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    The Seventh Scroll tes-2

    Page 32
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      Tessay's neck opened.- She drew in a wheezing, strangled breath and

      twisted out of his grip. Boris tried to turn and swing the rifle around,

      but Mek was on him again, seizing the rifle and trying to wrest it from

      Boris's hands.

      The Russian's finger was still on the trigger, and a shot went off white

      the muzzle was level with Mek's face. The detonation stunned him for an

      instant, and he released the rifle and staggered backwards with his ears

      ringing.

      Boris backed away from him, struggling with the weapon, trying to open

      the bolt and crank another cartridge into the chamber, but his crippled

      right arm'made his movements clumsy and awkward. Mek gathered himself

      and charged head down across the gravel beach. He drove into Boris with

      all his weight, and the rifle flew out of the Russian's hands. Locked

      chest to chest the two of them spun around in a macabre waltz, trying to

      throw each other, wrestling for the advantage, until they tripped and

      went over backwards into the river.

      They came to the surface still grappling and rolling over each other,

      first one on top and then the other, a fearful parody of the lovemaking

      which Boris had watched a few minutes earlier. Punching and straining

      and tripping each other, they struggled in the shallows. But every time

      they fell back into the water the slope of the bank beneath their feet

      forced them further out, until, when they were waist-deep, the main

      current of the Nile suddenly picked them up and swept them away

      downstream. They were still locked together, their heads bobbing in the

      tumble of waters, their arms thrashing the water white around them,

      bellowing at each other in primeval rage.

      Tessay heard the men that Mek had called coming down through the scrub

      at the run. She snatched up her shamnw and pulled it over her head as

      she ran to meet them. As the first of them burst on to the gravel bar

      with his AK cocked, she shouted to him in Amharic.

      "There! Mek is in the water. He is fighting the Russian.

      Help him!" She ran with them along the bank. As they drew level with the

      two men in midstream one of the men stopped and levelled his AK, but

      Tessay rushed at him and struck up the barrel.

      "You fool!" she shouted angrily. "You will hit Mek." Jumping to the top

      of one of the riverside boulders, she shaded her eyes against the

      dazzling reflection of the low sun off the water. With a sick feeling in

      the pit of her stomach she saw that Boris had managed to get behind Mek

      and had a half nelson hold around his throat. He was forcing Mek's head

      under the surface. Mek was struggling like a hooked salmon in his grip

      as they were swept into a long chute of white water.

      Tessay jumped down from the rock and ran on down the bank to the next

      point, from which she could only watch helplessly.

      Boris was still holding Mek's head under water as they were home

      together into the head of the chute. Fangs of black rock flashed by them

      on each side as they gathered speed. Mek was a powerful man and Boris

      had to exert every last ounce of his own strength to hold him, and he

      knew he could not do so much longer. Suddenly Mek reared back, and for a

      moment his head came out. He sucked a quick breath of air before Boris

      could force him under again, but that breath seemed to have renewed his

      strength.

      Desperately Boris looked ahead to the tail of the chute as they sped

      towards it. There were more rocks there. Boris picked out one great

      black slab over which the waters poured in a standing wave three feet

      high. He steered for it, kicking and hauling Mek's body around with the

      last of his strength.

      They flew down the slope of racing water with the rock slab waiting for

      them at the end like a lurking seamonster. Boris continued to wrestle

      with Mek, until he had turned him into a position ahead of him. He

      planned to steer him into a head-on collision with the rock and use

      Mek's body to cushion his own impact.

      At the very last moment before they struck Mek dragged his head out from

      the surface, and as he grabbed a precious lungful of air he saw the rock

      and realized the danger. With a single violent effort he ducked forward

      below the surface again and rolle over head-first. It was so powerful

      and unexpected that Boris was unable to resist.

      Instinctively he maintained his lock around Mek's neck and was carried

      forward over his back until their positions were reversed. Now Mek had

      managed to interpose Boris between himself and the rock, so that when

      they slammed into it it was the Russian who bore the full brunt of the

      impact.

      Boris's right shoulder crunched like a walnut in the jaws of a steel

      cracker. Although his head was still under water he screamed at the

      brutal agony of it, and his lungs filled with water. He relinquished his

      grip and was flung clear of Mek. When he came to the surface he was

      floundering like a drowned insect, his tight arm shattered in two

      places, his good arm flailing weakly, and his sodden lungs wheezing and

      pumping.

      Mek exploded through the surface only a few yards behind him. Looking

      around quickly as he strained for air, he spotted Boris's bobbing head

      almost immediately and with a few powerful overarm strokes came up

      behind him.

      Boris was so far gone that he was not aware of Mek's intentions until he

      seized his shirt collar from behind and twisted it like a strangler's

      garotte. With his other hand, below the surface, Mek secured a grip on

      the back of Boris's wide leather belt and used it like the helm of a

      rudder to steer him towards the next reef of rocks that was boiling the

      water ahead of them.

