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Authors: Elizabeth Peters

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Upon which, Emerson burst out laughing and pulled me into a close embrace. ‘Peabody, when you put your chin out and give me that steely stare, I know I’ve lost the
argument.’

‘You wanted me to come. Admit it.’

‘Mmmf,’ said Emerson, his lips against mine.

We caught the evening train and went straight to Shepheard’s. The sufragi on duty greeted us like the old acquaintances we were, and asked what he could do for us.

‘Breakfast,’ I said, while Emerson divested himself of various articles of clothing and tossed them around the room. Emerson had not been in favour of staying over, but even he
admitted that we could not dismiss this request as brusquely as we had done with the War Office’s other attempts to bring Ramses back into the service, and catch the first train back to
Luxor.

‘Emphatically not,’ said Ramses. ‘Smith told us virtually nothing, but they wouldn’t have sent for me unless they have some idea as to how to locate him. We must try to
find him, Father. If he is a prisoner – ’

‘If?’ Emerson exclaimed. ‘Do you believe he is a turncoat and a traitor?’

Once upon a time Emerson’s intimidating scowl would have reduced Ramses to silence. Now he met those narrowed blue orbs squarely and smiled a little. ‘It’s odd to hear you
defend him, Father. Good God, I don’t want to believe it either! But the man is an enigma – embittered, cynical, and unpredictable.’

‘Hmph,’ said Emerson. ‘Well. The sooner we find out what Murray has to say, the better. Shall we go?’

‘General Murray?’ I repeated. ‘What has he to do with this? You haven’t even made an appointment.’

‘You know my policy, Peabody – go straight to the top and avoid underlings. He will see me whenever I damn well decide to see him,’ said Emerson. ‘Are you ready,
Ramses?’

I would have insisted upon accompanying them if I had believed there was the slightest chance the general would allow me or Nefret to take part in the discussion. Men are singularly limited in
their views about women, and military men are even worse.

I handed Emerson his coat – he would have walked out of the room in his shirtsleeves if I had not – and helped him into it. ‘Come straight back here,’ I ordered.

‘Mph,’ said Emerson.

‘Yes, of course,’ said Ramses, smiling at Nefret.

From Manuscript H

Murray kept them waiting for half an hour. It wasn’t long, considering his busy schedule and the fact that he had not expected them, but Emerson took it as a personal
affront. He was in an extreme state of annoyance by the time they were ushered into the General’s office, and he expressed his feelings with his usual candour.

‘What the devil do you mean by letting us cool our heels all that time? It was damned inconvenient for us to come just now. You had better have a good reason for interrupting my
work.’

Murray was losing his hair. The high forehead added to the length of his face, which was set in stern lines, but the mouth under the neatly trimmed greying moustache twitched as Emerson spoke.
Ramses had heard that Murray had had a nervous breakdown in 1915, after serving as chief of staff to the British Expeditionary Force. An encounter with Emerson wasn’t going to do his nerves
much good.

‘I did not ask you here, Professor Emerson,’ he said stiffly.

The office was comfortably, almost luxuriously, furnished, with deep leather chairs and Oriental rugs. The wide windows behind the desk offered a view of palm trees and gardens. The fog had
cleared; it was going to be a fine day.

‘No?’ Emerson sat down and took out his pipe. ‘Well, if it wasn’t you, it was one of your flunkies, and you ought to know about it. What sort of administrator are
you?’

Murray began fumbling through the papers on his desk. Emerson’s tactics were brutal but effective; the general’s hands were shaking with rage. He couldn’t bully a civilian,
especially one of Emerson’s eminence, as he would have done a military subordinate – but how he wanted to! After a moment of hard breathing, he selected one paper from among the rest,
stared at it, and rang for an aide. A whispered conversation took place. Ramses, whose hearing was excellent, caught only a few words: ‘. . . devil he thinks he’s doing . . .’

‘Didn’t your mother teach you that it is rude to whisper when other persons are present?’ Emerson inquired, tossing a burned match onto the floor.

