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The Seventh Scroll: A Novel of Ancient Egypt

Page 34

by Wilbur Smith


  After the heat of the gorge the water was icy cold. It battered them with the force of a fire hose. Royan hopped on her good leg, gasping and whimpering under the torrent, and emerged covered in goose-pimples and shuddering blue with cold. However, it refreshed her, and even in her filthy, sweat-stinking clothes it gave her heart to start out on the last bitter climb to the summit.

  Before leaving the cavern they examined each other’s injuries again. Nicholas’s scalp wound was healing cleanly, but Royan’s knee was no better than the previous day. The bruises were starting to turn a virulent puce, the colour of decomposing liver, and the swelling was unabated. There was very little he could do for it, other than strapping it again with the bandana.

  At last Nicholas admitted defeat, and abandoned his bum-bag and the roll of dik-dik skin. He knew that he was reaching the limit of his physical reserves, and he realized that, light as these items were, every extra pound that he carried today might mean the difference between reaching the summit or breaking down on the trail. He retained only the three rolls of undeveloped film, each in its plastic capsule. These were their only record of the hieroglyphics on the stele in Tanus’s tomb. He dared not risk losing them, so he buttoned them into the breast pocket of his khaki shirt. He tucked both the bag and the skin into a crack in the wall at the back of the cavern, determined to retrieve them at some later date.

  And so they started out on the last but most onerous leg of the trail. To begin with Royan was on her own two feet, but leaning heavily on his shoulder. However, before the first hour was over her knee could no longer take the strain, and she subsided on to a rock on the edge of the pathway.

  ‘I am being an awful nuisance, aren’t I?’

  ‘Come on board, lady. Always room for a small one.’

  With Royan perched on Nicholas’s back, her injured leg sticking out stiffly in front of her, they toiled upwards, but their progress was even slower than it had been the day before. Nicholas was forced to pause and rest at shorter and shorter intervals. On the easier pitches she dismounted and hopped along on one leg beside him, steadying herself with one hand on his shoulder. Then she would collapse, and he had to lift her to her feet and pull her up on to his back once again.

  The journey descended into nightmare, and both of them lost all sense of the passage of time. Hours blended with hours into a single unremitting agony. At one stage they lay beside each other on the path, sick and nauseated with thirst and exhaustion and pain. They had emptied the water bottle an hour ago, and there was no more on this section of the path – nothing to drink until they reached the summit and were reunited with the Dandera river.

  ‘Go on and leave me here,’ she whispered hoarsely.

  He sat up immediately and stared at her aghast. ‘Don’t be silly. I need you for ballast.’

  ‘It can’t be much further to the top,’ she insisted. ‘You can come back with some of Boris’s men to help carry me.’

  ‘If they are still there, and if Pegasus doesn’t find you first.’ He stood up a little unsteadily. ‘Forget it. You are coming along on this ride, all the way.’ And he hoisted her to her feet.

  He made her count aloud every step he took, and at every hundredth he paused and rested. Then he started the next hundred, with her counting softly in his ear, clinging with both arms around his neck. The whole universe seemed to shrink in upon them to the ground directly at his feet. They no longer saw the rock cliff on one side nor the deep void of space on the other. When he lurched or jolted her and the pain shot through her knee, she closed her eyes and tried not to let her voice betray it to him as she kept counting.

  When he rested, he had to lean against the cliff face, not trusting his legs to get him up again if he lay down. He dared not lower her to the ground. The effort of lifting her again would be too much. He no longer had the strength for it.

  ‘It’s almost dark,’ she whispered in his ear. ‘You must stop here for the night. It’s enough for one day. You are killing yourself, Nicky.’

  ‘Another hundred,’ he mumbled.

  ‘No, Nicky. Put me down!’

  For answer he pushed off from the rock wall with his shoulder and staggered on upwards.

  ‘Count!’ he ordered.

  ‘Fifty-one, fifty-two,’ she obeyed. Suddenly the gradient altered so sharply under his feet that he almost fell. The path had levelled out, and like a drunkard he reached up for a step that wasn’t there.

  He staggered and then caught his balance. He stood teetering on the brink of the precipice and peered into the dusk ahead of him, at first unable to credit what he was seeing. There were lights in the gloom, and he thought that he had begun to hallucinate. Then he heard men’s voices, and he shook his head to clear it and bring himself back to reality.

