‘Sobeck!’
‘Sobeck!’ His lips hardly moved. ‘I don’t know what you are talking about. My name is Kheore — that means being. For that’s what I am — I simply am.’ He smiled at the riddle.
The boy returned with the beer jugs. Sobeck indicated that I was not to talk. We drank the beer and left, going down to the riverside. The quays were busy with their shabby markets through which soldiers, marines and sailors paraded, trying to catch the eye of the pleasure girls. Tumblers, tinkers, traders and scorpion men, the sellers of amulets and scarabs, bawled for trade. Storytellers announced what they had seen in their wondrous travels. Sobeck pushed his way through these and led me down an alleyway. At the bottom lay a derelict warehouse, its brick walls collapsed due to flooding. Inside, beneath the sodden palm-leafed roof mingled a pile of mud and bricks.
‘Everything collapses around here.’
Sobeck sat down on a part of the outside wall, indicating I sit on a nearby plinth.
‘Only the gods know what this was once. A temple? A warehouse? A brothel? A beer-shop? Anyway, it’s a good place to talk. There is only one lane leading to it, so I can see if anyone comes.’
I stretched out my hand. Sobeck hawked, spat, then grasped it.
‘I owe you my life.’ He stretched as if to catch the breeze coming in from the river. ‘I escaped,’ Sobeck declared. ‘I wandered for days. A Sand Dweller attacked me. He must have been a scout and not a very good one. The fortune of the gods, eh Mahu? He loosed an arrow but it hit the clay tablet round my neck. I pretended to be dead. He came in to see what plunder he could take.’
‘And you killed him? You broke the back of his head?’
For the first time Sobeck showed surprise.
‘Maya told me. He works in the House of Secrets.’
‘That plump piece of shit!’
‘He didn’t betray you,’ I declared.
‘Then who did?’
I spread my feet and gazed on the ground: I was intent on my revenge. ‘You will not believe this.’ I glanced up.
‘My Aunt Isithia.’
A knife suddenly appeared in Sobeck’s hand, its blade only a few inches from my face.
‘It’s a long story,’ I lied. ‘I won’t give you the details.
My Aunt Isithia was, is, a courtesan, well-known to the priests of Amun and the courts of the Divine One. She trains the Royal Ornaments in certain pleasures and practices.’
The knife was lowered. I sat listening to the whirr of insects and the faint sounds from the quayside.
‘I know all about the Divine One’s pleasures,’ Sobeck murmured, ‘but I never told anyone outside the Kap.’
‘Aunt Isithia’s suspicions were roused,’ I continued. ‘Do you remember Imri?’
‘The Captain of the Kushite guard,’ Sobeck retorted. ‘He guarded the Grotesque, or as you termed him, the Veiled One.’
‘Aunt Isithia heard some chatter about your dalliance with a Royal Ornament, the challenge to steal the Statue of Ishtar and so on.’ I paused. ‘She informed the authorities who instructed Imri, already their spy on the Veiled One, to keep this particular grove under close guard. He saw you both and reported back.’
‘I’ll kill him!’
‘He’s already dead,’ I replied. ‘Drowned in a crocodile pool.’
Sobeck put the knife away. ‘Your work, Mahu? You never did anything for anyone.’
‘Except plead for your life, Sobeck, and risk coming here.’
‘So Imri is dead.’ Sobeck tapped his sandalled foot. ‘I thought he killed Weni for insulting the Grotesque!’
‘Weni,’ I retorted, ‘died for mocking a Prince of the Blood. The Divine Ones will only tolerate this if it’s done at their command.’
Sobeck moved and saw me flinch, my nose wrinkle at his sour odour.
‘Yes, you’d notice it, Mahu, coming from your perfumed quarters. Do you know what I do now? How I make a few deben of copper? I am a dog-killer. I slaughter mongrels both here and in the Necropolis. I skin and mummify them so they can be sold to pilgrims as offerings.’ He half-smiled. ‘It’s an exciting profession, Mahu. You meet some interesting people.’ His smile faded. ‘It stops me from starving.’
‘Why did you follow me?’ I asked.
‘I’ve been following you since you left the palace. If you’d come straight to the Street of Jars I would have suspected that you’d allowed yourself to be deliberately followed, but the route you took,’ he shrugged, ‘the stalls you stopped at … There’s a price on my head, Mahu. A very good one. I am not some common criminal but someone who squeezed between the thighs of a royal concubine. The House of Secrets has as many spies as flies on a dog turd.’
‘So why did you send the message?’
‘Ah, the love poem?’ Sobeck whistled softly under his breath. ‘I wanted to find out if I could trust you. I need money, Mahu, silver and gold, precious stones. You always were a hoarder.’
‘And if I say no?’
‘Then, Mahu, you are no longer my friend. You can go, but you’ll never see me again.’
‘And why do I need your friendship?’
Sobeck crouched down and poked me hard in the chest. ‘In this land of tribulation, Mahu, never make an enemy when you can make a friend. The imperial court is not unique, it’s the same here. You fight, you struggle, you kill or die, either of starvation, a club to the back of the head or a knife under the ribs.’
‘I have already helped you.’
He got to his feet. ‘Ah yes, Aunt Isithia. I’ll reflect on what you said, Mahu. You want her dead?’
‘She’s nothing to me, Sobeck. She’s a witch: a woman with no heart or soul.’ I recalled Dedi, Ay’s secret whisperings. I rose to my feet. ‘She owes me a life. It’s time the debt was paid.’
I walked to the crumbled doorway.
‘Do you remember that jeweller I stopped at? Do you think he can be trusted?’
‘If he can’t be,’ Sobeck quipped, ‘he’ll die.’
‘I will leave you something there,’ I held up my hand, fingers splayed, ‘five nights from now.’
Sobeck walked across and clasped my hand. ‘You could inform the Divine One or Hotep? Even your own master?’
‘In this land of pain,’ I grinned, ‘this place of tribulation, you need every friend you can get, Sobeck. Anyway, you have been punished enough. No child of the Kap should end his life gibbering and screaming on a stake.’ I held up my hand. ‘Five nights from now.’
‘Let him go!’ Sobeck hissed out into the fading light.
I paused. A dark shape appeared in the doorway, a small thickset man, tufts of black hair framing a monkey-face. In one hand he carried a knife, in the other a club.
‘I see you have friends already, Sobeck.’
‘Ah, this is the Devourer,’ Sobeck laughed, ‘a demon from the Underworld, a man who can help us both. By the way, Mahu, I leave it to you whether you tell Maya about me. So go in peace, friend!’
Monkey-face stood aside and I went out into the night.
The Palace of Aten lay eerily silent during Akhenaten’s visit to the Temple of Amun-Ra. A soul-wrenching tension affected us all as we waited for news. On the fifth day, as promised, just before the ninth hour, I went back to the jeweller’s with a sealed casket. I’d kept my own treasures, gold, silver and jewels collected over the years. Akhenaten was a generous master. Monkey-face was waiting to take it. He grasped the casket, lips snickered into a grin and disappeared into the crowd. I dallied in the beer-house then visited a palace of delight where two Syrian girls in their thick perfumed wigs, bangles and anklets jangling, gorgets of silver round their throats, entertained and pleasured me. I returned along the river, past the picket guards set by Horemheb, to find Snefru waiting for me at the gate.
‘You are needed, Master.’
He almost pushed me into the hall of audience. Inside, three figures gathered round a glowing brazier; their muffled cloaks, shadows dancing against the painted wall, made them look like spectres, ghosts out of the West.