The Seventh Scroll - Smith Wilbur - Страница 77
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"Why not, indeed?" she laughed. "We will be able to make a more detailed
inspection of the quarry tomorrow early."
He stood up to start gathering firewood, but then stopped and looked up
at the sky. She heard it too, that now familiar fluttering whistle in
the air.
"The Pegasus helicopter once again," he said unnecessarily. "I wonder
what the hell they are up to at this time of day?"
They both stared up into the gathering darkness and watched the
navigational lights of the aircraft pass a thousand feet overhead,
flashing red and green and white as it headed southwards in the
direction of the monastery.
Nicholas built a small fire in the corner of the quarry nearest the
entrance, and as they sat around it he divided the pack of dry survival
rations into three parts. They nibbled them, and washed down the sweet
and sticky concentrated tablets with water from his bottle.
The fire threw ghostly reflections up the side of the ed the moving
shadows. When a quarry wall, and enhanc.
nightjar uttered it warbling cry from a niche high up the wall, it was
so eerie and evocative that Royan shivered and moved a little closer to
Nicholas.
"I wonder if somewhere on the other side Taita is aware of our
progress," she said. "I get the feeling that we have him a little
worried by now. We have untangled the first part of the conundrum that
he set for us, and I'll bet he never expected anybody to do that well."
"The next step will be to get to the bottom of his pool.
That will be really one up on the old devil. What do you hope we might
find down there?"
"I hesitate to put it into words," she replied. "I might talk it away,
and put a jinx on us."
"I am not superstitious. Well, not much anyway. Shall I say it for you?"
he offered, and she laughed and nodded.
He went on, "We hope to find the entrance to the tomb of Pharaoh Mamose.
No more hints and riddles and red herrings. The veritable tomb."
She crossed her fingers. "From your lips to God's ear!" Then she grew
serious. "What do you think of our chances?
I mean of finding the tomb intact?"
He shrugged. "I will answer that once we get to the bottom of the pool."
"How are we going to do that? You have ruled out the use of an
aqualung."
"I don't know," he confessed. "At this stage I just don't know. Perhaps
we might be able to get in there with fullhelmeted diving suits."
She was silent as she considered the seeming imposs' ability of the task
ahead.
"Cheer up!" He put his arm around her shoulders, and she made no move to
pull away from him. "There is one consolation. If Taita has made it so
tough for us, he has also made it tough for anyone else to have got in
there ahead of us. I think that if the tomb is really down there, no
other grave robbers have beaten us to it."
"If the entrance to the tomb is at the bottom of the pool, then his
descriptions in the scrolls are deliberately misleading. The information
that has come down to us has been garbled by Taita, then by Duraid, and
finally by Wilbur Smith. We are faced with the task of finding our way
through this labyrinth of deliberate misinformation."
They were silent again for a while and then Royan smiled in the
firelight, her face lighting up with anticipation.
"Oh, icky! It is such an exciting challenge." Then her voice descended
an octave. "But is there a way? Is it possible to get in there?"
"We will find out."
"When?"
"In due course. I haven't thought it out fully as yet. All I am certain
of is that it is going to take a prodigious amount of planning and hard
work."
"You are still committed, then?" She wanted his assurance. She knew that
she could never do it alone. "You aren't daunted by the project?"
Nicholas chuckled. "I will admit that I never expected Taita to lead us
on such a merry chase. I imagined simply breaking open a stone gateway
and finding it all waiting for us there, like Howard Carter walking into
the tomb of Tutankhamen. However, to answer your question, yes, I am
daunted by what it's going to involve - but hell nothing could stop me
now! I have the smell of glory in my nostrils and the gleam of gold in
my eye."
While they talked, Tamre curled up in the dust on the other side of the
fire, and pulled his shaninut over his head. His rest must have been
interrupted by dreams and fantasies, for he burbled and squeaked and
giggled in his sleep.
"I wonder what goes on in that poor demented head, and what visions he
sees," Royan whispered. "He says he saw Jesus here in the quarry, and I
am sure that he really believes that he did."
Their voices became softer and drowsier as the fire burned down and
Royan murmured, just before she fell asleep on Nicholas's shoulder, "If
the tomb of Pharaoh Mamose is below the level of the river, then surely
the contents will be water-damaged?"
"I can't believe that Taita would have built his dam and spent fifteen
years working on the tomb, as he says that he did in the scrolls, only
to flood it deliberately and despoil the mummy of his king and ruin his
treasure," Nicholas murmured, with her hair tickling his cheek. "No, t
would have precluded Pharaoh's resu he that rrection in other world, and
brought all his work to nothing. I think Taita has taken all that into
his calculations."
She snuggled closer, and sighed with satisfaction.
A little while later he said softly, "Goodnight, Royan," but she did
not' reply and her breathing was deep and even. He smiled to himself,
and gently kissed the top of her head.
Nicholas was not certain what had woken him.
He took a few moments to place himself, and then he realized that he was
still in the quarry. There was no moon but the stars hung down close to
the earth, as big and fat as bunches of ripe grapes. By their light he
saw that Royan had slipped down and was lying flat on the ground beside
him.
He stood up carefully, so as not to disturb her, and moved well away
from the dead fire to empty his bladder.
The night was deathly quiet. No night bird called, nor was there the
sound of any of the other nocturnal creatures.
The rocks around him still radiated the heat of the previous day's
sunlight.
Suddenly the sound that had woken him was repeated.
It was a faint and distant susurration that echoed along the cliffs, so
that he could form no judgement as to the direction from which it came.
But he was in no doubt what the sound was. He had heard it so often
before. It was the sound of faraway automatic gunfire, almost certainly
an AK-47 assault rifle firing, not long ragged bursts, but short taps of
three rounds, an art that took expertise and practice.
He was sure that the person doing the shooting was a trained
professional.
He tilted his wrist so that the luminescent dial of his watch caught the
starlight, and he saw that it was a few minutes after three 'clock in
the morning.
He stood listening for a long time, but the firing was not repeated. At
last he returned to where Royan lay and settled down beside her again.
However, he slept only shallowly and intermittently, and kept starting
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