."
"And the mail-boy who travels to and from Derut is one of your
servants? Dear Cyrus!"
"I'm as curious as you are," Cyrus said, blushing. "Even more so, I
reckon, aren't you anxious to read it?"
"I am torn between anticipation and apprehension," I admitted. "Where
Ramses's activities are concerned, the latter emotion tends to
predominate, and this appears to be a long . . . Ah, but not so long as
I had thought, Ramses has enclosed a batch of clippings from the
London newspapers. Confound them!
'Famed Egyptologist Missing,
Feared Dead . . .' The Archaeological Community Mourns the Loss of Its
Most Notorious . . .' Notorious! I am surprised at the Times, the
Mirror, perhaps, or ... Oh,
curse it! The Mirror describes me as
hysterical with grief, under a doctor's care; the World has a sketch of
the 'murder scene' complete with a huge pool of blood, the Daily Yell .
. ." The papers drifted from my palsied hand. In a hollow voice I said,
"The account in the Daily Yell
was written by Kevin O'Connell. I cannot
read
it, Cyrus, indeed I cannot, Kevin's journalistic style has often
inspired me to homicidal fury. I shudder to think what he has written
this time."
"Don't read it, then," said Cyrus, bending to collect the scattered
papers. "Let's hear what your son has
to say."
"His literary style is not much of an improvement on Kevin's," I said
gloomily.
In fact, the only part of the letter that calmed my nerves was the
salutation.
"Dearest
Mama and Papa: My hand trembles with mingled joy and dread as
I inscribe that last word for the space of a few endless hours I
feared I might never again be privileged to employ it in direct
address. Endless, I say, and so they seemed, though in fact less than
twelve of them elapsed before Mama's telegram brought renewed hope to
hearts sunk deep in the depths of woe. Uncle Walter bore the news with
manly fortitude, though he aged a year for every hour that passed. Aunt
Evelyn wept unceasingly. Jerry and Bob had to be restored by copious
applications of beer, Rose by copious applications of cold water and
smelling salts. I cannot speak of Nefret's pallid, silent, suffering
grief, and words fail me when I attempt to describe my own. Only
Gargery remained steadfast. 'I don't believe it,' he declared stoutly.
'It ain't true.' (I quote
Gargery literally, dear parents, excessive
emotion always has an adverse effect upon his grammar.) 'They couldn't
kill the professor, not even if they run over him with a locomotive,
which are scarce in Egypt anyhow, I am told. And if they did, madam
wouldn't be under no doctor's care, she'd be rampaging up and down the
country breaking heads and shooting
people. It ain't true. You can't
believe nothing you read in those newspapers.
My reading of this remarkable literary effort was interrupted by a
series of strangled sounds from Cyrus. Taking out his handkerchief, he
applied it to his streaming eyes and gasped, "I beg your pardon, my
dear, I couldn't help it. He is— he really is— does he talk that way
too?"
"He used to," I said, clenching my teeth. "He has not lost his
loquacity, only turned it into written form. Shall I go on?"
"Please."
"And
you see, dear Mama and Papa, that of us all Gargery was the only
one to discern the truth.
I had certain reservations, of course,
regarding the accuracy of journalistic reporting, but filial affection
quite overcame my reason at that point.
"We had our first intimation of
incipient tragedy the day before the
newspaper accounts appeared, when certain more responsible journalists
endeavored to inquire of us concerning the accuracy
of their reports.
After the first inquiry, from the Times, which Uncle Walter flatly
denied, we refused to communicate by telephone. The result was an
onslaught of unauthorized visitors
waving press credentials and
demanding entry. Needless to say, they were repelled by our
gallant
forces. But concern continued to grow, and when the newspapers arrived
next morning
we were forced to concede their truth, since they Quoted
reputable sources in Cairo and Luxor. Not until evening did a messenger
succeed in delivering your telegram. Ah, then what a scene ensued! Aunt
Evelyn cried harder than ever. Rose went into hysterics. Uncle Walter
and Gargery shook hands and kept on shaking them for ten minutes.
Nefret and I ..."
I held the letter closer to my eyes. "He has scratched something out
here," I said, frowning. "I think he wrote 'flew into one another's
arms,' and then replaced it with 'expressed our emotions in a suitable
fashion.'"
"So that's the way the land lies, is it?" Cyrus was no longer amused.
"I hope you won't take offense, Amelia, if I say that the only thing
that could deter a man from the honor of asking you to be his wife
would be the prospect of having to be a father to that boy"
"Emerson is the only one up to that challenge," I replied "And thank
heaven there is no need to consider another candidate. Let me see . . .
Oh, damnation!"
"Amelia!" Cyrus exclaimed.
"I beg your pardon," I said, almost as shocked as he at my inexcusable
lapse. "But really, Ramses is enough to drive a saint to profanity. He
spends four pages describing in disgustingly fulsome detail emotional
reactions that are of only academic interest at this stage, and then
devotes one paragraph
to a really horrifying piece of news. Listen to
this:
"The
only unfortunate consequence of the happiness following the
receipt of your telegram was that Bob and Jerry (our gallant
gatekeepers) slept rather too soundly that night, owing, as they
explained, not to an excess of beer but to the fatigue of joyful
relief. Whatever the cause (and
I see no reason to doubt the word of
such loyal friends who are, moreover, in a better position than I to
evaluate the effect of large quantities of beer), they did not hear the
men climbing over the wall, and it was not until those individuals were
discovered by the dogs that the barking of
the said dogs roused Bob and
Jerry. They arrived on the scene in time to drive off the would-be
burglars, to the great disappointment of the dogs, who had been trying
to induce the visitors to throw sticks for them. Do not worry, Mama and
Papa, I have thought of a way of ensuring that this will not occur again.
"In
conclusion, let me say that I am all the more determined to join
you and offer the
affectionate assistance only a son can render. I now
have three pounds eighteen shillings.
"Curse it!"
"Why does he say . . . Oh," said Cyrus.
"The expletive was mine," I admitted. "Ramses is saving his money to
buy a steamship ticket."
"Now don't worry, my dear A child can't purchase a ticket, or travel
alone, someone would catch him before the boat left the dock."
"I dare not hope that difficulty has not occurred to Ramses. He
probably intends to persuade Gargery
to buy the tickets and accompany
him. Gargery is a weak vessel, I fear, not only would he aid and abet
Ramses in any wild scheme the latter proposed, but he is a hopeless
romantic. I must telegraph at once, forbidding him to do any such
thing."
"A telegram to your butler?" Cyrus inquired, raising his eyebrows. "Why
not, if the circumstances
require it? I must warn Walter as well, he
is too innocent to anticipate the diabolical machinations of which
Ramses and Gargery are capable."
"The boy will take your messages whenever you like, Amelia. There is a
telegraph office at Minia."
"It can wait till morning. I will get a letter off as well. First I had
better see what lies the newspapers have printed, I can contradict them
at least, if I cannot tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but
the truth."
Immediately Cyrus brought me a stiff whiskey and soda. Thus fortified,
I was able to peruse the accounts in relative calm. I left Kevin's till
last.
The brash young Irish journalist and I had had a rather up-and-down
relationship On the occasion of our first meeting his impertinent
questions had so infuriated Emerson that my hot-tempered spouse had
kicked him down the stairs at Shepheard's. It was not a propitious
beginning for a friendship, but Kevin had stood valiantly at our side
on several occasions when danger threatened. He was at heart a
gentleman
and a sentimental one at that, unfortunately the gentleman
and the sentimentalist were both submerged,
at times, by the
professional journalist.
Thanks to the whiskey (which Cyrus thoughtfully kept replenishing) I
got through the first part of Kevin's story without undue stress. "It
could be worse," I muttered. "I suppose it was impossible for Kevin to
resist dragging in hints of curses and 'doom falling at last on the
head of one who had too long defied the ancient gods of Egypt.' I am
not altogether happy about his reference to . . . Oh, good Gad!"
I leapt to my feet
"What is it?" Cyrus asked apprehensively.
"Listen to this. 'Our correspondent is leaving immediately for Egypt,
where he hopes to interview Professor and Mrs. Emerson in order to
ascertain the true facts behind this strange affair. That there
are
mysteries yet to be uncovered he does not doubt.'"
I crumpled the newspaper into a ball and threw it on the floor. Anubis
pounced on it and began batting
it back and forth.
Ordinarily this kittenish behavior on the part of a particularly large
and dignified animal would have entertained me. On this occasion I was
too distraught to pay him any heed. Pacing furiously, I went
on, "This
is disastrous news! At all costs we must prevent Kevin from speaking
with Emerson."
"Well, sure, if we can. But he's just another consarned reporter"
"You don't understand, Cyrus Isolated as we are, and with Abdullah on
guard, we can fend off other journalists. Kevin's acquaintance with our
habits and his cursed Irish charm render him a more formidable opponent
Have you forgotten that it was Kevin who turned the death of Lord
Baskerville into The Curse of the Pharaohs'? It was Kevin whose
journalistic joie de vivre
inflated the death of a night watchman into
the case of the British Museum mummy. He is familiar with
archaeological matters, he spent some
weeks with the Sudan Expeditionary
Force, talking with the officers who ..." I stopped short and raised a
trembling hand to my brow. The idea that had come to me had the awful
inevitability of a mathematical equation. "No," I whispered. "No.
Surely not Kevin!"
Cyrus hurried to my side and put a respectful arm around me. "What ails
you, my dear? You are as
white as the driven snow. Sit down. Have another whiskey."
"There are some situations too serious even for whiskey and soda," I
said, slipping out of his embrace with a casual air that— I hoped— gave
no offense. "My idea was absurd, unjust. I will dismiss it But at
the
least, Cyrus, Kevin is bound to ferret out the truth of Emerson's
amnesia. He has known him too
long and too well to miss evidences of
that."
"I never could understand why you were so set on keeping it
secret, even from the family," Cyrus said. "Seems to me his brother, at
least, is entitled to know the truth."
"You know not whereof you speak, Cyrus! Five minutes after Walter found
out, everyone in the house would know it, and the whole lot of them
would rush off to catch the first boat— including Gargery! Have you
forgotten Dr. Schadenfreude's advice, Cyrus? We must not force
Emerson's memory; we
must wait for it to grow and blossom, like a flower."
"Huh," said Cyrus, in a tone as skeptical as the one Emerson would
probably have employed.
"I know you dislike the doctor's theories, Cyrus, but he is
unquestionably an authority in his field, and
his analysis of Emerson's
character was brilliantly accurate. It is imperative that we give
Schadenfreude's methods a fair chance. That would be impossible if our
family and friends descended on us en masse. None of them is capable of
the iron self-control that has guided my behavior— and can you imagine
the effect on Emerson of coming face-to-face with Ramses? An
eleven-year-old son would be enough of a shock for a man who doesn't
even know he is married, and a son like Ramses— "
"It might be the catalyst that would restore Emerson's memory, though,"
Cyrus said, watching me steadily. "The sight of his son—"
"He has known me longer than he has Ramses," I said. "And under
circumstances that ought, if any
could ... I perceive no purpose in
discussing it, Cyrus,- you must let me be the judge of what is best
for
Emerson."
"As always, you think of him and not of yourself. I wish you would let
me—"
"I don't care to discuss it," I said, softening the blunt words with an
affectionate smile "If you will
excuse me, Cyrus, I believe I will take
a turn around the deck before retiring. No, my friend, don't
come with
me, your men are on guard, and I would like some time for solitary
reflection."
It required longer than I had expected for cool reflection to calm the
agitated waters of distress. The suspicion I had entertained, if only
briefly, was truly dreadful.
Emerson and I had discussed the qualities an enemy must possess in
order to ferret out the secret of
the Lost Oasis. Kevin had them all—
even a smattering of archaeological training. He also had the
insatiable curiosity and the rampageous imagination (as Emerson would
have put it) that would enable
an individual to weave the disparate
strands of the puzzle into a meaningful whole.
Nothing can crush the spirit so much as the treachery of a friend.
Certain of Kevin's newspaper articles had, in my opinion, stretched our
friendship to the limit, but at worst they had only threatened our
reputations This was another matter entirely— a cold-blooded attack on
life, limb and sanity. In my
mind's eye I pictured Kevin's smiling,
freckled face, his candid blue eyes, his crop of flaming hair. In
my
inner ear I heard his caressing Irish voice repeat the compliments and
assurances of affection whose sincerity I had never doubted.
I would not doubt it now! As my agitation subsided I reminded myself
that Kevin was not the only individual who had the expert knowledge to
solve the puzzle. Nor could I believe that the desire for a
journalistic sensation— which the story of the Lost Oasis would
certainly constitute— was a strong
enough motive to make a man turn on
his friends and his own nature.
However, the danger posed by his ordinary journalistic instincts was
real enough. I knew I had not convinced Cyrus that Emerson's mental
condition had to be kept secret, though the reasons I had given him
were perfectly sound. Why distress our loved ones unnecessarily? Why
give them an excuse to rush en masse to Egypt and drive me to
distraction? Yet I knew, as had my perceptive and understanding friend,
that that was not my only reason.
I decided not to think about it. The important thing was to keep Kevin
away from Emerson. I began calculating schedules. If he had taken the
fastest possible means of transportation and pushed himself
to the limit, he might even now have arrived in Cairo. Would he be
clever enough to make inquiries there concerning our present
whereabouts instead of following our original trail to Luxor? Several
of our archaeological friends knew we had gone to Amarna; it had been
necessary to appeal to them in order
to obtain permission to excavate.
M. Maspero's kindly concern and powerful influence had been of enormous
help in cutting through the red tape, and he was not the only one who
knew. If Kevin came directly to Amarna he could be here in a few days.
"Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof," I reminded myself. At
least I was now forewarned. I would deal with Kevin when— I felt sure
it
was "when," not "if"— he appeared.
The lovely night of Egypt had worked its magic I was calmer now. The
moon was waxing, soon it
would reach the full and hang like a globe of
living light over the cliffs, washing their pale limestone with silver.
As I strolled the deck, the rustle of my skirts blending with the soft
lap of water and the murmur
of palm fronds stirring in the night
breeze, I thought of the last full moon I had watched from the deck of
another boat. Less than a month ago . . . With what high hopes and
breathless anticipation had I viewed that silvery orb! Emerson had been
with me, his strong hand holding mine, his arm circling my waist. Now I
was alone, and he was farther distant from me than he had ever been,
though only a few feet of actual space separated us.
The windows of the bedchambers opened onto the deck. His were lighted,-
the thin gauze of the curtains proved no impediment to vision. Glancing
in as I walked past, I saw him sitting at a table strewn with books and
papers. His back was to me, his head was bent over his work. He did not
look up, though he must have heard the click of my heels. The
temptation to stop and contemplate the sight so familiar and so
beloved—the smooth stretch of muscle across those broad shoulders, the
thick tumbled hair curling around his ears—was well-nigh irresistible,
but I conquered it. Dignity forbade that I should risk being discovered
peeping in at him, like a lovesick girl.
As I went on without pausing, there was movement in the shadows next to
Emerson's window, a low voice murmured a greeting in Arabic and I
gestured a silent acknowledgment. I could not see which of
the men it
was, in the dark, their silhouettes were all alike, for they all wore
the same turbans and
flowing robes. They were a fine, upstanding lot, and seemed devoted to
their employer. No doubt he
paid them well. (I do
not mean to be cynical, no reasonable individual can feel loyalty
toward a man
who underpays him.)
Other anonymous shadows greeted me as I proceeded. The fellow squatting
near my window, his back against the wall, was smoking, the glowing
end of his cigarette swooped like a giant firefly as he raised
his hand
to his brow and breast.
The windows of the rooms inhabited by the two young men were dark,-
from Rene's I heard a rumble
of bass snoring, positively astonishing
from such a delicate, aesthetic-looking young fellow. Bertha's window
was also dark. No doubt she was weary, the walk to and from the dig
would tire a city girl like her, unaccustomed to healthful exercise. I
recognized the man who guarded her window by his size, he was the
tallest and strongest of the crewmen. Cyrus was taking no chances.
I glanced at his window as I strolled by and saw it too was unlighted.
Perhaps he was still in the saloon, which opened onto the upper deck.
I need not have strolled alone in the moonlight. Since only the silent
watchers could see me, I permitted myself to smile and shake my head.
Dr. Schadenfreude's treatment had not cured Cyrus of his romantic
weakness. Being something of an amateur psychologist myself, I wondered
if the bluff American's tendency to fall in love with wholly unsuitable
ladies was born of his unconscious desire to remain a bachelor. Modest
woman that I am, I could not help having observed his increasingly soft
glances and
his chivalrous indignation on my behalf, but I was well
aware that his growing attachment was based solely on friendship and on
the rough-hewn gallantry for which Americans are well-known. Any "lady
in distress" between the ages of eighteen and forty-eight would have
aroused the same instincts. Cyrus knew he was perfectly safe from the
toils of matrimony with me, not only while Emerson lived but ever
after. Could I, having known such a man, be the bride of another?
The moonlight was making me morbid. Moonlight has that effect when one
enjoys it alone. I went to
my room, wrote out the telegrams to Gargery
and Walter, penned a peremptory letter to my son, and
put the notes I
had taken on the dig that day into proper form. By the time I finished,
my eyelids were heavy,- nevertheless, I gave my hair the usual hundred
strokes, took a long (cold) bath, and applied
cream to my skin. (This
is not vanity but necessity in Egypt, where sun and sand have a
frightful effect on the complexion.) I had hoped energetic employment
would prevent me from dreaming. However, it did not. I am sure I need
not specify the theme of those dreams to the sympathetic Reader.
* * *
To a female in the pink of condition, as I always am, a disturbed night
is of no consequence. I arose fresh and alert, ready to face the
difficulties I felt sure were about to ensue. Emerson had been biding
his time, trying to get us off guard by performing his archaeological
duties, but he is not a patient man, and I suspected he was about to
carry out his ridiculous plan. There was no way I could prevent him
from doing so, for reasoned argument has no effect whatever on him when
he has got some silly idea into his head. All I could do was anticipate
the worst and take steps to prevent it from happening. There was one
advantage to his scheme, the farther we went from the river, the more
difficult it would be for Kevin O'Connell to get at us.
My first sight of Emerson that morning strengthened my hunch that today
was the day. He was eating
his breakfast with the air of a man stoking
himself with food in anticipation of strenuous activity ahead, and he
was in a suspiciously genial mood, complimenting Rene on the quickness
with which he was learning excavation methods, and praising Charlie's
plan of the site. From time to time he tossed a scrap of sausage to
Anubis, who snapped it out of the air like a trout rising to a fly. I
wished the confounded beard did not hide his mouth. Emerson's mouth
always gives him away when he is contemplating something underhanded,
he cannot control the corners of it.
He saw me staring. "Does something offend you, MISS Peabody? Crumbs in
my beard, are there? Or
is it the beard itself? Come, come, don't be
shy of expressing your opinion."
"Since you ask," I began.
"I do, I do. Having strong opinions myself, I can hardly object to
others' possessing them."
"Ha!" I said. "Well, then, I must say that yours is one of the most
unprepossessing examples of an unattractive appendage I have ever
beheld. Beards are unsanitary, unsightly, hot— or so I would
suppose, dangerous— to smokers, and indicative of masculine insecurity.
Men grow them only
because women cannot, I believe."
Emerson's eyes narrowed with rage, but he could not speak at once
because his mouth was full of
egg and sausage. Before he could swallow, Cyrus— whose hand was
plucking nervously at his goatee— exclaimed, "I
never thought of it that way. Maybe I should— "
"Don't be a fawning fool, Vandergelt," Emerson growled. "She is talking
nonsense in the hope of annoying ME. Who the devil began this talk of
beards, anyway? Hurry and finish, all of you, I want
to be off."
And he was off, leaving the door swinging wildly on its hinges. The
young men jumped up and galloped after him. I buttered another piece of
toast.
"I didn't mean you, Cyrus," I said, smiling at him. "That goatee is so
much a part of you, I cannot
imagine you without it."
I meant it as a compliment, but he did not seemed pleased.
The air was still cool and pleasant when we went ashore. I lagged
behind, talking with young Charlie,
who had sought me out with the
obvious intention of consulting me. It took him a while to get to the
point, in fact, I had to ask him straight out what was worrying him.
"It's the stela," he admitted. "The one high up on the cliff— you
remember?"
"Stelae," I said. "Don't concern yourself about it, Charles, it will
be some time before Emerson turns
his attention to the stelae."
"No, ma'am, it won't! He wants me to get at it today. And— er— I
couldn't
tell the professor, I didn't dare, but I can't— I have not—
rather, I
should say I have ..."
"Fear of heights?"
He looked as guilty as if he had just confessed to murder
"My dear Charles, that is nothing to be ashamed of. Scientific research
indicates that such fears are weaknesses the sufferer cannot control.
You must confess the truth, it would be dangerous, possibly
fatal, for
you to force yourself to a task you cannot perform." Charles did not
appear to be cheered by this consoling diagnosis, so I went on, "If you
like, I will tell Emerson."
The young chap squared his manly shoulders. "No, ma'am, I thank you,
but that would be cowardly."
"Tell him yourself, then, but bear in mind that I will disclose the
truth if you do not do so. Now hurry
on, we are falling behind."
The others were already out of sight. As we hastened along the village
street, returning the greetings of those who hailed us and stepping
over dogs and chickens and children, a man came to meet us. I stifled
an exclamation of impatience, it was the sheikh, the mayor of the
village, and I could see from his
manner that he was intent on delaying
me.
We had managed to avoid the time-consuming ceremonies of welcome which
courtesy normally requires in such little communities, but I saw no way
of getting out of it now without mortally offending the man.
The poor old mayor we had known was long dead; his successor was a man
in the prime of life, who looked healthier and better-fed than most of
the fellahin. He greeted me with the customary formula
and I replied in
kind. "Will the Sitt honor my house?" was the next question
Knowing this visit might take an hour or more, I sought a courteous way
of escape. "The honor is too great. I must follow Emerson Effendi who
is my— er— who is the leader of the work. He will be angry
if I delay."
I had thought the argument would be persuasive in this male-dominated
world, but the mayor's brow
grew troubled. "The Sitt must hear me. I
tried to speak with the Father of Curses, but he would not stop. He is
a man without fear, but he should know Mohammed has returned."
Mohammed is a very popular name in Egypt. It took me a moment to
identify this one. "The son of the old mayor? I thought he had run
away, after the affair of the mummy that was only an evil man."
"He ran away, yes. When you and the Father of Curses unmasked the
evildoer, Mohammed knew he would go to prison for helping the bad man.
Or that the Father of Curses would punish him, which would have been
just as painful. He was gone from the village for many years, but he
has returned, Sitt, for I saw him myself last night."
I wished, not for the first time, that some ineffable Power had not
chosen to interpret my prayer so whimsically. Another ghost from the
past! Would all our old enemies return to haunt us? While I pondered,
the mayor went on with mounting agitation.
"We are honest people here, we respect the Father of Curses and his
honored chief wife and all the
Inglizi who hire us to work. But in
every village there are a few who are not honest, I think Mohammed
is
trying to stir them up against the Father of Curses, for he was talking
loudly in the coffee shop and
the ones who listened were the evildoers
among us. Warn the Father of Curses, Sitt, and take care for yourself.
Mohammed holds you in equal blame for his disgrace. He hoped to be the
sheikh after his
father died."
And still hoped, I fancied. The mayor's concern for us was not entirely
altruistic, Mohammed could
be a potential rival. Nevertheless, he was
an honest man, and I thanked him before hurrying on.
Emerson had named our excavation site the Eastern Village, overriding
the objections of Cyrus, who claimed that one house and part of a
wall did not a village make. He added that no one, not even an idiot
like Akhenaton, would build a residential quarter so far from the
river. (Cyrus was one of those who did not share my exalted view of the
heretic pharaoh, but he generally kept his opinions to himself when I
was present.)
They were arguing the matter when I arrived on the scene, for even at
my best pace I could not catch Emerson up when he was in a hurry.
Emerson had spread his plans out across a boulder. Taking his
pipe from
his mouth, he used the stem as a pointer. "These are ancient roads,
Vandergelt, half a dozen
of them converge at this point, which is
midway between the southern and northern tombs. The house
we finished
uncovering yesterday is obviously one of a number of such dwellings,
there is mud-brick
of similar shape and material scattered all over the
hollow. Oh, curse it, I can't be bothered to explain
my reasoning now,
why the devil should I? Go with Abdullah, he is following the face of
the enclosure wall. He ought to come across a gate soon."
Muttering and shaking his head, Cyrus went off. Watching Abdullah and
his trained men of Aziyeh was fascinating for an archaeological
enthusiast, in some places only a skilled eye could distinguish between
crumbled brick and the natural soil that had buried it. Cyrus was
enthusiastic about the profession, mistake me not, but like many
excavators he preferred royal and nobles' tombs to the dwellings of the
humble, which these clearly were. The only artifacts we had uncovered
were faience beads and a
wooden spindle whorl.
"Emerson," I said urgently. "I must speak to you "
"Well, what is it?" He had rolled up the plan and was poised on one
foot, impatient to get to work.
"The mayor told me an old enemy of ours— of yours— has returned to the
village."
"What, another one?" Emerson let out a bark of laughter. He started
off. I ran after him.
"You must listen to me. Mohammed has good reason to hold a grudge
against us— you. He is a sneak
and a coward— "
"Then he will have better sense than to bother me. I think," said
Emerson consideringly, "that we will divide the work force. Charles
seems to be getting the hang of it; with Feisal to help him, he can
start
on the southeast corner. I want to get an idea of how much diversity in
plan . . ."
He trotted off, still talking.
As I had suspected, Emerson had only been teasing poor Charlie when he
threatened to set him to work on the boundary stela. The subject was
not mentioned again. By the time we stopped for luncheon, the partially
uncovered walls of a second house had proved Emerson's theory, to his
satisfaction, at least.
My task, which was that of sifting through the
fill removed from the site, had not proved onerous, there were few
objects, and they were of poor quality. I was glad to stop, though, the
sun was hot and there was little shade. How Bertha endured the heat
in her muffling garments I could not imagine I had enlisted her aid
that morning, she had been quick and competent.
Emerson had graciously consented to allow his hard-pressed workers to
rest during the hottest part of
the day. This was customary on most
digs, but Emerson always behaved as if he were making an enormous
concession That day he did not so much as mutter. After the others had
gone off to find
shelter from the sun, I kept my eye on Emerson. He had
stretched out on the ground, his hat shading his face. I occupied one
of the tents, Cyrus another. The young men had gone to the house Cyrus
had built. Where Bertha was I did not know, but I felt certain the man
Cyrus had assigned to watch her did know.
Less than half an hour had passed when Emerson removed the hat from his
face and sat up. He gave
the tent where I lay concealed a long,
suspicious survey before rising to his feet.
I waited until he was out of sight behind the ridge before I followed.
As I had suspected, he was heading east, toward the cliffs and the
entrance to the royal wadi.
The plain and the crumpled faces of the cliffs were utterly devoid of
life. At this time of day even the desert animals sought their burrows.
The only moving objects were a hawk, circling high in the sun-whitened
sky, and the tall, erect figure ahead. My skin was prickling as I
hurried after it. Emerson had— quite deliberately— given Mohammed or
another adversary precisely the opportunity he wanted. Such a man would
watch and follow, waiting in deadly patience for the moment when he
might find his victim alone.
I waited until Emerson had almost reached the cleft in the cliff before
I hailed him. I dared wait no
longer, there were a hundred hiding
places in the tumbled rock at their base, thousands among the narrowing
walls of the wadi. He heard, he turned, an explosive comment floated
to my ears. But he waited for me to join him
"I ought to have anticipated this," he remarked, as, panting and
perspiring, I came up to him. "Can't a man go for a peaceful stroll
without you following like a hound on the scent? Return at once."
"Peaceful stroll?" I gasped. "Do you think I was fooled by all that
nonsense about Nefertiti's tomb? I suppose you think you can order the
rest of us to continue digging out that wretched village while you
pretend to work in the royal wadi. You have no intention of wasting
time there, the proposal is only a blind— a lure, rather, for an enemy
stupid enough to believe your boasts about secret tombs— with yourself
as the bait in the trap!"
"You are mixing your metaphors," said Emerson critically. His tone was
mild, but I knew that soft
purring voice, and there was a gleam in his
eyes I had seen before— but never directed at me "Now
turn around and go
back, MISS Peabody— or squat there, on a rock if you prefer, till I
return— or
I will put you over my shoulder and carry you back to your
friend Vandergelt, who will make sure
you don't wander off again."
He took a step toward me. I took a step back. I had not meant to.
"Cyrus would not do that," I said.
"I think he would."
I thought he would too. And there was no doubt in my mind that Emerson
would do what he had threatened to do.
The idea had a certain attraction, but I put it aside. I could not stop
Emerson, short of shooting him
in the leg (an idea that had its own
kind of attraction, but that might prove counterproductive in the
long
run). If I were to guard and protect him, craft and cunning were my
only weapons. I proceeded to employ them, dropping down on the rock he
had indicated and blinking my eyes furiously as if I were trying to
hold back my tears.
"I will wait here," I said, sniffing.
"Oh," said Emerson. "Well, then. See that you do." After a moment he
added gruffly, "I won't be long."
As I believe I have mentioned, the wadi takes a turn to the east almost
immediately, and a spur of rock cuts off the explorer's view of the
plain. Emerson passed around it. I waited, watching the spot over the
handkerchief I had raised to my eyes. After a short time Emerson's head
appeared, his narrowed eyes glaring at me. I bowed my head to hide my
smile and pressed the handkerchief to my lips.
The head vanished, and I heard the crunch of rock under his feet as he
walked on. As soon as the
sounds faded I followed
My heart was thudding as I hastened on, threading a path among the
boulders that littered the floor of
the canyon. The difficulty for
me now was not concealment but a clear line of vision, the twists and
turns of the path, the heaped-up detritus, gave me only flashing
glimpses of Emerson's form as he proceeded. It was pure luck— or the
blessing of Providence, as I prefer to believe— that one such
glimpse
showed me what I had feared to see.
The man emerged from behind a pile of boulders which Emerson had just
passed. Noiseless on bare
feet, his dirty white robe almost invisible
against the pale limestone of the rock walls, he launched
himself at
Emerson's back. The sunlight struck blindingly from the knife in his
hand.
"Emerson!" I screamed. "Behind you!"
The echoes rolled from cliff to cliff. Emerson spun around. Mohammed's
upraised arm fell. The knife found a target, Emerson staggered back,
raising his hand to his face. He kept his feet, though, and Mohammed,
arm raised to strike again, circled warily around him. He was not
fool
enough to close
with Emerson, weaponless and wounded as he was.
Needless to say, I had continued to move forward as fast as possible. I
was of course carrying my parasol. It required no more than a second or
two to realize it was not the weapon I wanted. I could
never reach them
in time to prevent another blow. Tucking the parasol under my arm, I
pulled my revolver from my pocket, aimed, and fired.
By the time I came up to Emerson, Mohammed was long gone. Emerson was
still on his feet, leaning against a spur of rock. His upraised arm was
pressed against his cheek. Since he never has a handkerchief, I deduced
he had substituted his shirt sleeve for that useful article, in an
attempt to
staunch the blood that was turning the left side of his
beard into a sticky mass and dripping down
onto his shirt front.
Between agitation, extreme speed of locomotion, and relief, I was
panting too heavily to articulate. Somewhat to my surprise Emerson
waited for me to speak first. Over his unspeakable sleeve his eyes
regarded me curiously.
"Another shirt ruined," I gasped.
The intent blue orbs were veiled, momentarily, by lowered lids. After a
moment Emerson muttered,
"Not to mention my face. What were you
shooting at?"
"Mohammed, of course."
"You missed by a good six yards."
"The shot achieved the desired effect."
"He got away."
"I resent the implied criticism. Sit down, you stubborn man, before you
fall down, and take your dirty sleeve away from your face in order that
I may assess the damage."
It was not as bad as I had feared, but it was bad enough. The cut ran
from cheekbone to jaw, and it
was still bleeding freely. My
handkerchief was obviously inadequate for the task at hand. I
unbuttoned
my jacket.
"What the devil are you doing?" Emerson asked, alarm overcoming his
momentary faintness as I cast
the garment aside and began unfastening
my blouse.
"Preparing bandages, obviously," I replied, removing the blouse.
Emerson hastily closed his eyes, but
I think he was looking through his
lashes.
It was a deuced awkward wound to bandage. He looked rather like a
half-finished mummy when I was done, but the flow of blood had almost
stopped.
"At least you will balance now," I said, reaching for my jacket. "This
will match the scar on your other cheek "
Emerson squinted at me through half-closed lids. "It will have to be
stitched up at once," I went on
"And thoroughly disinfected."
Emerson sat bolt upright and glowered at me. He tried to say something,
but the bandages I had wound around his jaws made articulation
difficult. I understood the word, however.
"I fear I have no choice, Emerson. It is necessary to shave the scalp
before treating a head wound, you know, the same is true of a wound on
the face. But cheer up, I will only have to cut half of it off."
"The
worse a man is, the more profound bis slumber,
for if he had a
conscience, be would not be a villain."
In the midday stillness the sound of the shots had echoed far, and, as
I later learned, our friends had
already noted our absence and begun searching for us. When we emerged
from the entrance to the
wadi I saw Abdullah approaching, at a speed I
would never have believed he was capable of attaining. When he saw us
he stopped and stared, and then crouched on the ground, covering his
head with his arms. He remained in that position, motionless as a
statue, until we came up to him.
"I have failed," said a sepulchral voice from under the folds of
fabric. "I will go back to Aziyeh and
sit in the sun with the other
senile old men."
"Get up, you melodramatic old fool," growled Emerson. "How have you
failed? I did not hire you as
a nursemaid."
This is Emerson's idea of affectionate reassurance. He went on without
waiting for a reply. The others were in sight now, led by Cyrus, so I
allowed him to proceed without me. Slowly Abdullah rose to his
full
height. He does relish drama, as do most Egyptians, but I saw that his
dignified face was drawn
with shock and remorse. "Sitt Hakim," he began.
"Enough of that, my friend. Allah himself could not stop Emerson when
he is determined to do
something stupid. He owes you his life. I know
that, and so does he, it is just that he has a rather unconventional
way of expressing the gratitude and affection he feels for you."
Abdullah's face brightened. Finding the sonorous and dignified
vocabulary of classical Arabic inadequate for my feelings, I added in
English, "We will just have to watch him more closely, that is all.
Curse the man, there are times when he is more trouble than Ramses!"
* * *
Fortunately Emerson was feeling rather feeble, so it only required ten
minutes of concentrated shouting
to persuade him to return to the
dahabeeyah— though not until after he had lectured Rene and Charles
about how to proceed with the excavation and insisted Abdullah stay
with them to supervise. He would not lean on Cyrus or on me, but when
Bertha approached him— any emotion she might have felt effectively
concealed by her veil— he accepted the arm she offered.
In silent efficiency she assisted me in my medical endeavours until I
began stitching the wound. Fortified by brandy and bullheadedness,
Emerson uttered not a sound during this process, which I did not enjoy
a great deal either. When I finished I saw the girl crouched in a
corner with her back to me.
"Strange how squeamish some people are about needles," I said musingly,
cutting lengths of sticking plaster.
"Yes, isn't it," said Cyrus, turning around. "Why don't you let me
finish that, Amelia? It can't have
been a pleasant experience for you— "
"Ha," said Emerson, still supine.
"It will only take a moment," I replied. "You see how impossible it
would have been to apply sticking plaster over all those whiskers,
though."
Emerson immediately declared his intention of returning to work. After
some rather noisy discussion he finally agreed to rest for the
remainder of the day on condition we left him strictly alone. I closed
his
door, as he had requested, and then at last I allowed a sigh to
escape my lips.
"My poor girl," Cyrus said gently. "How courageously you performed your
painful duty."
"Oh, I am quite accustomed to stitching Emerson back together. But
Cyrus— it was such a near thing! We cannot go on this way, fending off
one attack after another. A good offense is the best defense.
We must
take the aggressive!"
Cyrus tugged at his goatee. "I was afraid you were going to say that.
You're as bad as he is, Amelia.
This is the second time you've snuck
away and driven me to the brink of heart failure. I'm doing my
level
best to protect you— "
"I am aware of that, Cyrus, and appreciative of your concern, though if
you will allow me to say so,
the role of a poor little woman in need of
male protection does not suit me."
It was Cyrus's turn to sigh. "Okay. Just do me the favor of letting me
in on your schemes, will you?
What do you propose to do now?"
"I am going to the village."
"Then I am going with you."
We had a nice little chat with the mayor. He threw up his hands in
horror when I told him what had occurred, invoking every saint in the
Moslem calendar, starting with the Prophet himself, he protested
his
innocence and that of the village as a whole. I assured him we would
never, as some tyrannical authorities had been known to do, punish an
entire community for the misdeeds of one man. I then proceeded to make
him an offer he could not refuse.
We were climbing down the bank toward the gangplank before Cyrus
recovered his voice. "Dead or alive? A reward is a bully idea, Amelia,
but did you have to say— "
"That was just Arabic rhetoric," I assured him. "It sounded more
emphatic."
"It sure did. 'His head in a basket' carries a lot of punch."
"I made it clear I preferred him alive. But I will take what I can get."
Shaking his head, Cyrus went off to his quarters and I looked in on
Emerson. He was sleeping soundly, which I had expected, because I had
slipped a soupc,on of laudanum into his water bottle. With my
mind at
ease on that point I proceeded to my room, not to rest, as I had
promised Cyrus, but to
consider my next move.
