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    The Seventh Scroll tes-2

    Page 4
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      The police had come to the flat and taken her statement, and she had

      tidied up most of the disarray. She had even glued the head back on her

      white queen. When she left the flat and climbed into the green Renault

      her arm was feeling easier, and, if not cheerful, she was at least a

      great deal more optimistic, and sure of what she had to do.

      When she reached the museum she went first to Duraid's office and was

      annoyed to find that Nahoot was there before her. He was supervising two

      of the security guards as they cleared out all Duraid's personal

      effects.

      "You might have had the consideration to let me do that," she told him

      coldly, and he gave her his most winning smile.

      "I am sorry, Royan. I thought I would help." He was smoking one of his

      fat Turkish cigarettes. She loathed the heavy, musky odour.

      She crossed to Duraid's desk, and opened the top right hand drawer. "My

      husband's day book was in here. It's gone now. Have you seen it?"

      "No, there was nothing in that drawer."Nahoot looked at the two guards

      for confirmation, and they shuffled their feet and shook their heads. It

      did not really matter, she thought. The book had not contained much of

      vital interest. Duraid had always relied on her to record and store all

      data of importance, and most of it had been on her PC.

      "Thank you, Nahoot," she dismissed him. "I will do whatever remains to

      be done. I don't want to keep you from your work."

      "Any help you need, Royan, please let me know." He bowed slightly as he

      left her.

      It did not take her long to finish in Duraid's office. She had the

      guards take the boxes of his possessions down the corridor to her own

      office and pile them against the wall.

      She worked through the lunch-hour tidying up all her own affairs, and

      when she had finished there was still an hour until her appointment with

      Atalan Abou Sin.

      If she was to make good her promise to Duraid, then she was going to be

      absent for some time. Wanting to take leave of all her favoUrite

      treasures, she went down into the public section of the huge building.

      Monday was a busy day, and the exhibition halls of the museum were

      thronged with groups of tourists. They flocked behind their guides,

      sheep following the shepherd.

      They crowded around the most famous of the displays.

      They listened to the guides reciting their well-rehearsed spiels in all

      the tongues of Babel.

      Those rooms on the second floor that contained the treasures of

      Tutankhamen were so crowded that she spent little time there. She

      managed to reach the display cabinet that contained the great golden

      death'mask of the child pharaoh. As always, the splendour and the

      romance of it quickened her breathing and made her heart beat faster.

      Yet as she stood before it, jostled by a pair of big-busted and sweaty

      middle-aged female tourists, she pondered, as she had so often before,

      that if an insignificant weakling king could have gone to his tomb with

      such a miraculous creation covering his mummified features, in what

      state must the great Ramessids have lain in their funeral temples.

      Ramesses II, the greatest of them all, had reigned sixty-seven years and

      had spent those decades accumulating his funerary treasure from all the

      vast territories that he had conquered.

      Royan went next to pay her respects to the old king.

      After thirty centuries Ramesses II slept on with a rapt and serene

      expression on his gaunt features. His skin had a light, marble-like

      sheen to it. The sparse strands of his hair were blond and dyed with

      henna. His hands, dyed with the same stuff, were long and thin and

      elegant. However, he was clad only in a rag of linen. The grave robbers

      had even unwrapped his mummy to reach the amulets and scarabs beneath

      the linen bandages, so that his body was almost naked. When these

      remains had been discovered in 1881 in the cache of royal mummies in the

      cliff cave at Deir El Bahari, only a scrap of papyrus parchment attached

      to his breast had proclaimed his lineage.

      There was a moral in that, she supposed, but as she stood before these

      pathetic remains she wondered again, as she and Duraid had done so often

      before, whether Taita the scribe had told the truth, whether somewhere

      in the far-off, savage mountains of Africa another great pharaoh slept

      on undisturbed with all his treasures intact about him.

      The very thought of it made her shiver with excitement, and goose

      pimples prickled her skin and raised the fine dark hair at the nape of

      her neck.

      "I have given you my promise, my husband," she whispered in Arabic.

      "This will be for you and your memory, for it was you who led the way."

      She glanced at her "Wrist-watch as she went down the main staircase. She

      had fifteen minutes before she must leave for her appointment with the

      minister, and she knew, exactly how she would spend that time. What she

      was going to visit was in one of the less-frequented side halls.

      The tour guides very seldom led their charges this way, except as a

      short-cut to see the statue of Amenhotep.

      Royan stopped in front of the glass-fronted display case that reached

      from floor to ceiling of the narrow room. It was packed with small

      artefacts, tools and weapons, amulets and vessels and utensils, the

      latest of them dating from the twentieth dynasty of the New Kingdom,

      1100 BC, whilst the oldest survived from the dim ages of the Old Kingdom

      almost five thousand years ago. The cataloguing of this accumulation was

      only rudimentary. Many of the items were not described.

