Out of the Black Land (28 page)

Read Out of the Black Land Online

Authors: Kerry Greenwood

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Women Sleuths, #Historical, #General

BOOK: Out of the Black Land
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When I see your eyes shine
When I press close to look at you
Oh my beloved
Ruler of my heart!
The guests had begun to dance, not step dances but the marriage dances usually performed in private. The air in the hall was hot. My perfume cone had melted into my wig. Over my shoulders and down my breasts trickled cooling oil which tickled and made my skin shine. The same phenomenon emphasised all the muscles in the chest of Ptah-hotep the scribe.
The king and all the royal household were dancing. Pannefer and Huy were on their feet, mostly naked and smeared with oil, and their wives with them, giggling like children, as the Singer of Hathor continued.
This hour is happy
As you lie between my thighs
May this hour of bliss
Last forever, forever…
People were already seeking corners so that they could lie down with their chosen lovers. The drunken woman seized a passing servant and pulled his head down to her breast, spilling the ewer of wine which he had been carrying. I began to be afraid that I could not contain my lust much longer. The music was wild, shrilling over a grumble of fast-beating drums.
‘Something is happening,’ Ptah-hotep pulled away from my caress. ‘My love, my heart, wait a little longer, I must see…’
I ground my teeth in frustration, dug my fingernails into the palm of my hand and saw that trays were being carried amongst the guests by clean kitchen servants. I saw roasted flesh laid out as always, but the source of the flesh turned me sick with revulsion instead of lust.
This is what it was; it was all the venerated animals of Egypt, cooked. Yet there was nothing wrong with the way they had been cooked, dog and ibis and cat and crocodile. They smelt appetising and everyone was eating, snatching pieces of holy flesh, tearing the carcasses apart.
‘We will have to eat,’ I whispered.
‘Take a piece of the ibis for me,’ he said, and we bit and swallowed the white cooked flesh of the avatar of Thoth, god of wisdom and writing, judge of the netherworld, Ptah-hotep’s god.
The King, who had been drifting past, saw us and threw another load of gold at us in token of his pleasure.
Then I saw what beast had been served for the consumption of the royal family alone.
It was a beautifully-displayed roasted hawk, both Horus Avenger and Re-Harakhti, the most sacred of all creatures, symbol of Amen-Re at noon, the hawk in the horizon.
Ptah-hotep
As I ate a mouthful of the ibis flesh I dedicated myself again to Thoth, god of learning, and knew as my sister and spouse ate the same amount of holy beast that we would never be the same again, and neither would Egypt.
But we still burned. The feast was degenerating into such an orgy as Mentu my second in command had described as taking place in the more expensive brothels of the river-margin. Wine was spilled and rolled in, so that the floor was awash with it and trodden bread, broken pottery and the remains of shamefully slaughtered holy creatures.
I took Mutnodjme’s hand and we crawled away through the tipped over chairs past the copulating lovers and the vomiting drunks until we came to the door, crept unobserved over the threshold, and ran.
We ran away from the sed festival feast as though we were running for our lives from a terrible foe. We slipped, leaving wine red smears on the floor from our tainted feet. We clutched each other in fear and kept running until we came to my own apartments, startling Anubis into a warning snarl before he recognised our scent.
We barred the doors successively behind us as we went in through the outer office, inner office, outer living quarters and finally the inner rooms, which only contained my bedroom, a small store for treasures, and my bathroom.
‘Ptah-hotep,’ gasped my lady, freeing her body from cloth and jewellery. ‘I am horrified, I am revolted, but I am so sick with lust that I will not be able to think unless…’
I was in the same condition. Even when we had run—and why had we run like that? No one was chasing us, certainly no one would have missed us or noticed our going—I had been aroused almost to pain. I tore at the strings of my loincloth and threw it away and dropped the king’s gifts on top of it.
No delicacies were between us this time, no more words, just raw need. I slid down onto the floor, lying on my back; she swooped down upon me like a heron, and we were joined so close and so hard that we reached a climax in what seemed like moments. Before my phallus had time to shrink, it was hard again, and this time our coupling lasted longer.
I had never mated like that, not with man or woman. It was so ferocious, straining to get closer, to bury myself in the female body which strove to swallow me into herself and suck an orgasm from me. Her muscles closed around my phallus like a fist. Our shared perception was gone. This was almost like battle, a struggle to wrench satisfaction from the other body, and when we climaxed again and collapsed, her body over mine, we were winded and shocked and unable to explain why we had been so rough with each other.
I was inside her heart again, and she in mine. Very carefully, we helped each other to our feet and stood on the cool marble of the washroom and bathed each other.
‘Oh, my lord, my love,’ she said, sluicing cool water over my body. She lathered my head and body with the soft herb-scented soap which Meryt made for me, and I felt oil and semen and wine wash off my skin and run down my body in runnels of filth. My lady used a whole huge well-jar of water on cleansing me, then she stood trembling as I did the same for her, soaping her hair and rinsing her until the water ran clear.
Then we were cold. We wrapped ourselves in several Nubian blankets made of softest goat’s wool and lay down together and fell asleep as though we had been stunned.
I was woken in the dead of night by Meryt knocking on the outer door. It was her special knock and I climbed out of bed and went to let her in. She had brought the wives and children with her and Hani as bodyguard.
