'Do you remember her name?' Mohammed sat on the sandy floor beside his friend, the staff of fig wood leaning against his shoulder. 'Do you remember the golden city?'
Ahmet managed to nod, though he seemed very weak. 'I remember the last day. A dreadful shape rising above the towers...'
'You fell,' Mohammed said softly, 'and your body was stolen by the enemy. I searched among the ruins, but you had been taken away. Do you remember what happened after that?'
Convulsive shuddering wracked the emaciated body again and the Quraysh waited patiently until the spasms passed. This seemed to take a long time, though Mohammed noticed he did not tire, or grow hungry or thirsty. He began to wonder if time had any meaning in this place, wherever it was.
The Egyptian lay still again. Mohammed waited until the man's eyes opened. 'Do you remember now?'
'Yes.' The word was flat, and dead, and laden with enormous, inexpressible weight. 'I do.'
'How did you come to be here?' The Quraysh tried to restrain his curiosity—
A dry, rasping sound shook Ahmet's body and the Quraysh was heartened to recognize a feeble attempt at laughter. 'I do not know what this place is. I became aware of this desert when you touched my shoulder. Before that... I was... I was in Egypt.'
Mohammed frowned. 'Egypt? What do you mean?'
Now the withered, scarred lips twisted, trying to smile. 'I sat in a great temple—not the Serapeum, but one looking out upon the sea and the harbor—and the multitudes came before me, bowing, offering tribute and sacrifice.' Ahmet's hands moved, groping around his head. 'Hard to see what they dragged before my altar through the mask, but there were screams...' His lips fluttered, broken teeth making a
'What kind of mask?' Mohammed squatted, trying to make out the croaking words.
'...there were many priests and they wore the casque of Set and the lords of shadow... There were statues—new statues—of me... She was seated at my side, I could smell her hair!' Ahmet's eyes flickered open, filled with shock and surprise. 'I can
Mohammed shook his head in confusion, then remembered something Zoe had once done. 'Ahmet,' he said, grasping the man's shoulder and feeling a chill shock as his hand started to pass through the wiry muscle and bone. 'Ahmet, you are
'Open your eyes,' Mohammed commanded, putting steel in his voice. 'Tell me what is happening in the world you saw.'
The Egyptian focused again and the Quraysh thought he saw awareness flare in the dead eyes before hopelessness dulled them again. Ahmet lifted a hand, his dusty fingertips brushing Mohammed's face. 'Hah. Are you real? I can touch you—but any sensation may be deceived. How did you find your way into my prison?'
'I am a prisoner too,' Mohammed answered, now sure time was pressing. 'But I cannot see out into the living world. You can—is your body, your true body, in Alexandria?'
'My corpse, you mean,' Ahmet said, voice strengthening a little. 'Yes. A puppet, moved by a dark, implacable will.'
Revulsion and disgust twisted his expression. 'The Serpent's army has taken the city and my... my shape, for there is no better word, sits on a throne like Pharaoh and dispenses fear and terror in place of wisdom and judgment.'
'Who else is there?' Mohammed felt oddly adrift.
'She is,' Ahmet groaned, starting to curl up again. Mohammed pressed his shoulders down with both hands. A cold suspicion was growing, just under his breastbone. Bits and pieces of... of
'Who is
'The Queen, my queen, my beloved,' Ahmet whispered. 'She sits by my side and her voice is gracious and sweet as she pleads for mercy. We make a fine pair—one to distill fear, the other to offer hope—each on a golden throne.'
'Zenobia?' Mohammed felt the chill blossom into a deadly, breath-crushing flower. 'Or Zoe?'
'They are one,' Ahmet gasped, hands clutching on something only he could see. 'One more horror laid at horror's feet...'
Mohammed sat back, mind roiling with fury, despair, realization; a whirlwind of emotion. He grasped the staff for support, pressing his forehead against cool wood. A regal voice echoed in his memory:
'How... how did Zenobia—' Mohammed stopped, realizing what had happened. 'No, I understand. The Queen's mutilated body was a trap. Zoe took her corpse from the mountain tomb, and her mind become ensnared...'
Ahmet nodded, knocking his bare skull against the sand. 'He is fond of innocent-seeming lures. By our heart's desire we are captured and bound.' The Egyptian managed another hoarse, rattling laugh. 'He is strong, but made stronger still by the desires of others bent to his will.'
Mohammed grasped Ahmet's hand. 'This 'he'—the same wizard you fought on the plain of towers?' The Egyptian nodded. 'Is he a spirit, a god, or just a man?'
'He was human once,' Ahmet said bleakly. 'He let a power enter him—one of the pitiless, inhuman Great Old Ones who were worshipped before man, an incalculable power beyond comprehension—and has been transformed. Only a tiny fragment of his master's strength can pass through him—but that is enough to make him formidable beyond all others...'
Mohammed tried to voice a question, but his mind grappled with a sudden realization. Mouth working soundlessly, he took a breath, then managed to speak. 'Are these... Old Ones... opposed? Are they the wellspring of evil?'
Dead lips stretched over rotted teeth and Ahmet barked another hoarse laugh. 'Evil? A human conceit, my friend. Do you remember our discussions round the campfire? The wise thoughts of the philosophers and sages? They are no more than rubbish, the prattle of children too young and shortsighted to grasp the truth of the world. There is no good and there is no evil.' Ahmet shuddered. 'But there are things—powers—which dwarf the works of man and have lived so long in the abyssal spaces between the stars, death no longer touches them or makes them weak.'
Mohammed recoiled from the despair and nihilism in Ahmet's voice.
'You have abandoned hope,' the Quraysh said, changing the subject a little. 'You think
'He has!' Ahmet rose, eyes blazing. 'His will rides me like a ghoul, moving my limbs to murder, my power to strike—so many dead have I heaped at his feet I cannot remember their names! He sees with my eyes, speaks with my lips. I am no more than... a container for his desire. A tool to be picked up at need.'
Mohammed's eyes glinted hard, his suspicions confirmed. 'He holds the Queen—Zenobia—before you as bait, making you dance so you might see her once more, hear her voice, feel her touch? And too, now you fear death, don't you? You think there is nothing beyond the portal save annihilation and you cannot abide the thought of nothingness?'
Ahmet's face blanched and he lifted a skeletal arm to hide his face. 'There is