The Mummy or Ramses the Damned (42 page)

BOOK: The Mummy or Ramses the Damned
12.82Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

The bird had ceased its screeching. It stared with one round senseless eye into the room. Malenka lay on her back on the carpet, her head wrenched to one side at an impossible angle, her brown eyes half-closed.

Cleopatra stood staring down at her. Thoughtfully she looked at the girl. Then she said in Latin:

“She is dead.”

Elliott didn’t answer. He gripped the edge of the marble-top cupboard and pulled himself to his feet. The throbbing in his chest meant nothing to him. Nothing could equal the pain in his soul.

“Why did you do it!” he whispered. Oh, but was he mad to ask such a question of this being? This thing whose brain was damaged, without doubt, as her body was damaged, beautiful though she was.

Almost innocently she stared at Elliott. Then she looked back at the dead woman.

“Tell me, Lord Rutherford, how did I come to be here!” Her eyes narrowed. She approached him. In fact, she reached out and effortlessly helped him to stand upright. She picked up the walking stick and put it in his left hand. “Where did I come from?” she asked. “Lord Rutherford!” She bent forward, her eyes growing wide and full of terror. “Lord Rutherford, was I dead?”

She didn’t wait for him to answer; her scream came in pulses. He embraced her, and put his hand over her mouth.

“Ramses brought you here. Ramses! You called out to him. You saw him.”

“Yes!” She stood still, not struggling, merely clutching his wrist. “Ramses was there. And when I … when I called out to him, he ran from me. Like the woman, he ran from me! That same look in his eyes.”

“He wanted to come back to you. Others stopped him. Now I must go to get him. Do you understand? You must stay here. You must wait for me.” She stared past him. “Ramses has the medicine,” he said. “I shall bring it back here.”

“How long?”

“A few hours,” he said. “It’s midafternoon. I’ll be back before dark.”

She moaned again, and pressed her curved thumb to her teeth,
staring at the floor. She looked like a child suddenly, a child wrestling with an enormous puzzle. “Ramses,” she whispered. Clearly she was not certain who he was.

He patted her shoulder gently; then with the aid of his cane, he approached the body of the girl. What in the name of heaven was he to do with it? Let it lie here and rot as the hours passed? How could he bury it in the garden, when he could barely walk as it was? He closed his eyes and laughed to himself bitterly. It seemed a thousand years since he had seen his son, or Julie, or the civilized rooms of a common place like Shepheard’s Hotel. It seemed a thousand years ago that he had done anything normal or loved anything normal; or believed in it; or made the sacrifices that normality required.

“Go, get the medicine,” she said to him. She stepped between him and the dead woman. She reached down and lifted Malenka by her right arm. Effortlessly she dragged the woman across the carpet, past the clucking bird, which had the good fortune to be silent, and threw the corpse of the woman out into the yard as if it were a stuffed doll. The body landed on its face against the far wall.

Do not think now. Go to Ramses. Go!

“Three hours,” he said to her, again using the two languages. “Bolt the door after me. You see the bolt?”

She turned and looked at the door. She nodded.

“Very well, Lord Rutherford,” she said in Latin. “Before dark.”

She did not bolt the door. She stood there, her hands on the bare wood, listening as he walked away. It would take him a long time to move out of sight.

And she must get out of this place! She must see where she was! This could not be Egypt. And she could not understand why she was here, or why she hungered so, and could not be satisfied, or why she felt this sharp, enervating desire to be in a man’s arms. She would have forced Lord Rutherford again if she had not wanted him to go on his errand.

But the errand; it was not clear to her suddenly. He meant to get the medicine, but what was the medicine! How could she live with the great gaping wounds she had?

Yet only a moment ago she’d realized something about this, something to do with that dead woman, that shrieking slave girl whose neck she’d snapped.

Ah, but the thing to do was leave here, while Lord Rutherford was not here to scold her like a teacher and tell her to remain.

In a haze, she remembered the streets she had glimpsed earlier, full of great rumbling monstrous things made from metal; full of foul smoke and deafening noise. Who were the people she had seen around her? Women in dresses such as she wore.

She’d been terrified then; but her body had been full of aches and misery. Now her body was full of cravings. She must not be terrified. She must go.

She went back into the bedchamber. She opened the “magazine” called
Harper’s Weekly
and looked at the drawings of pretty women in these strange dresses that pinched them in the middle like insects. Then she looked at herself in the mirror on the cabinet door.

She needed a covering for her head, and sandals. Yes, sandals. Quickly she searched the bedchamber, and found them in a wooden closet—sandals with gold worked into the leather, and small enough for her feet; and a great strange thing with silk flowers all over it, a thing such as one would wear to keep off rain.

She laughed as she looked at it. Then she put it on her head, and tied the ribbons under her chin. Now she looked very much like the women in the pictures. Except for her hands. What was she to do about her hands!

She stared at the naked bones of the first right finger. A thin covering of skin overlaid them, but it was like silk, more sheer than the dress. She could see blood in it; but it was transparent. And the mere sight of the bones caused her to become dizzy, confused again.

A memory—someone standing above her. No, don’t let it begin again. She must wrap her hand in something, a bandage. The left hand would do well enough. She turned and began to search through the cabinet of female clothes.

And then she made the loveliest discovery! Here were two little silk garments made for hands. They were white; they had pearls sewn on them! Each had five fingers and had been cut to fit closely over the hand. This was perfect. She slipped them on; they hid the naked bone completely.