I had my strategy worked out by the time the weary workers returned
from the dig. The most difficult part was to decide whom to take into
my confidence, and to what extent. I did not count on any cooperation
whatever from Emerson, but I hoped by one means or another to induce
him to discuss his intentions with regard to the excavation. Cyrus, I
feared, had not entirely abandoned his charming but absurd idea of
protecting me, so I would have to find means of eluding his attentions
when it did not suit me to accept them. Men are frightful nuisances at
times,- how much simpler life would be if we women did not have to make
allowances for their little peculiarities.
Simpler, but not nearly so interesting. The sight of my now-beardless
spouse, scowling at me across the dinner table, caused a thrill to run
through my limbs and reminded me that no effort was too great to
preserve him from peril. To my regret I had been forced to cover up the
dimple in Emerson's chin,
which he detests and which I cherish, strips
of sticking plaster also disfigured the bridge of his nose and his
upper lip. But the strong jaw was at last exposed, the magnificent
modeling of one cheek at least was visible to my fond gaze.
I was about to compliment him on the improvement in his appearance when
Cyrus entered, apologizing for his tardiness and looking rather
sheepish. I dropped my napkin.
"Cyrus! You have shaved off your goatee!"
"A gesture of sympathy," said the American, glancing at Emerson.
"Wasted," said Emerson. "You ought to have stuck to your guns,
Vandergelt, as you Americans say.
You look ridiculous."
"Not at all," I said, considering the effect. "I approve, Cyrus. You
have a fine, well-shaped chin. Indeed, you look ten years younger."
Emerson immediately changed the subject, demanding of Rene an account
of the afternoon's work.
"You were right, Professor," Rene said. "The second structure appears
to be exactly the same size as
the one adjoining it, five meters wide
by ten deep. The plans are identical— four rooms in all. Into one room,
where we found a hearth with a patch of smoke-blackened plaster above
it, a part of the ceiling
had fallen. It was of matting covered with mud plaster— "
"The roof, not the ceiling," snapped Emerson. "The houses had only one
story. Stairs led to the roof, which was open but used for additional
living and storage space. Charles— what about the other house?"
Again Emerson's surmise had been accurate. The structure was larger and
more complex in plan than
the smaller houses, the enclosure wall
formed its south and east sides. After further discussion Emerson
announced, "There can be no question about it. The larger house is that
of an overseer or official. What we have is a workman's village
surrounded by an outer wall and laid out with a regularity that
indicates
it was designed and built as a unit instead of growing haphazardly like
ordinary towns. Petrie found a similar arrangement at Lahun,- as I told
him, it must have been occupied by the men who constructed
and
maintained the pyramid near it." Attempting to curl his lip at Cyrus— a
gesture whose effect was somewhat mitigated by the strips of sticking
plaster framing that part of his face—he added, "You see, Vandergelt,
Akhenaton was not such a fool after all. Our village was inhabited by
the workmen who decorated the tombs, and by necropolis guards, and the
location could not have been bettered— midway between the two groups of
nobles' tombs and not far from the entrance to the wadi where
Akhenaton's own sepulcher was located."
This dogmatic pronouncement (which later excavations proved to be
entirely correct) provoked no contradiction, but neither did it inspire
enthusiasm in the hearers. Cyrus expressed the general reaction when he
remarked, "Shucks, Emerson, we're not going to find anything
interesting in a poor workers' village. I hope to goodness you don't
want to excavate the whole place. It would take all winter."
"A typical dilettante's opinion," said Emerson with his usual tact. "We
know almost nothing about ancient Egyptian domestic architecture, even
less about how the ordinary people lived. Historically a discovery
of
this nature is far more important than a looted tomb, of which we
already have too many examples."
"I quite agree," I said. "Having once begun, we ought to do the job
properly, and produce a definitive publication which would include a
comparison of our village with the one at Lahun."
I knew Emerson had no intention of doing this, but that he would go on
arguing so long as Cyrus differed with him. Rather than find himself in
agreement with me, he was forced to backtrack.
"I never intended the excavation of the village to be other than
exploratory," he said with a frown.
"As soon as the overseer's house
has been cleared and properly recorded, we will move elsewhere."
Charles shriveled visibly. I gave him a reassuring smile. "The boundary
stelae?" I inquired. "That should certainly be our next project."
"Oh, you think so, do you?" Emerson glowered at me. "The boundary
stelae can wait. I intend to work next in the royal wadi."
He obviously expected me to protest, so I did. Men are so easy to
manipulate, poor things. When I
gave in, with poor grace, Emerson
thought he had won his point, whereas I knew I had won mine. Whither he
went, we would go— all of us. There is safety in numbers— a trite
saying,
but like most
trite sayings, right on the mark.
After dinner Charles and Rene asked permission to go to the village. It
boasted a coffee shop of sorts, where the men spent the evenings,
fahddling and lounging around, here, Charles explained with charming
candor, he and Rene hoped to improve their command of the language and
strengthen friendly relations with the villagers. I gave them a brief
motherly lecture on the dangers of excessive friendliness with a
certain section of the population. It embarrassed them very much, but I
would have felt negligent in my duty had I not done so.
Cyrus and I retired to the saloon for a council of war. I invited
Emerson to join us, but he declined and went stamping off to his room,
which was what I had intended. He had lost a considerable quantity of
blood and needed to rest. Besides, I wanted to discuss certain subjects
with Cyrus in private.
"I have decided to take you fully into my confidence, Cyrus," I began.
"I hope you believe that I have
not been deterred by lack of faith in
your discretion or in your friendship I have sworn an oath of secrecy
which I cannot and will not break, but the facts I am about to impart
to you will, I suspect, tell you nothing you have not already deduced."
With equal gravity he responded, "Let me set your conscience at rest,
Amelia, by telling you what I already know. I guess I'm not the only
one to have figured it out, either. Those of us who were acquainted
with Willie Forth knew about his lost civilization. Heck, the problem
was to keep him from boring us to death talking about it. Then you and
Emerson come back from Nubia last spring with a young female who you
announce is Willy's daughter. By itself that doesn't mean shoot, she
could have grown up among poor harmless missionaries, as you claimed.
But when some character goes to the trouble of snatching Emerson and
makes references to a recent trip you folks made, I reckon he's not
looking for directions to a Baptist mission. Add to that his wanting to
collect you and young Ramses and the girl, and a shrewd operator like
Cyrus Vandergelt can't avoid the conclusion that maybe poor old crazy
Willie Forth wasn't crazy after all."
"Expressed with your customary acumen, Cyrus," I exclaimed. "It would
be disingenuous and disloyal
of me to deny the fact itself, though I
can give you no further details."
"Unbelievable," Cyrus murmured. There was a faraway gleam in his eye.
"I thought it must be true,
but to hear you say so ... And the place is
all Willie claimed it was—a treasure house of antiquities and golden
ornaments?"
"It holds enough, at least, to make it worth looting. That is why
Emerson and I swore never to betray
its location."
"Yes, of course," Cyrus said abstractedly.
"We know the identity of the man responsible for our present
difficulty, and I have some idea as to how he obtained the information
that prompted his attack on us. But I suspect he is not working alone.
In fact, I know he is not, he must have enlisted Mohammed, the man who
assaulted Emerson today, for it is surely too much of a coincidence to
assume that incident is unrelated to the others. Mohammed has been
absent from the village for years, and if I read his character aright,
he is not the sort of man to risk injury or imprisonment for the sake
of an old grievance."
Cyrus stroked his chin reflectively. "Emerson's got a lot of enemies."
"True." I removed a sheet of paper from the portfolio I had brought
with me. "I composed a brief list
this afternoon."
Cyrus's jaw dropped. "One, two, three . . . Twelve people who are
thirsting for Emerson's blood?
He's been a busy little bee, hasn't he?"
"The list may not be complete," I admitted. "Emerson was a busy little
bee even before I met him, new candidates keep turning up. These are
the individuals of whom I have personal knowledge. Oh, wait—
I forgot
Mr. Vincey. That makes thirteen."
"I hope you're not superstitious," Cyrus muttered.
"I?" I laughed lightly. "The number is meaningless in any case. There
is a strong probability that several
of these people are dead or
incarcerated. Alberto"— I inscribed a neat interrogation point after
the
name— "Alberto certainly was in prison. I used to drop in for a visit
when I passed through Cairo, but
I have neglected to do so for the last
few years. Habib— you remember Habib— "
"Oh, yes. He tried to brain my old buddy once before"
"He did not appear to be in good health, and that was some years ago.
He may have passed on But it is imperative that we attempt to discover
the present whereabouts of these individuals. If any have been recently
released from prison, or have suddenly disappeared from their usual
haunts . . ."
"It won't do any harm to ask," said Cyrus. He was obviously unconvinced
by my reasoning, which was,
I admit, based on somewhat slender
evidence. I have found that my instincts for criminal behavior are a
more reliable guide than logic, but I sensed that argument would not
carry any more weight with Cyrus than it ever had with Emerson, though
Cyrus would have expressed his reservations more diplomatically.
His brow furrowed, Cyrus ran his finger down the list. It did not pause
at the particular name I had
feared might rouse painful memories, and I
was of course too tactful to point it out. "Reginald Forthright," Cyrus
read. "Is he old Willie's nephew, the one the newspaper stories
mentioned? Sacrificed his brave young life in the search for his uncle?
I thought he was dead."
"Disappeared in the desert," I corrected. "However, I consider it
unlikely that he is involved. For one thing, he knows . . . But I will
say no more. Besides, Tarek would have ... I believe I have said all I
ought to say."
"Your acquaintances sure have unusual names," Cyrus murmured. "Charity
Jones, Ahmed the Louse
. . . Sethos? I thought he was dead too."
"You are making a little joke," I said, smiling appreciatively. "The
name does not refer to the pharaoh of the same name, who has indeed
been dead for several thousand years. Have you never heard that name in
a modern context, Cyrus? Perhaps you know him better by his sobriquet
'the Master Criminal.'"
"Can't say I do," Cyrus replied, raising his eyebrows. "Sounds more
like a character out of a dime novel. But— hey, wait a minute. I did
hear that name once from Jacques de Morgan, the former Director of
Antiquities. He'd imbibed rather freely of the flowing bowl that
evening, he also claimed your son had been possessed by an afreet, so
when he started babbling about master criminals I kind of stopped
listening."
"Sethos is no afreet, though he shares certain of their
characteristics," I said. "For years he controlled the illegal
antiquities market in Egypt. Nameless except for his noms de guerre, a
master of disguise whose true face no one has seen, a veritable genius
of crime . . ."
"Oh, really," said Cyrus.
"Yes, really. He is without a doubt the most formidable of our old
adversaries, and logic would deem
him the most likely suspect. He is
well-versed in Egyptology. He commands a large criminal organization.
His intellect is superior and poetic, the quest for the Lost Oasis is
precisely the sort of thing that would
fire his imagination. And he has
a— a particular grudge against my husband."
"Not only the most likely suspect," Cyrus said slowly, "but ahead of
the rest of the field by ten furlongs."
"I hope not, for our chance of finding him is almost nil. The others we
may track down, but not Sethos. Furthermore . . ."
"Yes?"
"It is irrelevant," I murmured. "At least Emerson would say it was, and
perhaps he would be right.
I don't want Emerson to see this list,
Cyrus."
"Not much point, if he doesn't remember any of them. It's just between
you and me, Amelia." Cyrus's face reflected his pleasure in being able
to assist me. "We will get the authorities on the trail of these
ladies
and gents. Might as well go straight to the top, if you will give
me a
copy of your list I will telegraph the British Consul-General, Sir
Evelyn Baring, with whom I am slightly acquainted. He is
the most
powerful man in Egypt, and— "
"I know him well, Cyrus. He was a friend of my father's and has always
been most obliging. I have already written him a letter, that mode of
communication seemed best, since the situation is complex enough to
require some explanation. Selim or Ali can catch the train tomorrow and
deliver the letter
by hand."
"As usual, you are right square on top of the business, my dear. But I
hope you don't object if I make
a few inquiries of my own?"
"You are very kind."
"That's what a pal is for," Cyrus declared.
I accepted his invitation to take a turn about the deck. The night was
calm and peaceful,- the brilliant stars of Egypt blazed overhead. But
though I strove to open my senses to a scene that had never before
failed to inspire and soothe me—though my companion's steps were slowed
to match mine and his sympathetic silence answered to my mood—the
attempt was a failure. How could I lose myself in the magic of the
night when another than Emerson walked at my side? It was not long
before I declared my intention of retiring and bade Cyrus an
affectionate good night.
On the way to my room I stopped at Emerson's door, thinking he might be
in need of some medication
to help him sleep. Apparently he was not.
There was no answer to my knock.
I hesitated, cursing the bizarre circumstances that prevented me from
following the dictates of duty and affection. I feared to venture in
without his permission, yet I could not leave without assuring myself
he was not in a swoon or in pain his fortitude would not allow him to
express.
Eavesdropping is a contemptible act to which I would never stoop.
The fringes of my shawl somehow got caught in the door hinge. The
fringe was very long and silky,
and it took some time to untangle it
without breaking the threads. As I worked at it I listened for the
sounds of snores or groans. There was only silence.
Something pushed against my knee. I let out a muted exclamation of
surprise and turned to see the cat Anubis sitting on my skirt, butting
his head against me. Next to the cat was a pair of feet wearing
curly-toed native slippers. The feet were not those of an Egyptian,
however. I knew those members,
as I knew every other inch of that
particular anatomy.
Emerson stood over me, arms folded, eyebrows elevated. He was clad in
one of the loose Egyptian
robes
"Where have you been?" I cried, surprise overcoming my awareness of the
fact that this question
would only elicit a sarcastic and uninformative reply.
"Out," said Emerson. "Now I propose to go in, if I may impose on you to
get out of my way."
"Certainly," I said, stepping back.
"Good night," said Emerson, opening the door.
He had entered—preceded by the cat—and slammed the door before I could
reply, but not before I had observed that the bandage, which had
covered half his face, had been reduced to a patch only three inches
square. It had been very neatly done, so I knew he had not done it. The
person responsible must have had slim, deft fingers.
Our messenger left before dawn to catch the train to Cairo. Cyrus had
suggested we send one of his men instead of Selim, and I was glad to
accept the offer. I would need every loyal man from now on if Emerson
carried out his scheme of working in the wadi.
When we assembled for breakfast I studied my companions with the
interest of a general taking stock of her forces. The countenances of
Charles and Rene aroused some concern,- the combination of sunken eyes
and faint smiles was highly suspicious. However, the recuperative
powers of the young are great, and I did not doubt they would respond
to my orders with vigor and alacrity.
I had not yet accustomed myself to seeing Cyrus without his beard, but
I approved the change, I have always thought a goatee a particularly
ridiculous form of facial adornment. As always, he looked fresh
and
alert.
Need I remark that my eyes lingered longest on the face of Emerson? I
was pleased to observe that he had shaved that morning, I had expected
he would let his beard grow again in order to annoy me. The exposed,
shallowest part of the knife wound seemed to be healing nicely. One
long strip of sticking
plaster adorned the noble curve of his nose, but
the cleft in his chin was visible to my admiring eyes.
His mouth was
visible as well, as he met my gaze the corners compressed in an
expression that aroused the direst of forebodings, but he did not speak.
I had no proof that he had been with Bertha. I had not inquired. I
preferred not to inquire.
When she joined us on the deck I observed that she had made a slight
alteration in her attire. Her robe was the same discreet black, but the
veil now covered only the lower part of her face, and it was of
filmy,
almost transparent fabric, through which the rounded contours of her
cheeks and the delicate
shape of her nose could be seen. The swelling
seemed to have disappeared, and though she kept them modestly lowered,
her long-lashed dark eyes were clear.
Some authorities claim that charms half-hidden are the most seductive.
Bertha's veiled charms certainly seemed to have a powerful effect on
Rene (French gentlemen are particularly susceptible, according to those
same authorities.) His chivalrous instincts had already been touched by
her sad story, on several occasions he had approached her to offer the
support of his arm or the consolation of a friendly greeting. As we
climbed the path up from the riverbank I saw that he had relieved her
of the bundle she carried, and was walking beside her.
I began to feel a certain sympathy for Emerson's views about females on
archaeological expeditions. Something would have to be done about
Bertha. Even if she was victim instead of spy, she was quite capable of
turning the heads of both young men, setting them one against the
other, and decreasing
their efficiency.
As we left the cultivated fields and set off along the desert track I
saw the smoke that betokened the approach of a steamer. Not all of them
stopped at Amarna, but apparently this one was about to do so.
"Confound it," I said to Cyrus, who was at my side. "Emerson's temper
is not at its best just now, and tourists have a bad effect on him. I
hope this lot will leave us alone."
"They stop here only long enough to see the pavement Mr. Petrie found,"
Cyrus assured me.
"It is so like Petrie to leave the painting open and exposed to
tourists and other vandals," I said critically. "After having had one
lovely section of pavement destroyed, we made a point of covering up or
removing the bits we found. That is the only proper way to proceed."
Cyrus of course agreed with me.
I kept an eye on the steamer, whose location was easily ascertained by
the smoke from its funnels. None of the "cursed tourists" came near us.
After a few hours the steady column wavered and moved away, and I
dismissed the boat from my mind. I had not supposed Kevin would be
among the passengers, he would come by the fastest conveyance,
probably the train. But Vincey— devious, devilish adversary that he
was— might make use of an unlikely means of transportation simply
because it was unlikely.
Emerson had set the entire crew at work on the foreman's house, leaving
me and Ali to finish clearing the last few inches of debris from the
second of the smaller ones. It was here that small objects were most
likely to be found, and the work had to be done slowly and delicately.
Some of the objects, especially those made of the glassy faience, were
extremely fragile, others, such as bead necklaces, still showed the
original pattern even though the string had rotted away. It was a
demonstration of his increasing confidence in my skill at this finicky
task that Emerson had assigned me to it and I believe I may say,
without undue modesty, that his confidence was deserved.
The walls surrounding the room in which I was working had survived to a
height of a meter or more, so
I could not see what was going on in the
southwest corner of the site. I could hear, though. Most of the remarks
came from Emerson, most were profane, and many were directed against
Abdullah. Our
devoted reis stuck to Emerson like a shadow, and Emerson,
whose movements were inclined to be abrupt, kept bumping into him.
It was Abdullah who first saw the men approaching. His shout of "Sitt
Hakim!" brought me instantly to my feet and his gestures directed my
eyes toward the forms that had occasioned the warning.
There were two of them, both wearing European clothing. The shorter and
stouter of the pair had fallen behind, for his companion advanced with
long strides. A pith helmet covered his hair and shaded his features,
but there was something about that tall straight body that made my
senses quiver with alarm. Scrambling over the wall, I ran to intercept
Abdullah, who had started toward the newcomers, a long knife
in his hand.
"Wait," I said, catching hold of him to emphasize the order. "And keep
calm. There are only two of
them, and they would not approach so openly
if they— "
A cry from Abdullah and a sudden movement, not from either of the men
ahead, but from behind me, stopped my speech. Abdullah fought to free
his arm from my grasp. "Let me kill it, Sitt," he gasped.
"It is a
demon, an afreet, as I told you. See— it goes to greet its master."
The cat had leapt from the wall where it had been sleeping in the
sunlight. The man stooped to greet it
as it ran up to him. It butted
its head against his hand, but when he would have picked it up it
avoided
his grasp and sat down a few feet away.
I reached for my pistol. "Stand perfectly still, Abdullah," I ordered.
"An impetuous advance might bring you into the line of fire."
"Excellent advice," said a voice behind me. "Though the only safe place
is flat on the ground behind a large rock. Put the gun away, Peabody,
before you shoot someone."
"I intend to shoot someone, if he gives me the slightest excuse to do
so. What the devil does he mean, walking coolly up to us this way? You
know who it is, don't you?"
"Certainly," said Emerson. "I beg you won't shoot him until we hear
what he has to say. I am immensely curious."
Cyrus and the other men had gathered around. "Me too," said Cyrus. His
voice was flat and level, his eyes were narrowed, his hand was in his
pocket. "Let him talk, Amelia. I've got the drop on him."
"So have I," I replied, aiming at the center of Vincey's chest. He had
stopped ten feet away, his empty hands extended.
"I am unarmed," he said quietly "You may search me if you like. Only
allow me to speak— to clear
away the misapprehensions under which you
understandably labor. I only learned of them a few days ago, and I have
spent every hour since then gathering the evidence which will prove I
am not the man
you believe me to be."
"Impossible," I cried. "I saw you with my own eyes."
"You could not have seen me. I was in Damascus, as I told you. I have
brought my alibi with me."
He indicated the second man, who had now caught him up. His face was
round and red and adorned
with a set of superb mustaches curled like
the horns of a water buffalo. Whipping off his helmet, he
bent at the
waist in a stiff formal bow.
"Guten Morgen, meine Freunde. To
greet you at last is my pleasure. I
could not in Cairo do so, for
I was in Damascus."
"Karl von Bork!" I exclaimed. "But I thought you were in Berlin,
working with Professor Sethe."
"So it was," Karl said, bowing again. "Until the summer, when a
position with the Damascus expedition
to me offered was. Egyptian
reliefs had been found— "
"Yes, now I remember," I interrupted, for Karl, like my son, would go
on talking until someone stopped him. "Someone— the Reverend Sayce, I
believe— mentioned it when we dined with him in Cairo. Are
you telling
me that Mr. Vincey was with you?"
"Ja, ja, das ist recht. With a
fever I was ill, and I feared would not
be soon recovered. A substitute was necessary to carry on my work. The
good God sent me health sooner than I had hoped, and when Herr Vincey
telegraphed to me that the police had accused him of terrible crimes I
hurried at once to clear his name. I had heard, with what shock and
distress my tongue fails me to say, of the Herr Professor's accident,
but never would I have supposed— "
"Yes, Karl, thank you," I said. "Then the police have accepted your
story? I wonder they have not informed me."
"It was only yesterday they told me I was no longer under suspicion,"
Vincey said. "We set out at once for Amarna, for I was even more
anxious to clear myself with you than with the police." He started to
reach for his pocket, and then gave me a quizzical smile. "You will
allow me? I brought other evidence— train tickets, dated and stamped, a
receipt from the Sultana Hotel, affidavits from other members of the
expedition."
"Karl's evidence is good enough for me," I said. "He is an old friend
whom we have known for years— "
"Hmph," said Emerson, who of course had no recollection of ever having
seen Karl before.
"All the same," I went on. "I trust Karl will not take offense if I
call another witness, and if I request Cyrus to keep you covered (that
is the phrase, I believe?) while I go in search of her."
"Good idea," said Cyrus. "Not that I doubt your word, von Bork, but
this is the doggonedest story
I ever heard If it wasn't Vincey, then
who— "
"That will all be gone into at the proper time," I said. "First— where
is Bertha?"
There was no need to search for her, she was there, a few feet behind
us. Rene was at her side, his arm encircling her slim shoulders. "There
is nothing to fear," he assured her. "This villain, this scum, cannot
hurt you now."
"But it is not he," Bertha said.
"I would like to beat him as he— " Rene's jaw dropped. "What is it you
say?"
"He is not the one." Bertha moved slowly forward, out of the protective
circle of his arm. Her wide
dark eyes were fixed on Vincey. "They are
alike as sons of the same mother, but this is not the same man. Who
would know better than I?"
* * *
"So it was Sethos after all," I said.
We had retired to the shade and I had asked Selim to brew tea. With
such overwhelming evidence to support his claim it hardly seemed fair
to exclude Mr. Vincey from our company, but I noticed Cyrus
kept his
right hand in his pocket and held his cup in his left.
"The conclusion is forced upon us," I continued. "Who else but a master
of disguise, as we know the Master Criminal to be, could have imitated
Mr. Vincey's appearance so precisely?"
In a dangerously soft voice Emerson requested eludication of this
speech. I obliged in general terms, omitting certain details of our
former encounters with Sethos. When I had finished, Emerson studied
me
pensively before speaking.
"I had begun to believe you suffered less from woolly-mindedness than
other members of your sex, Peabody. I would be sorry to learn I was
mistaken, but this farrago of nonsense, this piece of
sensational
fiction— "
"There is such a man," Vincey said. Emerson's critical gaze moved to
him and he flushed faintly. "Anyone who has been involved with the
illegal antiquities trade knows of him. The unfortunate incident in my
past, which I bitterly regret and which I have endeavored ever since to
live down, brought me in contact with that trade."
"Ja, ja," Karl nodded
vigorously. "I too have heard such stories. One
is inclined, natiirlicb, to dismiss them as idle rumor, but no less a
distinguished individual than M. de Morgan— "
"Balderdash!" Emerson shouted, his countenance reddening. "It seems
necessary to admit that someone took advantage of Vincey's absence, but
let me hear no more nonsense about master criminals. You credulous
fools may sit here and spin fairy tales all day if you like, I am going
back to work."
And off he went, with Abdullah close on his heels and the cat close on
the heels of Abdullah. Vincey smiled ruefully. "I have lost the
allegiance of Anubis, it seems. Cats are unforgiving creatures, he
blames me for leaving him, I suppose, and will accept no excuses. I
hope, Mrs. Emerson, that you are more merciful. You do believe me?"
"No reasonable individual could doubt your evidence," I replied,
glancing from the little pile of receipts and statements— which I had
of
course examined carefully— to the solemn face of Karl von Bork.
"And the
misunderstanding has given me the pleasure of seeing Karl again. How is
Mary, Karl? We
heard she had been ill."
"She is better, I thank you. But— the Herr Professor . . . It is true,
then, what we heard from friends?
He did not seem to know me."
"He has suffered a temporary loss of memory in some areas," I
admitted— since it would have been
folly to deny it. "But that fact is
not generally known, and I hope you will be discreet about mentioning
it— especially to Walter, if you have occasion to write to him."
"We communicate less often than I would like," Karl said. "A scholar of
the most profound brilliance is Mr. Walter Emerson, in my own field of
philology he is the brightest star. He does not know of his most
distinguished brother's— "
"We expect a complete recovery," I said firmly. "There is no need to
distress Walter. Much as I would enjoy chatting with you, Karl, I had
better return to my duties. Will I see you later? Perhaps you will
both
dine with us this evening on Mr. Vandergelt's dahabeeyah."
I glanced at Cyrus for confirmation of the invitation. Still
preoccupied with the problem of drinking tea left-handed, he nodded
brusquely.
"It would be better not, I think," said Vincey. "You are a kind, just
woman, Mrs. Emerson, but you cannot be wholly comfortable in my
presence just now, it must recall too many painful memories. We
will
spend the night at Minia and be on our way next morning. Karl must
return to the dig, he has
already given too much of his time to my
affairs. As for me, I am at your disposal at any time and
for any
purpose."
"Where will you be?" I asked.
"At my apartment in Cairo, engaged in the same business as yourself."
His face hardened. "My good name has been tarnished, rny reputation
impugned. That stain will remain until the blackguard who defamed me is
caught and punished. My motive for tracking him down is not as
compelling as yours,
but I hope it will comfort you to know that I
am bent on the same object."
I embraced Karl, which made him blush and stammer, and shook Mr.
Vincey's hand. Cyrus did neither. He did not remove his hand from his
pocket until the two retreating forms were blurred by distance and
blowing sand into ghostly images of men. Then he said, "I guess I'm
just a hardheaded old Yankee, Amelia, but I'd just as soon not turn my
back on that fellow Vincey."
"You have known Karl as long as I. I would no more doubt his word than
I would that of Howard
Carter or Mr. Newberry."
"The more honest a man, the easier he can be bamboozled," Cyrus
grunted. "Just promise me, Amelia, that if Vincey asks you to meet him
in some dark alley you won't accept the invitation."
"Now, Cyrus, you know I would never do such a silly thing."
When I returned to the little faience ring I had been carefully
removing from its position, I saw that the
cat Anubis was stretched out
along the wall. I had forgotten it until that moment, and so,
evidently, had Mr. Vincey. Evidently his "faithful companion" was not
so faithful as he had believed. Not that I blamed the intelligent
animal for preferring Emerson's and my company.
With brushes and tiny probes I freed the ring from the matrix of
hardened mud that held it. Emerson came loping over to see how I was
getting on, and I handed him the ring— or, to be more accurate, the
bezel of a ring. These common objects, made of cheap fragile faience,
had usually lost the thinner shank portion when we found them, it may
have been because they were broken that they had been discarded.
Sometimes they bore the name of the reigning pharaoh and were worn as a
token of loyalty, in other cases the bezel was ornamented with the
image of a god favored by the wearer. "Bes," I said.
"Hmph," said Emerson. "So Akhenaton's devotion to his 'sole god' was
not emulated by all the citizens
of Amarna."
"The appeal of the homely little gods of the household must have been
difficult to combat." I sat back
on my haunches and rubbed my aching
shoulders. "Witness the popularity of certain saints in Catholic
countries. Bes, being the patron of jovial entertainment and— er—
conjugal felicity— "
"Hmph," said Emerson again. "All right, Peabody, don't dawdle. There is
a good-sized heap of sand
to be sifted."
I noted the ring on the record sheet and put it into the appropriate
box, which had been labeled with
the numbers assigned to the square,
the house, and the particular room. As I bent again to my task, I
was
conscious of a strange sense of depression. I ought to have been
encouraged by Emerson's use of that loved and loving appellation— i.e.,
my maiden name, sans title. He was using it now as he had originally,
with sarcastic intent, but even that was a step forward, for it tacitly
awarded me the same equality he would have given a fellow worker who
happened to be male.
It was not Emerson who had affected my mood, or even the startling
discovery of Mr. Vincey's innocence, though the knowledge that we now
had to deal, not with an ordinary criminal, but with that enigmatic and
unknown genius of crime who had evaded capture so often, was certainly
discouraging. What disturbed me most was being forced to acknowledge I
had been mistaken in my assessment of Sethos's character. I had been
gullible enough to believe in that strange man's honor— to trust his
word that never again would he impinge upon my life. Obviously he was
no more to be trusted in that area
than in any other. I ought not to
have been surprised or disappointed. But I was.
The swollen globe of the sun hung low over the river, veiled by the
rising mist of evening, when we started back to the dahabeeyah. Emerson
had driven the men unmercifully and himself just as hard—
and me even
harder. I was so stiff and cramped with squatting I was glad to accept
the offer of Cyrus's arm. Rene had given his to Bertha, watching the
oddly assorted pair— the slim, dapper young man and the perambulating
bundle of shapeless cloth beside him— I said thoughtfully, "I have
never
been one to interfere with romantic attachments, Cyrus, but I do not
approve of that relationship. His intentions cannot be serious— in the
way of matrimony, I mean."
"I hope not," Cyrus exclaimed. "His mother is a member of some noble
French house, the old lady
would have a fit if he brought home a
squashed blossom like that."
"Please don't mention that to Emerson. He is as prejudiced against the
aristocracy as he is against young lovers. However, Cyrus, I cannot
approve of an unlicensed attachment, it is not fair to the girl."
"I suppose you've got her future all planned," Cyrus said, the corners
of his mouth twitching. "Are you going to give her any say in the
matter?"
"Your sense of humor is delightful, dear Cyrus. I haven't had time to
consider the matter seriously, first
I will have to ascertain what
talents she has, and how best to employ them. But I certainly will not
allow
her to fall back into the life of degradation and abuse she has
experienced thus far. Honorable marriage
or an honorable
profession— what other choices are there for any woman who is given the
opportunity
to choose?"
Cyrus's hand went to his chin. Finding no goatee on which to tug, as
was his habit when perplexed or perturbed, he rubbed his chin. "I
reckon you're a better judge than I am," he replied.
"I reckon I am," I said, laughing. "I know what you are thinking,
Cyrus, I am a married woman, not an inexperienced girl. But you are
wrong. Men always believe what they want to believe, and one of their
least attractive delusions concerns the— er— the . . ."
While I was considering how best to express this delicate matter (and
really, there is no way of
expressing it delicately), I saw the
black-robed form of Bertha sway closer to Rene, and her head tilt
toward him. I caught my breath.
"Never mind, my dear, I get your drift," said Cyrus with a smile.
However, it was not embarrassment that had caused me to lose track of
what I had been saying. The girl's sinuous, swaying movement had roused
a long-forgotten memory. I had known another woman whose gestures had
that serpentine grace. Her name was one of those on the list I had sent
to Sir Evelyn Baring.
* * *
The mayor was waiting for me when Cyrus and I reached the village
square. His dour expression told
me, before he spoke, what news he had
to give.
"No sign of Mohammed yet?" I inquired.
"He has not returned to the village, Sitt, and some of the men searched
the cliffs all day. Hassan ibn Mahmud believes he has run away again."
"I would like to speak with Hassan." I sweetened the request with a few
coins, adding, "There will be
the same for Hassan if he comes at once."
Hassan promptly appeared, he had been watching from behind a wall. He
frankly admitted that he was one of those Mohammed had asked to join
him. "But I would never do such a thing, honored Sitt," he exclaimed,
opening his eyes as wide as they would go. The effect was not
convincing, like those of
many Egyptians, Hassan's eyelids were inflamed by recurrent infections,
and his other features were
not
precisely prepossessing.
"I am glad to hear that, Hassan," I remarked pleasantly. "For if I
believed you meant to harm the Father of Curses, I would tear the soul
out of your body by means of my magic, and leave it shrieking in the
fires of Gehenna. But perhaps you agreed to go along with Mohammed
yesterday in order to prevent
him from carrying out his evil plan?"
"The honored Sitt reads the hearts of men!" exclaimed Hassan. "It is as
the honored Sitt has said. But before we could act, the Sitt appeared,
shooting and shrieking, and we knew the Father of Curses was saved. So
we all ran away."
Of course I did not believe a word of this fantasy, and Hassan knew I
did not. His cowardly allies had waited in concealment to see how
Mohammed made out before risking their own precious hides, but if I had
not come when I did, they would have been on Emerson like a pack of
jackals on a wounded lion. Mastering my contempt and anger, I took out
a few more coins and jingled them carelessly in my hand. "What was
Mohammed's plan?"
I had to listen to a good many more protestations of innocence before I
could winnow the few grains of wheat from among the chaff of Hassan's
lies. He insisted that murder was not Mohammed's aim— and that I did
believe. Once their victim was subdued and helpless, they would carry
him to a place Mohammed knew of and leave him there Hassan insisted he
knew nothing more— and I believed that
too. He and his friends were only
hired thugs— tools, to be used for a specific purpose and discarded.
"And now," Hassan concluded sadly, "Mohammed has run away. One of your
bullets struck him, Sitt,
for he bled as he ran, and I think he will
not come back. I would be glad if he would."
I assured him the reward was still in effect, offered lesser amounts
for any additional information, and sent him on his way— not rejoicing,
but in a more cheerful frame of mind.
Twilight crept along the ground like a woman trailing long gray veils.
Golden flowers of lamplight blossomed in the windows of the houses. "If
I were not in the company of a lady," said Cyrus,
"I would spit. I have
a bad taste in my mouth."
I took his arm. "For that affliction I usually prescribe a whiskey and
soda. And if you pressed me to
join you, Cyrus, I would not say no."
"Don't give way to discouragement, my dear." Cyrus squeezed my hand,
"You handled that rascal just right. If Mohammed hasn't already skipped
the country his pals will be hot on his trail. I don't think we
have to worry about him bothering us again."
"But who will be next?" We had reached the shore, warm, welcoming
lights glowed from the dahabeeyah and the aroma of roasting mutton
wafted to our nostrils. Across the river the western cliffs were
crowned with a single brilliant star.
I stopped. "Will you think me foolish, Cyrus, if I confess a weakness I
scarcely dare admit to myself? May I confide in you? For I feel the
need of unburdening myself to a listener who is sensitive to my
feelings and will not reproach me for them."
In a voice gruff with emotion, Cyrus assured me he would be honored by
my confidence. Darkness, I have found, assists confession,- the
softness of the night, the silent attention of a friend lent eloquence
to my tongue, and I told him of my selfish, contemptible yearning to
return to the past.
"Can you blame me," I demanded passionately, "for feeling as if some
evil genie intercepted the prayer
I had the temerity to address to a
benevolent Creator? Legends and myths tell us how such selfish
wishes
are twisted to harm instead of help the wisher. You remember Midas and
the golden touch. The past has come back, not to help but to haunt me.
Old enemies and old friends— "
"Right," Cyrus interrupted. "Amelia, dear, you're too sensible a lady
to believe that stuff. I figure what you want from me isn't so much
sympathy as a jolt of common sense. These people haven't been lying
around in some eternal museum waiting to be wound up and set on your
trail all at once, you've seen
Karl off and on over the years, and me,
and Carter, and a lot of other folks. Old enemies are bound to turn up
too— along with plenty of new ones, considering how you and Emerson
operate. It's impossible
to go back, Amelia. This is now, not then, and
the only direction you can go is forward."
I drew a deep, steadying breath. "Thank you, Cyrus. I needed that."
His warm, firm fingers tightened around mine. He leaned toward me.
"That whiskey and soda you mentioned will complete the cure," I said.
"We had better go on, the
others will be wondering what has become of
us."
* * *
That evening Emerson informed us we would begin work next day in the
royal wadi, and that he
intended to remain there for several days and nights. The rest of us
could do as we pleased, if we preferred to
return to the dahabeeyah each evening, he would allow us to stop work
early.
Cyrus looked at me. I smiled. Cyrus rolled his eyes heavenward and went
off to make the necessary arrangements.
"All
is fair in love, war, and journalism."
I dreamed last night I returned to the royal wadi again. Moonlight
transformed the ragged cliffs to icy
silver sculptures of ruined palaces and crumbled colossi. The silence
was absolute, unbroken even by
the sound of my footsteps as I glided
on, disembodied as the spirit I felt myself to be. Shadows sharp-limned
as ink stains reached out and then retreated as I moved on. Darkness
filled the narrow
cleft toward which I drifted, and something moved to
meet me— a shape of pale light, crowned with moonbeams and swathed in
white linen. The deep-set eyes were sunk in shadow. The mouth was set
in a grimace of pain. I held out my arms in pity and appeal, but he
paid no heed. He passed on into eternal night, condemned to oblivion by
the gods he had tried to destroy. Forever will he wander and forever,
no doubt, will I return in dreams to that haunted place which draws my
spirit as it does his.
