necropolis at Saqqara. The word, borne by his young kinsmen, was one of outrage. The Greeks had shot arrows into the crowded bazaar! A seething wave of righteous anger rolled through Memphis. Men clamored for insurrection, shook their fists and spat at the mention of the Greeks.
'What of the Phoenician?' Menkaura asked.
Ibebi shook his head. 'They captured him alive.'
'We must do this alone, then.'
'What are you saying?' This from Hekaib, who served as supervisor of the royal building projects. He was a squat fellow, spindly-legged with a grotesque swag-belly. 'We're no match for the Greeks! '
'Hekaib is right. We're old men, Menkaura,' said the merchant, Amenmose. He wore his wealth like a badge of honor: golden pectoral, kilt of the finest linen, gemstones glittering in the hilt of his knife. Despite this display of cultured softness, his scarred body yet retained its strength, its flexibility. Thick silver eyebrows, flecked with black, knotted in a troubled scowl. 'Our days of glory are long past. The Greeks have superior arms, superior training, and superior numbers. Even in my prime I would have been hesitant. .'
'In your prime, I watched you cut through the men of Cyrene like a scythe through grain!' Menkaura said. 'And you, Hekaib, did you not fight in the vanguard at Sardis? And was it not you, Ibebi, who led the first wave of marines against the Libyan pirates of the Plinthine Gulf? Yes, we are old men, but tales of our doings still stir the blood of our younger kin — our nephews, our cousins, our sons. They watched the massacre in the Square of Deshur. Look in their eyes, and you'll see a desire for justice. With us or without us, they will fight. Without us, they will die.'
Menkaura let that sink in.
'My son's wife,' Ibebi hissed, 'was in Deshur. She took an arrow in the back. She likely won't live through another night. Her brothers are ready to fight, as are my sons. Menkaura's right. They need hands guiding them that have felt spear shafts and sword hilts before.'
Hekaib frowned. 'At Sardis, we fought to preserve an alliance I did not understand. We were willing to die for the homes of our allies. Can I do less for my own home?' He nodded at Menkaura. 'I will do what I can.'
Amenmose dismissed them with a wave. 'Given time, the Greeks will go away, just as the Assyrians did.'
Menkaura shook his head. 'No, my friend. Given time, the Greeks will destroy all we hold dear.'
'Can you be sure of this, Menkaura, or do you give voice to your grief?'
The old general bowed his head. 'My grief is boundless, Amenmose. My son, your friend, did not deserve to die, not like that. Though as expansive as my grief is, my outrage will not be denied.'
Amenmose hedged. 'What chance do we have without the Phoenician? If they can take him — him! — what chance would a gaggle of old men have?'
'True, the Phoenician is a killer like no other. He saved my life, I owe him that, but he saved me for his own purposes. If death is his portion, then so be it. I will mourn him. Yet, the Phoenician is one man. We,' Menkaura's gesture encompassed the tomb and beyond, 'are a nation. Two thousand Greeks cannot stop a nation, Amenmose. The choice is yours. Will you stand with us?'
Amenmose folded his arms across his chest, his head bowed in thought. 'If we do this thing and fail, we will be hunted men, or dead. I have not worked my entire life only to lose everything at the end.'
'When the Greeks take everything, Amenmose, will you be better off, or worse?' Menkaura leaned across the sarcophagus, towering over the merchant. 'When they drag your daughters off to slake their lusts, will you be better off, or worse? When your grandsons are castrated and sent to service a Greek tyrant, will you be better off, or worse? There are no guarantees in this, Amenmose. None. We all stand to lose our lives, and more. But what do we stand to lose under Phanes' thumb?'
Amenmose smiled wearily. 'You've not lost your gift for the game, have you my old friend? I will stand with you, though I do so with a heavy heart.'
Menkaura straightened. His eyes shone like glittering onyx. 'Then it is decided. Return to your homes and spread the word, but silently. Ibebi, we will need weapons; spears, swords, whatever you can get your hands on. Hekaib, from you I need intelligence, anything your long ears can discover about the Greeks — their names, their families, their whores. Amenmose, you and I will recruit fighters from the young men, from the old veterans, and from those who have had their fill of Greek arrogance.'
