Dream Boat

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Dream Boat Page 24

by Marilyn Todd


  pleasure. No doubt he also kicked his brother's tomcat, should it ever venture into this room!

  The only other papers hidden in his strongbox were accounts and, judging from his ticks and comments in the margins, Min worshipped money even over Ra. Women might not be respected. Gold was. He was salting stashes of it away in secret - and, according to these records, in places Mentu didn't know about. Oh dear, oh dear. You naughty boy. You're out to double-cross your younger brother.

  Well, that was their affair, perhaps they'd come to blows when it came to light and kill each other in the process. But certainly any receipt for the sale of young girls to brothels would be lodged among these papers. And, dammit, there were none—

  She backtracked to the office, where the papers were in neat order, and could tell from the registry that Neco was obviously right at home overseeing a large number of clerks and scribes, secretaries and accountants. As she had suspected, records were kept of every confessional heard at the terracotta ears - time, date, confidante's name, all listed alongside - but there was nothing suggestive of sales to Oriental brothels.

  Penno's room was decorated with hieroglyphics depicting the Day of Judgement - Anubis, weighing out some poor sod's heart, with Osiris set to lead him to the Underworld should the feather in the jackal's hand balance on the scales. Below the scales, there squatted a hideously misshapen monster licking its chops. Seth, of course. The Devourer of Souls. She peered closer at the long, curved snout and stiffly tufted tail. No wonder the dead man was looking worried!

  Laid out on Penno's long low table was a hand-sized replica of Ra's famous barque, a bowl of holy water, a set of ten carved priestesses, two ivory musicians and two carved horn dancers. Puzzled, Claudia considered the arrangement as she dripped the irritant juices on his bed and rubbed petals, leaves and sap into the temple warden's mattress. Then she saw! Old Loppylugs here conducted his own religious ceremonies in the privacy of his room, inevitably acting out the role of High

  Priest himself, and no doubt Penno made several changes -improvements! - in his little dramas. What other fantasies did he harbour? Men who are addicted to rites and rituals make ruthless killers. Like Min, they have a need to control.

  Each of the superintendents here thrives on control - terrorising, intimidating, bullying, even prescribing drugs to keep the commune pliable. That's their job. It's why they were given these commands.

  Claudia gazed round the bedroom of the Keeper of the Store. Give him one thing, she thought. He's a stickler for his own rules, the room was barren. No paintings on the walls. No tasselled drapes. A couple of spare tunics, nothing fancy. No jewels. Not even a razor for Geb! It therefore did not take her long to find his secret cache of letters, and there were only two.

  You bastard. You killed her, and you didn't even bother coming to her funeral. You are no father of mine.

  The second one was clearly a response to Geb's reply.

  You are more evil than I thought. You killed my mother and now you lay the blame on her, you say she drove you to it. I hope you rot in hell, you vicious bastard.

  The raw emotion was too much for Claudia. She felt the child's pain (instinctively she knew it was a son's), sensed the anguish in his heart. Mercy's feminine intuition had not been wrong. Geb was the type to beat his wife and he'd beaten her once too often, so it seemed. No, wait! Claudia was jumping to conclusions here. She only had Mercy's gut feeling that Geb had used his fists. There are many other ways to die . . .

  But the son's suffering embedded itself like a fish hook as Claudia continued to doctor the clothes and bedlinens of the remaining members of the Holy Council and she could not dislodge the barb. Was it possible, she wondered, that Geb had joined the Brothers of Horus to clear his conscience through

  their rigid, self-imposed regime of abstinence and penance? It might explain his violent temper and the punishment he inflicted cold. Through suffering, was he saying, you too can achieve blessedness? The notion did not sit well with his loutish behaviour.

  Blast! Zigzagging back and forth, she realised she'd missed a room. Neco's! Bugger, she'd used up all her irritants, as well! She imagined the Chief Scribe's superior air when it became obvious he'd escaped the mass contagion. By heaven, he was a smug bastard now, he'd be bloody unbearable then! Stupid cow, how could you have overlooked him? Neco, of all people, would keep his documentation neat and tidy. Any sales slips would not be hard to find - Claudia's hand was on the door when she realised someone was already in the room. She put her ear to the woodwork and heard a thwack, followed by a whistle, followed by a groan. Thwack, whistle, groan. Thwack, whistle, groan.