* * *
"You appear a trifle hollow-eyed this morning, Peabody," Emerson
remarked. "Didn't you sleep well? Something on your conscience,
perhaps."
We were alone on deck, waiting for the others to collect their gear. A
considerable quantity of supplies would be required if we were to
remain in the remote wadi for several days, Emerson had of course
left
the complex arrangements to Cyrus, and had already complained about the
delay.
Ignoring the provocation (for it was nothing less and certainly nothing
more), I said, "I want to change that bandage before we go. You have
got it wet."
He fussed and protested but I persisted, and at last he consented to
follow me to my room. I left the
door ostentatiously ajar.
"Are you sure you are willing to abandon your luxurious quarters for a
tent among the rocks?" Emerson inquired, with a contemptuous survey of
the elegant room. "You have my permission to return to the dahabeeyah
at night if you prefer. It is only a three-hour walk each— ouch!"
This ejaculation was wrung from him by my brisk removal of the sticking
plaster. "I thought you angels
of mercy prided yourselves on the
delicacy of your touch," Emerson went on, between his teeth.
"Not at all. We pride ourselves on our efficiency. Stop squirming or
you will get a mouthful of antiseptic. It is not meant to be taken
internally."
"It stings," Emerson grumbled.
"There is some localized infection. I expected that. The healing
process is proceeding nicely, however." My voice was steady, I believe,
though the sight of the ugly, inflamed wound made my heart contract.
"As for returning to the dahabeeyah every night, that would of course
be the most sensible procedure,"
I said, cutting strips of sticking
plaster. "But if you are determined to perch in the wadi like a bird in
the wilderness, the rest of us must— "
The voice of Cyrus calling my name interrupted me before Emerson could
do so, as his expression indicated he fully intended. "There you are,"
said Cyrus, in the doorway. "I was looking for you."
"You have a positive genius for stating the obvious, Vandergelt," said
Emerson. He pushed my hand away. "That will do. Collect your bottles
and paint and jars and other female flapdoodle and let's be off."
Brushing rudely past Cyrus, he went out. I packed away my medical
supplies and tucked the box into
my knapsack.
"Is that all you are taking?" Cyrus asked. "Someone can come back for
anything you have forgotten,
of course."
"That will not be necessary. I have everything I need." I tucked my
parasol under my arm.
The donkeys were being loaded when we crossed over to the riverbank.
Emerson had gone on, the cat riding on his shoulder. I stopped to talk
to Feisal, who was supervising the donkey men.
"They have been washed, Sitt Hakim," he assured me. He was referring to
the donkeys, not the men, though their appearance certainly could have
been improved by a little soap and water.
"Good." I took a handful of dates from my pocket and fed them to the
donkeys. One of the lean pariah dogs slunk toward us, its tail between
its legs. I tossed it the scraps of meat I had saved from breakfast.
"Poor dumb creatures," said Cyrus. "It's a waste of time feeding them,
though, my dear,- there are too many of them, and all half-starved."
"One scrap of food is better than none," I replied. "At least that is
my philosophy. But Cyrus, what is
all this baggage? We are setting up a
temporary camp, not a luxury hotel."
"Lord only knows how long your bullheaded husband will want to stay in
the wadi," Cyrus replied.
"You won't leave the place so long as he's
there, so I figured we might as well be comfortable. I ordered up a few
extra donkeys, in case you wanted to ride."
I declined this thoughtful offer, but Rene helped Bertha mount one of
the little beasts and walked beside her as we set out. It took about an
hour for our caravan to cross the plain, unless it is beaten, which I
never permit, a donkey's pace is not much faster than that of a man. I
kept a watchful eye on Emerson, some distance ahead. Abdullah and
several of his sons were in close attendance, to Emerson's audible
annoyance. Sound carries quite a distance in the desert.
Mounting into the foothills, we reached the entrance to the wadi, where
Emerson was waiting. He was rolling his eyes and tapping his foot and
exhibiting other ostentatious signs of impatience, but even he, I
think, was glad to rest and catch his breath for a moment. We were high
enough to see a stretch of the river sparkling in the morning sunlight
beyond the soft green of cultivated fields and palm trees. It was with
a sense of impending doom— and a corresponding stiffening of nerve and
sinew—that I turned to contemplate the dark opening in the cliffs.
The reality was grim enough, though of course it looked nothing like
the fantasy that was to haunt my dreams for years to come Sterile, bare
and dead, not a blade of grass, not a trickle of moisture. The
rocky
faces on either side were cracked, horizontally and vertically, like
crumbling ruins, the sloping detritus below them and the pebbles and
boulders littering the Valley floor were ominous evidence of constant
rockfalls, and of the rare but violent flash floods that had helped to
shape the wadi.
When we passed into the Valley, only the heights of the left-hand
cliffs shone with sunlight. The Valley floor was still deep in shadow.
Gradually the light crept down the cliffs and moved toward us as we
followed a path winding among the tumbled rocks, until at last the full
force of the sun struck down like
a blast from a furnace. The barren
ground quivered with heat. The only sounds that broke the silence were
the gasping breaths of men and donkeys, the crunch of rock under their
feet, and the cheerful
jingle of the accouterments dangling from my belt.
Never had I been so grateful for my comfortable new trousers and neat
knee-high boots. Even the bloomer-rationals I had worn on my first
visit to Egypt, improvement though they were over trailing
skirts and
bulky bustles, had not permitted such ease of movement. The only thing
I envied the men was their ability to remove more clothing than I could
properly do. Emerson, of course, had his coat off and his shirt sleeves
rolled to the elbow before we had gone a mile, and as the sunlight
enveloped our perspiring forms even Cyrus, with an apologetic glance at
me, removed his linen jacket and loosened his cravat. The cotton robes
the Egyptians wore were better suited to the climate than European
clothing. I had wondered at first how they managed to scramble around
so easily without tripping over their skirts, but I soon realized they
had no compunction about tucking them up or stripping off the robes
altogether when this was expedient.
After approximately three miles the rocky walls began to close in and
narrower canyons opened up to
the right and left. Emerson stopped. "We
will camp here."
"The royal tomb is farther on," Cyrus said, mopping his wet forehead.
"Up that wadi to the north—"
"There is not enough level space for your confounded tents in the royal
wadi itself. Furthermore, the other tombs I mentioned are nearby. There
is at least one in that small valley to the south."
Cyrus made no further objection. The word "tombs" had the same effect
on him that the mention of "pyramids" has on me. From Emerson's
ironical expression I suspected he knew what I anticipated
would be the
case: that the other tombs would be even more ruined and empty of
objects than the abandoned sepulcher of Akhenaton. However, hope
springs eternal, as the saying goes, and I
sympathized with Cyrus's
feelings. It is much more sensible to be an optimist instead of a
pessimist,
for if one is doomed to disappointment, why experience it in
advance?
We left the men to set up camp— no easy task on ground so littered with
debris— and went on another hundred yards to where the royal wadi led
northward A few minutes' walking brought us to the spot.
After a moment Cyrus spoke in a soft, contemplative voice. "There is
something about the place . . . What was he really like, that strange,
enigmatic figure? What did he really believe?"
I knew by Emerson's expression that he was not unmoved, but when he
replied his voice was harshly practical. "More to the point are the
mysteries of the tomb itself. Akhenaton was interred there, I would
stake my reputation upon it. Fragments of his burial equipment,
including the sarcophagus, have been found. That massive, hard stone
object was smashed to bits, few of the pieces are larger than five
centimeters across. No tomb robber would expend such effort. The
vandals must have been enemies of the king, driven by hatred and the
desire for revenge. Did they also destroy his mummy, or had it been
transferred to a safer place, along with the rest of his burial
equipment, when the city was abandoned?
"The second of his daughters died young, before there was time to
prepare a separate tomb for her. Fragments of another sarcophagus which
must have been hers have also been found here. I don't doubt she was
buried in the rooms which were decorated with the scenes of her parents
mourning over her body.
"But what of Nefertiti? There is only one sarcophagus emplacement in
the burial chamber. The separate suite of rooms leading off from the
entrance corridor may have been meant for her burial, but it was never
completed and not a fragment of her funerary equipment has turned up in
or near the tomb."
"What about the jewelry Mond bought in 1883?" Cyrus asked. "There was a
ring with her name— "
"That," said Emerson dogmatically, "was part— a very minute part— of
her
husband's rich equipment. Those bits and pieces were pocketed— I speak
figuratively, of course— by one of those who transferred the mummy of
Akhenaton to another tomb or by the vandals who destroyed the
sarcophagus. The former hypothesis seems most likely The
sarcophagus was too heavy to be moved, but the coffined body and
the
equipment buried with it—jars of oil and food clothing furniture,
ornaments—were taken away. The jewelry acquired by Mond was purchased
from local villagers. The ancient thief hid his loot somewhere
in the
wadi, meaning to come back for it later, but he never did The cache was
undoubtedly discovered by modern thieves."
"Then you believe her tomb— " Cyrus began.
"May yet be found," Emerson said. "But the royal tomb should be our
first enterprise. I want the place completely cleared out down to bare
rock. The fill in the shaft will have to be removed and sifted Floors
and ceilings and walls should be probed to make certain no hidden
doorways exist Where the devil is --
hell and damnation, Abdullah, will
you stop treading on my heels?"
"I follow to be ready when the Father of Curses commands" said Abdullah.
"I command you not to walk so close behind, then. Go fetch Ali and
four— no, five— of the others I
want only trained men to work here You
know what to look for, Abdullah."
"We start now?" Abdullah inquired, rolling his eyes heavenward High
above, the cloudless sky
shimmered with heat
"It is almost midday," I said, before Emerson could reply "And the trip
has been long and arduous.
We will rest and eat before starting work,
Abdullah."
"As for you," said Emerson, fixing me with a critical blue stare "you
can take your treasure-hunting
friend Vandergelt back to the main wadi
and start looking for other tombs."
"We haven't the manpower," Cyrus objected. "There are tons of rock and
sand to be shifted."
"Get workers from the village."
"for pity's sake, Emerson," I exclaimed. "Are you out of your mind?"
"You keep telling me," Emerson replied mildly.
"We dare not admit strangers to our group," I insisted "Some of the men
of Haggi Qandil were hiding in the cliffs when Mohammed attacked you,
ready to carry you off if his plan succeeded Most of them are honest, I
believe, but a few. . ."
"Hire the honest ones, then," said Emerson impatiently "Why the devil
can t you use a little initiative instead of depending on my advice for
everything?"
* * *
Naturally I paid no attention to Emerson's attempt to divide our
forces. "If you want to concentrate on
the royal tomb, then let us
concentrate," I said firmly. "In addition to the tasks you mentioned
this morning, we ought to make a more accurate plan of the entire tomb
and copy the remaining reliefs. Bouriant's copies are invaluable
because they show sections that have now disappeared, but they are
not
entirely accurate, and— "
"Damn it, woman, don't lecture me!" Emerson bellowed. He fumbled at his
chin. Finding no beard on which to tug, he rubbed the member in
question until it turned pink. "I intended, of course, to do all the
things you gratuitously suggested. Since you anticipated me, you may
have the pleasure of copying the reliefs."
I felt certain I knew what had motivated this suggestion. He was
getting even with me for the beard.
The inner chambers of the tomb were
as hot as the pits of the infernal regions.
"Certainly," I said calmly. "What method had you in mind? Dry squeezes
or tracings?"
"Both," said Emerson, his lips curving in an expression that hardly
deserved to be called a smile. "I want every scratch on those walls
recorded. One technique may show details the other missed. After you
have compared the two and made a master drawing, you will take it back
into the tomb and check it against the wall itself. You may have Rene
to assist you. Begin in room E and make sure you cover
every inch of
every wall."
Room E was the burial chamber—the deepest, most remote, hottest part of
the tomb.
"Certainly," I said again. Emerson went off, smirking. While he was
haranguing the men on how he wanted them to proceed, I took Abdullah
aside.
"I don't know what he is up to, Abdullah, but he has just ordered me
into the deepest and most distant part of the tomb, where I can't keep
an eye on him. He has not said what he means to do, but I fear
the
worst. I rely on you, my friend. Watch him! Don't let him wander off
alone."
"Have no fear, Sitt. Since the last time he eluded us I have made sure
someone watches over him even when he sleeps, or seems to sleep He will
not escape us again."
"Excellent. I trust you as I would myself."
I was turning away when the old man said hesitatingly, "Sitt Hakim . .
."
"Yes, Abdullah?"
"I would not have you think your safety is a lesser matter to us."
"You need not tell me that, old friend," I said warmly. "You and I
understand one another's hearts, I think. We both know that the Father
of Curses is in greater need of protection than I, he is the bravest
of
men, but he does take foolish chances." Adjusting my belt, I added, "I
can take care of myself."
Abdullah's bearded lips quivered. "Yes, Sitt. But I hope I do not
offend if I say that as you trust in me, I trust in the rich American
who is also your friend. He will not let harm come to you if he can
prevent it."
"Mr Vandergelt is a true friend," I said. "We are fortunate to have
such loyal friends— and you chief among them, Abdullah."
The courtesies and the dictates of affection having been satisfied,
Abdullah set off in pursuit of Emerson and I found Rene and instructed
him to gather our equipment.
Cyrus of course offered to assist me, but I could see he was not
interested in such painstaking, plodding work— nor had he the training
for it. When I assured him I would get on very well without him he did
not insist. He already had his eye on a pile of debris across the wadi,
near the place where other explorers, including Emerson, had found
evidence of a possible tomb opening, and I could see he was itching to
start digging.
Rene and I carried our rolls of paper and pencils down the long shafts
and stairs, over the half-filled
shaft (which had been bridged by
planks) and down a short ramp into the burial chamber.
It was about thirty feet on either side (10.36 by 10.40 meters, to be
precise) with two square pillars and
a raised plinth that had once
supported the sarcophagus. The floor was covered with hardened mud set
solid as plaster. The surfaces of walls and pillars had been decorated
with painted reliefs modeled on a layer of plaster which had been
applied to the rock surface. Here, where the heretic's own body had
rested, the full fury of his enemies had been expended. Most of the
plaster was gone. However, some
of the figures had been roughly
delineated on the underlying rock before the plaster was applied, and
these rude outlines still survived.
"We will start with the back wall," I said to Rene. "I at the
right-hand corner, you at the left. Watch me first, I am sure you are
familiar
with the technique, but I have my own methods."
The process of dry squeezing consists of pressing a thin sheet of paper
over the carvings with the fingertips. Wet squeezes would of course
give a more precise copy, but they often damaged the
crumbling reliefs
and removed the last traces of any remaining paint. The technique of
rubbing should be self-explanatory, soft pencils and a steady, even
pressure were necessary. It was hard on the arm and hand muscles to
maintain this, especially when working on a perpendicular surface.
I will not elaborate on the working conditions. Imagine the hottest,
dustiest, deadest, driest climate your mind can conceive, and double
it, that will give some idea of what Rene and I endured that afternoon.
I was determined to stick to it till I dropped and Rene was determined
not to be outdone by a mere woman (though of course he knew better than
to voice this sentiment aloud). For his sake rather than my own I
decreed occasional breaks for rest, air, and refreshment. Copious
consumption of water was essential to ward off dehydration. Each time
we emerged my eyes sought Emerson. Each time he was in a different
place— remeasuring a room Charlie had already measured, and telling him
he had done it wrong, criticizing Abdullah for overlooking a scrap of
pottery in a crack in the floor, or hectoring the small work force he
had assigned to Cyrus. He left me and Rene strictly alone most of the
afternoon, when he finally came thumping down the passage, it was to
tell us to stop for the day.
A faint moan came from Rene. I said, "As soon as I finish this sheet of
paper."
Emerson picked up one of the rubbings I had completed and held it near
the lamp. "Hmph," he said,
and thumped off.
The valley was sunk in blue shadows when we emerged. Rene collapsed on
the ledge, gasping. I handed him my canteen, the water was hot enough
to have been used for tea, but it gave him strength enough
to go on. I
had to help him descend the slope, however.
"What luck?" I inquired of Cyrus, who was waiting below.
"Not much. Emerson insists we piqk through every confounded square inch
of sand. At this rate it will take two weeks to reach bedrock. So far
we have found a diorite maul, the kind the ancients used to break rock,
and four pieces of pottery." Cyrus wiped the perspiration from his brow
with his sleeve and then blinked at me. "But my poor dear girl— you
look
as if you have spent the day in a steam bath. You must be exhausted."
"Not at all. A nice hot cup of tea and a nice warm cup of water with
which to bathe my face, and I will
be fully restored."
"We can do better than that," Cyrus said, taking my arm. "Come and see
what my fellows have done."
What they had accomplished was little short of a miracle. The area was
quite unsuitable for a camp. The central space was so narrow the tents
and shelters had to be arranged in a long line instead of clustering
together. To clear the ground entirely of rock would have taken weeks,
but the men had rolled away many of the larger boulders and prepared
relatively flat surfaces on which tents could be erected. Rugs and
matting softened the pebbly ground, and folding cots offered promise of
comfortable rest. Even the wood and dried camel dung for a fire had to
be brought with us, for there was not so much as a twig to
be gathered.
Several fires burned bright in the dusk, and lanterns hung near the
tents. Water jars, bowls and towels had been arranged outside each of
them.
"No wonder you wanted so many donkeys," I said to Cyrus as, with
glances admiring on my part and modestly proud on his, we surveyed the
scene. "You sent them back after they were unloaded?"
"Figured I might as well. In rough terrain like this a man can scramble
around as fast as a donkey can move." He hesitated for a moment, and
then said, "I hope Emerson isn't going to throw a fit when he finds out
I ordered some of my own men to stay. They don't know much about
excavating, but they
have sharp eyes and suspicious natures."
"Let him throw a fit if he likes. I approve, and I believe I can still
bully— persuade, I mean— Emerson to accept the inevitable. How did you
manage to convince your crewmen to take on the duties of guards?"
"Money is a great persuader, my dear. We'll speak no more of that, have
a look at your quarters and
see if I have forgotten anything you need
or want."
The only fault I could find was that there was an excess of unnecessary
luxuries, including soft cushions and a pretty china tea set. "It won't
do, Cyrus," I said, smiling. "Emerson will wax sarcastic when he
sees
those ruffled pillows."
"Let him," was the sulky reply.
"More to the point," I continued, "there is not room for a second cot.
Bertha will have to share my tent, Cyrus. No"— for he was on the verge
of objecting— "there is no alternative, I fear. Far be it from me
to
cast aspersions on the character of any young gentleman, but I cannot
allow the slightest breath of scandal to tarnish an expedition of which
I am
a part. Gossip of that sort, true or false, would hinder
the
advancement of females in the profession, and that advancement, as you
know, is a matter of great concern to me. Furthermore— "
"I take your point," said Cyrus with a sigh "If that's what you want,
Amelia, that's how it's going to be."
Cyrus's cook was among those who had consented to stay with us. I could
only assume Cyrus had
bribed him extravagantly, for good chefs can
easily find employment and do not have to endure conditions like the
ones under which he labored.
I was pouring tea by the fire when Charlie staggered into camp. The
poor young American was a sight
to behold. His shirt was as wet as if
he had stood under a waterfall, and his hair was dripping.
"So how did it go?" I inquired cheerfully. "You have been working on
the plan of the tomb, I believe?"
"Part of the time," said Charlie, in a voice hoarse with fatigue and
dust. "I believe I have by now
practiced every possible aspect of the
archaeologist's trade. If the professor— "
He was interrupted by the professor himself, who had gone off to
inspect the camp. He now came storming up to us, brandishing some
object like a club. It was so dark that I did not identify the object
until he got close to the fire.
"What the devil do you mean by this, Vandergelt?" he demanded,
thrusting the rifle— for so it proved
to be— into Cyrus's face.
"For heaven's sake, Emerson, point it the other way," I exclaimed in
some alarm.
"It is not loaded," said Emerson, pitching the weapon away. "But the
ammunition is there, along with a half dozen other rifles. What the
devil— "
"If you will give me a chance, I will answer you," said Cyrus coolly.
"Nobody is forcing you to pack a six-shooter, but I'll be consarned if
I am going to neglect such an obvious means of self-defense. These are
Mauser Gewehrs, with 7.92-millimeter cartridges and a five-round
magazine. A sharp shot, which
I am, can blow a man's head off at two
hundred yards. And if I see a head I don't recognize, that's
what I
intend to do, with your permission or without it."
Emerson's teeth gleamed in the firelight. "I'm sure your speech has
made a great impression on the ladies, Vandergelt. It doesn't impress
me, but then that was not your purpose, was it? I hope your eyesight is
good. It would be a pity if you happened to shoot Abdullah or me by
mistake."
Hearing Cyrus's teeth grinding, I hastened to intervene. "No more
squabbling, if you please. Supper will be ready soon, go and wash."
"Yes, Mama," said Emerson. He has rather large, very white teeth, the
reflection of the firelight off
their surfaces presented a horrifying
picture.
Bertha glided off to assist the chef. When the group reassembled,
tempers had improved somewhat— I refer primarily to the temper of
Emerson— and the consumption of an excellent meal put everyone into
a
more relaxed frame of mind. In relative affability we compared notes on
the activities of the day and discussed plans for the morrow. The only
discordant note was introduced by— whom else?— Emerson, who inquired
why
I was lounging around the fire instead of collating the copies I had
made that day.
With perfect calm I replied, "It is impossible to do it properly under
these conditions. The light is inadequate, there is not a flat surface
large enough to spread the papers out— "
"Bah," said Emerson.
It was not long before yawns and lengthening silences interrupted
speech, and I decreed that it was time to retire. It had been a long
hard day for most of us.
Bertha was not pleased to learn that she was to share my tent. Not that
she said so— she was a very
silent creature, at least with me— but she
was very adept at conveying her feelings without the use of words.
Removing only her outer robe and veil, she rolled herself in a blanket
and within a few minutes her regular breathing indicated that she had
fallen asleep. I had intended to ask her a few questions, but
I was
unusually tired myself. I felt my eyelids droop . . .
How long it took me to realize that my drowsiness was unnatural I
cannot say. I am particularly resistant to drugs and hypnosis, it
is
not so much physical immunity as something in my character, I believe.
For an indeterminate time I lay in a semi-stupor, dozing off and
waking, hearing the low voices of the workmen and the clatter of
cooking pots gradually fade into silence. It was well past midnight, I
think, when the sleepless sentinel within my brain finally made itself
heard. "This is no natural repose," it cried. "Arouse yourself and act!"
It was easier said (or thought) than done. My limbs felt as limp as
boneless tentacles. But the remedy
was close at hand. I had employed it before in a similar situation, and
thanks to the rearrangement of
the tent made necessary by the addition of Bertha's cot, all my
equipment was nearby. I had only to stretch out my hand.
My fingers were as clumsy as an animal's paws, but at last I managed to
open the box of medical
supplies and extract my smelling salts. A good
whiff of them not only cleared my head, it left the distinct impression
that the top of that appendage had been blown off. I sat up and put my
feet on the floor. I
had taken off my boots and jacket and my belt of
accounterments before retiring. The boots, at least, I must reassume
before proceeding to investigate. Not only was the ground uneven and
painful to stockinged feet, but there were scorpions and other stinging
creatures to be avoided.
I was still fumbling for my boots— for I did not deem it expedient to
strike a light— when I heard a soft rattle of pebbles from without, and
realized that a similar sound must have alerted my sleepless sentinel.
An animal might have caused it, or a man abroad on some harmless
errand. But I thought not. Leaping
to my feet, I promptly fell flat
onto the floor— or, to be more accurate, onto Bertha's cot. The sudden
impact was too much for the frail structure, it collapsed, with Bertha
still on it.
Though I had not planned it that way, the incident had the desired
effect, i.e., to alarm the camp.
My startled shout was answered by a
louder cry. Rocks crunched and rolled under running feet. A shot rang
out.
I managed to extract myself from the mass of tumbled blankets and bits
of broken cot Bertha had not stirred. If I had had any doubts about
being drugged, her immobility would have removed them, normal sleep
would surely have been interrupted by the collapse of the bed and the
impact of my body. First I located my parasol, then, finding my knees
were still too unsteady to permit a more erect posture, I crawled
toward the entrance of the tent. When I raised the flap the first thing
my hazed eyes beheld
was a gigantic firefly, wavering back and forth in
drunken flight. With some effort I focused my vision. The light was
that of a lantern. Emerson was holding it. Seeing me he said,
"Hell and
damnation!" but
he said no more, for his knees buckled and he sat down
suddenly on the ground— on a sharp rock, to judge by the equally
profane
outcry that followed.
* * *
"It is most interesting," I remarked somewhat later, "to observe the
varying effects of a particular drug
on different people."
"Urgh," said Emerson. He had irritably refused the offer of my smelling
salts, and was drinking cup
after cup of strong coffee.
"You," I continued, "may have acquired a certain immunity as a result
of— er— your recent experiences. Cyrus was less affected than Rene and
Charles— "
"Argh," said Cyrus.
"While Bertha was the most susceptible of all."
"Will she be all right?" Heavy-eyed and pale, Rene looked anxiously at
me.
"Yes, certainly. She will have a good night's sleep, which is more than
can be said of the rest of us. The guard," I continued, "appears to
have been relatively unaffected. Of course we don't know how the
laudanum was administered, so we cannot be certain of how much each
person consumed."
"It was in the food," Emerson muttered.
"Or drink. But which dish? Everyone got some of it, not only ourselves,
but the Egyptians. Even the guard admits he was dozing when he heard me
cry out. The question is one of some importance, you must agree, since
we must determine who had the opportunity to add the opium to our food.
We have
a traitor in our midst, gentlemen!"
Emerson gave me a critical look over the rim of his coffee cup.
"Allowing for the excessive melodrama
of your speech patterns,
Peabody, it appears you are correct. The chef is the most obvious
suspect."
"Too obvious," I said. "You know how he cooks— pots simmering for hours
on a fire, out in the open, with people constantly coming and going—
and
staying to gossip. We must interrogate the servants— "
"Rot," Emerson growled. "There is no way we can determine who is
responsible for this. The filthy
stuff may have been added to one of
the water jars before we ever left the village. Anyone could have done
it." His eyes raked the watching faces with sapphirine intensity, and
he repeated with slow
emphasis, "Anyone."
Charles immediately looked so guilty, my old friend Inspector Cuff
would have arrested him on the
spot. It led to a strong presumption of
his innocence.
But after we had finally dispersed I asked myself what I really knew
about the two young archaeologists. Rene had been with Cyrus for
several years, but even old acquaintance could not clear a man of
suspicion in this case. The lure of treasure and of discovery is strong
enough to seduce those of weak character. Aside from our men from
Aziyeh, there were only three who could be considered above suspicion:
Emerson, Cyrus and myself. As for Bertha . . Her drug-induced sleep was
genuine. I had applied a number of tests, the results of which left no
doubt in my mind. But only the stupidest of conspirators would fail to
include himself— or herself— among the victims in such a case. I did
not
think Bertha was that stupid.
* * *
In the clear light of morning we were able to determine that only the
area near my tent showed signs of uninvited guests. The partial prints
of bare feet were visible in two places where none of our men had
trod.
When we started out for the royal wadi, Cyrus was carrying a rifle.
Emerson's eyebrows climbed when
he saw it, but he made no objection,
even when Cyrus said coolly, "Don't get het up if you see someone
above, on the plateau. I sent a couple of my boys up there to keep a
lookout."
Like Cyrus, I had determined to take a few precautions of my own. Over
Emerson's violent objections (which I of course ignored) to the
depletion of his work force, I had stationed Selim, Abdullah's youngest
son, at the far end of the main wadi. Selim was Ramses's particular
friend, a handsome boy barely sixteen years of age. Knowing the
foolhardy courage of youth, I had been reluctant to assign him to this
particular task, I only did so after Abdullah assured me that both he
and Selim would feel dishonored if his offer were refused. I cautioned
the boy as emphatically as I was able that his role was that of an
observer only, and that he would fail in that role if he went on the
attack. "Stay in hiding," I instructed him. "Fire a warning shot to
alert us if you see anything that arouses your suspicions, but do not
shoot at anyone.
If you will not swear by the Prophet to obey my order,
Selim, I will send someone else."
His big brown long-lashed eyes wide and candid, Selim swore. I did not
like the loving way he handled the rifle, but with Abdullah beaming
with paternal pride, I felt I had little choice I only hoped that if he
did shoot someone, it would be Mohammed and not the reporter from the
London Times.
Or even Kevin O'Connell. It was he whom I expected, of course. I was
only surprised he had not succeeded in tracking us down before this.
When we returned to camp that evening, after grueling hours in the heat
and dry air of the burial chamber, I found Selim waiting. I had ordered
him to come back and report to me at sunset. Not even
to protect
Emerson would I have allowed such an excitable lad to stay in his
dangerous post after dark, when, as all Egyptians knew, demons and
afreets came out of hiding. Selim's face was rapt with awe.
He could
hardly wait to tell me his news.
"He came, Sitt, as you foretold he would— the man himself, the very one
you described to me. Truly you are the greatest of magicians! He said
he had not told you of his coming. He said you would be glad to see
him, though. He said he was a friend He said— "
"He tried to persuade— or bribe?— you to let him pass," I said, thereby
increasing my reputation for supernatural powers in the eyes of the
innocent youth. "Did he send a message, as I— as my magic— foretold he
would?"
"The Sitt knows all and sees all," Selim said reverently
"Thank you, Selim," I said, taking the folded paper he handed me. "Now
rest. You have done a man's work today."
Bertha had waked in the morning without ill effect, though she had been
drowsy and sluggish all day.
She had gone straight to our tent when we
returned, but when I entered she rose and glided out. I did
not attempt
to detain her. Sitting down on the edge of the bed, I unfolded the
note, which appeared to have been composed on the spot, for the writing
was so uneven the paper must have been resting upon
a rocky surface.
That difficulty had not restrained Kevin's tendency toward verbosity or
dimmed his ebullient Irish spirits.
After the usual florid compliments he went on:
I
look forward with a delight I cannot express in mere words to
renewing my acquaintance with such admired friends as you and the
Professor, and to expressing my felicitations on another miraculous
escape. In fact I look forward to it so much I won't take no for an
answer. I have
taken up my abode in
the pleasant little house someone
(dare I hope it was you, in the expectation of my coming?) kindly
constructed not far from the entrance to this canyon. One of the
villagers
has agreed to bring food and water for me daily, so I expect
to be quite comfortable. I am an impatient fellow, though, as you know,
so don't keep me
waiting too long... or I may be tempted
to risk my neck crossing the plateau and climbing down to join you.
Further compliments followed. It was the closing words—an impertinent
"A bientot,"—that forced from my lips an expression of the outrage I
had thus far suppressed.
"Curse it!" I cried.
Bertha's face appeared in the tent opening. Over her veil her eyes were
wide with alarm. "Is something wrong? Is it from— from him?"
"No, no," I said. "Nothing is wrong— nothing that need concern you. You
needn't stand outside, Bertha, though your courtesy is noted and
appreciated" Folding the letter, I put it in my box and went out to
splash water on my dusty and now even more heated face.
I did not join in the conversation around the fire as energetically as
was my wont that evening,. I was preoccupied with considering how I
could meet Kevin and head him off. I did not doubt that if I failed
to
confront him he would do precisely what he had threatened to do, and
if he did not break his neck climbing down the cliff face, one of
Cyrus's guards would probably shoot him. A less honorable woman might
have regarded that as an ideal solution, but I could not entertain such
a reprehensible idea. Besides, there was always the chance that Kevin
might elude the guard and accomplish the descent without damaging
himself.
I must see him and speak with him, and hope that an appeal to the
friendship he claimed to feel for me would persuade him to leave us
alone. A little bribe, in the form of a promise of future interviews,
might assist in achieving the desired end. But how was I to reach him
alone and unescorted? Cyrus would insist on accompanying me if he knew
what I planned, and Cyrus's critical presence would destroy the
friendly, confidential atmosphere that was essential to any hope of
success.
I would have to go during the midday rest period, I decided. It would
have been folly to attempt the long, difficult walk in darkness, and I
could not disappear for any length of time during working hours. The
rest period usually lasted for two or three hours. There was no hope of
being able to return before my absence was discovered, since the
distance was almost three miles each way, but if I could deal with
Kevin before they caught me up, I would have accomplished my purpose.
It was feasible, I concluded. Certainly it was worth a try. And there
could be no danger, for Selim would be on guard at the entrance to the
wadi. Having decided this, I applied myself to my dinner with good
appetite. The others, I observed, were inclined to study each bite
suspiciously before putting it into their mouths, but I had reasoned
that the same trick would not be tried again so soon after the failure
of the first attempt.
Such proved to be the case I woke several times during the night,
feeling only normal drowsiness before
I allowed myself to sleep again.
Bertha seemed restless too, which further reassured me.
Rene and I put in a good morning's work in the Pillared Hall (i.e., the
burial chamber), for I never allow mental distraction to interfere with
my archaeological duties We had almost finished the back wall, the
lowest sections could not be accurately copied until the floor was
cleared to bedrock. I pointed this out
to Emerson when we stopped for
luncheon.
"I don't suppose you want the men stirring up dust while you are
copying?" he inquired. "Leave that till later. You still have three
walls and four sides of two pillars to go, I believe?"
Rene's face fell. He had hoped for a day or two off while the men
worked.
I had considered slipping a little laudanum into the tea at lunch to
ensure everyone would sleep soundly while I stole away. That did not
seem quite cricket, so I only put it in Bertha's cup.
She dropped off almost at once. Though I was on fire to be up and away,
for time was of the essence, I forced myself to remain recumbent a
little longer in order to ensure that the others had followed her into
the land of Morpheus. As I lay watching her I could not help but wonder
what the future held for such a woman. What thoughts, what fears, what
hopes lay concealed behind that smooth white brow and those enigmatic
dark eyes? She had never confided in me, nor responded to my attempts
to win her confidence Yet I had seen her engaged in animated
conversation with Rene, and less often with Charles, even Emerson had
managed to induce, upon occasion, one of her rare silvery laughs. Some
women do not get on with other women, but that could not be the cause
of her reticence with me, because she was equally wary of Cyrus— who, I
must admit, did not conceal his dislike of her. Was she still a willing
slave of the man who had been so brutal to her? Had it been she who
drugged our food?
She lay with her back to me. Rising slowly, impelled by an impulse I
could not have explained, I bent over her. As if my intent regard had
penetrated her slumber, she stirred and murmured. Quickly I drew back.
Silence reigned without. It was time to go.
I had taken off my belt before I reclined. Much as I would have liked
to take it with me, I dared not risk the noise. Thanking heaven and my
own foresight for my useful pockets, I distributed several important
tools among them. One of the most important, my handy little knife,
provided me with a convenient exit from the tent. After cutting a long
slit I returned the knife to my pocket, picked up my parasol, and
exited.
Cyrus had placed my tent some distance from the others in a thoughtful
attempt to give me as much privacy as the terrain allowed. It was not
much, for at its greatest extent the wadi was only a few hundred feet
wide. My tent backed up onto the slope of scree that bordered the
cliffs. Carrying my boots, I crept along the base of it. Even our
Egyptian friends wore sandals here, for the thick integument that years
of going barefoot had developed on the soles of their feet was
insufficient protection against the sharp-edged stones littering the
floor of the canyon. My thick stockings served me no better, but I did
not dare assume my boots until after I had gone some distance and was
concealed from sight of the camp by a series of outcroppings.
It was extremely hot and very still. The only shade was high up on the
steep, loose scree of the slope at the base of the cliff Since haste
was imperative, I had to follow the path winding among the boulders on
the bottom, now in full sunlight. If I had not been in such a hurry I
would have enjoyed the walk. It was the first time in many days I had
been alone.
Naturally I kept a firm grip on my parasol and a sharp eye on the
surroundings, but I was more inclined to trust that sixth sense that
warns of lurking danger. Persons like myself, who are sensitive to
atmosphere and who have been often subject to violent attack, develop
this sense to an acute degree. It had seldom failed me
I cannot explain why it failed on this occasion. No doubt I was
preoccupied with composing the speech I meant to make to Kevin. The men
must have been lying concealed and motionless for some time, for I
certainly would have heard sounds of someone descending the slope.
They did not come out of hiding until after I had passed the first of
them, so that when they emerged, simultaneously, I found retreat cut
off. A second man popped out of a hole opposite me, two others appeared
ahead. They looked very much alike in their turbans and grubby robes,
but I recognized one of them. Mohammed had not run away after all. I
had to admire his persistence, but I did not like the way he was
grinning at me.
The cliff face was split by innumerable crevices and cracks. Some of
the fallen boulders were big enough to conceal not one but several men.
How many opponents must I defeat? Taking a firm grip on my parasol, I
considered alternatives with a rapidity of thought my measured prose
cannot attempt to convey.
Flight, in any direction, would have been folly. I could not scramble
up the scree fast enough to escape those who would follow. A rapid
advance would have sent me straight into the waiting arms of two
adversaries, who were now advancing slowly toward me. Retreat— not
flight, but a considered,
deliberate withdrawal— eastward, in the
direction from which I had come, appeared to offer the best hope. If I
could dispose of the single man who barred my way .
But even as I shifted my parasol to my left hand and reached for my
pistol, that hope was reduced by
the rattle and crunch of rock. Another
man was coming from the east to reinforce his confederate, and
at
considerable speed. There was not much chance, I feared, that I could
incapacitate or elude two men
A hand weapon is inaccurate except at
very close range, and I would be running as I fired. I would have to
try, of course.
