The Desert Castle (25 page)

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Authors: Isobel Chace

BOOK: The Desert Castle
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The young man licked his lips nervously, not liking to admit that he hadn

t the remotest idea what she was talking about. He began his introductions all over
again.


My name is Fawzi, I am your guide. Please to come this way to the horses.


Yes,

said Marion,

but there should be three of us. The policeman said he would look in the book and tell me if they had signed it earlier.

The guide swallowed.

I will look,

he said. He handed her a pen and pointed to the line where she was to sign, watching her closely as she did so. When she had written an impatient flourish that looked hardly anything like her usual signature, he studied the book intently, turning back to the previous page and running his finger down the list of names.


Well
?

Marion asked him.

He closed the book with a bang.

It may be that
they have
gone. We must follow quickly.

He smiled beatifically at her.

There is very much to see and you will want to
s
ee it all, yes
?

Marion wondered if she did want to in all this rain. But the thought of what she was going to say to Gaston and Lucasta when she caught up with them drove her on. Indeed, she scarcely noticed the rain as she accompanied Fawzi outside again and down to where the horses were waiting, their heads bowed against the onslaught of the water that was still falling out of the skies. Since she had heard so much about the glories of Arab horses it was rather a comedown to these flinching misshapen animals, strong of back, but with mouths like iron, and amenable only to the soft curses of the men who led them.

Marion eased herself on to the plastic-covered saddle and held on to the toggle that the driver put into her hands. Fawzi, it seemed, preferred to walk, and Marion didn

t blame him. She thought she might well have preferred to walk herself, especially when the brute under her poked his way over the rough ground, avoiding the puddles with a delicacy that belied his real nature.


Fawzi, can you read English
?

she asked the young
guide just as they were entering the narrow entrance of the Syq, slipping down the
s
lope from the dam.


A little,

he answered.

Not at all, she thought to herself, and wished she had looked at the book for herself.

Are you sure they

re ahead of us
?

she said out loud.


Maybe they are.

In fact, most likely they were not. But it was too late to return. Fawzi would not understand her if she told him to turn back, and the driver

s whole attention was concentrated on hurrying his horse along, muttering in Arabic as he did so. Marion recognised the phrase “We are alive, thanks be to God”, again and again, repeated with more and more dislike of the avalanche of water that descended on them.


Ye
llah
!

Fawzi called over his shoulder.

Yellah
!’


Yellah
!’

The driver took a firmer hold on the bridle and dragged the horse forward through the stream of water that was already running through the bottom of the Syq. The animal pulled away, stepping round the worst of the puddles and looking for shelter from the sides of the narrow passage so mat Marion bumped uncomfortably against the overhanging bulges which she had scarcely noticed the day before when she had been on her feet. With the Rest House scarcely out of sight, she was wet through to the skin and her shoes squelched when she moved them in the stirrups.

The driver looked round, trying to entice the nag into a trot. He caught sight of the anxious misery written plain on Marion

s face.


Keef halak
?

he said with a grin.

She knew what that meant. It was something Zein said to her, often and often, and it was she who had lovingly taught her the answer.


Mabsut


she began, and only belatedly remembered to put an “a” on the end as she was a woman.

Mabsuta el hamdu lillah.
I am well, thanks be to God.

The man nodded.

Yellah
!
Hurry up
!

he roared at the horse.

The channels that the Nabateans had cut into the rock to carry the excess of water away were already full to overflowing. Water streamed down the sides of the narrow passage, splashing into the puddles that grew larger, ran into one another, and began to stream down the slight incline.


It is a pity you won

t see the Treasury building with the sun shining on its face,

Fawzi mourned. His English was better when he was talking about Petra, a subject he knew backwards, parroting his patter with the greatest of ease.

Have you heard about this building
?


A little,

Marion replied, nursing her shoulder as her horse crashed her once again against the rocks.


It is known as the Treasury of Pharaoh. The Bedouin called it that when it had been forgotten why it was built. To the local Bedouin who had no education all sorts of things became the miraculous creations of Pharaoh. He was the evil genius of all their stories, just as Moses was the one who practised only white magic, controlling the natural forces. Had he not brought water out of stone
?

Fawzi looked up at the falling rain and shrugged his shoulders.