  Her immediate thoughts were of Min, and the girl whose rape she had not prevented. She'd not fail another girl, whatever the consequences. Without hesitating, Claudia burst in.

  She had indeed interrupted something nasty. The whistle was caused by the breath being expelled through the scribe's crossed teeth. The groan was pain. But the cause of the groan was a three-tailed knotted rawhide lash with which a kneeling, naked Neco thrashed himself.

  Chapter Thirty-one

  No light, no sound, no scent ever penetrated the charcoal shed, except when the hatch was opened either to fling in new supplies or shovel out existing stocks. Flavia, curled foetus-like in the corner, wanted to die.

  She was hungry, weary, dirty, hot and thirsty - yes, above all, she was thirsty. Merciful Minerva, help me, she pleaded in her dark and silent tomb. I didn't mean any of this to happen.

  She was beyond tears now.

  Curled up in a ball, staring into blackness, she had no concept of time. It seemed like days had passed, and her throat was dry and dusty from the coals, the thirst was killing her. What's happening to me? she cried. Why hasn't anyone come to open up the hatch? They need coals for cooking, for the bakehouse, for hot water for the Pharaoh's bath house. Why has no one come to take the charcoal? How much longer must I wait?

  Her nails were split and broken from picking at the wood, her knuckles and her shoulders were raw, but the bolt on the outside of the hatch stayed fast. She had cursed it, pleaded with it, prayed to every god and nymph, but nothing changed. What had started out as Flavia's refuge had become her prison.

  She daren't think about what would happen to her, once they found her. Geb would ridicule her in public, black and drenched with her own sweat, her hair plastered to her body. Then he'd beat her. He had promised her a hiding for that scald, even though it had been an accident. After this, he'd thrash her for everything from insolence and disobedience to throwing his

  horrid schedule out of kilter. She began to tremble. She'd seen the lash he used. Three strips of rawhide knotted at the tips.

  Someone said that he once used so much force that the knots became embedded in the victim's flesh and that he'd had to hook them out with his little finger. She shuddered in the dark. Please spare me that.

  Memories of Marcellus flooded in. Julia. Suddenly Flavia didn't hate them any more. She wanted them to take her home.

  None of this would have happened, she sniffed, if only they'd sent those two thousand gold pieces like I asked. With collateral behind me, I wouldn't be in this mess, cowering like a common criminal, a cornered rat. I wouldn't have to gut pigs and slave in the hot kitchens. Oh, no - a thought occurred to her - after this, Geb would not allow her back inside the kitchens! Sweet Janus, he'll send me to the fields. I want to go home. Please. She clamped her hands together and squeezed up her eyes. Please let me go home . . . I'll be good, I promise. I'll marry whoever you want me to, I won't run away again, I swear upon my father's grave.

  Her father! Oh dear Jupiter, if I die in here, she thought, I'll have to face my dad across the River Styx. He'll be furious that I've let the family down, brought the name of Seferius into disrepute - and Flavia daren't imagine what he'd say about her friendship with that smelly street urchin called Flea.

  Tears began to roll again. They were hot and salty and tasted of the bitter charcoal. She wanted to be
sick. She wanted to be home. Home and warm and safe, looked after by her slaves and wrapped in cool, fresh linen towels. She wanted—

  What was that?

  In the blackness, Flavia tensed. Someone was twitching at the lock.

  'Help!'

  She scrabbled over the slippery coals.

  'Help me, let me out!'

  Clunk! The bolt flew back. The hatch opened slowly, and she recoiled at the brilliance of the light which flooded in.

  'So then.'

  Flavia shielded her eyes. The voice was one she recognised, but she could not make out the face. That voice, though . . .

  'That's where you've been bloody skulking!'

  Flavia must surely be mistaken. Why would this person be the one to rescue her? It made no sense.

  'Come on.' A firm hand closed around her wrist and jerked. 'Out you get!'

