CRITICS SALUTE RAMSES
“A PLOT AS SINUOUS AS THE RIVER NILE, WITH CHARACTERS LYING LIKE CROCODILES IN THE SHALLOWS. . . . THIS BOOK MAKES ANCIENT EGYPT AS RELEVANT AND 3-D AS TODAY’S NEWS.”
—J. Suzanne Frank, author of Reflections in the Nile
“Officially, Christian Jacq was born in Paris in 1947. In fact, his real birth took place in the time of the pharaohs, along the banks of the Nile, where the river carries eternal messages. . . . Who could ever tell that Christian Jacq, Ramses’ official scribe, was not writing from memory.”
—Magazine Littéraire
“With hundreds of thousands of readers, millions of copies in print, Christian Jacq’s success has become unheard of in the world of books. This man is the pharaoh of publishing!”
—Figaro Magazine
“In 1235 B.C., Ramses II might have said: ‘My life is as amazing as fiction!’ It seems Christian Jacq heard him. . . . Christian Jacq draws a pleasure from writing that is contagious. His penmanship turns history into a great show, high-quality entertainment.”
—VSD
“It’s Dallas or Dynasty in Egypt, with a hero (Ramses), beautiful women, plenty of villains, new developments every two pages, brothers fighting for power, magic, enchantments, and historical glamour.”
—Libération
“He’s a pyramid-surfer. The pharaoh of publishing. His saga about Ramses II is a bookselling phenomenon!”
—Le Parisien
“Moves at a breakneck pace. . . . A lot of fun.”
—KLIATT
RAMSES
Volume I: The Son of Light
Volume II: The Eternal Temple
Volume III: The Battle of Kadesh
Volume IV: The Lady of Abu Simbel
Volume V: Under the Western Acacia
RAMSES VOLUME IV: THE LADY OF ABU SIMBEL. Copyright © 1996 by Editions Robert Laffont (Volume 4). All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer who may quote brief passages in a review.
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ISBN: 978-0-4469-3025-3
Originally published in French by Editions Robert Laffont, S.A. Paris, France.
A trade paperback edition of this book was published in 1998 by Warner Books.
First eBook Edition: March 2001
Visit our Web site at www.HachetteBookGroup.com
CONTENTS
CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER TWO
CHAPTER THREE
CHAPTER FOUR
CHAPTER FIVE
CHAPTER SIX
CHAPTER SEVEN
CHAPTER EIGHT
CHAPTER NINE
CHAPTER TEN
CHAPTER ELEVEN
CHAPTER TWELVE
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
CHAPTER NINETEEN
CHAPTER TWENTY
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE
CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX
CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN
CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT
CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE
CHAPTER THIRTY
CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE
CHAPTER THIRTY-TWO
CHAPTER THIRTY-THREE
CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR
CHAPTER THIRTY-FIVE
CHAPTER THIRTY-SIX
CHAPTER THIRTY-SEVEN
CHAPTER THIRTY-EIGHT
CHAPTER THIRTY-NINE
CHAPTER FORTY
CHAPTER FORTY-ONE
CHAPTER FORTY-TWO
CHAPTER FORTY-THREE
CHAPTER FORTY-FOUR
CHAPTER FORTY-FIVE
CHAPTER FORTY-SIX
CHAPTER FORTY-SEVEN
CHAPTER FORTY-EIGHT
CHAPTER FORTY-NINE
CHAPTER FIFTY
CHAPTER FIFTY-ONE
CHAPTER FIFTY-TWO
CHAPTER FIFTY-THREE
CHAPTER FIFTY-FOUR
CHAPTER FIFTY-FIVE
CHAPTER FIFTY-SIX
CHAPTER FIFTY-SEVEN
CHAPTER FIFTY-EIGHT
CHAPTER FIFTY-NINE
CHAPTER SIXTY
ONE
Fighter, Ramses’ pet lion, let out a roar that froze both the Egyptians and the rebel foe in their tracks. The huge beast wore a fine gold collar, his award for valor in battle against the Hittites at Kadesh. He was twelve feet long and weighed more than six hundred pounds; a thick mane flared around his head, neck, shoulders, and upper chest. His tawny coat was sleek.
