The Magic and the Mummy

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The Magic and the Mummy Page 1

by Terry Deary




  THE MAGIC AND

  THE MUMMY

  Illustrated by Helen Flook

  A&C Black • London

  Reprinted 2009

  First published 2004 by

  A & C Black Publishers Ltd

  36 Soho Square, London W1D 3QY

  www.acblack.com

  Text copyright © 2004 Terry Deary

  Illustrations copyright © 2004 Helen Flook

  The rights of Terry Deary and Helen Flook to be identified as the author and illustrator of this work respectively have been asserted by them in accordance with the Copyrights, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

  eISBN 978-1-40811-590-9

  A CIP catalogue for this book is available from the British Library.

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form or by any means – graphic, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, taping or information storage and retrieval systems – without the prior permission in writing of the publishers.

  This book is produced using paper that is made from wood grown in managed, sustainable forests. It is natural, renewable and recyclable. The logging and manufacturing processes conform to the environmental regulations of the country of origin.

  Printed and bound in Great Britain

  by CPI Cox & Wyman, Reading RG1 8EX.

  Table of Contents

  Chapter 1. The House of Death

  Chapter 2. Fate of the Pharaoh

  Chapter 3. The First Mummy

  Chapter 4. Cruel for Cats

  Chapter 5. The Magic Cat

  Afterword

  Chapter 1

  The House of Death

  Neria couldn’t sleep.

  She lay on the cool floor of her room and wriggled with excitement.

  “The House of Death!” she whispered in the dark. “The House of Death!” And she remembered over and over again what her father had told her the night before.

  “Neria,” he said. “You are a clever girl.”

  “Thank you father,” she muttered and blushed. He hardly ever seemed to notice her. He was a grand priest at the royal temple. He certainly hadn’t told her she was clever before. How did he know?

  He dusted crumbs of bread off his hands and wiped his thin mouth. His scary, dark eyes looked into her. “I can trust you,” he went on.

  “Oh, yes, father,” she said quietly.

  “I have a very special task for you,” he said. Her brothers and sisters fell silent and looked at her.

  She was the oldest and they always knew she was a special girl. She was like a mother to them since their own mother had died a year ago. Their faces were still but their ears were twitching like hippos on the banks of the Nile.

  Neria nodded.

  “Tomorrow I am taking you to the House of Death with me,” the man said. His shaved head glowed in the golden light of the oil lamps and he looked like a god.

  “Oooh!” her youngest brother, Karu, cried. “House of Death! Neria is going to die.”

  The priest turned his head slowly and looked at his little son. The boy gave a hiccup of fear. “The House of Death is not the pace you go to die, my son. It is the place you go after you are dead … at least the place the great people of Egypt go when they are dead.”

  The little boy’s mouth fell open. “Oooh!”

  “The House of Death is where we preserve the bodies of people …”

  “What’s ‘preserve’?” Karu whispered.

  Father nodded. “If you have a piece of meat, and you leave it in the sun, what happens to it?”

  “The cat would pinch it!” the little boy said.

  “Or the jackals would come in from the desert and gobble it up.”

  Father closed his eyes for a moment and took a slow breath. “If you put it on the roof, where the cats and the jackals couldn’t get it …”

  Karu wriggled. “The birds would eat it.”

  The priest held the table so tightly his knuckles turned white. Neria tried to shake her head – to tell her little brother to close his mouth before their father lost his temper.

  At last their father said. “If we put the meat in a cage, and close the door, so the animals and birds could not eat it, what would happen to it?”

  Karu smiled. “Then I would open the door of the cage and I would eat it!”

  “No you would NOT!” their father shouted. The children jumped as if a Nile crocodile had snapped its jaws suddenly shut. “I will TELL you what would happen to the meat. It would become slimy and very smelly. It would be covered in flies and the flies would lay their eggs. The eggs would hatch out into maggots and the maggots would eat the meat.”

  “Do they like slimy, smelly meat?” the boy gasped.

  “They love it,” Father said. “Love it.” He turned back to Neria. “People like us would be like pieces of meat when we died. We’d rot and smell and be eaten by maggots. That is why we have to turn people into mummies.”

  “I know, Father,” Neria said.

  “That’s what we do in the House of Death. We make mummies.” He lowered his voice. “We are going to get very busy in the House of Death some day soon. I need some extra help. Someone who can learn quickly. Someone I can trust. I have chosen you, Neria.”

  The girl felt a warm tingle in her cheeks. “Thank you Father,” she said and lowered her dark eyes.

  In the quiet of the room little Karu’s voice sounded like a reed pipe. “Will I be made into a mummy, Father, or will I be eaten by maggots?”

  Father turned on him with an angry glare. “If you do not close your monkey mouth you will be chopped up and fed to the crocodiles.”

  “Ooooh!” Karu cried. He jumped to his feet in fear, took a step backwards and fell over the cat. The cat squawked, the boy squeaked and the children tried to hide their laughter.

  “Get to bed NOW!” Father roared. “Or I will feed you to the Pharaoh’s own pet crocodile.”