The second man came into view, and my fingers froze on the barrel of
the pistol (which had shifted around in my pocket in a way I had not
anticipated). Astonishment paralyzed every muscle. The man
was Emerson,
bareheaded, red-faced, and in extremely rapid motion. With a shout of,
"Run, damn you!" he hurled himself at the surprised Egyptian, who
collapsed onto the ground in a flurry of dirty fabric.
I took it that the order was addressed to me, and I was certainly in no
position to object to the way it
had been phrased. Emerson's sudden
appearance and abrupt action had sent our opponents into momentary
confusion, I had no difficulty in outstripping the man who was nearest
to me. They were all close behind, though, and when Emerson caught my
hand and fled, dragging me with him, I was in full agreement with his
decision I did wish he would get over his prejudice against firearms,
however. A rifle would have been particularly useful just then
We were over a mile from the camp and I did not see how we could reach
it without being overtaken. Had he come alone? Was help on the way?
Questions flooded my mind but I was too short of breath to articulate
them, which is probably just as well, because Emerson was obviously in
no mood to permit debate. After rounding an outcrop of rock he turned
abruptly to the right, caught me round the waist,
and threw me up onto
the rocky slope. "Go on," he gasped, emphasizing the suggestion by a
sharp slap
on a convenient part of my anatomy.
"Through that opening. Hurry!"
Looking up, I saw the opening he referred to— a black irregular hole in
the cliff face. It was roughly triangular in shape, narrowing to a
crack that turned at a sharp angle to meet the top of the slope. Only
at its widest part was there room for the passage of a body. Mine
passed, with little conscious volition
on my part but with considerable
assistance from Emerson, shoving from behind. I did not resist, though
the prospect of dropping down into blackness, with no idea of what lay
below and beyond, was not especially appealing. It was more appealing
than the alternative, however.
I landed somewhat forcibly on an uneven surface about six feet below
the opening. The floor was littered with stones and other objects which
pressed painfully into my bare hands. As I struggled to my feet I heard
a nasty crunching sound and a scream, followed by a rumble of falling
rock. I deduced that Emerson had kicked one of our pursuers in the face
The ensuing confusion gave him time to make a more dignified entrance
into the hole than I had managed,- feet first, he dropped down beside
me, and
for a few moments he was too out of breath to do more than pant
heavily.
The space in which we stood was quite small. Immediately behind us the
floor sloped sharply up toward the ceiling. The width was no more than
five or six feet, but from the relative regularity of the side walls
I
deduced it must be the entrance to one of the tombs Emerson had
mentioned.
Emerson got his breath back. "Where is that ridiculous pistol of
yours?" was his first question.
I produced it and handed it to him. Extending his arm out the opening,
he pulled the trigger three times.
"Why are you wasting bullets?" I demanded. "There are only six in the
pistol, and you didn't even— "
"I am summoning assistance," was the brusque reply.
Summoning assistance is not something Emerson often does. In this case
it seemed the only sensible course. The entrance to the tomb-cave was
so narrow and inconveniently located our adversaries could only pass
through it one at a time— at the considerable risk of being knocked on
the head, one at a time, by Emerson, as they did so—but neither could
we get out while they were waiting for us. Emerson
had— for
once— accepted the inevitable, but he obviously did not like it.
"Oh," I said. "Then you came alone?"
"Yes," said Emerson, very softly. Then his voice rose to a roar that
deafened my ears. "You damned
fool woman! What the devil possessed you
to do such an idiotic thing?"
I started back, but I did not go very far, Emerson's hands shot out
and gripped my shoulders. He shook me like a terrier with a rat,
shouting all the while. Distorted by echoes, the words were relatively
unintelligible, but I got the idea.
I do not think I would have hit him if— quite unintentionally, I feel
sure— his violent shaking had not brought my head into painful contact
with the wall behind me. I had lost my hat during our flight and my
hair had come down, so there was nothing to cushion the blow. It hurt
enough to remove any inhibitions
I might have had about hurting him
back. All the same, if I had not been in a state of considerable
emotional excitability (for various reasons) I would not have done it.
Except for playful gestures of quite another nature (which are
irrelevant to this narrative) I had never struck Emerson. It would not
have
been playing the game to strike an opponent who is unable to hit
back.
I certainly did not intend to hit him on the face. My wild blow landed
square on his bandaged cheek
The effect was remarkable. With a long gasping intake of pain (and, I
presume, fury) he shifted his grip. One arm encircled my shoulders, the
other my ribs. Pulling me to him, he pressed his lips to mine. He
had NEVER kissed me like that before. Between the steely strength of
his arm and the pressure of his mouth, my head was bent back at an
angle so acute that I felt my neck must snap. Between the unyielding
barrier of the wall at my back and the hard muscles of his body, mine
was crushed as if in a vise. What with constant practice and assiduous
study, Emerson's natural talents at osculation had been honed to a fine
pitch, but he had never kissed me like THAT before (And I certainly
hoped he had never kissed anyone ELSE like that before.) My senses were
not gently wooed, they were assaulted, mastered, overcome.
When at last he let me go I would have fallen had it not been for the
wall against which I leaned. As the roaring of blood in my ears
subsided, I heard other voices, crying out in question and alarm.
Rising
above them all was a voice I took to be that of Cyrus, for it
called my name, though I would scarcely have recognized it otherwise.
"We are here," Emerson shouted through the opening. "Safe and unharmed.
Stand by, I will hand her out."
Then he turned to me. "I beg your pardon," he said quietly. "That was
an unforgivable action for a gentleman— which, despite some
eccentricities of behavior, I like to consider myself. You have my
word
of honor it will never happen again."
I was too shaken to reply, which is probably just as well, for if I
had I would have blurted out what
I was thinking: "Oh, yes, it will—if
have anything to say about it!"
CHAPTER 12
"Once a man has taken refreshment in
your home and a chair in your
sitting room,
you are less likely to pitch him into a pond."
There was nothing for it but to take Cyrus into my confidence.
"It was Kevin O'Connell I had to see," I explained. "I told you he
couid turn up, and so he has Selim delivered a message from him
yesterday."
I sat on a camp stool drinking tea, for I felt myself entitled to a
mild restorative. Emerson, of course,
had immediately returned to work,
Cyrus had not followed him, he now lay sprawled on the rug at my feet
like a fallen warrior, his face hidden in his arms, I nudged him gently
with my toe "What you need,"
I said, "is a nice hot cup of tea."
Cyrus rolled over and sat up. His face was still flushed, though the
livid color it had originally exhibited had faded somewhat. "I have
never been a drinking man," he said, endeavoring to control his voice.
"But I am beginning to understand how a man can be driven to drink.
Never mind the darned tea.
Where is that bottle of brandy?"
He was only joking, of course. I handed him a cup of tea. "Give me the
benefit of your advice, Cyrus. What am I to do about Kevin?"
"Amelia,
you are the most . . . You have an absolutely unparalleled You— you— "
"We have already had that conversation, Cyrus. I said I was sorry to
have worried you, but as you see, it has all turned out for the best.
We have captured Mohammed! One enemy the less! And as soon as his
broken nose heals we can question him and find out who hired him"
"One
down," said Cyrus gloomily. "How many to go? If you are going to take
risks like that to collect
the rest of them, my heart is going to give
way under the strain. Your lip is bleeding again, my dear, I can't
stand the sight of it."
"The hot liquid must have opened the cut," I murmured, pressing my
napkin to my mouth. "It is no
injury incurred in the line of battle,
you know, only a— a bitten lip."
For a moment we were both silent, thinking— I am sure— quite different
thoughts. Then I gave myself
a little shake and said briskly, "Now if
we may return to the subject of Kevin
"I'd like to murder the young rascal," Cyrus muttered. "If it had not
been for him ... All right, Amelia,
all right. Where is he, and what do
you want me to do?"
I explained the situation. "So," I concluded, "we had better be off at
once."
"Now?" Cyrus exclaimed.
"Certainly. If we hurry we can be back before dark. I do not anticipate
another attack so soon, the
men who got away can scarcely have had
time to report the failure of this one. However, it is difficult
walking in the dark."
With a wry smile Cyrus put down his cup and got to his feet. "Are you
going to tell Emerson?"
"No, why should I? I am sure he has already cautioned you not to let me
out of your sight."
"He didn't have to," Cyrus said, no longer smiling. There was no need
for him to say more, his steady regard and firmly set lips proclaimed
his resolution. The removal of the goatee had definitely been an
improvement. He reminded me of those strong, silent sheriffs of whom
one reads in American fiction.
He left me after promising he would be ready to go in five minutes.
I did not require so much time. I put away the tea things and strapped
on my belt,- then I took from my pocket the small object my groping
hands had encountered on the rock-strewn floor of the tomb. My touch
has been trained by years of experience, I had known by the shape of
it that it was not a stone
but an object shaped by man, and the same
trained instinct had prompted me to slip it into my pocket.
It was a ring bezel of cheap faience, like those I had found in the
workmen's village and elsewhere.
Some bore the name of the ruling
pharaoh, others were adorned with the images of different gods. This
was of the second variety. The image was that of Sobek—the crocodile
god.
* * *
Not only Cyrus but two of his men accompanied me this time. All were
armed. It was a needless precaution, I felt sure, but men always enjoy
marching around with weapons and flexing their figurative muscles, and
I saw no reason to deny them this harmless exercise As I had expected,
the journey was without incident, and after hailing Selim, who had come
out of hiding when he saw us, we emerged from the mouth of the wadi and
walked the short distance to the little mud-brick house.
Kevin had certainly made himself comfortable. We found him sitting on a
camel bag in the shade at the front of the house reading a yellowback
novel, a glass in one hand and a cigarette in the other. He pretended
to go on reading until we were almost upon him, then he leapt to his
feet with a theatrical and unconvincing start of surprise.
"Sure an' it's one of those mirages I'm seeing— a vision of loveliness
like the houris in the Moslem paradise! Top o' the afternoon to ye,
Mrs. Emerson, me dear."
As he came to meet me the sun set his hair ablaze and reddened his
sunburned cheeks. Freckles, snub nose, ingratiating grin, wide blue
eyes made up an irresistible picture of a young Irish gentleman— and
roused an irresistible urge in my breast. I did not try to resist it. I
brought my parasol down on his outstretched arm.
"I am not your dear, and that brogue is as false as your professions of
friendship!"
Kevin fell back, rubbing his arm, and Cyrus, unable to hide his smile,
said, "I thought you were going
to use gentle persuasion. If you wanted
the guy beaten up, I could have done that for you."
"Oh, dear," I said, lowering the parasol. "I fear that in the stress of
emotion I lost sight of my object.
Stop cringing, Kevin, I won't hit
you again. Unless you annoy me."
"I certainly would like to avoid doing so," said Kevin earnestly.
"Would it annoy you if I offered you
a chair— or a camel bag, rather?
I'm afraid I have not enough seats for your escort."
Cyrus had already gestured his men to take up positions on either side
of the little structure, where
they could see in all directions. "I'll
stand," he said curtly.
"You remember Mr. Vandergelt, of course," I said to Kevin, taking the
seat he had offered
"Ah, I thought he looked familiar. It has been a good many years, and I
didn't know him at first without his goatee. How do you do, sir?" He
started to offer his hand, Cyrus's frosty stare made him think better
of it. "And how's the professor?" Kevin went on, squatting at my feet.
"Fully recovered, I hope, from his— er— accident?"
"I give you credit, Kevin," I said. "You don't beat around the bush. It
was no accident, as you well
know. The curse of the ancient gods of
Egypt' was how you put it, I believe. Surely your readers must
be tiring of curses."
"Och— I mean, oh, no, ma'am. Readers never tire of mystery and
sensationalism. You and I know better, to be sure, and I'd be glad to
set them straight if I had the facts."
He continued to nurse his arm. I knew full well that Kevin would have
considered a broken arm, much less one that was slightly bruised, as a
fair exchange for the story he wanted, so I was unmoved by his look of
hurt reproach.
"You will be the first to have the facts, I promise, as soon as they
can be made public."
The reprehensible young man gave a crow of delight. "Aha! So there are
facts as yet unknown. Never mind denying it, Mrs. Emerson, and don't be
chewing on that pretty lip of yours, one particular fact, which cannot
fail to capture the imagination of the reading public, is already known
to me, for I spent several enlightening days in Cairo conversing with
mutual friends."
It is an old trick of journalists and other villains to pretend to
knowledge in order to trick the victim into
an admission of it I
laughed lightly. "You are referring, I suppose, to the incident at the
ball. That was a silly joke— "
"Let's not fence, Mrs. E. I am referring to the professor's loss of
memory."
"Curse it," I exclaimed. "The few who knew were sworn to secrecy.
Which— "
"Now you know I can't be giving away my sources." He had me now, and he
knew it. His wide smile
had the impertinent good humor of a wretched
little Irish brownie.
In fact I had a good idea as to who had "spilled the beans," to use an
American colloquialism. The only mutual friend of mine and Kevin's who
knew the truth was Karl von Bork. Kevin's acquaintance with other
archaeologists was superficial and for the most part antagonistic.
Kevin had known Karl since the old days at Baskerville House, when Karl
had won the girl they both wanted, and no doubt it had given Kevin a
great deal of satisfaction to trick the intelligent but unworldly
German into giving away more
than he meant to.
Cyrus, who had listened in silence, now spoke. "It's getting late,
Amelia. Send him away or let me
knock him over the head. My fellows can
hold him prisoner here till you decide— "
"Now let's not be losing our tempers," Kevin exclaimed, his eyes
widening. "Mrs. Emerson, ma'am,
you'd never allow— "
"When the stakes are so high, I might not only allow but encourage such
a solution. I would hate to have Cyrus risk a lawsuit and a good deal
of unpleasant publicity for my— for the sake of friendship, but I would
commit acts even more contemptible to prevent this news from being made
public. I wish I could appeal to your honor, but I fear you have none,
I wish I could trust your word, but I cannot."
With an air of finality, I rose to my feet. Cyrus raised the rifle to
his shoulder.
"He isn't going to shoot you," I explained, as Kevin gave a bleat of
alarm. "At least I don't think he is Cyrus, tell your men to treat him
as gently as possible. I will come by now and then, Kevin, to see how
you are getting on."
Kevin then proved himself the man I had always— despite some evidence
to
the contrary— believed
him to be. He laughed. Considering the
circumstances, it was a fairly convincing imitation of insouciant mirth.
"You win, Mrs. E. I don't think you mean it, but I would rather not
take the chance. What must I do?"
There was really only one solution. If Kevin gave me his word to remain
silent he would be entirely sincere— at the time. Like Ramses, and, I
fear, a good many other people, he could always find a specious excuse
for doing what he had promised not to do if he wanted badly enough to
do it. He had
to be kept in confinement, and the most secure
prison available was the royal wadi itself.
I had to slow my steps to match Kevin's, he was not in such good
training as he ought to have been.
If I had not been so out of temper
with him I would have given him a friendly little lecture on the
advantages of physical fitness. At that time I confined my lecture to
more important matters, and it
was not at all friendly. I concluded by
informing him that if he volunteered any information whatever
to
Emerson (for a flat interdiction seemed the simplest course) I would
never speak to him or communicate with him again.
A look of sadness, a blush of shame spread over the young man's face.
"You may believe it or not,
Mrs. Emerson," he said, in a well-bred
voice without the slightest trace of an accent, "but there are
some
acts too despicable even for me to commit. In our battles of wits we
have been worthy opponents— and I include the professor, who has made a
fool of me as often as I have embarrassed him. I have enjoyed matching
wits with both of you, and although you may not admit it, I think you
have enjoyed
it too. But if I thought any act of mine would cause you
grievous harm of mind or body, no promise of reward, however great,
could induce me to commit it."
"I do believe you," I said. And at that moment, I did.
"Thank you. So, then," said Kevin, in quite his old manner, "how are
you going to explain my presence?"
"That is a difficulty Emerson may not remember you, but his opinion of
journalists is of long standing. You cannot pass as an archaeologist,
you know nothing of excavation."
"I could say my arm was broken," Kevin suggested, giving me a
meaningful look.
"You could have two broken arms and the like number of broken legs.
Emerson would quiz you and
you would betray your ignorance. Ah! I have
it! The perfect answer!"
* * *
"A detective?" Emerson's voice rose on every syllable. "What the devil
do we want a detective for?"
When he put it that way, I was hard-pressed to come up with a sensible
answer. I therefore responded
in a manner I felt certain would distract
him.
"You certainly don't seem to be making much progress in solving our
little mystery. All these
interruptions are getting to be a nuisance."
It was delightful to watch Emerson trying to decide which provocation
to counter first. I did not think he would be able to resist a play on
the word "nuisance," applying it of course to me, but perhaps he was
unable to compose a sufficiently stinging retort on the spur of the
moment. Instead he went on the defensive, which, as I could have told
him, is always a mistake.
"I caught one of the swine, didn't I?"
" 'Caught' is hardly an appropriate word. You shouldn't have kicked him
so hard. He cannot speak intelligibly with his nose and jaw
immobilized, and furthermore— "
Emerson rolled his eyes, threw up his hands and stormed off Kevin, who
had prudently retired to a distance during the discussion, returned and
sat down on the rug at my feet. "He seems quite his old
self. Are you
certain he— "
"I could hardly be mistaken. Remember what I told you. One slip of the
tongue and I will let Cyrus
deal with you as he proposed. And don't
forget to call me Miss Peabody."
It might have been the sunset glow that softened the young journalist's
features, but his voice was
equally subdued as he said, "That must be
the unkindest cut of all, ma'am. How he could forget a
woman like
yourself— "
"I do not want your sympathy, Kevin. I want— I insist upon— your
cooperation."
"You have it, Mrs. . . . Miss Peabody. I suppose you have no objection
to my chatting with the others— Abdullah, for instance? After all," he
added winsomely, "if I am supposed to be a detective I ought to
question people."
The point was well taken. Now that it was too late, I wished I had
thought of a different persona for Kevin— that of an illiterate
deaf-mute, for instance. "Oh, what a tangled web we weave, when first
we practice to deceive!" Taking my baffled silence for consent, Kevin
wandered off, hands in his pockets,
a cheerful whistle issuing from his
lips, and I considered this latest tangle and whither it might lead.
Kevin already knew the one fact I had been most anxious to keep from
him. He seemed still to be in ignorance of other equally important
facts, and these I was determined to keep from him at all costs. Kevin
would fall on the story of the Lost Oasis like a dog on a ripe, smelly
bone, for it was just the sort
of fantastic tale in which he
specialized. The slightest hint would be enough to set him off, he
would not bother to substantiate it, for fiction was as good as truth
by the standards of his profession. Rapidly I ran through the list of
persons present to reassure myself there was no danger of exposure from
any of them
Emerson knew only what I had told him of the matter and he was not
inclined to believe that. In any case, Kevin was the last person with
whom he would have discussed the subject. Cyrus's discretion I did not
doubt. Rene and Charles were unwitting, as was Abdullah. Bertha
maintained her "master" had told her nothing. If she lied . . . well,
then she had every reason to remain reticent on the subject. An
admission of knowledge she claimed not to have would prove her false,
and would betray the secret
her master was no more anxious than we to
have spread abroad.
My reasoning was irrefutable. Relieved of that anxiety (and would the
others were so easily disposed
of!) I went to have a look at my latest patient.
One of Cyrus's men stood on guard outside the shelter that had been set
up for Mohammed. There was no need, the wretch was so full of laudanum
he would not have roused if someone had set fire to his bed. I hated to
waste my medical supplies on such a vile specimen, but he had been in
acute pain and even if mercy had not tempered my wrath I could not have
set his broken nose while he was writhing
and screaming. His jaw, I
thought, was only bruised, but since I could not be absolutely certain
I had wound it round with bandages too.
He was a dreadful sight as he lay there on the pile of rugs. Not even
Christian charity and the ethics of the profession of which I count
myself a formally unqualified but able practitioner could have forced
me to touch the ragged, flea-infested robe or bathe the filthy body.
The cast I had applied to his nose jutted out like the grotesque beak
of some mythical monster, coarse black hairs bristled at odd angles
from above and below the bandages covering most of the lower half of
his face. A slit of white glistened under each eyelid. His mouth gaped
open, displaying brown, rotting teeth. The light from my lantern cast
shadows that intensified every ugly feature and made the open cavern of
his mouth look like a black hole.
I took his pulse and listened to his breathing. There was nothing more
I could do, only time, and a good deal of luck, would complete the
cure. I prayed most sincerely for his recovery, but I am sorry to say
that Christian charity had very little to do with that prayer.
When I emerged, dusk was far advanced, but the light of the lantern I
carried showed a retreating form. The flutter of draperies betrayed her
identity, none of the men walked as she did. I had not heard her
address the guard, so she must have turned away as soon as she realized
I was within.
I hurried after her. "Bertha! Wait, I wish to speak with you. What were
you doing there?"
Her posture was submissive— hands clasped, head bowed. In a low voice
she said, "I would help you nurse the man, Sitt. There is not much I
can
do to show my gratitude, but I am skilled at women's work."
It was as if she had deliberately cast off her European heritage.
Voice, manner, speech were more and more Egyptian with every passing
day. Naturally I found this extremely irritating.
"There is no work a woman cannot do," I said. "We must have a little
chat about that one day, Bertha. Just now you can help me best by
continuing to search your memory. Anything you recall may be of
importance, even if it seems meaningless to you."
"I am trying, Sitt," she murmured.
"And don't call me Sitt! Miss Peabody will do, if you cannot twist your
tongue around my given name. Come away now. The injured man is in no
need of services you can provide."
A little gasp of what sounded like amusement issued from her lips. It
must have been a stifled cough,
I concluded, for nothing I had said
could have provoked laughter
By the time we assembled for the evening meal, Kevin had already
ingratiated himself with Rene and Charlie. I did not know how he had
managed it with Rene, but he had won Charlie's heart by professing
a
passion for motor cars.
"They are the wave of the future," Kevin exclaimed enthusiastically.
"Daimler's internal-combustion engine— "
"But have you seen the Panhard?" Charlie interrupted. "The sliding-gear
transmission—"
They went on talking unintelligibly about things like clutches and
gears, while Bertha hovered at Rene's shoulder and Emerson glowered
impartially on all of us and I ... I looked at Emerson. It seemed to
make him rather nervous, but I saw no reason why that should deter me.
He had hardly spoken to me since that thrilling encounter in the tomb,
except when the loss of his
temper over the advent of Kevin overcame
his reticence. At first I had been a trifle discouraged by his
apology and ensuing silence, I am something of a romantic myself, and
I had hoped that that passionate embrace would burst the bonds that
held his memory in thrall. Schadenfreude had said it would not in
fact, he had warned me, most vehemently, against applying any such
procedure. Apparently the doctor had been correct.
However, as I thought back over the incident, I felt it offered some
encouragement. It might be interpreted as marking a step forward in the
relationship I was, according to the doctor's instructions, endeavoring
to re-create. Annoyance had replaced Emerson's initial indifference,
he was now sufficiently interested to follow after me and risk himself
to save me. That he would have done the same for
Abdullah or any of the
other men I was prepared to admit, but no combination of relief and
anger would have prompted him to behave to Abdullah as he had behaved
to me.
However. The kiss might have meant less than I hoped. As I had good
cause to know, Emerson is a hot-blooded individual. The mere proximity
of a female who, if not irresistibly beautiful, has been regarded by
some as worthy of admiration, might have been sufficient to inspire
such a response in
a man who was under considerable emotional stress.
Dare I admit the truth? I see no reason why I should not, since these
journals will not be read by other eyes until I can find a publisher
worthy of them (a more difficult procedure than I had believed) and
then not until after considerable revision. I hoped and prayed
Emerson's memory might be restored, but what
I really wanted restored
was his love for me, whether it came by recollection or by being forged
anew. That marriage of true minds, based on mutual trust and respect
(and on another kind of attraction whose importance I would be the last
to deny) was all in all to me. By one means or another I meant to
regain it, and I did not really care how it was achieved. It might be a
little difficult to explain to a man who has just proposed marriage
for, as he believes, the first time, that he already has an
eleven-year-old son. It would be an even greater shock to receive the
full impact of Ramses all at once, instead of getting used to him
a
little at a time. However, I could and would deal with greater
difficulties than that, if only . . . So my emotions swung back and
forth like the pendulum of a clock, now rising, now falling. So
absorbed was I in my thoughts, and in contemplation of Emerson's
splendid, scowling physiognomy, that I was unaware of Cyrus's approach
until a gentle cough made me look up.
"A penny for your thoughts," he said. "Or whatever amount you ask; they
must be distressing, to judge by your face."
"Only confusing," I said. "But I will straighten them out, Cyrus, never
fear. Once Mohammed is able to speak, we may be on the way to a
solution of our present difficulty. It is a pity his nose and mouth
took the brunt of the blow."
Emerson, who had been openly eavesdropping, took this for another
not-so-veiled criticism. Scowling even more fiercely, he rose and
started to stalk away.
"Don't go far," I called. "Dinner will be served shortly."
There was no reply, not even a grunt.
"I have something that may cheer you up," Cyrus said. "My servant has
been collecting the mail, as
usual, he brought the most recent letters
here this evening."
"All this way?" I took the packet he handed me. "Cyrus, you are the
most thoughtful of men."
"Well, I figured you'd be keen to know what's going on back in jolly
old England. I'm a little curious myself, so . ."
"Of course. I have no secrets from you, Cyrus. But I see dinner is
ready, I will wait to read this
particular epistle until afterward, I
think Not only is it very bulky, but I fear it might spoil my appetite."
From Cyrus's admiring look I could see he took this as a demonstration
of British phlegm. In fact I had
a cowardly reluctance to read Ramses's
latest literary offering, which I expected would only tell me a number
of distressing things I could do absolutely nothing about. If anything
serious had occurred,
Walter would have telegraphed.
So after a meal no one except Kevin seemed anxious to eat, we
dispersed. Emerson had not joined us, I concluded he had dined with
Abdullah and the others. At my invitation, Cyrus followed me to my tent.
There were two letters from Chalfont in the packet. I recognized
Evelyn's dainty, precise handwriting
on one, and decided to save it for
a treat— or an antidote— after I had read Ramses's.
"Dearest
Mama and Papa. I am sorry to tell you that Gargery is still
not a hero. However, we have another heroine.
"I never thought Aunt Evelyn had
it in her. It has been a salutary if
humbling experience for
me and will teach me, I hope, to Question even
more rigorously the false stereotypes our society holds about the
behavior and character of females. I had always believed myself free of
such
prejudices and certainly I ought to have been, with Mama's example of
abnormality always
before me. How curiously the human mind operates! It
seems to be able to dismiss any evidence that conflicts, not only with
its own desires, but with preconceived beliefs so deeply seated and
unconsciously instilled that they are not recognized as irrational.
Examined in the cold light
of reason ..."
Before turning the page— which ended with the last phrase I have
quoted— I took a firm grip on my temper. It would serve no purpose to
lose it, since the object of my wrath was out of reach. He must have
been reading the articles on psychology I had strictly forbidden him.
Or
had I? I had certainly
meant to, since some of the theories expressed
were far too shocking for the innocent minds of children. However, I
could not be certain. Telling Ramses what not to do was a
time-consuming process, and it was almost impossible to keep up with
him because he was always thinking of new atrocities to commit.
Realizing that I was letting my mind stray, just as Ramses had done, I
went on reading.
".
. . many of these beliefs do not stand up for a moment. They are, in
fact, no more than
mindless superstition. Whence, then, do they come? I
confess I have not yet found an answer.
It is particularly galling to
discover them in a mind as rational as I have always considered
mine to
be.
"I would like to discuss this
matter with you, dearest Mama and Papa,
for it interests me a
great deal, but perhaps this is not the
appropriate time, for you must be wondering what particular incident
prompted my speculations.
"You may recall that in my last
letter I described the curious incident
of the dogs that barked
in the nighttime. Since barking was the extent
of their assistance I determined, as I believe
I mentioned, that I
would take steps to provide a more effective variety of watch-animal.
You see, I had a hideous foreboding ..."
I had one too. "Oh, no," I gasped.
"What?" Cyrus cried, hardly less agitated than I.
"...
a hideous foreboding that we had not seen the last of nocturnal
invasions. I felt certain it would be impossible to convince Uncle
Walter of the logic of my decision, so I had to carry it
out myself, and it
was cursed inconvenient having to wait for everyone to go to sleep
before I crept out to let ... [My voice broke.] ... let ... the lion .
. . out of . . ."
"By the Almighty!" Cyrus exclaimed "For pity's sake, go on, Amelia, I
can't stand the suspense!"
".
. . its cage, and then waking up at dawn to put it back before some
other member of the household encountered it. Nefret very kindly
assisted
Again emotion overcame me. "Another one," I said hollowly. "I thought
one was bad enough, and
now . . . Forgive me, Cyrus. I will endeavor
not to break down again.
".
. . assisted me on two occasions she said I was a growing boy and
needed my rest. I hardly need say, Mama and Papa, that I took this
without resentment, in the spirit in which it was
meant.
"Naturally
I had shut up the dogs and warned Bob and Jerry to lock
themselves into the lodge while the lion was out. They agreed this was
a sensible procedure.
<>"Uncle
Walter has insulted me mortally. His remarks on the subject of
the lion were uncalled
<>for, unfair, and
extremely
rude, particularly in
view of the fact that my foresight prevented—
<>or helped to prevent, at
least— an incident that might have proved disastrous.
<>
<>"Having anticipated such
an
occurrence, I was the first to wake when
the piercing screams of
<>a female in the last
extremity
of terror,
mingled with the growls of a large feline, rent the night!
<>I had been
sleeping in my clothes, of course, in order to be fully prepared and
ready for action,
<>it was the work of a
moment to
snatch up the weapon I
had put at hand (a poker from the fireplace] and rush down the stairs.
<>
<>"The moon cast a frosty
light
upon the lawn (which was, in fact,
covered with frost, the night being cold). The forms of the great
jungle beast and its prey stood out in sharp outline.
<>Hastening toward
the group, poker at the ready, I beheld a somewhat disconcerting sight.
There was just enough light for me to make out the features of the
individual lying supine between the lion's paws. With a start of
chagrin, I recognized her as Ellis, Aunt Evelyn's new maid.
<>
<>"In fact, the lion would
probably not have harmed her. To be sure, it was growling, but the
sound held a note of inquiry rather than
ferocity. I had the distinct impression it did not know what to do
next. Ellis had swooned, which was no doubt a sensible move on her part.
<>
<>"While I was thinking
how best
to proceed, I saw Nefret running toward
me, her little bare feet noiseless on the grass. Her unbound hair
streamed out behind her, silver-gold in the pale light, her light
nightdress billowed about her slender limbs. She was a vision of. . .
[Something had been scratched out here. Ramses went on.] . . . of
womanly efficiency. Her knife was in her hand.
<>
<>"With her assistance I
persuaded the lion to abandon his new toy.
Grumbling under his breath
he ambled off, with Nefret's fingers twisted
affectionately in his mane. The literary allusions
that occurred to me
will doubtless occur to you, Mama, as well, so I will not take up paper
describing them.
<>
<>"I set to work restoring
Ellis
to consciousness, but I had not had time
to slap her more than
once before I heard a considerable racket coming
from the house. I had been expecting some reaction from that Quarter, I
was surprised it had not occurred before, but I suppose the
actions I
have described had taken only a few minutes. Astonishing, is it not,
how quickly
time passes when one is engaged in interesting activities?
<>
<>"The sounds I heard
suggested
to me something rather more serious than
the indignation of
Uncle Walter at being awakened. These cries were
high-pitched— female, I deduced. So abandoning Ellis, I hastened to
ascertain their origin.
<>
<>"As you know, the
majority of
the windows in the castle are narrow and
small. Only the sitting room has been modernized; its windows open onto
the rose garden. It was from this room that
the noise issued, and as I
came through the garden I was distressed to note that the windows
stood
open. The room was dark and at first I could not make out what was
going on, rapid movements, gasps and exclamations of pain and exertion
were all the evidence available to me. Then the combatants— for such
they were— approached the window. The poker fell from my palsied hand
when I identified them.
<>
<>"One was a man, a
hulking
fellow wearing a short fustian jacket and a
cap pulled low over his eyes. He held a cudgel or thick stick, with
which be was warding off the blows directed at him
by . . .
<>
<>"But no doubt you have
anticipated me. Her nightcap had come off and
hung by its strings, her braided hair fell over one shoulder. Her face
was set in a ferocious snarl. Quite unlike her
normal sweet look, and the<> <>instrument with which she was belaboring
the cowering villain
appeared—and indeed proved—to be a parasol.
<>
<>"I recovered myself and
my
poker and rushed to her assistance. She was
not in need of it, but
the rascal might have got away from her if I had
not tripped him up. Together we subdued him. Tearing off the sash of
her dressing gown, Aunt Evelyn bade me bind his arms.
<>
<>"It was at this point
that
Uncle Walter arrived on the scene, followed
by Gargery and Bob, both
of whom carried lanterns. They had been
wandering around the grounds, uncertain as to where the action was
taking place. (Wandering gives an inaccurate impression, in fact, for
it was obvious from Uncle Walter's appearance that he had been running
as fast as he could, though
to little effect. Like Papa, he does not
like being waked up suddenly and is slow to react.)
<>
<>"Bob lit the lamps and
Gargery
finished binding the arms and legs of
our burglar. This was at
my direction, I am sorry to say that Uncle
Walter lost his head completely. I have never seen
him behave so
erratically. He rushed at Aunt Evelyn and shook her very hard. Then he
embraced her as fiercely as ever I have seen . . . [Another phrase was
scratched out. I knew what it must have been, though ] . . . others do.
Then he shook her again. Strangely enough, Aunt Evelyn
did not seem to
mind.
<>
<>"I do not have another
sheet
of paper, and cannot get one, since Uncle
Walter has confined me
to my room until further notice, so I am forced
to be brief. Ellis was on her way to meet a friend, as she explained,
when the lion intercepted her. (Rose says people like Ellis manage to
find friends wherever they go. It is an endearing characteristic, I
think.) The burglar claimed he
was looking for valuables. Inspector
Cuff has taken him off to London. Inspector Cuff is a very taciturn
person. All he would say, before he left with his prisoner, was, 'I
think I can be of
greater use to you elsewhere, Master Ramses. You will
hear from me in due course.' As for
Aunt Evelyn, she says she has had
the parasol for quite a long time. I have never seen her carry
it. It
is like yours, Mama, very heavy and plain, not her usual little ruffled
ones. I wonder why
she would have something like that if she never
expected to need it? But that is another matter
we can discuss at a
future time.
<>
<>"My paper tells me I
must
stop. Your loving son, Ramses.
<>
<>"P.S. I know that Papa
is very
busy with his excavations, but it would
comfort me a great deal
to receive a message in his own hand."
<>
<>
Cyrus and I sat in silence for a few moments. Then he said, "Excuse me,
Amelia. I will be right back."
When he returned he was carrying a bottle of brandy. I had a little
sip. Cyrus had a little more.
"Comment," I said, "would be futile. Now let me read Evelyn's version."
But Evelyn made no reference to the events Ramses had described. After
affectionate greetings and assurances that all were well, she explained
that her chief reason for writing was to clarify in her own mind what
might lie behind the mysterious events that had recently occurred.
My own poor powers of reasoning are so inferior to yours, dear Amelia,
that I hesitate even to express thoughts that must long ago have been
apparent to your clear, decisive mind. Yet I will venture to do so, in
the hope that by sheer chance I may have stumbled on some notion that
has not occurred to you.
I began as I believe you might
have done, by asking how these terrible
people could have learned the secret you were so careful to conceal.
The story you gave out was plausible, so our enemies must have had
sources of information not known to the public. Several possibilities
have
occurred to me, I list them in the neat order you would approve.
1. One of us might unwittingly
have betrayed information that could
only have come from a visit to the place mentioned by Mr. Forth. You
would never be indiscreet enough to do this, dear Amelia, search my
conscience as I might, I can think of no occasion on which I might have
done so. I do not wish to ask Walter, for the very idea that he might
be responsible, however innocently, for the troubles that have befallen
us would break his noble heart. Yet I wonder: Did he or Radcliffe speak
in the articles they have written since your return, or to colleagues
in archaeology, of things an expert might recognize as firsthand
knowledge? The articles have not yet been published, but surely they
have been read by the editors of the journals at least?
2. One of the officers at the
military camp may have had more
information about the matter than you realize. Had Mr. Forthright
befriended any of them? Had they been shown the map? You mentioned that
there were compass readings on it. I know little of such matters, but
it would
seem to me that such precise details would arouse interest and
intelligent speculation, particularly after you came back to Gebel
Barkal with Nefret.
3. I hesitate to mention this,
for it seems even more foolish than my
other silly ideas, but I cannot help recalling the young man Nefret met
at Miss Mclntosh's school. An individual whose
curiosity had already
been aroused might seek her out with the intention of questioning her
about her experiences. As we all know, it is very difficult to avoid
slips of the tongue, and an innocent child is particularly unwary. I
wonder— I can put it no more strongly than that— I wonder if that
fleeting acquaintance might not have been renewed, or an attempt made
to do so,
if she had not already given him what he hoped to get? At my
request she performed the Invocation to Isis for us one evening. (Do
not fear, dear Amelia, I made certain she thought it
was only for our
amusement.) Walter could not contain his excitement. He recognized some
of
the phrases of the song, which he said were from an ancient ritual.
And certainly no one could suppose that she learned that dance, or
would have been permitted to perform it, at a Christian mission!
So I questioned her, with equal
tact, I assure you, about the young man
she called Sir Henry.
He had thick waving black hair, parted down the
middle, a cavalry-style mustache, gray or pale-blue eyes and long
lashes. He was of medium height and slender build, with a fair
complexion and a rather pointed chin and narrow nose.