For leagues in every direction, Fighter’s fury resounded. Clearly, his fury echoed that of Ramses, the young pharaoh whose victory at Kadesh had made him Ramses the Great.
Yet had he earned true greatness, when with all of his stature the Hittites continued to defy him?
The Egyptian army had proved disappointing in combat. The generals, cowardly or incompetent, had abandoned Ramses, leaving him to face the enemy single-handed, one man against a host of thousands, certain that victory was theirs. But the god Amon, concealed in the light, had heard the pharaoh’s prayer and endowed his son with supernatural strength.
After five tumultuous years as Pharaoh, Ramses had believed the defeat at Kadesh would humble the Hittites for years to come and that the entire region would enter into an era of relative peace.
He had been sadly mistaken—he, the Mighty Bull, beloved of Ma’at, Lord of the Two Lands, Son of Light! Did he deserve his coronation names when sedition continued to brew in Canaan and southern Syria, Egypt’s traditional protectorates? Now the Hittites not only refused to submit, but furthermore had launched a vast offensive. Their latest allies were the Bedouins, a people of pillaging murderers who cast a covetous eye on the rich Nile Delta.
The commander of Ramses’ Ra division approached him.
“Your Majesty, the situation is more critical than expected. This is no ordinary rebellion. According to our scouts, all of Canaan is up in arms against us. Once we get over the first hurdle, another one will turn up, and then another . . .”
“And you’re afraid we can’t go the distance?”
“Our losses may be heavy, Your Majesty, and the men have no wish to die needlessly.”
“Egypt’s survival should be a good enough reason.”
“I didn’t mean to imply . . .”
“That’s what you’re thinking, though. You generals learned nothing from Kadesh. Why must I always be stuck with cowards who lose their lives in the process of trying to save them?”
“My obedience to you is beyond question, Your Majesty, like that of my fellow commanders. We were only trying to alert you.”
“Has our intelligence network found information on Ahsha?”
“No, I’m sorry to say, Your Majesty.”
Ahsha, the king’s boyhood friend and newly appointed secretary of state, had been waylaid by the Prince of Amurru.* Had Ahsha been tortured? Was he still alive? Would his captors use the diplomat as a valuable pawn?
As soon as he learned the news in a coded message from Ahsha, Ramses had mobilized his troops, still reeling from Kadesh. To rescue Ahsha, they would have to travel through territory once again hostile to Egypt. The local rulers had flouted their oaths of allegiance and sol
d themselves to the Hittites in exchange for precious metal and hollow promises. Who wouldn’t dream of invading the land of the pharaohs and exploiting its reputedly inexhaustible riches?
Ramses the Great had ambitious projects to oversee in Egypt—the Ramesseum (his mortuary Temple of Millions of Years at Thebes); additions to the temples at Karnak, Luxor, and Abydos; his final resting place in the Valley of the Kings; and now Abu Simbel, the poem in stone he planned as a gift to his beloved wife, Nefertari. Yet here he stood on a hilltop overlooking the first fortress within the borders of Canaan, observing the enemy position.
“Your Majesty, if I may say . . .”
“Out with it, General.”
“Your show of force is most impressive. I’m convinced that Emperor Muwattali has already gotten the message and will free Ahsha any day.”
Muwattali, the Hittite emperor, was a ruthless and cunning ruler, well aware that sheer force was the basis of his power. Kadesh had shattered the unprecedented Near Eastern coalition he had put together, but Muwattali would never stop trying to conquer Egypt, even if it meant resorting to deals with the Bedouins and third-party rebels.
Only Muwattali’s death—or Ramses’—would put an end to the conflict, and the future of the entire region hinged on it. If Egypt fell, a Hittite military dictatorship would clamp down on the Two Lands—the Twin Kingdoms of upper and lower Egypt—destroying a civilization that had lasted more than a thousand years, since the days of the first pharaoh, Menes.