  Junius winced when the crowd surged forward because someone caught him on the hip where that vicious Dungeon Master had landed several kicks. White fire thrashed behind his eyes, muzzing up his vision, but he hadn't told the doctor, let alone his mistress.

  His throat constricted. When he arrived here, in the commune, he'd been worried that he might not find her among the herd, but - inwardly he smiled - it wasn't very difficult in the end. Who else marched around as though she owned the place, nose in the air and chin held high?

  He was now convinced something bad was going on. Six girls had vanished to date, and he felt sure another girl, the little laundress, was a casualty.

  Junius was worried for his mistress.

  'Stay here,' she'd said. 'Watch for my signal. This way, we can all get out together.'

  So here he had remained. Alongside the woman from Brindisi, whose grey hair would not obey the rules and coil up in a bun, and resisting her every effort to go and change his merchant clothing for Egyptian costume. But it wasn't his out of place clothes making Junius jittery.

  It wasn't right, the bodyguard doing nothing while the mistress laid her life out on the line.

  It should be him, who took the arrow for her. Him, who stopped the slingshot meant for her.

  Around him, the crowd were cramming forward to give their praise to Ra, to strew petals on the temple steps and swear allegiance to Osiris, through his son on earth, Mentu.

  Since leaving Gaul, Junius had seen some bizarre spectacles, but this was way beyond him, this business about worshipping a boat . . .

  Where the hell was she?

  His eyes roved round the commune, alighting that fraction longer on the supervising staff who had been coming and going with such regularity throughout the so-called resurrection. He distrusted them all - the hairy one, the shiny one, the fat one, the bony one. He paused. Hang on a minute. The weirdo, the one with the wonky teeth and the lip. He was missing.

  And so was his mistress.

  He chewed his thumbnail and shifted his weight from foot to foot. His mind heard again the command to stay put, the way it brooked no contradiction, and Junius rubbed his good eye. Which would be worse? he wondered. To stay while her life might be in danger, or disobey the order and try to seek her out in the crush?

  'It's a miracle, isn't it?'

  Beside him, Mercy's eyes glowed with fanaticism.

  'Mentu dies and is reborn before our very eyes, he will lead us to eternal resurrection, and soon, when darkness falls, we'll celebrate his rebirth with the Festival of Lamps.'

  She wrapped her solid arms around him and hugged him tight.

  'Isn't this the happiest moment of your life?' she asked.

  Junius said nothing.

  Marcus lay on his back in the granary, unaware of the setting sun, the lamps which flickered round the temple compound, the heavy summer heat which throbbed, the sticky breeze which brought sickness to the city. Sprawled on the grain and wearing a dead man's clothes, he was unaware even of the bloodied bruise just above his ear from the blow which had laid him out, unaware of ribs which had cracked when he had pitched forward on a heap which was by no means as soft as it appeared - or as he would have wished.

  In his unconscious state, he did not dream.

  He did not know that, back in Rome, his faithful steward, Tingi, had tracked down the groom who had left his household six months before his wife sold off the slaves and was about to divulge some interesting revelations. Revelations that would lead, although Marcus did not know it, to the identity of the murder victim - a distant cousin of his uncle's who had come to stay before Orbilio had taken over the house. The groom, having fathered eight children of his own, had recognised the signs of the girl's - shall we say - condition straight way, and his wife mentioned rumours about the cousin's affair with the master of the house. How the cousin and the wife had had a blazing row one night, resulting in the cousin leaving shortly afterwards.

  Neither could Marcus, in his cocoon of oblivion, know that his boss was sitting, at this very moment, in the theatre, unable to concentrate on the comedy by Terence, because it niggled him that any scandal attached to Marcus might blow back in his own face. Suppose Orbilio had killed his wife and bricked up her body in the plaster? How would that reflect on the Head of the Security Police, who had checked his references and found them impeccable? While the audience clutched their sides and howled, his boss was wondering whether he'd acted too hastily in drawing attention to the body in Orbilio's storeroom. Mopping at his brow, he glanced across to the box where Augustus sat with his wife and daughter and a few close friends. Suppose word got back to him? Presumption of guilt went very much against the Imperial grain and the Head of the Security Police must - like the late and Divine Julius's wife -be above suspicion. He shuffled miserably on his cushion. He had never found Terence funny, anyway.

