Read The Time Travelers, Volume 2 Online
Authors: Caroline B. Cooney
“Might I descend the shaft?” said Camilla eagerly, merely being polite, not expecting to need permission.
But Dr. Lightner refused. She was a lady, he explained.
On the one hand, Camilla loved being a lady: too important to take risks or get dirty. On the other hand, she hated being a lady: too
un
important to participate in the fun.
The mystery of the tomb, however, was not so much the single sandal, but its owner. When torches were brought into the depths, and the hieroglyphs on the stone coffin read, it turned out to be the sarcophagus of Hetepheres, mother of Khufu, who built the Great Pyramid.
Impossible. This little hole—a queen’s tomb?
Pharaoh forced his people to labor for decades to create
his
tomb—and stuck his mother into an undecorated closet?
“Surely, inside that sarcophagus lies the queen herself,” said the young man from Yale.
“How fabulous her mummy will be!” said the boy from Princeton.
Dr. Lightner spread his hands in a shrug. “One does not know these things in advance. Egypt likes to hold her secrets.”
“We must have a ceremony for the opening of her sarcophagus,” said the youth from Harvard, having been raised to expect things to go his way, “and invite all the important archaeologists in Egypt. Within easy reach are scholars and dignitaries from Germany and Austria, France and Italy, America and England.”
The site was chaotic as dusk fell. Egyptian workmen scurried and carried. Men from other digs in Giza came to discuss the find and the possibility of treasure. Camels spat and donkeys bellowed. The shadow of the Pyramid sketched a black line over the sand.
Camilla kept track of every member of the expedition.
The moment finally came in which nobody was looking in her direction. Camilla felt the nuns who had taught her calling
Stop it!
She ignored them.
She wrapped the gold sandal in her scarf and drifted away.
All the action was around Hetepheres’ tomb. She walked swiftly to the long low tent where young Stratton and the college boys slept.
She was now a thief. She could never deny that in this life, and in the next life, she must face her Maker, and when asked which commandments she had broken, she would have to admit that she had stolen.
But Hiram Stratton, Sr., had stolen a life.
There were five cots in the tent, each with some gear stacked by. Which was Strat’s? By the bed closest to the door, on a small scarred wooden trunk, lay one of Dr. Lightner’s volumes with a folded letter half-tucked into it. Camilla withdrew the letter.
Dear Katie
,
Your letters continue to make me feel worthless and self-indulgent. I participate in the opening of tombs—and you serve the most wretched humans on earth. That sickness terrifies me, Katie. One day, I fear, you will be what they are. And yet you chose that life. I will never understand. But I will always be proud
.
I sold my best photograph of the Sphinx to a London newspaper! I had to keep a bit of money to resole my boots; sand is hard on footgear. But here is the rest. Katie, buy vegetables and milk, so you resist illness. Go
ahead, laugh. You know
I
despise vegetables and milk. But I worry. You might spend this on chocolate for your patients, instead of upon yourself
.
Today we descend into the tomb I found! Pray I will take a photograph good enough to sell. Then I will have lots of money to send you
.
Your very dear friend
,
Strat
Camilla stood for a moment. Then she opened the trunk.
Strat had few possessions. A spyglass, that he might see across the desert. Notebooks and pens. A few changes of clothing and linen. A Bible, with a red ribbon marking his place.
She lifted the Bible, intending to see what book and chapter he was reading, but out fell the tiny envelope. It was not sealed, but the flap gently tucked in. Camilla opened it, too. The lock of hair Strat had told her about was black and shimmery as silk. It was very straight and did not want to be in such a small space, but leaped toward the opening, straightening itself as if it still lived and grew.
Annie
, thought Camilla, and the dank terror that had come through the gold sandal spread through her limbs once more.
She freed herself from the spell of the hair, put the gold sandal inside one of Strat’s shirts and stumbled away.
• • •
“The wind has brought tears to your eyes,” said Dr. Lightner, handing Camilla his handkerchief.
She blotted her tears.
From Spain Camilla had sent a cable to Duffie, telling him that Strat was with Dr. Lightner’s dig in Giza. Shortly she would send another cable. It would contain the news of the son’s ruin. A man who stole gold from an archaeology site was destined for the hellhole of an Egyptian prison.