Ramses’ thoughts strayed to Moses, another close friend from his school days. Wanted for murder, the Hebrew had fled the country. Could he be hiding somewhere in this desert? While serving as chief builder of Pi-Ramses, the new capital Ramses founded in the Delta, Moses had become a leader to his people. Some claimed he’d formed a rebel faction, but Ramses refused to believe that Moses could ever become his enemy.
“Your Majesty, are you listening?”
He looked the general in the eye. A typical officer, well fed, battle-shy, and intent on preserving his rank. The man reminded him of the person he hated most in the world: Shaanar, his older brother. The traitor had allied himself with the Hittites in the hope of seizing the throne of Egypt. While being transferred from the main Memphis prison to a desert penal colony, Shaanar had escaped in a blinding sandstorm. Ramses believed that his brother was still alive and up to no good.
“Prepare your troops for combat, General.”
The commander sheepishly took his leave.
Ramses wished he could be spending the day in a garden with Nefertari, his son, and their daughter. He much preferred the simple pleasures, far from the clash of arms. Yet only he could save his country from the thundering, bloodthirsty hordes poised to pull down the temples and destroy law and order. The stakes were higher than his personal fate. He had no right to consider his own comfort, to think of his family. He must keep Egypt safe from harm, even if it cost him his life.
Ramses studied the fort blocking the route that led into the heart of Canaan. The tall walls sloped on both sides, protecting a sizable garrison. In the battlements, archers waited. The ditches were filled with pottery shards to cut the feet of soldiers advancing to erect the ladders.
A sea breeze cooled the Egyptian troops, who were huddled between two sun-drenched hills. The pace of their march had been grueling, with brief rest stops in makeshift camps. Only the well-paid mercenaries were ready and willing to do battle. The young recruits, already exhausted and homesick, were afraid of losing their lives in gruesome combat. Everyone hoped that Pharaoh would settle for shoring up the northeastern border rather than heading into a full-fledged campaign that might prove disastrous.
Not long before, the governor of Gaza (the capital of Canaan) had hosted a splendid banquet for the Egyptian high command, swearing never again to side with the cruel and barbaric Hittites. At the time, his obvious hypocrisy had turned Ramses’ stomach. Today, his betrayal hardly surprised the pharaoh; at twenty-eight, Ramses knew all too well what lurked in the hearts of men.
The lion again began to roar, growing restless.
Fighter had changed since the day Ramses had found him as a cub in the Nubian grasslands, hovering near death from a cobra bite. A bond had been forged between them on the spot. Luckily Setau had been along on that journey. Another friend of Ramses’ since their school days, Setau had gone on to become a snake charmer and a healer. His remedies and the lion cub’s remarkable constitution had allowed Fighter to survive and grow into a magnificent specimen, a bodyguard any king would envy.
Ramses stroked Fighter’s mane. The beast remained edgy.
Now Setau came heading up the hill, dressed in his working costume of antelope skins. The tunic’s multiple pockets were stuffed with powders, pills, and vials. The man was of average height, stocky and square-jawed, dark and stubbly. His passion for snakes and scorpions had only increased in adulthood. The venom he harvested became strong medicine. With his stunning Nubian wife, Lotus, he now directed the palace laboratories.
Ramses had once more asked the pair to head the army’s medical service. They had taken part in all the king’s military campaigns, not out of any love for war, but to help the wounded and collect a few snakes in the bargain. The soldiers were delighted to have the lovely Lotus along, and Setau wanted to be close at hand in case anything happened to his friend Ramses.
“Morale isn’t what it should be,” Setau reported.
“The generals want to turn back,” admitted Ramses.
“Considering how your commanders behaved at Kadesh, is that any wonder? The decision will be yours alone, as usual.”
“I’m not alone, Setau. I have the sun and the wind to counsel me, the spirit of my lion and the voice of the earth. They never lie. The trick is to understand what they’re telling me.”
