Authors: Will Adams
Tags: #Fiction - General, #Adventure fiction, #Suspense, #Thrillers, #Excavations (Archaeology), #Action & Adventure, #English Mystery & Suspense Fiction, #Thriller, #Dead Sea scrolls, #General, #Archaeologists, #Fiction - Espionage, #Egypt, #Fiction
FIVE
I
‘Well?’ said Griffin. ‘Won’t you tell us why you’re here?’
‘I was offered an artefact in Alexandria this morning,’ replied Knox. ‘The seller said it was from an excavation south of Mariut.’
‘You shouldn’t believe what those people tell you. Anything for a sale.’
‘Yes,’ agreed Knox.
Griffin’s eyes narrowed. ‘What kind of artefact exactly?’
‘A storage-jar lid.’
‘A storage-jar lid? You came all this way for a storage-jar lid?’
‘We came all this way because we think antiquities theft is a serious matter,’ said Omar.
‘Yes, of course,’ nodded Griffin, suitably chastened. ‘But you must realize there used to be a substantial pottery industry out here. They made jars to transport grain and wine all around the Mediterranean, you know. Good wine, too. Strabo commended it highly. So did Horace and Virgil. They even found some amphorae of it off Marseilles, would you believe? Walk along the old lake-front here, you’ll find great heaps of ancient pottery fragments. Anyone could have picked up your lid from one of them. It didn’t have to come from an excavation.’
‘This lid wasn’t broken,’ said Knox. ‘Besides, it was …
unusual
.’
‘Unusual?’ said Griffin, shading his eyes from the sun. ‘In what way?’
‘What exactly
is
this site?’ asked Omar.
‘An old farm. Of no great interest, believe me.’
‘Really?’ frowned Knox. ‘Then why excavate here?’
‘This is primarily a training excavation. It gives our students the chance to experience life on a real dig.’
‘What did they farm here?’
‘All kinds of things. Grain. Vines. Beans. Madder. Papyrus. You know.’
‘On limestone bedrock?’
‘This is where they lived. Their fields were on all sides.’
‘And the people?’
Griffin scratched beneath his collar, beginning to feel the pressure. ‘Like I say. This was an old farm. They were old farmers.’
‘What era?’
Griffin glanced at Peterson, but found no help. ‘We’ve found artefacts from the Nineteenth Dynasty on. But mostly Graeco-Roman. Nothing later than the early fifth century AD. A couple of coins from 413 or 414, something like that. There seems to have been a fire around that time. Luckily for us.’
Knox nodded. A good blaze would put a carbonized shell over a site, protecting it from the worst ravages of time and weather. ‘The Christian riots?’ he suggested.
‘Why would Christians burn down a farm?’
‘Why indeed?’ agreed Knox.
‘Perhaps you could give us the tour,’ suggested Omar into the ensuing silence. ‘Show us what you’ve been finding.’
‘Of course. Of course. Any time. Just make an appointment with Claire.’
‘Claire?’
‘Our administrator. She speaks Arabic, you know.’
‘That’s good,’ said Omar. ‘Because I can barely speak a word of English myself.’
Griffin had the grace to blush. ‘I’m sorry. I didn’t mean it that way. It was just if you had one of your people make the appointment for you.’
‘Can’t we speak to her now?’
‘I’m afraid she’s not on site. And this season may not be easy. Rush of work. So much to do. So little time.’ He waved vaguely at the desert behind him, as though they could see for themselves. But of course they could see nothing.
‘We wouldn’t get in your way,’ said Knox.
‘I think I’m the best judge of that, don’t you?’
‘No,’ said Omar tersely. ‘I think
I’m
the best judge.’
‘We report to Cairo, not you,’ said Peterson, speaking for the first time. ‘I’m not quite clear what your jurisdiction here is.’
‘Do you have an SCA representative here?’ asked Omar.
‘Of course,’ nodded Griffin. ‘Abdel Lateef.’
‘May I speak with him?’
‘Ah. He’s in Cairo today.’
‘Tomorrow, then?’
‘I’m not sure when he’ll be back.’
Knox and Omar shared a glance. The SCA representative was supposed to be on site full time. ‘You have an Egyptian crew, I assume. May I speak with your
reis
?’
‘By all means,’ said Peterson. ‘Just show us your authorization.’ He waited a moment for Omar to produce it, then shook his head in theatrical disappointment. ‘No? Well do come back when you have it.’
‘But I’m head of the Supreme Council in Alexandria,’ protested Omar.