  ‘Oh, dear God. You have made it. We are at the top, Nicky. There are the vehicles. You did it, Nicky. You did it!’

  He tried to speak, but his throat had closed up and no words came. He reeled forward towards the lights, and Royan cried out weakly on his back.

  ‘Help us here. Please help us.’ First in English and then in Arabic. ‘Please help us.’

  There were startled cries and the sounds of running men. Nicholas sank down slowly into the fine highland grass and let Royan slide off his back. Dark figures gathered around them, chattering in Amharic, and friendly hands seized them and half-carried, half-dragged them towards the lights. Then a torch was shone into Nicholas’s face and a very English voice said, ‘Hello, Nicky. Nice surprise. I came down from Addis to look for your corpse. Heard you were dead. Bit premature, what?’

  ‘Hello, Geoffrey. Good of you to take the trouble.’

  ‘I dare say you could use a cup of tea. You look a bit done in,’ said Geoffrey Tennant. ‘Never realized that your beard had ginger and grey bits in it. Designer stubble. Fashionable. Suits you actually.’

  Nicholas realized what a picture he must present, ragged and unshaven, filthy and haggard with exhaustion.

  ‘You remember Dr Al Simma? She has a bit of a dicky knee. Wonder if you would mind taking care of her?’

  Then his legs gave way under him, and Geoffrey Tennant caught him before he fell.

  ‘Steady on, old boy.’ He led him to a canvas-backed camp chair, and seated him solicitously. Another chair was brought for Royan.

  ‘Letta chai hapa!’ Geoffrey gave the universal call of an Englishman in Africa, and minutes later thrust mugs of steaming over-sweetened tea into their hands.

  Nicholas saluted Royan with his mug. ‘Here’s to us. There’s none like us!’

  They both drank deeply, scalding their tongues, but the caffeine and sugar hit their bloodstreams like a charge of electricity.

  ‘Now I know I am going to live,’ Nicholas sighed.

  ‘Don’t want to be pushy, Nicky, but do you mind telling me what the hell is going on here?’ Geoffrey asked.

  ‘Why don’t you tell me?’ Nicholas countered. He needed time to evaluate the situation. What did Geoffrey know and who had told him? Geoffrey obliged immediately.

  ‘First thing we heard was that white hunter chappie of yours, Brusilov, had been fished out of the river near the Sudanese border, absolutely riddled with bullet holes. The crocs and catfish had snacked on his face, so the border police identified him by the documents in his money belt.’

  Nicholas glanced across at Royan and cautioned her with a frown.

  ‘Last time we saw him, he went off on a scouting expedition on his own,’ Nicholas explained. ‘He probably ran into the same bunch of shufta who raided our camp four nights ago.’

  ‘Yes, we heard about that too. Colonel Nogo here radioed in a report to Addis.’

  Neither of them had recognized Nogo in the crowd of men. It was only when he stepped forward into the light of the camp lanterns that Royan stiffened, and such an expression of loathing flashed across her face that Nicholas reached across surreptitiously and took her hand to restrain her from any indiscretion. After a moment she relaxed and com
posed her features.

  ‘I am very relieved to see you, Sir Quenton-Harper. You have given us all a very worrying few days,’ said Nogo.

  ‘I do apologize,’ said Nicholas smoothly.

  ‘Please, sir, I meant no offence. It is just that we had a report from the Pegasus Exploration Company that you and Dr Al Simma had been caught up in a blasting accident. I was present when Mr Helm of the exploration company warned you that they were conducting blasting in the gorge.’

  ‘But you—’ Royan flared bitterly, and Nicholas squeezed her hand hard to stop her going on.

  ‘It was probably our own carelessness, as you suggest. Nevertheless, Dr Al Simma has been injured and we are both badly shaken up by the accident. More important than that, however, is the fact that a number of other people, camp staff and monks from the monastery, have been killed in the shufta raid and in the blasting accident. As soon as we get back to Addis I will make a full statement to the authorities.’

  ‘I do hope that you don’t think any blame attaches—’ Nogo started, but Nicholas cut him short.

