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He Shall Thunder in the Sky taps-12

Page 41

by Elizabeth Peters


  Most damning of all was the fact that Farouk had known about the house in Maadi. It had been a closely guarded secret between Ramses and David until Ramses took Sennia and her young mother there, to hide them from Kalaan. Ramses had never known how the pimp tracked her down; she might have been the innocent agent of her own betrayal, slipping back to el Was’a to visit friends and boast of the new protector who had, incredibly, offered her safety without asking anything in return. Rashida was dead and Kalaan had not shown his face in Cairo since, and there was only one other person who had been a party to that filthy scheme.

  Percy—who was now paying him extravagant, hypocritical compliments and defending his tarnished reputation. If Percy was the traitor and spy Ramses suspected him of being, his interest in his cousin’s present activities was prompted by more than idle curiosity.

  It made a suggestively symmetrical pattern, but what chance had he of convincing anyone else when even David thought his hatred of Percy had become an irrational idйe fixe? Would any of them believe a member of their own superior caste, an officer and a gentleman, would sell out to the enemy?

  He knew he couldn’t keep the knowledge to himself; he’d have to tell someone. But I’m damned if I’m going after him myself, he thought. Not now. Not until I’m out of this, and I’ve got David out, and he can go home to Lia, and I can shake some sense into Nefret and keep her safe. I couldn’t stand to lose her again.

  Chapter 13

  After seeing Nefret and the Vandergelts, and Fatima, who had insisted on waiting up for them, off to bed, I put on a dressing gown and crept downstairs. The windows of the sitting room faced the road, and it was on the cushioned seat under them that I took up my position after easing the shutters back in order to see out. It was very late, or very early, depending on one’s point of view; those dead, silent hours when one feels like the only person alive. The moon had set; beyond the limited circles of light shed by the lamps we kept burning at our door, the road lay quiet in the starlight.

  I was not aware that Ramses had returned until the sitting room door opened just wide enough to enable a dark figure to slip in. Two dark figures, to be precise; Seshat was close on his heels.

  “Do you enjoy climbing that trellis?” I inquired somewhat snappishly. Relief often has such an effect.

  He sat down next to me. “I had to report myself to Seshat.”

  “How did you know I was here?”

  “I knew you weren’t in your room. I looked in. I trust you will overlook the impertinence; I was a trifle anxious about Father.”

  “So you saw him,” I murmured.

  “Heard him, rather.” He gave me a brief account of what had transpired. “I hope you don’t think I did wrong in letting him go off alone.”

  “Good gracious, no. Short of binding him hand and foot, you could not have prevented him.”

  “How did it go on your end?”

  “There was no difficulty. I arrived home well before the others.” The area of illumination looked very small against the enveloping darkness. “He has a long way to come,” I said uneasily. “Perhaps I ought to take the motorcar out again and go to meet him.”

  We were sitting side by side, our heads together, so we could converse quietly. I felt his arm and shoulder jerk violently. “Again?” he gasped.

  “Didn’t your father tell you?”

  “No.” He seemed to be having trouble catching his breath. “I wondered why he… You drove the car home? Not all the way from Tura! Where is it?”

  “In the stableyard, of course. Take a glass of water, my dear.”

  “Father would say the situation calls for whiskey,” Ramses muttered. “Never mind, just tell me what happened. I don’t think I can stand the suspense.”

  I concluded my narrative by remarking somewhat acerbically, “I do not understand why you and your father should assume I am incapable of such a simple procedure.”

  “I believe you are capable of anything,” said Ramses.

  I was pondering this statement when Seshat sailed past me and out the window. A thump and a faint rustle of shrubbery were the only sounds of her passage through the garden.

  “Your father!” I exclaimed.

  “A mouse,” Ramses corrected. “Don’t credit her with greater powers than she has.”

  “Oh. I do hope she will eat it outside and not bring it to you. As for the motorcar—”

  “Ssh.” He held up his hand.

  According to Daoud, Ramses can hear a whisper across the Nile . My hearing was sharpened by affectionate concern, but it was several moments before I made out the sound that had alerted him. It was not the sound of booted feet.

