CHAPTER I "I Told You This Was a Harebrained Scheme!" hands on hips, brows lowering, Emerson stood gazing fixedly at the recumbent ruminant. A sympathetic friend (if camels have such, which is doubtful) might have taken comfort in the fact that scarcely a ripple of agitated sand surrounded the place of its demise. Like the others in the caravan, of which it was the last, it had simply stopped, sunk to its knees, and passed on, peacefully and quietly. (Conditions, I might add, that are uncharacteristic of camels alive or moribund.) Those conditions are also uncharacteristic of Emerson. To the readers who have encountered my distinguished husband, in the flesh or in the pages of my earlier works, it will come as no surprise to learn that he reacted to the camel's death as if the animal had committed suicide for the sole purpose of inconveniencing him. Eyes blazing like sapphires in his tanned and chiseled face, he plucked the hat from his head, flung it upon the sand, and kicked it a considerable distance before turning his furious glare toward me. "Curse it, Amelia! I told you this was a harebrained scheme!" "Yes, Emerson, you did," I replied. "In those precise words, if I am not mistaken. If you will cast your mind back to our first Elizabeth Peters discussion of this enterprise, you may remember that I was in full agreement with you." "Then what-" Emerson turned in a circle. Boundless and bare, as the poet puts it, the lone and level sands stretched far away. "Then what the devil are we doing here?" Emerson bellowed. It was a reasonable question, and one that may also have occurred to the reader of this narrative. Professor Radcliffe Emerson, F.R.S., F.B.A., LL.D. (Edinburgh), D.C.L. (Oxford), Member of the American Philosophical Society, et cetera, preeminent Egyptologist of this or any other era, was frequently to be encountered in unusual, not to say peculiar, surroundings. Will I ever forget that magical moment when I entered a tomb in the desolate cliffs bordering the Nile and found him delirious with fever, in desperate need of attentions he was helpless to resist? The bond forged between us by my expert nursing was strengthened by the dangers we subsequently shared/ and in due course, Reader, I married him. Since that momentous day we had excavated in every major site in Egypt and written extensively on our discoveries. Modesty prevents me from claiming too large a share of the scholarly reputation we had earned, but Emerson would have been the first to proclaim that we were a partnership, in archaeology as in marriage. From the sandy wastes of the cemeteries of Memphis to the rocky cliffs of the Theban necropolis, we had wandered hand in hand (figuratively speaking), in terrain almost as inhospitable as the desert that presently surrounded us. Never before, however, had we been more than a few miles from the Nile and its life-giving water. It lay far behind us now, and there was not a pyramid or a broken wall to be seen, much less a tree or a sign of habitation. What indeed were we doing there? Without camels we were marooned on a sea of sand, and our situation was infinitely more desperate than that of shipwrecked sailors. I seated myself upon the ground with my back against the camel. The sun was at the zenith, the only shade was cast by the body of the poor beast. Emerson paced back and forth, kicking up clouds of sand and swearing. His expertise in this latter exercise had earned him the admiring title of "Father of Curses" from our Egyptian workmen, and on this occasion he surpassed himself. 1 sympathized with his feelings, but duty compelled me to remonstrate. "You forget yourself, Emerson," I remarked, indicating our companions. A A A THE LAST CAMEL DIED AT NOON 5 They stood side by side, watching me with grave concern, and I must say they made a ludicrous pair. Many of the native Nilotic peoples are unusually tall, and Kemit, the only servant remaining to us, was over six feet in height. He wore a turban and a loose robe of woven blue-and-white cotton. His face, with its clean-cut features and deeply bronzed skin, bore a striking resemblance to that of his companion, but the second individual was less than four feet tall. He was also my son, Walter Peabody Emerson, known as "Ramses," who should not have been there. Emerson cut off his expletive in mid-syllable, though the effort almost choked him. Still in need of a "went" for his boiling emotions, he focused them on me. "Who selected these da these cursed camels?" "You know perfectly well who selected them," I replied "I always select the animals for our expeditions, and doctor them too. The local people treat camels and donkeys so badly-" "Don't give me one of your lectures on veterinary medicine and kindness to animals," Emerson bellowed. "I knew-I knew!-your delusions about your medical knowledge would lead us into disaster one day. You have been dosing these da these confounded animals,- what did you give them?" "Emerson! Are you accusing me of poisoning the Camels?" I struggled to overcome the indignation his outrageous accusation had provoked. "I believe you have taken leave of your senses." "Well, and if I have, there is some excuse for me," Emerson said in a more moderate tone. He edged closer to me. "Our situation is desperate enough to disturb any man, even one as even-tempered as I. Er-I beg your pardon, my dear Peabody. Don't cry." Emerson calls me Amelia only when he is annoyed with me. Peabody is my maiden name, and it was thus that Emerson, in one of his feeble attempts at sarcasm, addressed me during the early days of our acquaintance. Hallowed by fond memories, it has now become a private pet name, so to speak, indicative of affection and respect. I lowered the handkerchief I had raised to my eyes and smiled at him. "A few grains of sand in my eye, Emerson, that is all. You will never find me succumbing to helpless tears when firmness is required. As you are well aware." "Hmph," said Emerson. "All the same, Mama," said Ramses, "Papa has raised a point worthy Elizabeth Peters A A of consideration. It is surely stretching coincidence to the point of impossibility to assume that all the camels should die, suddenly and with no symptoms of disease, within forty-eight hours of one another." "I assure you, Ramses, that consideration had already occurred to me. Run and fetch Papa's hat, if you please. No, Emerson, I know your dislike of hats, but I insist that you put it on. We are in bad enough case without having you laid low by sunstroke." Emerson made no reply. His eyes were fixed on the small figure of his son, trotting obediently after the sun helmet, and his expression was so poignant that my eyes dimmed. It was not fear for himself that weakened my husband, nor even concern for me. We had faced death together not once but many times,--he knew he could count on me to meet that grim adversary with a smile and a stiff upper lip. No, it was the probable fate of Ramses that brought the moisture to his keen blue eyes. So moved was I that I vowed not to remind Emerson that it was his fault that his son and heir had been condemned to a slow, lingering, painful death from dehydration. "Well, we have been in worse situations," I said. "At least we three have,--and I presume, Kemit, that you are no stranger to peril. Have you any suggestions, my friend?" Responding to my gesture, Kemit approached and squatted down next to me. Ramses immediately squatted as well. He had conceived a great admiration for this taciturn, handsome man,--and the sight of them, like a stork and its chick, brought a smile to my lips. Emerson was not amused. Fanning himself with his hat, he remarked sarcastically, "If Kemit has a suggestion that can get us out of this dilemma, I will take off my hat to him. We-" "You cannot take off your hat until you put it on, Emerson," I interrupted. Emerson slapped the offending article onto his unruly black head with such force that his eyelashes fluttered wildly. "As I was saying, we are more than six days from the Nile, as the camel trots,--considerably longer on foot. If the so-called map we have followed is to be trusted, there is a water hole or oasis ahead. It is a journey of approximately two days by camel, of which we have none. We have water for perhaps two days, with strict rationing." A A A THE LAST CAMEL DIED AT NOON 7 It was an accurate and depressing summary. What Emerson did not say, because the rest of us knew it, was that our desperate condition was due to the defection of our servants. They had departed, in a body, the night before, taking with them all the waterskins except the partially filled containers we had had with us in our tent and the canteen I always carry attached to my belt. They might have done worse,--they might have murdered us. I cannot, however, attribute their forbearance to kindness of heart. Emerson's strength and ferocity are legendary,--many of the simple natives believe he is armed with supernatural powers. (And I myself have a certain reputation as the Sitt Hakim, dispenser of mysterious medicines.) Rather than challenge us, they had stolen away in the dead of night. Kemit claimed he had been struck unconscious when he attempted to prevent them, and indeed he had a sizable lump on his head to prove it. Why he had not joined the mutineers I could not explain,--it might have been loyalty-though he owed us no more than did the others, who had worked for us as long-or it might have been that he had not been invited to join them. There was a great deal about Kemit that wanted explaining. Expressionless as the nesting bird he somewhat resembled at that moment, his knees being on approximately the level of his ears, he was not at all a comic figure. Indeed, his chiseled features had a dignity that reminded me of certain Fourth Dynasty sculptures, most particularly the magnificent portrait of King Chephren, builder of the Second Pyramid. I had once remarked to Emerson on the resemblance,- he had replied that it was not surprising, since the ancient Egyptians were of mixed racial stock and some of the Nubian tribes were probably their remote descendants. (I should add that this theory of Emerson's-which he regarded not as theory but as fact-was not accepted by the great majority of his colleagues.) But I perceive that I am wandering from the plot of my narrative, as I am inclined to do when questions of scholarly interest arise. Let me turn back the pages of my journal and explain in proper sequence of time how we came to find ourselves in such an extraordinary predicament. I do not do this in the meretricious hope of prolonging your anxiety as to our survival, dear Reader, for if you have the intelligence I expect my Readers to possess, you will know I could not be writing this account if I were in the same state as the camels. Elizabeth Peters A $ I must turn back not a few but many pages, and take you to a quiet country house in Kent, when the turning of the leaves from green to golden bronze betokened the approach of autumn. After a busy summer spent teaching, lecturing, and readying the publication of our previous season's excavations, we were about to begin preparations for our annual winter's work in Egypt. Emerson was seated behind his desk, 1 walked briskly to and fro, hands behind my back. The bust of Socrates, oddly speckled with black-for it was at this bust that Emerson was wont to hurl his pen when inspiration flagged or something happened to irritate him-watched us benevolently. The subject of discussion, or so 1 fondly believed, was the future intellectual development of our son. "1 fully sympathize with your reservations concerning the publicschool system, Emerson," 1 assured him. "But the boy must have some formal training, somewhere, sometime. He is growing up quite a little savage." "You do yourself an injustice, my dear," Emerson murmured, glancing at the newspaper he was holding. "He has improved," 1 admitted. "He doesn't talk quite as much as he used to, and he has not been in danger of life or limb for several weeks. But he has no notion how to get on with children his own li age. Emerson looked up, his brow furrowed. "Now, Peabody, that is not the case. Last winter, with Ahmed's children-" "1 speak of English children, Emerson. Naturally." "There is nothing natural about English children. Good Gad, Amelia, our public schools have a caste system more pernicious than that of India, and those at the bottom of the ladder are abused more viciously than any Untouchable. As for 'getting on' with members of the opposite sex-you do not mean, 1 hope, to exclude female children from Ramses's social connections? Well, 1 assure you that that is precisely what your precious public schools aim to achieve." Warming to his theme, Emerson leapt up, scattering papers in all directions, and began to pace back and forth on a path at right angles to mine. "Curse it, 1 sometimes wonder how the upper classes in this country ever manage to reproduce! By the time a lad leaves A A A THE LAST CAMEL DIED AT NOON 9 university he is so intimidated by girls of his own class it is almost impossible for him to speak to them in intelligible sentences! If he did, he would not receive an intelligible answer, for the education of women, if it can be dignified by that term-Oof. I beg your pardon, my dear. Are you hurt?" "Not at all." I accepted the hand he offered to assist me to rise. "But if you insist on pacing while you lecture, at least walk with me instead of at right angles to my path. A collision was inevitable." A sunny smile replaced his scowl and he pulled me into a fond embrace. "Only that sort of collision, I hope. Come now, Peabody, you know we agree on the inadequacies of the educational system. You don't want to break the lad's spirit?" "1 only want to bend it a little," I murmured. But it is hard to resist Emerson when he smiles and . . . Never mind what he was doing, but when I say Emerson's eyes are sapphire-blue, his hair is black and thick, and his frame is as trim and muscular as that of a Greek athlete-not even referring to the cleft or dimple in his chin or the enthusiasm he brings to the exercise of his conjugal rights . . . Well, I need not be more specific, but 1 am sure any rightthinking female will understand why the subject of Ramses's education ceased to interest me. After Emerson had resumed his seat and picked up the newspaper, I returned to the subject, but in a considerably softened mood. "My dear Emerson, your powers of persuasion-that is to say, your arguments-are most convincing. Ramses could go to school in Cairo. There is a new Academy for Young Gentlemen of which I have had good reports, and since we will be excavating at Sakkara ..." The newspaper behind which Emerson had retired rattled loudly. I stopped speaking, seized by a hideous premonition-though, as events were to prove, not nearly hideous enough. "Emerson," I said gently, "you have applied for the firman, haven't you? You surely would not repeat the error you made a few years ago when you neglected to apply in time, and instead of receiving permission to work at Dahshoor we ended up at the most boring, unproductive site in all of Lower Egypt?