Day of the False King

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Day of the False King Page 1

by Brad Geagley




  Also by Brad Geagley

  Year of the Hyenas

  SIMON & SCHUSTER,

  Rockefeller Center

  1230 Avenue of the Americas

  New York, NY 10020

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  Copyright © 2006 by Brad Geagley

  All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form.

  SIMON & SCHUSTER and colophon are registered trademarks of Simon & Schuster, Inc.

  Book design by Ellen R. Sasahara

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Geagley, Brad, date.

  Day of the false king : a novel of murder in ancient Iraq / Brad Geagley.

  p. cm.

  1. Government investigators—Egypt—Fiction. 2. Iraq—History—To 634—Fiction. 3. Babylon (Extinct city)—Fiction. 4. Egyptians—Iraq—Fiction. I. Title.

  PS3607.E35D395 2006

  813’.6—dc22 2005052756

  ISBN-10: 0-7432-8865-3

  ISBN-13: 978-0-7432-8865-1

  Visit us on the World Wide Web:

  http://www.SimonSays.com

  For

  Randall R. Henderson

  Introduction

  DAY OF THE FALSE KING continues the story of Semerket, Egypt’s clerk of Investigations and Secrets. The time is approximately 1150 BCE, and the conspirators who plotted the overthrow of Pharaoh Ramses III have been tried and executed. But the old pharaoh has succumbed to the wounds inflicted by his Theban wife, Queen Tiya; it is his first-born son who now rules Egypt as his chosen successor, Ramses IV.

  Day of the False King takes place mainly in the city of Babylon (ancient Iraq). Geographically placed at the center of the Old World, where East literally meets West, Babylon was the crossroads for conquering armies and adventuresome merchants, and the prize of dynasts. From cruel tyrants to far-seeing visionaries, an ever-changing set of rulers have claimed Babylon’s throne as their own. But they were not god-kings as in Egypt; in fact, there was no term for “king” in any of the Babylonian languages. Instead, they were called simply “strong man” or “big man.” Then as now only martial strength determined who ruled. Strangely, or perhaps inevitably, the rights of the individual were first codified and set down as laws here.

  Around the time that Day of the False King occurs, the Middle East is undergoing—just as it is today—a tortuous, protracted transformation. The old regimes have vanished, setting the stage for the aggressive emergence of the new nations of Phoenicia, Israel, and the Philistines; it is the fourth of these new peoples, the Assyrians, who will achieve dominance in the years ahead.

  Babylonia in particular has suffered a series of cataclysms. The old Kassite Dynasty, themselves invaders from the north, has been toppled. The nation of Elam (soon to be known as Persia) has launched a massive war to conquer Babylonia from the southeast. Native tribes in the country also see this moment as their own chance to evict the foreigners and re-establish a dynasty of their own.

  Into this roiling alchemy Semerket’s adored ex-wife, Naia, is thrust. She and Rami, the tomb-maker’s son, have been banished to Babylon as indentured servants—punishment for their accidental roles in the Harem Conspiracy against Ramses III.

  As in the first novel, most of the events in Day of the False King actually happened, and many of the characters actually existed. The Elamite invader King Kutir and the native-born Marduk truly vied for the throne of Babylonia. There really was a festival called Day of the False King, where the entire world turned upside down for a day, when slaves ruled as masters—when the most foolish man in Babylon was chosen to become king.

  Brad Geagley

  Alas my city! Alas my house!

  Bitter are the wails of Ur

  She has been ravaged

  Her people scattered.

  —The Lament for Ur,

  Traditional Sumerian poem

  Book One

  Message From

  Babylon

  WAKING WITH A SHARP CRY, HE FELT HIS heart thump madly before he realized that he was on his pallet in his brother’s house. Once again, he had dreamed of his wife, Naia, slaughtered before the eyes of his wandering night’s spirit. He sat up in the dark, rubbing his forehead. Every time he had the dream, his old wound stung.

  Throwing his mantle over his shoulders, he slipped from the courtyard gate. He had taken to walking the Theban streets late at night when he could not sleep, which was most nights now. Turning from the Avenue Khnum, where the bonfires of Amun’s Great Temple blazed, he slipped into a dank and twisting alley behind a riverfront warehouse. Picking his way through the rot and refuse, he came at last to a tavern. The sign hanging above its door depicted a hippopotamus besieged by hunters.

  It was very late and many of the patrons were snoring over their cups. The Wounded Hippo was a venerable dockside haunt, centuries old, and its brick walls were crumbling to pieces. Unfortunately, the current owner’s apparent devotion to the antique did not extend to the vintage he served.

  He trod silently to his usual corner and signaled the tavern’s owner.

  “Wine,” he said. “Red.”

  At the hearth, the innkeeper poured some wine into a terracotta bowl and gave it to his serving wench. “See that man over there?” he asked, keeping his gruff voice low. The woman was recently hired, and unfamiliar with the tastes of the tavern’s regular patrons.

