'Indeed, lord.' Abu set off without further discussion.
They reached the Divine Lotus with no other encounters and approached the rear entrance. The guard stared at them briefly but allowed them to enter the courtyard. Othrys's celebrations were still going on and had reached a gleeful loudness that irritated Meren. He drew his aide to a corner of the courtyard beside an ornamental pavilion.
'What should we do now, lord?'
'Listen to me carefully, Abu,' Meren whispered. 'The danger is even greater than we supposed. All who know the identity of this murderer perish, even warriors like Yamen. The only way to guard against such power is not to work alone. You and Reia will have to contact Ebana.'
'But Ebana hates you.'
'Perhaps. But we were brothers once, and I know him as I know myself. He loves me, though he has tried to cast me from his heart. He wouldn't have gone to my house if he weren't trying to help me. Go to him. Tell him what has passed, and tell him this from me. The guilty one who attacked the king must have met with Yamen immediately before we left on the raid. He probably has been known to have dealings with Yamen before. Tell Ebana he must find this man, quickly, before the hidden one who killed Yamen finds me.'
'Yes, lord.'
'And Abu-' Meren hesitated. 'If you should hear that I'm captured or killed, you must decide whether it is safe for Kysen and the girls to remain in Egypt.'
Abu grasped Meren's forearm in a warrior's clasp, which Meren returned.
'It shall be done, lord. There will be no need to leave Egypt.'
'I pray to Amun you're right,' Meren said wearily. 'Take great care when you leave this place. I'll get Ese to give me a room for the night. I must cleanse myself, and it's too dangerous to leave with the patrols aroused by Yamen's death.'
'Blessings of the gods be with you, lord.'
'They haven't been of late,' Meren said.
Once more keeping to the shadows, Meren gained the door to the tavern and stepped inside. The stairwell was empty, so he ascended to the second-floor landing, where he waited while several patrons passed by with Egyptian women dressed in Greek clothing. When they vanished into a bedroom, he continued to the third floor and eased open one of a pair of doors made of the finest cedar. Looking through the crack, he found the room beyond empty and went inside. As he shut the door, a woman came into the antechamber through an archway. It was Ese, the owner of the Divine Lotus. A woman of middle years and a youthful body, she had luxuriant, curling brown hair and an air of promised pleasures. When greeting customers, she exuded the mysterious attraction of Hathor, goddess of love. When she was not on duty, however, her dark, heavy-lashed eyes lost their light and became the flat, pitiless orbs of a serpent. As far as Meren could discern, her distinguishing characteristic was an abiding resentment toward all men.
Ese saw him, gasped, and nearly dropped the eggshell-thin ceramic cup she was holding. 'Ass's dung. What are you doing here, Tiros?' She addressed him by the Greek name Othrys had given him.
'My thanks for your concern for my welfare, Ese, but no, I'm not wounded, just drenched with someone else's blood.'
'Get out. You'll ruin my fine floor mats and furniture.'
'I need a room, Ese.'
'I said get out. Out of my tavern.'
'Don't you want to know whose blood this is?'
'I don't care.' Ese whisked past him and opened the door. 'Leave, or I'll call some of my men to throw you out.'
'Will you do that before or after you explain to Othrys why you've denied me the help you promised?'
He waited while Ese debated whether his presence posed a greater danger than the pirate's wrath. Again, her fear of Othrys won.
'Follow me.'
She led him to the chamber beyond the archway. Tired as he was, Meren paused in astonishment to survey delicate, hazy curtains billowing in a breeze. They were draped across a long balcony that overlooked the courtyard. The room itself was painted with a pastel blue over which had been drawn frescoes of the sea and its creatures. Placed about the room were caskets and chests worked in ebony, ivory, and cedar. He caught a glimpse of tables bearing embossed silver cups, goblets and flagons trimmed in gold, and an open jewelry casket. A necklace trailed over the rim, its beads in the shape of sun disks with spiral rays. Ese pointed impatiently to another door.
'Bathing chamber,' she snapped. 'Be clean by the time I return. I'll find something for you to wear. You'll frighten my patrons if you go about in that bloody tunic.'
When she was gone, Meren looked down at himself. His tunic, his leggings, and one foot were smeared with blood and dirt. His arms were no better. He screwed his face up in distaste, then stripped and entered the bathing chamber. He stepped into the plastered stall, picked up a jug, and began pouring water over himself from the tall vat that stood nearby.
As the cool water hit him, Meren began to feel the tightness in his body loosen. Weariness followed this release, and he dumped water over his head to keep alert. It was then that he remembered the wig. Pulling it from his head, he tossed the wet mass to the floor. He scooped up soap paste from a dish and rubbed his entire body.
Yamen's last words must hold a key to the identity of the enemy. What were they? Ah, yes.
'You're in a foul temper, lord.'
Meren whirled around to find Naram-Sin leaning against the door, smiling. Without thought Meren's hand had gone to his side, where a dagger should have been. He noticed the direction of the intruder's gaze. Scowling, Meren reached for a dry bathing cloth and wrapped it around his waist.
'What do you want?'
Laughter like the gentle lapping of water against a river-bank made Meren want to hurl the water jug at Othrys's scribe. Naram-Sin vanished for a moment and returned with a pile of clothing. Shutting the door, he placed his burden on top of a chest and picked up a tunic of dark green. Before Meren could protest, Naram-Sin gathered the fabric in both hands and dropped it over his head. Meren had no choice but to drop his towel and thrust his arms through the sleeves. Dragging the tunic down, Meren emerged in a fury, only to find that Naram-Sin had turned way to pluck a braided cloth belt from the chest.
Before his self-appointed body servant could touch him, Meren grabbed the belt and pulled it around his waist. 'Go away.'
Naram-Sin picked up a pair of leather sandals.
'What happened, lord?'
'My affairs are not yours.'
'Ese complained to Othrys that you were in her chamber, getting blood all over her valuable possessions. You're in danger, lord, and the master has made me your guardian.'
Meren looked up from tying his belt. 'I need no guard.'
'The master disagrees. This evening he has had reports of many soldiers in the city, and there are rumors that pharaoh will reward the man who finds you.'
Meren stared at Naram-Sin, who smiled his intimate smile. He knelt with the sandals and reached for Meren's