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"Just a look-"

"It's waited a thousand years, you tell me," said the caravan master with a tight grin. "It'll wait for tomorrow better'n dealing with the-living surroundings-will."

"Well, I rather thought you'd, ah, take care of such things without my presence," said Khamwas. His expression was hooded and his voice careful, because he didn't understand why he had to state the obvious. Samlor was not only competent to deal with mundane cares of food and campsite, those were the reasons the Napatan scholar had hired him.

"I can take care of that, sure," said Samlor gently. "But I can't do that and watch you at the same time… which is why you hired me."

Khamwas blinked, suddenly aware of parallel truths, his and his companion's.

"The fellow down there," Samlor continued. "He doesn't like us a bit, and he may have friends who feel the same way. I'm not leaving you here alone."

"The Priest?" Khamwas said. He straightened and faced the distant figure, arms akimbo. The men were scarcely more than blobs of color to one another, but the challenge was as obvious as a slap in the face. "He's harmless."

The Priest of the Rock turned and disappeared within his shadowed doorway like a sow bug scurrying back beneath a rotting log. The panel closed behind him. It was so massive that the curving rock brought the sound of the door slamming all the way to the men watching it close.

"He's old," said Khamwas. "He lives in the temple and he'd like to think he owns it, owns them both. But he knows he's there on sufferance of the crown of Napata. All the ancient monuments are property of the state. If a peasant like him ever interferes with visitors, he'll die chained to a water wheel on a prison farm."

"Honor the old men in your heart," said Tjainufi, his posture matching the stiff arrogance of the man on whose shoulder he stood, "and you will be honored in the hearts of all men."

Khamwas jerked his head around, though the manikin must have been too close for his eyes to focus on it.

"This is far too important for the wishes of some mud-dwelling hermit to be consulted," Khamwas snapped. For the first time since Samlor had met them, he saw the scholar angry at Tjainufi. "I did him no harm when I was here before, unless you call clearing away the filth in which he lived harm. I'll do him no harm now. But he will not keep me away from this prize because he doesn't like other men examining these temples!"

Tjainufi did not speak or change his stance. After a moment, Khamwas turned his head away.

Samlor looked at the facing reliefs, grimaced, and looked down at the temple his companion intended now to explore. It must be cut back into the rock directly under them-a vaguely unsettling notion, though the footing here was certainly more secure than that of an ordinary building's floor. They would have to reach the temple door by the sand slope to the left, awkward going down and damned difficult coming up. Maybe he could rig a knotted rope as an aid. .

"I'm going to go down to the temple," said Khamwas, transferring the angry challenge in his voice from the manikin to Samlor. "You may leave or stay as you choose."

"Always true," agreed the caravan master with a smile which threatened more than the words did. Khamwas read the expression correctly and paused.

Idly, half pretending that he wasn't doing what he knew full well he was, Samlor slid the coffin-hilled dagger from its new sheath. The bright sun bathed the whole blade in a shimmering surface reflection which had no color or form but that of white light. But turn the flat slightly, and there crawled the whorls and quavers of black metal on white, a meaningless design-

Which spelled SAFE for a moment before becoming iron again and alloys of iron rippling coolly with reflected light.

"That is-" began Khamwas, abashed.

Samlor sheathed the weapon. Not that he trusted it, but… Khamwas ought to be able to handle himself against one old man, even without his magic. He knew the place, had been here before, after all.

"No, that's fine," said Samlor. "I was just letting my imagination go, that's all. Foolish. I'll off-load the camels and take one to see about supplies."

Khamwas relaxed visibly and nodded. Tjainufi mimicked the Napatan's motions, but Khamwas either did not notice or refused to notice.

"Hey, but look," Samlor added. He glanced away, embarrassed at what he was about to say and uncertain whether he could control his expression when he said it. "Ah. Don't-you know, don't do anything, you know, major, while I'm gone, will you? I don't know that I'd be a lot of help with, you know, magic. But if I'm supposed to be supporting you in this whole business, then. . well, you're paying me to be around."

"Thank you," said Khamwas. "Friend. I know how much you dislike the idea of my scholarship."

He cleared his throat before he continued. Neither man was looking at the other. "But no, nothing significant will happen while you're gone-even if I intended it. A few minor location spells, perhaps. That didn't help me before, but now that I know the general whereabouts of the tomb, I'm sure the rest will follow.

"But nothing important will happen. I promise you."

CHAPTER 9

THE MOST IMPORTANT thing that happened in the next three days was that Samlor shaved the price of millet by a couple coppers per peck. The villagers were beginning to treat the newcomers as long-term residents, not travellers.

Samlor didn't consider that good news. As for Khamwas, natural gentility kept his frustration from blazing out-but his mild personality was growing spines beneath the veneer.

The caravan master paused at the temple entrance and rubbed his palms against one another to clear them of fragments of the coarse rope by which he had descended the slope. The four reliefs ignored him, staring southward across the river and the horizon. The figures were of seated men-or rather, a man, thick-featured and facing stiffly forward. The four copies were distinguished from one another only by the degree to which sand swirling off the escarpment had worn them.

Frowning at his own hesitation to look, Samlor glanced over his shoulder toward the other rock-cut temple. The monstrous carvings did not face him directly but the Priest of the Rock, a smudge in the angle of'the doorway, did. He squatted there, scarcely visible in the distance, during every daylight moment that Samlor chanced to look in that direction.

The priest was harmless. He was accomplishing as little as Khamwas was. Samlor stepped into the temple, rubbing his eyes to ease the shock of stepping from sunlight into darkness almost as solid as the rock above.

The temple's extent had surprised Samlor when he first entered it, expecting a low adyton and nothing beyond except a cult statue or-since they were searching for a tomb-a sarcophagus.

Instead, the central corridor of the temple was cut more than a hundred yards into the interior of the outcrop. Two large halls broadened from the main corridor, peopled with statues which would have been colossal were it not for the much greater reliefs on the temple facade. The walls and ceilings-twenty feet high in the first hall, fifteen feet in the second-were covered with incised writing and low reliefs of pomp and battle. Each relief was complex by itself and, considered as parts of a whole, staggeringly beyond the ability of a man to comprehend.

Besides the main halls, there were ten or a dozen obvious side chambers, some of them five yards by twenty in size. All were covered with their own carvings. Several of the chambers had been sealed with slabs of stone mortised so neatly that they appeared to be part of the living rock. The slabs had been broken out in the ancient past by men searching for treasure or the treasure of wisdom.