Phanes passed a public well alongside the road in the shadow of a stand of palm trees. The canopy of green fronds crackled in the light breeze. A Nubian slave, nearly naked in the blistering heat, worked the creaky arm of a shadouf. His efforts filled the basin one bucket at a time. Men and women clustered around the stone-lined pond, some washing off the day's dust, others filling pottery jugs. A toddler squealed as his father splashed water over him. But, as the Greek ambled by, their laughter, their chatter, ceased. Even the children stopped, staring, fearful in the sudden silence. Phanes felt the hostility in their collective gazes.

They did not hate him for his foreign blood. Indeed, two generations of Greek mercenaries had honorably served the kings of Sais, their heavy armor shaping a political landscape ravaged by years of Assyrian rule. No, they hated him because, instead of serving Pharaoh as mercenaries should, Phanes and his men strutted about like conquerors, taking what they wanted, and who. None were safe. Not the priests in their temples or the merchants in their stalls. Not their daughters or wives. Not their sons. The Greek garrison strangled Memphis with a noose of arrogance and greed, tightening it daily. Phanes sneered at their impotent rage.

Ahead, a chariot cut through the human sea like the prow of a ship. Pedestrians scurried aside; the driver plied his whip to remove any stragglers from his path. Phanes grinned. The man who worked the reins was Greek, as well, though burned dark as an Ethiop by the relentless sun. His height, combined with lean muscles and a long jaw, gave Phanes the impression of a racing hound, a thoroughbred. He wore a short Egyptian kilt of bleached linen, belted at the waist. Phanes raised a hand in greeting as the chariot drew abreast.

'A true man,' the driver said, curbing the horses, 'would have made that run in full panoplia.'

'A true man,' Phanes said, 'or a Spartan?'

'They are one in the same.'

'You are Spartan, Lysistratis, yet I see no sheen of sweat on your brow. Did you sprout wings and fly to the Serapeum?'

'If I did, who then would look after your affairs in Memphis while we're off puttering in the desert?' Lysistratis said. 'Come. You've a guest. That fool Callisthenes has returned from Delphi.'

Phanes' grin widened, a wicked gleam in his eyes. He leapt up into the chariot beside Lysistratis. 'Praise the gods! That bastard's been away so long I feared he'd made off with our offering.'

'Why you would trust a fat and lazy merchant of Naucratis is beyond me,' Lysistratis said. 'I would have gone.'

'Only you would suspect good Callisthenes, jolly Callisthenes, of treachery. What was the oracle's answer?'

The Spartan shrugged. 'Wouldn't say. Says her message is for you, alone.'

Phanes expected as much. It wasn't superstition or piety that drove him to seek guidance from the gods, but tradition. Since hallowed antiquity, the Greeks undertook no expedition, nothing, without first consulting the proper oracles. Heroes sought divine wisdom in their dealings. Kings sought answers to thorny problems. Even the lowliest sheepherder beseeched the gods for guidance in raising worthy flocks and worthier sons. With that in mind, Phanes sent offerings to the temples of Zeus at Dodona, Gaia at Olympia, and Dionysus at Amphicleia. Thus far, the answers to his enquiries had been cryptic yet affirmative. The last, and the one he anticipated most, was the answer of the priestess of Pythian Apollo at Delphi.

Lysistratis hauled on the reins, his horses disrupting the flow of traffic along the Saqqaran Road like a stone dropped into a fast-moving stream. Egyptians scrambled aside as the Spartan's whip cracked above their heads.

Phanes openly leered at several of the women on the street, their linen skirts sheer, their bare breasts slick with sweat. 'I'll not miss this slag-heap of a land, Lysistratis, but I will miss its women. Egyptian women are so … liberated.'

'I've heard the women of Persia are more beautiful.' Lysistratis raised his voice to be heard over the clatter of the chariot's wheels. 'Think Cambyses will share his seraglio with us?'

Phanes grinned. 'We give him Egypt, and I imagine he'd let us rut his sisters out of gratitude.'