I know this description is too
vague to be of much use (especially
since, if my silly idea is right,
a disguise might have been employed}.
However, I pass it on to you because another and very alarming thought
has occurred to me. This person's failure to pursue the acquaintance
with
Nefret might stem from the fact that he is no longer in England.
Your recent communications
have attempted to reassure us, dear Amelia,
but I know you very well, and I sense a formality
and stiffness that
suggests you are concealing something from us. I would not urge you to
greater candor, I appreciate the tender affection that makes you
reluctant to add to our concern. (Though I might add, my dear friend
and sister, that speculation often conjures up fears far
worse than the
truth.) Logic also forces upon me the conclusion that if the children
have been threatened, you and Radcliffe must be in even greater peril.
Pray take care! Curb your courageous propensity to rush headlong into
danger! And try to restrain Radcliffe— though
I know that is no easy
task. Remind him, as I remind you, that there are those to whom your
health and safety are as important as their own. Chief among them is.
Your loving sister,
Evelyn.
Tears blurred my vision as I read the last lines. How blessed I was in
such affection! And how I had underestimated Evelyn! Ramses's lecture
on preconceptions had not been directed at me (at least I
trusted it
had not), but everything he had written about himself could as well be
applied to me. And I,
of all people, ought to have known better. Had I
not seen Evelyn coolly confront the hideous mummy? Had I not heard her
accept an offer that made every nerve quiver with revulsion in the hope
that by
doing so she could save those she loved? I was as guilty of
prejudice against my own sex as the blind, biased men I had condemned.
Evelyn had not said a word about her adventure. Instead she had bent
all her efforts on trying to find
an answer to the mystery. The
analysis was brilliant,- the mind that had composed it was as keen as
my own.
Cyrus had been rereading Ramses's letter. Sensitive to every change in
my expression, he said gently, "What is it, Amelia? Some bad news
Ramses did not mention? I find it difficult to believe he could or
would omit anything, but— "
"In that assumption you are correct. Evelyn is far more considerate of
my feelings than is my son." I folded the letter and slipped it into my
pocket. Let it rest there, against my heart, to remind me of my good
fortune and my shame!"
"I hope you will forgive me for not sharing this with you, Cyrus," I
went on. "It was the tender expressions of affection it contains that
brought the tears to my eyes."
I was more than ready to follow his advice that I seek my couch, for it
had been a tiring day. Never has fatigue prevented me from doing my
duty, however. I first inspected my patient, whose condition was
unchanged, and then went in search of Bertha. The sooner I could find a
suitable establishment for her, the better, it really was a nuisance
having to play chaperone as well as perform my other duties.
Somehow I was not surprised to find her sitting by the dying fire,
talking with Kevin. Knowing he would be all the more determined to
speak to her if I made a mystery of her identity, I had simply
described
her as another victim of the villain who had attacked
Emerson. I had expected Kevin would seek her out. No journalist could
resist the mysteriously veiled, seductively gliding figure, and
victimized women are particularly popular subjects. I could have
composed the heading for his story myself, the words "love-slave" would
undoubtedly appear. In the private pages of this journal I will admit
that I was willing to throw poor Bertha to this Hibernian wolf of the
press if her story
would distract him from other
aspects of the case.
However, there was no reason why I should go out of my way to
accommodate Kevin, so I interrupted the discussion and sent Bertha off
to bed. "You had better do the same, Kevin. We rise at dawn and it will
be a long day."
"Not for me," said Kevin with a lazy smile. "We detectives keep our own
hours. Wandering to and fro, questioning this one and that—"
"You will not be wandering. You will be with me, so I can keep my eye
on you."
"Ah well, it was worth a try," Kevin murmured. "While I am with you,
Mrs.— Miss Peabody, you can
tell me all about your daring rescue of the
professor. It's bound to come out, you know," he added with
a
challenging smile. "Even now some of my more enterprising colleagues
are interviewing various citizens of Luxor. From what I have heard, you
cut rather a wide swath. Wouldn't you rather have the true facts
published than the exaggerated fantasies some of my associates— "
"Oh, be quiet and go to bed," I snapped.
He went off, crooning some sentimental Irish melody in a way that was
calculated to annoy me. When
I reached my own tent, Bertha was already
asleep, or pretending to be. I fully intended to ask her what she had
talked about with Kevin, but at that time I had other matters on my
mind. Having sought my couch, I had at last leisure to consider what
Evelyn had proposed.
Her first two suggestions I had myself considered. The third, I
confess, I had not, and chagrin threatened to overcome me when I
realized how stupid I had been. That a young gentleman should appear at
the school on the very day Nefret was expected there, and that he
should insist on meeting some of the scholars—it was highly suspicious,
and I could not think why I had not seen it at the time Was it possible
that maternal instincts I had never supposed I possessed had clouded my
normally clear intellect?
Highly unlikely, I decided.
Evelyn's incisive outline had made clear to me something else I ought
to have realized much earlier. No single suspicious circumstance but a
combination of many— a piling up of confirmatory evidence— would be
strong enough to induce an enemy to act with such violence and
persistence. He might have been alerted in the first place by
remembering a conversation with Willoughby Forth, who appeared to have
babbled to every archaeologist in Egypt. Skillful questioning of the
officers of the Sudan Expeditionary Force would add
additional evidence. Greatly as I shrank from holding Walter culpable
in the least degree, I had had to caution him more than once to be
careful of appearing to know more than he should. He had several
friendly rivals in the philological game, had he dropped hints to Frank
Griffith, or another, that he was about to make a miraculous
breakthrough in the decipherment of Meroitic? Griffith was honest, I
had never suspected him,- but he might have spoken of the matter to
someone else.
Having by such means established a possibility, the villain would seek
further confirmation— and what better source than Nefret herself? She
was not nearly so naive and helpless as Evelyn believed, but Evelyn's
view was shared— as Nefret had herself pointed out— by society. There
were a number of ways in which an acquaintance thus begun might be
continued, if all else failed, the good old reliable "accident outside
the gates of the park" might serve How surprised the injured young
gentleman would
be to recognize the charming girl he had met at Miss
Mclntosh's! How reluctant he would be to impose
on our kindness! How
gratefully he would accept my ministrations, the friendly attentions of
the dear children!
It had not been necessary. Evelyn had hit the nail on the head. I had
seen Nefret perform the Invocation to Isis, and there was no way on
earth she could have learned it from a family of missionaries, or even
in a native village while under the supervision of such a family. It
would take a trained scholar to recognize its origins— but that was
true
of the other evidence as well.
Yet still our deadly foe had held his hand until he discovered the
final proof— objects, artifacts, that
could only have come from a place
such as Willoughby Forth had postulated. He must have searched
our
rooms in Cairo and found the scepters. The attacks on us had not begun
until after we had been
in the city for several days.
Evelyn— my dear, sweet Evelyn, whose intelligence I had so sadly
underrated— had been right in
every particular. The villain was no
longer in England. He was in Egypt— in our very camp. I had
known there
was a traitor among us. Now I knew who he was.
* * *
"Charlie?!"
I had been waiting for Cyrus when he emerged from his tent next
morning—at a discreet distance, of course, lest I embarrass him by
inadvertently observing his ablutions. The pleased smile with which he
had greeted me vanished as he listened to my explanation, and the name
burst from him with the force
of incredulity.
"He is new with you this season, Cyrus. You had not known him before."
"No, but ... I know his father, his family. I wouldn't hire a fellow
without— "
"He may be the true Charles H. Holly. Engineers and archaeologists are
no more immune to greed
than members of other professions."
"May be the true . . . Excuse me, Amelia, sometimes I have a doggone
hard time following your train
of thought. You surely don't suspect
Charlie of being your Master Criminal in disguise?"
"It is possible, but unlikely. I doubt that Sethos would dare face me
again. I could not be in his presence for long without penetrating any
disguise he might assume." I added, with some asperity— for his
skeptical expression annoyed me— "My reasons for suspecting Charles
have
nothing to do with Sethos. He fits the description of a man whom I have
reason to believe— "
"Uh-huh. So you said. You want to run through that again, my dear? I am
afraid I didn't follow you
the first time."
So I ran through it again, and finished by reading the description
Evelyn had given.
"But— but," Cyrus stuttered, "that description doesn't match Charlie in
any particular. It sounds more
like Rene. Not that I believe he— "
"That is the point, Cyrus. 'Sir Henry' was obviously disguised He would
take care to change those
aspects of his appearance when he came to
us— the color of his hair, the mustache The long chin and narrow nose
match Charlie's, and Charlie is approximately the same age."
"Jimminy," Cyrus muttered. "How many men that age have long chins and
narrow noses, do you suppose? Two million? Five million?"
"But only one of them is here," I cried impatiently. "And one of us is
a spy for Sethos! Consider that
not only was our food drugged, but that
the ambush set for me yesterday must have been arranged by one who
anticipated I would follow that path. He must have read the note from
Kevin and realized I would respond as soon as I was able."
"An assumption that would certainly be made by anyone who had the honor
of your acquaintance,"
said Cyrus, stroking his chin. "My dear girl, I
am not denying there may be something in what you say.
But you would be the first to agree I cannot condemn a man on such
equivocal evidence."
"I am not suggesting we hold a marsupial court— "
"I beg your pardon?" said Cyrus, staring.
"It is an American term, I believe? Having to do with illegal trials?"
"Oh. Kangaroo court, you mean?"
"No doubt. You know me better, I hope, than to suppose I would leap to
unwarranted conclusions or subvert the principles of British justice In
fact, I am inclined to agree that we ought to let him go on believing
he is not under suspicion. Sooner or later he will betray himself and
then we will have him!
And perhaps his leader as well. An excellent
idea, Cyrus. He will have to be watched closely, of course."
"I guess I could manage that," Cyrus said slowly.
"I am glad we are in agreement. Now go and get your coffee, Cyrus. You
appear a trifle sluggish this morning No offense taken, I hope?"
"None in the world, my dear. You will join me for breakfast, I hope?"
"First I must see how Mohammed is getting on. I confess I find myself
postponing that task, his very presence— not to mention the varied
insect life that pervades his person— makes my skin crawl. And don't
suggest, Cyrus dear, that I leave the disgusting duty to another. That
is not my way. Besides, it is possible that he may be able to speak
today and I trust no one else to question him."
"I long ago gave up trying to talk you out of anything you had set your
mind on," said Cyrus, smiling. "Your sense of duty is as remarkable as
your boundless energy. Do you want me to come with you?"
I assured him it was not necessary, and he went off, shaking his head.
It had become a habit of his recently.
I stopped outside the shelter to speak with the guard He was one of
Cyrus's crew, a stocky, dark-skinned fellow with the aquiline features
that spoke of Berber or Touareg blood. Like the desert men, he wore a
khafiya or headcloth instead of a turban. He assured me he had looked
in on Mohammed at regular intervals during the night and had found no
change.
Yet as soon as I pushed the curtained hanging aside I realized that
there had been a change—the most final change of all. Mohammed lay in
the same position in which I had last seen him, flat on his back, with
his mouth ajar and his eyes half-closed. But now no breath of air
stirred the bristling hairs of his beard, and blood had issued from his
mouth to stain the bandages around his jaws a rusty brown.
"Superstition
has its practical uses."
"Sitt Hakim," said a voice behind me. "Will you admit this case is
beyond even your skill?"
It was Emerson, of course, speaking in the annoying drawl that
indicates he is trying to be sarcastic.
I turned, holding the curtain
aside.
"He is dead," I said. "How did you know?"
"It requires very little medical expertise to realize that a man cannot
live long with a knife in his heart."
I had not seen the shaft of the knife till then, I was a good deal more
shaken than I would have admitted, especially to Emerson. "Not his
heart," I said. "The knife is in the center of his chest. Many people
make that mistake. The blade may have pierced a lung. A man in his
condition would not survive even a slight wound."
Squaring my shoulders, I started toward Mohammed. Emerson pushed me
rudely aside, and bent over
the body. I made no objection. Revolting as
Mohammed had been in life, he was even more disgusting
dead. After a few moments I heard a nasty sucking sound and Emerson
straightened, the knife in his hand.
"He has only been dead for a few hours. The blood has dried, but there
is no sign of stiffening in the
jaw or extremities. The knife is the
kind most of the men carry, with no distinctive features."
"We must search the place," I said firmly. "Let me pass. The killer may
have left some clue."
Emerson took my arm and pushed me out of the shelter. "When you own a
dog you are not supposed
to bark, Peabody. Where is your tame
detective?"
He was sitting by the fire with the others, calmly drinking tea
Surprise— and that short-lived— rather than horror was the general
response to Emerson's terse announcement that Mohammed was no more.
Charlie appeared to be as astonished as anyone, which only confirmed my
suspicions. If a spy and a traitor does not learn how to counterfeit
emotion convincingly, he does not last long in his profession.
Cyrus was the only one to comprehend instantly the seriousness of the
blow "Doggone it! Don't feel
bad, my dear, you did all you could. A
serious injury like that— "
"Even the great Sitt Hakim's talents could not have prevailed in this
case," said Emerson. He had been holding the knife behind him, now he
tossed it onto the ground. "Mohammed was murdered— and not
by me. In the
dark of night the deed was done, with that knife."
The others eyed the weapon as if it had been a snake coiled to strike
Charlie was the first to speak
"Then then he was deliberately silenced!
This is horrible! It means there is a traitor among us!"
He did it very well, I must say.
"We knew that," Emerson said impatiently. "And now that it is too late,
we know that Mohammed
was a danger to him or to his leader. How the
devil did the killer get past your guard, Vandergelt?"
"I am going to find out pretty quick," said Cyrus grimly.
"Mr. O'Connell will wish to accompany you," said Emerson, as Cyrus got
to his feet
Kevin was not at all anxious to volunteer. "At least let me finish my
breakfast," he pleaded. "If the
fellow is dead, he can wait a few more
minutes."
"You lack the dogged zeal that is supposed to characterize your
profession, Mr. O'Connell," said Emerson. "I had expected you would be
on fire to examine the body, study the ghastly face, probe
the wound, search the bloodstained garments, crawl around the floor
looking for
clues. The fleas and
lice and flies won't bother a man of your hardened
nerve, but do watch out for scorpions."
Kevin's face had gone a trifle green. "Stop that, Emerson," I ordered.
"Come, Kevin. I will go with you."
"Chacun a son gout," remarked
Emerson, taking a chair and reaching for
the teapot.
As I had expected, Kevin was of no help at all. After one glance at
Mohammed's motionless form he hastily turned his back and began
scribbling in his notebook while I crawled around the floor and carried
out the other actions Emerson had suggested. I did allow myself to omit
one, probing the wound was not necessary, since the stains on the knife
blade were sufficient indication of how deeply it had penetrated.
While I searched for clues Cyrus was interrogating the guard. I heard
most of what was said, for Cyrus's voice was rather loud and the
guard's voice rose in volume as he defended himself. He stoutly denied
that anyone had approached during the night. Yes, he might have dozed
off, no one had relieved him, and a man could not do without
sleep
indefinitely. But his body had blocked the entrance to the shelter and
he swore he would have sprung instantly awake if anyone had tried to
pass him.
"Never mind, Cyrus," I called. "The killer did not enter that way. Come
here and see."
The slit in the canvas wall would have escaped my notice had I not been
searching for something of the sort. It had been made by a very sharp
knife— probably the same one that had penetrated Mohammed's scrawny
chest.
"The killer would not even have to enter," I said. "Only insert an arm
and strike. He must have known exactly where Mohammed's pallet was
placed. And I had left a lamp burning, so that the guard could
see
inside. It was a waste of time looking for clues here Let us see if he
left footprints outside."
But of course he had not. The ground was too hard to take prints.
I dismissed Kevin, who was very glad to go. Taking Cyrus's arm, I held
him back and let Kevin draw ahead.
"Now will you take the precaution I suggested?" I hissed. "Charlie must
be put under restraint! You
were willing to take such measures with
Kevin— "
"And still am," Cyrus said grimly. "Archaeology is not the only
profession whose members may be seduced by greed."
I believe I gasped aloud. "You don't mean— "
"Who would know better than the man who sent it that you had received
an invitation you wouldn't resist? I thought from the start there was
something funny about that, a die-hard like O'Connell would
be more
likely to sneak up on you than ask you to come to him. He practically
goaded you into bringing him here, and now you see what has
happened— the first night after he arrived."
"No," I said. "Surely not Kevin!"
It was not the first time those words had burst from my lips. Kevin
could not have heard them, but at
that very moment he turned his head
and looked back. It might have been my overstrained nerves, it might
have been the distorted angle at which I saw him, but on his face was a
sly, secretive expression more sinister than any I had seen on that
countenance before.
Ineptly assisted by Kevin, I interrogated the others in an attempt to
establish alibis. I did not expect
useful results, and I got none.
Everyone claimed to have slept the sleep of the innocent and weary, and
denied they had heard anything unusual. Charles swore Rene could not
have left the tent they shared without awakening him, Rene swore the
same about Charles That meant nothing. I could— and did—
say the same
about Bertha. But the dastardly deed could have been accomplished in
five minutes or less, and innocent or guilty, we had all been tired
enough to sleep soundly.
Emerson watched me with a sour amusement he made no attempt to conceal.
At last he said, "Satisfied, Miss Peabody? I could have told you this
was a waste of time. Does anyone save myself intend to do
any work
today?"
Taking this for the order it undoubtedly was, Rene and Charles followed
Emerson's example, and Emerson. So did the cat.
My spirits were rather low as I prepared my equipment— notepad and
pencils, measuring rule and water flask, candles and matches. If the
day went on as it had begun, I did not know how I could bear it.
Emerson had returned to calling me MISS Peabody. He had not requested
my assistance that day.
Instead of progressing toward that greater
understanding for which I had hoped, we were farther apart than before.
Mohammed's death, before he could speak, was discouraging too.
If I had needed anything else to lower my spirits, the knowledge of
where we were working that day would have done the job. Cyrus was
determined to investigate the new tomb. It had not been mentioned by
any of the earlier visitors to the wadi, so it could truly be called
unknown, and nothing fires the imagination of an excavator so much as
the hope of being the first to enter such a sepulcher. To be sure, the
place had obviously been known to Emerson, but as Cyrus dourly
remarked, "That son of a gun knows a lot more than he's saying about a
lot of things. He doesn't think there's anything worth finding
or he'd
have dug into the place himself a long time ago. But he's not the last
word, consarn him! There's bound to be something there."
I had not told him of my discovery. The ring bezel was in my pocket
even at that moment. I seemed to feel it pressing against my breast—
which was nonsense, because it was very small and light. Had I followed
the dictates of my archaeological conscience, I would have left it
behind, safely enclosed in a box labeled with the location and date of
the discovery. I cannot explain or defend the idle fancy that told me I
must keep it close, like an amulet warding off danger.
The old demonic, animal-headed gods of Egypt had been proscribed by the
heretic king, but it is easier
to pass edicts than enforce them when
that which is forbidden appeals to passionate, deep-seated human needs
and desires. Our earlier excavation had turned up evidence that the
common people had not abandoned their beloved household gods. Sobek was
a crocodile god whose chief center of worship was in the Fayum, far to
the north. It was the first time any representation of him had been
found at Amarna, but his presence was no more surprising than that of
Bes, the grotesque little patron of matrimony, and Thoueris, who
protected pregnant women. But for me to come upon the crocodile god's
image there, after narrowly escaping another deadly threat... Is it any
wonder superstition fought with reason in my mind?
First the snake, now the crocodile. Did the third fate still threaten
us? If the traditions of myth and
folktale held true, it would be the
most dangerous of all.
* * *
The men had to spend most of the day clearing the tomb entrance, which
was choked with fallen rocks. Some were of considerable size, and the
sloping scree had been hardened by repeated flooding and drying into
the consistency of cement. It was I who pointed out to Cyrus that we
must sift through this debris. Water must have poured into the tomb
through the opening above, and through other apertures as
yet undisclosed, on more than one occasion, and objects might have been
flushed out onto the slope.
Only Cyrus's good manners— and, I would like to believe, his respect
for
my professional expertise— prevented him from objecting vigorously to
this procedure, for it took a great deal of time. It was late
in the
day before the wisdom of my methods was proved. The broken fragment we
discovered would certainly have been overlooked by careless excavators.
It was only a piece of alabaster (more properly calcite), five
centimeters long and apparently shapeless. The credit for recognizing
its importance must go to Feisal— who, of course, had been trained in
my
methods. He brought it to me, smiling in anticipation of praise. "There
is writing on it, Sitt. You see
the hieroglyphs."
The excitement that suffused every inch of my being when I read those
few signs was enough to overcome, for the moment at least, all other
considerations. Summoning Cyrus with a piercing cry, I indicated the
broken inscription. " The king's great wife Neferneferuaten
Nefertiti.' It is part of a
shawabti, Cyrus— a shawabti of Nefertiti!"
"A ushebti?" Cyrus snatched it from me. I forgave him this momentary
lapse of courtesy/ like myself,
he understood the import of the words.
Ushebtis, or shawabtis, were strictly funerary in nature. They were
images of the dead man (or woman), animated in the afterlife to perform
services for him and work in his stead. The wealthier an individual,
the more of these little statues he possessed. Fragments of many
ushebtis bearing the name of Akhenaton had turned up, Emerson had
found three more the previous day, in the royal tomb But this was the
first
I had seen or heard of with the name of the queen.
"By the Almighty, Amelia, you're right," Cyrus exclaimed. "It's the
lower legs and part of the feet of a ushebti. It can't have come from
the royal tomb . ."
"That is not necessarily true." Some scholars, I regret to say, concoct
fantastic theories from inadequate evidence, but I have never been
prone to this weakness and I felt I must caution Cyrus against
overen-thusiasm.
"Broken fragments of Akhenaton's funerary equipment, including
ushebtis, must have been thrown out
of his tomb," I went on. "And a
violent flood could have washed them some distance down the wadi.
But
this was not part of bis tomb furnishings. Her name appears on many
objects along with his, but ushebtis were designed and named only
for the dead person."
Cyrus held the battered fragment as gently as if it had been solid
gold. "Then this must have come from her tomb. This tomb!"
"No," I said regretfully. "I think not. If she had a separate tomb it
would surely have been nearer his. From what little we have seen of
this one, it is small and unfinished. However, this is a remarkable
discovery, Cyrus. I congratulate you."
"The credit goes to you, my dear."
"And Feisal."
"Oh, sure." Cyrus gave Abdullah's son a hearty slap on the back "Big
baksheesh for you, my friend.
Even bigger if you turn up any more
pieces like this."
However, by the time sunset forced an end to the work, nothing more of
interest had been discovered. The frustration of his hopes put Cyrus in
a bad temper, though I must say it was a model of saintly forbearance
compared to the demonstrations of which Emerson was capable. "I'm sure
tired of trying to wash in a cupful of water," he grumbled, as we
trudged along the dusty path. "If I don't get near a tub pretty soon, I
won't be fit company for a mule, much less a lady."
"The lady is in no better case," I said with a smile. "I confess that
of all the inconveniences of camping out, the absence of adequate means
of ablution vexes me most. Unless I have lost count, tomorrow is
Friday, the men will want their day of rest, so I presume Emerson
intends to return to the river."
"You can't take anything for granted where that bullheaded billy goat
is concerned," Cyrus said picturesquely.
I promised to see what I could do to convince Emerson. I hope no one
will suppose that it was a lack of Spartan fortitude that made me favor
a reprieve from our labors. A lady likes to be fresh and dainty at all
times, and a lady who is attempting to win the heart of a gentleman
cannot feel much confidence in her success when she looks like a dusty
mummy and smells like a donkey. However, those were not my reasons (at
least I think they were not) for wishing to leave the royal wadi. The
place was beginning to oppress me. The rocky walls seemed to have edged
in closer, the shadows were deeper. I had crawled
on hands and knees
through dusty tunnels and squirmed through holes scarcely large enough
to admit
my body without ever feeling the sense of claustrophobia that
afflicted me now.
The others had returned from their work, so I went off to look for
Abdullah. He and our other men had their own little camp, they were
frightful snobs (as they had some reason to be, since they were the
most sought-after trained workers in the country) and always refused to
hobnob with lesser men. I had brought along my medical kit and when I
saw the delighted smiles that greeted me I felt ashamed that I had not
taken the time to fahddle with them, or even ask whether they needed
attention.
I felt even more ashamed when they displayed a variety of minor
injuries, ranging from a mashed finger to a bad case of ophthalmia.
After I had washed out Daoud's eyes with a solution of boracic acid,
and tended the other injuries, I scolded them for not coming to me at
once.
"Tomorrow we will return to the river," I said. "My medical supplies
are low, and we all need rest."
"Emerson will not go," said Abdullah gloomily.
"He will go willingly, or
rolled in a rug and carried on our backs," I
said.
The men grinned and nudged one another, and Abdullah's dour face
brightened a trifle. But he shook
his head. "You know why he came here,
Sitt."
"Certainly I know. He hoped to entice our enemy into attacking him
again, so that he could catch the fellow. So far only half that
brilliant plan has succeeded. We have been attacked twice— "
"Not we, Sitt Hakim. You."
"And Mohammed. That is three attempts, and we are no nearer a solution
than before."
"It has made Emerson very angry," said Abdullah. "He did very foolish
things today, even more foolish than is his custom. Once he almost
escaped me. Fortunately Ali saw him slip away and followed him.
He was
almost at the end of the wadi before Ali came up to him."
"What was he doing?" I demanded.
Abdullah spread his hands out and shrugged. "Who can follow the
thoughts of the Father of Curses? Perhaps he hoped they were waiting to
find him alone."
"All the more reason why we must persuade him to leave this place," I
said firmly. "It is too dangerous.
I will go now and find him."
"I will have the rug ready, Sitt," said Abdullah.
Emerson was not in his tent. It was getting dark, night gathered in
the narrow cleft like black water
filling a bowl. Stumbling over stones and swearing under my breath (an
indication, if any were needed, that
my state of mind was far from the calm that ordinarily marks it), I
finally smelled tobacco and made out the red glow of his pipe. He was
sitting on a boulder some distance from the fire. At first I took the
dark shape at his feet for another rock. Then its outlines shifted,
like shadows moving.
"Get up at once, Bertha," I said sharply. "A lady does not squat on the
ground."
"I did offer her a rock," said Emerson mildly. "So spare me the lecture
I feel sure you were about to deliver. She was in need of comfort and
reassurance, as any normal female would be under these circumstances.
You would not expect an English gentleman like myself to turn away a
lady in distress."
"She might have come to me." I fear my tone was still a trifle
critical. "What is the matter, Bertha?"
"How can you ask?" She continued to crouch at his feet, and I thought
she pressed closer to him, if that were possible. "He is out there,
watching and waiting. I can feel his eyes upon me. He is toying with
me, like a cat with a mouse. Your guards are useless, he can come and
go as he likes, and when he wishes to strike at me, he will." She rose
to her feet and stood swaying. Even in the dark I could see the
agitated trembling of her draperies. "This is a horrible place! It
closes in around us like a giant tomb, and every rock, every crevice
hides an enemy. Are you made of ice or stone, that you cannot feel it?"
I would have slapped her soundly across the cheek if I had been able to
locate that part of her body precisely. Reaching out blindly, I took
hold of some part— an arm, I believe— and shook it vigorously. "Enough
of
that, Bertha. None of us is pleased to be here, but an exhibition of
unwomanly hysteria
won't help matters."
A voice from the dark repeated, "Unwomanly?"
Ignoring it, I went on, "You will only have to endure one more night
here. We are leaving tomorrow."
"Do you mean it? Is it true?"
Emerson must have inadvertently inhaled a quantity of smoke. He began
coughing violently. "Yes,"
I said loudly. "It is true. Now go and—
and— oh, I don't care what the devil you do, only stop keening and
wailing and getting everyone in a state of nerves."
She moved away, gliding over the uneven ground as easily as if she
could see in the dark. Emerson had got his breath under control. He
remarked, "Nothing seems to affect your nerves, MISS Peabody. Or your
monstrous self-confidence. So you have decided we are leaving, have
you?"
"Circumstances that should be apparent to any reasonable individual
demand a brief interlude for rest
and reorganization. I cannot collate
the rubbings and squeezes I made in the royal tomb under these
conditions. The men are entitled to their day of rest, and I used most
of my medical supplies on Mohammed, and furthermore . . Good Gad, why
am I arguing with you?"
"It would be a departure for you to deign to explain your decisions,"
Emerson replied, in the same ominously mild voice. "I take it you have
subverted Abdullah and the other men, as well as your
faithful follower
Vandergelt? I cannot prevent you from doing as you like, but what is to
stop me
from remaining here?"
"Abdullah and the other men, as well as my faithful follower
Vandergelt," I replied smartly. "Now
come back to the fire. Don't sit
here in the dark inviting someone to stab you in the back."
"I will sit where I like, MISS Peabody, for as long as I choose. Good
evening to you."
* * *
No one tried to stab Emerson in the back, much to his disappointment, I
felt certain. It was not long before he joined us at the fire I waited
for him before making my announcement, since it is not my
habit to
undermine his authority behind his back. Direct confrontation, and a
brisk argument, saves
time in the long run, I had found.
The argument did not ensue, nor did the news of our departure produce
the surprise and pleasure I
had expected. It appeared that everyone had
taken it for granted.
"Friday is the Moslem holy day, after all," Charlie pointed out. "We
figured an enlightened employer
like Mr. Vandergelt would be
sympathetic to the rights of the laboring man and agree we were
entitled
to the same " He gave his employer a cheeky grin.
Cyrus grunted, quite as Emerson might have done. Emerson did not even
grunt.
I wondered what he was up to. A few moments of cogitation gave me an
answer, however. He had
hoped to entice our enemy out into the open. So
far that enemy had declined to take the challenge,
as any sensible
person would. He had sent hired bullies and spies to do the dirty work,
and if he had
been on the scene it had been under cover of darkness. I doubted that
he had. His modus operandi, if
I may employ
a technical term, was based on the principle of leading his regiment
from behind. He had not dared face Emerson until the latter was chained
and helpless.
Impatience is one of Emerson's most conspicuous failings, and although
"stubborn" is too mild a word
for him, he does not refuse to accept a
conclusion when it is forced upon him. His stratagem had not succeeded,
nor was it likely to. Of course I had realized this from the first, and
if Emerson had been willing to listen to reason I would have told him
so. He had not been willing to listen, the conclusion had now been
forced upon him, and he was getting bored with fighting off attentions
that distracted him from his archaeological work and yielded no
effective results. The time had come to shift his ground.
At least, I reflected, it had not been a complete waste of time. The
removal of Mohammed was a dubious blessing, I did not doubt Sethos
could find as many scurvy assassins as he wanted. But we (I use the
word editorially) had done some good work in the royal tomb, and gotten
some ideas about promising sites for future excavation. Kevin was
firmly in hand, not wandering around the country causing trouble, and
whether Cyrus admitted it or not, which he did not, I knew that Charlie
was the man to be watched.
I was glad I had not yielded to my first
unthinking impulse and put him under arrest. Secret surveillence of his
movements might lead us to his master.
Most consoling of all— dare I admit it?— was the fact that we had
survived two of the frightful fates mentioned in the antique tale. I
did not dare admit it to anyone else, for fear of being laughed at, but
as you will see, dear Reader, a woman's instincts are keener to discern
the mysterious workings of Fate
than is cold logic.
* * *
We were all in good spirits when we set out next morning. We were on
foot,- since we were leaving the tents and much of our equipment
behind, there was no need for donkeys Bertha's musical laugh echoed
frequently from the rocky walls,- it held a note of anticipation that
made me realize she was, after all, very young. Inured as I am to the
hardships of desert travel, I found myself looking forward with great
anticipation to a bath and a change of clothing. I had brought three of
my working suits with me, all
were in a frightful state of dust and
muss, for of course it had been impossible to rinse them out.
I felt as if some invisible burden had fallen from my shoulders when we
emerged from the widening mouth of the wadi and saw the plain
stretching out before us. Open air, sunlight, distance! They came
as an
indescribable relief after those days of confinement. The sun was high
and the desert quivered
with heat, but beyond it the cool green of the
cultivation and the glitter of water refreshed the eyes.
Our path led along the north side of the low hills that enclosed the
Eastern Village. No one suggested we stop to rest, though we had been
walking for two hours, we were all anxious to press on Emerson had
forged ahead, as was his infuriating habit, the cat clung to his
shoulder, and Abdullah was close on his heels. Bertha and the two young
men had fallen behind. I am sure I need not say that Cyrus was beside
me as he always was.
Only our voices broke the stillness. Gradually, however, I became aware
of another sound, sharp-pitched and monotonous as the mechanical
ringing of a bell. It rose in volume as we approached the end of the
ridge. Ahead and to the left I saw the wall of the little house Cyrus
had caused to be built. The sound might have been coming from it.
Emerson heard it too. He stopped, cocking his head. Lowering the cat to
the ground he turned, heading for the house.
The sun beat down on my shoulders and head with the force of an open
fire, but a sudden chill permeated every inch of my body I had
recognized the sound It was the howling of a dog.
I shook Cyrus off and began to run. "Emerson!" I shrieked "Don't go
there! Emerson, stop!"
He glanced at me and went on.
Though Emerson dislikes displaying any of the softer emotions, he is as
fond of animals as I. His
efforts on behalf of abused and threatened
creatures do not attain the extravagance to which his son is
unfortunately prone, but he had often interfered to rescue foxes from
hounds and hunters. The cries of the dog suggested it was in pain or
distress. They drew Emerson as strongly as they would have drawn me—
had
I not had cause to anticipate danger from such a source
I saved my breath for running. I can, when it is necessary, attain
quite a rapid pace, but on this occasion
I believe I broke my own
record. Emerson had reached the house before I caught him up. He
paused,
his hand on the latch, and looked at me curiously.
"The creature has got shut up inside somehow. What is— "
Being unable to articulate for want of breath, I threw myself at him.
It proved to be an error, but one for which I may be excused, I think.
I had not observed his fingers
had already pressed the latch.
Hearing our voices, the dog had begun hurling itself at the door. It
burst open. Emerson staggered back against the wall, and I fell rather
heavily onto the ground.
The pariah dogs of the villages are scrawny, starved creatures of
indeterminate breed. They are not pets, but feral beasts who have good
cause to fear and hate human beings. Those who survive the hardships
of
early life do so because they are tougher and more vicious than their
peers. And this one was mad.
It would have gone straight for Emerson's throat if I had not shoved
him aside. Now it attacked the first object it saw— my foot. Bloody
foam
flew in pink flecks from its jaws as it sank its teeth into my boot,
shaking it, gnawing it. My parasol was still in my hand I brought it
down on the dog's head. The blow would have stunned an animal less
frenzied. It only drove this one to a more furious attack.
Emerson snatched the parasol from me. Raising it over his head, he
struck with all his strength. I heard the crack of bone and a last,
agonized howl that will haunt my memory forever. The beast rolled over,
thrashing and kicking. Emerson struck again. The sound was less sharply
defined this time but equally sickening.
Emerson seized me under the arms and dragged me away from the body of
the dog. His face was as white as the bandage on his cheek— whiter, if
I must be accurate, for the bandage had got very dirty,
and he had
refused my offer to change it that morning. Abdullah stood nearby, his
knife in his hand.
He was as still as a statue, and he too had gone
pale.
Kneeling beside me, Emerson reached up and took Abdullah's knife.
"Start a fire," he said. Abdullah stared blankly at him for a moment,
and then nodded.
There was fuel at hand, part of Kevin's supplies. I was vaguely aware
of Abdullah's rapid movements,
but most of my attention, I confess, was
focused on my boot, at which Emerson was slashing. The laces were
knotted and sticky with saliva, and the part of the boot around the
ankle had been torn to shreds.
"Don't touch it!" I exclaimed. "Your hands are always scratched and
cut, an open wound—"
I broke off with a cry of pain I could not repress, as Emerson seized
the boot in a savage grip and wrenched it off. Cyrus came round the
corner of the house in time to hear my exclamation. Fury darkened his
brow and he was, I think, about to hurl himself on Emerson when he saw
the body of the dog. The color drained from his face as, with his usual
quick intelligence, he grasped the significance of the scene.
"God in heaven!" he cried. "Did it— "
"That is what I am trying to ascertain, you damned fool," said Emerson,
inspecting my dirty stocking
with the intense concentration of a
scientist peering through a microscope. "Keep them back," he added, as
the others hurried up, exclaiming in question and in alarm. "And don't
touch the— "
The sound that issued from his lips was not a gasp or a groan. It was a
muttered expletive. I had seen
it too— such a small rent, barely an inch
long. But it was large enough to mean my death.
Carefully Emerson stripped the stocking off and took my bare foot in
his hand.
It is not proper to be vain about one's personal appearance, and heaven
knows I had little cause, but in the privacy of these pages I will
confess I had always believed I had rather pretty feet. Small and
narrow, with high arches, they had been described in appreciative terms
by no less an authority than Emerson himself. Now he stared fixedly,
not at the appendage but at the tiny scratch on my ankle. The skin had
barely been broken. There were only a few drops of blood.
For a moment no one spoke. Then Abdullah said, "The fire burns well,
Father of Curses." He held
out his hand. I thought it trembled a little.
Emerson gave him the knife.
If Ramses had been there, he would already have been talking. Kevin was
almost as perniciously loquacious as my son, so I was not surprised
when he was the first to break the silence. His freckles
stood out dark
against the pallor of his face. "It is only the merest scratch. Perhaps
the dog was not
mad. Perhaps— "
"If someone does not silence that babbling idiot of an Irishman I will
knock him down," said Emerson.
"We cannot afford to take the chance, Kevin," I said. "I am going to
sit up now— "
"You are not going to sit up now," said Emerson, in the same remote
voice. "Vandergelt, make yourself useful. Put your knapsack under her
head and see if you can locate a bottle of brandy."
