Part 26 (1/2)
The good father awaited us, his bald head bared to the bitter sunlight. He did his best, but he could not do much except repeat the formal prayers. Afterward, Sethos, who had not spoken except to acknowledge a distant acquaintance with the dead man, took out a handful of money.
”I beg you will add to your kindness by saying a few Ma.s.ses for his soul,” he said. Not until we had turned away, followed by the dismal drumbeat of soil landing on the simple coffin, did he add, ”If anyone is in need of them, it's Martinelli.”
I did not respond. I was thinking of certain other graves in that cemetery-reminders of several of our earlier encounters with crime. Poor young Alan Armadale and Lucinda Bellingham. I had been unable to save them, but I had avenged them. (With a certain amount of a.s.sistance, in the latter case, from Ramses.) There was another such burial, and when Sethos would have headed for the entrance I took his arm and led him back, to the far end of the cemetery. A feral dog, sprawled across the untended grave, rose as we approached and backed off, snarling. It was a female, heavy with young.
”Fitting,” said Sethos. ”Why did you bring me here, Amelia?”
”You have never visited her grave?”
The arm I held was rigid. ”Once. I wanted to convince myself she was really dead. I suppose it was you who erected the headstone. Only her name? Couldn't you think of a fitting epitaph?”
”There is one.” I knelt and pushed the dusty weeds away from the base of the stone. Under her name were the carved words, ”May she rest in Peace.”
”Oh, G.o.d.” He pulled me roughly to my feet and and put his arms round me. ”You are unbelievable, Amelia. She tried to kill you and murdered one of your dearest friends. How can you forgive that?”
It was a brother's embrace, not that of a lover, but I detached myself as gently and quickly as I could. Bertha would not have made the distinction, and although I do not share the ancient Egyptian belief that the soul lingers near the mortal remains, I preferred not to take the chance.
”Our Christian duty requires us to forgive those who have injured us,” I said. ”It is easier to do that, I admit, when the individual in question is deceased.”
He let out a choked laugh and pa.s.sed his hand over his mouth. ”Does Maryam know her mother lies here?”
”I have no idea. Will you tell her?”
”No. I don't know. d.a.m.nation, Amelia, don't you ever weary of prodding people's consciences? I can forgive Bertha for what she did to me-I a.s.sure you, you don't know the half of it-but not for what she did to you and to Maryam. May we go now, or have you more to say?”
”Not to you.” I took his arm and we turned our backs on the desolate grave. ”I believe I will have a few words with Maryam.”
He kicked at a clump of weeds. ”Do you believe she is responsible for the accidents that have plagued you?”
”The possibility had of course occurred to me after the affair of the Veiled Hathor,” I said, fudging the truth just a little. Maryam had not been on my original list. ”She was one of a number of females who might have believed herself badly treated by Ramses-”
”Good Lord.” Sethos came to an abrupt halt. ”You never told me. Must I call Ramses out for seducing my daughter?”
”You can hardly suppose Ramses would take advantage of a fourteen-year-old girl,” I exclaimed indignantly. ”She made the advances to him. I should not have to tell you that he behaved impeccably.”
”No, he's a gentleman,” Sethos agreed, with a cynical twist of the lips. ”Well, that is most interesting, but it isn't as strong a motive as seeking revenge for her mother's death.”
”I have already discussed that with her, and I believe I am safe in a.s.serting that she has reached-or is on the way to reaching-a proper understanding. Moreover, it would have been impossible for a girl that age to carry out such a complex scheme. She certainly could not have been Hathor, since the most recent appearance of that lady occurred when Maryam was with Ramses, and Mrs. Fitzroyce told me she was here in Luxor when Hathor made her first appearance.”
The carriage we had hired was waiting for us on the road. I accepted the hand he offered to help me in. In my opinion it is not a betrayal of one's feminist principles to accept such gestures graciously.
