The next day Freddy announced at breakfast,
which was a typically English meal except
for the excellence of the coffee that there
was to be a very extra-special ball the next night
at the Cataract Hotel at Assuan.
“Would you like to go to it,
Meg?” he asked. “I think you’d
enjoy it I can guarantee you plenty of
partners.”
“Would you go to it if I wasn’t
here?” Meg asked tentatively. The old
Meg in her thrilled at the idea of dancing on a good
floor with good partners. Freddy had told her
of Michael’s record as a dancer, so she knew
that she could count on two partners, at least, for
Freddy and she had learnt dancing together, and had
enjoyed nothing better than waltzing with each other.
“Yes, I thought of going,”
Freddy said. “I can leave everything all
right here, and it’s about time we had a day
off.” He turned to Michael. “Carruthers
is coming to see me. He wants to stay the night,
so that’s all right.” Carruthers
was a fellow-excavator attached to a camp at Memphis.
“Then I’d love to go,”
Meg said. “I haven’t danced for ages,
but I left my ‘gay rags’ at Luxor.”
“I’ll send Abdul for them,”
Freddy said, “and you can go to Assuan early
to-morrow and get your traps in order. I don’t
want a fright, mind the tourists dress
like anything.”
Meg laughed. “I’ll
do my best, but don’t expect too much of travelled
garments.”
While she was speaking quite naturally
and with genuine interest about the ball, a vision
was forming itself before her eyes, her visitor of
the night before; the dark sad eyes and the emaciated
face of the heretic Pharaoh became extraordinarily
clear. It usurped her mind so completely that
she found it difficult to pay attention to the subject
which she was discussing.
She tried to banish the influence,
but failed. She had forgotten the name which
Michael gave to the God whom the Pharaoh had so greatly
loved. She could not even recollect the words
of his message. Only his luminous form and melancholy
eyes were there in the sunlight before her.
She began to wonder which vision was
the more fantastic and unreal the picture
which she had visualized of the grand ballroom in the
magnificent hotel at Assuan, filled with men and women
in modern evening dress, or the figure of the ancient
Pharaoh, as he had come to her in this barren valley
in the western desert.
“Wake up, Meg!” Freddy
said. “Dreaming seems infectious.”
Meg knew what her brother meant. So did Mike.
“Don’t forget that the
practical Lampton mind is a jolly good thing.
That old drifter won’t like living in a tent
or a caravan, on twopence a day, when he’s sixty!”
Freddy lit his cigarette; he had finished breakfast.
“You’ll come, of course?” His eyes
spoke to Mike. “Gad, what a topping morning
it is?”
“Rather!” Mike said abstractedly.
“Unless you want me to stay here?”
“Carruthers will be all right
here alone he knows the place as well as
I do.” Freddy’s voice did not express
much eagerness for Michael’s company at the
ball, and Michael knew the reason. Freddy was
unable to decide in his own mind whether it was wiser
to urge Mike to go and let him see Meg as Freddy knew
he would see her in all her pretty finery, and let
him enjoy the pleasure of her perfect dancing, or allow
him to stay behind and so avoid the risk of meeting
the woman whom he knew would be there. He had
seen her name in the visitors’ list in the Egyptian
Gazette. She was staying at the Cataract
Hotel at Assuan. He was so divided as to the
wisdom of Michael’s going or staying that his
response had lacked his usual note of sincerity.
“Then I’ll go,”
Michael said, for into his mind had floated a vision
of Margaret dressed in her ball-finery and dancing
as Freddy’s sister would dance dancing
with other men.
“Then that settles it,”
Freddy said. “We’ll go a buster to-morrow
night and we’ll make up for it after. You
can begin real work next week, Meg sorting
and painting, if you care to.”
When Freddy was ready to start off
to his work, Meg went with him. It was too early
for the sun to be dangerous and the air was deliciously
fresh and clean. Meg’s hands were dug deep
down into the pockets of her white silk jersey, just
as her brother’s were dug deep down into the
pockets of his white flannel coat. Meg’s
long limbs looked almost as clean-cut as her brother’s
in her closely-fitting white skirt. As Michael
watched them walk off together, he said to himself,
“They are absurdly alike; they are like twins they
see eye to eye and think mind to mind.”