‘Master, you shut me out!’ she exclaimed. I must have looked at her strangely, for she did not chide me further, but bustled the little ones into their places and ordered Hani to take Anubis and mind the door. Hani was sleepy and drunk, but Anubis was alert. He was an old dog now, but his reflexes were as sharp as ever.
‘I have heard strange things,’ she said. ‘But they can wait until morning, Master.’
I staggered back to the blankets, and wrapped myself so that I was lying as close to my lady as I could, and fell asleep again.
Morning brought Meryt with an infusion of bitter herbs and the news that most of the palace had gone mad the previous night.
‘You were well out of that feast, Master,’ she told me, watching to make sure that I drank her infusion and handing a pottery cup to my lady. I assumed that Meryt used pottery cups for her infusions because they would eat through bronze. While I was testing the inside of my mouth to see if all my teeth were there and trying to recollect the previous evening—which had ended agreeably, it seemed—Meryt continued.
‘This morning the servants came to clear up and found three people dead of some sort of frenzy, Master. Dead among the broken wine cups and torn clothes and spilled beer. The floor was slippery with blood and man-seed, what happened at that feast? I have heard of such things in barbarian tribes such as the vile Kush, but never in the painted feasting-hall of an Egyptian King!’
‘Oh, Lady Isis, I remember,’ exclaimed Mutnodjme, and in a rush, so did I. We groaned. ‘Did we…did the King…’ she began, and I agreed.
‘Yes, we did. We coupled like animals. And the King served up a special dessert. It was composed of all the sacred beasts of Egypt, and he made us eat it.’
I beat my lady by a whisker to the closet, where we vomited up all the holy flesh which we might have eaten, as well as a lot of wine. Meryt, understanding only that something terrible had occurred, made us a drink of beaten eggs and milk and cinnamon to settle our rebellious insides.
Then we washed again and clothed ourselves and sat down out of earshot to watch Meryt teaching Hani’s youngest how to feed himself with a spoon—he was now three and had been newly weaned—and to consider what we had seen.
‘There was an aphrodisiac herb in the wine the King poured for us,’ Mutnodjme told me. ‘It is possible that the whole feast was designed by the King to make us lose control. The wine was double strength, the food was excellent, and the music was exciting.’
‘Someone designed this other than the King Akhnaten may he live,’ I protested. ‘He has little tact and has already presented us with the statement that there are no gods other than the Aten and we had better believe so, on pain of death. No, this is a dark plotting mind. This was to drag us all into dreadful sin, to turn us away from whatever we might have had left of devotion to the old gods. For now everyone at that feast, including me and even you, have committed an unforgivable sin.’
‘So we cannot afford to believe in the old gods, because if we do believe in them, we condemn ourselves to everlasting torment?’
‘As long as it takes for a heart to be eaten by Aphopis, yes.’
‘And now we are accomplices, are we not? Co-offenders. We are all in the same prison wearing identical fetters having committed identical crimes.’
‘That is the idea.’
‘Huy,’ she decided.
‘Pannefer,’ I argued.
‘Possibly both,’ she conceded. ‘Do you feel burdened by a dreadful sin, Ptah-hotep, my beloved?’
‘Not really. If I had been force-fed ibis flesh, I would have committed no sin, and that was close to force-feeding such as men do to geese. In the same fashion, watch the way Meryt distracts the child and then pops a spoonful of porridge into his mouth. It was like that. What could we do, with the King actually watching us?’
‘We could say,’ she observed, ‘that by eating the flesh of our gods we have communed with them, taken them inside us.’
‘That’s a good thought, and it comforts me.’
I embraced her gently, my wise lady, careful of the bruises, and she kissed what she said was a bite on my throat.
I had another thought. ‘Mark the ingenuity of it, my beloved lady. First they served fish, a forbidden creature, but every farmer in the Black Land eats fish so that did not seem sinful. Certainly not customary but not really sinful, and churlish to refuse in the middle of such a lavish feast.’
‘Yes, I ate some of it, it was very good,’ agreed my lady. ‘But I have often eaten fish. Except for the one kind which consumed Osiris’ phallus, it is not forbidden to Isis, just to the palace, and I always thought that that prohibition had something to do with making sure that the palace didn’t eat all the fish and leave nothing for the common people.’
‘To be sure, and many people at the feast would have eaten fish on their country estates. So it eased us into the greater transgression of the laws, do you see? By the time that grisly collation was being carried around, we had already broken one law so why not another?
Be exiled for a flock, not one single goat
, so says the maxim of the Divine Amenhotep-Osiris, how I wish that he had lived forever.’
‘I, too,’ she sighed.
‘I still think it is Pannefer,’ I stated.
‘Huy. A career selling broken down asses to unwilling buyers teaches that sort of dirty skill,’ she insisted.
‘You may be right, my heart. Now, how do you feel? As though you are doomed to be eaten after death? As though your heart must sink against the feather?’
‘We ate as little as we could,’ she said slowly, curling one strand of night-black hair around her strong finger. ‘We ran away as soon as we could. We coupled like beasts, but that was the night and the feast and the poisoned wine, and our own lust which it magnified, and lust is not a sin if the object is free and consenting.’
‘You flung me to the floor, lady, I didn’t have time to consent,’ I protested.
And she said gravely,’ You were consenting in your heart. I could tell from the way you tore off your clothes.’ Then she grinned and her eyes were much brighter than they had a right to be after the night we had spent and the wine we had consumed. I laughed at her reply and she continued.

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