had promised the righteous worshiper, as we look forward to everlasting life with the Redeemer these people never knew?
Walter did not appear to be absorbed in pious meditation. He was scowling as he stared down at the occupant of the coffin. Then he turned, holding the torch high as he inspected the walls of the chamber. They were covered with inscriptions and with the same sort of reliefs to which I had become accustomed in the Southern Tombs. All centered on the majestic figure of pharoah, sometimes alone, but usually with his queen and his six little daughters. Above, the god Aten, shown as the round disk of the sun, embraced the long with long rays that ended in tiny human hands.
'Well?' I asked. 'Will you excavate here, or will you remove the poor fellow from his coffin and unwrap him in more comfortable surroundings?'
For a moment Walter looked unnervingly like his shaven brother as he tugged thoughtfully at his lower lip.
'If we leave him here, some enterprising burglar will rend him apart in the hope of finding ornaments such as were sometimes wrapped in the bandages. But I don't hope for much, Miss Peabody. Some tombs were used for later burials, by poor people who could not build tombs of their own. This looks to me like just such a late mummy, much later than the period in which we are interested, and too poor to own any valuable ornaments.'
He handed his torch to one of the villagers and spoke to the man in Arabic- repeating the comment, I assumed. The man burst into animated speech, shaking his head till the folds of his turban fluttered.
'Mohammed says our mummy is not a commoner,' Walter explained, smiling at me. 'He is a prince-a princely magician, no less.'
'How does he know that?'
'He doesn't. Even if Mohammed could read the hieroglyphs, which he cannot, there is no inscription on the coffin to give the mummy's name. He is only trying to increase the backsheesh I owe him for this find.'
So Mohammed was the discoverer of this tomb. I studied the man with interest. He looked like all the other villagers -thin, wiry, epicene, his sunbaked skin making him look considerably older than his probable age. The life span in these villages is not high. Mohammed was probably no more than thirty, but poverty and ill health had given him the face of an old man.
Seeing my eye upon him he looked at me and grinned ingratiatingly.
'Yes,' Walter said thoughtfully. 'We must take our anonymous friend along. Radcliffe can unwrap him; it will give him something to do.'
Emerson was delighted with the find; he fell on the mummy with mumbled exclamations, so after making sure his temperature and pulse were normal, I left him to his ghoulish work. When he joined us on the ledge that evening, however, he was vociferously disappointed.
'Greco-Egyptian,' he grumbled, stretching his long legs out. 'I suspected as much when I saw the pattern of the wrappings. Yes, yes; the signs are unmistakable. I am familiar with them from my own research; no one has done any work on this problem, although a chronological sequence could be worked out if one- '
'My dear fellow, we are all of us familiar with your views on the deplorable state of archaeology in Egypt,' Walter broke in, with a laugh. 'But you are wrong about the mummy. Mohammed swears it is that of a princely magician, a priest of Amon, who placed a curse on this heretical city.'
'Mohammed is a scurvy trickster who wants more money,' growled Emerson. 'How does he know about heretics and priests of Amon?'
'There is another project for you,' Walter said. 'Investigating the traditions and folk memories of these people.'
'Well, his folk memory is wrong in this case. The poor chap whose wrappings I removed this afternoon was no priest. It frankly puzzles me to find him here at all. The city was abandoned after Khuenaten's death, and I did not think there was a settlement here in Ptolemaic times. These present villages did not occupy the site until the present century.'
'I doubt that the tomb was used by the official who had it built,' Walter said. 'The reliefs in the corridor were not finished.'
'What have you done with our friend?' I asked. 'I hope you are not planning to make him the third occupant of your sleeping dormitory; I don't think he can be healthy.'
Emerson burst into an unexpected shout of laughter.
'Being dead is the ultimate of unhealthiness, I suppose. Never fear; the mummy is resting in a cave at the bottom of the path. I only wish I could account for his original position as easily.'
'I might have a look at the tomb in the morning,' I said. 'That would leave the afternoon for working on the pavement- '
'And what do you expect to find?' Emerson's voice rose. 'Good God, madam, you seem to think you are a trained archaeologist! Do you think you can walk in here and- '
Walter and Evelyn broke in simultaneously in an attempt to change the subject. They succeeded for the moment, but Emerson was sulky and snappish for the rest of the evening. When I tried to feel his forehead to see if he had developed a temperature, he stalked off to his tomb, fairly radiating grumpiness.
'Don't mind him, Miss Peabody,' Walter said, when he was out of earshot. 'He is still not himself, and enforced inactivity infuriates a man of his energy.'
'He is not himself,' I agreed. 'In normal health he is even louder and more quarrelsome.'
'We are all a little on edge,' Evelyn said in a low voice. 'I don't know why I should be; but I feel nervous.'
'If that is the case we had better go to bed,' I said, rising. 'Some sleep will settle your mind, Evelyn.'
Little did I know that the night was to bring, not a cure for troubled minds, but the beginning of greater trouble.
It is a recognized fact that sleepers train themselves to respond only to unfamiliar noises. A zoo keeper slumbers placidly through the normal nightly roars of his charges, but the squeak of a mouse in his tidy kitchen can bring him awake in an instant. I had accustomed my sleeping mind to the sounds of Amarna. They were few indeed; it was one of the most silent spots on earth, I think. Only the far-off ululation of an occasional love-sick jackal disturbed the silence. So, on this particular night, it was not surprising that the sound at the door of our tomb, slight though it was, should bring me upright, with my heart pounding.
Light penetrated cracks in the curtain, but I could see nothing without. The sound continued. It was the oddest noise-a faint, dry scratching, like the rubbing of a bony object on rock.
Once my pulse had calmed, I thought of explanations. Someone on the ledge outside the tomb- Michael, keeping watch, or Walter, sleepless outside his lady's chamber? Somehow my nerves were not convinced by either idea. In any case, the sound was keeping me awake. I fumbled for my parasol.
The frequent mention of this apparatus may provoke mirth in the reader. I assure her (or him, as the case may be) that I was not intending to be picturesque. It was a very sturdy parasol, with a stiff iron staff, and I had chosen it deliberately for its strength.
Holding it, then, in readiness for a possible act of violence, I called softly, 'Who is there?'
There was no response. The scratching sound stopped. It was followed, after a moment or two, by another sound, which rapidly died away, as if someone, or something, had beat a hasty but quiet retreat.
I leaped from bed and ran to the doorway. I confess that I hesitated before drawing back the curtain. A parasol, even one of steel, would not be much use against a feral animal. The scratching sound might well have been produced by claws; and although I had been told that there were no longer any lions in Egypt, they had abounded in ancient times, and an isolated specimen might have survived in the desolate region. As I stood