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Authors: Scott Oden

BOOK: Men of Bronze
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The Medjay had come to Leontopolis.

Medjay
. The soldiers bearing this appellation were the most savage of Pharaoh’s mercenaries. They were a cadre of outcasts, criminals in their own lands, who banded together under Egypt’s banner to dedicate their lives to the gods of violence. The emblem painted on their shield faces, the
uadjet
, the all-seeing Eye of Horus, symbolized their task as guardians of the eastern frontier. Pharaoh paid them to be vigilant, to crush any intruders before they could reach even an abandoned ruin such as Leontopolis, and he paid them well. This time, though, the Medjay had failed their royal paymaster.

To a man, they froze as the rasp of metal on stone drifted through the mist; instinctively, their eyes sought out the massive silhouette of their commander. Phoenician by birth, Hasdrabal Barca ruled the Medjay with the tigerish strength of a born killer. Spear, arrow, torch, and sword, all this and more had touched his flesh, leaving behind the indelible scars of a lifetime spent waging war. He disdained a helmet; long black hair, shot through with gray, fell over his face as he stood with head bowed, straining to hear.

The clatter came again, followed by sibilant cursing.

Barca looked up; his eyes turned to slits, like splinters hacked from the iron gates of Tartarus. He motioned, and a young soldier, a Libyan, edged up to his side. The Phoenician dragged his index finger across his throat in a chilling pantomime. Nodding, the soldier handed his bow and shield off to another, removed his helmet, and drew a curved knife from the small of his back. Beneath a thatch of sandy hair, plastered with sweat, the young Medjay’s eyes shimmered with anticipation as he crept off to do Barca’s bidding.

Raids like this were nothing new. The desert-folk of Sinai, the Bedouin, encroached on Egypt’s borders every season, fleeing tribal feuds or seeking succor from generations of drought. The Medjay turned most back at the Walls of the Ruler, a line of ancient fortifications stretching from Pelusium on the coast, along the Bitter Lakes, to the Gulf of Suez. A few, though, slipped through the Medjay’s nets to plunder the border villages. Such was the fate of Habu, south of the vale of Tumilat, on the shores of the Great Bitter Lake.

Habu lay on the patrol route between Sile and Dedun, on the Gulf; it was a small village of two dozen mud brick huts clustered around a brackish well whose inhabitants mined salt in the nearby hills. The Medjay, following the Bedouin’s trail, found Habu in ruins. Barca recalled the mound of severed heads in the village square, the corpses left to rot in the merciless sun. The men were killed outright, the women raped and mutilated. Even the children …

Barca’s scout returned as quietly as he had left. He made a show of wiping his knife on a Bedouin headscarf.

“You were right,” the scout, Tjemu, whispered, “they are the Beni Harith.”

“How many?” Barca’s voice did not carry past the Medjay’s ear.

Tjemu nodded back the way he had come. “Maybe twice our number, camped in a square some hundred yards beyond a causeway of crouching stone lions. Their pickets are asleep. Careless bastards.”

“They’re not expecting us.” Barca’s jaw tightened; deep in his soul he felt the Beast stir, flexing its claws.
Even the children
. “Fan out!” he ordered, raising his fist.

Sinew creaked as the Medjay bent their bows.

 

The Bedouin camp stirred and came alive. The younger men fetched water from the Nile’s bank while their elders sat in council before the camelhair tent of their
shaykh
, Ghazi ibn Ghazi. Four of his brothers, an uncle, and seven nephews reclined on their blankets, talking in low voices about this last stage of their journey. Spear butts and sheathed swords clattered on the cracked paving stones; tethered camels bawled, as unhappy about the claustrophobic mist as their masters were.

Ghazi ibn Ghazi plucked a date from a wooden bowl and popped it into his mouth. Age, sand, and sun had left his face fleshless, seamed, an uncured hide stretched tight over a frame of bone. His eyebrows and beard were gray and sparse, his shoulders stooped, calling to mind a wizened shoemaker rather than a Bedouin war leader.

“This place is accursed!” the man on his right said, with all the frustrated weariness of one who had not slept soundly in days. He wore clothing similar to his Bedouin companions — robes of grimy brown wool and a once-white head scarf held in place by a leather band — but his accent and manners marked him as a Persian. “It is fit for jackals, perhaps, or Bedouin, but it is no place for a man of refinement.”

Ghazi grinned. “Where are your balls, Arsamenes? Have you Persians become so civilized that you can no longer stomach the hard road?”

The Persian, Arsamenes, leaned forward, helping himself to the dates. His eyes, small and dark, flickered up to the Bedouin’s face. “We could have been done with the hard road, and in Memphis already, had you not stopped to glut yourself on that flyspeck of a village.”

At this, the other Bedouin ceased their own conversations. This was not the first time the Persian had broached that topic.

“I told you before,” Ghazi said quietly, “Habu is none of your concern.”

“Will the Medjay not notice the slaughtered villagers? Will they ignore the spoor of a hundred camels leading in country from Sinai? You fool! Everything about this mission is my concern! You have jeopardized it, and I want to know why!”

The old
shaykh
sighed. From other tents, he heard voices, muffled laughter, and the
slish
of blades on oiled stone. “It was an old debt,” Ghazi said, finally. “In my youth, a man of Habu shamed a girl of the Harith. We could not pass them by without exacting our vengeance.”

Arsamenes’ face darkened; his close-cropped beard bristled. “You put the honor of a two-shekel desert slut over the interests of the King of Kings?”