      Through his waterlogged lungs Boris was trying to shout invective at

      him. "Bastard! Black swine! Filthy-' But his voice was barely audible

      above the rush of the waters and the growl of the rocky spur that lay

      across their path. Mek rode him head-first into the rock and he felt the

      impact transferred through Boris's skull to jolt the straining muscles

      of his forearms. Instantly Boris went slack in his grip, his head lolled

      and his limbs became as limp and soft as strands of kelp washing in the

      surf.

      As they tumbled into the next run of open water, Mek used his grip on

      the back of Boris's collar to lift the Russian's face above the surface.

      For a moment even he was struck with horror at the injury that he had

      inflicted.

      Boris's forehead was staved in. The skin was unbroken, but there was a

      deep indentation in his skull into which Mek could have thrust his

      thumb. And Boris's eyes bulged, pushed out of their sockets like those

      of a battered doll.

      Mek swung the inert carcass around in the water, and stared at the

      broken head from a distance of only a few inches. He reached up and

      touched the depressed area of the skull with his fingertips, and felt

      the shards of splintered , bone grate and give beneath the skin.

      Once again he thrust the shattered head below the surface and held it

      there, while he crabbed sideways across the current towards the bank.


      There was no resistance from Boris, but Mek kept his head submerged for

      the rest of that long tortuous swim across the Nile.

      "How do you kill a monster?" he thought grimly. "I should bury him at a

      crossroads with a stake through his heart." But instead he drowned him

      fifty times over, and at the next bend of the river they were washed

      into the bank.

      Mek's men were waiting for him there. They supported him when his legs

      sagged under him, and they helped him up the bank. When they started to

      drag Boris's corpse out of the river, Mek stopped them abruptly.

      him for the crocodiles. After what he has done

      "Leave to our country and our people, he deserves nothing better." But

      even in his anger and his hatred he did not want Tessay to have to look

      at that mutilated head. She had been unable to keep pace with the men,

      but she was coming along the bank towards him now.

      One of his men pushed Boris's corpse back into the current, and as it

      floated away he unstung his AK rifle from his shoulder and let off a

      burst of automatic fire. The bullets chopped up the surface around

      Boris's head, and socked heavily into his back. They tore holes in his

      wet shirt and kicked out lumps of raw flesh. The other men on the bank

      shouted with laughter and joined in the fusillade, emptying their

      magazines into the lifeless body. Mek did them. Some of their close

      relatives not attempt to prevent had died most horribly under the

      Russian's care. The corpse rolled over in a pink cloud of its own blood,

      and for a moment Boris's pate bulging eyes stared at the sky. Then he

      sank away beneath the surface.

      Mek stood up slowly and went to meet Tessay. He took her in his arms,

      and as he held her to his chest he whispered to her softly.

      "It's all right. He won't ever hurt you again. It's all over. You are my

      woman now - for ever!'

      Since -Boris and Tessay had left the camp there was no longer any reason

      to maintain security, and Nicholas -and Royan were no longer obliged to

      skulk in Royan's hut when they discussed their search for the tomb.

      Nicholas transferred their headquarters into the dining hut, and had the

      camp staff build another large table on which they could spread the

      satellite photographs and all the other maps and material that they had

      accumulated.

      The chef sent a steady supply of coffee from the kitchen, while they

      pored over the papers and discussed their discoveries in Taita's pool

      and every theory that either of them dreamed up, no matter how

      far-fetched.

      "We will never be certain if that shaft was made by Taita, or whether it

      was a natural sink-hole, until we can get back in there with the right

      equipment."

      "What type of equipment are you talking about?" she wanted to know.

      "Scuba, not oxygen rebreathers. Although the navy rebreathing outfits

      are much lighter and more compact, you cannot use them below a'depth of

      thirty-three feet, the equivalent of one atmosphere of water. After that

      pure oxygen becomes lethal. Have you ever used an aqualung?"

      She nodded. "When Dutaid and I were on honeymoon at a resort on the Red

      Sea. I had a few lessons and made three or four open-water dives, but

      let me hasten to add that I am no expert."

      "I promise not to send you down there," he smiled, "but I think we can

      safely say that we have found enough evidence both in Tanus's tomb and

      Taita's pool to make it imperative that we mount the second phase of

      this operation."

      She nodded agreement. "We will have to return with a much more extensive

      range of equipment, and some expert help. But you are not going to be

      able to pose as a- tourist Sportsman next time around. What possible

      excuse are we going to find for returning that will not set off all the

      alarm bells in the minds of Ethiopian bureaucracy?"

      "You are speaking to the man who has paid unofficial and uninvited

      visits to both those charming lads Gadaffi and Saddam. Ethiopia should

      be a Sunday-school picnic in comparison."