Ah, the wonder of what Lord Rutherford had called these “modern times.” These times of music boxes and “motor cars,” as he called them, the things she had seen this morning, all around her, like great roaring hippopotami from the river.
What would Lord Rutherford call these things, these clothes for hands?

She was wasting time. She went to the dressing table, gathered up a few small coins that lay there and put these in the deep hidden side pocket of the heavy skirt.

As she opened the front door of the house, she glanced over at the dead body, out in the courtyard, heaped against the wall. Something, what was it, she had to understand it, but it simply would not come clear to her. Something …

She saw again that hazy figure standing over her. She heard again those sacred words. A tongue she knew speaking to her.
This was the tongue of your forefathers, you must learn it
. No, but that had been another time. They had been in a bright room full of Italian marble, and he had been teaching her. This time, it had been dark and hot and she’d been struggling upwards as if from deep water, her limbs weak, the water crushing her, her mouth full of water so that she couldn’t scream.

“Your heart beats again; you come to life! You are young and strong once more; you
are
now and forever.”

No, do not weep again! Do not struggle to grasp it, to see it. The figure moving away; blue eyes. She had known those blue eyes.
As soon as I drank it, it happened. The priestess showed me in the mirror … blue eyes
. Ah, but whose voice was this! This voice that had said the prayer in the darkness, the ancient sacred prayer for the opening of the mummy’s mouth.

She had called out his name! And here, in this strange little house, Lord Rutherford had spoken the name also. Lord Rutherford was going …

Be back before dark.

It was no use. She stared through the archway at the dead body. She must get out into this strange land. And she must remember that it was extremely easy to kill them, to snap their necks like brittle stems.

She hurried out, without closing the door. The whitewashed houses on either side of her looked familiar and good to her. She had known such cities. Maybe this was Egypt, but no, that could not be.

She rushed along, holding the ribbons tight so that the strange headdress would not fly from her hair. So easy to walk fast. And the sun felt so good to her. The sun. In a flash she saw it flooding down from a high portal in a cave. A wooden shutter had opened. She heard the creak of the chain.

Then it was gone, the memory, if it had even been a memory.
Wake, Ramses
.

That was his name. But she didn’t care now. She was free to roam this strange city; free to discover, to see!

AMIR PURCHASED several Bedouin garments in the first shop in old Cairo that sold such clothes. He ducked into a small restaurant, a filthy alleyway of a place full of down-on-their-luck Frenchmen, and there put on the loose, concealing garb and tucked the other garments—those he’d bought for Julie—under his arm, inside his robes.

He liked this loose peasant costume, which was infinitely older than the tailored robes and hats which most Egyptians wore. In fact, it was probably the oldest mode of dress still in active existence—the long, loose drapery of the desert wanderers. He felt free in it, and safe from all eyes.

He hurried along through the winding honeycomb streets of Arab Cairo, towards the house of his cousin Zaki, a man he disliked dealing with but one who would give him exactly what he wanted more easily and efficiently than anyone else. And who knew how long Ramses must hide in Cairo? Who knew how these murders would be solved?

When he reached the mummy factory of his cousin—surely one of the most distasteful places in the entire known world—he entered by the side gate. A load of freshly wrapped bodies baked in the harsh afternoon sunshine. Inside, no doubt, others were being stewed in the pot.

A lone worker dug a trench now into which these fresh mummies
would be laid for a few days, “browning” as it were in damp earth.

It disgusted Samir completely, though he had come to this little factory as a boy long before he had known there were real mummies, the bodies of the ancient ancestors to be studied, to be saved from theft and mutilation, and preserved.

“Look at it this way,” his cousin Zaki once argued. “We are better than the thieves who sell our ancient rulers bit by bit to the foreigners. What we sell isn’t sacred. It’s fake.”

Good old Zaki. Samir was about to signal to one of the men inside the place, a man who was in fact engaged in wrapping a body. But then Zaki himself emerged from the reeking little house.

“Eh, Samir! So good to see you always, cousin. Come have a coffee with me, cousin.”

“Not now, Zaki, I need your assistance.”

“Of course, you would not be here if you did not.”

Samir accepted the rebuke with a humble little smile.

“Zaki, I need a safe place, a little house with a heavy door and a back entrance. Secret. For a few days, maybe longer. I don’t know.”

Zaki laughed good-naturedly, but a little smugly.

“Ah, so, the educated one, the one whom all respect, and he comes to me for a hiding place?”

“Don’t question me, Zaki.” Samir produced a roll of bills from under his robe. He held this out to his cousin. “A safe house. I can pay.”

“All right, I know just the thing,” said Zaki. “Come into the house and take coffee with me. One whiff, and you get used to the smell.”

For decades Zaki had been saying that. Samir never got used to the smell. But he felt compelled now to do what his cousin wanted, and he followed him into the “embalming room,” a miserable place where a vat of bitumen and other chemicals was always simmering, waiting for a new body to be thrown in.

As he passed, Samir saw that the pot had a new victim. It sickened him. He looked away, but not before he had glimpsed the poor devil’s black hair billowing free on the surface as his face floated just beneath it.

BOOK: The Mummy or Ramses the Damned
12.82Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

In Pursuit of the English by Doris Lessing
The Forest Laird by Jack Whyte
Empathy by Dukey, Ker
Last Sacrifice by Richelle Mead
Toy's Story by Lee, Brenda Stokes
Power, The by Robinson, Frank M.
The Memory Man by Lisa Appignanesi
How to Be Sick by Bernhard, Toni, Sylvia Boorstein
Time Dancers by Steve Cash