Read Counted With the Stars Online

Authors: Connilyn Cossette

Tags: #FIC042030, #FIC042040, #FIC026000

Counted With the Stars (5 page)

Shira wrapped a fragile arm around my waist and pulled me tight against her side, causing me to ache for my mother and brother. “No, there is always hope. As long as we have breath in our bodies, there is hope.”

No graceful bowing palms shaded us here, and the tall clumps of papyrus afforded little refuge from the sun's unrelenting glare. Even the soft morning breeze did little to assuage the heat. Sweat trickled down the back of my neck as tears threatened to spill over.

Shira did not let go. I did not pull away.

Just as I realized the sun had already passed the tip of the obelisk, hundreds of birds lit into the skies in unison. Shrill cries of alarm shattered the stillness of the morning.

Shira gasped and pointed upstream with her free hand. “What is that?”

I stared, blinking, trying to comprehend the darkness spreading across the water as it rushed toward us. No longer a muddy reddish-brown, the river ran a deep, dark crimson.

Mother Nile, the Great Heart of Egypt, was bleeding.

6

L
ike the gush from a fatal wound, the crimson current swirled closer to us.

Dread churned in my stomach. “What is happening?”

Shira dropped her arm from my waist. “We need to get back to the villa. Everyone must know.”

I bent to pick up the full jar and recoiled at my reflection in the dark water. I tipped the jar with my foot and a rush of bloody water stained the ground red.

The water we had collected from the pool had been perfectly clear only minutes ago, yet now it, too, was defiled. How could this be?

I shuddered at the thought that only minutes ago I had been immersed in the now-foul water. We dumped our tainted jugs and hurried back up the path. As we neared the city, shrieks ripped the air. Shira and I looked at each other, eyes wide, and agreed to take different routes back to the city. Red water or no, Tekurah must not know Shira and I had met today.

A guard leaned against the entry post at the front gate of the villa, his face troubled.

I stopped to catch my breath after my jog from the canal. “Is the water here in the villa changed, too?”

He bobbed his bald head. “The kitchen staff found every pot and bowl full of red water.”

The hair on my neck prickled. “And the garden pools?”

He nodded again, face drawn and pinched.

“The river is tainted, too.”

His kohl-rimmed eyes widened. “What curse is this?”

I gagged on my way through the gardens. The pools stood red and fetid—they even smelled like spilled blood. Yes, this had to be a curse of some sort.

Tekurah's voice echoed through the villa, her demands for a fresh cup of water no doubt audible to all the surrounding neighbors. Dread swirled through me. My already furious mistress would not be pleased with my empty water jar.

The sweet waters of the Nile had always flowed from the veins of Osiris, the god of the underworld and granter of fertile life. But two days after Shira and I had stood on its banks, bloated fish, frogs, and snakes floated along the surface of the river. The rushes and palms drooped with thirst.

The regional Nomarch had ordered teams of slaves to dig additional pools along the water's edge, although the sand did little to filter out the red color. A complicated process of linen sieves and filters, followed by boiling for hours, made the water potable again, but only barely. No matter what we did, a distinct metallic-sulfur odor remained. Drinking the repulsive result required courage. My every nauseated sip intermingled with horrendous thoughts of priests drinking sacrificial life-blood during temple rituals.

Tekurah's panic continued to boil over. Bathing in the strong-smelling water nauseated her, and the prospect of washing her
body with something resembling blood made her—made all of us—cringe. She insisted evil spirits inhabited the cursed water and purchased magic potions to mix in it, attempting to ward off the bad luck. Whether or not the potions had any effect, the water reeked worse than before.

Still, to my great relief, she insisted Latikah and I bathe in the treated water. Who was I to question protection against malevolent spirits?

Everything smelled revolting—the water, the dead animals, the unwashed people. A stench of death hung over Iunu. Decaying fish and reptiles lined the banks of the swollen canals. Even a few crocodiles and hippos washed up on the shore, their carcasses stained pink. Birds vanished from the once-teeming banks of the Nile, gone to search out fresher waters.

We tried to mask the smell, rubbing myrrh balms and almond oil on our bodies. The villa overflowed with flowers of every variety, but the stench overpowered their subtle fragrances, and without fresh water they withered quickly. Incense burned in every room, causing my head to throb in relentless agony.

When the third day dawned and the water still ran red, a terrified Tekurah ventured to the temple to hear what explanation the priests offered for this curse. Throngs of people gathered outside the temple gates, demanding why Hapi, the protector of the Nile, allowed this strange curse on the land. Tekurah and I pushed our way through the crowd, straining to hear the priests assembled on the grand temple steps.

One of them wore the elaborate beaded headdress that signified the office of high priest. “Please, please.” He stretched his arms wide, like an indulgent father. “Calm down.”

Shouts echoed through the crowd.

“Why is this happening?”

“What did we do to deserve this?”