      "When do the big rains start up in the mountains?" she asked suddenly.

      "Yes!" His expression became serious. That is the jackpot question. You

      only have to look at the high-water mark on the walls of Taita's pool to

      have some idea what it must be like in there when the river is in full

      flood." He flipped over the pages of his pocket diary. "Luckily, we

      still have a bit of time - not a great deal, but'enough. We will need to

      move pretty smartly. We have to get back home before I can start work on

      planning phase two."

      "We should pack up right away, then."

      "Yes, we should. But it seems a damned shame not to take full advantage

      of every moment we are here, having come all this way. I think we can

      spare just a few more days to sound out some ideas that I have about

      Taita's pool and the sink-hole, to try to arrive at some sort of

      informed guess about what we will need when we return."

      "You are the boss."

      "My word, how pleasant to hear a lady say that." She smiled sweetly.

      "Enjoy the moment," she counselled him, "it may never happen again." And

      then she became serious again. "What are these ideas that you have?

      "What goes up must come down, what goes in must come out," he said

      mysteriously. "The water going into the sink'hole under such pressure

      must be going somewhere.

      Unless it joins a subterranean water system and makes its way into the

      Nile that way, then it should come to the surface where we can find it."

      "Go on," she invited.

      40the thing is certain. Nobody is going to get into the sink-hole from

      the pool. The pressure is lethal. But if we can find the outlet, we may

      be able to explore it from the other end."

      "That's a fascinating possibility." She looked impressed, and turned to

      the satellite photograph. Nicholas had identified the monastery and

      ringed it on the photograph.

      He had marked in the approximate course of the river through the chasm,

      although the gorge itself was too narrow and covered with bush to show

      up on the smallscale picture, even under the high-powered magnifying

      lens.

      "Here is the point where the river enters the chasm." She pointed it out

      to him. "And here is the side valley down which the trail detours.

      Okay?"

      "Okay," he nodded. "What are you driving at?"

      "On our approach march, we remarked that this valley might at one time

      have been the original course of the Dandera river, and that it seemed

      to have cut a new bed for itself through the chasm."

      "That's right,'Nicholas agreed. "I am still listening."

      "The fall of the land towards the Nile is very steep at this point,

      isn't it? Well, do you recall we crossed another smaller, but still

      pretty substantial, stream on our way down the dry valley? That stream

      seemed to emerge from somewhere on the eastern side of the valley."

      All right, I am with you now. You are suggesting that this may be the

      overflow from the sinkholes Clever little devil, aren't you?"

      "Just capitalizing on your genius." She cast down her eyes modestly, and

      looked up a
    t him from under her lashes.

      She was clowning, but her lashes were long and dense and curling, and

      her eyes were the colour of burnt honey with tiny golden highlights in

      their depths. At this close range he found them disturbing.

      He stood up and suggested, "Why don't we go and take a look?"

      Nicholas went to fetch his camera bag and the light day'pack from his

      hut, and when he returned he found Royan ready to go. But she was not

      alone.

      I see that you are bringing your chaperon with you," he remarked with

      resignation.

      "Unless you are tough enough to send him away." Royan smiled

      encouragement at Tamre who stood at her side, grinning and bobbing and

      hugging his shoulders in the ecstasy of being in the presence of his

      idol.

      "Oh, very well." Nicholas gave in without a struggle.

      "Let the little devil come along."

      Tamre lolloped away up the path ahead of them, his grubby shamma

      flapping around his long skinny legs, chanting the repetitive chorus of

      an Amharic psalm, and every few minutes looking back to make certain

      that Royan was still following him. It was a hard pull up the valley,

      and the noonday heat was debilitating. Although Tamre seemed totally

      unaffected, the other two were both sweating in dark patches through

      their shirts by the time they reached the point where the stream

      debauched into the valley. Gratefully, they sought the shade of a patch

      of acacia trees, and while they rested Nicholas glassed the side of the

      valley through his binoculars.

      "How are they after the dunking I gave them?" she asked.

      "Waterproof," he grunted, "full marks to Herr Zeiss."

      "What do you see up there?"

      "Not much. The bush is too thick. We will have to foot'slog up the side.

      Sorry."

      They left the shade and made their way up the side of the valley in the

      direct burning sunlight. The stream tumbled down a series of cascades,

      each with a pool at its foot. The bush crowded the banks, lush and green

      where the roots had been able to reach the water. Clouds of black and

      yellow butterflies danced over the Pools, and a black and white wagtail

      patrolled the moss-green rocks along the edge, its long tail gyrating

      back and forth like the needle of a metronome.

      Halfway up the slope they paused beside one of the pools to rest, and

      Nicholas used his hat like a fly-swatter to stun a brown and yellow

     


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