  Karu fled, his little legs pattering faster than his thumping heart. He clutched his favourite rag ball to his mouth.

  Neria was sure Father’s tight mouth was trying not to laugh. At last he looked around the table. “In fact you can all go to bed,” he said. “Sleep well, Neria, you have a busy day ahead tomorrow.”

  But Neria didn’t sleep well. She hardly slept at all. Her cat crept onto her blanket and purred like a mountain lion.

  She stroked it and whispered, “The House of Death! I’m going to the House of Death, Katkins.”

  The cat purred.

  At last the black night turned to the darkest grey and she knew Horus the Hawk God was opening his eye. The eye that was the sun.

  It was time to go.

  Chapter 2

  Fate of the Pharaoh

  Neria’s father was dressed in his finest robes today. He marched down the middle of the road and everyone scurried to get out of his way. It was as if he was too bright to look at; bright as the eye of Horus. Even the dogs tucked in their tails and ran.

  Neria walked a little way behind him. Suddenly a woman ran out from a dark doorway. She threw her arms up to the sky and shrieked. Then she bent down to the ground, grabbed a fistful of dust and let it trickle over her grey-black hair.

  Neria’s father nodded. “So, it has started. We must hurry.” He strode out and the girl trotted to his side.

  “What has started, Father?”

  “The woman must have heard some news. Last night the Pharaoh was sick. This morning he must be dead.” He marched on. “We have work to do.”

  They headed east towards the rising sun, passed through the poorer streets of shambling houses and then through the city gates. Guards raised their spears to salute them.

  Neria copied her father; she
raised her chin and ignored them.

  This gate led into the desert and ahead of them stood the House of Death. Not a house at all. A fine white tent that had no walls. All the smells could be blown away on the desert breeze. Perfumes of cedar and rose took away the smell of death but still the jackals on the hills caught the scent. They watched and waited.

  Inside the House of Death dozens of men and women hurried about their tasks. When Neria’s father came near they stopped and bowed.

  There were twenty tables under the rippling white roof and every one had a body on it. The priest walked up to a man in a black robe and said, “Has it started, Thekel?”

  Thekel was a large man with a small, round head. It was shaved and his ears stuck out like handles on a water jug. He smiled happily.

  “It has started, Lord. The old Pharaoh became a god last night at moonrise. They’re dumping his body here later on today.”

  Neria’s father pulled a face as if cheerful Thekel’s words had hurt. He turned and said, “This is my daughter, Neria. She’ll deal with Bastet.”

  Neria was puzzled. She knew that Bastet was the cat-god who looked after their corn.

  Thekel grinned his simple grin. “We need all the hands we can get.”

  “Teach her what to do,” her father ordered.

  “Leave it to me. Let’s start with the brain-pulling, shall we?” he asked.

  Before Neria could answer, her father said, “No! Wait. If the Pharaoh’s body is arriving this afternoon we need to get Nesumontu out of the way. Let’s do it now.”

  Thekel winked at Neria. “Won’t be long, mistress. I’ll have him gutted in no time.”

  He clapped his hands and the priests gathered round. “Right, my Lords. We need to get Nesumontu ripped open. Let’s make it snappy … as the crocodile said to the fish.”

  The priests shuffled around one table where the body of a withered old man lay. They began to chant a prayer and their voices filled the tent.

  They looked to the east where light from the eye of Horus was pouring in to the tent.

  Neria shuddered when she saw the great god Anubis walk out of the sun and towards the body. He had the body of a man but the big-eared, sharp-nosed head of a monstrous jackal.

  Neria had expected to see the dead here. But this was a shock. This was Anubis … the God of the Dead himself.

  Chapter 3

  The First Mummy

  Anubis walked between the tables and stumbled. He caught his toe on the leg of a table. The leg cracked, the table fell and the mummy of a man rolled onto the floor.

  “Ohhhh!” Anubis roared with pain and anger. He raised his hands, grasped his ears and pulled. Neria blinked as Anubis pulled his head off.

  But the head of Anubis was just a mask. Under the mask was the red and angry face of her father. “I hate this mask,” he grumbled as the chanting of the priests became a jumble of noise and stuttered to an end. “Can’t see a blind thing.”

  He threw the mask to the ground and limped to the table where the old man’s body lay. “Has someone scooped out the brain?”

  A young priest held up a bowl of grey mush. “Yes, Lord.”

  “We’re in a hurry,” Neria’s father said. He looked at the body. “Sorry, Nesumontu,” he sighed. “I’ll have to do you without the mask.”

  A priest handed Neria’s father a pen made from a reed and a pot of ink. He marked a line about the length of his hand on the old man’s side then turned to the man in black. “Right, Thekel, get on with it!”

  Thekel took a sharp stone knife from his belt and sliced along the line her father had just drawn. He plunged his hand into the body, wriggled it around and quickly pulled out the stomach. A priest took it and wrapped it in a cloth. He took it off to a stone jar and plopped it in.