  “A camel,” I said, unable to conceal my disappointment. “Some early-rising peasant.”

  The early-rising peasant was in more of a hurry than those individuals usually are. The camel was trotting. As it entered the lamplight, I beheld Emerson, upright and bareheaded, legs crossed on the camel’s neck, smoking his pipe.

  He yanked on the head rope to slow the beast and whacked it on the side of the neck to turn it toward the front of the house and the window. I winced as my tenderly nurtured roses crunched under four large flat feet. At Emerson’s command the camel settled ponderously onto the ground, crushing a few hundred marigolds and petunias, and Emerson dismounted.

  “Ah,” he said, peering in the window. “There you are, Peabody . Move aside, I am coming in.”

  I found my voice. “Emerson, get that damned camel out of my garden!”

  “The damage is done, I fear,” said Ramses. “Father, where did you acquire it?”

  “Stole it.” Emerson climbed over the sill. “Got the idea from David.”

  “You can’t just leave it there!” I exclaimed. “How are you going to explain its presence? And the owner—”

  “Don’t concern yourself about the camel, I’ll think of something. What did you do to the car?”

  “Put it in the stableyard, of course.”

  “In what condition?”

  “Let us not waste time on trivialities, Emerson. The most important thing is that you are here; Ramses is here; I am here. I suggest we all go to bed and—”

  “No point in that, it will be light in an hour or two,” said my indefatigible spouse. “What about breakfast, eh, Peabody ?”

  “It would be unkind to rouse Fatima at this hour, when she was so late getting to bed last night.”

  “Good Gad, no, I wouldn’t do that. I will just cook up some eggs and coffee and—”

  “No, you will not, you always burn the bottoms off the pans.”

  “I would offer,” said Ramses, “but—”

  “But you always burn them too.” The idea of breakfast had some merit. I wanted to hear how Emerson had carried out his task, and I knew he would be in a much better humor after he had been fed. The dents in the motorcar were bound to provoke some recriminatory remarks, and the missing lamp… “Oh, very well, I will see what’s in the larder.”

  There was quite a lot in the larder, and Emerson tucked into a roast chicken wing with a hearty appetite. Between bites he gave us a description of his adventures.

  “It went off without a hitch. What did you expect? After I had stowed the stuff away I drove the cart back to Kashlakat and left it outside the mosque.”

  “You walked off and left it?”

  “The donkeys weren’t going anywhere. As for walking, I concluded I would rather not.” He stopped chewing and gave me a reproachful look. “I had become very anxious about you, my dear. I expected to find you not far from where I had left you.”

  “Oh, you did, did you?”

  My interest in Emerson’s narrative had not prevented me from noticing that Ramses had put very little food on his plate and had eaten very little of that. He finished his cup of coffee and rose.

  “No,” I said. “Please, Ramses. Don’t go out again.”

  “Mother, I must. I ought to have taken care of it earlier, but I wanted to make certain Father got ho
me all right. I should be back by daylight.”

  “The others will sleep late,” Emerson said. “But—er—don’t be any longer than you can help, my boy. Do you know who it was?”

  “What—” I began.

  Emerson waved me to silence, and Ramses said, “Not for certain, but Rashad is the most likely candidate. If he wakes to see me squatting on the foot of his bed, glowering like a gargoyle, he’ll be in a proper state for interrogation.”

  I said, “What—” and Ramses said, “Tell her, Father. I must hurry.”

  “You aren’t going on foot, I hope,” said Emerson.

  Ramses’s tight lips parted in a smile. “I’ll take the camel.”

  He was gone. I put my elbows on the table and my face in my hands.

  “Now, now, Peabody .” Emerson patted me on the shoulder.

  “How much longer is this going to continue?”

  “It can’t be much longer. If the last delivery has been made, der Tag must be imminent. Don’t you suppose he is as anxious as you are to get this over?”