      At the furthest end, on the bottom shelf, was a display of jewellery and

      finger rings and seals. Beside each of the seals was a wax impression

      made from it.

      Royan went down on her knees to examine one of these artefacts more

      closely. The tiny blue seal of lapis lazuli in the centre of the display

      was beautifully carved.

      Lapis was a rare and precious material for the ancients, as it had not

      occurred naturally in the Egyptian Empire. The wax imprint cut from it

      depicted a hawk with a broken wing, and the simple legend beneath it was

      clear for Royan to read: "TAITA, THE SCRIBE OF THE GREAT QUEEN'.

      She knew it was the same man, for he had used the maimed hawk as his

      autograph in the scrolls. She wondered who had found this trifle and

      where. Perhaps some peasant had plundered it from the lost tomb of the

      old slave and scribe, but she would never know.

      "Are you teasing me, Taita? Is it all some elaborate hoax? Are you

      laughing at me even now from your tomb, wherever it may be?" She leaned

      even closer, until her forehead touched the cool glass. "Are you my

      friend, Taita, or are you my implacable adversary?" She stood up and

      dusted off the front of her skirt. "We shall see. I will-play the game

      with you, and we shall see who outwits whom," she promised.

      The minister kept her waiting only a few minutes before his male

      secretary ushered her into his presence. Atalan Abou Sin wore a dark,

      shiny silk suit and sat at his desk, although Royan knew that he

      preferred
    a more comfortable robe and a cushion on the rugs of the

      floor. He noticed her glance and smiled deprecatingly. "I have a meeting

      with some Americans this afternoon." .. She liked him. He had always

      been kind to her, and she owed him her job at the museum. Most other men

      in his position would have refused. Duraid's request for a female

      assistant, especially his own wife.

      He asked after her health and she showed him her bandaged arm. "The

      stitches will come out in ten days."

      They chatted for a while in a polite manner. Only Westerners would have

      the gaucherie to come -directly to the main business to be discussed.

      However, to save him embarrassment Royan took the first opportunity he

      gave her to tell him, "I feel that I need some time to myself. I need to

      recover from my loss and to decide what I am to do with the rest of my

      life, now that I am a widow. I would be grateful if you would consider

      my request for at least six months' unpaid leave of absence. I want to

      go to stay with my mother in England."

      Atalan showed real concern and urged her, "Please do not leave us for

      too long. The work you have done has been invaluable. We need you to

      help carry on from where Duraid left off." But he could not entirely

      conceal his relief She knew that he had expected her to put before him

      her application for the directorship. He must have discussed it with his

      nephew. However, he was too kind a man to relish having to tell her that

      she would not be selected for the job. Things in Egypt were changing,

      women were emerging from their traditional roles, but not that much or

      that swiftly. They both knew that the directorship must go to Nahoot

      Ouddabi.

      Atalan walked with her to the door of his office and shook her hand in

      parting, and as she rode down in the lift she felt a sense of release

      and freedom.

      She had left the Renault standing in the sun in the Ministry car park.

      When she opened the door the interior was hot enough to bake bread. She

      opened all the windows and fanned the driver's door to force out the

      heated air, but still the surface of the driver's seat burned the backs

      of her thighs when she slid in behind the wheel.

      As soon as she drove through the gates she was engulfed in the swarm of

      Cairo traffic. She crawled along behind an overloaded bus that belched a

      steady blue cloud of diesel fumes over the Renault. The traffic problem

      was one that seemed to have no solution. There was so little parking

      available that vehicles lined the verge of the road three and four

      deep," choking the flow in the centre to a trickle.

      As the bus in front of her braked and forced her to a halt, Royan smiled

      as she recalled the old joke that some drivers who had parked at the

      kerb had to abandon their cars there, for they were never able to

      extricate them from the tangle. Perhaps there was a little truth in

      this, for some of those vehicles she could see had not been moved for

      weeks. Their windscreens were completely obscured with dust and many of

      them had flat tyres.

      She glanced in the rear-view mirror. There was a taxi stopped only

      inches from her back bumper, and behind that the traffic was backed up

      solidly. Only the motorcyclists had freedom of movement. As she watched

      in the mirror, one of these came weaving through the congestion with

      suicidal abandon. It was a battered red 200 cc Honda so covered with

      dust that the colour was hardly recognizable. There was a passenger

      perched on the pillion, and both he and the driver had covered the lower

      half of their faces with the corners of their white headcloths as

      protection against the exhaust fumes and dust.

      Passing on the wrong side, the Honda skimmed through the narrow gap

      between the taxi and the cars parked at the kerb with nothing to spare

      on either side.

