tom sneaked back to steal the other two while he looked away?

All rules could be broken. One simply had to find a way where no blame would fall on anyone's shoulders. The mother cat trotted out of the shadows of the house, lifted a kitten by the nape of the neck, and pattered back inside. She was moving her litter to a new and safer place.

A broad smile flashed across his face, and he offered a silent prayer of thanks to the lady Bast, the cat goddess. 'What if we also built a shrine on the island for the lady Harbor?' He picked up another spindle, this one broken, and glanced often along the lane, making sure the tom did not return to stalk his innocent and now- unprotected prey. 'A new mansion it would be, but of modest proportions. Would you then agree to move the lord Amon?'

Imsiba and the other officers, trying hard not to laugh at so brazen an idea, stared at Kenamon, willing him to agree. The priest, his mouth twitching with stifled humor, walked to the edge of the roof and looked into the lane. The mother cat stalked out of the house and caught up another kitten. Kenamon burst into laughter. 'Not even the first prophet himself could argue with so fortunate an intervention by the lady Bast.'

Pashenuro rolled his eyes skyward. 'First you give us another day so we need not push so hard, and now you ask us to build a shrine. Will this task never end?'

Bak laughed at the Medjay's hangdog expression. 'You should be overjoyed-as I am-that we're getting off so easy. Once this fortress is habitable and Amon-Psaro in residence with the lord Amon, most of our worries for his safety will be over.'

'We'll be toiling far into the night, I fear.'

Bak sobered, fully aware of the enormous responsibility he had laid on Pashenuro's shoulders. 'Woser is even now explaining the task to a carpenter and a goldsmith. Minnakht is searching out the finest woods in the city, and Nebseny is raiding the treasury for gold. All you have to do is provide a firm and flat foundation in the most sheltered comer of this fortress.'

Their eyes automatically followed the little drifts of fine sand blowing across the open floor. With the northern wall repaired, that end was the least touched by the breeze.

After they had decided where best to situate the shrine, they walked around the walls, examining the finished work and discussing the effort yet to be made. The floor had been cleaned from one end to the other, the debris hauled away. A half dozen men were smoothing rough spots and filling holes. Two men were trimming bushes and cutting branches that hung too low. Other than the cook and his helpers, the rest of the men were scattered over the long, western wall, hanging from scaffolding, suspended from ropes, standing on ladders. They laughed and joked, chiding each other, Pashenuro, even Bak. They were men enjoying a job they would soon see over and done with, a job to be proud of and one never to be repeated.

Bak was delighted with the men and their effort, and he told them so. As for Pashenuro, he made a silent vow to plead his case to Commandant Thuty as soon as they returned to Buhen, asking that the Medjay be promoted to sergeant.

'I thought you should be one of the first to know.' Bak, bursting with self-satisfaction, raised his drinking bowl to Inyotef. 'As the man responsible for ferrying Amon-Psaro across the river day after day, you'd have been at his beck and call throughout his stay in Iken.'

A raucous yell exploded from a rough circle of sailors and soldiers sitting on the floor of Sennufer's house of pleasure, gambling with knucklebones. Laughter rippled through the group. Someone banged his fists on a wooden stool, beating out a hasty tattoo. A woman's giggle sounded behind ateavy curtain drawn across the door to the brewing room.

Inyotef gave the gamblers a distracted glance. 'I owe you another jar of beer, it seems.'

Bak picked up his jar, sloshed it around, and found its contents wanting. Holding it high, he signaled Sennufer to bring more. 'Having the god and the king in one place is more convenient for everyone-and safer.'

Inyotef's eyebrow shot upward. 'I wouldn't think safety would be a factor, not here in Iken. The only place in all of Wawat where there's less to fear is Buhen.'

Bak wished he could tell his friend of the threat to Amon-Psaro's life, but he could not do so until he somehow cleared him of suspicion. 'Haven't you heard of the child whose throat was cut while he ran through the market? I'd hate to think of the consequences should Amon-Psaro or any member of his entourage suffer a like fate.'