  “I know he is. That is what frightens me. Desperation drives a man to recklessness. I take it Rashad is one of Wardani’s lieutenants? Not another of the same ilk as Farouk, I hope.”

  “Unlikely,” said Emerson, with infuriating calm. “Part of the cache was missing. Someone had got there before us. That means there are a hundred rifles and possibly a machine gun or two in unknown hands in an unknown location. Not enough to win a war, but enough to kill quite a number of people. The most likely suspect is this fellow Rashad, who has been exhibiting signs of insubordination, egged on, no doubt, by Farouk. That has been one of Ramses’s difficulties all along—keeping that lot of young radicals under control. I know their type—good Gad, I was one of them myself once upon a time!—naive and idealistic and itching to prove their manhood by rioting in the streets. Fists and rocks and clubs can do a limited amount of harm, but a gun is entirely different. It makes a weak man feel like a hero and a strong man feel as if he is immortal, and it removes the last inhibition a killer might feel. You don’t have to be close to a man to put a bullet into him. You don’t have to see his face.”

  “Were you a radical, Emerson?”

  “I am still, my dear. Ask anyone in Cairo .” Emerson’s grin faded. “ Peabody , Ramses took on this assignment for one reason and one reason only: to keep people from being injured, even those young fools of revolutionaries. He won’t rest until he’s got those guns back. When he does, he will have accomplished what he set out to do, and this damned business will end, if I have to collect the damned weapons and the damned young fools myself. Are you trying not to cry? Let it out, my darling, let it out, you look dreadful with your face screwed up like that.”

  “I am trying not to sneeze.” I rubbed my nose. “Though your words moved me deeply. Emerson, you have given me new heart. I am ready to act when you are!”

  “We’ll give Russell time to act first. Not much time, though, curse it. Something is going to happen in the next two or three days. The Turks are within five miles of the Canal in some areas; they’ve begun digging themselves in east of Kantara and Kubri and el-Ferdan. In the meantime that lot of Clayton’s is drawing up maps and ‘examining broader questions of strategy,’ as they put it! What we need is detailed information: precisely where and when the attack will take place, how many men, what kind of armaments, and so on. Our defenses are dangerously undermanned, but if we knew that, we might be able to hold them.”

  “Might? Really, Emerson, you are not very encouraging.”

  “Not to worry, my dear.” Emerson’s handsome blue eyes took on a faraway look. “If the enemy takes Cairo we will retreat into the wadis and hold out until reinforcements arrive from England . The weapons I concealed at Fort Tura —”

  “You’d like that, wouldn’t you?”

  “I?” Emerson’s dreamy smile stiffened into a look of rigid disapproval. “I only want to get on with my excavations, Peabody . What do you take me for?”

  I went to him and put my arms round his shoulders. “The bravest man I know. One of them… Ow! Emerson, don’t you dare kiss me while you are wearing that beard!”

  From Manuscript H

  Ramses knew where Rashad and the others lived; he kept track of changes of address, which were fairly frequent. This wouldn’t be the first time he had dropped in on one of them without warning. He preferred these epiphanies, not only for the sake of safety but because they added to his own mystique. Wardani knows all!

  Rashad, whose father was a wealthy landowner in Assiut, had a room to himself in a building near el-Azhar, where he was, in theory at least, a student. Whether from inertia or self-confidence or love of comfort, he hadn’t shifted quarters lately, and Ramses had decided the best approach was through the window, which gave onto a narrow street leading off the Sharia el-Tableta. The window was on the first floor with a blank wall under it, but the camel would help him with that little difficulty if he could force the balky beast into position.

  As he might have expected, the camel walked out from under him as soon as he got hold of the sill, and he had a bit of a scramble to get in. Fortunately, Rashad was a heavy sleeper. He was snoring peacefully when Ramses took up a position at the foot of his bed.

  The darkness paled with the approach of dawn, and Ramses decided irritably that he couldn’t wait for the lazy lout to have his sleepout. He had to be out of the room before it was light enough for Rashad to get a good look at him. The tweed coat and trousers were the ones he had worn before, and the hat shadowed his face, but he hadn’t had time to alter his features with makeup. He lowered his voice to the resonant pitch he had learned from Hakim the Seer of Mysteries (aka Alfred Jenkins), who did a mind-reading stunt at the London music halls.