* Emerson! Put down that newspaper and answer me! Have you obtained permission from the Department of Antiquities to excavate at Sakkara this season?" *Tbe Mummy Case 10 Elizabeth Peters A A A Emerson lowered the newspaper, and flinched at finding my face only inches from his. "Kitchener," he said, "has taken Berber." It is inconceivable to me that future generations will fail to realize the vital importance of the study of history, or that Britons will be ignorant of one of the most remarkable chapters in the development of their empire. Yet stranger things have happened,- and in the event of such a catastrophe (for I would call it nothing less), I beg leave of my Readers to remind them of facts that should be as familiar to them as they are to me. In 1884, when I made my first visit to Egypt, most English persons persisted in regarding the Mahdi as only another ragged religious fanatic, despite the fact that his followers had already overrun half the Sudan. This country, encompassing the region from the rocky cataracts of Assouan to the jungles south of the junction of the Blue and White Niles, had been conquered by Egypt in 1821. The Pashas, who were not Egyptians at all but descendants of an Albanian adventurer, had proceeded to rule the region even more corruptly and inefficiently than they did Egypt itself. The benevolent intervention of the great powers (especially Britain) rescued Egypt from disaster, but matters continued to worsen in the Sudan until Mohammed Ahmed Ibn el-Sayyid Abdullah proclaimed himself the Mahdi, the reincarnation of the Prophet, and rallied the forces of rebellion against Egyptian tyranny and misrule. His followers believed he was the descendant of a line of sheikhs, his enemies sneered at him as a poor ignorant boat-builder. Whatever his origins, he possessed an extraordinarily magnetic personality and a remarkable gift of oratory. Armed only with sticks and spears, his ragtag troops had swept all before them and were threatening the Sudanese capital of Khartoum. Against the figure of the Mahdi stands that of the heroic General Gordon. Early in 1884 he had been sent to Khartoum to arrange for the withdrawal of the troops garrisoned there and in the nearby fort of Omdurman. There was a good deal of public feeling against this decision, for abandoning Khartoum meant giving up the entire Sudan. Gordon was accused, then and later, of never meaning to comply with his orders/ whatever his reasons for delaying the withdrawal, he did just that. By the autumn of 1884, when I arrived in Egypt, Khartoum was besieged by the wild hordes of the Mahdi, and all the surrounding country, to the very borders of Egypt, was in rebel hands. A A A THE LAST CAMEL DIED AT NOON 11 The gallant Gordon held Khartoum, and British public opinion, led by the Queen herself, demanded his rescue. An expedition was finally sent but it did not reach the beleaguered city until February of the following year-three days after Khartoum fell and the gallant Gordon was cut down in the courtyard of his house. "Too late!" was the agonized cry of Britannia! Ironically, the Mahdi survived his great foe by less than six months, but his place was taken by one of his lieutenants, the Khalifa Abdullah el-Taashi, who ruled even more tyrannically than his master. For over a decade the land had groaned under his cruelties, while the British lion licked its wounds and refused to avenge the fallen hero. The reasons, political, economic and military, that led to a decision to reconquer the Sudan are too complex to discuss here. Suffice it to say that the campaign had begun in 1896 and that by the autumn of the following year our forces were advancing on the Fourth Cataract under the gallant Kitchener, who had been named Sirdar of the Egyptian Army. But what, one might ask, do these world-shaking affairs have to do with the winter plans of a pair of innocent Egyptologists? Alas, I knew the answer only too well, and I sank into a chair beside the desk. "Emerson," I said. "Emerson. I beg of you. Don't tell me you want to dig in the Sudan this winter." -'4 "My dear Peabody!" Emerson flung the newspaper aside and fixed the full power of his brilliant gaze upon me. "You know, none better, that I have wanted to excavate at Napata or Meroë for years. I'd have tackled it last year if you hadn't raised such a fuss-or if you had consented to remain in Egypt with Ramses while I did so." "And waited to learn that they had put your head on a pike, as they did Gordon's," I murmured. "Nonsense. I'd have been in no danger. Some of my best friends were Mahdists. But never mind," he continued quickly, to forestall the protest I was about to make-not of the truth of his statement, for Emerson had friends in very strange places-but of the common sense of his plan. "The situation is entirely different now, Peabody. The region around Napata is already in Egyptian hands. At the rate Kitchener is going, he will take Khartoum by the time we reach Egypt, and Meroë-the site I favor-is north of Khartoum. It will be quite safe." "But Emerson-" "Pyramids, Peabody." Emerson's deep voice dropped to a seductive 14 Elizabeth Peters A A enjoyed the opportunity to spend time with my dearest friend, and a brother-in-law whom I truly esteem, and their five (unless it was six?) delightful offspring, I had an additional reason, this particular year, for encouraging the visit. I had not entirely abandoned hope of persuading Emerson that Ramses should be left in England when we set out on our hazardous journey. 1 knew I could count on Evelyn to add her gentle persuasion to mine. For reasons which eluded me, she doted on Ramses. It is impossible to give a proper impression of Ramses by describing his characteristics. One must observe him in action to understand how even the most admirable traits can be perverted or carried to such an extreme that they cease to be virtues and become the reverse. At that time Ramses was ten years of age. He could speak Arabic like a native, read three different scripts of ancient Egyptian as easily as he could read Latin, Hebrew, and Greek-which is to say, as easily as English-sing a wide variety of vulgar songs in Arabic, and ride almost anything with four legs. He had no other useful skills. He was fond of his pretty, gentle aunt, and I hoped she could help persuade him to stay with her that winter. The presence of his cousins would be an inducement, Ramses was fond of them too, although I am not certain the feeling was reciprocated. I had gone off to London that day with less trepidation than I usually felt when leaving Ramses because it was raining heavily and 1 assumed Evelyn would insist that the children remain indoors. I had strictly forbidden Ramses to conduct any chemical experiments whatever, or continue his excavations in the wine cellar, or practice knife-throwing in the house, or show little Amelia his mummified mice, or teach his cousins any Arabic songs. There were a number of other things, 1 forget them now, but I felt reasonably sure I had covered everything. 1 was therefore able to pursue my errands with a mind at ease, though the same could not be said about my body,- the coal smoke that hangs over London had combined with the rain to form a blackish smut that clung to clothing and skin, and the streets were ankle-deep in mud. When I got off the train late that afternoon I was glad to see the carriage waiting. I had arranged to have most of my purchases shipped, but I was loaded with parcels and my skirts were wet to the knee. The lights of Amarna House shone warm and welcoming through AAA THE LAST CAMEL DIED AT NOON 15 the gathering dusk. How joyfully I looked forward to my reunion with all those I loved best, and to lesser but nonetheless pleasant comforts-a hot bath, a change of clothing, and a cup of the beverage that cheers but does not inebriate. Feeling the chill of wet feet and clinging skirts, I reflected that I might instead indulge in the beverage that does inebriate-but only when taken in excessive quantities, which I never do. There is, after all, nothing so effective in warding off a cold than a stiff whiskey and soda. Gargery, our excellent butler, had been watching for the carriage, as he assisted me to remove my wet outer garments he said solicitously, "May I venture to suggest, madam, that you take something to ward off a cold? I will send one of the footmen upstairs with it at once, if you like." "What a splendid idea, Gargery," I replied. "I am grateful to you for suggesting it." I had almost reached my room before I realized that the house was uncommonly quiet. No voices raised in genial debate from my husband's study, no childish laughter, no ... "Rose," I cried, flinging open my door. "Rose, where . . . Oh, there you are." "Your bath is ready, madam," said Rose, from the open door of the bathroom, where she stood wreathed in steafn like a kindly genie. She seemed a trifle flushed. It might have been the warmth of the bathwater that had brought the pretty color to her cheeks, but I suspected another reason. "Thank you, Rose. But 1 was about to ask-" "Will you wear the crimson tea gown, madam?" She hastened to me and began wrenching at the buttons on my dress. "Yes. But where . . . My dear Rose, you are shaking me like a terrier with a rat. A little less enthusiasm, if you please." "Yes, madam. But the bath water will be cold." Having divested me of my gown, she began attacking my petticoats. "Very well, Rose. What has Ramses done now?" It took me a while to get the truth out of her. Rose is childless, no doubt that fact explains her peculiar attachment to Ramses, whom she has known since he was an infant. It is true that he showers her with gifts-bouquets of my prize roses, bunches of prickly wildflowers, small furry animals, hideous gloves, scarves, and handbags, selected by himself and paid for out of his pocket money. But even if the gifts were appropriate, which most are not, they hardly corn- 16 Elizabeth Peters A A A pensate for the hours Rose has spent cleaning up after him. I long ago gave up trying to comprehend this streak of irrationality in an otherwise sensible woman. After Rose had stripped me of my garments and popped me into the tub, she deemed that the soothing effect of hot water would soften me enough to hear the truth. In fact, it was not as bad as I had feared. It seems I had neglected to forbid Ramses to take a bath. Rose assured me that the ceiling of Professor Emerson's study was not much damaged, and she thought the carpet would be all the better for a good washing. Ramses had fully intended to turn off the water and no doubt he would have remembered to do so, only the cat Bastet had caught a mouse, and if he had delayed in rushing to the rodent's rescue, Bastet would have dispatched it. As a result of his prompt action the mouse was now resting quietly, its wounds dressed, in Ramses's closet. Rose hates mice. "Never mind," I said wearily. "I don't want to hear any more. I don't want to know what forced Ramses to the dire expedient of bathing. I don't want to know what Professor Emerson said when his ceiling began spouting water. Just hand me that glass, Rose, and then go quietly away." The whiskey and soda had been delivered. An application of that beverage internally and of hot water externally eventually restored me to my usual spirits, and when I went to the drawing room, trailing my crimson flounces and looking, I fancy, as well as I have ever looked, the smiling faces of my beloved family assured me that all was well. Evelyn wore a gown of the soft azure that intensified the blue of her eyes and set off her golden hair. The gown was already sadly crushed, for children are drawn to my dear friend as bees are drawn to a flower. She had the baby on her lap and little Amelia beside her, in the maternal clasp of her arm. The twins sat at her feet, mashing her skirts. Raddie, my eldest nephew, leaned over the arm of the sofa where his mother sat, and Ramses leaned against Raddie, getting as close to his aunt's ear as was possible. He was, as usual, talking. He broke off when I entered, and I studied him thoughtfully. He was extremely clean. Had I not known the reason I would have commended him, for the condition is not natural to him. I had determined not to mar the congeniality of the gathering by any AAA THE LAST CAMEL DIED AT NOON 17 reference to earlier unpleasantness, but something in my expression must have made Emerson aware of what I was thinking. He came quickly to me, gave me a hearty kiss, and shoved a glass into my hand. "How lovely you look, my dearest Peabody. A new gown, eh? It becomes you." I allowed him to lead me to a chair: "Thank you, my dear Emerson. I have had this dress for a year and you have seen it at least a dozen times, but the compliment is