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Tamping down his irritation, a waste of time at best, he studied the ship on which he stood. The deckhouse was a light-framed structure sheathed in brownish reed mats which could be installed or removed as needed, its shape and size altered to suit the cargo. About half the space in front of the shelter had been roofed with mats and fenced to hold a small but valuable herd of short-horned cows, magnificent reddish beasts offered as tribute by a southern chieftain to the royal house of Kemet. Not long after the ship had docked, they had been led away to a paddock inside the fortress and there they would remain until the vessel was ready to sail.

The foremost portion of the deck, piled high with hay and bags of grain to feed the animals, lay open to the elements.

The area behind the deckhouse was similarly equipped to transport a herd of long-haired white goats, which had also been driven ashore and confined in a paddock. Nearly as valuable as the cattle, they too were being sent north as tribute. The deck had been swept clean. The tangy smell of fresh hay overlaid a lingering odor of animal waste.

Between the sheaves of hay and the grain, the deck held an infinite number of hiding places. As would the deckhouse and the vast area belowdecks. But by the wildest stretch of his imagination Bak could not conceive of Mahu carrying contraband. The animals alone, some of the finest he had ever seen, attested to the captain’s integrity. No important chieftain would entrust so valuable a herd to a man of questionable honesty. Yet Nebwa’s instincts, sometimes dramatically wrong, were more often than not right.

Bak’s eyes darted aft to Captain Mahu’s husky figure. How well had he known Captain Roy? He had no idea how many ships plied the waters between Abu and Buhen, but 64 / Lauren Haney surely not so many that the drowned man would have been a stranger. Dropping off the forecastle, he hurried the length of the deck to the stern, where he apologized for detaining the vessel for so long.

Mahu waved off the apology. “The delay was no fault of yours, Lieutenant. If I’m to lay blame, I’ll look to the viceroy.

Or to the gods who allowed the storm to wreck Roy’s vessel.

If indeed that’s what happened.”

“Rumors have multiplied ten times ten since word of the shipwreck was brought to Buhen,” Lieutenant Kay said. “Not many carry the ring of truth.”

Mahu snorted. “We’ve even heard tales of mutiny.”

Kay aimed his baton at the northern quay and Ramose’s ship. “Now we can see for ourselves Roy’s crew, with no sign of their master. Was he slain by an angry river, as some say, or by those ruffians?”

“His men swear he was washed overboard,” Bak said, watching a soldier remove one wall of Mahu’s deckhouse.

“I’m inclined to believe them. Without him to lead the way, they let the storm run them aground, and now they seem lost.”

“No great surprise.” If Mahu was troubled by the search, he gave no sign. “Roy brought most of them with him when he came south from Kemet. They’ve done his bidding for years.”

“How well did you know him?”

“As well as any man could.” Mahu watched the thickset, pockmarked Medjay Psuro lift the afterdeck hatch and, with two other men, each carrying a small torch, climb down into the hold. “He was a quiet man, one who kept his own counsel, and as steady as a rock. He knew the river better than most, and he was a fine sailor. He maneuvered his ship as easily as most men would handle a fishing boat a quarter the size.”

Bak glanced toward Ramose’s ship, where a line of men was carrying the animals down the gangplank and along the northern quay to the fortress gate. The cages hung from long poles, allowing the bearers to remain at a safe distance from vicious claws and teeth. “Have you ever known him to carry illicit cargo?”

“I know what’s being said: his deck was stacked high with contraband.” Mahu eyed the men searching the foredeck, prodding and poking sheaves of hay and bags of grain. “As far as I knew, he was no different than most: honest but not to a fault, and willing to take a small risk, but too steady to make a habit of it.”

Kay gave Bak a quick look. “He sailed out of Buhen the day before the storm with no caged animals on board. I know that for a fact, for I saw the ship leave. Have you asked his crew where they picked them up and who delivered them?”

“Sir!” Psuro, his face an emotionless mask, pulled himself half out of the hatch. “We’ve found something you should see.”

Bak noted the Medjay’s lack of expression, the careful way he failed to name his prize. Contraband? He glanced at Mahu, who looked mildly puzzled rather than fearful-as most men would if they expected to be caught with an illicit cargo. Lieutenant Kay glanced from one man to another, curious.

Bak hurried to the hatch, Psuro ducked out of his way, and he let himself down into the hold. The square of light beneath the opening illuminated neat stacks of copper ingots, which filled much of the floor space within easy reach of the hatch. Accustomed as he was to the brightness of the deck, he could see nothing beyond except the two torches his men had brought and, at the far end of the cavernous space, a square of light from the open foredeck hatch. He ducked down and closed his eyes, giving them time to adapt to the dark. He felt the ship wallow in the swells, heard water slap the hull, smelled the burning torches. The skitter of tiny clawed feet passed him by, a rat without doubt.

When at last he could see, he arose. The deck was too low overhead to allow him to stand erect, so he walked hunched over, taking care not to bump his head on the crossbeams.

Beyond the ingots, he stepped around a hundred or more thigh-high reddish pottery jars stacked and tied so they could 66 / Lauren Haney not escape and roll with the ship. The two men who had gone below with Psuro knelt in the light of their torches, looking at a mound of coarse white fabric-the sail stowed away for the journey downstream. The remainder of the hold was filled with rough chunks of stone, providing the additional ballast required over and above the weight of the ingots and whatever the jars held. They gave the hold a dusty smell which mingled with the odors of stagnant water, grain, and hints of an infinite variety of previous cargoes.

Psuro squatted beside the sail, and Bak knelt next to him.

The thick, heavy linen had been folded in as neat a way as possible so that when next it was needed, it could be installed on the yards with a minimum of effort. Now it lay with each of the top six or seven folds folded back on itself. Laying across the next lower fold was a long, curving cone of ivory, an uncut elephant tusk the length of a man’s leg from thigh to ankle.

“I didn’t know the tusk was there!” Mahu, looking as harried as a man could be, wiped the sweat from his brow. “I swear to the lord Amon and all the gods in the ennead that it was not on this ship when we stowed the sail below.”

Bak eyed the officer, less certain than he liked to be that he had found the guilty man. Mahu was either a superb actor or innocent. “How did it come aboard then? And when?”

Mahu stared at the tusk laying at his feet as if it were a poisonous serpent. “If I knew, don’t you think I’d tell you?”

Bak glanced at the growing number of men standing on the quay alongside the ship, talking among themselves in hushed voices, fearful of missing a single detail. Sailors and fishermen mostly, alerted by whispers carried on the wind and drawn to the scene by curiosity. Lieutenant Kay was not among them; evidently he had no taste for seeing a man brought low.

“I must make you my prisoner, Captain Mahu, and impound your ship and cargo.” Bak kept his voice low, unwilling to shame the officer before the gawkers on the quay.

Mahu drew himself up to his full height and looked the length of his ship, his pride in the vessel apparent. “I’ve done no wrong. If you seek the truth, you’ll learn for a fact that I’m innocent.”