From the Saqqaran Road, they crossed the broad, redpaved Square of Deshur at the western entrance of the Mansion of Ptah, where the Alabaster Sphinx glowed in the setting sun. Around this recumbent image, the evening market swirled. Men and women employed by the wealthier households bustled between stalls selling produce, bread, meat, and beer, haggling over prices, and arranging delivery to their masters' kitchens. Priests of the temples stood aloof as their factors inspected lambs and sheep, seeking those of the finest quality to serve as the next morning's offering to the gods. One such priest turned his head as Phanes' chariot passed; the Greek was unsure whether the sneer curling the priest's thin lips was intended for him, or for the bleating lamb his agent held between his knees.

Phanes' eyes narrowed. 'No matter what the oracle's answer may be, it's time we started culling the herd,' he said, indicating the Egyptians with a nod of his head. 'Use the Arcadians. Leon's men. But keep them under strict discipline, Lysistratis! I don't want a repeat of last summer's little orgy of violence. We're not the krypteia, and these aren't helots we're terrorizing.'

The Spartan glanced sidelong at his commander. He had been responsible for giving Leon's men a free hand during last summer's troubles, and though he found their methods deplorable — whole families executed to the last child — they were effective. The Arcadians were experts at rooting out discontent among the populace. 'Where should they start?'

'I leave it to you.'

The chariot rattled over a stretch of broken pavement before plunging down the great north-south avenue, called the Way of the Truth of Ptah. Lysistratis said, 'There's a gaggle of wealthy men, old bureaucrats for the most part, who have been trying to get letters through to Pharaoh. Petenemheb showed them to me. Mostly, they complain at great length about the `arrogance of the Hellenes', and beg Pharaoh's intercession. I suspect they would organize any resistance the Egyptians might mount against us.'

'Who leads them?'

'Most of the letters came from a man called Idu, son of Menkaura. A merchant, of all things,' Lysistratis said, with a moue of distaste. His Spartan heritage gave him a healthy disdain for those who made their lives off the needs of others. 'A dealer of wine.'

Phanes grunted. 'Menkaura?'

'You know him?'

'There was a general from Memphis in the army of old Pharaoh Apries, during the Cyrene campaign. They called him,' Phanes barely suppressed a grin, 'the Desert Hawk.'

'If he's the same man, then his son does not share his martial pretensions,' Lysistratis said. The chariot passed beneath the twin colossi of Pharaoh flanking the gates leading into the fortress enclosure of Ineb-hedj, the White Walls. Hoplite sentries snapped to attention, their spear-butts grinding against the flagstones. Bronze flashed in the fading sunlight. Ahead, on a manmade acropolis, the citadel walls reared above the city it professed to guard.

'Use this Idu as an example,' Phanes said, his face diabolical in the thickening shadow. 'Menkaura, too. I want these Egyptians to bleed for me as I bled for them, Lysistratis. I want them to fear me before I pillage their peaceful little world.'

Callisthenes of Naucratis paced in a tight circle, his stubby fingers twittering with a finely carved jasper scarab that lay on his breast. Lamplight gleamed on his shaven skull, and the green malachite outlining his eyes — an Egyptian trick to lessen the sun's harsh glare — gave Callisthenes a sinister cast incongruous with the colorful linen robes draping his fleshy frame.

The antechamber of the throne room at Memphis recalled the glory of an age long past, an epoch when Pharaoh's shadow stretched across the known world. Under incised and painted murals depicting the battle at Qadesh, dark bearded emissaries of the Hittite king would have felt outrage at the portrayal of their lord as coward. Dark-skinned Nubians, accounted the tallest men on earth, would have been made to feel small and inconsequential beneath the mammoth columns that supported the ceiling, their shafts like stalks of papyrus hewn from cold white limestone. Messengers from Palestine would have found the bound figures etched into the stone tiles to be a source of distress: at every step, they would grind their captive ancestors beneath their bare feet. The effect the chamber had upon foreigners who came to Memphis, whether a tribute bearer or princely ambassador, was to remind them of their place by reinforcing the splendor and majesty of the Lord of the Two Lands.

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