appreciated nonetheless." Emerson too was extremely clean. His dark hair lay in soft waves, as it did when it had just been washed. I deduced that a quantity of water, and perhaps plaster, had fallen on his head. If he was prepared to overlook the incident, I could do no less, so I turned to my brother-in-law, who stood leaning against the mantel watching us with an affectionate smile. "I saw your friend and rival Frank Griffiths today, Walter. He sends his regards and asked me to tell you he is making excellent progress with the Oxyrynchos papyrus." Walter looks like the scholar he is. The lines in his thin cheeks deepened and he adjusted his eyeglasses. "Now, Amelia dear, don't try to stir up a competition between me and Frank. He is a splendid linguist and a good friend. I don't envy him his papyrus,- Radcliffe has promised me Meroitic inscriptions by the cartload. I can hardly wait." Walter is one of the few people who is allowed to refer to Emerson by his given name, which he detests. He flinched visibly, but said only, "So you stopped by the British Museum, Peabody?" "Yes." I took a sip of my whiskey. "No doubt it will come as a great surprise to you, Emerson, to learn that Budge also proposes to travel to the Sudan this autumn. In fact, he has already left." "Er, hmmm," said Emerson. "No! Indeed!" Emerson considers most Egyptologists incompetent bunglerswhich they are, by his austere standards-but Wallis Budge, the Keeper of Egyptian and Assyrian Antiquities at the British Museum, was his particular bête noire. "Indeed!" Walter repeated. His eyes twinkled. "Well, that should make your winter's activities even more interesting, Amelia. Keeping those two from one another's throats-" "Bah," said Emerson. "Walter, I resent the implication. How you 18 Elizabeth Peters A A A could suppose me so forgetful of the dignity of my profession and my own self-esteem. ... I don't intend to come within throatgrasping reach of the rascal. And he had better stay away from me, or I will throttle him." Always the peacemaker, Evelyn attempted to change the subject. "Did you hear anything more about Professor Petrie's engagement, Amelia? Is it true that he is soon to be married?" "1 believe so, Evelyn. Everyone is talking about it." "Gossiping, you mean," said Emerson, with a snort. "To see Pétrie, who was always wedded to his profession and had no time for the softer emotions, fall head over heels for a chit of a girl . . . They say she is a good twenty years younger than he." "Now who is engaging in ill-natured gossip?" I demanded. "By all accounts she is an excellent young woman and he is utterly besotted with her. We must think of a suitable wedding present, Emerson. A handsome silver epergne, perhaps." "What the devil would Pétrie do with an epergne?" Emerson asked. "The man lives like a savage. He would probably soak potsherds in it." We were discussing the matter when the door opened. I glanced up, expecting to see that Rose had come to take the children away, for it was approaching the dinner hour. But it was Gargery, not Rose, and the butler's face wore the frown that betokened an unwelcome announcement. "There is a gentleman to see you, Professor. I informed him that you did not see callers at this time of day but he-" "He must have urgent reasons for disturbing us," I interrupted, seeing my husband's brows draw together. "A gentleman, you said, Gargery?" The butler inclined his head. Advancing upon Emerson, he offered the salver on which rested a chaste white calling card. "Hmph," said Emerson, taking the card. "The Honorable Reginald Forthright. Never heard of him. Tell him to go away, Gargery." "No, wait," I said. "I think you ought to see him, Emerson." "Amelia, your insatiable curiosity will be the death of me," Emerson cried. "1 don't want to see the fellow. 1 want my whiskey and soda, I want to enjoy the company of my family, I want my dinner. I refuse-" The door, which Gargery had closed behind him, burst open. The butler staggered back before the impetuous rush of the new- A A A THE LAST CAMEL DIED AT NOON 19 comer. Hatless, dripping, white-faced, he crossed the room in a series of bounds and stopped, swaying, before Walter, who stared at him in astonishment. "Professor," he cried. "I know I intrude-I beg you to forgive me-and to hear me-" And then, before Walter could recover from his surprise or any of us could move, the stranger toppled forward and fell prostrate on the hearthrug. CHAPTER 2 Tly Son Lives!" E, 1--merson was the, first to break the silence. .J£ "Get up at once, you clumsy young ruffian," he said irritably. "Of all the confounded impudence-" "For pity's sake, Emerson," I exclaimed, hastening to the side of the fallen man. "Can't you see he has fainted? I shudder to think what unimaginable horror can have reduced him to such straits." "No, you don't," said Emerson. "You revel in unimaginable horrors. Pray control your rampageous imagination. Fainted, indeed! He is probably drunk." "Fetch some brandy at once," I ordered. With some difficultyfor the unconscious man was heavier than his slight build had led me to expect-I turned him on his back and lifted his head onto my lap. Emerson folded his arms and stood looking on, a sneer wreathing his well-cut lips. It was Ramses who approached with the glass of brandy I had requested, I took it from him, finding, as I had expected, that the outside of the glass was as wet as the inside. "I am afraid some was spilled," Ramses explained. "Mama, if I may make a suggestion-" 21 22 Elizabeth Peters A A "No, you may not," I replied. "But I have read that it is inadvisable to administer brandy or any other liquid to an unconscious man. There is some danger of-" "Yes, yes, Ramses, I am well aware of that. Do be still." Mr. Forthright did not appear to be in serious condition. His color was good, and there was no sign of an injury. I estimated his age to be in the early thirties. His features were agreeable rather than handsome, the eyes wide-set under arching brows, the lips full and gently curved. His most unusual physical characteristic was the color of the hair that adorned his upper lip and his head. A bright, unfashionable but nonetheless striking copper, with glints of gold, it curled becomingly upon his temples. I proceeded with my administrations, it was not long before the young man's eyes opened and he gazed with wonder into my face. His first words were "Where am I?" "On my hearthrug," said Emerson, looming over him. "What a da er-confounded silly question. Explain yourself at once, you presumptuous puppy, before I have you thrown out." A deep blush stained Forthright's cheeks. "You-you are Professor Emerson?" "One of them." Emerson indicated Walter, who adjusted his spectacles and coughed deprecatingly. Admittedly he more nearly resembled the popular picture of a scholar than my husband, whose keen blue eyes and healthy complexion, not to mention his impressive musculature, suggest a man of action rather than thought. "Oh-I see. I beg your pardon-for the confusion, and for my unpardonable intrusion. But I hope when you hear my story you will forgive and assist me. The Professor Emerson I seek is the Egyptologist whose courage and physical prowess are as famous as are his intellectual powers." "Er, hmmm," said Emerson. "Yes. You have found him. And now, if you will remove yourself from the arms of my wife, at whom you are staring with an intensity that compounds your initial offense . . ." The young man sat up as if he had been propelled by a spring, stammering apologies. Emerson assisted him to a chair-that is to say, he shoved him into one-and, with a scarcely less heavy hand, helped me to rise. Turning, I saw that Evelyn had gathered the children and was shepherding them from the room. I nodded gratefully at her and was rewarded by one of her sweet smiles. A A A THE LAST CAMEL DIED AT NOON 23 Our unexpected visitor began with a question. "Is it true, Professor, that you are planning to travel in the Sudan this year?" "Where did you hear that?" Emerson demanded. Mr. Forthright smiled. "Your activities, Professor, will always be a subject of interest, not only to the archaeological community but to the public at large. As it happens, I am in an indirect manner connected with the former group. You will not have heard my name, but I am sure you are familiar with that of my grandfather, for he is a well-known patron of archaeological subjects-Viscount Blacktower." "Good Gad!" Emerson bellowed. Mr. Forthright started. "I-I beg your pardon, Professor?" Emerson's countenance, ruddy with fury, might have intimidated any man, but his terrible frown was not directed at Mr. Forthright. It was directed at me. "I knew it," Emerson said bitterly. "Am I never to be free of them? You attract them, Amelia. I don't know how you do it, but it is becoming a pernicious habit. Another cursed aristocrat!" Walter was unable to repress a chuckle, and I confess to some amusement on my own part,- Emerson sounded for all the world like an infuriated sans-culotte, demanding the guillotine for the hated aristos. ,JJ* Mr. Forthright cast an uneasy glance at Emerson. "I will be as brief as possible," he began. "Good," said Emerson. "Er-but I fear I must give you some background if you are to understand my difficulty." "Curse it," said Emerson. "My . . . my grandfather had two sons." "Curse him," said Emerson. "Uh . . . my father was the younger. His elder brother, who was of course the heir, was Willoughby Forth." "Willie Forth the explorer?" Emerson repeated, in quite a different tone of voice. "You are his nephew? But your name-" "My father married Miss Wright, the only child of a wealthy merchant. At his father-in-law's request, he added the surname of Wright to his own. Since most people, hearing the combined name, assumed it to be a single word, I found it simpler to adopt that version." 24 Elizabeth Peters A A "How accommodating of you," said Emerson. "You don't resemble your uncle, Mr. Forthright. He would have made two of you." "His name is familiar," I said. "Was it he who proved once and for all that Lake Victoria is the source of the White Nile?" "No, he clung doggedly to the belief that the Lualaba River was part of the Nile until Stanley proved him wrong by actually sailing down the Lualaba to the Congo, and thence to the Atlantic." Willoughby Forth's nephew smiled sardonically. "That, I fear, was the sad pattern of his life. He was always a few months late or a few hundred miles off. It was his great ambition to go down in history as the discoverer of something. Anything! An ambition that was never realized." "An ambition that cost him his life," Emerson said reflectively. "And that of his wife. They disappeared in the Sudan ten years ago." "Fourteen years ago, to be precise." Forthright stiffened. "Did I hear someone at the door? "I heard nothing." Emerson studied him keenly. "Am I to expect another uninvited visitor this evening?" "I fear so. But pray let me continue. You must hear my story before-" "I beg, Mr. Forthright, that you allow me to be the judge of what must or must not be done in my house," said Emerson. "I am not a man who enjoys surprises. I like to be prepared for visitors, especially when they are members of the aristocracy. Is it your grandfather whom you expect?" "Yes. Please, Professor, allow me to explain. Uncle Willoughby was always the favored son. Not only did he share my grandfather's archaeological and geographical interests, but he had the physical strength and daring his younger brother lacked. My poor dear father was never strong-" I could tell by Emerson's expression that he was about to say something rude, so I took it upon myself to intervene. "Get to the point, Mr. Forthright." "What? Oh yes, I beg your pardon. Grandfather has never accepted the fact that his beloved son is dead. He must be, Professor! Some word would have come back, long before this-" "But no word of his death has come either," Emerson said. Forthright made an impatient gesture. "How could it? There are no telegraphs in the jungle or the desert wastes. Legally my uncle and his unfortunate wife could have been declared dead years A A A THE LAST CAMEL DIED AT NOON 25 ago. My grandfather refused to take that step. My father died last it year- "Aha," said Emerson. "Now we come to the crux of it, I fancy. Until your uncle is declared to be dead, you are not legally your grandfather's heir." The young man met his cynical gaze squarely. "I would be a hypocrite if I denied that that is one of my concerns, Professor. But believe it or not, it is not my chief concern. Sooner or later, in the inevitable course of time, I will succeed to the title and the estate,- there is, unhappily, no other heir. But my grandfather-" He broke off, with a sharp turn of his head. This time there was no mistake,- the altercation in the hall was loud enough to be heard even through the closed door. Gargery's voice, raised in expostulation, was drowned out by a sound as loud and shrill as the trumpeting of a bull elephant. The door exploded inward, with a shuddering crash, and on the threshold stood one of the most formidable figures I have ever seen. The mental image I had formed, of the pathetic, grief-stricken old father, shattered like glass in the face of reality. Lord Blacktower-for it could be no other than he-was a massive brute of a man, with shoulders like a pugilist's and a mane of coarse reddfth hair. It was faded and liberally streaked with gray,-{>ut once it must have blazed like the setting sun. He seemed far too young and vigorous to be the grandfather of a man in his thirties, until one looked closely at his face. Like a stretch of sun-baked earth, it was seamed with deep-cut lines-a map of violent passions and unhealthy habits. The suddenness of his appearance and the sheer brute dominance of his presence kept all of us silent for several moments. His eyes moved around the room, passing over the men with cool indifference, until they came