‘Interim head,’ retorted Peterson. ‘Drive safely, now.’ And he turned his back on them and strode away, leaving Griffin to hurry after him.
II
Gaille was waved to a stop at a checkpoint a couple of kilometres north of Assiut, assigned two police cars for the return journey north. It was like that round here. In her headscarf, driving alone, Gaille was effectively invisible; but once she had such obvious Westerners as Stafford and Lily for passengers, there was little chance of avoiding an escort. Gaille hated driving in convoy like this; the police here drove at breakneck pace, wending wildly through traffic, forcing her to drive frighteningly fast just to keep up. But they reached the end of the police jurisdiction without incident and the two cars vanished as quickly as they’d appeared.
‘So what’s your programme about, then?’ asked Gaille, slowing with relief to a more comfortable speed.
‘I’ve a copy of the synopsis for this segment, if you’d like,’ said Lily from the back, unzipping her bag.
‘That’s confidential,’ snapped Stafford.
‘We’re asking Gaille to help,’ observed Lily. ‘How can she if she doesn’t know what we’re working on?’
‘Very well,’ sighed Stafford. He took the synopsis from Lily, glanced through it to make sure it contained no state secrets, then rested it on his knee and cleared his throat. ‘In 1714,’ he began sonorously, as if for a voice-over, ‘Claude Sicard, a French Jesuit scholar, came across an inscription cut into the cliffs at a desolate site near the Nile in the heart of Egypt. It turned out to be a boundary marker for one of the most remarkable cities of the ancient world, the capital city of a previously unknown pharaoh, a pharaoh who’d inspired the birth of a new philosophy, a new style of art, and – most of all – of bold new ideas about the nature of God that had shattered the status quo and irreversibly altered the history of the world.’
As opposed to reversibly altering it, you mean
? thought Gaille, struggling not to smile.
Stafford squinted at her. ‘Did you say something?’
‘No.’
He pursed his lips, but then let it go, picked up where he’d left off. ‘The new ways had proved too much for the Egyptian establishment, however. Extraordinarily, it would transpire, this city hadn’t just been abandoned, it had been deliberately
dismantled
, brick by brick, to remove any evidence of its existence. And all across Egypt, every mention of this man and his reign had been meticulously erased so that the seas of time closed over his head without a trace. Who was he, this heretic pharaoh? What crime had he committed that was so monstrous, it had had to be expunged from history? In his latest groundbreaking book and companion documentary, iconoclastic historian Charles Stafford explores the astonishing multiple mysteries of the Amarna era, and puts forward a revolutionary new theory that not only shatters the way we think about Akhenaten, but will also rewrite our notions of the history of the ancient Near East.’ He folded the sheet back up, tucked it away in his inside jacket pocket, looking rather pleased with himself.
A donkey was standing in the middle of the road ahead, its front legs hobbled so that it could move only in feeble bunny-hops. Gaille put her foot on the brakes, slowing right down, trying to give it time to reach the verge, but it didn’t move, it just stood there, terrified and bewildered, so that she had to cut into the other lane to drive around it, provoking angry bursts of horn from other traffic. ‘Your programme’s really going to do all that?’ she asked, checking anxiously in her rear-view until the donkey had vanished from sight.
‘And more. Much more.’
‘How?’
‘He’s suggesting Akhenaten had a disease,’ volunteered Lily from the back.
‘Oh,’ said Gaille, disappointed, as she turned left off the main Nile road onto a narrow country lane. The grotesque images of Akhenaten and his family were one of the most fiercely debated aspects of the Amarna era. He himself had often been portrayed with a swollen skull, protruding jaw, slanted eyes, fleshy lips, narrow shoulders, wide hips, pronounced breasts, a potbelly, fat thighs and spindly calves. Hardly the heroic picture of manhood that most pharaohs had aspired to. His daughters, too, were typically shown with almond skulls, elongated limbs, spidery fingers and toes. Some believed that this had simply been the prevailing artistic style. But others, like Stafford it seemed, argued that it portrayed the ravages of some vicious disease. ‘Which are you going with?’ she asked. ‘Marfan’s Syndrome? Frohlich’s?’
‘Scarcely Frohlich’s,’ sniffed Stafford. ‘It causes sterility. And Akhenaten had six daughters, you know.’
‘Yes,’ said Gaille, who’d worked on her father’s excavation in Amarna for two seasons while still a teenager, and who’d studied the Eighteenth Dynasty for three years at the Sorbonne. ‘I did.’ Even so, there was only so much of the relentless ‘
child of his loins, his alone, no one else’s, just his
’ inscriptions that you could read before wondering whether someone wasn’t protesting a mite too much.