"I always carry a flask of brandy," I said, fumbling at my belt. "For
medicinal purposes, of course.
There is water in this other flask."
Emerson took the brandy from me and wrenched off the top. I swigged it
down like a hardened drunkard, for unnecessary martyrdom is not
something I court. I only wished I could drink enough of the horrid
stuff to render myself intoxicated and unconscious, but I knew if I
consumed it too quickly I would only be sick.
Better sick, drunk, or in pain than dead. Hydrophobia is inevitably
fatal, and it would be difficult to think of a more unpleasant way in
which to die.
When Abdullah returned, my head was already spinning and I was glad to
lie back against the support Cyrus had prepared. He knelt beside me,
his face a mask of sympathetic anguish, and took my hand in his. The
blade of the knife glowed cherry-red with heat. Abdullah had wrapped a
cloth around the handle Emerson took it from him.
It is quite an uncomfortable sensation, of course. Oddly enough the
thing I minded most was the hiss and the stench of burning flesh
Someone cried out. Most probably it was I.
When I recovered my senses I felt someone's arms holding me. They were
not Emerson's, blinking blurrily, I saw him standing nearby, with his
back turned.
"It is all over, dearest Amelia," said Cyrus, pressing me closer.
"Over, and safe, thank God."
"Excellent," I said, and fainted again.
The next time I woke I did not need to look to know who carried me
cradled in his arms. I had been unconscious for some time, for when I
opened my eyes I saw palm fronds overhead. A chicken squawked and
flapped. Emerson must have kicked it aside. That was not like him, he
usually stepped over them.
"Awake, are you?" he inquired, as I stirred feebly. "Allow me to be the
first to congratulate you on behaving in a womanly fashion."
I turned my head and looked up at him. Perspiration had run down his
cheeks and dried, leaving tracks through the dust that smeared them.
"You may put me down now," I said. "I can walk."
"Oh, don't be an ass, Peabody," was the irritable reply.
"Let me take her," pleaded Cyrus, close at hand as always.
"Not necessary. We are almost there."
"How do you feel, my dear?" Cyrus asked.
"Quite well," I murmured. "Well, but rather odd. My head seems to be
disconnected from the rest of me. Make sure it doesn't float away,
Cyrus. It is so useful, you know. For putting one's hat onto."
"She is delirious," Cyrus said anxiously.
"She is dead drunk," said Emerson. "Interesting sensation, is it not,
Peabody?"
"Yes, indeed. I had no idea."
I was about to go on, explaining some of the effects I was
experiencing, when I heard the sound of running feet and a voice cried
out, "Emerson! O Father of Curses, wait for me! It is well. The dog
was
not mad. She is safe, she will not die!"
Emerson's arms squeezed like a vise and then relaxed. He turned, and I
saw Abdullah hurrying toward
us, waving his arms. He was grinning from
ear to ear and every few steps he gave an absurd little hop, like a
child skipping.
We had reached the center of the village. The procession that had
followed us from the cultivation—
men and women, children, chickens and
goats— gathered around. Life in these villages is very dull.
Any
excitement draws a crowd.
"Well?" said Emerson coolly, as his foreman came panting up.
"There had been a stick wedged in its jaws to hold its mouth open,"
Abdullah gasped. "The fragments pierced deep when the stick finally
broke. And this"— he displayed a filthy, blood-stiffened length of
tattered cord— "tied tightly around its— "
"Never mind," said Emerson, glancing at me.
"How horrible!" I exclaimed. "The poor creature! Just let me lay my
hands on that villain and I will—
oh, dear. Oh, dear, suddenly I don't
feel at all well. Wrath, I expect, has weakened my . . . Emerson,
you
had better put me down immediately."
* * *
Though I felt a great deal better afterward, I found to my distress
that I could not stand upright. It was not my foot that prevented this,
though it hurt like the devil, but the fact that my knees kept bending
at odd angles. I would not have supposed that the anatomy of the knee
permitted such flexibility.
"Not such an enjoyable experience as you thought, was it?" said
Emerson. "And the worst is yet to
come. If you think your head aches
now, wait till tomorrow morning."
He looked so handsome, his eyes bright blue with amused malice, his
hair waving damply back from his brow and his stalwart frame attired in
clean if rumpled garments, I could not even resent the amusement.
Someone had replaced the dirty bandage, I presumed it had been Bertha.
She had tended me as deftly and gently as a trained nurse, helping me
strip off my filthy clothes— for my hands did not seem to function any
better than my knees— and attend to the other elements of the toilette.
Cyrus had been waiting to carry me to the saloon, where we were now
assembled, refreshing the inner man (and woman) as the outer had been
refreshed. It was certainly a more presentable group than the crew of
weary, work-stained, agitated individuals who had stumbled onto the
boat.
Arranging my skirts, I settled back on the divan and allowed Cyrus to
lift my foot onto a stool. "You
will have your little joke, Emerson," I
said. "I feel perfectly fit. I confess it is a relief to know I will
not have hydrophobia. When I think of Abdullah's courage in examining
that poor wretched dog! He might have contracted the disease himself."
"It is a pity he didn't think of examining the dog earlier," said Cyrus
critically. "He might have spared
you all that agony, my dear."
"It was my idea to examine the dog," Emerson said. "Locating at short
notice an animal in the appropriate stage of rabies is not as easy as
you might suppose, and few men, however hardened, would care to
risk
handling it. However, the idea did not occur to me immediately, and the
cauterization could not have been delayed Every second counts with such
injuries. Once the disease enters the bloodstream . . Well, there is no
need to think of that. The dog was deliberately tortured and shut up in
the house to await our arrival. Who knew we would be coming that way?"
"Everyone, I should think," Charlie said. "This is the day of rest, we
assumed— "
"Quite right," I said. "That line of investigation won't lead anywhere,
Emerson. The villain must have thought it was worth a try. All he stood
to lose was one wretched dog Thank God we came when
we did! Its
suffering is over now, at any rate."
"It is so like you to think of that," Cyrus murmured, taking my hand.
"Hmph," said Emerson. "You might better be thinking of what would have
ensued if Abdullah had not examined the dog."
"We would have endured days, weeks of suspense," Kevin said soberly.
"Even cauterization does not ensure— "
"No, no," Emerson said impatiently. "Your sympathetic suffering,
O'Connell, would not have interested our attacker. What did he hope to
gain by this?"
"The pleasure of picturing you picturing yourself in the ghastly throes
of hydrophobia," I suggested. "Violent paroxysms of choking, tetanic
convulsions, extreme depression, excitability . . ."
Emerson gave me a very old-fashioned look. "You are as bad as
O'Connell. You were the one the
dog attacked, not I."
"But you were the intended victim," I insisted. "You always forge ahead
of the rest of us, you would
have been the first to hear the poor
animal's cries, and anyone who knows your character would realize how
you would, inevitably, respond to such— "
"As you did." Emerson's eyes were fixed on my face. "You ran like the
very devil, Peabody. How did you know the dog constituted a danger?"
I had hoped he would not wonder about that. "Don't be ridiculous," I
said, with a good show of irritability. "I was not concerned about the
dog, I feared it might have been employed as a means of
luring you into
a trap of some kind, that is all. You are always rushing in where
angels fear— "
"Unlike you," said Emerson. "I suppose you tripped and fell against me
without intending to?"
"Quite," I said, in my most dignified tones.
"Hmph," said Emerson. "Well. It does not matter which of us was the
intended victim. What would
we have done, had we believed the dog was
rabid?"
Cyrus clasped my hand tighter. "I would have ordered a train and taken
her straight to Cairo, of course. The Pasteur treatment must be
available in the hospitals there."
"Very good, Vandergelt," said Emerson. "And somewhere along the way, I
suspect, a group of kindly strangers would have relieved you of your
charge. Unless . . . oh, curse it!" He leapt to his feet, eyes bulging.
"What a fool I am!" And without further ado he rushed out of the room,
leaving the door swinging on its hinges.
"Oh, curse it!" I echoed with equal vehemence. "Go after him, Cyrus!
Confound my skirts and my
foot and my knees . . . Hurry, I say!"
When I speak in that tone I am seldom disobeyed (and when I am, it is
always by Ramses). Cyrus
gave me a startled glance before following
after Emerson. Charles looked at Rene. Rene looked at Charles. Charles
shrugged. As one man they rose and left the room.
Kevin stood irresolutely in the doorway, one foot in and one foot out.
"Where is he going?"
"I have not the least idea. I can only assume that it is somewhere he
ought not to be— certainly not
alone and unguarded. Come back and sit
down, Kevin, you will never catch them up now. If that was your
intention."
Kevin looked hurt. Before he could proclaim his courage and zeal,
Bertha ran to him and caught his
arm. "Do not go! Stay and protect us!
This may be a ruse— "
"On Emerson's part?" I inquired ironically. "It is broad daylight and
most of the men are still on board.
Do sit down, Bertha, and stop
wailing."
His male vanity soothed by the appeal of a helpless female, Kevin
slipped his arm around the slight, trembling form and led the girl to a
sofa. She sat staring at me, her eyes very wide and dark. Then she
wrenched the veil from her face, as if it smothered her.
"He was there before you," she said. "How is it that the dog attacked
you instead?"
"I got in its way," I said.
"By chance? I do not believe that. I saw how quickly you ran. How you
must love him!"
"Anyone would have done the same," I said shortly, for I am not in the
habit of discussing my personal feelings with strange young women.
"Not I," said Kevin frankly. "At least not if I had been given time to
think before I acted." He sighed deeply and patted Bertha's hand. "Och,
but that's the curse of our confounded British moral code. It is
drummed into us from childhood and is part of our nature. I've done me
best to conquer it, but there
have been times when even I have
instinctively behaved like a gentleman instead of thinking first of
my
own precious skin."
"Not many," I said.
Bertha was trembling violently. Kevin seated himself beside her and
began to croon reassurances in a particularly vile brogue I paid them
no further heed. My eyes were fixed on the wide windows of the saloon,
through which I had beheld Emerson rushing full-tilt up the bank toward
the village, hatless and coatless, his hair blowing wildly in the
breeze. The others had followed him, but I paid them no heed either,
even in my thoughts.
Long before I had dared hope they returned. I could have cried out with
relief. Cyrus must have
stopped him and persuaded him to listen to reason— or, more likely,
Emerson had had second thoughts. He was not,
as a rule, susceptible to persuasion, however reasonable.
He and Cyrus walked side by side, with the two young men trailing them
at a respectful distance. It was pleasant to see such amity between
them,- they appeared to be engaged in serious conversation, and I would
have given a great deal to overhear what they were saying. Never mind,
I thought, I will get it out of Cyrus at a later time.
CHAPTER 14
"Men always have some high-sounding
excuse for indulging themselves."
The snake, the crocodile and the dog— we had met and overcome them all!
The last of the three fates
had been the subtlest and most dangerous,
if Emerson had not thought to examine the body of the dog,
I might even
now be in the clutches of our arch-enemy. I did not blame him for
failing to think of it earlier. The idea— irrefutably logical though it
was— had not occurred to me either. I had been somewhat distracted at
the time. Only those who have faced it can fully comprehend the sick
horror
that fills the soul at the mere possibility of that ghastly
infection. Cauterization is the most effective treatment, but it is not
a certain cure.
Emerson had been a trifle distracted himself. I remembered his set,
white face as he bent over me, the tightening of his lips as he
prepared to lay the red-hot steel against my flesh. But there had been
no
tremor of those firm hands, no moisture in those keen blue eyes.
Naturally one expects such fortitude in a man of Emerson's character.
However, I would not have held it against him if he had wiped away a
few manly tears.
The eyes that looked at me now were not brilliant sapphire but steely
gray— my own, reflected in the mirror over my dressing table. We had
dispersed to our rooms after luncheon. The others were napping,
I was
supposed to be doing the same. Cyrus had placed me on my bed and bade
me rest, Emerson, passing by the door, had called out, "Try sleeping
it off, MISS Peabody, that usually works for me."
How could I sleep? My brain teemed with confusion. I had managed to
hobble to the dressing table,
not because the contemplation of my own
features gave me any pleasure, but because I cogitate more efficiently
when in an upright position.
As Cyrus carried me to my room I had taken the opportunity of
questioning him about the conversation
I had overheard— or, to be more
precise, overseen. "I was just trying to talk some sense into him, my
dear," was the reply. "He was heading back to the desert when we caught
up with him, wanted to have another look at the body of the dog, he
said 'Don't worry, he's thought better of it.'"
Would it were so! But I had my doubts. I had never been able to talk
sense into Emerson so easily.
Additional food for thought had been provided by the letters I found
waiting. Cyrus's messenger,
hearing of our imminent return from the
wadi, had delivered them to my room. I postponed the
pleasure of
reading Ramses's latest epistle until after I had read the others, for
I had no reason to
suppose it would ease my mind.
A brief note from Howard Carter in Luxor informed me that the town was
swarming with journalists
who pursued him and our other friends
demanding interviews. "I was in the Hypostyle Hall at Karnak
yesterday," he wrote, "when a head popped out from behind one of the
columns and a voice shouted,
'Is it true, Mr. Carter, that Mrs. Emerson
broke two of her umbrellas during the rescue of her husband?'
I shouted
back a denial, of course, but prepare yourself, Mrs. E., for the worst
excesses of journalistic fiction. I expect, however, you are accustomed
to that."
Messages from friends in Cairo reported equally infuriating assaults
and even more insulting rumors.
The letter from Sir Evelyn Baring's
secretary—to which he had added a solicitous (and obviously bewildered)
note in his own hand—held more comfort. It had been impossible to
locate in such a short time all the individuals on the list I had sent,
but investigations were proceeding, and as I studied the annotations
that had been made I began to wonder if my theory might not be in error
after all. Those former enemies of ours who had been incarcerated were
still in their cells. Ahmet the Louse had turned up in the Thames some
months earlier. I was not surprised a user of and dealer in opium does
not have
a long life expectancy. That left ... I counted . . six. There
was no guarantee that all six of them were
not on our trail, but the
reduction of the numbers gave me an illogical sense of encouragement.
It could not be put off any longer. With a sigh, I opened Ramses's
letter.
Dearest
Mama and Papa, I have come to the conclusion that my talents
lie in the intellectual rather than the physical sphere, for the
present at least. It is some consolation to realize that my physical
inadequacies will improve to some extent through the natural process of
time—or to
put it in more colloquial terms, when I grow up. I dare not
hope I will ever attain the degree of strength and ferocity that
distinguishes Papa, however, what natural talents I possess can be
increased by constant exercise and the practice of particular skills. I
have already begun this regimen and intend to continue it.
An icy chill seized my limbs. I was unable to cherish any delusions
concerning the kind of skills Ramses had in mind. Most of them involved
the propulsion of sharp or explosive missiles. It was probably just
as
well that there was no whiskey in the room and that my foot was too
sore to enable me to go as far
as the saloon. Like Cyrus, I was
beginning to understand how an individual can be driven to drink.
I forced myself to go on reading, wondering when, if ever, Ramses would
get to the point.
I
must confess, since honesty is a virtue Mama has always attempted to
instill in me (though there are times when I suspect it does more harm
than good), that I was not the sole originator of the scheme which
will, I hope, offer a solution to our present difficulties. The
inspiration came from an unexpected source. I have encountered several
unexpected sources in the past weeks and I
hope I have been cured of my
preconceptions along that line, though, as I have said, I look forward
to discussing this absorbing subject with you at a future date.
But allow me to describe the
event in proper order, as Mama would
approve.
Thanks to Aunt Evelyn's gentle
intervention on my behalf, I was only restricted to my room for twenty-four
hours. Once released, I found
myself rather at loose ends. The boys, as you know,
are at school.
Nefret was reading Pride and Prejudice and was quite absorbed in what
has
always struck me as a rather silly story. The ladies with whom I am
acquainted are not at all
like the ones in the book. Little Amelia very
kindly offered to play Parcheesi with me, but I
was not in the mood for
juvenile companionship. (Do not fear, Mama, I was very polite. I
would
not hurt the dear child's feelings for the world.)
Ordinarily I would have gone to
the library to pursue my researches
into Egyptian grammar,
but it seemed the better part of wisdom to stay
out of Uncle Walter's way for a while. I therefore proceeded to Aunt
Evelyn's sitting room, with the intention of making further inquiries
(in the most tactful manner, I need not say) as to why she possessed a
large black parasol.
She was not there, but Rose was
tidying the room. I offered to help her
with the dusting but she declined quite decidedly. She had no objection
to engaging in conversation, however.
The exciting events of the last
night but one were of course foremost
in both our minds. I had already told Rose all about it but she asked
to hear it again, so I willingly obliged. (She did not know why Aunt
Evelyn had the parasol either, and refused to speculate.) The subject
to which
she kept returning was the reprehensible behavior of Ellis.
She does not get on with Ellis, as I believe I told you. Ellis is quite
a lot younger than Rose. She is thinner than Rose too, and has
bright-yellow hair. I do not know what, if anything, these facts have
to do with Rose not getting on with Ellis. I make note of them only as
a matter of information.
"No better than she should be,"
said Rose with a sniff. "I told Miss
Evelyn she wouldn't do.
I know her kind."
"What kind is that?" I inquired.
Before she could answer,
supposing she had intended to, Aunt Evelyn
entered. She beckoned
me to join her on the sofa— which I was happy to
do— and took out her embroidery. It gave
me a strange feeling to see her
sitting there, as neat and quiet as a lady in a painting, when
I
remembered the fierce warrior maiden of the other night.
"Don't let me interrupt your
conversation," she said in her soft voice.
"I know you two enjoy talking together I pray go on as if I were not
here."
"We were talking about Ellis," I
said. "Rose knows her kind. I was
endeavoring to discover
what kind she meant."
Rose turned very red and began
polishing the tea table vigorously.
"Rose, Rose," said Aunt Evelyn gently.
"You must not be so
uncharitable."
I do not know what it was that
emboldened Rose to speak. Usually she
just mumbles, "Yes, madam," and shoves the furniture around. I can only
attribute her candor on this occasion to
one of those premonitions Mama
and I, and apparently others, occasionally have.
She was still very red in the
face but she spoke up stoutly. "Excuse
me, Miss Evelyn, but I think you ought to know. She's always sneaking
and prying. I caught her coming out of Master
Ramses's room one day.
She's no business there, as you know, madam. Master Ramses's room
is my
job. And what was she doing out of the house at that hour of the night,
if I may ask"
It was quite uncanny, Mama and
Papa, how it struck all of us at the
same moment. We gazed
on one another with a wild surmise. Only it was
not really wild at all. Aunt Evelyn was the
first to speak.
"Master Ramses's room, you said,
Rose? What could she have wanted
there?"
I struck myself on the brow. (I
have read in books of people doing
that, but I doubt they really
do. Not more than once, at any rate.) "We
can hazard a guess, can we not?" I cried. "How long ago did Ellis come
to you, Aunt Evelyn?"
The ensuing discussion was most
animated, and the conclusions we
reached were unanimous.
My chagrin at having overlooked such an obvious
culprit was great, but it was I, dear Mama
and Papa, who proposed the
scheme.
"Let her find what she wants," I
exclaimed. "Let her leave us, taking
it with her, and without
the slightest suspicion that we know her
purpose."
Aunt Evelyn and Rose acclaimed
this idea with such flattering praise
that I was overcome with embarrassment. Even more flattering was their
assumption that I would be able to produce a reasonable facsimile of
the document in question for, as you know, dear Mama and Papa, the
original is in Papa's . . . [the last two words had been crossed out]
... is elsewhere.
I got to work at once. (Forgery
is a fascinating hobby. I have added it
to my list of useful skills
to be honed with practice.) Feeling that
verisimilitude was vital in this case, I used a sheet from one of
Papa's notebooks. (The one on the Dahshoor excavation, which I had
brought along in order to study his reconstruction of the pyramid
temple. There are several points I would like to raise with him at a
future time.) But to resume: I had to age the paper properly, of
course, this required some experimentation before I arrived at the
solution of baking the paper in
the oven after fraying the edges and sprinkling it with water, I then
traced a copy of tbe map, whose outlines I had good cause to remember,
on another sheet from the notebook, and repeated the process. The
result was most satisfactory. I need not tell you, dear parents, that
the compass readings I wrote were not the ones on the original. I made
a few other alterations as well.
The next cjuestion was- Where to
conceal the document? The library
seemed the most likely
place, but we agreed it would be expedient to
direct Ellis's attention to the precise spot.
Without Rose's enthusiastic
cooperation and remarkable tbespian talents
the scheme would
never have succeeded. The library is, it appears,
another of those regions into which Ellis has
no reason to go. (I
expect you were aware of this, Mama, I was not, and I found the
definitions
of comparative duties and relative social status dependent
thereon quite interesting.) Mary Ann, Aunt Evelyn's parlormaid, is
responsible for that room. It was necessary, therefore, to remove Mary
Ann, for she has not the sort of temperament that lends itself to
deception, and also we
felt the fewer people who knew of our
intentions, the better.
I had time, before I turned the
page, to hope poor Mary Ann had not
been removed too forcibly. She was a gentle gray-haired woman who had
never done any harm.
The incident of the lion had
reduced to shreds, as Mary Ann put it,
nerves already frazzled by other events, so it was not difficult to
persuade her to take a few days' holiday. (It is not difficult to
persuade Mary Ann to do anything.) As soon as she left for the station,
Rose fell down the back stairs and sprained her ankle. (She really did
not sprain it, Mama and Papa, but the performance she put on was
remarkably convincing.) That meant that Ellis had to be pressed into
service to carry out some of tbe duties properly belonging to Mary Ann
and Rose.
The amiability with which she
agreed to take on the task of tidying the
library was the final
proof of her villainy. According to Rose and Aunt
Evelyn, a proper lady's maid would have
given notice rather than accept
a demeaning task. (Fascinating, is it not? I had no idea such
undemocratic attitudes permeate the servants' hall.)
Two more details were necessary:
to get Uncle Walter out of the library
while Ellis was
searching it, and to give her a broad hint as to where
to look. Aunt Evelyn assured us she could manage the first difficulty.
(They were gone the whole
afternoon. I do not know what they were
doing.) I took it upon myself to arrange the second matter. I daresay
my performance would not have convinced Mama, but Ellis is not very
intelligent. I allowed her to catch me in the act of reading the papers
Uncle Walter keeps in a locked drawer in his desk. The guilty start
with which I pretended to notice
her, and the baste with which I
returned the papers to the drawer, added verisimilitude to my
performance. In my hurry to leave the room, I of course forgot to lock
the drawer.
I take great pleasure in
informing you, Mama and Papa, that our
stratagem has succeeded.
Ellis has gone, bag and baggage, and the false
document has gone too.
Now, dear Mama and Papa, for the
best part of the scheme. (Modesty
prevents me from mentioning whose idea it was.) As soon as our plans
had been worked out, we made use of that convenient apparatus, the
telephone, to reach Inspector Cuff and explain the situation to him.
He
pretended not to be surprised. In fact he claimed he had been
suspicious of Ellis all along,
and that one of the reasons why he had
gone to London was to investigate her antecedents. He assured us that
Ellis would be followed from the moment she left the house.
We do not expect a report from
the inspector for several days, but I am
dispatching this at once
so it will reach you as soon as possible for
I feel certain that with the document in their possession tbe unknown
individuals who have behaved so unpleasantly will cease to trouble
us
with their attentions. Your devoted son, Ramses.
PS. I am still of the opinion
that my place is at your side, for you do
seem, dearest parents, to attract dangerous persons. I have now seven
pounds seven shillings.
It took me some time to recover from the full effect of this remarkable
document. I attribute the confusion that seized me in part to my
enfeebled condition, though the contents of the letter were enough to
throw anyone into a state of bewildered agitation. What Emerson would
say when he discovered his precious excavation notes had been
vandalized for purposes of forgery I dared not imagine. Where Ramses
had learned to pick locks— another "useful skill," I suppose he would
claim— I shuddered to contemplate. (Gargery? Inspector Cuff? Rose??) As
for poor Walter, his nerves were probably as
frazzled as those of the
much-tried Mary Ann, though it was gratifying to learn that Evelyn and
he were on such excellent terms.
I put these matters aside in order to concentrate on Ramses's major
piece of news. The picture of Rose, Evelyn, and Ramses conspiring to
deceive a treacherous lady's maid was so delicious I could almost
forgive my wretched child for all his sins, except his ponderous
literary style. However, a sobering
thought soon intruded. The letter
was dated ten days ago. Sethos must have learned of his confederate's
success before this, she would have telegraphed immediately, or at
least so I supposed. Yet the attacks
on us had not ceased. One,
possibly two, had occurred after the news could have reached him.
The snake, the crododile and the dog . . . There were no other fates
mentioned in the little story. Was
he going to start all over again?
Perhaps it was the very absurdity of the notion that cleared my mind.
Perhaps it was the hope that Ramses's stratagem would be effective—
that the news had not yet reached the Master Criminal. At
any rate, I
found myself wondering if the parallels with the Egyptian fairy tale
were not something more than coincidence or supernatural influence.
Could the imitation be deliberate? Had the mind that had conceived the
complex plot been influenced by "The Tale of the Doomed Prince"?
A number of people had known I was studying that tale. Mr. Neville's
was the first name to come to mind, but he had mentioned it at the
dinner table that evening in Cairo. Many of our friends had been
present.
Had Sethos been among them?
The idea had a kind of insane attraction. That sinister master of
disguise might well have been challenged by the prospect of playing the
role of an individual as well known and distinctive in appearance as
the Reverend Sayce, for example. I did not believe it, however. No one
had greater respect for Sethos's abilities than I, but there would be
no need for him to take such a risk. He had secret allies and employees
throughout the world of archaeology. One of our guests might have
mentioned my interest in the little fairy tale to such an individual.
Regretfully I was forced to admit that this line of inquiry was no more
fruitful than others I had considered. It led back to the same group I
had always suspected of supplying information to the Master Criminal:
archaeologists. Some of them might have done so in all innocence.
Every clue snapped in my hand when I attempted to grasp it. Noting the
skill with which the bearded villain had inserted the hypodermic needle
into Emerson's vein, I had thought he might have had formal medical
training. That suspicion availed me naught, now that I knew Sethos was
the man in question.
He had shown himself, on several occasions, to be well acquainted with
the use and application of
various drugs. In fact, I reminded myself, most excavators are familiar
with simple medical techniques, since they are often obliged to deal
with injuries incurred in the field.
Another line of inquiry that I had hoped at first might limit the field
of suspects did nothing of the kind. The officers of the Sudan
Expeditionary Force were not, all of them, in the Sudan. After the fall
of Khartoum many had been given leave. I had myself seen one familiar
face in the lobby of Shepheard's.
I had forgotten his name, but I
remembered now where I had met him— at the house of General Rundle at
Sanam Abu Dom. Sethos need not have been in the Sudan to acquire
information from the officers who had known of our expedition. In a
burst of frustration I brought my fist down on the table. Bottles and
jars shook violently,- a little vial of cologne toppled over.
The thud of the falling bottle was echoed by a knock at the door There
was only one individual I yearned to see at that moment, and I knew it
was not he, Emerson did not tap softly on doors. "Come in," I said
unenthusiastically.
It was Bertha. The change in her appearance was so astonishing, I
forgot my painful musings for a moment. Head and face were bare, she
had put off her mournful black for a blue-and-white-striped
robe. It
was a man's galabeeyah, married women always wore black, and since
girls were hustled into matrimony at indecently young ages, no female
garment would have fit Bertha's mature figure. Though somewhat large
for her, the robe displayed that figure to advantage, for the fabric
was fine and I suspected she was wearing nothing under it. Her braided
hair hung over her shoulder in a shining rope,
big around as my wrist.
Her face was clear and unmarked,- her complexion was as fair as my own.
Before I could remark on this she said, "I came to see if you wanted
anything. The burn must pain you
a great deal."
It throbbed like fury, in fact, but I do not believe discomfort is
relieved by dwelling upon it. "Only time can improve it. We are
somewhat deficient in ice here."
"Something to help you sleep, then."
"I cannot afford to dull my senses with drugs, Bertha. We are too
vulnerable as it is."
"Won't you lie down, then?"
"I may as well, I suppose. No, I don't need to lean on you. Just hand
me that parasol, will you?"
It was not the one I had carried that morning. I doubt I could have
touched it again. Fortunately I always have several spares.
Bertha helped me arrange my garments and handed me a glass of water. I
felt a trifle feverish, so when she dampened a handkerchief and began
wiping my face I did not object. Her hands were very deft and gentle.
That gave me an idea, and when she finished I said, "I am glad you
came, Bertha. I have been wanting to talk to you. Have you ever thought
of training as a nurse?"
The question seemed to surprise her a good deal. I am accustomed to
having people react that way to
my remarks, however. Those whose minds
do not function with the agility of my own often fail to
follow my
train of thought.
"We must think of something for you to do," I explained. "The nursing
profession is open to women, and although I would prefer to see females
battering their way into occupations hitherto dominated by men, you do
not appear to me to have the force of character necessary for social
reform. Nursing might suit you, if you can overcome your squeamishness."
"Squeamishness," she repeated thoughtfully. "I think I might do that."
"It is only a suggestion. You ought to give the matter some thought,
however. I will be sending you back to England as soon as this
situation is settled. I would do it now— for candidly it would be a
relief to have the responsibility for you off my hands— if I thought
you
would consent to go."
"I would not consent. Not until the . . . situation is settled." Hands
folded in her lap, face composed,
she studied me with considerable
attention for a time and then said, "You would do that for me? Why
should you?"
My eyes shifted under her steady gaze. The change in her was quite
remarkable, but my reluctance to answer was due to quite another
cause— one which did me no credit. I overcame that reluctance, as I
hope
I always overcome weaknesses of character "I saw what you did, Bertha,
that night I came for Emerson. If you had not flung yourself at the
door and tried to hold it against the man who meant to murder him I
might not have got my pistol out in time. It was the act of a true,
courageous woman."
A faint smile touched the corners of her lips. "Perhaps it was as
O'Connell said— I did not have time
to think before I acted."
"All the more credit to you, then. Your instincts are sounder than your
conscious acts. Oh, I confess I have had some doubts about you. You
will laugh," I said, laughing, "when I tell you that at one time I
suspected you might be a man."
Instead of laughing she raised her eyebrows and ran her hands slowly
over her body. The tightened
fabric clung to it in a way that left no
room for doubt. "The man you call Sethos?" she asked. "Even veiled and
robed, only a very clever man could carry off such a masquerade."
"He is a very clever man. You ought to know."
"I don't think it was he."
"It must have been. Though I would not have believed he could use a
woman as he did you . . . Ah,
well, it only goes to show that even so
astute a judge of character as I can sometimes be deceived. He chose a
proper pseudonym in this case— the sly, creeping serpent, the deceiver
of Eve."
Bertha leaned forward. "What does he look like?"
"Ah, but you see, that is the difficulty. His eyes are an indeterminate
shade, they can appear gray or
blue or brown, or even black. His other
features are equally susceptible to alteration. He explained to
me some
of the devices he uses to disguise them."
"So you have spoken with him— been in his presence."
"Er— yes," I said.
"But surely," Bertha said, watching me, "no man can disguise himself
entirely from the eyes of a
woman who . . . who is as keen an observer
as you. Was he young?"
"It is easier to counterfeit old age than youth," I admitted. "And in
his attempt to ... In his consummate vanity he did display certain
characteristics that are probably his own. He is almost of Emerson's
height
— a scant inch shorter, if that— and well-built. There was the
elasticity of youth and physical strength
in his step, his ... I think
I have told you all I can. From what I saw of your erstwhile master,
those characteristics would fit him."
"Yes." We sat in contemplative silence for a while, each occupied with
her own thoughts. Then she rose.
"You should rest. May I ask you one thing before I go?"
"Certainly."
"Does he remember you?"
"He has good cause to ... Oh. Emerson, you mean?" I was weary, a sigh
escaped my lips. "Not yet."
"He cares for you. I saw his face when he held the knife to your foot."
"No doubt you mean to cheer me, Bertha, and I appreciate the thought,
but I fear you do not understand the British character.
Emerson would have done the same for any sufferer and he would have
felt the same pity for— for Abdullah. Especially Abdullah. Run along
now, and do think seriously about the nursing profession."
I wanted to be alone. Her words, kindly though they had been meant, had
cut deep. How desperately I yearned to believe Emerson's distress on my
behalf was more than that any English gentleman would have betrayed
toward any sufferer. Alas, I could not so delude myself And Emerson was
(despite
certain eccentricities) unquestionably an English gentleman.
Though I was not feeling quite my energetic self that evening, I
insisted upon joining the others. I confess I felt like some heroine of
fiction when I entered the saloon, reclining gracefully in the
respectful grasp of my friend Cyrus and attired in my most elegant
dressing gown. It was the same one I had worn that night in Luxor when
Cyrus came to my room with the telegram from Walter, and as I fastened
the clasps and tied the bows I was reminded of the extreme mental
anguish I had suffered during that endless period. It was a salutary
reminder. No matter what dangers yet faced us— no matter how doubtful
my
success in winning back Emerson's regard— no torment could compare with
those terrible hours when I had not known whether he lived, or would
ever be restored to me.
The faces of those who rose to greet me were wreathed in smiles of
welcome and (if I may not be considered immodest for mentioning it)
admiration. The face I had hoped to see was not among them.
He was not
there.
"Curse it!" I said involuntarily.
Cyrus paused in the act of lowering me onto a sofa. "Did I hurt you? I
am such a clumsy old— "
"No, no, you did not hurt me. Just put me down, Cyrus."
Rene hastened to me with a glass in his hand His expression indicated
that he at least appreciated yellow silk and Chantilly lace. He was
French, of course.
"No, thank you," I said. "I don't care for sherry."
"Here you are, ma'am." Kevin pushed Rene aside. "Just what the doctor
ordered. I took the liberty of making it good and strong. For pain, you
know."
The twinkle in his eye as he handed me the glass brought an involuntary
answering smile to my lips.
I knew he was remembering a certain occasion in London, when he had
entertained me in one of those curious
establishments known, I believe, as public houses, and had choked on
his own drink when I ordered a whiskey and soda. Not Kevin, I thought
again— not the young man who had fought at my
side against the masked
priests, who had stood by us— when he was not writing insulting stories
about us— during the Baskerville murder case.
"And may I say," Kevin went on cheerfully, "how well that yellow frock
becomes your sun-kissed
cheeks and raven locks, Mrs.—er— Miss Peabody."
"Never mind," I said. "He is not here. Where the devil has he got to
now?"
There was a brief, uncomfortable silence. Glances were exchanged.
"Not to worry, ma'am," Charles said. "Abdullah has gone with him."
I put my glass carefully down on the table before I spoke. "Gone," I
said. "Where?"
All eyes, including mine, were fixed on Charles. He was saved from his
difficulty by the advent of Emerson himself. As usual, he left the door
open. Glancing at me, he remarked, "A hair of the dog,
MISS Peabody?"
before heading for the table and pouring a stiff whiskey and soda for
himself.
Several replies came to my mind. Dismissing them all as unnecessarily
provocative and unproductive
of information, I said, "What luck?"
Emerson turned, leaning against the table with his glass in his hand.
His expression roused the direst of suspicions. I knew that look well—
the brilliance of those sapphire-blue eyes, the tilt of his brows, the
little quirk at the corner of his mouth. "Smug" is perhaps the wrong
word. It always suggests, at least to me, a certain primness which
could never under any circumstances apply to Emerson. "Self-satisfied"
is closer the mark.
"Luck?" he repeated. "I suppose you would call it that,- I prefer to
think of it as the result of experience and training. I have found
another boundary stela. I thought there must be another one along the
northern perimeter. It is in sad condition, so it behooves us to copy
the inscription as soon as possible."
Charles choked on his sherry. "I beg your pardon," he gasped, pressing
a serviette to his lips.
"Quite all right," said Emerson genially. "Contain your delight,
Charles, I promise you will be the first
to have a go at it."
"Thank you, sir," said Charles.
* * *
"I cannot imagine what is wrong with me," I exclaimed, pressing my
hands to my throbbing head. "Ordinarily I can follow Emerson's train of
thought, even when it is incomprehensible to normal people, but I am at
a loss to understand him now. He is up to something— but what?"
I was not talking to myself, but to Cyrus. He had insisted on taking me
back to my room immediately after dinner. Since there were no other
volunteers I accepted his offer, for I was not feeling quite up
to par.
He did not reply at once, being preoccupied with the difficulty of
opening the door while both hands
were supporting me.
"Allow me," I said, reaching for the knob.
Cyrus's efficient steward had tidied the room and left a lamp burning.
It was not until Cyrus was about
to lower me onto the bed that I saw
something that brought a cry to my lips. "Curse it! Someone has
been
going through my papers!"
Cyrus gazed around the room. Being a man, he saw nothing out of place
"The steward . . ." he began.
"He would have no excuse for opening the box in which I keep letters
and personal documents. See,
there is a corner of paper protruding; I
hope you do not believe I would be so untidy! Hand me the
box, will you
please?"
It was a metal container of the sort solicitors employ, I had not
locked it, since the only papers it presently contained were the
letters I had received and my notes on "The Tale of the Doomed Prince "
The rubbings I had made in the royal tomb and my excavation notes were
in another portfolio.
Quickly I sifted through the pile of papers. "There is no doubt about
it," I said grimly. "He did not
even bother to replace them in the same
order. Either he is criminally inexperienced, or he did not care
whether I detected his efforts."
"Is anything missing?" Cyrus asked.
"Not from here. Er— Cyrus, would you mind turning your back for a
moment?"
He gave me a hurt, quizzical look, but at once complied. The rustling
of the bedclothes must have
driven him wild with curiosity, his
shoulders kept twitching. Like the gentleman he was, he remained
motionless until I bade him turn around.