to rest on me. Sweeping his hat from his head, he bowed, with a grace unexpected in so very large a man. "Madam! I beg you will accept my apologies for this intrusion. Allow me to introduce myself. Franklin, Viscount Blacktower. Do 1 have the honor of addressing Mrs. Radcliffe Emerson?" "Er-yes," I replied. "Mrs. Emerson!" His smile did not improve his looks, for his eyes remained as cold and opaque as Persian turquoise. "I have long looked forward to the pleasure of meeting you." Advancing with a ponderous rolling stride, he extended his hand. 26 Elizabeth Peters A A A I gave him mine, bracing myself for a bone-crushing grip. Instead he raised my fingers to his lips and planted a loud, lingering, damp kiss upon them. "Mmmm, yes," he mumbled. "Your photographs quite fail to do you justice, Mrs. Emerson." I fully expected Emerson would object to these proceedings, for the mumbling and kissing went on for a protracted period of time. There was, however, no comment from that source, so I withdrew my hand and invited Lord Blacktower to take a chair. Ignoring the one I had indicated, he sat down on the couch beside me, with a thud that made me and the whole structure vibrate. There was still no reaction from Emerson, or from Mr. Forthright, who had sunk back into the chair from which he had started when his grandfather burst in. "May I offer you a cup of tea, or a glass of brandy, Lord Blacktower?" I asked. "You are graciousness itself, dear madam, but I have already taken too great advantage of your good nature. Allow me only to explain why I venture to burst in upon you so unceremoniously, and then I will remove myself-and my grandson, whose presence is the cause, if not the excuse, for my rudeness." He did not look at Mr. Forthright, but went on with scarcely a pause. "I intended to approach you, and your distinguished husband, through the proper channels. Learning by chance, this afternoon, that my grandson had taken it upon himself to anticipate me, I was forced to act quickly. Mrs. Emerson . . ." He leaned toward me and placed his hand on my knee. "Mrs. Emerson! My son lives! Find him. Bring him back to me." His hand was heavy as stone and cold as ice. I stared at the veins squirming across the skin like fat blue worms, at the tufts of grayishred hair on his fingers. And still no objection from Emerson! It was unaccountable! Only maternal sympathy for a parent driven into madness by the loss of a beloved child kept me from flinging his hand away. "Lord Blacktower," I began. "I know what you are about to say." His fingers tightened. "You don't believe me. Reginald there has probably told you that I am a senile old man, clinging to an impossible hope. But I have proof, Mrs. Emerson-a message from my son, containing information only he could know. I received it a few days ago. Find him, and A A A THE LAST CAMEL DIED AT NOON 27 anything you ask of me will be yours. I won't insult you by offering you money-" "That would be a waste of your time," I said coldly. He went on as though I had not spoken. "-though I would consider it an honor to finance your future expeditions, on any scale you might desire. Or a chair in archaeology for that husband of yours. Or a knighthood. Lady Emerson, eh?" His accent had coarsened, and his speech, not to mention his hand, had grown increasingly familiar. However, it was not the insult to his wife but the implied insult to himself that finally moved Emerson to speak. "You are still wasting your time, Lord Blacktower. 1 don't buy honors or allow anyone else to purchase them for me." The old man let out a rumbling roar of laughter. "I wondered what it would take to rouse you, Professor. Every man has his price, you know. But yours-aye, I'll do you justice,- none of the things I've offered would touch you. I've got something I fancy will. Here-have a look at this." Reaching into his pocket he drew out an envelope. I rearranged my skirts, I fancied I could still feel the imprint of his hand, burning cold against my skin. Emerson took the envelope. It was not sealed:»;With the same delicacy of touch he used on fragile antiquities, he drew from the envelope a long, narrow, flat object. It was cream-colored and too thick to be ordinary paper, but there was writing on it. I was unable to make out the words. Emerson studied it in silence for a few moments. Then his lip curled. "A most impudent and unconvincing forgery." "Forgery! That is papyrus, is it not?" "It is papyrus," Emerson admitted. "And it is yellowed and brittle enough to be ancient Egyptian in origin. But the writing is neither ancient nor Egyptian. What sort of nonsense is this?" The old man bared his teeth, which resembled the papyrus in color. "Read it, Professor. Read the message aloud." Emerson shrugged. "Very well. To the old lion from the young lion, greetings. Your son and daughter live/ but not long, unless help comes soon. Blood calls to blood, old lion, but if that call is not strong enough, seek the treasure of the past in this place where I await you.' Of all the childish-" 28 Elizabeth Peters A A A "Childish, yes. It began when he was a boy, reading romances and tales of adventure. It became a kind of private code. He wrote to no one else in that way-and no living man or woman knew of it. Nor knew that his name for me was the old lion." He resembled one at that moment-a tired old lion with sagging jowls and eyes sunk in wrinkled sockets. "It is still a forgery," Emerson said stubbornly. "More ingenious than I had believed, but a forgery nonetheless." "Forgive me, Emerson, but you are missing the point," I said. Emerson turned an indignant look upon me, but I went on. "Let us assume that the message is indeed from Mr. Willoughby Forth, and that he has been held prisoner, or otherwise detained, all these years. Let us also assume that some daring couple-er-that is to say, some daring adventurer-were willing to go to his aid. Where would that adventurer go? A man asking for help ought at least give directions." "I," said my husband, "was about to make that very point, Amelia." The old man grinned. "There is something else in the envelope, Professor. Take it out, if you please." The second enclosure was more prosaic than the first-a single sheet of ordinary writing paper, folded several times-but its effect on Emerson was remarkable. He stood staring at it with as much consternation as if it had been a death threat (a form of correspondence, I might add, with which he was not unfamiliar). I jumped up and took the paper from his hand. It was gray with age and dust, tattered with much handling, and covered with writing in the English language. The handwriting was as familiar to me as my own. "It looks like a page from one of your notebooks, Emerson," I exclaimed. "How on earth did this come into your hands, Lord Blacktower?" "The envelope and its contents were left on the doorstep of my house in Berkeley Square. My butler admitted he had half a mind to pitch it into the trash. Fortunately he did not." "It didn't come through the post," Emerson muttered, inspecting the envelope. "So it must have been delivered by hand. By whom? Why didn't the messenger identify himself and claim a reward?" "I don't know and I don't care," the old man said irritably. "The handwriting on the envelope is my son's. So is the writing on the papyrus. What more proof do you want?" "Anyone who knew your son, and had received a letter from him, A A A THE LAST CAMEL DIED AT NOON 29 could imitate his handwriting," I said gently but firmly. "To my mind, the page from my husband's notebook is a far more intriguing clue. But I don't understand what bearing it has on Mr. Forth's disappearance." "Turn it over," said Lord Blacktower. I did as he directed. At first glance the faded lines appeared to be random scribbles, like those made by a small child. From Lord Blacktower's throat came a horrible grating sound. I presumed it was a laugh. "Are you beginning to remember, Professor Emerson? Was it you or my son who sketched the map?" "Map?" I repeated, studying the scrawl more closely. "1 remember the occasion," Emerson said slowly. "And under the present circumstances-taking into consideration the suffering of a bereaved father-I will make an exception to my general policy of refusing to answer impertinent questions from strangers." I made a little sound of protest, for Emerson's tone of voice-especially when he mentioned the suffering of a bereaved father-made the speech even ruder than the words themselves convey. Blacktower only grinned. "This is not a map," Emerson said. "It is a fantasy-a fiction? It can have no possible bearing on your son's fate. Someone is playing a cruel trick on you, Lord Blacktower, or is planrting to perpetrate a fraud." "That is precisely what I told my grandfather, Professor," Mr. Forthright exclaimed. "Don't be a fool," Blacktower snarled. "I couldn't be deceived by an impostor-" "Don't be so sure," Emerson interrupted. "I saw Slatin Pasha in '95, after he had escaped from eleven years' starvation and torture by the Khalifa. I didn't recognize him. His own mother wouldn't have known him. However, that wasn't the kind of fraud I had in mind. How much were you prepared to offer me to equip and undertake a rescue expedition?" "But you refused to be bribed, Professor." "I refused, period," Emerson said. "Oh, the devil with this! There is no point in my offering you my advice, because you wouldn't take it. As my family will tell you, Lord Blacktower, I am the most patient of men,- but my patience is wearing thin. I bid you good evening." 30 Elizabeth Peters A A A The old man heaved himself to his feet. "I too am a patient man, Professor. I have waited for my son for fourteen years. He lives, I know it,- and one day you will admit that I was right and you, sir, were wrong. Good evening, gentlemen. Good evening, Mrs. Emerson. Don't trouble yourself to ring for the servant. I will let myself out. Come, Reginald." He went to the door and closed it quietly behind him. "Good-bye, Mr. Forthright," said Emerson. "Let me add one last word, Professor-" "Be quick about it," Emerson said, his eyes flashing. "This may be precisely the sort of filthy game you described. But there is another possibility. My grandfather has enemies-" "No! You astonish me!" Emerson exclaimed. "If there is no further communication-if he can't find a qualified man to lead such an expedition-he will go himself. You look skeptical, but I assure you I know him well. He is convinced of the authenticity of this message. Believing that-" "You said one word, and I have let you utter sixty or seventy." "Before I let my grandfather risk his life on such a scheme, I will go," Forthright said quickly. "Indeed, if I could believe there was the slightest chance-" "Confound it," Emerson shouted. "Must I evict you bodily?" "No." The young man backed toward the door, with Emerson following. "But if you should change your mind, Professor, I insist upon accompanying you." <*> w "A very pretty speech, upon my word," Emerson declared, splashing whiskey into his glass with such force that it fountained up onto the table. "How dare he suggest I might change my mind? 1 never change my mind." "I suspect he is a more acute judge of character than you give him credit for," Walter said. "I too detected something in your manner . . . You haven't been completely candid with us, Radcliffe." Emerson winced-whether at the unpopular appellation or the implied accusation, I cannot tell. He said nothing. I went to the window and drew the curtain aside. The rain had stopped. Mist veiled the lawn, and carriage lamps glowed through A A A THE LAST CAMEL DIED AT NOON 31 the dark. They were obscured as a shapeless bulk heaved itself between them and my vision. It was Lord Blacktower, mounting into his coach. In his caped coat, wrapped round with wisps of fog, his shape was scarcely human. I had the unpleasant impression that I saw not a man or even a beast, but some elemental force of darkness. Hearing the door open, I turned to see Evelyn. "Cook is threatening to leave your service if dinner is not served instantly," she said with a smile. "And Rose is looking for Ramses. He did not come up with the others,- is he ... Ah, there you are, my boy." And there he was indeed, rising up from behind the sofa like a genie from a bottle-or a flagrant eavesdropper from his place of concealment. Irritation replaced my eerie forebodings, and as my son obediently hastened toward his aunt, I said sharply, "Ramses, what have you got there?" Ramses stopped. He looked like the reverse image of a small saint, for the mop of curls crowning his head was jet-black and the face thus framed, though handsome enough in its way, was as swarthy as any Egyptian's. "Got, Mama? Oh . . ." With an air of surprised innocence he glanced at the paper in his hand. "It appears to be the leaf from Papa's notebook. I picked it up from the floor." I did not doubt that in the least. Ramses preferred to tell the truth whenever possible. I had placed the paper on the table, so he must have pushed it off onto the floor before he picked it up. After he had handed over the paper and gone through the lengthy process of saying good night, we made our way to the dining room. I had long since given up trying to prevent Emerson from discussing private family matters in front of the servants. In fact, I had come round to his point of view-that it was a cursed silly, meaningless custom-for the servants always knew everything that was going on anyhow, and their advice was often helpful since on the whole they had better sense than their purported superiors. I fully expected that he would discuss the extraordinary events that had just taken place. Gargery, our butler, obviously shared this anticipation,- though he directed the serving of the meal with his usual efficiency, his face was beaming and his eyes alight. He always enjoyed participating in our little adventures, and the peculiar behavior of our visitors certainly justified the suspicion that another was about to occur Conceive of my surprise, therefore, when, after having satisfied 32 Elizabeth Peters A A the first pangs of hunger by polishing off his soup, Emerson patted his lips with his napkin and remarked, "Inclement weather for this time of year." "Hardly unusual, though,"said Walter innocently. "I hope the rain will let up. You will have a wet journey home otherwise." "Quite," said Walter. I cleared my throat. Emerson said hastily, "And what are you giving us tonight, Peabody? Ah-roast saddle of lamb. And mint jelly! I am particularly fond of mint jelly. A splendid choice." "Mrs. Bates is giving us the lamb," I said, as Gargery, visibly pouting, began serving the plates. "You know I leave the menu to her, Emerson. 