Menkaura knelt behind the sarcophagus. He moved aside a sand-colored tarp and uncovered a cache of swords, antique sickle blades gleaming in the torchlight. He tossed one to each man. Ibebi ran an appraising hand over the tarnished bronze. Hekaib caught his sword with more grace than his stunted frame implied. He stared at it like a long lost friend. Amenmose shook his head sadly and lay his across his knee. They looked to Menkaura.
'Let them fear us for a change!'
At first, there was nothing but darkness …
His senses returned slowly, in small increments, like a blind, deaf mute inching his way from oblivion's edge. He was aware of voices, of the smell of charred wood, and of a fiery pain lancing through his side. Something rattled in the darkness, and he winced as a cool rag touched his fevered brow. He tasted blood; his limbs felt like granite.
Faces welled and ebbed in the darkness. Matthias, tortured and screaming. Ithobaal, writhing in gut-shot agony. Each of his men in turn, eyes rolling back in their skulls, tongues swollen and protruding. Barca, they howled. Barca, they cursed. Barca, they pleaded.
'Barca.'
Neferu, clad in gauzy silks, floated through the blackness. Her face — thin and pointed — bore a look of indescribable ecstacy. Dark hair floated around her like the snaky locks of a Gorgon. Ruby lips parted; her tongue darted out. Barca, she panted. Barca, she moaned. Barca, she screamed.
'Barca! '
Hasdrabal Barca stirred, feeling dried reeds crunch under his naked shoulders. His eyes fluttered open. He squinted. The light from a guttering torch knifed through his brain.
'Ah, the sleeper awakes!'
The voice came from nearby, distorted, hollow. He tried to struggle into a sitting position but could not move. His arms and legs were like wood. He tried to remember. Tried …
'M-Matthias …?' he grunted, his tongue thick. He rolled to the side and spat blood.
Derisive laughter. 'No, not Matthias. I'm afraid your Jew didn't make it.' A pause. 'Help him up.'
Barca felt hands under his shoulders, levering him into a sitting position, his back against a wall. The room was hazy, indistinct. Colors swam before his eyes. He clenched his teeth and tried to focus.
Slowly, the room came in to view.
In the dim torchlight, Barca could make out few details. The walls were yellow sandstone, undecorated, the blocks rough and unfinished. Reeds carpeted the dirt floor. A door lay across from him, its stout timbers bound in green and pitted bronze, and cool air flowed from its barred grate. A man stood on either side of him; a third sat to the left of the door, his cuirass glittering in the uneven light. The smile on his lips dripped mockery. Phanes.
'I'm surprised you didn't kill me,' Barca croaked. 'If our situations were reversed, you'd be waking up in hell right now, like that Spartan bitch of yours.'
Phanes gestured magnanimously. 'That's where we differ, Phoenician. In my eyes it's not personal. Only conflicting senses. Your sense of duty conflicted with my sense of ambition. Ambition won, it's as simple as that. Lysistratis,' Phanes sighed. 'Lysistratis was a victim of your duty, my ambition. He will be missed.'
Barca glared at the Greek. 'You've not won,' he said, 'so long as I have breath in my lungs.'
Phanes chuckled, propping his chin on his fist. 'When I see you, I'm reminded of a dog my father had when I was a boy, on our farm in Halicarnassus. It was a scruffy, little black hound; easily the most stubborn beast I have ever seen. It had this patch of ground on a hilltop, at the base of an ancient oak, where it liked to take naps. Zeus have mercy on any poor soul foolish enough to want to sit in that hound's spot. Its hackles would rise, and it would howl and bay as though you'd put the bronze to it.
'Anyway, one summer my father allowed a band of mercenaries to set up shop on the crest of that hillock, to make the Carians think again before raiding our lands. They built their mess area right there under the oak. That dog, it went mad. Day and night it would harry those soldiers, growling, barking, gnawing at their legs when they got careless. They tried throwing stones at that dog. They tried burning it, whipping it — one even tried catching it