Ghazi’s lips curled into a sneer. “The Harith are not slaves to your king, not like the Medes or the Parsi. We paid Cyrus his due because we respected him, but you would do well to remember not even your great king could conquer the People of the Sands. I have given the son of Cyrus my word to escort you to Memphis. After that …” Quicker than his age belied, Ghazi drew his knife and put it to Arsamenes’ throat. The Persian gasped, his body going rigid. “After that, you live at my pleasure, understand?” Arsamenes’ eyes blazed. Without the slightest hesitation, he reached up and pushed Ghazi’s hand away. “Cambyses will have your head.”

“Finding it will not be difficult, eh?” Ghazi grinned, sheathing his blade. “Since it will be buried between the thighs of Pharaoh’s daughter!” Raucous laughter erupted from the Bedouin; even Arsamenes smiled, though his eyes lost none of their fire. The tension broken, Ghazi’s kinsmen stood and stretched, eager to be away from this desolate place, with its leonine statues and inhuman sphinxes. The
shaykh
gave orders for the tents to be struck, the small fires doused, and the sentries recalled.

Ghazi did not have the gall to call this gathering of his kin an army, though by Bedouin standards, it was a veritable host. He had seen true armies in his youth, armies drawn to the standards of Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon. In comparison, his five-score would have been as a single grain of sand in the desert. Yet, he doubted the Chaldeans were more loyal to their king than his Harith were to him. They would ride to the gates of Hell, if he asked it of them. Pride swelled Ghazi’s chest. With a thousand Bedouin, he could make Sinai a power to be reckoned with; with a hundred thousand, he could make the world an Arab playground. Someday, Ghazi told himself, someday …

Ghazi uncorked a skin of wine. He made to raise it to his lips, but stopped in mid-gesture, his head cocked to the side. The hairs on the back of his neck stood up as he sensed unseen eyes on him.

“What is it,
shaykh
?” Others, too, muttered their concern.

Ghazi’s frown deepened. “Quiet. Listen.”

Though he had seen no sign of it, Ghazi knew in his marrow the Medjay were in relentless pursuit, driven by that devil of a man, the Phoenician. If they were out there, this fog would work to their advantage.
We should not have tarried here
. Ghazi glanced around, his eyes coming to rest on his sister’s son, Tajik. An unspoken question passed between them.

“Sounds like locusts,” Tajik said. The young Bedouin craned his neck …

… and died as a bronze-tipped arrow split his skull.

A deadly hail rained down through the mist, punching through flesh and bone, shattering on stone. Arsamenes twisted with an agonized scream, clawing at the black-fletched shafts that sprouted from his back. Ghazi’s frayed robe flared out behind him like misshapen wings as he leapt the fallen Persian and took cover in the lee of a massive lion-headed statue. All around, his Bedouin crumpled and died.

“Move!” he shouted, drawing his sword. “Move, you bastards! The Medjay are upon us!”

 

Baying like human wolves, the Medjay charged into the Bedouin camp, Barca at the head of a loose wedge of fighters. They cast their bows aside, drew their swords, and unslung their shields; men grabbed the flared cheek pieces of their helmets and tugged them down, transforming flesh-and-blood soldiers into the faceless cogs of a bronze killing machine.

The Bedouin did not stand idle. Though disarrayed by the sudden arrow storm, Ghazi’s cry rallied their spirits. “Move, you bastards! The Medjay are upon us!” Young men and old snatched their weapons up and answered the Medjay’s threat with the undulating shriek of the desert folk.

Time grew hazy, indistinct. Seconds took on the aspect of hours. In this last elongated heartbeat between life and death, a man’s senses became painfully acute. Hereditary enemies stared at one another across the shrinking interval, teeth bared in snarls of hate, grimaces of fear. Thoughts of distant homes, long-lost loves, and forgotten embraces vanished beneath the adrenalin-laced pulse of blood lust. Neither side called for terms; none sought guarantees of mercy. This fight would be as savage and brutal as it would be short.

Muscles tensed. Weapons glittered. Lips prayed. Shields balanced.

And suddenly …

Medjay and Bedouin collided in a grinding of flesh and bone, underscored by the crunch of chopping blades and the screams of the dying. Swords flickered like lightning, crashing on shield and helmet, rasping on enemy blades. Men strained breast-to-breast, helmet-to-turban, a vicious mob fighting for purchase on the blood-smeared stones. The wounded collapsed, shrieking as they were trampled underfoot, dragging the living down with them. Iron punched and shattered, and blood flowed like wine at Hell’s banquet.

No time to issue orders or ponder tactics, Barca plowed into the heart of the fight and trusted its outcome to the gods. The massive Phoenician roared and struck from side to side, dropping a man with each blow. A soldier of the Medjay stumbled against him, a spear buried in his neck. His killer’s cry of triumph became a death rattle as Barca’s scimitar licked out and sheared through his turbaned skull. The Bedouin called the captain of the Medjay
al-Saffah
, the Blood-letter; with each killing stroke, Barca demonstrated the truth of that sobriquet.

The Bedouin redoubled their attack. Bearded faces pressed in from all sides, visages radiating hatred and bloodlust. Frothing lips hurled curses as knotted fists hurled blows. Bedouin grew reckless, sacrificing their own lives in an effort to bring Barca down. A knife blade scored the flesh of his forearm; a sword rebounded from his shield. The Phoenician snarled. With a chilling cry, Hasdrabal Barca unleashed the Beast.

The Greeks called it
katalepsis
— demonic possession in the heat of battle, rendering a man insensate to the flesh, his own or his foes’. A berserk fury boiled up from the depths of Barca’s soul, from a place only he knew. A fury stoked by memories that had haunted him for more than twenty years …

Moonlight pierced the darkness, caressing her thigh
,
her breast. A night breeze ruffled the gauzy curtains as she
crawled to where her lover sat, arching her back like a cat
in heat. He was Greek, perfumed and pomaded, a soldier in
name only. “Neferu,” he whispered with a smile, stripping off
his linen kilt and leading her eager mouth to him

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