”We will discuss this later,” I went on, as the carriage rattled into motion. ”With everyone present. It is time for a council of war!”
FROM Ma.n.u.sCRIPT H.
Emerson sent the men home earlier than usual that afternoon. His wife had not returned, nor had Nefret turned up.
Ramses went at once to the clinic. There were two people in the waiting room, a very pregnant girl of about fourteen, and a child racked with an incessant dry cough. Nisrin was with them, looking very professional in a tightly wound white headcloth and a man's galabeeyah that had been shortened at the hem and the sleeves. ”Nur Misur is very busy, but I will let you go in,” she announced.
”Kind of you,” Ramses said, and went through into the surgery.
To his surprise, the patient was Daoud. He gave Ramses a sheepish smile and Kadija, standing over him with folded arms, said, ”Marhaba, Ramses. Tell this stubborn man to show Nur Misur his hand. I had to make him come to her.”
Finding himself outnumbered, Daoud obeyed.
”It needs to be st.i.tched,” Nefret said, inspecting the ugly gashes that ran across his large palm and the insides of his fingers. ”How on earth did you do this?”
Daoud mumbled something. Kadija said, ”Someone left a hegab-a charm-lying in front of the house, and Daoud, fool that he is, picked it up.”
”It was a fine hegab,” Daoud protested. ”Large and silver, with red stones. I would have asked who had lost it. But when I closed my hand over it, it cut me.”
”What did you do with it?” Nefret asked.
”I buried it,” Kadija said. ”It was a holy thing, but broken. Sharp as a razor along two sides.”
Nefret selected an instrument and bent closer. ”It's a good thing you did. There's something metallic deep in the wound. Hang on, Daoud.” She exchanged the probe for tweezers and before long she had it out-a needlelike bit of metal half an inch long. ”Good heavens, Daoud, this must have hurt badly. Why didn't you come to me right away?”
”I put the ointment on it,” Daoud said defensively.
That was obvious. His palm was green.
”That probably prevented an infection,” Nefret said, with a nod at Kadija. ”Well, now we know why the owner discarded it. Let me make sure there are no other broken pieces embedded.”
Daoud sat like a large brown statue while she cleaned the cuts and put several neat st.i.tches into them before bandaging his hand.
”Change the dressing every day,” she said to Kadija, giving her a box of bandages. ”I don't have to tell you what to watch out for.”
”No, Nur Misur. Thank you.”
”How does it feel to be back in harness?” Ramses asked, as Nefret cleaned her instruments and put them away.
”Wonderful. I should have done this ages ago. Nisrin, show in the next patient, please.”
”Have you been at this all day?” he asked. ”Can I help?”
”No, thank you. If you want to do something useful, go and play with the children.”
That puts me in my place, Ramses thought. Baby-tender. The children were gathered in the courtyard. His advent was greeted with cries of relief from the adults who were present, and cries of welcome from his daughter, who ran to him holding out her arms. He picked her up. She jabbered imperatively at him, her black eyes bright and demanding.
”Mama has been busy with a poor sick man,” he said, a.s.suming that was what she wanted to know. Apparently that was only part of it; she tugged at his s.h.i.+rt and dug her knees into his midriff. He had learned to interpret that gesture. He helped her climb up onto his shoulders.
”High time you got here,” said Lia. ”As usual, you men left us to do the hard work.”
”Not me,” David protested. He was on his hands and knees, giving Evvie a ride.
”Everybody but you,” Lia said.
The women looked as if they had had a hard time. Lia's hair was in wild disorder, and Evelyn was leaning against the back of the sofa, her eyes half closed. Sennia was conspicuous by her absence. He couldn't blame her; it wasn't fair to expect her to play nursemaid. Maryam had been pressed into service, though. She seemed to have suffered less than the others, perhaps because she had concentrated her attention on Dolly. He sat close beside her, with her arm around him. She looked up from the storybook from which she had been reading, and smiled at Ramses.