Hiram Stratton would have no joyful reunion. Perhaps no reunion at all. Men do not live long in such prisons, what with cholera and typhus and murder.
“See how the desert has changed, sir,” she whispered. “In the dark, it stretches on like death.”
“That is the very horror Pharaoh tried to fend off,” agreed Dr. Lightner. “All these stones he piled into a mountain, a ladder to his eternal life, because he so feared death. That I can understand. But what possible explanation can there be for the tomb Strat found? Why did Khufu not equally prepare his mother for
her
eternal life?”
She gave back the handkerchief. Her deeds had shadowed her soul, and she was worthy of nothing, not even a square of linen.
“Miss Matthews,” said Dr. Lightner, “might I ask a most special favor of you?”
“Of course, sir,” she said drearily.
“The French embassy is giving a dinner party. It seems that a major American art collector is arriving in Cairo. Over the years he has purchased many a French
oil painting. We are privileged to meet him and of course invite him to our excavation.”
Camilla kept forgetting she was here as a reporter. Dr. Lightner would want this event in the newspapers back in America and so would the art collector. She had never read a society column in her life. She had no idea what to write about such an event.
“Miss Matthews,” said Dr. Lightner, “would you do me the honor of allowing me to escort you to this dinner?”
She was not to attend as a female reporter with work to do. She had been asked as a guest. A man—a
tall
man—had sought out her company. “You are so kind, sir,” she said, her words stumbling on her tongue. “I regret, however, that when I packed my trunks, I did not plan for a ball at the French embassy.”
He beamed. “I have already communicated with a friend whose wife has a plentiful wardrobe and will be delighted to assist you.”
Men, Camilla thought. Whoever she is, her clothing won’t fit me. It’s too late to call a dressmaker. I have literally nothing to wear on such an evening.
But she was too touched by his eagerness to tell him how silly he was; that she, Camilla Mateusz, made even dressmakers laugh. And then she remembered that Camilla Mateusz did not exist. “Dr. Lightner, it will be my privilege.”
And privilege it was.
Two dressmakers used up two gowns to create one
for Camilla. With anyone else, Camilla would have been weeping. Lady Clementine made it a party.
The maids cleverly stitched an entire ten inches to the length of one gown by using the ruffles off the other. “I feel like Cinderella,” said Camilla, laughing.
“Indeed,” said Lady Clementine, smiling. “And here are your borrowed slippers. Silver-toed. Are they not fashionable? Luckily, my feet are large for me and your feet are small for you.”
Slippers …
Was the gold slipper even now being discovered in Strat’s trunk? Would Dr. Lightner arrive at Lady Clementine’s shocked and heartsick, having learned that his cameraman was a thief? Was Strat even now in some dark prison, without light or air or hope?
What price revenge? thought Camilla. My soul. Strat’s future. But I do not care about either one. I want Hiram Stratton to suffer, and he will.
“Now stand tall, my dear,” said Lady Clementine. “Do not slump. Dr. Lightner is halfway in love with you, and it is your splendid height that attracts him.”
“Halfway in love? With me?”
“Of course. You are as tall and strong as a pillar of Karnak, I believe he said. He is quite smitten. Of course archaeologists are a difficult group, my dear. Think twice. They are apt to be demanding, pernickety and dusty.”
Camilla laughed.
“Capitalize upon your height. Throw your shoulders back. Be tall.”
Nobody had ever instructed Camilla to do that.
Lady Clementine became very serious. “I see you are well educated and more than capable of presenting fine arguments during table discussions. Remember that ladies in search of a husband do not demonstrate brains.” Lady Clementine fixed around Camilla’s throat a beautiful necklace of shimmering pearls.
In the looking glass, Camilla found, as many a girl before her, that the wearing of beautiful clothing and jewels made her lovelier and more worthy.
“Perfect!” cried Lady Clementine. “Just so must you blush and lower your eyes. It draws men’s eyes toward your bosom, you know, and away from your mind. You must not display your mind.”
“Thank you,” said Camilla gratefully, and they pantomimed hugs, such as decoratively dressed and coiffed women give one another.