1 have no time for such things. Especially now, with so many extra supplies to order-" "Quite, quite," said Emerson. "Mint jelly, sir?" said Gargery, in a voice that ought to have frozen that wobbly substance into a solid chunk. Without waiting for an answer, he proceeded to give Emerson approximately half a teaspoonful. Like his brother, Walter was inclined to ignore conventions, not because he necessarily shared Emerson's radical social theories but because he forgot all else when professional enthusiasm overcame him. "I say, Radcliffe," he exclaimed. "That bit of papyrus was quite fascinating. If an ancient Egyptian scribe had known how to write English, the result would have looked precisely like that message. 1 wish I had had a chance to examine it more closely." "You may do so after dinner," I said. "By a strange coincidence, and in the haste of his departure, Lord Blacktower forgot to take it with him. Or was it a coincidence, Emerson?" "You know as well as I do that it was deliberate," Emerson snarled. "Pas devant les domestiques, Peabody, as you are always telling me." "Bah," I replied pleasantly "Ramses has probably told Rose all about it by now. I know you well, my dear Emerson,- your countenance is an open book to me. That supposedly meaningless scrawl on the back of the notebook page had meaning for you. I know it. His lordship knew it. Will you take us into your confidence, or force us to employ underhanded means to discover the truth?" Emerson glowered-at me, at Walter, at Evelyn, and at Gargery, who was standing guard over the mint jelly, his nose in the air and A A A THE LAST CAMEL DIED AT NOON 33 wounded dignity in every lineament of his face. Then Emerson's own face cleared and he burst into a hearty laugh. "You are incorrigible, my dear Peabody. I won't inquire what particular underhanded methods you had in mind. ... In fact, there is no reason why I shouldn't tell you what little I know of the matter. And now, Gargery, may I have more mint jelly?" This delicacy having been supplied, Emerson went on. "I spoke the truth when I told Blacktower that piece of paper could have no bearing on Forth's fate. Yet it gave me an eerie feeling to see it again after all these years. Rather like the hollow voice of a dead man echoing from his tomb. . . ." "Now who is allowing a rampageous imagination to run away with him?" I inquired playfully. "Get on with it, Emerson, if you please." "First," said Emerson, "we must tell Evelyn what happened after she left with the children." He proceeded to do so, at quite unnecessary length. Gargery found it most interesting, however. "A map, was it, sir?" he asked, giving Emerson more mint jelly. "Take that cursed stuff away," Emerson said, studying the green puddle with loathing. "Yes, it was a map. Of sorts." "Of the road to King Solomon's diamond mines£ I suppose," said Walter, smiling. "Or the emerald mines of Cleopatra. Or the gold mines of Gush." "It was a fantasy almost as improbable, Walter. It is coming back to me now-that strange encounter, the last meeting I ever had with Willie Forth." He paused to give Gargery time to remove the plates and serve the next course before resuming. "It was the autumn of 1883-the year before I met you, my dearest Peabody, and a year when Walter was not with me. Having no such engaging distractions, I found myself at loose ends one evening in Cairo, and decided to visit a café. Forth was there, when he saw me, he jumped to his feet and called my name. He was a great bull of a fellow with a head of wiry black hair that always looked as if it had not seen scissors or brush for weeks. Well, we had a friendly glass or two,- he demanded I drink a toast to his bride, for he had just been married. I ragged him a bit about this unexpected news, he was a confirmed old bachelor of forty-odd and had always insisted no woman would ever tie him down. He only grinned sheepishly 34 Elizabeth Peters A A A and raved about her beauty, innocence, and charm like any infatuated schoolboy. "Then we got to talking about his plans for the winter. He was cagey at first, but I could see that something besides marital bliss had fired him up, and after another friendly glass or two he admitted that his ultimate destination was not Assouan, as he had initially told me, but somewhere farther south. " 'I understand you have excavated at Napata/ he said casually. "I was unable to conceal my surprise and disapproval. The news from the Sudan was extremely disquieting, and Forth had told me he planned to take his wife with him. He brushed my objections aside. The worst of the trouble is in Kordofan, hundreds of miles from where I mean to go. And General Hicks is on the way there, he'll settle those fellows before we reach Wadi Haifa/ " Turning to the butler, he explained, "Wadi Haifa is at the Second Cataract, Gargery, several hundred miles south of Assouan." "Yes, sir, thank you, sir. And that other place-Nabada?" "Hmm, well," said Emerson. "There has been some debate about that. The Cushites, or Nubians, had two capitals. Meroë, the second and later of the two, was near the Sixth Cataract, just north of Khartoum. Its ruins have been visited and identified. We have a fairly good idea of where Napata, the earlier capital, was situated, because of the pyramid cemeteries in the area, but its exact location is uncertain. "Well, we all know what happened to Hicks. (His army was annihilated by the Mahdi, Gargery, contrary to all expectations except mine.) Word of that disaster did not reach Cairo until after Forth had left. All I could tell him that night was that I had visited a site I believed to be Napata and that-to put it mildly-it was not the spot I would have chosen for a honeymoon. 'You surely don't mean to take your bride to a primitive, fever-ridden, dangerous place like that?' I demanded. "Forth was feeling the effects of four or five friendly glasses. He gave me a drunken grin. 'Farther than that, Emerson. Much farther.' " 'Meroë? It's even more remote and dangerous than Gebel Barkal. You're mad, Forth.' " 'And you're still off the mark, Emerson.' Forth leaned forward, planting both elbows on the filthy table, and fixed me with burning eyes. I felt like the Wedding Guest, and indeed, as he went on, I . A THE LAST CAMEL DIED AT NOON 35 A A ^ uld not have been surprised to see the albatross hung about his ck 'What happened to the royalty and nobility of Meroë after the city fell? Where did they go? You've heard the Arab legends about the sons of Cush who marched toward the setting sunwestward through the desert to a secret city. . . .' " 'Stories, legends, fictions,' I exclaimed. They are no more factual than the tales of Arthur being carried off to the Isle of Avalon by the three queens, or Charlemagne sleeping under the mountain with his knights-' " 'Or the Homeric legends of Troy/ said Forth. "1 swore at him-and at Heinreich Schliemann, whose discoveries had encouraged lunatics like my friend. Forth listened, grinning like an ape and fumbling in the pockets of his coat-for his pipe, as I thought. Instead he took out a small box and handed it to me, inviting me, with a sweeping gesture, to lift the lid. When I did so ... Peabody, do you remember the Ferlini Collection in the Berlin Museum?" Caught unawares by the question, I started to shake my head and then exclaimed, "The jewelry brought back from Meroë by Ferlini half a century ago?" "Quite." Emerson whipped a pencil from his pocket and began to draw on the tablecloth. Gargery, who was familiar with this habit of Emerson's and with my reaction to it, deftly inserted a piece of paper under the pencil. Emerson finished his sketch and handed the paper to Gargery, who, after inspecting it closely, handed it round the table like a platter of vegetables. "What I saw in the box was a gold armlet," Emerson continued. "The designs, consisting of uraei, diamond shapes, and lotus buds, were inlaid with red and blue enamel." Walter frowned at the paper. "I have seen a lithograph of a piece of jewelry resembling this, Radcliffe." "In Lepsius's Denkmaler," Emerson replied. "Or perhaps the official guide to the Berlin Museum, 1894 edition. An armlet of the same type, with similar decoration, was found by Ferlini at Meroë. I saw the resemblance at once, and my first reaction was that Perth's armlet rnust also have come from Meroë. The natives have been plundering the pyramids ever since Ferlini's time, hoping to find another treasure trove. Yet the cursed thing was in virtually pristine condition-a few scratches here and there, a few dents-and the enamel was so 36 Elizabeth Peters A fresh it might have been newly made. It had to be a modern forgery-but what forger would use gold of such purity it could be bent with one's fingers? "I asked Forth where he had got it, and he proceeded to tell me a preposterous story about being offered the piece by a ragged native who offered to lead him to the source of such treasures. A source far in the western deserts, in a secret oasis, where there were huge buildings like the temples of Luxor and a strange race of magicians who wore golden ornaments and performed blood sacrifices to demonic gods. . . ." Emerson shook his head. "You can imagine how I jeered at this absurd story, all the more so when he told me that the unfortunate native had suffered from a fever to which he succumbed a few days later. "My arguments had no effect on Forth, he was drinking quite heavily, and when I finally gave up my attempt to dissuade him from his lunatic plan I could see he was in no condition to be left alone. Late at night, in that district, he would have been robbed and beaten. So I offered to escort him to his hotel. He agreed, saying he was anxious to introduce me to his wife. "She had waited up for him, but she had not anticipated he would bring a stranger with him/ she was wrapped in some sort of fluffy A A A THE LAST CAMEL DIED AT NOON 37 white stuff, all trembling with lace and ruffles, part of her bridal getup, I suppose. An exquisite creature, looking no more than eighteen,- great misty blue eyes, hair like a fall of spun gold, skin white as ivory. And cold. An ice maiden, with no more human warmth than a statue. They made a bizarre contrast, Forth with his ruddy beaming face and mane of black hair, his wife all white and silvery pale-Beauty and the Beast personified. I thought of that flowerywhite skin of hers baked and scourged by blowing sand, of her gleaming hair dried by the sun-and by heaven, Peabody, I felt only the regret one might feel at seeing a work of art disfiguredno human pity at all. She would have received none, she would have felt none. No, the pity I felt was for Willie Forth. The idea of taking a frozen statue like that into one's arms, into one's . . . Er, hmmm. You understand me, Peabody." I felt myself blushing. "Yes, Emerson, I do. Yet one can't help but feel for her. She can have had no idea of what she was about to experience." "I tried to tell her. Forth had collapsed onto the bed and lay snoring, with both hands clenched over the box that contained the armlet. I spoke to her like a brother, Peabody,• I told her she was mad to go, that he was madder to let her. I might have been speakfng to a chryselephantine statue. At last she intimated-^iat my presence displeased her, so I left, and I am sorry to say I slammed the door behind me. That was the last 1 saw of either of them." "But the map, Emerson," I said. "When did you-" "Oh." Emerson coughed. "That. Well, curse it, Peabody, I'd had a few friendly drinks myself, and I'd been reading some of the medieval Arabic writers . . ." "The Book of Hidden Pearls?" Emerson grinned sheepishly. "Confound you, Peabody, you're always a step or two ahead of me. It's that rampageous imagination of yours. But there is often a germ of truth in the most fantastic of legends. I am quite willing to believe that there are unknown oases in the western desert, far to the south of the known oases of Egypt. Wilkinson names three, in his book published in 1835, he had heard about them from the Arabs. The people of Dakhla-one of the known oases in southern Egypt-tell tales of strangers, tall black men, who came out of the south. And El Bekri, who wrote in the eleventh century, described a giantess who was captured at Dakhla,- she spoke no known language, and when she was released, 38 Elizabeth Peters A A A so that her captors could not track her to her home, she outran them and escaped." "Fascinating," Evelyn breathed. "But the Book of Hidden Pearls?" "Ah, there we enter into pure legend," Emerson said, smiling affectionately at her. "It is a magical work, written in the fifteenth century, containing stories of buried treasure. One such location is in the white city of Zerzura, where the king and queen lie asleep on their thrones. The key to the city is in the beak of a bird carved on the great gate,- but you must take care not to wake the king and queen if you want the treasure." "That is simply a fairy tale," Walter said critically. "Of course it is. But Zerzura is mentioned in other sources,- the name probably derives from the Arabic zarzar, meaning sparrow, so Zerzura is 'the place of the little birds.' And there are other stories, other clues. . . ." Emerson's face took on the pensive, dreamy look few of his acquaintances are privileged to see. He likes to be thought of as a strictly rational man, who sneers at idle fancies, but in reality the dear fellow is as sensitive and sentimental as women are purported to be (though in my experience women are far more practical than men). "Are you thinking of Harkhuf?" Walter asked. "It is true that that mystery has never been solved, at least not to my satisfaction. Where did he go on those expeditions of his, to procure the treasures he brought back to Egypt? Gold and ivory, and the dancing dwarf that so delighted the child-king he served. . . . Then there are Queen Hatshepsut's voyages to Punt-" "Punt doesn't enter into it," Emerson said. "It must be somewhere on the Red Sea coast, east of the Nile. As for Harkhuf, that was over four thousand years ago. He may have followed the Darb el Arba'in. . . . There, you see the fascination of such idle speculation? We speculated, and had those friendly drinks, and drew meaningless lines on a piece of paper. If Forth was fool enough to follow that so-called map, he deserved the unpleasant death that undoubtedly came to him. Enough of this. Peabody, why are you sitting there? Why haven't you risen from your chair to indicate that the ladies wish to retire?" This question was mean to provoke me,- Emerson knew quite well that the custom to which he referred was never followed in our house. "We will all retire," I said. Walter hastened to open the door for me. "It is an odd coinci- A A A THE LAST CAMEL DIED AT NOON 39 dence, though," he said innocently. "The Dervish uprising had just begun when Mr. Forth disappeared. Now it appears to be almost over, and the message arrives-" "Walter, don't be so naive. If fraud is contemplated, the timing is no coincidence. The news of Slatin Pasha's escape, after all those years in captivity, may well have inspired some criminal mind-" He broke off with a choking sound. The blood rushed into his cheeks. I knew what he was thinking. 