‘We spoke to a specialist before coming out,’ said Lily. ‘He reckoned Marfan’s Syndrome was the most likely candidate. But he did suggest others too. Ehler’s-Danlos. Klinefelter’s.’
‘It was Marfan’s,’ asserted Stafford. ‘It’s autosomal dominant, you see. That’s to say, if a child inherits the relevant gene from
either
parent, they’ll inherit the syndrome, too. Look at the daughters;
all
portrayed with classic Marfan’s symptoms. The odds against that happening unless the condition was autosomal dominant are enormous.’
‘What do you think, Gaille?’ asked Lily.
She slowed to bump her way across a thick carpet of sugar-cane husks laid out to dry in the sun, fuel for the furnaces of the black-honey factories, their thick black smoke still visible despite the growing late-afternoon gloom. ‘It’s certainly plausible,’ she agreed. ‘But it’s not exactly new.’
‘Yes,’ smiled Stafford. ‘But then you haven’t heard the groundbreaking bit yet.’
III
‘This is bad,’ muttered Griffin, whey-faced, hurrying after Peterson. ‘This is a disaster.’
‘Cleave ye unto the Lord thy God, Brother Griffin,’ said Peterson. ‘No man will be able to resist you.’ The visit of Knox and Tawfiq had, in truth, exhilarated him. For was not Daniel Knox a one-time protégé of that shameless abominator Richard Mitchell? Which made him an abominator himself, a servant of the Devil. And if the Devil was sending his emissaries on such missions, it could only mean he was worried. Which in turn was proof that Peterson was close to fulfilling his purpose.
‘What if they come back?’ protested Griffin. ‘What if they bring the police?’
‘That’s what we pay your friends in Cairo for, isn’t it?’
‘We’ll need to hide the shaft,’ said Griffin, holding his belly as if he had a stomach ache. ‘And the magazine! Good grief. If they find those artefacts …’
‘Stop panicking, will you?’
‘How can you be so calm?’
‘Because we have the Lord on our side, Brother Griffin. That’s how.’
‘But don’t you realize—?’
‘Listen,’ said Peterson. ‘Do as I tell you and everything will be fine. First, go and talk to our Egyptian crew. One of them stole that lid. Demand his colleagues give him up.’
‘They never will.’
‘Of course not. But use it as an excuse to send them all home until your investigation is complete. We need them off the site.’
‘Oh. Good thinking.’
‘Then call Cairo. Let your friends know our situation, that we need their support. Remind them that if there’s any kind of enquiry, we might not be able to prevent their names from coming up. Then move anything that could cause us a problem out of the magazine and back underground. Store it in the catacombs for the moment.’
‘And you? What are you going to do?’
‘The Lord’s work, Brother Griffin. The Lord’s work.’
Griffin paled. ‘You’re not seriously planning to go on with this?’
‘Have you forgotten why we’re here, Brother Griffin?’
‘No, Reverend.’
‘Then what are you waiting for?’ Peterson watched disdainfully as Griffin slouched away. A man of terrible weak faith; but you had to use the tools to hand when you did the Lord’s work. He strode up a hummock of rock, relishing the tightness in his hams and calves, the burnish of the setting sun upon his nape, the long sharp shadow he cut in the sand. He’d never for one moment imagined he’d feel such affinity for Egypt, away from his church and flock and home. Yet there was a quality to the light here, as though it too had suffered in the flames and been purified.
He breathed in deeply, filling his lungs. The earliest Christian monks had chosen this place to answer God’s call. Peterson had always imagined that an accident of history and geography; but he’d soon realized that there was more to it than that. This was a profoundly spiritual place, all the more so the further you ventured into the desert. You felt it in the blazing sun, in the sweat and ache of labour, in the way water splashed gloriously over your parched skin and lips. You glimpsed it in the voluptuous golden lines of the dunes and the shimmering blue skies. You heard it in the silence.
He paused, looked around to make sure no one could see him, then went down into the slight dip in which they’d found the mouth of the shaft two years before. That first season, and the next, he’d allowed himself to be constrained by Griffin’s anxieties, excavating the cemetery and old buildings during the day, only going about their true business once their Egyptian crew had left for the night. But his patience had finally run out. He was an Old Testament preacher by temperament, scornful of the divine social worker championed by so many modern religious leaders. His God was a jealous God, a stern and demanding God: a God of love and forgiveness to those who submitted utterly to him; but a God of furious wrath and vengeance to His enemies and to those who let Him down.