  ‘Of course not. Not your fault at all. You warned us about the danger of shufta in the gorge. You were not present, so what could you have done to prevent any of this? I would say that you have done your duty in the most exemplary fashion.’

  Nogo looked relieved. ‘You are most gracious to say so, Sir Quenton-Harper.’

  Nicholas studied him for a moment longer. He seemed the most amiable of young men behind the metal-rimmed spectacles, so concerned and eager to please. For a moment Nicholas almost believed that he had been mistaken, and that it had been somebody else that he had seen in the Jet Ranger, hovering over the avalanche site like a vulture, searching for their dead bodies.

  Nicholas forced himself to smile in his most friendly manner. ‘I would be most grateful if you could do me a favour, Colonel.’

  ‘Of course,’ Nogo agreed readily. ‘Anything at all.’

  ‘I left a bag and one of my hunting trophies in the cavern under the Dandera waterfall. The bag contains our passports and travellers’ cheques. Very grateful if you could send one of your men down to bring it up for me.’

  While giving Nogo directions on how to find his possessions, he derived a perverse enjoyment from sending his would-be assassin on such a trivial errand. Then he turned back to his friend so that Nogo would not pick up the vindictive glint in his eyes. ‘How did you get here, Geoffrey?’

  ‘Light plane to Debra Maryam. There is an emergency landing field there. Colonel Nogo met us, and brought us the rest of the way by army jeep,’ Geoffrey explained. ‘The pilot and the aircraft are waiting for us at Debra Maryam.’

  Geoffrey broke off and spoke to the camp staff in execrable Amharic, before turning back to Nicholas. ‘I have just arranged a hot bath for you and Dr Al Simma. After that, a meal and a good night’s sleep should work wonders. Tomorrow we can fly back to Addis. No reason why we shouldn’t be there by tomorrow evening at the latest.’

  He patted Royan’s shoulder, disguising his carnal interest in her behind a benign avuncular smile. ‘I must say I am rather pleased not to have to go traipsing down into the Abbay gorge looking for the pair of you. I hear that it’s a pretty beastly part of the world.’

  ‘Do you mind, Dr Al Simma, if I sit in front? Terribly rude of me, but I am inclined to suffer from mal de air. Ha ha!’ Geoffrey explained to Royan as they waited for three small boys to chase the goats off the emergency airfield at Debra Maryam. In the meantime Nicholas was stuffing the roll of dik-dik skin under the rear passenger seat. One of Nogo’s sergeants had made a night descent of the escarpment, and had delivered both his bag and the skin while they were breakfasting that morning.

  Nogo gave them a smart salute as they taxied out in a cloud of dust. Nicholas waved and smiled at him through the side window, murmuring, ‘Screw you, Nogo, screw you very much indeed.’

  When at last the pilot lifted the little Cessna 260 off the rough grass strip, the horizon over the Abbay gorge resembled a field of cosmic mushrooms, vast thunderheads reaching up into the stratosphere. The air beneath them was turbulent as a storm sea and they were thrown about mercilessly in the rear seats. Up in front Geoffrey seemed to be faring no better. He was very quiet and took no interest in their conversation.

  There had been no opportunity for them to talk privately the previous evening, what with either Geoffrey or Nogo hovering within earshot at all times. Now with their heads close together, the engine beat covering their voices and Geoffrey occupied with his own queasy thoughts, they were able to concoct their story.

  Geoffrey had made it clear that the British Ambassador in Addis was less than delighted with the inconvenience they had caused him. Apparently there had been a string of faxes from Whitehall since they had been reported missing. Added to that, the Ethiopian Commissioner of Police was anxious to question them. They had to make sure that they did not implicate Mek Nimmur in the killing of Boris Brusilov, and at the same time they must not alert or alarm Pegasus in any way. They realized that the reaction from that quarter would be swift and probably lethal if they gave the least suspicion that they knew who the other players were in Taita’s game.

  Most of all they must avoid antagonizing the Ethiopian authorities, or give them any cause to cancel their visas and declare them to be undesirable immigrants. They agreed to feign ignorance and play the role of innocents caught up in affairs which they had not precipitated and which they did not understand.

