I said nothing. I wanted her to talk.
âMen always assumed they could beat me, and abuse me. And when I was too young to know how to take revenge, they did. Often. But as soon as I learned to defend myself, I began to kill them with my knife. And from then they learned to take me seriously.'
She let that hang in the air.
âRevenge is important,' I said.
Her eyes scrutinized mine. I made myself hold her gaze for as long as possible.
âWhy do you say that?' she asked.
âBecause a great friend of mine was murdered. I live with the hunger for revenge every day of my life.'
âYou might yet have the opportunity to satisfy your hunger,' she said mysteriously.
âI desire that greatly,' I replied.
âThen you must please me greatly,' she said.
I tried to return her look. I knew I must try to do as Nakht had commanded me.
âHow many men have you killed?' I asked.
âWhy? Are you impressed by blood?'
âI am impressed by you,' I replied. And it was almost true. For all her barbarity, there was something compelling about her. She pretended to be defiantly scornful of my praise, but I saw I had touched on something. And then I realized:
she was lonely
.
âMen love fear,' she said. âIt makes them feel alive. But you are different. Perhaps you have passed beyond fear because of the power of your desire for revenge.'
The light from the oil wicks quivered. The walls of the room wavered with shifting shadows.
âThe Hittite Prince in your cell is an extremely valuable prize. His father would pay handsomely for his return.'
She didn't reply, but merely poured new wine from an especially finely wrought jug. I tried again.
âEgypt has all the gold in the world. Negotiate with Thebes for his release. You will be handsomely rewarded.'
She passed one of the goblets to me.
âIf Egypt and Hatti both value that pretty boy so much, perhaps I should have him write two letters, and then cut off his hands, and send them one each, holding his plea, as proof he is alive and in my possession.'
I noticed how she tested the bouquet of the wine, and drank thoughtfully.
âI do not care to know why the son of the Hittite King is travelling by such a route, in such secrecy, to the Egyptian court. Nor do I care why high-ranking Egyptian officials accompany him. Nor why the man who commissioned your kidnapping wants you all dead by his own hand. It is of no consequence to me.'
âIt is of consequence to me,' I replied.
Our shadows wavered against the walls. She clasped her ringed fingers together and regarded me carefully. Her beauty sometimes shimmered to the surface, and sometimes vanished into a cold mask of anger.
âThere is nothing you can do to save your friends or this Hittite Prince. They are already dead. But you can make another choice for yourself.'
âI would never choose my own survival at the price of my friends' death,' I replied.
âOf course you could. I might offer you a new life. If you joined me here, you would enjoy the best fruits of this world, and the next. By my side.'
What could I say?
âI am honoured by your offerâ¦' I said. âGive me time to consider itâ¦'
âYou will not refuse me,' she said quietly. âYou must choose. Death, or life.'
Our eyes held each other's gaze again, and this time I did not look away.
She clapped her hands, and a servant hurried in, carrying a beautifully inlaid wooden box, a silver dish on long, elegant legs, and a candle. She opened the lid, and took out a small piece of something dark brown, and sticky. She placed it in the dish, and let it heat and melt over the candle flame. Then, as it began to fume, she earnestly chanted a short prayer.
âTo which God are you praying?' I said.
âTo no god! To my Goddess. The Queen of the Underworld. To Ishtar.'
âShe is unknown to me,' I said, recalling how the Babylonian Queen in Hatti had identified the symbol of the black star.
âShe is the Goddess of Love and War. She has wings of many colours. Her feet are the talons of an eagle. She stands on the back of two lions. In her hands she holds the rod and ring of justice. She is all-powerful.'
Then she offered me her bejewelled hand.
âCome,' she said simply. âIt is time to meet her. It is time to dream.'
The time contained in a drop of water is infinite. As I stared at it, gathering itself into itself in its own time, I knew a thousand years was held in the swelling beauty of the water drop. A golden tranquillity flowed through me, and it was the warmth and light of Ra himself. My hands and feet were heavy with calm, and very far away. I could, if I desired, raise my right hand and gather the stars like jewels from the sky, or carefully pick the moon from the vast dark and hold it in my palm, delicate as a moth. The walls of the chamber swam like clear water. The flames of the lamps moved freely, like fish, through the passing of time, through the insubstantial reigns of gods and kings. That which was near was also far away. Everything was illuminated with beauty and a calm glory. I was dreaming, but more awake than I had ever felt in my life, which all now seemed a dream; the pains and fears of the past diminished to tiny figures on reed boats set to sail on the sunlit ocean of the Otherworld. I was part of the endless sparkling glory of its waters. I moved forward, sweeping the lights with my hands, holding the glitter up to my face, going deeper and deeper into the endless delight of the lightâ¦
Very slowly I rose up from the depths of the dream. I felt I had been with the Gods. But I felt inexplicably saddened to awake to the world, to the chamber, to the couch. Inanna was beside me, still lost in her own dream. Her lips were slightly parted, and her eyes flickered under her eyelids. We were both naked. Her skin was warm and soft against mine. Sudden fear gripped my heart in its fist. I moved quickly away from her and stood in the dark, the chamber spinning around me. What had happened? What had I done? I struggled to remember the events of the night. I recalled the invitation to partake of the drug; then wanting to vomit; but next being overcome by a slow, golden sensation of tranquillity and bliss. And then I remembered Inanna chanting to her Goddess, and stripping naked before meâand I had been dazzled.
My mouth was dry. Panic danced through my body. I tried to breathe slowly, but Inanna stirred, and rolled over, stretching like a cat. And she saw me, and smiled, and reached for me.
And then I knew exactly what I had done
.