1 always know what Emerson is thinking, for the spiritual bond that unites us is strong. The dark shadow of the Master Criminal, our old nemesis, would always haunt us-me, especially, since I had (much to my astonishment, for I am a modest woman) inspired an intense passion in that warped but brilliant brain. "No, Emerson," I exclaimed. "It cannot be. Remember his promise, that never again would he-" "The promise of a snake like that is worth nothing, Peabody. This is just the sort of scheme-" "Remember your promise, then, Emerson. That never again would you-" "Oh, curse it," Emerson muttered. * Though she did not (at least I hoped she did no$ know whereof we spoke, Evelyn tactfully introduced another subject. "Explain to me, dear brother, what it is you hope to accomplish at Meroë, and why you can't work in Egypt as you have always done? It terrifies me to think of you and Amelia running such risks." Emerson responded, though he kept tugging at his collar as if it were choking him. "To all intents and purposes, ancient Cush is an unknown civilization, Evelyn. The only qualified scholar who visited the site was Lepsius, and he could do little more than record what was there in 1844. That is the most important task awaiting usto make accurate records of the monuments and inscriptions, before time and treasure hunters destroy them completely." "Especially the inscriptions," Walter said eagerly. "The script is derived from Egyptian hieroglyphs, but the language has not been translated. When I think of the rate at which the records are vanishing, never to be recovered, I am tempted to come with you. You and Amelia cannot possibly-" At this Evelyn let out a cry of alarm and clutched at Walter's arm as if he were about to depart instantly for Africa. Emerson reassured 40 Elizabeth Peters A A her in his usual tactful fashion. "Walter has grown soft and flabby, Evelyn. He wouldn't last a day in Nubia. A strict course of physical training, that is what you need, Walter. If you work hard at it this winter, I may allow you to accompany us next season." In such animated and pleasant domestic intercourse the next hour passed. Both men had asked permission to smoke their pipes, permission which was, of course, granted,- Evelyn was too kind to refuse anyone she loved and I would never dream of attempting to prevent Emerson from doing anything he liked in his own drawing room. (Though I have been forced, upon occasion, to request that he postpone a particular activity until a more appropriate degree of privacy could be attained.) At last I went to the window to admit a breath of fresh air. The clouds had cleared away and moonlight spread its silvery softness across the lawn. As I stood admiring the beauty of the night (for I am particularly fond of nature), a sharp cracking sound broke the dreaming peace. It was followed in rapid succession by a second and a third. I turned. My eyes met those of Emerson. "Poachers," said Walter lazily. "It's a good thing young Ramses is asleep. He'd be out that door-" Emerson, moving with pantherlike quickness, was already out that door. I followed, delaying only long enough for a quick explanation. "Not poachers, Walter. Those shots came from a pistol. Stay here with Evelyn." Hitching up my crimson flounces I sped in pursuit of my husband. He had not gone far, I found him on the front lawn, gazing out into the darkness. "I see nothing amiss," he remarked. "From what direction did the sounds come?" We were unable to agree on that question. After a rather brisk discussion-in the course of which Emerson firmly negated my suggestion that we separate in order to search a wider area more quickly-we set out in the direction I had suggested, toward the rose garden and the little wilderness behind it. Though we investigated the area carefully, we found nothing out of the way, and I was about to accede to Emerson's demand that we wait until morning before pursuing the search when the sound of a wheeled vehicle came to our ears. "That way," I cried, pointing. "It is only a farmer's wagon going to market," Emerson said. A A A THE LAST CAMEL DIED AT NOON 41 "At this hour?" I started across the lawn toward the belt of trees that bounds our property on the north. The grass was so wet it was impossible for me to attain my usual running speed in fragile evening shoes, and Emerson soon forged ahead, ignoring my demands that he wait for me. When I caught him up, he had passed through the gate in the brick wall-which constitutes a side entrance to the estate-and was standing still, staring down at something on the ground. Turning, he put out his arm and held me back. "Stop, Peabody. That's one of my favorite frocks, I would hate to see it ruined." "What-" 1 began. But there was no need to finish the question. We were on the edge of the belt of trees. A narrow track used by carts and farm vehicles ran along the side of the wall. On the beaten earth the pool of liquid was black as ink in the moonlight, which stroked its surface with tremulous silver fingers. But the liquid was not ink. By daylight it would be another color entirely-the same shade as my bright crimson skirts. BLMOa CHAPTERS "He Promised All the Ladies riariv Sons" w T Y ith the conspicuous absence of intelligence that marks the profession, our local constabulary refused to believe that murder had been committed. They agreed with me that no living creature could have survived the loss of such a quantity of the vital fluid, all the more reason, they declared, to assume that the crime had been perpetrated against one of the lower animals and was therefore not a crime, or at least not the crime of murder. When I pointed out that poachers seldom employ hand weapons, they only smiled politely and shook their heads-not at this selfevident fact, but at the idea that a mere female could have distinguished between the different sounds-and inquired, even more politely, why my hypothetical murderer should have removed the body of his victim. They had me there. For no body had been found, nor even a trail of bloodstains. Clearly the perpetrator had carried it away by means of a cart or wagon, the sound of whose wheels Emerson and I had heard, but I was forced to admit that without a corpus delecti my case was considerably weakened. Emerson did not support me with the ardor I had every right to expect. He was particularly annoyed by my suggestion that the 43 44 Elizabeth Peters A A fatality was in some way connected with the Forth family. I am sure the Reader will agree with this conclusion, as any sensible person would, two mysterious events on the same evening cannot be unrelated. Yet it appeared that they were. Inquiries, which 1 insisted upon making, resulted in the discovery that both Lord Blackstone and his grandson were in perfect health and at a loss to understand my concern. The viscount also took pleasure in telling me that no one had approached him demanding money for information or for equipping a rescue expedition. He seemed to think this was proof Emerson's analysis of the message had been mistaken, but to me it made the situation even more baffling. Certainly, if fraud had been intended, further communications were to be expected, but the same was true if the appeal was genuine. How had the message got from-wherever it was?-to London, and why did not the messenger make himself known to the recipient? And what bearing-if any-had the ghastly puddle in the lane upon the matter? As for the documentary evidence-the scrap of papyrus and the page from Emerson's notebook-closer examination confused the situation even more. The papyrus was ancient/ traces of an earlier text could be seen under the modern writing. This phenomenon was of frequent occurrence in ancient Egypt, for papyrus was expensive and was often erased so that it could be reused. Pieces of ancient papyrus were (I regret to say) easily obtained by any traveler to Egypt. Similarly, the page from Emerson's notebook might have come into the possession of a person or persons unknown. Emerson admitted that he could not remember what had happened to it; Forth might have put it in his pocket, or he might have left it on the café table. The case, such as it was, appeared to have reached a dead end. Even I could think of nothing more to do. I decided reluctantly to abandon it, especially since other problems were trying Emerson's temper to the utmost. Emerson likes to think that he is the master of his fate and the lord of all he surveys. It is a delusion common to the male sex and accounts for the sputtering fury with which they respond to the slightest interference with their plans, no matter how impractical those plans may be. Being ruled by men, most women are accustomed to irrational behavior on the part of those who control their destinies. I was therefore not at all surprised when Emerson's plans A A A THE LAST CAMEL DIED AT NOON 45 received their first check. Instead of advancing toward Khartoum, the Egyptian Expeditionary Force settled into winter quarters at Jvlerawi, not to be confused with Meroë, which is several hundred miles farther south. Rather than resign himself to the inevitable, as a woman would do, Emerson wasted a great deal of time trying to think of ways to get around it. He also refused to accept the obvious arguments against working in a region where food was scarce and trained workmen were in exceedingly short supply. "If we could find something to feed them, we would have workers enough," he growled, puffing furiously on his pipe. "These stories about the congenital laziness of the Sudanese are only European prejudice. I don't see how we can manage it, though. All transport south of Wadi Haifa is controlled by the military,- we can hardly commandeer a railway carriage, load it with supplies . . ." He fell silent, his eyes brightening as he considered this idea. "Not without being somewhat conspicuous," I replied dryly. "You would also have to commandeer an engine to pull the carriage, and wood to stoke the boiler, and an engineer, among other necessities. No, I fear the idea is impractical. We must give it up, Emerson, fqr this year at least. By next autumn our brave lads will have taken Khartoum and wiped out the stain of dishonor th£% has soiled the British flag since we failed to succor the gallant Gordon." "Gallant nincompoop," said Emerson. "He was sent to evacuate Khartoum, not squat like a toad in a puddle daring the Mahdi to come and murder him. Well, well, perhaps it is all for the best. Even if the country were pacified, it has suffered greatly. Not a fit place for our boy, hardy though he is." "Ramses does not enter into it," I replied. "He will be at school in Cairo. Where shall we excavate then, Emerson?" "There is only one place, Peabody. Napata." "Napata?" "Gebel Barkal, near Merawi. I am convinced it is the site of the first capital of Cush, which flourished for six hundred years before the Cushites moved upriver to Meroë. Budge is already there, curse him," Emerson added, clenching his teeth so violently on the stem of his pipe that a cracking sound was heard. "What he is doing to the pyramids I dare not think." Poor Mr. Budge was at fault because he had had the audacity to be already in the Sudan. It was no use for me to point out that he 46 Elizabeth Peters A A had only done what Emerson himself would have done, given the opportunity-i.e., accept an invitation from the British authorities. "Invitation, my-" Emerson would roar, employing language that made me clap my hands over my ears. "He invited himself! He bullied, pushed, and toadied his way into going. Good Gad, Peabody, by the time that blackguard finishes, there won't be one stone left on another in Nubia, and he will have stolen every portable antiquity in the country for his cursed museum. . . ." And so on, at considerable length. Though as a rule I attempted to defend Mr. Budge against Emerson's more unreasonable complaints, I was a trifle out of sorts