  Night fell and Marcus, lying on his back, snored softly in his coma and did not see the human shadow which fell over him.

  Luckily for him, he hadn't heard about the fate of spies. That they were condemned to die by the Ordeal of the Lakes, first by being roasted in a fire. Then by being boiled alive.

  Marcus did not see the figure which leaned over him.

  He slumbered on . . .

  All across the valley, the exhilaration and excitement generated by a whole day packed with festivals and games and culminating in their Pharaoh's proof of immortality slowly gave way to a different kind of optimism. Soon, the vigil would begin. Ten thousand tiny lights would flicker through the night, guiding Ra's boat through its perilous journey in the Realm of Dark. The flames would scare away the Serpent of the Void and navigate a safe route through the Twelve Gates of the Underworld.

  Ablaze with these mortal illuminations, mummies would awaken from the dead and cast off their bandages. The lame shall walk, the blind shall see, the barren shall bring forth a child. Praise be to Ra, O lord of lords and king of kings, whose limbs are gold and emeralds are his eyes. Grant us peace in heaven, health on earth and acquittal on the final Day of Judgement.

  The High Priest, with his ten priestesses, laid out flat dishes filled with oil and salt and his ten white-robed acolytes lit the floating wicks around the Barque of Ra. In the darkness, the gold prow glinted brighter than midsummer sunshine and as the hundreds upon hundreds of twinkling lights were lit, the Boat of a Million Years drifted on the waters of their hope.

  Up in his secret cave, Seth felt his whole body glow with happiness. His skin tingled, his pulse skipped, he could not believe his luck. Another one! He danced around his table, unable to keep still. Tonight, while those fools down there celebrate the Festival of Lamps, The Master of Men's Destinies can begin the slow process of putting his own magic into practice. Dark, powerful magic which will make divinities of mere disciples.

  He clasped his hands together and gave thanks to Ra. Ra, who had shown him the secret path to immortality. Ra, whose goodness shone on Seth by day and whose power guarded him by night.

  Power! The knowledge of his own potency stirred his

  manhood into action and he took the new arrival roughly and wit
hout care. In his heightened state of emotion, Seth could not recall her name, or the mask he'd allocated her -in fact, he could not recall any of their real names now. Thoth and Bast, Horus and Hathor, that's who they were. They had become the Ten True Fools, seated round his table for eternity, with Osiris coming last to bend the knee, as it must be. As it was ordained to be.

  Seth climaxed.

  The girl whimpered.

  'Shut up!' He silenced her with his fist. 'Shut up, you bitch, I need to think!'

  Think. Think . . .

  But he couldn't think. He was too light-headed at the moment. He laughed. By heaven, it had taken him by surprise, back there on the stage, when Mentu actually mentioned Seth by name. For a minute, he'd wondered if the bastard was on to him - about to denounce him on the spot - and he didn't mind admitting, his heart had nearly stopped! But now, in retrospect, he was glad the subject of the Dark Destroyer was back out in the open. For some reason, Mentu hadn't mentioned him for a week or two, and Seth badly wanted the people to know about his power. To understand who they were dealing with.

  He loped over to the back of his cave, to the set of scrolls hidden in the corner. He had set it all down in these books - everything, except the secret of his magic, naturally! That secret was his and his alone, it had been passed to him by Ra and would travel with him in the underworld. But when the time was right - and that time was fast approaching -he'd deposit his Book of Knowledge in the House of Life, along with the Forty-two Sacred Books of Wisdom, so that everyone might know who they'd be dealing with.

  That Seth was no mere Dark Destroyer, Devourer of Souls.

  That he was also Master of Eternity, controller of men's destiny, the Sorcerer, the Measurer of Time.

  That he, with his ten disciples, could change the future of mankind.

  He replaced the scrolls and looked around. His majestic seed had transformed mortal women into gods who now sat around his table and awaited the stupendous moment when Seth and Seth alone could breath life - eternal life - into them.

 

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