  She turned her head discreetly, whispering in the same guarded tone, “A gentleman!” Her posture perceptibly straightened so that her breasts might be displayed to better advantage beneath her tight linen sheath. “What’s he doing here, I wonder?”

  The innkeeper ignored the unintentional slur to his establishment. “Every night he comes in and wants the same thing.”

  “Well, that’s hardly strange—not much to choose from, is there?” The wench laughed, which she often did these days, proud of her new teeth made of elephant ivory and wired into her mouth with copper bands. “I mean, it’s either white or red, now, isn’t it?”

  “That’s not the point.” The man’s voice fell to a whisper. “He never drinks it.”

  The woman caught herself in midchortle. The idea of a man coming into a tavern and not drinking struck her as odd, somehow, almost obscene. “You’re joking,” she said.

  “May my Day of Pain come tomorrow if I am,” the innkeeper said. “Just stares at the bowl all night, and never once brings it to his lips.”

  The woman peered suspiciously at the man. “He’s not a ghost, is he? They say ghosts can’t eat or drink, but still they pine for it terrible.” She shivered. “I won’t serve ghosts.”

  “He’s alive all right—though Egypt would’ve been better off if he wasn’t. A ‘follower of Set,’ he is. He’s the one accused all them at the conspiracy trials last year.”

  “That’s Semerket?”

  The innkeeper nodded. They stared.

  Semerket’s aggravated voice abruptly cut through the room. “Must I wait for the grapes to be harvested?”

  The innkeeper looked down at the bowl still clutched in the wench’s hands. “Better take it to him. Don’t want my name on any list of his.”

  The wench swept her mass of braids away from her face and crossed the room to where Semerket sat, her generous hips swaying as she walked. She placed the bowl at his side.

  “Your wine, my lord.”

  At her unfamiliar voice, his head snapped up. She was struck by the sudden tense collision of emotions on his slim face. His eyes, glittering dangerously in the firelight,
were the blackest she had ever seen. He was not handsome, but far from ugly. She dropped her eyes before his powerful stare, and the woman was surprised to feel something unexpectedly warm flush through her loins.

  “You’re new,” Semerket said, handing her a copper snippet. It was not a question.

  The wench bobbed her head, and the wax beads woven into the ends of her braids clicked together softly.

  Semerket looked away, his black eyes going opaque. Still the woman lingered a bit, collecting the empty bowls strewn around the rug. He did not appear to notice her.

  “My lord?” she whispered at last.

  He looked up, surprised to find her still there. “What?”

  “I don’t mean to pry, but—but my master over there says—well, he tells me that every night you order wine, but that you…”

  “But that I never drink it.” Annoyance flickered behind the obsidian depths as Semerket glanced in the direction of the innkeeper. “I wasn’t aware he found me so fascinating.”

  Though his voice was cold, the woman persisted. “I thought you was a poor spirit, maybe, some sort of ghost, now, didn’t I? But up close, I see you’re a fine, strong man. Very alive, indeed. So why do you not drink?” She smiled at him encouragingly.

  “My wife doesn’t want me to,” he said dully. “And I promised her…something…”

  “Well, if you don’t mind me saying it, what you need is a more forgiving woman.”

  He grabbed her wrist, and her words ended in a tiny yelp. She gasped at the strength in his grip as he pulled her down so that her eyes were level with his. In the firelight his face was haggard and drawn, his expression tormented.

  “I need the wine because I know if I can’t deal with my life any longer, one little sip and the gods grant me a merciful release. Do you understand now? It’s a way out.”

  She nodded, her eyes wide, the ivory nervously glinting. “Yes, my lord. Yes. It does a body good to get out now and then. I understand. Truly.”

  The odd lights in Semerket’s eyes suddenly extinguished, and he let go of the woman’s arm. She comprehended nothing.

  Rubbing her wrist, she retreated again to the hearth, never to come near him again that night. Semerket hardly noticed. He gazed instead into the shadows, as if looking for something. It was very close now, he knew, the thing that sought him. He felt like some helpless rabbit, spellbound by the cobra’s approach.

  For a year, he had sensed it coming. Lately the feeling had become worse. Rarely did he sleep through an entire evening without seeing his banished wife, Naia, slain by a spear’s thrust. The dreams were a warning, he believed, some intuitive communication he had received from her. Perhaps she was in some kind of danger in Babylon; perhaps she needed him. It might be that she was—

  He clenched his eyes tightly, rubbing at his brow, refusing to consider that obscene possibility.

  At long last, through the doorway, he saw that the night was turning from black to gray. He rose, another evening gone. Outside, shrill birdsong poured from the reeds and grasses at the Nile’s edge, and from the Temple of Thoth came the distant barks of the sacred baboons heralding Ra’s approaching solar barque. He stood at the river’s edge and closed his eyes, inhaling deeply.

  The air was clear on the river. The Nile had only recently receded, leaving its yearly gift of silt upon the land. The odor of rich black earth rose in his nostrils. Tassels of sprouting emmer wheat and flax fringed the distant fields with a delicate green. It would be a good harvest this year, he thought, if the gods did not afflict the crops with locusts or snails.