  By the time that they landed at Addis Ababa they had prepared their story and rehearsed it thoroughly. As soon as the Cessna pulled on to the hardstand in front of the airport buildings and the pilot cut the engine, Geoffrey came back to life again, only a little green around the gills, and handed Royan down the aircraft steps with a flourish.

  ‘Of course, you will stay at the residence,’ he told them. ‘The hotels in town are too dreadful to contemplate, and HE has a half-decent chef and a passable wine cellar. I will rustle up some togs for both of you. My missus is about the same size as you, Dr Al Simma, and Nicky will fit into my gear at a pinch. Thank God, I have a spare dinner jacket. HE is a bit of a stickler for form.’

  The British Ambassador’s residence had been built during the reign of the old Emperor, Haile Selassie, before Mussolini’s invasion in the 1930s. Set on the outskirts of the town, it was an example of the better colonial architecture, with a thatched roof and wide verandas. The lawns, tended by a host of gardeners, were wide and green, contrasting with the brilliant crimson of the poinsettia. The mansion had survived both the revolution and the war of liberation that followed.

  At the front entrance Geoffrey handed them over to an Ethiopian butler in a long, spotlessly white shamma, who showed them to adjoining bedrooms on the second floor. Nicholas heard the bathwater running in Royan’s suite next door as he lay in his own brimming bath, sipping a whisky and soda and twiddling the taps with his big toe. Then there was the murmur of the doctor’s voice from next door as he attended to Royan’s knee.

  Geoffrey’s dinner jacket was loose round his waist and too short in the arms and legs, and his shoes pinched, added to which Nicholas was in need of a haircut, he realized, as he surveyed himself in the mirror.

  ‘No help for it, now,’ he decided with resignation, and went to knock on Royan’s door.

  ‘I say!’ he exclaimed as she opened it. Sylvia Tennant had loaned her a lime-green cocktail dress that set off Royan’s olive skin marvellously well. Royan had washed her hair and left it loose on her shoulders. He felt his pulse accelerate like a teenager on his first date, and laughed at himself.

  ‘You look absolutely scrumptious,’ he told her, and meant it.

  ‘Thank you, sir,’ she laughed back at him, ‘and you look very dashing yourself. May I take your arm?’

  ‘I was hoping to carry you. Addictive activity.’

  ‘Those days are over,’ she told him, and brandished the carved ebony walking-stick with which the butler had provided
her. She used it on her bad side. As they started down the long corridor, she asked in a whisper, ‘What is the name of our host?’

  ‘Her Britannic Majesty’s Ambassador, Sir Oliver Bradford KCMG.’

  ‘Which stands for Knight Commander of St Michael and St George, right?’ she asked.

  ‘No,’ he corrected her, ‘it stands for Kindly Call Me God.’

  ‘You are impossible!’ She giggled, and then became serious. ‘Did you manage to send the fax to Mrs Street?’

  ‘It went through at the first attempt and she acknowledged. Sends you her salaams, and promises to have some information about Pegasus double pronto.’

  It was a mild evening and Sir Oliver was waiting to greet them on the veranda. Geoffrey hurried forward to make the introductions. The Ambassador had a bush of white hair and a red face. Geoffrey had warned them about him and his view on troublesome tourists, but his hostile frown started to fade as soon as he laid eyes on Royan.

  There were a dozen other guests for dinner apart from Geoffrey and Sylvia Tennant, and Sir Oliver took Royan’s arm and led her around the group introducing her. Nicholas trailed along behind them, resigned by now to the fact that Royan had that effect on most men.

  ‘May I present General Obeid, the Commissioner of Police,’ Sir Oliver said. The head of the Ethiopian police force was tall and very dark-complexioned, suave and elegant in his blue mess uniform. He bowed over Royan’s hand.

  ‘I believe that we have an appointment to meet tomorrow morning. I look forward to that with the keenest pleasure.’

  Royan glanced at Sir Oliver uncertainly. She had been told nothing of this.

  ‘General Obeid wants to know from you and Sir Nicholas a little more about this business in the Abbay gorge,’ Sir Oliver explained. ‘I took the liberty of having my secretary make the appointment.’

  ‘Just a routine interview, I assure you both, Dr Al Simma and Sir Nicholas. I will take up very little of your time, I promise you that.’

 

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