An elderly man standing next to me lifted his chin to call out. “How long will this last?” The chaos swallowed his voice.

“Let us assure you, this is perfectly natural.” The priest stood with hands spread wide, as if trying to push back the surging emotion of the crowd.

The mob roiled, voices rising like a tide.

“Natural? I've never seen it before.”

“This is a curse!”

“Hapi is angry!”

“Osiris is stricken!”

The man next to me lifted his voice again. “I've seen fifty-two inundations. Never seen the river turn to blood.”

The high priest's face belied nothing but serenity. “We have offered many sacrifices to Hapi and consulted the oracles—”

The swell of voices rose again, many accusing the priests of inaction.

“Let me assure you.” He shouted above the melee, his expression losing its careful composition. “Our gods are pleased. It is a natural occurrence. Unusual, but natural. Our histories bear witness to red waters and tides from time to time.”

Tekurah pushed around me to speak to the elderly man. “My husband says every branch of the river, every canal, is affected—is this true?”

He leaned forward on his walking stick, scratching his grizzled chin. “I've heard the same. All the way to the Northern Sea.”

“Haven't there been red waters before, when red dirt washed down the river from Kush?”

“Not like this, such a dark stain. And not mid-inundation.” His silver brows furrowed. “This has not happened before . . . at least, not in my lifetime.”

“The priests have no answers, husband.”

Tekurah washed down succulent bites of roasted beef with wine. My mouth watered as I eyed the scraps of meat she had pushed aside.

“What answer can they give? They don't know the minds of the gods.” Shefu wiped his mouth with a linen cloth. He glanced at me with a pained look, then pushed away his plate.

“But surely, the oracles . . .” She placed her hand on his.

He pursed his lips and shook his head. “I don't want to hear talk of oracles.” He slid his hand away.

Tekurah shrank back in her seat, looking around, no doubt to make sure no one overheard his blasphemy. She must have forgotten I stood at attention behind her chair.

“I don't know why this is happening. But I am concerned about our crops.” Shefu stood to leave. “With inundation at its highest point, I worry that the silt deposits will not be healthy for the farmland. Thankfully the grapes have already been harvested.”

The annual blessings from the Nile made our fertile land the envy of the world. The lush vegetation and bountiful crops supplied Egypt with food. We exported goods to all the surrounding nations. If even unflappable Shefu was anxious, then the situation must indeed be grim.

Shira placed her empty jug on the ground and hugged me. Unused to such displays of affection, I stood immobile, arms pinned to my sides by her boisterous embrace.

“It has been so long since we talked.” She hoisted the jug back to her hip. “Filtering and boiling became my full-time occupation these last few days.”

“Thanks to Hapi, the water is finally running clearer.”
Praise the gods, they heard our pleas.

People pressed into the temple courtyards all day long again—this time to offer sacrifices in gratitude for a lifted curse.

Her brow pinched. “My brother said it would only last the week.”

“Your brother?”

“He came the other day. We only had a few moments, but it was good to hear from home.” A tender smile graced her lips.

“He is allowed to see you?” Jealousy shot through me. I managed only a few stolen minutes in the market with my older brother, Jumo, every few weeks.

“Oh, goodness no, I meet him the same way I am meeting you. He hides here in the rushes.” She trailed a free hand through the tall stalks along the path. “He comes every seventh day of the week. He knew I would be curious about the river and the excitement among our people.”

“How does he get away from his master?”

“He is not a slave.” She lifted a shoulder. “Well, not like I am anyhow. My brother is owned by his master, but he is given unusual freedoms. He is allowed to come and go at will and is paid a small wage. On the seventh day, the
shabbat
, his master allows him rest.”

I stumbled and then stopped walking. “Why?”

“There is such a thing, you know, as Egyptians who have compassion.” She winked, and one corner of her full mouth lifted. “My brother's master even secured my position in Shefu's household.”

“He did?”

A shadow crossed her face. “I had just begun working on the looms. Finally old enough to work alongside my mother, when I was . . . attacked.”

“By whom?”

“An overseer.” Her downcast eyes seemed ancient—they told the rest of the story. “My brother begged his master to find a safer place for me. Akensouris is a friend of Shefu.” She lifted her chin. “Shefu is a good man. He's been kind to both of us.”

“You and your brother?”

“No, you and me. He's protected us both. Me, from an evil man, and you, from perhaps an even worse fate.”

Considering that fate, I walked forward again. “What did you mean about excitement among your people?”

“Oh, that!” She slipped her free arm through mine. “It is so exciting! We have been waiting so long. Hundreds of years. I think the time has finally come. The signs have been building for a long while.”

“Signs?”

“Yes, a great number of our people have been turning back to the God of Our Fathers—crying out for rescue. Almost as many have turned away, given up. And many doubt that Elohim even hears us. But he does, and he sent a Deliverer!”

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