'I heard about the boy.' Inyotef expelled a long, regretful sigh. 'Terrible that one so young must lose his life like that. He was the child who served Puemre, I've heard.'

Bak sensed a question rather than a simple comment, but he had not brought Inyotef to the house of pleasure to hand out information. 'Tell me what you know of Senu.'

A befuddled and naked man, shielding his privates with a dirty kilt bunched in his hand, shoved the curtain out of his way and stumbled through the door from the brewing room. Tagging close behind was a scraggly young woman pulling a rumpled dress down over her substantial rear. While the pair made an unsteady trek across the room and out the door, the gamblers roared, slapped their knees, jeered.

'Your taste in houses of pleasure has never been dull,' Inyotef laughed, 'but I'm honor-bound to tell you, it's far from refined.'

Bak grinned. 'As you pointed out yesterday, I'm a policeman.'

The pilot eyed him over the rim of his drinking bowl as if he suspected Bak was needling him. Then he shrugged, dismissing the thought, and sipped from his bowl. 'If you think Senu slew Puemre, my young friend, you must think again. He's a good man and a good soldier. I can think of no one I'd rather stand beside when facing combat.'

'High praise indeed.' Bak shifted his stool so he could see his companion's face better through the gloom. 'Do you know him as well off duty as on?'

The knucklebones clattered onto the floor. A gambler yelped with glee, his companions groaned.

Inyotef's mouth tightened with disapproval, whether because of the disturbance or the question was unclear. 'Senu wed a woman from this wretched desert. He's sired children who know no other place but Iken and the Belly of Stones. He's even taken one of the taller and more fertile islands as his own and raises crops like a native.' Inyotef gave a sharp, cynical laugh. 'We've nothing to talk about but his duties and mine. I don't claim to know him.'

Bak heard bitterness in Inyotef's voice, and envy. Traits that made him uncomfortable, especially when found in a friend 'Like the rest of you, he's made it clear he hated Puemre. And with good reason, it seems to me.'

Inyotef snorted. 'His home is his life. Soldiering is merely the task he performs to place bread on his table. If he'd not been so involved with his family, he'd have seen the way Puemre coveted his company of spearmen and taken precautions.'

From what Bak had heard of Puemre, he doubted any defense would have stopped him for long. 'Senu makes no secret of his dislike for the duties of a watch officer. Is he equally dissatisfied with the course of his life, his career?' 'I respect him,' Inyotef said carefully, 'and within the limitations I've mentioned, I like him. He's not a man who'd slay another from behind, that I can assure you.' Bak could already hear the 'but.'

'But,' Inyotef went on, 'Senu, like all of us, has been the victim of whimsical gods, especially in his early years.' 'Good fortune follows bad as surely as day follows night,' Bak said, spouting a platitude an elderly aunt often repeated, a banality he hated though at times found useful. 'But you speak of Senu as a victim, which makes a lie of the promise of good fortune.'

'He won a golden fly, but the joy of it was short-lived.' Bak eyed his friend narrowly. 'Tell me straight out, Inyotef. Don't dance around the edges of the tale, teasing me with hints.'

'It happened a long time ago in our war with the land of Kush. He was a sergeant, new to the rink and inexperienced.' Inyotef stared into his drinking bowl as if reluctant to speak, swishing the beer around, bringing the dregs to the surface. 'He… He disobeyed orders, I heard, and told his unit to charge the Kushite army. Most of his men were slain, but they held off the enemy long enough for a fresh and superior force to move into the area and come to their aid, winning the battle.' The pilot paused, glanced at Bak with a sad smile. 'His bravery won him a golden fly, but his disobedience curbed what could've been a brilliant career. Now you see why he's bitter.'

The tale was much as Senu had told it, but with a different slant, one that made him seem more foolhardy, a danger to his troops. Bak had heard bitterness in Senu's voice, but he had thought at the time the feeling was more worthy than Inyotef believed, a bitterness over the loss of lives rather than a damaged career. The truth was no doubt somewhere between the two. As for whether or not Senu had reason to slay Amon-Psaro, Bak felt no closer

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