with him myself. A dispatch sent through military channels boasted of his making the arduous journey from Cairo to Kerma in only ten and one half days. I knew too well what the effect of this claim would be on my irascible spouse. Emerson would insist on bettering Budge's record. & W The first stage, from Cairo to Assouan, was one we had made many times, and I anticipated no particular difficulty there. So it proved, but Assouan, which had been a sleepy little village, was now transformed into a vast depot for military supplies. Though we received every courtesy from Captain Pedley, he was tactless enough to tell Emerson he ought not allow his wife to travel into such a desolate and dangerous region. "Allow!" Emerson repeated. " 'Allow/ did you say?" Though scarcely less annoyed, I thought it best to change the subject. One must recognize the limitations of the military mind, as I later pointed out to Emerson. After a certain age-somewhere in the early twenties, I believe-it is virtually impossible to insert any new idea whatever into it. Since travel by boat through the tumultuous, rocky rapids of the First Cataract is hazardous, we had to leave the steamer at Assouan and take the railroad to Shellal, at the south end of the cataract. There we were fortunate enough to find passage on a paddle wheeler. The captain turned out to be an old acquaintance of Emerson's. A good many of the inhabitants of Nubia turned out to be old acquaintances of Emerson's. At every wretched little village where the steamer took on wood for the boiler, voices would hail him: "Es- A A A THE LAST CAMEL DIED AT NOON 47 salâmu 'aleikum, Emerson Effendi! Marhaba, Oh Father of Curses!" It was flattering, but somewhat embarrassing, especially when the greetings came (as they did upon one occasion) from the painted lips of a female individual inadequately draped in a costume that left little doubt as to her choice of profession. Our quarters on the steamer, though far from the standards of cleanliness upon which I normally insist, were commodious enough. Despite the inconveniences (and the awkwardness I have referred to earlier), I greatly enjoyed the trip. The territory south of Assouan was new to me. The rugged grandeur of the scenery and the ruins lining the banks proved a constant source of entertainment. I took copious notes, of course, but since I plan to publish an account elsewhere, I will spare the Reader details. One sight must be mentioned, however,- no one could pass by the majestic temple of Abu Simbel without a word of homage and appreciation. Thanks to my careful planning and the amiable cooperation of Emerson's friend the captain, we came abreast of this astonishing structure at dawn, on one of the two days each year when the rays of the sun lifting over the eastern mountains strike straight through the entrance into the farthest recesses of the sanctuary and rest like a heavenly flame upon the altar. The effect was awe-inspiring, and even after the sun had soared higher and the arrov^shaft of golden light had faded, the view held us motionless at the rail of the boat. Four giant statues of Ramses II guard the entrance, greeting with inhuman dignity the daily advent of the god to whom the temple was dedicated, as they have done morning after morning for almost three thousand years. Ramses stood beside us at the rail, and his normally impassive countenance showed signs of suppressed emotion as he gazed upon the mightiest work of the monarch whose namesake he was. (In fact, he had been named for his uncle Walter,- his father had proposed the nickname for him when he was an infant, claiming that the child's imperious manner and single-minded selfishness suggested that most egotistical of pharaohs. The name had stuck, for reasons which should be apparent to all Readers of my chronicles.) But what, you may ask, was Ramses doing at the rail of the steamer? He should have been in school. He was not in school because the Academy for Young Gentlemen in Cairo had been unable to admit him. That is the word the headmaster used-"unable." He claimed they had no room for 48 Elizabeth Peters A A another boarder. This may have been so. I had no means of proving it was not. I cannot conceive of any other reason why my son should not have been admitted to a school for young gentlemen. 1 do not speak ironically, though anyone who has read certain of my comments concerning my son may suspect I do. The fact is, Ramses had improved considerably in the past few years. (Either that, or 1 was becoming accustomed to him. It is said that one can become accustomed to anything.) He was at this time ten years old, having celebrated his birthday late that summer. Over the past few months he had shot up quite suddenly, as boys do, and I had begun to think he might one day have his father's height, though probably not the latter's splendid physique. His features were still too large for his thin face, but just lately 1 had discovered a dent or dimple in his chin, like the one that lent Emerson's handsome countenance such charm. Ramses disliked references to this feature as much as his father resented my mentioning his dimple (which he preferred to call a cleft, if he had to refer to it). I am bound to admit that the boy's jet-black curls and olive complexion bore a closer resemblance to a young Arab -of the finest type-than an Anglo-Saxon, but that he was a gentleman, by birth at least, no one could deny. A distinct improvement in his manners had occurred, due in large part to my untiring efforts, though the natural effects of maturation also played a part. Most small boys are barbarians. It is a wonder any of them live to grow up. Ramses had lived, to the age of ten at least, and his suicidal tendencies seemed to have decreased. I could therefore contemplate his accompanying us with resignation if not enthusiasm, especially since I had little choice in the matter. Emerson refused to join me in bringing pressure to bear on the headmaster of the Academy for Young Gentlemen,- he had always wanted to take Ramses with us to the Sudan. I put my hand on the boy's shoulder, "Well, Ramses, I hope you appreciate the kindness of your parents in providing you with such an opportunity. Impressive, is it not?" Ramses's prominent nose quivered critically. "Ostentatious and grandiose. Compared with the temple of Deir el-Bahri-" "What a dreadful little snob you are," I exclaimed. "I do hope the antiquities of Napata will measure up to your exacting standards." "He is quite right, though," said Emerson. "There is no architec- NUBIA -1597 First Cataract i .ASWAN ffSHELLAL ABU SIMBEL»^ Second C«t*ract^ADIHALFA Third J : Cataract z£ • VKERMA n Fourth R Cataract \ NAPATA} GEBEL BARKALt ^ABUHAMED \ 4 NURI Fifth Cataract £• MEROWE SANAM ABU DOM N W Sixth Cataract OMDURMAN 50 Elizabeth Peters A A A tural subtlety or mystery in a temple like that-only size. The temples of Gebel Barkal, on the other hand-" "Temples, Emerson? You promised me pyramids." Emerson's eyes remained fixed on the facade of the temple, now fully illumined by the risen sun and presenting a picture of great majesty. "Er-to be sure, Peabody. But we are limited in our choice of sites, not only by the cursed military authorities but by ... by ... by a certain individual whose name I have sworn not to pronounce." It was I who had requested he abstain from referring to Mr. Budge if he could not do so without swearing. (He could not.) Unfortunately 1 could not prevent others from referring to Budge. He had preceded us, and everyone we met mentioned him, hoping, I suppose, to please us by claiming an acquaintance in common. Ramses distracted Emerson by climbing up on the rail, thus prompting a stern lecture on the dangers of falling overboard. I rewarded my son with an approving smile, there had never been any danger of his falling, he could climb like a monkey. With such distractions and a few animated arguments about archaeological matters, the time passed pleasantly enough until we disembarked at Wadi Haifa. Haifa, as it is now commonly termed, was once a small cluster of mud huts, but in 1885, after the withdrawal of our forces from Khartoum, it was established as the southern frontier of Egypt. It had now become a bustling depot of supplies and arms for the forces farther south. Following the advice of the young military officer whom I consulted, I purchased quantities of tinned food, tents, netting, and other equipment. Emerson and Ramses had wandered off on some expedition of their own. On this occasion I did not complain of their dereliction, for Emerson does not get on well with military persons, and Captain Buckman was a type of young Englishman who particularly annoyed him-prominent teeth, no chin to speak of, and a habit of tossing his head when he laughed in a high-pitched whinny. He was a great help to me, though, and full of admiration for Mr. Budge, whom he had met in September. "Quite a regular chap, not like your usual archaeologist, if you take my meaning, ma'am. I took his meaning. I also took my leave, with appropriate thanks, and went in search of my errant family. As I had come to expect, Emerson had a number of "old acquaintances" in Haifa,- it was at A A A THE LAST CAMEL DIED AT NOON 51 the home of one of them, Sheikh Mahmud al-Araba, that we were to meet. The house was palatial by Nubian standards, built of mud brick around a high-walled central courtyard. I had braced myself for an argument with the doorkeeper, for these persons often tried to take me to the harîm instead of into the presence of the master of the house, but on this occasion the old man had evidently been warned,- he greeted me with salaams and repeated cries of marhaloa (welcome) before escorting me into the salon. Here I found the sheikh, a white-bearded but hearty man, and my husband seated side by side on the mastaba-bench along one wall. They were smoking narghiles (water pipes) and watching the performance of a young female who squirmed around the room to the undulating beat of an orchestra consisting of two drummers and a piper. Her face was veiled,- the same could not be said of the rest of her. Emerson sprang to his feet. "Peabody! I had not expected you so soon." "So I see," I replied, returning the dignified greetings of the sheikh and taking the seat he indicated. The orchestra continued to wail, the girl continued to squirm, and Emerson's high cheekbones took on the color of a ripe plum. Even the best of men exhibit certain inconsistencies in their attitude toward women. Emerson treated me as an equal (I would have accepted nothing less) if£ matters of the intellect, but it was impossible for him to conquer completely his absurd ideas about the delicate sensibilities of the female sex. The Arabs, for all their deplorable treatment of their own women, showed far more common sense in their treatment of ME. Having decided that I ranked as a peculiar variety of female-man, they entertained me as they would any masculine friend. When the performance ended I applauded politely, somewhat to the surprise of the young woman. After expressing my appreciation to the sheikh, I inquired, "Where is Ramses? We must be on our way, Emerson, I left instructions for the supplies to be delivered to the quay, but without your personal supervision-" "Yes, quite," said Emerson. "You had better fetch Ramses, then, he is being entertained by the ladies. Or vice versa." "Oh, dear," I said, hastily rising. "Yes. I had better fetch himand," I added in Arabic, "1 would like to pay my compliments to the ladies of your house." And, I added to myself, I would also have a word with the young woman who had-I suppose she would have called it "danced"- 52 Elizabeth Peters A A for us. I would have felt myself a traitor to my sex if I had missed any opportunity to lecture the poor oppressed creatures of the harîm on their rights and privileges-though heaven knows, we Englishwomen were far from having attained the rights due us. An attendant led me through the courtyard, where a fountain trickled feebly under the shade of a few sickly palm trees, and into the part of the house reserved for the women. It was dark and hot as a steam bath, for even the windows opening onto the courtyard were covered with pierced shutters, lest some bold masculine eye behold the forbidden beauties within. The sheikh had three of the four wives permitted him by Moslem law, and a number of female servants-concubines, to put it bluntly. All of them were assembled in a single room, and 1 heard them, giggling and exclaiming in highpitched voices, long before I saw them. I expected the worstRamses's Arabic is extremely fluent and colloquial-but then I realized that his was not among the voices I heard. At least he was not entertaining them by telling vulgar jokes or singing rude songs. When I entered the room, the ladies fell silent, and a little flutter of alarm ran through the group. When they saw who it was they relaxed, and one-the chief wife, by her attire and her air of command-came forward to greet me. I was used to being swarmed over by the women of the harîms, poor things, they had little enough to amuse them, and a Western woman was a novelty indeed. On this occasion, however, after glancing at me they turned their attention back to something-or, as 1 suspected, someone-hidden from me by their bodies. The heat, the gloom, the stench of the strong perfumes used by the women (and the aroma of unwashed bodies those perfumes strove to overcome) were familiar to me,- but 1 seemed to smell some other, underlying odor-something sickly sweet and subtly pervasive. It may have been that strange scent that made me forget courtesy/ it may have been the uncertainty as to what was happening to my son. I pushed the women aside so I could see. A rug or matting, woven in patterns of blue and red-orange, green and umber, had been spread across the floor. On it sat my son, crosslegged, with his cupped hands held out in a peculiarly rigid position. He