  “Rashad!”

  The response would have been entertaining if Ramses had been in a mood for broad humor. Rashad thrashed and squawked and squirmed, fetching up in a sitting position with his back against the wall and his knees drawn up and the sheet clumsily arranged over his naked body.

  “Kamil! You! How—”

  “Where,” Ramses corrected. “Where did you take them?”

  There was no argument, but there were plenty of excuses. Ramses interrupted him. “The ruined mosque? You haven’t much imagination, have you? They must be moved. I’ll see to it myself. I will overlook your insubordination this time, Rashad, but if it happens again…”

  He left the threat unspecified, knowing Rashad had enough imagination to picture a variety of ugly possibilities, and went to the door. Rashad had not only barred it but shoved a chair against it. As he removed these pathetic impediments, Rashad continued to squeal apologies. Ramses left without replying. He didn’t suppose Rashad would work up nerve enough to follow him, especially since he had taken the precaution of “borrowing” the galabeeyah Rashad had laid out across a chair, ready to put on in the morning.

  There was no sign of the camel. He didn’t waste time looking for it; it would not be lonely for long, and its original owner would be anonymously and generously reimbursed. In Ramses’s opinion he was lucky to be rid of the brute. It had the gait of a three-legged mule and it had tried to bite him on the leg.

  He quickened his steps, reaching the mosque as the call to morning prayer ended. After removing his shoes and hat, he went inside, pausing by the fountain to bathe face, hands, and arms. There were few worshipers, since most people preferred to pray at home; and as Ramses went through the prescribed positions, kneeling at last close to the left wall, he hoped what he was doing would not be regarded as profanation. He slipped his hand into the opening in the wall, and paper crackled under his fingers.

  The train left him off at Giza Station. Since it was now broad daylight, he was as likely to be seen climbing up the trellis as walking in the front door, so he did the latter. The smell of frying bacon floated toward his appreciative nostrils and he followed it toward the breakfast room.

  The Vandergelts weren’t down yet, bu
t Nefret had joined his parents at the table. They all turned to stare when he sauntered in.

  “Enjoy your walk?” his father inquired, giving him a cue he didn’t need.

  Nefret yawned prettily, covering her mouth with her hand. “Such energy! Early to bed and early to rise… I hope you are feeling wealthy and wise, because you don’t look especially healthy.”

  “Kind of you to say so.”

  “You’ve got those dark smudges under your eyes,” Nefret explained. “Very romantic-looking, but indicative, in my experience, of too little sleep. I thought you came home early last night.”

  “I also woke early. Couldn’t get back to sleep, so I went for a long walk.” Fatima put a plate of eggs in front of him. He thanked her and told himself to shut up. He was explaining too much.

  “You should have hoarded your strength,” said his father, with a wolfish smile. “I mean to get in a full day’s work, so hurry and finish breakfast.”

  Ramses nodded obediently. His mother had not spoken, but he hadn’t missed the signs of silent relief when he walked into the room. She always carried herself like a soldier, even when she was sitting down; it made him feel like a swine to see those straight shoulders sag and that controlled face lose a little of its color. What he was doing was unfair to David and Nefret, but it was brutal to his parents. Perhaps the news he brought would cheer them up.

  He had to wait until they were on their way to Giza before he had a chance to speak with his mother alone. His father had gone on ahead with Nefret, and Ramses held Risha to the plodding pace of his mother’s mare.

  “I know where he’s hidden them,” he said without preamble.

  “It was the man you suspected?”

  “Yes. He was only trying to be helpful! A feeble excuse, but he wasn’t in a state to think clearly.”

  His mother was. She was blind as a mole about some things, but every now and then she hit the nail square on the head. “The Turks are communicating directly with him. They must be, or he wouldn’t have known where the cache was located. You didn’t tell him, did you?”

 

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