It had to be a magician who had built the Khasneh al Faroun. Faroun means Pharaoh. To men who lived only in tents, it was impossible that men had made such a building. That is why they thought there was treasure in the
urn
at the top. Pharaoh would naturally hide his gold out of the reach of those who would try to steal it. Nowadays, there is schooling for everyone, and such stories are not believed any more.

They came out of the Syq at that moment and the salmon-pink facing of the Khasneh dominated their view.


That is the u
rn
up there,

Fawzi told her.

This place where we are is called the Wadi al Jarra, the Wadi of the U
rn
. You know what a wadi is
?


A dry river-bed,

she said.


It is that, but it is not always dry. Do you want to stop and see inside
?

Marion shook her head.

I saw it yesterday. I want to find my friends. Could you ask the traders if they have seen them
?

But there were no traders to be seen. Some horses, saddled ready for the non-existent tourists, sheltered under the overhanging cliff beside the Treasury, but their drivers had taken refuge out of the teeming rain and of them there was no sign.


They will be here,

Fawzi comforted her.

Or, if they are not, they will be back at the Rest House.

She wished she shared his certainty. In that instant when she had found Lucasta

s bed cold and empty she had known immediately what had happened. She would have been a fool not to know. The pair might have made up their quarrel, or they might never have quarrelled at all, but Lucasta wouldn

t have had to wait long before Marion had fallen asleep and then she would have knocked on the wall, using the code they had worked out between them. Perhaps she had even changed her room for Gaston

s, laughing to herself because Marion hadn

t suspected for a moment what
sh
e had been planning. But where had they gone, then? Had Gaston taken her home? Or had he driven her up to look at the
s
ite where he was working? It didn

t bear thinking about
t
he Hartley family—and Gregory —had trusted Lucasta to Marion

s care, and she had failed them all. She would be sent home to
England
in disgrace—and what would happen then, with her mother in Devon and determined to sell the house, and herself without a job and absolutely nothing to look forward to?

That Gregory would be furious, she didn

t doubt for a moment. It was all right for him to tell her not to worry, but he wouldn

t excuse her failure easily. Lucasta was his niece and she was only seventeen.

T
here were no two ways about it, Marion should have looked after her better!

T
he tears mingled with the rain on her cheeks and she wiped her eyes on the back of her hand. She was here, in Petra, the fulfilment of a childhood

s dream, and she might never go anywhere half as romantic ever again, so she might as well make an attempt to enjoy herself. But the savour had gone out of it. the dream had become a nightmare, black and threatening like the sky overhead. If Gregory were angry with her, the whole of life would be like this, she reflected unhappily. It had been bad enough when he had said he wouldn

t bring her here. T
h
at had hurt at the time, but the wound he had dealt her was like an aching void within her and it was getting worse all the time.


You must get off here,

Fawzi broke into her thoughts.

S
he started, looking wearily around her to get her bearings. Not far away was the Roman theatre, looking bleak and more black than red as the
rain
ran down the stone seats to the floor of the Stage.


I went up there yesterday,

sh
e said, pointing up on the other side of the Urn Tomb.

F
awzi accepted this with a slight shrug.

You must visit the Silk Tomb. That is the most colourful of them all. It is like shot silk and beautiful.

T
here was nothing to do but dismount. Marion found she had stuck to the wet, cheap plastic of the saddle and, with rather less elegance than
sh
e would have liked to display,
s
he slithered down to the ground.


Come, quickly
!

Fawzi urged her.

S
he wondered why he was in such a hurry, but even as she stood there, the river-bed had started to fill with water and, looking down by the
si
de of the Colonnade Street, she could see it moving relentlessly onwards and, in a matter of seconds, it had turned into a babbling stream that grew deeper and more violent every moment


There

s someone coming,

she said.

It might be Lucasta and Gaston.


We must hurry,

Fawzi said anxiously.

They will close the Syq and we shall have to stay here if we don

t go quickly.


You mean we won

t be able to get out
?’

S
uch a fate had not previously occurred to Marion, and now that it had, she wondered why they didn

t turn round at once and go back to the Rest House.


We have a little time,

he reassured her.
‘I am a
good guide and you have given me money to show you a little of Petra. In one day you can

t see all of it, you must have two weeks to see everything, but we shall do as much as we can.


I want to go back,

Marion objected.

My friends aren

t here, and if they go back to the Rest House they won

t know where I am.

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