Before she could see the look on my face, I bent to the washbowl, and cupped water in my shaking hands, and splashed the water on my face. I had to bring myself back. I had experienced a kind of bliss, but now all I felt was torment. I had to get away from her. I moved silently to the doors, but when I opened them, two guards stood facing me, and waved me back into the chamber. Inanna beckoned to me.
We rode out together on a pair of magnificent horses into the fresh morning. Her henchmen watched me antagonistically, and then turned their backs, muttering quietly to each other, as if they knew something I didn't.
The sun blazed in the clear sky, adding a fine warmth to the cool, clear air. From time to time, Inanna glanced at me; we had been intimate, and yet now we were as distant as strangers. I felt like a stranger to myself; the world of my real life seemed far away. My friends were prisoners of this woman, and here I was, riding out with her as if I were her lover. The golden bliss of the drug still lingered inside me, but I felt as if I were trapped in a nightmare of betrayal from which I could not wake.
We rode along a busy way, passing between the fields that climbed the slopes of the wide valley. Above us, the grey and silver mountains glinted in the powerful morning light. The sloping opium fields were busy, full of men and teenage boys, their heads shrouded in cloths to protect them from the sun, working backwards through the crops, scraping the night's sticky harvest from the seed-heads into containers hanging from their necks, while younger children were set to weeding among the plants. Some workers were seeding newly ploughed fields. In others, the poppy plants bore new white flowers.
âEach crop comes to fruit in four moons. The Goddess rewards us,' Inanna said proudly.
She showed me a seed-head ready for scoring; it was dark green, and the crown, which had held the petals, was standing straight out. She produced the three-bladed knife with which she had cut Zannanza, and deftly pulled it upwards across the skin of the seed-head. It made only the shallowest of incisions, but instantly white tears of pungent sap appeared.
âThe tears of joy,' she said.
âYou need many hundreds of labourers to harvest the cropâ¦'
âEveryone here belongs to me. This is my kingdom.'
âAnd they have no idea that each of them is harvesting something that could earn them fortunes beyond their dreams, in the cities of Egypt, and no doubt elsewhere?' I said.
She turned to me.
âAnd what would they do with such knowledge, or with such fortunes? I give them all they need, all they desire.'
âSurely some of your men know the value of the opium?' I suggested.
âThey get their share. And besides, they would not dare to confront me,' she replied.
âWhy not?'
âBecause I would kill them,' she said, and spurred her horse forward.
We rode on until we reached a small collection of simple shacks surrounding an open area, and a mud-brick storehouse. Farmers had come to exchange their harvest of opium sap for food and grain, some lengths of cloth, and primitive tools. Poppy seeds were raked out in large areas in the sun to dry. Big cauldrons were boiling over open fires. Inside these, I saw to my astonishment, the opium sap was being cooked. I watched as a cauldron was skimmed of leaves and debris, and then the liquid strained through a cloth. What emerged was a steaming brown broth, which was heated again, until it thickened into a dark-brown paste that was shaped into bricks. She offered me one to hold; I turned it over in my hands, fascinated. It was sticky, but dry and relatively lightâand above all, far more easily transportable than its liquid form, which required heavy clay jars.
We went into the storehouse. Shelf upon shelf held hundreds of blocks of the brown resin. At last I knew how the Theban gang had been able to supply such quantities of opium, and transport it across such distances.
âYou are amazed!' she cried, delighted by the look on my face, and slipped her arm through mine.
âYou are as rich as a goddess,' I said.
She nodded happily.
âWhere do you sell it?' I said, nodding at the stacked shelves.
âWhy do you ask so many questions?' she said. âWhy do you need to know such things?'
I had to be careful. If all of this were to save us, I had to remember Nakht's command. I knew I must take my chance, so I kissed her, and held her in my arms. She gazed at me warily, and finally allowed a wide smile to appear on her face. Her blue eyes shone. I kissed her again. Who was this traitor, who was doing these things? What was this feeling inside him? How could it be pleasure?
She led me out of the building, running with excitement. We cantered quickly away, and then followed a path, bordered with fruit trees and wild flowers, higher and higher, until we turned, and looked down at the valley, illuminated in the midday sun.
And then she pulled a jug of wine from her saddle and, arching her head back so that the red wine flowed expertly from jug to mouth, drank deeply. She wiped her lips, and passed it to me.
We sat on the grass in the sun, and looked down at the great valley of her extraordinary domain. Lying back, the echo of the opium's golden bliss still alive in my veins, I confess I suddenly felt a terrible temptation to let the weight of my old life fall away, as if into the earth and stones beneath me; all I would need to do would be to allow this strange, golden light in my body to enter my soul.
Suddenly Inanna was astride me, her magnificent hair glowing around her shadowed face as she gazed down. I reached up and held her breasts, then ran my hands down her body. She leaned down to kiss me lightly, her hair brushing my face.
âWhat do you see?' she asked.
âI see you,' I replied.
âYou please me,' she said. And then she laughed, an open, honest laugh of delight. She offered me her hand. I took it, and we rose to our feet. But then she stopped me, and gazed intently into my eyes.
âBut I do not yet trust you. The shadows of the past are still alive in you. I see it. But they will fade, as shadows do. You are here, now. You have awoken to a new world and a new life. You cannot go back.'
I assumed I would be returned to the cell, and to my friends. As we cantered into the stronghold, Inanna leapt from her horse, and shouted orders to her men. I jumped down from my own horse, but even as my feet touched the ground, I was surrounded, and my hands bound with cord. I was pushed into a different cell, and left there for the rest of the day. I shouted out to Nakht and Simut as loudly as I could, but received no reply. I sat with my head in my hands, in remorse at what I had done. The golden bliss had gone, and instead I felt gripped by a terrible new darkness. My body was wretched with tension. I paced the cell, trapped, desperate to be freed, kicking at the walls, trying to think what I could do to save us all, before it was too late.