  They did the same with the liver, kidneys, lungs and guts. When Thekel was finished, the priests began to jeer at him.

  Thekel grinned and said, “Thanks, lads. But can we cut it short? We’re in a hurry today.”

  “Oh, all right,” they agreed and went back to their jobs.

  Thekel turned to Neria. “Right mistress, I need to give you a quick lesson in making a mummy.”

  “But why did they call you all those names?” she asked. “Didn’t you mind?”

  “Nah!” he chuckled. “It’s an unclean job. I do it and they have to drive me out of the House of Death because I am an unclean man. Just a sort of game really. Now I’ll just wash the blood off my hands and I’ll show you round.”

  By the end of the morning Neria knew most of the things that went on in the House of Death. The bodies that had been emptied, like old Nesumontu’s, were washed with palm wine – inside and out – then they were ready to be dried out.

  “We cover the body in this salty stuff – Natron,” Thekel explained. “We leave it for forty days until it’s dry as a desert beetle’s back, then we wrap it in bandages to make a mummy.”

  Neria nodded towards a boy who was writing on parchment pieces. “What’s he doing?”

  “Writing the Book of the Dead – prayers that are wrapped in the bandages. They help the dead person in the next life. The gods must be clever enough to read them. I never learned to read or write.”

  “Neither did I,” Neria said.

  “Never mind,” Thekel shrugged. “You won’t have to. Here is your table. All you have to do is turn Bastet into a mummy.”

  Neria was just about to ask, “Who’s Bastet?” when she heard a loud noise and it was getting louder. “What’s that sound?”

  “Trumpets,” Thekel said. “The Pharaoh is coming. Here we go! Stand by your tables, lads!”

  Chapter 4

  Cruel for Cats

  Soldiers marched into the tent carrying the Pharaoh in a cloth cradle slung between two poles.

  Neria’s father met the men and led them to an empty table. The girl saw that a cat was marching with the soldiers, tail held high and proud as if it was the Pharaoh himself.

  Suddenly Thekel swooped and picked up the startled cat. He carried it carefully over to Neria’s table. “Here you are, Mistress. This is Bastet. It is your job to turn him into a mummy.”

  “The cat? The Pharaoh named his cat after the god? And you want me to turn it into a mummy?”

  “Of course. The Pharaoh had his holy cat when he was alive. He has to have it with him in his tomb. They will go to the Afterlife together.”

  Neria blinked. “I know animal mummies go in tombs with their masters – but this one is still alive. I can’t turn a live cat into a mummy.”

  Thekel grinned his wide and happy grin. “I know.”

  “So, what do I do?” Neria frowned.

  “Kill it!”

  The cat was the colour of warm sand and its eyes were as pure as gold. It stood on her table and looked up at her. It stretched its neck and rubbed its head against her chin. It looked just like Katkins.

  “Here’s my knife,” Thekel said.

  Neria took the cold, black blade. The cat purred. Tears began to prickle her eyes. “I – I can’t!”

  Thekel shrugged. “You have to. Your father will be very upset if the Pharaoh’s cat doesn’t go into the tomb with him.”

  “I can’t,” Neria said stupidly. “What am I going to do?”

  The big man with the small head looked at her tenderly. “You know the story of Osiris? The first mummy?”

  Neria nodded. “Osiris was killed by his brother and chopped into 13 pieces. His wife gathered all the pieces together and used magic to bring him back to life for a little while. And then she wrapped the 13 pieces as a mummy so his spirit could go to the Afterlife.”

  Thekel shook his head. “Not exactly. His wife only found 12 pieces. A crocodile had eaten one! So she replaced the lost bit with a piece of wood.” He lowered his voice. “We do it in here – if an arm falls off we replace it with a piece of wood. We wrap it in bandages and no one ever notices.”

  The cat purred and looked up at the man. Neria stroked it and f
rowned. “So?”

  “What if we lost a whole body – or a whole cat?” he whispered.

  “You’d … you’d have to wrap up a whole mummy full of wood,” she breathed.

  Thekel spread his hands wide, grinned and said nothing. He looked at the cat. The cat looked back.

  Neria snatched the cat from the table, tucked it under her arm and ran from the tent. Everyone was fussing about the Pharaoh. No one but Thekel saw her go.

  She raced across the desert, through the city gate, down the crowded street and into her house.

  Neria dropped the grumbling cat into a wooden chest in her room. A moment later she was back to drop in a piece of dried fish then closed the lid.

  She raced around the house and gathered up anything useful she could find – wooden spoons and even Karu’s wooden crocodile on wheels. She still needed something round, and about the size of her fist, to make the head.

  Karu was playing in the garden alone. He was throwing his rag ball up in the air and catching it. “Karu!” Neria cried. “Throw me your ball.”

  The little boy shook his head. “No. It’s my ball.”

  “I’ll show you a wonderful game.”

  “No,” he said and stuck out his bottom lip.

  Neria knew she didn’t have much time. “I’ll … I’ll use magic and turn it into something wonderful!”

  Karu narrowed his eyes. “What?”

 

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