there when he showed his face. The boy had to be found and any secrets he held somehow released. Only then would he be safe.

'I've seldom seen men work so hard,' Imsiba said, his eyes on the crowd massed in the distance. The glitter of gold could be seen above their heads, the elegant, upswept prow of the god's barge towed now by men rather than a warship. 'I pray the lord Amon makes the effort worthwhile.'

'You've heard Amon-Psaro is already in Semna,' Bak said.

Imsiba's face turned dour. 'How can a man expect a god, no matter how great and powerful, to heal a child so ill?

'What does Kenamon have to say?'

'He speaks with the unflagging faith of a priest, not the practical physician he is. But the closer we come to Semna,

I've noticed, the more often he kneels in prayer.'

The big Medjay's gloom was contagious, filling Bak's heart with grim and unwanted thoughts.

They strode across the sandy waste, neither in a mood to talk yet comfortable with the shared silence. Bak's eyes darted ahead, tracing the course of the slipway along which the lord Amon's barge was being dragged past the most formidable of the rapids below Iken. The route stretched across the sandy desert flat, a road paved with logs, slightly curved to form a cradle, lying side by side on a bed of dry and cracking silt.

As they neared the barge, Nebwa stepped back from among the soldiers surrounding the vessel and shouted an order. The men standing in front, well above a hundred troops from Buhen, took up the slack on heavy ropes attached to the craft, while others alongside did the same, their task to prevent the barge from tipping to the right or left as well as to aid with the tow. Several men carrying large round-bottomed jars hurried forward. Commander Woser and the officers Huy, Senu, Inyotef, and Nebseny stood off to the side with Kenamon. The lesser priests and a couple of soldiers purified for the occasion knelt beside the lord Amon's golden barque, waiting to lift it onto their shoulders and move it forward with the barge. The doors of the shrine were closed and sealed, protecting the image of the god from the noise and dust of the outside world.

A second shout from Nebwa. The water carriers tipped their jars, soaking the silt in front of the barge, making it as slick as the grease taken from a fat roasted goose. A foreman counted off the rhythm in a singsong voice, and the tow-men began to pull. Muscles bulged. A few men grunted, others cursed. Sweat poured forth beneath the heartless sun. The lower hull, gently rounded, bare of paint and gilding, slid forward on the bed of logs, its wood creaking and moaning with the strain.

A great golden barge traveling across the barren desert. Amazing! Bak thought.

Nebwa walked alongside, watching with a wary eye, alert for snarled ropes, a fallen man. Ten paces and he shouted again, bringing the barge to a halt, giving the men a chance to rest.

Bak let muscles that he had not realized were tensed relax and looked farther afield, searching out his men. A mixed guard of Medjay police and the spearmen Nebwa had selected formed a rough oval thirty or so paces around the barge. Others stood on higher ground off to the west, widely spaced yet not so far apart they could not communicate with a whistle or a shout. Their task was to watch the desert for marauding tribesmen.

'You've done well, Imsiba. I wish I could say the same.'

'I've had no opportunity to speak with Commander Woser.' Imsiba stared toward the officers with Kenamon. 'Have you learned yet why he raised so high a wall around the news of Puemre's death?'

Bak laughed ruefully. 'If he were the only obstruction I've found in Iken, I'd think myself lucky.'

The big Medjay gave him a curious glance.

'I'll explain tonight. After the lord Amon is safe within the mansion of Hathor. Now I must talk to Woser.' Bak grinned. 'I've been summoned.'

While Imsiba struck off to the west and the line of guards watching from afar, Bak circled around the weary tow-men. The officers and priests were too intent on their conversation to notice his approach.

Woser was saying, 'You surely don't believe Chancellor Nihisy will come all the way to the Belly of Stones!' The commander looked worried, Bak noticed with some satisfaction Nebwa raised his hands palm forward, staving off the words. 'You misunderstand. All I said was that I wouldn't want to walk in Thuty's sandals, or yours, if the man who slew Puemre isn't brought to justice in a timely manner.' 'The chancellor won't come,' Inyotef said. 'He's too new to his task, too busy slipping into the palace bureaucracy. He'll send someone else in his place.'

'Worse yet,' Nebwa snorted. 'A lesser man who represents a great one is always harsher than his master. Especially when the master is too far away to learn the true facts and soften his agent's decisions.'

'Do you always look on the dark side, Nebwa?' Huy kept his voice light, teasing almost, but he looked as worried as Woser.

'I call the score the way I see it.' Nebwa spotted Bak and a broad grin erased the gloom. 'Now here's the man who can save you from Nihisy's wrath!' He clasped Bak's shoulders in greeting. 'No man yet- has escaped his justice.'

'You exaggerate.' Bak spoke automatically, his eyes darting around the group, noting their reactions.

Woser's face was taut; tired eyes betrayed nights made restless by anxiety. Nebseny's mouth was a thin, tight line. The wrinkles etching Huy's forehead had deepened. Senu's eyes searched Bak's face and Nebwa's, as if he suspected a plot to spread fear among him and his fellow officers. Inyotef smiled, a trait Bak remembered from the past, the pilot's way of hiding tension, worry, fear, or any sign of weakness.

Nebwa eyed the barge and the men around it, some drinking beer from a goatskin, others oiling themselves to prevent their skin from drying, the rest sitting and talking or lying on the sand with their eyes closed. He gave no hint of whether or not he noticed the officers' reactions. 'You're too clever by far,' he told Bak. 'A man impossible to deceive.'

'You make me sound like one who walks with the gods,' Bak joked.

'You walk with the lady Maat, that I know.' Nebwa clapped him on the shoulder, grinned at Woser. 'You'll see. When he's in search of justice, he's like a dog with a bone. Once he sinks his teeth in, he never lets go. I wouldn't tread in the slayer's footsteps for all the gold in Wawat and Kush.'

Bak was delighted with Nebwa and the reactions he had brought forth, but he wondered if his friend had not gone too far. A cornered criminal, like a trapped animal, was apt to strike out with uncontrolled fury. If he knew from which direction to expect an attack, he could guard against it, but here, where one man seemed as guilty as another, he had no defense.

Kenamon gave the pair a disapproving scowl, patently unhappy with Nebwa's game and suspicious of Bak's part in it. 'Have you heard the news, my son?'

Bak caught the censure in the elderly priest's voice, and a deeper worry. 'What's wrong? Has something happened to Amon-Psaro?' The moment the words popped out, he knew he had made a mistake. If, as he believed, one of the officers standing with him was determined to slay the king, he had revealed what he knew in one short, ill-conceived question.

Woser gave him an odd look. 'Not the king. It's the prince.'

'A courier came to Commander Woser not an hour ago,' Kenamon explained. 'He carried a message from Amon-Psaro, who's gravely worried about the life of his son. He no longer has the patience to wait in Semna while the lord Amon makes his slow progress up the river. He's bringing the child to Iken.'

'May the gods save us all.' Bak's voice was flat and lifeless, his thoughts stalled.

'As the river is still too low to sail all the way uninterrupted by rapids, Amon-Psaro will come by the desert route. His entourage is large, more than a hundred men including servants, so they'll not be able to travel fast, but they should arrive in two days' time.'

Bak did not bother to hide the dismay he felt. No one, with the exception of the would-be assassin, could possibly guess its true source: the Kushite king on his way to Iken, walking onto the home ground of a man who wanted him dead. Like a honeybee buzzing toward a gossamer web, with a spider poised to strike.

He looked toward the golden shrine and offered a fervent prayer to the god dwelling inside. Let us soon find the mute child, he implored, for we've no other trail to follow.

Chapter Ten

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