remembered nothing. My journal lay on the floor, its sheets somewhat creased, the flow of words stopped in mid- thought. The image of Akhenaten still stared down at me, as if I was already failing on the job. But I felt strangely rested. Had I been so tired to sleep like that? I checked the room. Nothing seemed changed. I examined the journal: no sheets torn out, no markings. Yet-something felt different. As if there were a trace of some other presence in the memory of the air. Had there been some potion in the water? I remembered then its unusual sweetness.
The knocking was repeated. I called out ‘Enter!’ in an authoritative way that I hoped disguised my afternoon sleepiness. The officer of the guard who had conducted me to the interview, and then to this office, appeared at the threshold. A man perhaps five years younger than me, with careful eyes and a well-learned expression of caution accommodated within a pleasant, alert and undistinguished face. He was followed by a younger man, more handsome, neat and smooth, with the eyes of a charmer and that deliberately slow leisure of movement common to our profession.
‘What is your name?’ I addressed the more senior of the pair.
‘Khety, sir.’
‘A wise name for a wise man?’
‘My parents hoped so, sir.’
‘We gain power from our names, don’t you believe?’
‘It is generally believed to be so, yes, sir.’
He held himself carefully. Unconfidently confident.
‘How long have you been here, Khety?’
‘Since the beginning, sir. With Mahu himself.’
‘You mean since the city was built?’
‘All my life. My father worked for him before me.’
This was common practice, of course. The generations of a low-or even middle-ranking family would have a great deal to gain by such an alliance, as well as a great deal to lose if they were in any way to fall from favour. But it told me quite candidly, and as I might easily have guessed, that I must deal carefully with this officer. Bring him in to my researches while knowing that every detail and every step will be reported to Mahu. All perfectly normal.
‘And you?’
‘Tjenry, sir.’
His tone lacked a touch of respect, but I liked his style, his hint of bravura.
‘I look forward to the benefit of your experience and knowledge during the investigation of the mystery.’
‘It’s an honour, sir.’ He allowed a touch of a smile to curve his lips.
‘Good. I need you to assist me, to show me the ways and the secrets of this great city.’
‘Yes, sir.’
‘You have come to conduct me to my interview?’
‘It is time.’
‘Then let us go.’
And indeed, the sun was setting, the shadows lengthening, trees and buildings now illuminated sideways; not the blinding incandescence of afternoon, but an evening world of gold, quicksilver and blue shades, accompanied by conferences of birds. We walked together up the wide thoroughfare and on to the neatly swept Royal Road as it ascended gradually towards the central precinct parallel to the river and the setting sun. Individuals were walking in the same direction accompanied by their obedient shadows, with an air of singular purpose, as if they must never be seen to be doing anything less than work vital to the survival of the state.
‘Khety, what is the principle of the arrangement of this part of the city?’
‘It is a grid, sir. The streets are all straight lines, and they intersect each other so that the buildings in their sections are all of the same size. It is perfect.’
‘Perfect, but not finished.’
He ignored my comment, but Tjenry added, ‘There’s not much time left now until the Festival. They’ve brought in extra labour. Even so, it’s going to be tough to meet the deadlines.’
Khety continued with his guided tour: ‘To the right of us is the Records Office, and beyond that the House of Life.’
‘The Records Office? I’ll want to visit that.’
‘It is an extensive library of information about everything and everyone.’
‘It’s the only one in the whole of the Two Lands,’ chipped in Tjenry brightly, as if he thought it was a great idea.
‘So we are all in there, reduced to information?’
‘I believe so,’ said Khety.
‘It is amazing how a few marks on papyrus can be said to represent all our histories and secrets, and be stored, and read, and remembered.’
Khety nodded as if he was not sure what I was talking about.
‘And what is that construction beyond?’
‘The Small Aten Temple.’
‘And that in the distance?’ I could see ahead, opposite the sparkle and sails of the Great River, a low and immensely long building.
‘The Great Aten Temple, which is kept for exceptional festivities.’
‘Where am I to meet the King?’
‘My instructions are to bring you to the Great Palace but to show you the Small Aten Temple first.’
‘Houses, palaces, temples; great this, small that. It is confusing, isn’t it? What’s wrong with how things used to be?’
Khety nodded again, uncertain how to respond. Tjenry grinned. I grinned back.
Up ahead I could see the river of people and their shadows heading towards the great pylons of the temple, six of them arranged in pairs through the heart of the building, dazzlingly white. Streamers of multicoloured cloth drifted elegantly in the river breeze from their high poles as if they had all the time in the world. Unfinished hieroglyphs covered the stone facades of the pylons, illuminated gold by the setting sun. I struggled to read some of them, but I have never been good at this. Then we passed between the central pylons, jostled stiffly by the human stream that narrowed through the guard gate under another carving of the Aten, then bunched, hustled and distributed itself out into an open courtyard with colonnades on each side. The people dispersed expertly to their offices and appointments. Sunset is an important time of prayer, in these days more so than ever before.
But this was a temple unlike any other I had seen. The great dark stone temples at Karnak are labyrinths lit by a few spots of intense white light, leading to ever more obscure chambers, all ensuring the god is kept perpetually hidden deep in the shadowy heart of his House, away from the ordinary light of the world and its teeming temporal worshippers. This was deliberately designed to be exactly the opposite, wide open to the air and the sun. Vast walls were decorated with thousands of images in panels and sections, almost all of them, as far as I could see, depicting Akhenaten, Nefertiti and their children worshipping the Aten. And the whole space was filled with hundreds of altars, arranged in rows, and all around the walls. At the back were chapels, again filled with altars. In the centre a main raised altar, surrounded by lotus-shaped incense burners, was piled high with food and flowers from both Upper and Lower Egypt. How clever to unite the offerings of the Two Lands in the one altar, and how ostentatious in our time of trouble. And everywhere one looked were statues, in all sizes, of Akhenaten and Nefertiti, looking down at their subjects not with the distant stare of official power, but with lively human faces, perfectly carved in the limestone, their hands intertwined or raised, cupped, to receive the divine gifts of the sun that on this evening, as every evening, were streaming down to them from a real sky. And people stood still, eyes wide open, their hands holding up offerings to the light: flowers, food, even occasionally babies.
I looked down at my own hands and saw that they were gilded by the warm evening light.
‘“Since he casts his rays on me, bestowing life and dominion for ever and eternity, I shall make Akhetaten for the Aten, my father, in this place,”’ Khety recited, and he smiled. ‘The god is everywhere with us.’
‘Except at night.’
‘The god sails the darkness of the Otherworld, sir. But he always returns, reborn to a new day.’
‘Speaking of which, should we not now continue to the appointment?’ said Tjenry, amusingly bored by the