Chapter Seven
“I’m sorry, Lieutenant, but I can’t help you.” The boy Amonaya did not look the least bit sorry. “Mistress Nofery has ordered me never to awaken her so early in the morning.”
Bak scowled at the slim, sleek youth, eleven or twelve years of age, his dark skin oiled to a fine gloss. The boy’s large black eyes never faltered, his expression remained bland. Or smug, more likely. “You know as well as I that I’m a special friend. I come here often enough.”
“She takes no man into her bed, sir, unless she herself bids him come. I can awaken another young lady if your need is great.” The misunderstanding flowed off Amonaya’s tongue like honey off a smooth crust of bread.
Taking a quick step across the threshold, Bak clapped a hand on the back of the boy’s neck and squeezed. After a sleepless night, he was in no mood for games, especially from one who thought himself better than others merely because he had once been servant to a king. His voice turned ominous. “Either take me to your mistress, Amonaya, or bring her here to me.”
A low, deep growl came from the dim recesses of the room, the half-grown lion the boy had accompanied to Buhen. Bak had early on befriended the creature, but if the cat had to make a choice between a casual friend and the one who fed it, he had no doubt which of the two it would choose. He squeezed harder, accepting the risk. “Now do as I say. Move!”
Nofery’s room was dark, the high, narrow windows covered with mats. White bedding and a large white dress draped over a storage basket caught the light from the open doorway, drawing attention to the obese old woman lying like a queen on a bed with ebony head- and footboards. Her head was raised on a mound of colorful pillows so she could see Bak across her massive body. Beds were rare in Buhen.
Where Nofery had found hers, he had no idea, and he thought it best not to ask.
“Have you no regard for anyone?” She heaved her bulk back toward the low headboard, which Amonaya hastened to pad with more pillows. The bed groaned beneath her shifting weight. “Could you not wait until a decent hour? At least let the sun come up.”
“The lord Khepre rose above the eastern horizon while I stood on the quay at Kor. I’ve since journeyed from there to Buhen…” He reached across the bed to pinch a fat jowl.
“…just to see you.”
She slapped away his hand. “Whatever you want, you’ll have to wait until a reasonable hour.”
“Come, old woman. Drag yourself out from among your sheets and pull your wits together. I’m in dire need of information.”
Her eyes narrowed, her expression turned sly. “You’ve a murder to resolve, I’ve heard. Captain Mahu.”
Bak knew that look well, and the acquisitive nature behind it. “Don’t expect favor for favor, old woman. Not this time.
I spoke up for you with Commandant Thuty, and he let you move your place of business to this house. Your gratitude, you swore, would be never-ending.”
“I’m a poor woman,” she whined. “I work day and night…”
“Enough!” He raised a hand, staving off the spate of words, and baited the hook he hoped would set her tongue to wagging. “I’ve two murders to resolve, not one. And I’ve 102 / Lauren Haney no intention of haggling for what you know, as I would for a fat goose in the market.”
“A second murder?” Her eyes lit up. She clutched the sheet against her sagging breasts and swung her legs off the side of the bed.
Bak managed not to smile. Her curiosity knew no bounds, which added much to her value as an informer. “The hunter Intef. Surely his death didn’t escape your notice!”
“I thought it an accident,” she admitted with uncharacter-istic candor. Her glance leaped to the boy hovering beside her bed. “Go away, Amonaya. Find us some food and drink.
I’ll be dressed in an instant.”
Bak, who had no desire to look upon the mountain of sagging flesh, left the room one step behind the servant, who hurried across the open courtyard to disappear through a rear portal. Nofery’s new house of pleasure was palatial compared to the old: four rooms, a courtyard, and even a kitchen versus a small, dark two-room hovel. This building was spotless, with white-plastered walls neither scuffed nor gouged nor blackened by smoke, and hard-packed earthen floors covered with mats not yet embedded with grit.
He had heard soldiers and sailors complain that they felt the building too grand for a good time, but still they came.
Perhaps because only the setting had changed. The beer was as thick and harsh as before, the games of chance as risky and sometimes as dishonest. The music offered on rare occa-sions was as loud and raucous as in the past, and the girls as free with their favors.
Preferring not to air his business to all the world, Bak peered into the main room, which opened off the entryway through which he had arrived, to see if anyone was there. A scrawny man with white hair and a pronounced limp was wielding a rush broom, raising a cloud of dust thick enough to sting the eyes. A few stools and low tables and an open chest half filled with drinking bowls had been shoved against the wall out of his way. Loud snores drew Bak’s eyes to an alcove, an afterthought to the main room with no door to close it off. Two soldiers lay sprawled on the floor asleep.
The acrid smells of vomit and sweat hinted at a night of too much beer and pleasure.
He backed away and crossed the courtyard to another door, where he swept aside a linen curtain to look upon three young women lying on a rumpled sleeping pallet. A shapely beauty with a thick, dark braid falling over her shoulder opened sloe eyes and gave him a sultry smile. The others slept on. He was sorely tempted, but he had no time for dalliance. He blew the temptress a kiss and let the curtain fall.
Satisfied whatever he said would go unnoticed, he sat on a mudbrick bench in a shady spot outside Nofery’s door and watched the lion, stretched out in the sun, gnawing on what had once been a woven reed sandal. Six or eight three-legged stools had been shoved up against a couple of low tables piled high with drinking bowls. Thigh-high jars of beer stood against another wall, shaded by the same lean-to roof that sheltered him. “I’ve been told Mahu played knucklebones here the night before he set sail for Kor. Do you remember?”
“Mmmmm.” The rustle of fabric, heavy breathing, a curse.
“That was the last time I ever saw him.” Shuffling feet, another whisper of linen, a couple of grunts. “He enjoyed himself, I think, winning more than he lost, but playing more for pleasure than profit.”
“I must know who talked with him.”
“You know how Mahu was. Friendly. I doubt a man came through the door he didn’t say a word to.”
“A man liked by one and all,” Bak muttered, disgusted.
Aloud he asked, “Who played with him? Do you remember?”
“I’ve lost a sandal. Do you see one out there?”
Bak glanced at the lion. The creature’s attention had been drawn to a flock of chattering swallows darting back and forth over the courtyard, gorging themselves on a swarm of insects too small to see at a distance. One large paw rested firmly on what had begun to look like a bedraggled mat, with ends of reed projecting from toe and heel.
He refused to be drawn into what he knew would become 104 / Lauren Haney a lengthy tirade. “Did the same people play through the evening? Or did men come and go?”
“The players never changed.” Nofery shuffled out the door, her breathing heavy, her face flushed with effort. The white sheath covered her fleshy body. She wore one sandal, the other foot was bare. “All good men, they were, upstanding residents of Buhen.”
Her description, brief as it was, gave Bak a feel for the game. Men of substance wagering sums large enough to discourage the average soldier or sailor who might otherwise have wished to play. “Their names, old woman?”