“There’s no better war council.”
“Have you consulted your snakes?”
“Of course I have. They know all the secrets. This time they were straightforward: don’t turn back. What’s making Fighter so nervous?”
“That oak grove over there to the left, about halfway to the fort.”
Chewing on a reed stem, Setau looked where the king was pointing.
“I don’t like the look of it, either. An ambush, like Kadesh?”
“That one worked so well that the Hittites may have decided to try it again. When we attack, we’ll be brought up short, while the archers mow us down from the battlements.”
Menna, Ramses’ chariot driver and shield bearer, bowed to the king.
“Your chariot is ready, Your Majesty.”
The king stopped to pat his two horses, Victory in Thebes and the Goddess Mut Is Satisfied. Besides Fighter, they were the only ones who stayed by his side at Kadesh when the battle seemed all but lost.
Ramses took the reins, to the incredulous stares of his driver, the generals, and the crack chariot regiment.
“Your Majesty,” stammered Menna, “you’re not going to . . .”
“Let’s swing to the left of the fort,” ordered the king, “and bear down on that oak grove.”
“Wait, Your Majesty! You’re forgetting your coat of mail!”
Waving a corselet covered with small metal disks, the driver ran helplessly behind the chariot. Ramses was heading straight for the enemy, alone.
TWO
Tall in his speeding chariot, Ramses the Great looked more like a god than a man. On his broad, high forehead he wore a tight-fitting blue crown. Beneath full, arched brows, his eyes darted like a falcon’s. His nose was long and hooked, his ears round and delicate, his chin strong, lips full. Ramses was the image of power and strength.
At his approach, the Bedouins emerged from their hiding place in the oak grove, some drawing bows, others brandishing spears.
In a flashback to Kadesh, the king was a whirlwind, covering long distances faster than a jackal. Like a sharp-horned bull on a rampage, he felled the first line of attackers, piercing the rebels with arrow after ar
row.
The head of the Bedouin commando somehow made it through the monarch’s furious charge. On one knee, he was poised to toss a long dagger straight at Ramses’ back.
Horror-stricken, the few remaining Bedouins saw Fighter spring into the air. Despite his size, he seemed to fly like a bird. Claws bared, he pounced on the chief, crunching the man’s skull between his fangs.
The sight was so horrifying that many of the enemy warriors threw down their arms and ran for their lives. Fighter was already mangling two other Bedouins who had come to their commander’s rescue.
The Egyptian charioteers, followed by foot soldiers in the hundreds, were close behind Ramses. They quickly dispatched the last pockets of resistance.
Fighter sat calmly by, licking his bloody paws and gazing fondly at his master. Detecting the gratitude in Ramses’ eyes, he purred contentedly and settled near the right wheel of the chariot, still on alert.
“A resounding victory, Your Majesty!” declared the Ra division general.
“We’ve just averted a disaster. Why didn’t any of our scouts realize that an enemy squadron was lying in ambush?”
“We didn’t have them check the oak grove. It looked too small to be of any consequence.”
“Take a lesson from my lion, General.”
“Shall I convene the war council to discuss the attack on the fort?”
“We’ll attack at once.”
The Pharaoh’s tone of voice told Fighter that his rest was over. Ramses stroked the hindquarters of his two horses, who looked at each other for the strength to go on.
“Your Majesty, here you are, please!”
Winded, the driver Menna caught up with them, waving the shiny breastplate. Ramses donned the coat of mail without too much damage to his long-sleeved linen gown. On each wrist he wore a gold and lapis lazuli bracelet with the heads of a pair of wild ducks entwined in the center, symbolizing the royal couple. Like migrating birds, they would fly toward the great beyond. Would he see Nefertari again before the great journey began?
Victory in Thebes and the Goddess Mut Is Satisfied pranced impatiently in their headdresses of blue-tipped red plumes and matching caparisons, eager to ride into battle.
Ramses, Volume IV Page 1