"Even more curious," I said, frowning. "Nothing at all is missing. One
would have supposed . . ."
"That a trained thief would look first under the mattress?" Cyrus
inquired, eyebrows raised. "I won't
ask what you've got there, Amelia,
but you sure could find a better hiding place. Never mind, doesn't
the
fact that your treasure, whatever it is, has not been taken suggest
that it was only a curious servant who searched your papers?"
"It suggests to me that the searcher's motive is even more sinister
than I could suppose, since I am
unable to determine what it is."
"Oh," said Cyrus. He scratched his chin.
His lean frame and rough-hewn features, the epitome of masculinity,
looked quite incongruous in the pretty, luxurious room. I invited him
to sit down, and he perched uncomfortably on the edge of a fragile
chair.
"It's no wonder you're feeling poorly, my dear," he said. "Most men
would be flat-out after such an experience. I wish you would take it
easy."
I ignored this ridiculous suggestion. "Since idle speculation as to the
motives of the searcher is a waste
of time, let me return to the
subject of Emerson. He is extremely pleased with himself, Cyrus. That
is
a bad sign. It can only mean that he has discovered a clue to the
identity or the whereabouts of our enemy— some fact already known to
him, or it would not have prompted his cry of 'What a fool I am!' What
can it be? If Emerson can think of it, I ought to be able to. He was
talking about taking me to Cairo— strangers on the train . . medical
attention . . . Of course! What a fool I am!"
The dainty chair creaked ominously as Cyrus shifted his weight I was
too excited to note this evidence
of discomfort. "Follow my reasoning,
Cyrus," I cried. "If we had believed that I— or Emerson, who
was the
intended victim— had been infected, we would have set out for Cairo.
Our
enemy would have intercepted us. But why would he delay until we were
on the train? He would have a better opportunity
of ambushing our party
between here and Derut— on the felucca that carried us across the
river,
or
along the road to the railroad station. He was here, Cyrus— here in
the village, staying with the 'Omdeh
in all probability, for that is
where tourists find accommodations— and that is where Emerson was
going,
to the house of the 'Omdeh! If you had not— "
The chair gave off a series of alarming squeaks. Cyrus leaned back,
eyes fixed on the ceiling.
"Cyrus," I said very gently. "You knew this. You lied to me, Cyrus. I
asked you where Emerson had gone, and you said— "
"It was for your own good," Cyrus protested. "Doggone it, Amelia, you
scare the dickens out of me sometimes, the way you figure things out.
You sure you don't practice witchcraft on the sly?"
"I wish I did. I would like to be able to put curses on certain people.
Speak up, Cyrus. Tell me all."
I had been absolutely correct, of course. A party of tourists had
arrived that morning, on horseback.
They had requested the hospitality
of the 'Omdeh but had changed their minds and departed, somewhat
abruptly, shortly after we returned.
"They— or someone who reported to them— must have overheard Abdullah
announce the dog was not rabid," I mused.
"The whole darned countryside heard Abdullah," Cyrus grunted.
"It was not his fault. It was no one's fault. So that is why Emerson
was wandering around the northern cliffs this afternoon! He believes
the 'tourists' are still in the neighborhood. It may well be so, our
enemy is not likely to give up now. And Emerson means to deal with the
fellow himself, of course. I cannot permit that. Where is Abdullah? I
must— "
I started to swing my feet off the bed. Cyrus sprang to my side, gently
but firmly he forced me to lie back. "Amelia, if you don't stop this I
will hold your nose and pour a dose of laudanum down your
throat. You
will only aggravate your injury if you don't give it a chance to heal."
"You are right, of course, Cyrus," I said. "It is so cursed
inconvenient! I cannot even pace to relieve
my pent-up feelings."
How quickly he had overcome his embarrassment at being alone with me in
my room! He was now actually sitting on the bed, and his hands still
rested on my shoulders. He looked deeply into my eyes.
"Amelia—"
"Would you be good enough to get me a glass of water, Cyrus?"
"In a minute. You have to hear me out, Amelia. I can't stand this any
longer."
Out of respect for feelings that were— I am convinced— genuine and
profound, I will not record the words in which he poured them out. They
were simple and manly, like Cyrus himself. When he paused
I could only
shake my head and say, "I am sorry, Cyrus."
"Then—there is no hope?"
"You forget yourself, my friend."
"I'm not the one that's forgotten," said Cyrus harshly. "He doesn't
deserve you, Amelia. Give it up!"
"Never," I said. "Never, if it takes a lifetime."
It was a dramatic moment. I believe my voice and my look carried
conviction. I certainly meant them to.
Cyrus took his hands from my shoulders and turned away. I said gently,
"You mistake friendship for deeper feelings, Cyrus. One day you will
find a woman worthy of your affection." Still he sat in silence, his
shoulders bowed. I always think a little touch of humor relieves
difficult situations, I added cheerfully, "And just think—it is most
unlikely she will have a son like Ramses!"
Cyrus squared his broad shoulders. "No one else could have a son like
Ramses. If you mean that as consolation, however . Well, I will say no
more. Shall I fetch Abdullah to you now? I guess if I don't you'll
hoist yourself out of bed and go stumping off after him."
He had taken it like a man. I had expected no less of him.
* * *
Abdullah looked even more out of place in my room than Cyrus had. He
studied the frills and furbelows with a scowl of deep suspicion, and
refused the chair I offered. It did not take me long to force him to
confess that he too had deceived me.
"But, Sitt, you did not ask me," was his feeble excuse.
"You ought not have waited till you were asked. Why did you not come to
me at once? Oh, never mind," I said impatiently, as Abdullah rolled his
eyes and tried to think of another lie. "Tell me now. Precisely what
did you learn this afternoon?"
Before long Abdullah was squatting comfortably on the floor next to the
bed, and we were deep in friendly consultation. Accompanied by
Abdullah, Daoud and Ali (he had at least had sense enough to take them
with him), Emerson had attempted to learn where the mysterious tourists
had gone. No boatman admitted to having taken them across the river,
and it was unlikely the former would have lied— for, as Abdullah
innocently expressed it, "the threats of the Father of Curses are
stronger than any bribe." That meant that the men we sought were still
on the east bank. An itinerant camel driver had confirmed this
assumption, he had seen a group of horsemen heading for the northern
end of the plain, where the cliffs swung close to the river.
"We lost them then," Abdullah said. "But they must have a camp
somewhere in the hills or on the high desert, Sitt. We did not look
farther, it was growing late, and Emerson said we would turn back. He
was looking very pleased."
"Of course he is, curse him," I muttered, clenching my fists. "That
explains his sudden interest in boundary stelae, it is only an excuse
to search that area and, with any luck— as Emerson would
probably put
it— be violently attacked again. Furthermore, he believes I am out of
commission and
cannot interfere with his idiotic scheme. Well! Just
wait till he sees— "
An almost imperceptible twitch of Abdullah's beard made me break off.
His is a particularly impassive countenance, or so he fondly believes.
Since he also believes that I have occult powers, he finds it difficult
to conceal his thoughts from me.
"Abdullah," I said. "My father. My honored friend. If Emerson tries to
leave the boat tonight, stop him
by any means necessary, including
violence. And if you tell him of our conversation . . ."
I paused for effect, having found that unuttered threats are the most
terrifying. Besides, I could not really think of one I was capable of
carrying out.
"I hear and will obey." Abdullah rose in a graceful flutter of skirts.
The formal words of submission
would have impressed me more if he had
not been trying to repress a smile. He added, "It is very difficult,
Sitt, to walk the knife's edge between your commands and those of
Emerson. He said the
same thing to me not an hour ago."
"Martyrdom
is often the result of excessive gullibility."
I was up and dressed at dawn, belt of tools strapped at my waist,
parasol in my hand. My martial
appearance was only a trifle marred by the pale-blue woolly slipper on
my left foot. Leaning heavily on
the parasol, I made my way to the
dining saloon. (The stairs presented something of a difficulty until I
thought of ascending them in a sitting position.)
There was less fuss and complaint than I had expected. Kevin greeted me
with a knowing grin, and Cyrus's feeble, "Amelia, I really don't think
you ought . . ." was never completed. Emerson looked
at the pale-blue
woolly slipper, raised his eyebrows, opened his mouth, closed it, and
reached for
another piece of bread.
After we had finished eating, Cyrus went off to make sure the donkeys
were ready. Bertha, followed
by the three young men like ganders after
a comely lady goose, had offered to collect my gear, an offer
I was
glad to accept.
"Just a moment, Emerson," I said, as he pushed his chair away from the
table. "I want to speak to you
for a moment about Charles."
He had not expected that Pausing with his hand on the back of the
chair, he studied me suspiciously,
his head tilted. "What about him?"
"He has not told you of his fear of heights? Oh, dear, I feared he
would not. Men are so— "
"He did tell me," Emerson interrupted. His brows drew together in a
scowl "How he ever expects to qualify as an archaeologist I cannot
imagine. What with tombs in the cliffs, and pyramids, and— "
"That is all right, then," I said, recognizing the start of one of
Emerson's notorious lectures. "It was
cruel of you to tease him about
it yesterday."
"Don't push me too far, Peabody," said Emerson between clenched teeth.
"I am holding on to my
temper with both hands as it is. How dare you
turn up this morning in that preposterous slipper wearing that
expression of maddening self-confidence? I ought to lock you in your
room and tie you to the bed! By heaven, I will!"
Though my parasol was fastened to my wrist by its little strap I made
no attempt to prevent him from sweeping me up into his arms. I am a
strong-minded woman, but even the best of us is not always able
to
resist temptation. When he started toward the stairs, I said firmly,
"Just carry me directly to a donkey, if you please. You may as well
spare yourself time and trouble, Emerson, for no method you employ
will
suffice to keep me in that room if I choose to leave it."
Emerson deposited me on the donkey and stormed off, shouting at
Abdullah, since he knew there was
no use in shouting at me Abdullah
glanced at me. If he had been English he would have winked.
We were soon on our way. Bertha and I rode donkeys. After considering
its options with an uncanny
air of deliberation, the cat chose to ride
with me. The others walked, including Kevin, over his piteous
objections. Our path led us almost due north along the bare desert
track that passes through the mountain defile at one end of the Amarna
plain and runs parallel to the river before rising again over the hills
to the south. Nothing marked it except the prints of men and donkeys,
on either side the waterless waste lay empty under the sun. Yet once
this had been the royal road of a great city, lined with fine houses
and painted temples. From the Window of Appearance of the king's palace
he had thrown collars of gold to favored courtiers. Now only low mounds
and sunken hollows remained, time and the ever-encroaching sand had
destroyed the evidences of man's ephemeral presence, as they would one
day destroy all traces of our own.
The distance from Haggi Qandil to the northern boundary is a little
over three miles. Already the sun
was hot. Kevin puffed and groaned and
mopped his streaming brow. I offered him my parasol, but he refused
it,- some silly notion of appearing unmanly, I suppose. I only hoped he
would not inconvenience me by collapsing with heat prostration. Unlike
the others he was unused to the climate, and Emerson moderated his pace
for no man— or woman.
To the right, several miles distant, were the northern tombs and the
boundary stela we had seen on the first day. Emerson did not turn
aside. As we went on, the cliffs curved more sharply toward the river,
until only a narrow space a few hundred yards wide separated them from
the bank. The shade they offered was welcome, but I began to feel the
same sense of oppression that had overshadowed me while we were camping
in the royal wadi. The rock face was even more broken here (or so it
seemed to my anxious eyes), not only by crevices and innumerable small
wadis but by the remains of ancient quarries
At last Emerson came to a stop and looked up Anubis jumped down from my
lap and went to stand by him.
High above on the stony wall I saw fragmentary reliefs and rows of
hieroglyphic signs. So there was a stela. I would not have been
surprised to find that Emerson had invented one. This was a new one—
new
to archaeologists, I mean, for it was certainly very old and worn—and
far north of any of the
others. A brief tremor of archaeological fever
ran through me, but it quickly passed. I felt sure Emerson had not come
here to add a few more hieroglyphs to the texts of the boundary stelae.
Cyrus managed not to swear aloud, though he choked on the unut-tered
word. "Holy— er— Jimminy.
All this way— for that!"
"The text is probably identical with the others," I replied. "But you
know how battered they all are,- we may find a portion here that has
not survived elsewhere, and fill in some of the missing sections."
"Well, you sure aren't going to find anything," Cyrus declared. "Only a
lizard could slither up that cliff. Come and sit down here in the
shade, my dear—what there is of it."
He lifted me off the donkey and placed me on the rug Bertha had spread
out. The men were already unloading the supply donkeys. Rene and
Charles, goaded by Emerson's caustic comments, pitched in
with a will.
Kevin flung himself down at my feet with a martyred sigh and begged for
water I poured a cup for the afflicted journalist and reminded him that
it
was his own fault he was enduring thirst and
heat "Curiosity killed the
cat, you know, Kevin. I hope yours may not be the death of you."
"Speaking of cats," Kevin said, "tell me about that diabolical-looking
creature that follows the professor around. I thought when I first saw
it that it was the one you adopted after l'affaire Baskerville, but
this one appears to be much more savage and less domesticated."
"We are taking care of it temporarily for a friend," I replied. "There
is no news story in that, Kevin.
Will you excuse me? I want to see what
they are doing."
"Should you be walking on that ankle?" Kevin asked, as I levered myself
to my feet with the aid of
my trusty parasol.
"It is not broken or sprained, only a trifle sore. Stay here, Kevin, I
don't need you."
Under Emerson's direction the men were fitting together a rough
scaffold, binding the strips of wood together with rope. It was a
horribly ramshackle affair, but I knew that it was a good deal sturdier
than
it looked. I had often seen our men scampering up and down such
structures with the insouciance of tightrope walkers, apparently
oblivious to the way the boards creaked and swayed This time, I knew it
would have to bear a heavier weight.
Cyrus was so intent on the work that he did not see me until I stood
next to him. I brushed aside his protests and his attempt to pick me
up. He followed me, still protesting, as I hobbled on
Beyond the shoulder of rock a ravine cut at a sharp angle into the
cliff. The usual litter of broken stone and flood-deposited pebbles
covered its floor, and the sides were laced with black shadows where
crevices of all sizes and shapes broke the rocky walls.
I looked up and my heart gave a great leap as I saw the figure of a man
silhouetted against the sky. Then I recognized Ali. Leaning
precariously over the edge, he helped another of the men to climb up
beside him. Turning, they looked down, not at me but at those just
around the corner of the cliff.
"What are they doing?" Cyrus asked curiously.
"Ali and Daoud are lowering ropes. The men below will fasten them to
the top of the scaffold. There
is no other way of anchoring the
structure, since even steel spikes, which we do not have, would be
difficult to drive into solid rock. Emerson will tie another rope
around his waist as a safety measure.
At least I hope he will."
"If he does not, you will remind him," Cyrus said with a smile.
"Certainly. I had better go and make sure"
Before we went on, I turned for another look at the desolate valley
behind us and at the cliff that
bounded its northern side. The rickety
scaffold and those on it were fully exposed to anyone who might be
lying in hiding behind the tumbled rocks on the top.
"You and your men are still armed, I observe," I said.
"And will be," Cyrus said grimly. Shading his eyes with his hand, he
looked up "Yep, that would be a good spot for a lookout. I'll send one
of the boys, if you'll go back and sit down."
He gave me no opportunity to argue, picking me up and walking with long
strides back to the rug. Emerson was already on the scaffold and Rene
was climbing up to join him. Both, I was relieved to observe, wore
safety ropes
The sun rose higher and the shade shrank. Cyrus's foresight had
provided even for that, his men rigged a little shelter, with piled-up
rocks and canvas stretched over it. By the time the men stopped for
food and rest, the temperature was well into the nineties. Of them all,
Rene appeared most exhausted, which was no wonder, since he had been on
the scaffold in the boiling sun for several hours.
As the long afternoon wore on without incident, the uneasiness with
which I had faced the day ought to have lessened Instead it mounted,
hour by slow hour, until every inch of my skin felt raw and exposed.
I
was surprised and relieved when Emerson announced that we would stop
for the day. It lacked several hours till sunset: I had expected he
would go on, as he always did, until the last possible moment.
The announcement was greeted with a universal sigh of thankfulness.
Hands on his hips, fresh as ever, Emerson swept scornful eyes over his
sweating subordinates and scowled at Kevin, who was reclining
gracefully at Bertha's feet.
"Tomorrow you can employ your detectival talents elsewhere," he
announced. "You are a nuisance,
Mr. O'Connell, listening to you groan
and complain distracts me, and unless I miss my guess, you are
on the
verge of heat prostration. The rest of you aren't much better. We may
as
well go back."
Ordinarily the dry baking heat of my beloved Egypt is much more to my
taste than the climate of my native heath I may have had a little
temperature that afternoon. However, I am more inclined to believe that
it was nervousness—for Emerson, not myself—that made me feel so warm
and miserable. That sensation lessened as we started on the homeward
path I had for once been in error, the danger I expected had not
materialized. I reminded myself that it was perfectly in character
for Emerson to be distracted from threats to life and limb by an
archaeological discovery, but I felt sure he had not abandoned, only
postponed, whatever underhanded scheme he had in mind. I would have to
watch
him closely that night.
Musing thus, endeavoring to anticipate Emerson's next move, lethargic
from heat, lulled by the ambling pace of the donkey, I fell into a kind
of waking doze. I was not asleep. The donkey must have stumbled, or I
would not have come close to pitching head-foremost off its back. A
hand at once steadied me, blinking, I saw Cyrus's face beside me.
"Hang on a little longer, my dear," he said. "We are halfway home."
I looked around. To my right the village of El Til huddled among the
palm trees. A faint breeze from the river carried the scent of the
cooking fires. The swollen molten orb of the sun hung low over the
western cliffs,- Akhenaton's god, the living Aton, was about to leave
the world to darkness and a sleep like death. But he would rise again
as he had risen thousands upon thousands of times, to fill every land
with his
love and waken every living creature to praise his coming.
I am often given to poetic fancies. I could have wished they had not
come upon me at that particular
time, however. They cost me several
precious seconds.
Bertha rode beside me, silent as a statue. The donkeys had drawn ahead
of the weary men. I saw them coming along behind us in a ragged
procession. Kevin was among the last stragglers, his fiery hair blazed
in the rays of the declining sun. Charlie walked beside him, slowing
his steps to those of his limping friend. Rene . .
I snatched the reins from Cyrus and brought the poor donkey to a sudden
halt. "Where is he?" I cried. "Where is Emerson?"
"He is coming," Cyrus answered. "Just behind. He and Abdullah stopped
to— "
"Abdullah. I don't see him either. Or your two guards. Or the cat!"
The truth, the terrible truth, struck like a bolt of electricity.
"Curse you, Cyrus," I cried. "How dare you?
I will never forgive you for this!"
I much regretted having to knock him down, but I would never have got
away from him otherwise. He was trying to pull the reins from my hand
when my parasol struck his arm away. In avoiding a second blow he
tripped over his feet and fell. I dug my heels into the donkey's
side.
I think it was my scream of pain that inspired the donkey to rapid
motion, I had forgotten I was wearing only a slipper on the injured
foot. Since no one but the donkey could hear me I allowed myself to use
a few expressions I had learned from Emerson. They helped to
relieve my feelings, but not a great deal.
They had all conspired against me— Cyrus, Abdullah, and of course
Emerson. It was small consolation
to know that it had taken all three
to get the better of me. How long had they been planning this? Since
the previous night, at least, the expedition today had been designed
only to put me off the track and
wear me out so that by the end of that
long tiring day my vigilance would relax. I ground my teeth.
What a
dastardly, unsportsmanlike trick!
I have never struck an animal and I did not do so on this occasion. The
sound of my voice crying
"Yalla! Yallal" was spur enough. Ears back,
the little donkey thundered on at a speed it had probably never
attained before. Like all the donkeys on all my expeditions, it had
been given good care since it came into my hands, and now kindness had
borne useful fruit, as the Scripture assures us it must.
As I rode I strained my eyes in the hope of seeing a moving form among
the foothills. I saw nothing,
the uneven terrain offered ample
opportunity for concealment, and his dusty clothing would blend with
the pale shade of the rocks. He had gone that way, I felt certain,
following the curve of the bow while
the rest of the group headed
straight south along the royal road. I could only guess at his ultimate
destination, but I knew his purpose as clearly as if I had heard him
proclaim it. Somehow, by some
means that eluded me, he had arranged for
an encounter with our deadly enemy.
I hoped to head him off before he got to wherever he was going. The
donkeys had walked slowly, Emerson's pace could equal theirs, even over
rough ground. By cutting across the plain at an angle, I intended my
path to intersect his, not at the point where I judged he must be at
this moment, but at some point ahead of where he would be when I
arrived. He could not be far from his intended destination now even
Emerson would not be fool enough to tackle such a dangerous foe in
darkness. At least Abdullah was with him, and two armed men. Perhaps
the situation was not so desperate as I had feared. Nevertheless, I did
not regret my action. Emerson's impulsive nature requires the restraint
of a cooler individual.
I expected there would be pursuit, but I did not look back. My eyes
were fixed on the cliffs, which were rapidly drawing nearer, and as I
realized where I was headed a hand seemed to grip my heart and squeeze
it. To the left a row of dark rectangles broke the glowing pink of the
sunset-brightened cliffs. They were the entrances to the northern
tombs, the final resting places of the nobles of Akhenaton's court. To
the right, not far distant, was the entrance to the royal wadi. Was it
that ill-omened place Emerson had selected for the setting of the last
act of the drama?
No, it was not. The entrance was some distance away when I saw him. For
once he was wearing his
pith helmet, so even the distinctive black hair
was concealed. It was a cloud of smoke that betrayed his presence.
Perched comfortably on a rock, he was smoking his pipe and watching my
approach. Perched comfortably on a nearby rock was the cat Anubis,
watching Emerson. On the ground at Emerson's feet was a rifle.
Rising, he brought the donkey to a stop by tearing the reins out of my
hand. " 'Ubiquitous' is certainly
one word for you," he said. "
'Inopportune' is another that comes to mind."
I was not deceived by the calm of his voice, for it had the low purring
note that indicates Emerson's
really serious rages, as opposed to his
little fits of temper. His eyes moved from my face to that of the rider
who was bearing down upon us. Cyrus must have taken Bertha's donkey. I
hoped he had not whipped the poor thing, to come so fast.
"Can't I trust you to carry out the simplest assignment, Vandergelt?"
Emerson inquired.
Cyrus dismounted. "I will tie her to the donkey. Hold her hands while— "
I brandished my parasol. "The first man who lays a hand on me or the
donkey— "
"It is too late," Emerson said. "He, or one of his men, is behind that
ridge just north of us. There is another one to the south. It is a safe
assumption that they are armed, and you would be a tempting
target on
the open plain. He let you approach unharmed so that he could gather us
all into his little
trap before he pulled the strings tight."
He rose to his feet, stretching. "Get down," I exclaimed.
"Neither of them can get us in their line of fire without exposing
themselves to Abdullah or one of Vandergelt's men," Emerson said. "That
was one reason I selected this spot. Another reason . . ." He turned.
"Behind that little spur of rock there is the entrance to a cave. When
I first discovered it some years ago I thought it might be a tomb, but
it was never— "
The sharp crack of a rifle interrupted his lecture and cast some doubt
on the accuracy of his assessment of our present situation. Stone chips
spattered down from the cliff. Some must have struck the poor donkey,
with a terrified bray he bolted, tearing the reins from my hand. The
other donkey followed. Pausing only long enough to snatch up the rifle,
Emerson ran, pushing me ahead of him.
Behind the spur of rock he had indicated there gaped not one but a
dozen cracks and fissures, at least three of which were wide enough to
admit a human form. Through one of these, which appeared no different
from the others, Emerson propelled me. Cyrus was close behind.
The space within was roughly circular and approximately ten feet in
diameter. It narrowed toward the back like a runnel and went on into
darkness,- how far, I could not see.
Emerson whirled to face Cyrus. "Abdullah was supposed to be covering
that fellow," he said in an ominous growl. "Where are your men,
Vandergelt?"
A series of shots struck the cliff face nearby. There was no answering
fire.
Emerson drew a long breath. "Well, well. I suppose this weapon you
kindly lent me . . . ? Yes, I see.
One bullet in the chamber. A poetic
touch, that. I ought to use it on you."
Cyrus stepped forward till the muzzle of the gun touched his breast.
The light was almost gone, I could see only their outlines as they
faced one another. "That is not important now," Cyrus said coolly.
"What matters— " He gestured at me.
"Hmmm, yes." Emerson leaned the rifle against the wall and flexed his
hands. "There is another way
out of here."
"What?" Cyrus cried eagerly.
"Oh, come, man, you don't suppose I would be stupid enough to lead us
into a dead end? I had this in mind as a bolt-hole in case my plans
went awry. Which," Emerson said caustically, "they certainly have done.
The trouble is, the exit tunnel is very narrow. I barely made it
through last time. We can only hope it has not been blocked further
since."
"What are we waiting for, then?" I demanded. I had not spoken before
because my brain was reeling under the impact of the dreadful
implications Emerson's speech had contained. Why had not Abdullah and
Cyrus's two men returned the fire of our attackers? The rifles all
belonged to Cyrus had the one he had given Abdullah also been rendered
ineffective? The suggestion of treachery, from the man I had considered
a dear and trusted friend, was almost too much to bear.
That treachery had not been directed against me, for Cyrus had not
anticipated I would be present.
I knew only too well what motive he
might have for wishing to betray Emerson.
But this was not the time for retribution. We were all in peril
now, escape was the most important consideration. How glad I was that I
had rushed to Emerson's side! "What are we waiting for?"
I repeated.
"Only this," said Emerson. He took me gently by the shoulder and struck
me on the chin with his clenched fist.
When Emerson hits people, he hits as hard as he can, which is quite
hard indeed. I presume that being unaccustomed to judging the amount of
force necessary in a situation such as this, he underestimated it.
I do
not suppose I was unconscious for more than a few seconds. He had
gathered me up as I fell,
when my senses returned I realized that my
head lay against his breast, and that he was speaking.
"... if they have not already, that we are unarmed. Someone must hold
them off for a while. If you
are stuck like a cork in that bloody
tunnel when they break in . . ."
"Yes, I understand."
"You should be able to squeeze through, your shoulders are a trifle
narrower than mine. If you cannot,
try to block the tunnel from the
other side. And take that damned parasol away from her or she will
batter her way back out."
Cyrus said quietly, "If I cannot get through, I will return and fight
with you."
"The more fool you, then," said Emerson rudely. "Take her, man, and go"
Needless to say, I had no intention of permitting such a scheme. I knew
I must bide my time, however,
if I indicated my intention to Emerson
he would hit me again, perhaps harder. I preferred to take my chances
with Cyrus. My parasol hung from my wrist, held by its little strap. I
lay limp and unmoving
as Emerson transferred me to Cyrus's arms. I had
thought he might give me a last, lingering embrace before doing so, but
he did not, possibly because another bullet striking nearer the
entrance sprayed
the interior of the cave with stone pellets.
Emerson had not been engaging in empty melodrama (though, like all men,
he is prone to grandiloquent gestures). He was perfectly confident he
could hold off any number of armed men single-handed. And
he had the
effrontery to lecture me about overconfidence! If we could survive long
enough, there was
a good chance of rescue. Whatever Cyrus's intention (and I could not
believe Emerson's accusation was
true there must be some mistake!) he was now in danger too, and his
men would not abandon him. Not
if they wanted to be paid, at any rate.
Rene and Charles had seen him follow me, our loyal men would hasten to
my aid even before they heard the ominous echo of gunfire. Yes, they
would come. And we— all three of us— could defend the narrow entrance
to
the cave until they did.
Stygian darkness wrapped round us as soon as Cyrus passed into the
tunnel. It was narrow, but the
ceiling was high enough to permit him to
walk upright, at least at the beginning. I knew when it grew lower
because Cyrus reeled back with a cry when his head hit it.
This seemed an opportune moment. I did not want to wait until we got
into some space too confined to permit easy movement. Taking a firm
grip on my parasol I stiffened, straightened my lower limbs, and
slipped neatly out of his grasp. Between the bump on the head and the
suddenness of my movement he was caught off guard, I was able to slide
past him and proceed quickly on my way. I was vaguely aware that my
foot hurt like blazes, but it did not slow my pace. Being by now
accustomed to the vagaries of pockets and pistols, I was able to
extract the latter from the former without difficulty.
I had not gone far when I heard voices, and the calm, measured tones,
the absence of any sound of altercation, surprised me so that I slowed
my impetuous pace. Was it rescue, so soon? I must make certain before I
fired my pistol that I did not injure a friend. Pausing at the end of
the tunnel, I peered cautiously out into the cave.
He carried a lantern in one hand, and in the other, the right hand, he
held an object that explained the need for light. It is difficult to be
sure of hitting a rapidly moving target in total darkness, particularly
when the tirget is intent on hitting you. The object was not a rifle,
it was a hand weapon of some sort.
I am no authority on pistols. All I
could see was that it was a great deal larger than mine.
Vincey's golden locks were a trifle windblown, otherwise he was as
neat and composed as he had been
on that fateful night in Cairo when I
first met him. The ugly angle of his jaw softened as he smiled.
"Don't try to reach your weapon," he said pleasantly.
Emerson glanced at the rifle, which lay on the floor a few feet away.
"It is empty."
"I surmised as much from the fact that you did not return our fire. It
might have taken me a while to
find your hiding place if Anubis had not kindly led me to it. You were
wise to propose a truce, though
I
must warn you not to expect that anything to your advantage will arise
from it."
"Ah, well, one never knows," said Emerson. His eyes went to the cat,
which stood midway between the two men, its eyes moving from one to the
other and its tail bristling. "I thought you would be unable to resist
my invitation, Vincey. I observed the childish pleasure you derive from
gloating over people."
Vincey's smile broadened. "I hope you aren't going to claim you did not
accept my carefully prepared alibi. Hindsight, my dear Emerson, surely."
His back against the rough wall to my right, Emerson watched the other
man intently. "You must take
me for a fool," he said with a curl of his
lip. "I saw a great deal of you during those days when I was
your
guest. How many pleasant hours of conversation did we enjoy, you
lounging in that tasteless overstuffed chair and me in—a less
comfortable position? I could hardly be mistaken as to your
identity.
How did you manage to involve von Bork in this dirty business?"
"That sickly little wife of his is in need of medical attention," was
the reply. "Sentimentality is weakness,
a clever man knows how to use
it to his advantage."
A hand grasped my arm. I shook it off. There was nothing Cyrus could do
now. He knew if he tried to seize me I would struggle, and that would
betray our presence to the smiling blackguard with the very large gun.
Emerson shook his head. "You have played your hand well in the past, I
admit, but you have already
lost this latest move. My friends are on
their way. You cannot hope to carry me away from here before they— "
"I fear you do not understand. The rules of the game have changed. I am
no longer in need of the information I hoped to get from you. When I
leave this place you won't be coming with me."
"Hmmm." Emerson rubbed his chin. "I always thought of you as a
practical sort of fellow, Vincey.
If you have what you want, why risk
your neck chasing after me?"
Vincey's smile widened till it stretched the muscles of his face into a
ghastly grimace. "Because you
would continue to risk yours to prevent
me from carrying out my plan. I can't have you breathing down my neck
for the rest of my life. I admit I will derive a certain personal
pleasure— call it sentimentality if you like— from killing you. You
defied me, you defeated my deadliest schemes— and worst of all, you had
the audacity to patronize me when I was down and out!" His voice rose
in pitch. "I am going to do this slowly. The first bullet in the leg, I
think. Then an arm— or perhaps the other leg— "
I had only delayed because I was curious about what he had to say.
Aiming with care, I pulled the trigger.
Emerson prudently dropped to the floor. The bullet hit Vincey in the
left arm. He let the lantern fall, but the wound must have been slight,
for with a violent oath he swung around and pointed the gun in my
direction. I pointed mine in his direction, but something spoiled my
aim, it must have been Cyrus, plucking at me, or the fact that a
bullet hit the wall beside me, causing me to start. My next two shots,
fired in rapid succession, went wild. One of them, I was distressed to
observe, struck the floor quite
close to Emerson's outstretched hand,
causing him to swear loudly and pull his hand back. I fired again
— and
heard the hammer fall on an empty chamber. I had forgotten to refill
the pistol after Emerson
used it to summon help.
There was nothing for it but direct attack. I burst out of the mouth of
the tunnel, straight at Vincey. Unfortunately the same idea had
occurred to Emerson. We collided heavily, as we toppled, he twined
his
arms around me and tried to turn me so he would be on top. Again, our
minds worked as one. My efforts succeeded, I landed on top of him, and
strove to shield his body with mine.
It was a little difficult to keep track of what was happening, for I
was busily occupied in trying to protect Emerson, who kept squirming.
Vincey had been somewhat confused, I believe, by the rapidity and
apparent randomness of our actions. He hesitated for a perceptible
moment before taking careful aim.
I closed my eyes and clung to Emerson. We would die in one another's
arms, as he had once proposed. The idea did not appeal to me any more
now than it had on that occasion.
The echoes of the shot deafened me. It took me some time to realize I
was still breathing—unhurt, unwounded—and that there had been two
shots, so close together the reports had blended into one.
I opened my
eyes.
Directly in front of me was Emerson's arm. His elbow was braced against
the floor, in his hand was
the rifle, which pointed up at an oblique
angle, on the trigger was his finger.
Now I understood why Emerson had lured his foe into the cave and left
the weapon lying on the floor,
as if useless to him. There had been only one bullet. He had certainly
employed it in the most effective
manner possible.
Pushing me away, he rose to his feet. I rolled over and sat up, my ears
still ringing from the noise, my head in a whirl. When one has resigned
oneself to death, it takes a while to get used to being alive.
Vincey lay crumpled on the floor, in a spreading pool of gore. Another
man lay close by. He lay on his back, Vincey's bullet— the one meant
for
us— had struck him square in the breast and flung him backward. The
lantern light lay gently on his still face and quiet, outflung, empty
hands.
"Physical
strength and moral sensibility, combined with tenderness of
heart,
is exactly what is wanted in a husband."
"Too late!" I cried, wringing my hands. "He gave his life for us! Oh,
Charlie, if you had only come five minutes sooner!"
It was not so long as that, in fact, before our rescuers arrived.
Charlie had been the first to enter now he knelt, head bowed, by the
body of his kindly patron. His grief was so genuine I much regretted
having suspected him.
"I doubt it would have mattered," Emerson said. "At the first sound of
your approach, Vincey would
have acted, and the result would probably
have been the same."
"You are right," I said. "Forgive me, Charlie. I was so fond of him,
and you see, he gave his life for— What did you say, Emerson?"
"Nothing," said Emerson.
Charlie rose slowly to his feet. His face was drawn with pain and
sorrow. I reiterated my apology. He tried to smile "I will always feel
the same regret, ma'am. You can leave him to us, now— to me and
Rene.
You look in pretty sad shape yourself. Go along, why don't you, and
console Abdullah, he was trying to fight two fellows with rifles the
last time I saw him."
We removed Abdullah from his victims, they had only been trying to
defend themselves, and they fled
as soon as they were able.
"Explanations will be forthcoming in due time, Abdullah," I said
soothingly
"It was all a mistake."
"So long as you came to no harm," Abdullah muttered. Since it was too
dark to see clearly, he so forgot himself as to run anxious hands over
Emerson's frame, and would have done the same to me, I daresay, had not
propriety prevailed.
Our loyal men fought for the privilege of carrying me, so I allowed
them to do it in turn. Emerson did
not offer, the cat in his arms, he
stamped along in such a brown study that he did not even seem to hear
Abdullah's persistent questions. Finally I said, "We will tell you the
whole story later, Abdullah, after we have rested Be content now with
knowing that it is over. Er— it is over, isn't it, Emerson? Emerson!"
"What? Oh. Yes, I think so. There were others involved, only too many
of them, but most were
Vincey's dupes or hired thugs. He was the
mainspring. Now that he is gone, I believe we have nothing more to
fear."
"Did you kill him, O Father of Curses?" Abdullah asked eagerly.
"Yes," said Emerson.
"It is good," said Abdullah.
Not until we reached the Nefertiti did Emerson lower Anubis to the
ground and take me from the arms
of Daoud, whose turn it was. "Rest and
eat, my friends," he said. "We will come to you later."
Anubis preceded us up the gangplank As I watched him trot briskly
along, quite ready, as it appeared, to abandon his dead master without
the slightest show of regret or remorse, I could almost share
Abdullah's superstitious fear of the creature. "Vincey had trained him
to respond to a whistle," I said softly. "That is how he was able to
abduct you And tonight— "
"Tonight he responded as I had trained him," Emerson said. "I did not
set out to kill Vincey, though
I was prepared to do so if there was no
other choice. He had begun to annoy me. I would rather have taken him
alive, however, and I expected he would follow the cat when it followed
me."
"Trained him?" I exclaimed. "How?"
"Chicken," said Emerson. Stopping in front of my door, he extended one
hand and turned the knob. "And, of course, the effect of my charismatic
personality."
The steward had lit the lamps. As the door opened I let out a cry, for
facing me was a pair of dim but dreadful forms, their garments in
tatters, their red-rimmed eyes staring wildly, their haggard faces gray
with dust.
It was our reflection in the tall pier glass. Emerson nudged the cat
aside, kicked the door shut, deposited me on the bed, and collapsed
beside me with a heartfelt groan. "Are we getting old, Peabody? I feel
somewhat fatigued."
"Oh, no, my dear," I replied absently. "Anyone would be weary after
such a day."