did not turn his head. Facing him was the strangest figure I had ever seen-and I have seen a great many strange individuals. At first glance it appeared to be a folded or crumpled mass of dark fabric, with some underlying structure of bone or wood jutting out A A A THE LA57 CAMEL DIED AT NOON 53 at odd angles. My reasoning brain identified it as a squatting human figure, my mother's heart felt a thrill of fear bordering on horror when my eyes failed to find a human countenance atop the angular mass. Then the upper portion of the object moved, a face appeared, covered with a heavy veil,- and a deep murmurous voice intoned, "Silence. Silence. The spell is cast. Do not wake the sleeper." The elder wife came to my side. She put a timid hand on my arm and murmured, "He is a magician of great power, Sitt Hakim like yourself. An old man, a holy man-he does the boy honor. You will not tell my lord? There is no harm in it, but-" The old sheikh must be an indulgent master or the women would not have dared introduce a man, however old or holy, into their quarters, but he would be forced to take notice of such a flagrant violation of decency if someone like myself brought it to his attention. I whispered a reassuring, "Taiyib, mâtakhâfsb (It is good,- do not fear)"-though, as far as I was concerned, it was not at all good. I had seen such performances in the sûks of Cairo. Crystal-gazing, or scrying, is one of the commonest forms of divination. It is all nonsense, of course, what the viewer sees in the crystal ball or pool of water or (as in this case) liquid held in the palm of the hand is nothing more than a visual hallucination, but the deluded audience is firmly convinced that the diviner is able to foretej? the future and discover hidden treasure. Often a child is employed by the fortuneteller in the (naive) belief that the innocence of youth is more receptive to spiritual influences. I knew that to interrupt the ceremony would be not only rude but dangerous. Ramses was deep in some sort of unholy trance, from which he could be roused only by the voice of the magician, who now leaned forward over the boy's cupped hands, mumbling in a voice so low I could not make out the words. I did not blame the poor bored women for allowing the ceremony, or even the seer, who undoubtedly believed sincerely in his own hocus-pocus. However, I was not about to stand idly by and wait upon the latter's convenience. Very softly I remarked, "As is well known, I, the Sitt Hakim, am also a magician of great power. I call upon this holy man to bring back the soul of the boy to his body, lest the efreets [demons] I have set to protect my son mistake the holy man's purpose and eat up his heart." The women gasped in delighted horror. There was no immediate reaction from the "holy man," but after a moment he straightened Elizabeth Peters A A A 56 -L.K^WL/l.n.' ± nnj carriage he took a deep breath of the steaming, stifling, sand-laden air and exclaimed, "The last stage! We will soon be there, my darling Peabody. Isn't this splendid?" 1 had not the strength to do more than glare at him. However, 1 am nothing if not resilient, and a few hours later I was able to share his enthusiasm. A troop of Sudani soldiers-which included several of Emerson's acquaintances-had removed our luggage and helped us set up our tents. We had declined with thanks the offer of the harassed captain in charge of the encampment to share his cramped quarters,- after assuring us that there would be places for us on the steamer leaving next day, he bade us farewell and bon voyage with obvious relief. As the sun sank rapidly in the west, Emerson and I strolled hand in hand along the riverbank, enjoying the evening breeze and the brilliance of the sunset. The silhouettes of the palm trees stood black and shapely against the glory of gold and crimson. We were not alone. A troop of curious villagers trailed us. Whenever we stopped they stopped, squatted on the ground and stared with all their might. Emerson always attracts admirers and I had become more or less used to it, though I did not like it. "1 hope Ramses is all right," 1 said, turning to look at the rapidly dimming outline of the tent where he slept. "He was most unlike his normal self. Hardly a word out of him." "You said he was not feverish," Emerson reminded me. "Stop fussing, Amelia, the train ride was tiring, and even a gritty little chap like Ramses must feel its effects." The sun dropped below the horizon and night came on with startling suddenness, as it does in those climes. Stars sprang out in the cobalt vault of the heavens, and Emerson's arm stole around my waist. It had been a long time since we had enjoyed an opportunity for connubial exchanges of even a modest nature, but 1 felt bound to protest. "They are watching us, Emerson. 1 feel like some poor animal in a cage, 1 decline to perform for an audience." "Bah," Emerson replied, leading me to a large boulder. "Sit down, my dear Peabody, and forget our audience. It is too dark for them to observe our actions, and if they should, they could hardly fail to find them edifying-inspiring, even. For instance, this . . ." It certainly inspired me. I forgot the staring spectators until a strengthening glow of silvery light illumined the beloved features A à. A THE LAST CAMEL DIED AT NOON 57 so close to mine. The moon had risen. "Oh, curse it," I said, removing Emerson's hand from a particularly sensitive area of my person. "It was a refreshing interlude, though," Emerson said with a chuckle. Reaching into his pocket, he took out his pipe. "Do you mind if I smoke, Peabody?" I really did not approve of it, but the soft moonlight and the stench of tobacco smoke recalled tender memories of the days of our courtship, when we faced the sinister Mummy in the abandoned tombs of Amarna.* "No, I don't mind. Do you remember Amarna, and the-" "The time I set my-er-myself on fire by neglecting to knock the ashes out of my pipe before I put it in my pocket? And you let me do it even though you knew perfectly well . . ." Emerson burst out laughing. "Do you remember the first time I ever kissed youlying flat on the floor of that cursed tomb, with a maniac shooting at us? It was only the expectation of imminent death that gave me the courage to do it. I thought you detested me." "I remember that moment and many others," I replied with considerable emotion. "Believe me, my darling Emerson, that I am fully cognizant of the fact that I am the most fortunate of women. Frorn first to last, it has been outstanding." "And the best is yet to come, my dearest Peabo^^y." His strong brown hand closed over mine. We sat in silence watching the moonlight spread silvery ripples across the dark surface of the river. So clear and bright was the illumination that one could see for a considerable distance. "The rock formations are extremely regular," I remarked. "So much so that one might wonder whether they are not in fact the ruins of ancient structures." "They may well be, Peabody. So little has been done in the way of excavation here, so much needs to be done. . . . My colleagues -curse them-are more interested in mummies and treasure and impressive monuments than in the slow, tedious acquisition of knowledge. Yet this region is of vital importance, not only for its own sake, but for the understanding of Egyptian culture. Not far from this very spot are the remains of what must have been a fort or a trading post or both, within its massive walls were stored the exotic treasures brought as tribute to the pharaohs of the Egyptian Empire-gold and ostrich feathers, rock crystal and ivory and leop- CrocoAle on the Sandbank Elizabeth Peters A A 58 J-, H £,14 L/C n./ A vn-i ^ ard skins." He pointed with the stem of his pipe toward the moonlight lying like a white path along the river and across the sand. "The caravans went there, Peabody: into the western desert, through the oases, toward the land called Yam in the ancient records. One such caravan route may have gone west from Elephantine-Assouan, as it is today. A series of wadis run westward from this very region,- they are dried-up canyons today, but they were cut by water. Three thousand years ago . . ." He fell silent, gazing at his stern, strong profile, 1 felt a sympathetic thrill, for he seemed to be looking not across distance but across time itself. No wonder he felt a kinship with the bold men who had braved the wilderness so many centuries before. He too possessed the unique combination of courage and imagination that leads the noblest sons (and daughters) of humanity to risk all for the sake of knowledge! With all due modesty I believe I may claim that I possess those qualities myself. The bond of affection that unites me and my dear Emerson left me no doubt of the direction in which his thoughts were tending. Into those distances, so deceptively cool and silverwhite in the moonlight, had gone Willoughby Forth and his beautiful young bride, never to return. However, in addition to courage, imagination, et cetera, 1 also possess a great deal of common sense. For a time 1 had-1 admit it!-entertained a romantic notion of going in search of the missing explorer. But now I had seen with my own eyes the dreadful desolation of the western desert, 1 had felt the burning heat of the day and the deadly chill of darkness. It was impossible that anyone could have survived in that arid waste for fourteen long years. Willoughby Forth and his wife were dead, and I had no intention of following them, or allowing Emerson to do so. A shiver passed through my frame. The night air was cold. Our audience had vanished, as silently as shadows. "It is late," 1 said softly. "Shall we . . ." "By all means." Emerson jumped to his feet. At that moment the quiet air was rent by a weird, undulating cry. 1 started. Emerson laughed and took my hand. "It is only a jackal, Peabody. Hurry. I feel a sudden, urgent need for something only you can supply." "Oh, Emerson," I began-and said no more, because he was pulling me along at such a pace I lost my breath. A A A THE LAST CAMEL DIED AT NOON 59 Our tents had been placed in a small grove of tamarisk trees. Our boxes and bags were piled around them, theft is almost unknown among these so-called primitive people, and Emerson's reputation was enough to deter the most hardened of burglars. I was startled, therefore, to see something moving-a slight white shape slipping through the trees with an unpleasantly furtive motion. Emerson's night vision is not as keen as mine, and perhaps he was preoccupied with the subject he had mentioned. Not until I shouted, "Halt! Who goes there?" or something to that effect, did he behold the apparition-for so it appeared, pale and silently gliding. As one man (figuratively speaking) we leapt upon it and bore it to the ground. An all-too-familiar voice exclaimed in plaintive protest. With a loud oath Emerson struggled to his feet and raised the fallen form to its feet. It was Ramses, looking quite ghostly in the white native robe he wore as a nightshirt. "Are you injured, my boy?" Emerson asked in faltering accents. "Have I hurt you?" Ramses blinked at him. "Not intentionally, Papa, I am sure. Fortunately the ground is soft. May I venture to ask why you and Mama knocked me down?" * "A reasonable question," Emerson admitted. "Wtjy did we, Peabody?" Having had the breath knocked out of me by the fall, I was unable to reply at once. Observing my state, Emerson considerately assisted me to rise, but he took advantage of my enforced silence to continue, "I hope you understand, Peabody, that the question was not meant to imply criticism, but only inquiry. I reacted instinctively, as I hope I will always do, my dear, when you have need of my assistance. Did you see or hear something I failed to observe that prompted such impetuous activity?" Normally I would have resented this cowardly attempt to put the blame on me-so typical of the male sex, from Adam on down. But to be honest, I was as bewildered as he. "No, Emerson, I confess I did not. I too reacted instinctively, and I am at a loss to explain why. 1 had the strangest feeling-a premonition of danger, of-" "Never mind," Emerson said hastily. "I know those premonitions of yours, Peabody, and with all respect, I prefer not to discuss them." "Well, but it was only natural that seeing someone prowling 60 Elizabeth Peters A A A around our stores, I should assume the worst. Ramses ought to have been asleep. Ramses, what were you . . . Oh." The answer seemed self-evident, but it was not the one Ramses gave. "You called me, Mama. You called me to come, and of course I obeyed." "1 did not call you, Ramses." "But I heard your voice-" "You were dreaming," Emerson said. "What a touching thing, eh, Peabody? Dreaming of his mama and, even in sleep, obedient to her slightest command. Come along, my boy, I will tuck you in." With a meaningful glance at me, he pushed Ramses into the tent and followed after. I knew he would sit by the boy until he had fallen asleep,- Emerson is somewhat self-conscious about being overheard, especially by Ramses, when he and I are actively demonstrating the deep affection we feel for one another. Instead of retiring to prepare for this activity, I lingered in the shadows of the trees, gazing all around. Moonlight sifted through the leaves and formed strange silvery hieroglyphs upon the ground. The night was not silent, sounds of activity came from the direction of the military base, where the barges were being loaded for the morning's departure. And from across the river, lonely as the cry of a lost and wandering spirit, came the mournful call of a jackal. & m Four days later, after an uncomfortable but uneventful voyage, we saw a ruddy mountain loom over the tops of the palm trees. It was Gebel Barkal, the Holy Mountain of the Nubian kingdom. We had reached our destination. B?MOl CHAPTER 4 Stone Houses of the Kings I f I have not done so alreadyf I should make it clear that Napata is not a city but