  The food vendors soon appeared from the dark alleys to set up their stalls on the concourse. When the smells of frying onions and spiced fish began to scent the boulevard, he turned and walked back to his brother’s house. Nenry was the mayor of Eastern Thebes and occupied an estate near the Temple of Ma’at. Semerket’s fretful mind was a void, for once, and he was unprepared for the sight that met him at his brother’s gate.

  A cohort of Shardana guards waited in the alley. They were Pharaoh’s elite northern guard, composed of Egypt’s former enemies, the Sea Peoples. An empty sedan chair waited with them. It was no modest equipage, for eight liveried attendants wearing Pharaoh’s colors carried it.

  Semerket saw that Nenry and his wife, Keeya, stood at the gate. From their anxious expressions, he sensed that the news was not good. Keeya clutched Huni to her chest, the child Naia had left behind in Egypt for Semerket to raise. Even the infant’s dark eyes were full of fright.

  “Here is my brother at last,” Nenry said, his face wreathed in nervous tics.

  The Shardana chief turned as Semerket approached. “Lord Semerket?” he asked.

  Semerket nodded mutely.

  “Pharaoh requests your presence at Djamet Temple.”

  Semerket swallowed, trying to find his tongue. “May I…may I know why?”

  “There is a message for you, I’m told—from Babylon. Pharaoh wants you to come immediately.”

  He would have fallen if the guards had not leapt to catch him. As they eased him into the carrying chair, he cast a stricken glance at Nenry and Keeya. He felt Nenry’s hand squeeze his shoulder as the chair was lifted high by the bearers.

  As she held Huni for him to kiss, Keeya whispered into his ear, “The gods go with you, Semerket.”

  It was too late for gods, he knew; the thing he feared had come. Resolutely, he turned his face to Djamet Temple.

  SEMERKET STOOD at the grated window in Pharaoh’s private chambers, straining to make out the blurred and water-stained words written on a piece of brittle palm bark. The first ones he managed to pick out were ominous:

  …attacked by Isins.

  He had no idea what or who Isins were—or even who had written the letter. The next few glyphs, smudged beyond recognition, offered no help. He could make out only those that spelled these words:

  …the house of Menef to…Prince of Elam…Naia…

  His breath caught when he saw the name he cherished actually written down. The only glyph he could further distinguish, and that with difficulty, was the most chilling of all—slain.

  Then, at last, the signature, smudged and barely legible. Rami.

  He raised his head. Surrounded by his scribes and servants, the fourth Ramses sat on a thronelike chair at the end of the room. Beside him was another man, a foreigner. Though it was late winter and the temperature was climbing every day, Egypt’s king had wrapped himself in a heavy, embroidered cape of red wool. Charcoal braziers were placed everywhere about the room to warm it.

  “Does Your Majesty know the contents of this letter?” Semerket asked.

  Pharaoh nodded, and gestured to the foreigner, who also sat in a chair. “My cousin Elibar, here, brought it to me last night. We read it together—or as much of it as we could.”

  Semerket, surprised, looked closer at the other man, and noticed that Pharaoh and the foreigner indeed shared a physical likeness he had not appreciated at first—the same slim, prominent nose; the pale eyes and skin. Indeed, though the stranger’s long hair and beard had turned to gray, their hue had once been the same russet that characterized all the Ramessid family. He must be related to the king’s Canaanite mother, Semerket thought.

  Ramses drew a breath to speak again, but instead began to cough. A faint sheen of sweat erupted on his forehead and he pressed a kerchief to his lips. Semerket noted the instant concern that flared in Elibar’s eyes. With a wordless gesture, the hovering chamberlain directed a servant to remove the soiled kerchief and bring another. Though the room’s light was dim, Semerket thought he saw a faint tinge of pink froth staining the cloth before the slave hastily folded it. Elibar himself filled a goblet with wine and held it to Pharaoh’s lips.

  When he had finished drinking, Ramses sat back on his gilded chair, weakly mopping his brow with a fresh kerchief. “Now,” Pharaoh’s voice was stronger, “you will no doubt want to ask my cousin about that letter you hold.”

  Without pleasan
tries, Semerket nodded and began to speak. “How did you come by this letter, lord? And when?”

  Elibar answered slowly, taking time to consider his words. “A caravan entered Canaan from Babylon a fortnight ago. This Rami of yours had given the letter to the caravan’s master to bring to Egypt, or to pass to another merchant who would.”

  Though Elibar spoke an excellent Egyptian, his voice was so deep and oddly inflected that Semerket had to watch the man’s lips to determine the words he actually spoke.

  “In my own land people know that I’m Pharaoh’s cousin—not always to my advantage, I might add—so the letter was brought to me. I recognized your name at once, for my aunt, Pharaoh’s mother, had written to me about how you rescued my cousin from the conspirators. I hurried here, knowing of his majesty’s regard for you.”

 

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