Murray’s complexion was that of a man who spends most of his time indoors. His pale cheeks reddened. ‘Professor Emerson, I did not ask to speak with you, but so long as you are here
I can spare you a few minutes, in order to emphasize the seriousness of the situation. From now on you will be taking orders from someone else.’

Oh, Lord, Ramses thought, is the man a natural idiot, or hasn’t he heard about Father? The last sentence had the effect he had known it would. Emerson’s eyes narrowed, and when he
spoke it was in the quiet purring voice his acquaintances had learned to dread.

‘The only person from whom my son takes orders is me, General. I don’t take them from anyone – except him.’

Ramses’s jaw dropped. His father had deferred to him on a few occasions – to his utter astonishment – but this was the first time he had paid him such a compliment.

‘When the situation demands it,’ Emerson added. ‘We may as well leave, Ramses.’

The door opened. Murray transferred his bulging stare to the newcomer. Not Smith. Cartright. ‘Why didn’t you tell me they were coming?’ the general demanded.

‘I didn’t know, sir. The last I heard from them was a curt telegram denying my request for their assistance. I had planned to go to Luxor in person within the next few
days.’

Ramses caught his father’s questioning eye. Evidently the same doubt had entered Emerson’s mind. If this lot didn’t know of Smith’s visit, he wasn’t going to bring
it up. He shook his head slightly, and Emerson settled back into his chair. ‘So,’ he purred, ‘is this the person from whom my son is to take orders?’

‘You misunderstood, Professor,’ Cartright said quickly. ‘We are asking for his help, not demanding it.’

‘He did say “please”,’ Ramses reminded his father. ‘Perhaps we ought to listen to what he has to say.’

Emerson stamped into the room, flung himself into a chair, and took out his pipe. Nefret had left his thumb and fingers free of the cast, and by now he was using both hands,
against her advice and my orders. The weight of the cast did not seem to bother him in the slightest. He proceeded to tamp tobacco into the pipe, making an even greater mess than usual. Ramses
followed, his face unreadable. That withdrawn, ‘stone pharaoh’ look was his reaction to bad news, just as poorly repressed fury was his father’s.

‘Well?’ I demanded. ‘What happened?’

Ramses’s features relaxed into a smile. ‘Father threatened to punch General Murray on the jaw.’

‘Ah,’ I said. ‘Well, that was only to be expected if the general accused your – er – Sethos of treachery.’

‘Bastard,’ said Emerson, round the stem of his pipe. I knew he was not referring to his brother.

‘Stop swearing and tell me what transpired.’

‘I will swear if I like,’ Emerson said sullenly. ‘Murray would drive a nun to profanity.’

Nefret held out her hand to Ramses. He went at once to her and took her hand in his.

‘You had better let me tell it, Father. It appears there was a problem of miscommunication. Murray wasn’t expecting us, and he was not at all pleased to have us turn up. He knew
about the matter, but if we had asked for an appointment, in the usual way, the request would have been passed on to his chief of staff, who would have passed it on to the head of military
intelligence in Cairo, who is – ’

‘Boisdragon-Bracegirdle,’ I exclaimed.

‘No, Mother. My old acquaintance, Captain, now Major, Cartright.’

‘How extraordinary. It was on this business he telegraphed you in that brusque fashion? Then what does Brace – curse it, Smith – have to do with this?’

‘I don’t know, and I didn’t ask,’ Ramses said. ‘There is something odd about this business, and until we can make sense of it, the less we say the better. It may be
only a question of interservice jealousy. That has caused more trouble than the enemy.’

‘How much does Murray know?’ I asked.

Emerson was still muttering curses, so Ramses answered the question. ‘He made no reference to our relationship with Sethos. Smith may have been telling the truth there. They know
I’ve met him, though, and that I have had ample opportunity to observe him. It was Cartright who convinced Murray that I was the best man to track Sethos down. They’ve had trouble
getting agents into and out of Turkish territory. None of their own people can pass as an Arab, and the locals they’ve recruited are unreliable and untrained.’

