Because I needed Thoth’s bloody book to pound some sense into my own thick head, I thought. Because I was the worst savant in the world.
I slumped in the wicker basket, dazed. Too much had happened. The pyramid was locked, Bin Sadr gone, the Egyptian Rite defeated. I’d had a measure of revenge for the deaths of Talma and Enoch. Even Ash was reunited with his people in a struggle for Egypt. And I had resolved nothing, except to learn what I believed in.
The woman I had just lost.
The pursuit of happiness, I thought bitterly. Any chance of that had just fallen into the Nile. I was furious, heartsick, deadened. I wanted to go back to Cairo and learn Astiza’s fate, whatever it would cost me. I wanted to sleep for a thousand years.
The balloon permitted neither. Its bag was sewn tight. It was cold this high, my clothes still wet, and I felt dizzy from vertigo. Sooner of later this contraption had to come down, and what then?
The delta was a fairyland below. Date palms made stately rows. Fields formed quilted patterns. Donkeys trundled on ancient dirt lanes. From the air everything seemed clean, tidy, and untroubled. People pointed and ran after my progress, but I soon left them behind. The sky seemed a deeper blue. I was having, I thought, a glimpse of heaven.
I kept drifting northwest, at least a mile above the earth. In a few hours I spied Rosetta at the Nile’s mouth, and Abukir Bay where the French fleet had been destroyed. Alexandria was beyond. I crossed the coast, the surf a rim of cream, and drifted out over the Mediterranean. So, I would drown after all.
Why hadn’t I given up the medallion a lifetime ago?
And then I saw a ship.
Ahead on the Mediterranean was a frigate, cruising the coast near Rosetta where the Nile debouched with its long tongue of chocolate. The tiny vessel sparkled in the sun, cutting a foamy wake. The sea was dotted with whitecaps. Flags snapped in the wind.
‘It has an English ensign,’ I muttered to myself.
Hadn’t I promised Nelson I’d return with information? Despite my sorrow, dim thoughts of survival began to beat into my brain.
But how to come down? I grabbed the ropes holding the basket and shimmied to the bag overhead. I no longer had either rifle or tomahawk to pierce it. I looked down. The frigate had changed course to intercept my own, and sailors the size of insects were pointing. But I’d easily outrun him if I didn’t descend to the sea. Then I remembered I still had a stub of candle and a scrap of flint. There was a steel collar to hold the ropes under the gasbag. I peeled some strands of hemp and struck my flint against the collar, generating enough spark to ignite tendrils of rope, which in turn lit peeled strips of wicker, which gave me flame for my wick. Shielding my candle, I reached up toward the gasbag.
Conte had told me hydrogen was flammable.
I held the flame to the silk, saw it smoulder, a wink of light…
Then there was a whoosh and a clout of hot air punched me straight down into the basket, singed and terrified.
The bag had exploded with fire!
Flames ran up a seam like a train of gunpowder, boiling skyward. The balloon didn’t burst, the eruption was not that violent, but it burnt like a dry pine bough. I began a sickening plunge, much faster than I wanted. The flames gathered force and I threw all the rock ballast off to slow my descent. It hardly helped. The basket rocked madly as we spiralled down, trailing fire and smoke. Too fast! Now the whitecaps became individual waves, a gull skittered by, the burning bag was falling down around me, and I could see spray whipping off the swell tops.
I braced, and the basket hit with a jarring crash. A huge fountain of water shot up and the bag fell just past my head, hissing as its heat hit the Mediterranean.
Fortunately, the fire mostly consumed what might otherwise have been a soggy anchor. The wicker basket leaked, but slowly, and I’d given the frigate a beacon it could hardly miss. It was steering straight for me.
The basket went down as a longboat was being lowered. I treaded water for only five minutes before being picked up.
Once again I was deposited soaked and sputtering on launch floorboards, crewmen gaping, a young midshipman peering at me like I was a man from the moon.
‘Where the bloody hell did you come from?’
‘Bonaparte,’ I gasped.
‘And who the bloody hell are you?’
‘An English spy.’
‘Aye, I remember him,’ one of the crewmen said. ‘Picked him up when we was at Abukir Bay. He pops up like a bloody bobber.’
‘Please,’ I coughed. ‘I’m a friend of Sir Sidney Smith.’
‘Sidney Smith, eh? We’ll see about that!’
‘I know he’s not the navy’s favourite, but if you just put me in touch…’
‘You can put your lies to him right now.’
In short order I was standing dripping on the quarterdeck, so sore, singed, hungry, thirsty, and heartsick that I thought I would faint. The grog they gave burnt like a slap in the face. I learnt I was a guest of Captain Josiah Lawrence, HMS Dangerous.
I didn’t like that name at all.
And sure enough, Smith materialised. Dressed in the uniform of a Turkish admiral, he came bounding up on deck from some cabin below when the news of my rescue was passed to him. I don’t know which of us looked more ridiculous: me, the drowned rat, or him, gussied up like an Oriental potentate.
‘By God, it is Gage!’ exclaimed the man I’d last seen in a gypsy camp.
‘This man claims he’s your spy,’ Lawrence announced with distaste.
‘Actually, I prefer to consider myself an observer,’ I said.
‘Heart of oak!’ cried Smith. ‘I had word from Nelson that he’d contacted you after the Nile, but neither one of us really believed you’d make it out again.’ He slapped my back. ‘Well done, man, well done! I guess you had it in you!’
I coughed. ‘I never expected to see you again, either.’
‘Small world, is it not? Now then, I hope you got rid of that damned medallion.’
‘Yes, sir.’
‘I sensed nothing but trouble from that. Nothing but trouble. And what’s the word on Bonaparte?’
‘There’s a revolt in Cairo. And Mameluke resistance in the south.’
‘Splendid!’
‘I don’t think the Egyptians can beat him, however.’
‘We’ll give them help. And you’ve flown like a bird from Boney’s nest?’
‘I had to borrow one of their observation balloons.’
He shook his head in admiration. ‘Damn fine show, Gage! Fine show! Had enough of French radicalism, I hope. Back to king and country. No, wait – you’re a colonial. But you have come around to the English point of view?’
‘I prefer to think of my view as American, Sir Sidney. Put off by the whole thing.’
‘Well. Quite, quite. Yet you can’t capitulate to indecision in desperate times, can you? Have to believe in something, eh?’
‘Bonaparte is talking about marching on Syria.’
‘I knew it! The bastard won’t rest until he’s occupied the sultan’s palace in Constantinople! Syria, eh? Then we’d best set course for there and give warning. There’s a pasha there, what’s his name?’ He turned to the captain.
‘Djezzar,’ Lawrence replied. ‘The name means ‘butcher’. Bosnian by birth, rose from slavery, supposed to be unusually cruel even in a region known for its cruelty. Nastiest bastard in five hundred miles.’
‘Just the man we need to face off against the French!’ Smith cried.
‘I’ve no more business with Napoleon,’ I interrupted. ‘I simply need to learn if a woman I was with in Egypt survived a terrible fall, and reunite with her if she did. After that, I was hoping to arrange passage to New