Emerson sat up. "Your protestations do not convince me. Let me put it
to the test." And, seizing me in
a firm grip, he crushed me to him and
brought his mouth down on mine
He went on kissing me for quite a long time, adding other
demonstrations that almost distracted me from the astonishing
realization that had burst explosively into my dazed brain. Finally I
succeeded in freeing my lips long enough to gasp, "Emerson! Do you
realize that I am— "
"My wife?" Emerson removed himself a short distance. "I certainly hope
so, Peabody, because if you
are not, what I am about to do is possibly
illegal, certainly immoral, and probably not becoming an
English
gentleman. Damn these damned buttonholes, they are always too— "
The blouse was ruined in any case.
* * *
Sometime later (quite some time later, in fact) I murmured, "When was
it that you remembered, Emerson?"
His arm encircled me and my head rested on his breast, and I felt that
Heaven could hold no greater
bliss. (Though I would only admit to such
an unorthodox opinion in the pages of this private journal.)
We were in
perfect amity and would always remain so, for how could discord mar
such understanding?
"It was a memorable moment," Emerson replied. "Seeing you come tearing
along, waving that absurd
little pistol, without the slightest regard
for your own safety . . . And then you spoke the words that
broke the
spell: 'Another shirt ruined!'"
"Oh, Emerson, how unromantic! I would have thought—" I flung his arm
away and sat up. He reached for me; I scrambled back on hands and
knees. "Curse you, Emerson!" I exclaimed passionately. "That was days
and days and days ago! Do you mean you kept me dangling in limbo,
suffering agonies of doubt, fearing the worst, for days and days and
days and— "
"Now, Peabody, calm yourself." Emerson pulled himself to a sitting
position and leaned back against
the pillows. "It was not so simple as
that. Come here and I will explain."
"No explanation can possibly suffice," I cried. "You are the most— "
"Come here, Peabody," said Emerson.
I went.
After an interval Emerson began his explanation. "That moment of
revelation literally staggered me, it
was as stunning as an electric
shock, and as brief. For the next few days fragments of forgotten
memories kept coming back, but it required several days to put all the
pieces together and fix them in place. To say
I was in a state of
confusion is to understate the case. You will admit, I believe, that
the situation was somewhat complex."
"Well . . ."
"The same could be said, of course, of all the situations you have
managed to get us into," Emerson went on. I could not see his face from
the position I occupied at that time, but I could tell from his voice
that
he was smiling. "In this case it seemed wiser to keep my own
counsel until I had got things straight in my mind. I often had trouble
doing that even when I did not have amnesia to contend with."
"Your sense of humor, my dear, is one of your most attractive
characteristics. At the present time, however— "
"Quite right, my dear Peabody. This delightful interlude cannot be
prolonged, there are a number of
loose ends to be tied up. Let me be
brief. The loyalty of at least one of our companions was in serious
doubt. The only people I felt certain I could trust were you and
Abdullah— and our other men, of
course. To confide in either of you
would have been to endanger you and confuse the situation even
further— were that possible."
He stopped speaking and— did something else. Greatly as I enjoyed the
sensation, I recognized one
of Emerson's old tricks of distraction. His
explanation had been glib and quite unconvincing.
However, his reminder of the stern duties yet to be faced had a
sobering effect, firmly though reluctantly
I withdrew from his embrace.
"How selfish is joy," I said sadly. "I had almost forgotten poor, noble
Cyrus. I must help Charlie and Rene make the necessary arrangements.
Then there are our dear ones in England to be reassured, and Kevin
O'Connell to be threatened into silence, and ... so many things. You
must write to Ramses at
once, Emerson. Er— you remember Ramses, I trust?"
"Ramses," said Emerson, with a chuckle, "was the most difficult of all
my memories to assimilate. On the face of it, my dear, our son is
fairly unbelievable. Don't be concerned, I have already written to him."
"What? When? How did you . . . Curse it, Emerson, was it you who
searched my room? I ought to
have known, no one else would make such a
mess."
"I had to know what was happening to our family, Amelia. I was
suspicious enough earlier to take the precaution of warning Walter, but
as my memory returned I became deeply concerned about them. Ramses's
letters touched me a great deal, I could not leave the poor lad
fretting about my fate."
"You left me fretting," I snapped. "Just tell me one thing before we
rise and fight again, so to speak. When you kissed me in the tomb— "
"It wasn't the first time I kissed you in a tomb," said Emerson,
grinning. "Perhaps it was the ambience that snapped my self-control. I
was a trifle put out with you, Peabody. You frightened me half to
death."
"I was well aware of that. Andyou were well aware of our relationship,
don't try to tell me you were not. Yet you— you . . . You never kissed
me like that before!"
"Ah," said Emerson, "but you enjoyed it, didn't you?"
"Well . . . Emerson, I am seriously annoyed with you. You enjoyed it
too, didn't you? Bullying me, taunting me, insulting me— "
"It had a certain titillation," Emerson admitted. "Like the days of our
youth, eh, Peabody? And I confess
I did enjoy being wooed again. Not
that your methods of winning a man's heart are exactly . . . Peabody,
stop that! You really are the most— "
Between laughter, fury, and another emotion that need not be described,
I had quite lost control of myself. How matters would have developed I
do not know, for a knock on the door interrupted them
just as they were
becoming interesting. Swearing, Emerson went into concealment in the
bathroom, I assumed the first garment that came to hand and went to
the door.
The sight of Rene's sad face sobered me. He was attempting to control
his grief with manly fortitude,
but it was clear to sensitive
eyes like mine.
"Forgive me for disturbing you," he said. "But I felt you would want to
know. We are taking him to Luxor, Mrs. Emerson. He had expressed his
desire to be buried there, near the Valley of the Kings,
where he had
spent the happiest years of his life. We must leave at once if we are
to catch the train
from Cairo. You understand the need to avoid delay
..."
I did understand, and appreciated the delicacy with which he had
expressed this unpalatable fact.
I wiped away a tear. "I must say
goodbye to him, Rene. He gave his life— "
"Yes, dear madam, but I fear there is no time. It is better this way.
He would want you to remember
him as— as he was." Rene's lips trembled
He turned away to hide his face.
"We will follow, then, as soon as we are able," I said, patting his
shoulder. "His friends must be notified, they will wish to attend the
memorial service. I will speak a few words, on that beautiful and
appropriate theme: 'Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay
down his life for his friends.'"
Rene faced me. "Leave everything to us, madam You will stay at the
Castle, I presume, when you are
in Luxor? I feel certain Mr. Vandergelt
would want that."
"Very well." I gave him my hand. With a graceful Gallic gesture he
raised it to his lips
"Mes hommages, chere madame. Adieu,
et bonne chance."
* * *
I knew our little group would be sadly reduced in number that evening,
but I did not expect to find the saloon deserted except for Kevin. He
was scribbling in his beastly notebook, of course. When he saw
me he
made a feeble attempt to rise.
"Sit down," I said, doing so myself. "And don't pretend to be overcome
with exhaustion or grief."
"I am grieved about poor old Vandergelt," Kevin said "But if a man has
to go— and all men do— that
was how he would have wished it to be.
'Greater love hath no man— '"
"You will no doubt quote that in your story," I said severely. "We must
discuss that, Kevin. But where
is everyone?"
"Rene and Charlie have left for Derut, with— "
"Yes, I know. What about Bertha?"
"In her room, I suppose I asked for the pleasure of a conversation with
her, but she put me off. As for your— er— the professor— "
"He is here," I said, as Emerson entered
To my fond eyes he had never appeared handsomer. His damp hair lay in
shining waves, only the ugly half-healed scar marred the perfection of
his chiseled features. With a smile at me and a scowl at Kevin he went
to the sideboard. "The usual, Peabody?" he inquired.
"If you please, my dear. We might drink a toast, to absent friends and
love passing the love of—"
"Watch your tongue, Peabody. That cursed journalist is writing down
every word."
He handed me my glass and then confronted Kevin, whose jaw had dropped
and whose eyes were popping. "I want to see your story before you send
it off, O'Connell. If it contains anything libelous
I will break both
your arms."
Kevin swallowed. "You— you have just destroyed my lead, Professor. You
have regained your memory!"
"Is that the absurd tale that is making the rounds? How interesting. I
wonder how much the courts
will award me in damages when I sue the lot
of you."
"But I never— believe me, sir— " Kevin stammered, trying to cover the
paper with his elbows.
"Good," said Emerson, baring his teeth. "Now, Mr. O'Connell, I am going
to give you your next
dispatch. You may take notes," he added
graciously.
It was, I confess, as neat a lie as I might have composed. Emerson
omitted all references to the Forth affair, describing Vincey as
"another of those old enemies who keep cropping up." His vivid
descriptions of our various thrilling encounters with Vincey kept Kevin
scribbling furiously. "So," Emerson concluded, "having tired of his
attentions, I lay in wait for him this evening, with the assistance of
Abdullah and two of Mr. Vandergelt's guards, whom he kindly lent me.
Vandergelt was supposed to keep Mrs. Emerson
out of the way. That did
not succeed, thanks to her inveterate habit of— "
" 'Love gave her insight into her adored spouse's intention. " Kevin
muttered, his pen driving across the page. " 'And devotion lent wings
to her steed as she rushed headlong. . . .'"
"If you dare print that, Kevin," I said. "I will break both your arms."
"Hrmph," said Emerson loudly. "Let me finish. Owing to an unavoidable—
er— misapprehension on the part of my assistants, Vincey was able
to get past them and enter the cave where we had taken refuge.
A slight
altercation ensued, in the course of which Vincey shot Vandergelt. I
was— er— unable to reach my own weapon in time to prevent it, but my
bullet reached its target a moment later."
"A bit terse and flat," Kevin muttered. "Never mind, I can fill in the
details. So what was the fellow's motive, Professor?"
"Revenge," said Emerson, folding his arms. "For an old, fancied injury."
" 'Years of brooding over an old, fancied injury had driven him mad . .
.' You wouldn't care to be more explicit? No," Kevin muttered. "I see
you would not. And the attacks on Mrs. E.?"
"Revenge," Emerson repeated firmly.
"Yes, of course. 'Knowing that no dart could strike deeper into that
devoted heart than danger to
his . . .' Yes, that's the stuff. I can
reel that off by the page."
"You are incorrigible, Mr. O'Connell," said Emerson, unable to repress
a smile. "Remember I insist
on seeing it before you send it off. Come
along, Peabody, I promised Abdullah we would talk to him."
The story Emerson told our men was quite different. It was like coming
home again, to perch on a packing case on the deck with the men
gathered around, smoking and listening, with occasional "Wahs!" and
murmurs of amazement interrupting the tale. The stars shone brightly
overhead, the soft breeze stirred Emerson's hair.
Some of what Emerson said was new to me as well. He had had an
advantage over me, of course,
having "enjoyed" Vincey's hospitality so
long, as he put it. And when I thought of that despicable villain,
lounging at ease in his comfortable chair and gloating over his
suffering prisoner, I only regretted that Emerson had despatched him so
quickly. I had observed the incongruity of that article of furniture in
the foul kennel where Emerson had been imprisoned, but not until I
heard the note in Emerson's voice when he referred to it did I fully
comprehend how so harmless an object as a red plush armchair could
become a symbol of subtle and insidious cruelty. I would never be able
to sit in one that color again.
Vincey's alibi had been wholly convincing to me. The written evidences
of his residence in Syria had
been forged, of course, but even if I had
questioned them I would not have got around to checking their validity
until it was too late. Nor had I Emerson's reason for doubting poor
Karl von Bork (I reminded myself I must inquire after Mary and see how
I could be of assistance to her), especially when Bertha
confirmed . . .
"What?" I cried, when Emerson reached this part of his narrative.
"Bertha was Vincey's spy all along?"
"One up for me," Emerson remarked with a self-satisfied smile and a
vulgar gesture.
"But her bruises—her courageous gesture in throwing herself at the door
of your cell to prevent the
guard from entering— "
"She was only trying to get out," Emerson said. "She wanted no part of
murder and she was frantic to escape. Seeing you come popping down out
of the ceiling like a demon in a pantomime was enough to throw anyone
into a panic. I myself was— "
"Please, Emerson," I said with as much dignity as I could command. It
was not much, the horrid little creature had fooled me completely. I
wanted to squirm when I remembered telling her she should overcome her
squeamishness. Squeamishness! It must have been she, then, who drove
the knife into Mohammed.
"Yes," Emerson said, when I expressed this opinion. "She was as deadly
and sly as a snake. Small wonder, when you think of the life she has
led."
"I suppose her sad story of being thrown into poverty by the death of
her father was a lie, too," I said, clenching my teeth.
"Oh, is that what she told you? I fear her— er— career began much
earlier, Peabody, she had been Vincey's companion for several years.
One of his companions ... As for her bruises, they were all paint and
padding. Weren't your suspicions aroused when she refused your medical
attention and kept her
face hidden until the supposed injuries could
heal?"
"Oh, curse it," I said. Abdullah had concealed his face behind his
sleeve and several of the younger men were snickering audibly. "Was
that why you went to ... Never mind."
"I had set out to win her over early on," Emerson said. His voice was
quite serious. "By appealing, not
to her better nature, but to her
self-interest. She is a brilliantly clever young woman, with no more
morals than a cat. Vincey was only the latest of her— er— associates.
Affection had nothing to do with those relationships, she has changed
allegiance as often as expediency dictated, seeking, I rather imagine,
a man whose amoral intelligence was the equal of her own. Women are
sadly handicapped in criminal activities, as in all others, society
makes it difficult for them to employ their natural talents without the
assistance of a male partner. I fear, Peabody, that your honorable and
forthright
character limits you when it comes to dealing with such persons. You
always try to bring out the hidden virtues in people. Bertha had none."
I let him enjoy his triumph, though of course he was mistaken. I
remembered the expression on the girl's face when she said, "How you
must love him." It had not been one of contempt or sneering amusement.
She had been touched, I knew it. And I did not doubt that Emerson's
splendid attributes—of character,
I mean— had softened her as they had
affected so many other women.
"She carried your message to Vincey, then," I said. "When you informed
him you would be at the rendezvous tonight."
"Rendezvous," Emerson repeated throughtfully. "It certainly was, wasn't
it? You are correct, Peabody. She had never lost touch with him.
Several of the villagers were in his employ, all she had to do was
slip a note to Hassan or Yusuf when we passed through the village.
While we were in the royal wadi
she communicated with him by leaving
messages in a selected spot not far from our camp. One of the villagers
served as post-boy, those rascals know every inch of the cliffs and can
creep in and out and
up and down unobserved
"I did not succeed in convincing her that she would be better off with
us than with Vincey until after
we returned to the dahabeeyah
yesterday. She . . . What are you smirking about, Peabody?"
"Nothing, my dear. Do go on."
"Hmmph," said Emerson. "I laid the whole case before her and promised
her immunity if she joined us, and imprisonment if she did not. The
message she passed on this morning did not incriminate her, it
was only
a notification to Vincey that I would be along the northern cliffs this
evening."
"But," said Abdullah, who was not especially interested in the evil
machinations of women, much less their reformation, "why did the men
who were supposed to defend you take me prisoner instead?
Were they
also in the evil man's pay? For surely Vandergelt Effendi would not— "
"That is right, Abdullah," I said. "Emerson, I believe we had better go
now. You have not eaten, and
you must be very tired."
Emerson took my hint. It was not a subject I cared to discuss. With the
memory of Cyrus's sacrifice
so fresh in my mind I would not, could not,
think of how close he had brought us to disaster. I knew
the motive
that had prompted him to the one ignoble gesture of his noble
life, and I blamed myself for failing to realize the depth of his
feelings for me. It must have been my rejection that had driven him to
madness.
Temporary insanity was the kindest and most likely explanation for his
betrayal of Emerson— which he had redeemed with his life.
Bertha did not come to dinner. When we went to look for her, we found
her room empty and her few possessions missing. Inquiry produced the
information that a woman of her description— which would,
I admit, have
fit most of the women in the village— had hired a boat to take her
across the river several hours earlier.
To my surprise Emerson was not— or at least he put up a good pretense
of
not being— surprised. If I must be candid, which I always endeavor to
be
(at least in the pages of this private journal), it was a
relief to
have her off my hands. How much of an obligation we owed her was
questionable, if one balanced the evil against the good, I doubted the
debt would have been in her favor. She was a woman and she had been
much tried, but really, as I pointed out to Emerson, it would have
been hard to find a suitable career for such a person.
"Hmmm," said Emerson, fingering the cleft in his chin. "I rather
suspect, Peabody, that she has found
a suitable career by herself"
He refused to elaborate on this enigmatic remark, so I did not pursue
it for fear of provoking sentiments that might mar the activities I had
planned for the remainder of the evening.
* * *
Thanks to the assiduous assistance of Cyrus's steward, we were able to
catch the afternoon train the following day He salaamed profoundly when
we thanked him and bade him farewell, and I assured him that if he
required a recommendation I would be happy to render him the praise his
excellent service deserved. It was sad to say farewell to the
Nefertiti. I doubted I would
see her like again, for as I have said,
such elegant sailing vessels were fading from the scene.
Emerson slept a good deal of the way, with Anubis curled up on the seat
beside him. We appeared to have acquired another cat. The creature
followed Emerson as devotedly as Bastet did Ramses, and I knew my
husband's sentimental nature well enough to be certain he would not
abandon the animal—especially when it showed him such flattering
attention. Anubis's change of allegiance was not
a sign of cold-blooded
self-interest, it demonstrated an intelligent appreciation of Emerson's
superior character. I wondered what Bastet would make of the newcomer.
The possibilities were somewhat alarming.
But there was little room in my heart that day for dark forebodings. I
had brought a book from Cyrus's excellent library, but I read very
little, it was pleasure enough watching the rise and fall of my
husband's breast, listening to his deep sonorous breathing, and
occasionally yielding to the temptation to stroke the lines of
weariness that yet marked his face. Whenever I did, Emerson would
mutter "Cursed flies!" and swat at my hand. At such moments the
happiness that filled me was well-nigh unendurable. Soon our loved ones
at home would know the same happiness, we had dispatched telegrams
early that morning with messages of undying affection and assurances
that all was well.
Night had spread her sable wings over the ancient city when we arrived.
We hired a carriage to take us directly to the Castle. As it rattled
away I looked back and saw, or thought I saw, a familiar form dart into
the shadows. But no, I told myself, it could not have been. Kevin had
left several hours before us, to catch the up-train to Cairo.
The carriage lamps shone dimly through the dark. The slow plodding of
the horse's hooves formed a fitting accompaniment to my melancholy
thoughts. It was difficult to imagine the Castle, in which Cyrus had
taken such pride, without him Every room, every passageway, would be
haunted by a tall, kindly ghost. I fancied Emerson must feel the
same, in respect for my feelings he remained thoughtfully silent,
holding my hand in his.
I assumed Rene had notified the servants of our imminent arrival, and
indeed we were greeted by the majordomo as welcome and expected guests.
Bowing, he led the way, but when I realized where he was taking us, I
stopped.
"I cannot face it, Emerson. Not the library— not tonight. We spent so
many hours together in that room, his favorite . . ."
But Anubis had preceded us along the hall, and the servant threw the
door open. The scent of smoke— the smoke of a fine cigar— reached my
nostrils. From a deep leather chair near the long table, with its
scattering of books and periodicals, a man rose. Cheroot, goatee,
beautifully tailored linen suit...
It was the ghost of Cyrus
Vandergelt, exactly as he had appeared in life.
* * *
I did not swoon. Emerson claims I did, but he is always trying to find
evidence in me of what he calls "proper ladylike" behavior. It is true—
and who can blame me?— that my knees gave way and a gray
mist swirled
before my eyes. When it cleared, I realized that I was seated on the
sofa with Emerson slapping my hands and Cyrus bending over me, his
goatee quivering with kindly concern.
"Oh, good Gad," I cried . . . But the Reader can well imagine the
agitated iterations that escaped my lips in the course of the
succeeding minutes. The warm clasp of Cyrus's hand assured me it was
he, and not his apparition, the application of a mild stimulant
restored my customary calm,- and before long we
were busily satisfying
our mutual curiosity.
Cyrus was thunderstruck to discover he was supposed to be deceased. "I
only got here an hour ago,"
he exclaimed. "The servants told me you
were expected, which was sure good news, but they didn't tell me I was
dead. You'd think one of 'em would have mentioned it. How did I pass
on?"
"First we had better hear your story," said Emerson, with an odd glance
at me. "Where have you been
for the past weeks?"
As I listened, a queer creeping feeling came over me. It was not the
first time I had listened to such a tale.
"They snatched me right after I got off the consarned train in Cairo,"
said Cyrus. "I felt a little jab in my arm— reckoned a mosquito bit me.
Then everything went fuzzy. I remember a couple of fellows stuffing me
in a carriage, and that was it, till I woke up in what looked like a
luxury hotel— bedroom, bathroom,
a fancy sitting room with overstuffed
chairs and bookshelves. Only difference was, there weren't any handles
on the doors."
He had been treated with perfect courtesy, he assured us. The food had
been prepared by an excellent chef and served by servants who did
everything for him except answer his questions.
"I was beginning to wonder if I'd spend the rest of my life there,"
Cyrus admitted. "I went to bed as
usual last night— I guess it was last
night— and if you can believe it, I woke up this morning in a
first-class compartment on the Cairo-to-Luxor express. I raised a
commotion, as you might expect,
the conductor grinned and leered at me
and informed me I'd been a little under the weather when my friends put
me on the train. They'd handed him my ticket, straight through to
Luxor, so that was all
right. Folks, I was in something of a daze, I
tell you, but I decided I might as well come on here and
then try to
figure out what was going on. 1 have a feeling you can tell me."
"I have a feeling we can," said Emerson, glancing at me.
I was bereft of speech Visibly pleased at being the chosen narrator,
Emerson launched into his tale.
Not a word, scarcely a breath, was
heard until he finished.
"Aw, shucks!" Cyrus gasped. "I tell you flat out, Emerson, I wouldn't
believe a yarn like that if anybody else had told it. I don't think I
believe it anyhow. How could anybody fool you into thinking he was me?
You've known me for years."
I had been studying Cyrus's lean, lined face. The years had not been as
kind to my old friend as I had believed I ought to have known that
trim, tall (but not so tall by several inches) body and that remarkably
well-preserved face were not his. The goatee had not been his either!
How relieved Sethos must have been to dispense with it.
Naturally I put the matter more tactfully. "We had not seen you for
several of those years, Cyrus. His imitation of your speech and
mannerisms was perfect, he is a natural mimic, and he had several days
to study you, from hiding, before he left Cairo. His most useful
weapon, however, was psychological. People see what they expect to
see— what they have been told they are seeing. And once they have
convinced themselves of that belief, no evidence to the contrary can
persuade them they are wrong."
"Never mind the psychological mumbo-jumbo, Amelia," Emerson growled. "1
suppose, Vandergelt,
you do not have individuals named Rene D'Arcy and
Charles H. Holly on your staff?"
"Staff? I don't have one. Hoffman left me last year to work for the
Egypt Exploration Fund. I was
going to look for an assistant in Cairo
There is a young fellow named Weigall— "
"No, no, he won't do," Emerson exclaimed. "He is not without ability,
but his propensity for— "
"Emerson, please don't wander off the subject," I said. "Like Cyrus, I
am finding this difficult to credit. Both those pleasant young men were
lieutenants of ... of ..."
Emerson tried very hard to get the words out, but could not manage it.
". . . of the ... of the Master . . . Er— yes. We ought to have known
they were not archaeologists. Holly's fear of heights was suspicious,
and neither of them displayed the degree of knowledge they ought to
have had, but there are few excavators who are worth a damn these days.
1 don't know what the field is coming to, what with one thing and . . .
Yes, Peabody, I know; I am wandering from the subject They were— er—
his
men, as I began to suspect when they hustled him away so precipitately.
The crewmen of the dahabeeyah were hired, like the
guards."
"Oh, dear," I murmured helplessly. "Cyrus— Emerson— I do hope you will
forgive me, but I am quite beyond sensible thought at this moment.
Perhaps we should all have a good night's sleep and discuss
this
further in the morning."
Cyrus was too much of a gentleman (in his rough-hewn American way) to
resist such an appeal. Assuring me that the servants had our rooms
prepared, he escorted me to the door. "It has been a busy day for all
of us, and no mistake," he said. "Mrs. Amelia, my dear— I hope you
believe that I would have been as anxious to serve you as that
goldurned rascal appears to have been. Which reminds me— "
"That was what made his masquerade so convincing, Cyrus," I said. "That
he acted as you would have done. My dear old friend, this day has
brought one happy result. I am so glad, so very glad, that the reports
of your death were greatly exaggerated."
As I had hoped, my little joke distracted him, and left him chuckling.
"Good work, Peabody," said Emerson, as we mounted the stairs arm in
arm. "But you only postponed the inevitable. Between now and tomorrow
morning we had better come up with a good explanation
for Sethos's
energetic activities for and against us."
"I am not certain I fully comprehend his motives myself," I admitted.
"Then you are either stupid, which I do not believe, or disingenuous,
which is equally unlikely," said Emerson coldly. "Would you care to
have me explain them?"
"Emerson, if you are going to pretend you knew all along that man was
not Cyrus Vandergelt, I may ...
I may be forced to . . ."
I did not complete the sentence. Emerson had shut the door of our room
behind us. Taking me into his arms, he held me close. It was a sacred
moment— a silent but fervent reaffirmation of the vows we had made to
one another on that blissful day when we two had become one.
One of the supreme moments in a woman's life must be when she hears
from the lips of the man she loves, without prompting or even little
hints, the precise words she secretly yearns to hear. (It is also,
I
believe, a rare occurrence.)
"I loved you from the first, Peabody," Emerson said, his voice muffled
against my hair. "Even before I remembered you. From the moment you
dropped down from the ceiling brandishing that pistol I knew you were
the only woman for me— for even in trousers, my dear, your gender
is unmistakeable. All
those days I was like a man wandering in a mist,
seeking something desperately desired . . ."
"But you did not know what it was," I murmured tenderly.
Emerson held me off at arm's length and scowled at me. "What do you
take me for, a moonstruck schoolboy? Of course I knew what it was. Only
there seemed no easy or honorable way to get it. For
all I knew then, I
did have a boring conventional wife and a dozen boring conventional
children somewhere in the background. And you certainly did not behave
like a conventional wife. Why the
devil didn't you pound the truth into
my head? Such restraint is not like you, Peabody"
"That was Herr Doktor Schadenfreude," I said. "He insisted . . ."
After I had explained, Emerson nodded. "Yes, I see. That fills in the
last portion of the puzzle, I think. Shall I tell you how I reconstruct
the story?
* * *
"To answer the question you asked some time ago— no, I did not know who
the devil Vandergelt was.
I didn't know who the devil anyone was! As my
memories returned I did not even question the fact that he seemed to
have grown younger instead of older since I last saw him. I accepted
him because you and the others did.
"I did not suspect him then, but long before that, while we were still
in Cairo, I had begun to wonder if
we had not been assigned a personal
guardian angel. Didn't it strike you as curious that we managed to
escape so many unpleasant encounters because of the apparently
fortuitous appearance of rescuers?
The first time, when you were
carried off at the masked ball, I managed by sheer good luck . . .
Well,
if you insist, my dear Peabody, a certain amount of physical and
mental agility on my part brought me back in time to retrieve you from
your abductor. That was Vincey, of course. I presume you had informed
all our archaeological acquaintances that we were attending the affair?
It would not be difficult to search the suks and find the merchant from
whom the famous Sitt Hakim had purchased articles of male attire.
"Our ensuing adventures began to assume quite a different complexion.
The police official who led his men into a part of Cairo where the
police never go, in time to drive off the hired thugs who had us
cornered, the bumbling young German archaeology student who fired a
warning shot just when a workman— who could not be found afterward—
tried to lure you away with promises of a tomb—
which also failed
to materialize, the fellow in the suk, who collapsed and was carried
off by his 'friends'
— you didn't notice that, did you? I did, and it
confirmed my feeling that we ought to get out of Cairo
as soon as
possible.
"Abdullah told me of the party of drunken young Americans who
miraculously appeared on the scene
in time to prevent you from being
carried off the night Vincey snared me. It became apparent to me
that
there were two different parties interested in us. One was bent on
taking one or both of us captive,
he did not seem to care which. The
other sought to ward off the attacker, but the fine timing of the
incident in which I was taken prisoner indicated it was you alone the
guardian angel cared about.
"We will never know the truth, but I feel certain my reconstruction of
Sethos's activities is fairly
accurate. He had got wind of the Forth
affair early on, as we both realized, he was the most likely
person to
have done so. He— curse it, I hate to give the fellow credit, but I
must— he held his hand.
He had promised you he would not interfere with
you again, and he kept his promise (damn him!) until the moment when he
realized that others were after Forth's treasure and that you might be
in danger
from them. That gave him the excuse he wanted to break his
sworn word.
"As soon as news of the attempted abduction at the ball reached him he
was on the scene, organizing
his men. In one guise or another he must
have been watching you day and night. Mind you, he felt no obligation
to protect ME. From his point of view the most desirable result of the
business would be your survival and my demise, but he was (curse the
swine!) honorable enough to refrain from direct action against me. All
the attacks on us were instigated by Vincey. Sethos only intervened to
protect you from harm. In order to do that he was forced to assist me
as well, but he must have prayed to whatever gods he favors that Vincey
would succeed in doing away with me.
"At last he got his wish. I was gone, and you, he hoped, were or soon
would be a grieving widow.
Cyrus Vandergelt, an old and trusted friend,
appeared on the scene, overflowing with tender sympathy and very little
else. It was due to the efforts of you, my dearest Peabody, and our
devoted friend Abdullah, that I survived. I could almost feel sorry for
Vandergelt-Sethos, what a blow it must have
been to him when you
dragged me back into the land of the living!
"He was quick to recover— damn his eyes— and with characteristic
ingenuity found a means, as he hoped, to rid himself of me while
remaining within the letter if not the spirit of his vow. I must admit
Schadenfreude was a brilliant inspiration. There is such a man, I
suppose? Yes, but surely it ought to
have struck you as a strange
coincidence that he happened to be, at that moment, in Luxor? Well,
well,
I understand, I would have been in the same state of
perturbation had our positions been reversed.
"The Schadenfreude who visited me was another of Sethos's confederates,
well primed in his role.
What an absurd concoction of lunatic theories
he presented! The aim, of course, was to keep us apart
and antagonistic
to one another. Peabody, you adorable idiot, if you had had the sense
to— er— force your attentions upon me, as you would probably express
it... But I believe I understand the mixture of modesty and quixotic
romanticism that prevented you from doing so. Though how you could ever
have doubted . . ."
(A brief interlude interrupted the even course of the narrative.)
"So there we were at Amarna, with Vincey still on our heels and
Vandergelt-Sethos wooing you with every device of luxury and devoted
attention he could find. It was a pretty contrast to my behavior, I
confess! Any sensible woman, my dear, would have given me up as a bad
job and accepted the devoted attentions of a youngish, adoring American
millionaire. He hoped his wiles would prevail, and he hoped even more
that Vincey would succeed in doing away with me. But you remained
steadfast. Not only did you repel his advances ... at least I hope you
did, Peabody, because if I thought you had considered yielding, for
even a split second ... I will accept your assurances, my dear. Not
only did you repel him, you followed me like a devoted hound and risked
your life over and over to keep me from the nasty consequences of my
reckless behavior. You must have driven Sethos wild.
"At the end he could bear it no longer. You ought to have realized that
I had not the slightest suspicion
of Vandergelt, or I would not have
conspired with him to set up an ambush for Vincey. Even then— confound
him!— he refrained from taking direct action against me. However, he
did
as much as he
could to ensure my death without firing the actual shot.
The two men he sent with me had been ordered not to interfere with
Vincey, they also prevented Abdullah from coming to my assistance. Nor
could I have defended myself. As you observed, the rifle he lent me had
only one bullet. The significance of
that little touch still eludes me.
Perhaps 1 was meant to use it on myself rather than face capture! Or
perhaps he expected me to test the weapon, if I
had found it was unloaded I might have retreated from
a position that
was clearly untenable.
"I rather imagine that once Vincey had killed me, the two guards would
have dispatched Vincey. A
happy ending from Sethos's point of view,
with your enemy and your inconvenient husband dead, you would
eventually find consolation in the arms of your devoted friend. Sooner
or later— if I read his character aright— he would have confessed his
true identity and restored Vandergelt to his own place.
He could not
have continued the masquerade indefinitely, nor would it have suited
him to do so. He would have sworn to abandon his criminal activities—
told you, as he did once before, that you and
you alone could turn him
from evil to good . . . Damn the fellow's vanity!
"Thanks to your inveterate habit of meddling, my dearest Peabody,
things did not work out quite as Sethos had planned. I had an inkling
of the truth in that moment when we confronted one another,
with the
evidence of his betrayal of me unmistakable, and his devotion to you
equally plain. He did
not speak to me as Vandergelt in those last
moments. I hope you don't believe, Peabody, that I was making a noble
gesture when I handed you over to him. I fully intended to get out of
that ambush
with a whole skin and beat Vandergelt— or whoever he was— to
a pulp.
"At the end ... I cannot assess his character fairly. Yet he attacked,
barehanded, an assassin with a
rifle, and took the bullet meant for us—
for you. Nothing in his life became him like the leaving it.
"In fact," Emerson concluded, "nothing else in his life became him in
the slightest. I only hope, my dear Peabody, that you are not in danger
of succumbing to that sloppy sentimentality I sometimes observe
in you.
If I find you have set up a little shrine with fresh flowers and
candles, I will smash it to bits."
"As if I would do anything so absurd! Yet he did have a code of honor,
Emerson. And surely his last
act must atone in some measure—"
Emerson put an end to the discussion in a particularly forceful manner.
* * *
Sometime later I lay watching the slow drift of moonlight across the
floor and enjoying the most exquisite of sensations. I knew I risked
breaking that heavenly mood if I spoke, and yet I felt I must say one
more thing. "You must admit that Sethos was capable of inspiring
considerable devotion in his subordinates, and that they carried out
his last wishes as he would have done— freeing Cyrus and sending him to
us
in order that our grief might be assuaged at the earliest possible
moment. I wonder where they took— "
Emerson's shoulder was by now as rigid as a rock. "You might set up a
cenotaph," he suggested with ineffable sarcasm. "A coiled snake, I
think, would make an appropriate adornment."
"It is odd you should mention that, Emerson. You remember the little
fairy tale I have been translating—The
Tale of the Doomed Prince'?"
"What about it?" Emerson's tone was slightly more affable, but I had
had time to reconsider what I had started to say. He would taunt me for
the rest of my life if I admitted to the superstitious fancies I had
entertained about that harmless story.
"I think I know how it ended."
"Oh?" Emerson replaced the arm he had withdrawn when 1 began speaking.
"The princess saved him, of course. Defeating the crocodile and the dog
as she had done the snake."
"That is quite an un-Egyptian ending, Peabody." He drew me close.
"There are some interesting, if coincidental, parallels in the two
cases, though, aren't there? The prince was as reckless and obtuse as
a
certain other individual I could name, and I have no doubt the brave
princess saved his worthless neck as persistently and cleverly as you
did mine, my darling. Even the dog . . . We encountered no crocodiles
or snakes, however. Unless Sethos could be considered— "
"My dear." Though every nerve in my body thrilled with rapture at his
eloquent and generous tribute,
I felt obliged to remonstrate. "We have
spoken enough about Sethos. 'De
mortuis nil nisi bonum,' you know."
"I don't know, though," Emerson muttered. "I wish I did."
"1 don't understand, Emerson."
"Good," said Emerson.
Before I could inquire further he proceeded to institute
certain
activities that required my complete attention and ended the
discussion. Emerson's powers in that particular area have always been
extraordinary, and, as he had occasion to point out in the course of
the proceedings, we had a lot
of lost time to make up for.
* * *
STOP PRESS. From our special correspondent in Luxor. ASTONISHING
RESURRECTION OF AMERICAN MILLIONAIRE ARCHAEOLOGIST. Mrs. Amelia P.
Emerson: "Divine Providence Answered My Prayers." Professor Emerson:
"Mrs. Emerson's Brilliant Medical Talents Have Wrought a Miracle."
"The earlier dispatch from this correspondent reporting the tragic
death of American millionaire archaeologist Cyrus Vandergelt turns out
to have been somewhat inaccurate. Mr. Vandergelt's injuries, received
in the course of the exciting events described in yesterday's Yell,
were not as severe as was presumed. The news was received in
archaeological quarters with..."
* * *
Dearest
Mama and Papa,
It is with rapture unalloyed
that I anticipate the joy you will
experience when I tell you that
within a few days of your receipt of this letter
you will be able to clasp me in your arms.
You will be able to clasp Gargery too, if you should be so inclined,
though I think such
demonstrations would embarrass him a good deal. You owe him forty-one
pounds six shillings.
GLOSSARY OF
ARABIC WORDS AND PHRASES
afreet: evil demon
Allah yimessikum bil-kheir: God give you a good evening
Amerikani: American
Alemani: German
baksheesh: tip, present
burko: face veil
dahabeeyah: houseboat
effendi: sir
essalamu 'aleikum: peace be with you
fahddle: gossip
fellah (pi. fellahin): peasant
Feransdwi:
French, Frenchman
galabeeyah: loose man's robe
habib: friend
hakim: doctor
harim: women's quarters
hezaam: sash
Inglizi: English
jinni (pi. jinn): demon
jubba: vest
khafiya: Bedouin headcloth
marhaba: welcome
mashrabiyya: carved screen
narghila: water pipe
'Omdeh: local magistrate
reis: captain, foreman
sabil. water fountain
safragi: waiter
sitt: lady
suk: bazaar, market
Touareg: a desert tribe
ukafi: stop!
wadi: canyon
yalla!: go on! hurry!
zemr: kind of oboe