S
ince dawn, Annie had been pointing toward the Great Pyramid. By the time Pankh arrived in mid-morning, Annie’s gestures had crossed the language barrier. Renifer coaxed Pankh to take them to see the Pyramid.
Pankh was unwilling.
It took considerable pouting and pleading to change his mind. Renifer was excellent at both. Flouncing around in her dress, a very thin gauze pressed in stiff pleats, Renifer made it clear that neither gold nor gifts would make her happy. Only an excursion to the Pyramid.
Finally Pankh shrugged and nodded.
Annie held Renifer’s hand as they threaded through narrow streets shaded by canvas canopies, lined with stalls selling spices and cookpots and shoes. They passed walled houses and tenements, donkeys tied in stable yards, geese in the road and even a royal procession.
Everybody knelt to gaze lovingly at a young woman on a litter covered in beaten gold. A princess, perhaps, reclining on pillows under her fringed shade? Four bulky men in tiny white kilts carried the litter on their
shoulders. They walked rhythmically, one counting, like rowers on a crew team.
At the waterfront, Pankh commandeered a boat. Two men rowed half-standing, toes braced against a shelf. They moved quickly on the river, a breeze bucketing inside a much-mended sail. Annie was mesmerized by the water traffic: little boats, tubby boats, oared boats and sailboats, barges loaded with stone or casks, logs or bales.
Along the banks of the Nile, hundreds of men labored, making bricks out of mud. Villages were perched on the heights, their little mud-brick dwellings like piles of little brown wren houses.
From the Nile, they entered a canal, straight-sided as a ruler, slicing through fields and orchards, palm trees and grazing sheep. They steered into a square lake, neatly sided by cut stone, and pulled up to a wharf. Soldiers paced up and down. Small sphinxes were being set in rows.
Pankh swept his two women before him and up to a vast temple.
So modern and harsh was its design Annie felt it could have been an electric power plant in Chicago or Detroit. They did not enter the temple, but walked through a vast portico and emerged on a paved pedestrian street with awnings stretched over pillars. Flowers had been laid on the whole length of the road, bouquet after bouquet, and their feet crunched on the sun-dried petals.
At the end of the shining road was Khufu’s Pyramid.
In the museum photograph, the Pyramid had been tiers of great lumps, two million brown sugar cubes, each the size of a dining room table. But at its creation, the Pyramid was slick with polished white limestone. It was surrounded by a sea of baby pyramids, flat-topped pyramids, temples, graveyards, mausoleums, steles—and one vast Sphinx, being chipped out of bedrock as Annie watched.
She began laughing with excitement. Strat must be here! This was the very place where he had taken his photographs. She must keep her eyes open.
She examined every passing man, giggling at the thought of Victorian Strat wearing a white gauze kilt like Pankh.
R
enifer thanked the gods for letting her live now; a time which would last for all time, embodied in this very Pyramid.
The girl of ivory was gasping in awe. Wherever she was from, she had never seen anything like this. But then, nobody had.
I was right to insist that Pankh bring us today, thought Renifer. The girl herself made it clear that this is where she must be. The reason she was put in my hands will be presented to me now.
They passed a priest in a robe of panther skins. As he approached, the priest lifted a large ostrich feather fan and hid his face behind it. Renifer was mildly surprised, because priests of the City of the Dead were the proudest men in Egypt. They did not hide their status. When she looked after him, to see which temple he entered, the priest was half-running.
They approached the burial place of Queen Hetepheres. Her chapel was a delicate structure, sitting at the foot of the thirteen-acre Pyramid like a child’s toy. Over the portico, the blue and white stripes of the awning
fluttered in the wind and the reflection from the silver floor was blinding.
On two blessed occasions, Renifer had been privileged to help Princess Meresankh honor her grandmother. Renifer had done the actual carrying of food to the dead queen. A royal ornament, Meresankh had never once used her hands. Handmaidens were so called because their hands did all work.
Now Renifer knelt to honor Pharaoh’s mother, motioning the girl of ivory to join her. Putting their weight on one knee, they leaned forward, extending the other leg back so as to achieve a position both graceful and helpless.