      The taxi-driver made an obscene gesture with thumb and forefinger, and

      called on Allah to witness that the driver was both mad and stupid.

      The Honda slowed slightly as it drew level with Royan's Renault, and

      the' pillion passenger leaned out and dropped something through the open

      window on to the passenger seat beside her, Immediately the driver

      accelerated so abruptly that for a moment the front wheel was lifted off

      the ground. He put the motorcycle over into a tight turn and sped away

      down the narrow alleyway that opened off the main thoroughfare, narrowly

      avoiding hitting an old woman in his path.

      As the pillion passenger looked back at her the wind blew the fold of ck

      she recognized the man she had last seen in the headlights of the Fiat

      on the road beside the oasis.

      "Yusuf!" As the Honda disappeared she looked down at the object that he

      had dropped on to the seat beside her.

      It was egg-shaped and the segmented metallic surface was painted

      military green. She had seen the same thing so often on old TV war

      movies that she recognized it instantly as a fragmentation grenade, and

      at the same moment she realized that the priming handle had flown off

      and the weapon was set to explode within seconds.

      Without thinking, she grabbed the door handle beside her and flung all

      her weight against the door. It burst open and she tumbled out in the

      road. Her foot slipped off the clutch and the Renault bounded forward

      and crashed into the back of the stationary bus.

      As Royan sprawled in the road under the wheels of the following taxi,

      the grenade exploded. Through the open driver's door blew a sheet of

      flame and smoke and debris. The back window burst outwards and sprayed

      her with diamond chips of glass, and the detonation drove painfully into

      her eardrums.

      A stunned silence followed the shock of the explosion, broken only by

      the tinkle of falling glass shards, and then immediately there was a

      hubbub of groans and screams.

      Royan sat up and clasped her injured arm to her chest. She had fallen

      heavily upon it and the stitches were agony.

      The Renault was wrecked, but she saw that her leather sling bag had been

      blown out of the door and lay in the street close at hand. She pushed

      herself unsteadily to her feet and hobbled over to pick it up. All

      around her was confusion. A few of the passengers in the bus had been

      injured, and a piece of shrapnel or wreckage had wounded a little girl

      on the sidewalk. Her mother was screaming and mopping at the child's

      bloody face with her scarf The girl struggled in her mother's grip,

      wailing pitifully.

      Nobody was taking any notice of Royan, but she knew the police would

      arrive within minutes. They were geared up to respond swiftly to

      fundamentalist terror attacks. She knew that if they found her here she

      would be tied up in days of interrogation. She slung the bag over her

      shoulder and walked as swiftly as her bruised leg would allow her to the

      alleyway down which the Honda had disappeared.

      At the end of the street was a public lavatory. She locked herself in

      one of the cubicles and leaned against the door with her eyes closed,

      trying to recover from the shock and to get her confused thoughts in

      order.


      In the horror and desolation of Duraid's murder she had not until now

      considered her own safety. The realization of danger had been forced

      upon her in the most savage manner. She remembered the words of one of

      the assassins spoken in the darkness beside the oasis "We always know

      where to find her later!'

      The attempt on her life had failed only narrowly. She had to believe

      that there would be another.

      I can't go back to the flat," she realized. "The villa is gone, and

      anyway they would look for me there."

      Despite the unsavoury atmosphere she remained locked in the cubicle for

      over an hour while she thought out her next movements. At last she left

      the toilet and went to the row of stained and cracked washbasins. She

      splashed her face under the tap. Then in the mirror she combed her hair,

      touched up her make-up, and straightened and tidied her clothing as best

      she was able.

      She walked a few blocks, doubling back on her tracks and watching behind

      her to make sure she -was not being followed, before she hailed a taxi

      in the street.

      She made the driver drop her in the street behind her bank, and walked

      the rest of the way. It was only minutes before closing time when she

      was " shown into the cubicle office of one of the sub-accountants. She

      withdrew what money was in her account, which amounted to less than five

      thousand Egyptian pounds. It was not a great sum, but she had a little

      more in her Lloyds Bank account in York, and then she had her

      Mastercard.

      "You should have given us notice to withdraw an article from safe

      deposit," the bank official told her severely.

      She apologized meekly and played the helpless little-girllost so

      convincingly that he relented. He handed over to her the package that

      contained her British passport and her Lloyds banking papers.

      Duraid had numerous relatives and friends who would have been pleased to

      have her to stay with them, but she wanted to remain out of sight, away

      from her usual haunts.

      She chose one of the two-star tourist hotels away from the river where

      she hoped she could remain anonymous amongst the multitudes of the tour

      groups. At this type of hotel there was a high turnover of guests, for

      most of them stayed only for a few nights before moving on up to Luxor

      and Aswan to view the monuments.

     


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