Emerson had got himself under control. ‘They’re a bunch of bumbling incompetents,’ he declared. ‘Sometimes it takes weeks for information about Turkish movements to reach
them, via the indirect channels they employ. They got the news about Sethos fast enough, though. I suggested to Murray that he might be a prisoner instead of a traitor, and that swine Murray
– ’

‘That was when Father tried to hit him,’ said Ramses, with a grin. ‘Cartright got us out of Murray’s office in a hurry.’

‘I cannot believe Sethos passed on vital information willingly,’ I exclaimed.

From behind a cloud of vile-smelling smoke, Emerson said, ‘The alternatives are almost as unpleasant, my dear.’

‘Alternatives? I can only think of one.’ I got up and moved to the window, where the air was not so thick. ‘Emerson, that pipe – ’

‘It calms my nerves, Peabody. However, anything to please you.’ He knocked the thing out into a receptacle, sending sparks flying. ‘Torture is one possibility, certainly,
though I don’t see how they could make a public spectacle of him if he was injured and under duress. There are other ways of forcing an individual to speak. Are you certain Margaret Minton is
in France?’

‘What a horrible idea!’ I cried. ‘That the villains would use the threat of harm to the woman he loves!’

‘It is a well-established technique, not only in the service but in popular fiction,’ said Ramses.

‘I beg, Ramses, that you will refrain from inappropriate attempts to be humorous. I will set about ascertaining Margaret’s present whereabouts as soon as is possible.’

‘I beg your pardon, Mother,’ Ramses said. He was still holding Nefret’s hand, running his fingers lightly over her wrist. ‘Such inquiries would take too long and would
probably be inconclusive. There is one sure way of learning the truth. Ismail Pasha is now in Gaza. I’m going there to try and find him.’

I was conscious of a sinking feeling at the pit of my stomach. ‘I thoroughly disapprove, Ramses. You are too well known to the enemy. Let them find someone else.’

‘I must go, Mother. I can’t leave it to someone else. You don’t understand.’ He looked from me to Nefret; and on her face I saw the same dawning horror that I felt on my
own.

‘They ordered you to kill him,’ she whispered. ‘Is that it?’

‘That is how the Great Game is played.’ Ramses’s voice was hard, his expression withdrawn. ‘Assassination, deception, corruption – nothing is too vile if it can be
labelled patriotism. Whether he is guilty or under duress, he can give away vital information. Cartright wouldn’t tell me what that information is, but it is obviously enough to make him
extremely dangerous.’

I cleared my throat. ‘You agreed, of course.’

Ramses came to me with his long strides and bent to kiss my cheek. It was a rare gesture for him, and I took it as the compliment he intended. ‘I would have done, Mother, if I had supposed
they’d believe me. Murray would have; he hasn’t imagination enough to suppose anyone would dare disregard his orders, and he doesn’t know the man he wants me to assassinate is my
uncle. Not that that little matter would bother him.’

‘ “If thy hand offend thee, cut it off”,’ I murmured.

I ought to have known better than to quote Scripture when Emerson was already in a vile humour. His heavy brows drew together, but before he could bellow, Ramses spoke again. ‘Cartright
knows me well enough to suspect I would baulk at assassination, so we arrived at a compromise. I will get a look at Ismail Pasha and ascertain whether he is Sethos, and whether he is being used by
the Turks against his will.’

‘Rather a tall order, that,’ I remarked.

‘The first part shouldn’t be difficult. He’ll be showing himself in public, as he did in Constantinople. I only hope he hasn’t altered his appearance so much I
can’t recognize him.’

‘And then what?’ Nefret demanded.

Ramses shrugged. ‘One can’t plan very far ahead when there are so many unknowns in the equation. I’m not counting on anything except making a preliminary reconnaissance.
Depending on what I learn, if anything, we’ll decide what to do next.’

‘Can you get in and out of the city undetected?’ I asked, endeavouring to conceal my concern.

‘Oh, I think so. The trouble is, Cartright insisted I take someone else with me.’

‘It’s safer for two than for one,’ Nefret said hopefully.

‘Not when one of the two is fresh out of the nursery,’ Emerson growled. ‘Fair, young, speaks Arabic like a textbook, stammering with excitement at the prospect of playing spy .
. .’ Emerson summed it up with an emphatic ‘Damnation!’ and went back to filling his pipe.

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