As he said the words his sense of
Meg contradicted his last remark, for he knew that
he could say things to Meg which Freddy would not
understand; he knew that if they had thought mind to
mind he would not have asked her to keep the secret
which they now held between them.
Thoughts full of tender affection
for Freddy made him feel happily contented; to have
such a friend and to be allowed to work with him was
a privilege deserving of sincere thanks. For
a few moments he stood lost in gratitude and praise.
These dreaming moments, about which he was so often
good-naturedly chaffed, were not entirely wasted; they
gave him the spiritual food his nature demanded.
The desert holds many prayers.
“Why so abstracted to-day, Meg?”
Freddy said, as they reached the site of excavation.
Margaret was no great talker at any time, but there
was something new in her silence this morning and
Freddy felt it.
“Am I abstracted? I didn’t know
it.”
“A bit off colour? Are
you feeling the sun? You’d better go back
before it gets any hotter and rest more to-day, if
we’re to go to the dance to-morrow.”
“Oh, I adore the sun,”
Meg said. “I believe in my former incarnation
I worshipped it.”
“A disciple of Akhnaton?
I think we all are, if we only knew it. Poor
Akhnaton!”
“Oh, Freddy, who was this Akhnaton?
No, I forgot don’t tell me.”
Her voice, for Meg, was emotional, excited.
“I want to spell things out for myself.”
“What do you know about him?”
Freddy said. “I thought you hadn’t
begun reading yet? Has Mike been preaching his
religion? Mike’s dotty on Akhnaton his
religion’s all right, but as a king he was an
ass.”
“No, no, Mike hasn’t told
me anything about him and I really would rather come
to him in his proper place in history. I mustn’t
dip, though it’s a great temptation, but it
spoils serious work.”
They had stopped and were looking
down from the height of the desert to the level of
the excavation which was furthest advanced. Things
had developed greatly since Margaret’s first
visit. Now she was able to see that they were
at work upon a vast building of some description.
The enormous size and the beautiful cutting of the
stones and the exquisite strength of the mortarless
masonry indicated noble proportions.
“How interesting it’s
getting!” she said. “I love these
blocks of evenly-hewn stone in the sand they
look so mysterious, and eternal.”
“I want to take the men off
this, if we’re going to Assuan to-morrow it’s
getting too hot.”
“Why?”
“Because there were indications
yesterday that we had struck a sort of rubbish-heap
of things which had been turned out of the tomb.”
“What kind of things?”
“I don’t know yet . .
. all sorts of things. Probably the relatives
of the dead threw them out when they visited the tomb
from time to time; just as we throw away faded wreaths
and flowers, they threw away accumulations of broken
vases and offerings.”
“And you don’t want the workmen to know?”
“I want to be on hand when they
are cleaning it up, and it can’t all be done
in one day. They are quite capable of sneaking
back here before the gaphir’s about in
the morning, to see what they can pick up, to sell
to the visitors in Luxor. It’s a great
temptation.”
“I suppose they consider the
tiny things they find far more theirs than ours?”
“I suppose they do, but, mind
you, the Museum in Cairo gets its pick and the choice
of all that’s found in Egypt in the various sites
of excavation.”
“Oh!” Margaret said. “I didn’t
know that.”
“Certainly it does,” he
said, “and rightly, too, although nothing would
be saved or be in any museum if it wasn’t for
the various European schools. The natives would
eventually plunder and steal everything, and if the
excavation had all been in the hands of the Egyptian
Government, heaven knows where the treasures would
be to-day! As it is, Cairo has the finest Egyptian
museum of antiquities in the world.”
“Akhnaton was buried in this valley?”
“Yes, in later days in his mother’s
tomb. His first burial-place was at Tel-el-Amarna.”
“How odd! That’s
what he told me last night,” Meg said dreamily,
almost unconsciously. She could hear again the
sad voice of the Pharaoh, saying, “I was laid
in my mother’s tomb in this valley.”
Freddy looked quickly up at her; he
had left her to descend to the workmen’s level.
“So Mike has told you about him, then?
I thought he would!”
Margaret blushed to the roots of her
hair. “Just one or two things nothing
really very interesting.”
“I knew he would, sooner or
later. He’s got Akhnaton on the brain.”
“He really has scarcely mentioned
him to me never until last night.”
“Go back, Meg,” Freddy
said, as he disappeared down a deep channel in the
excavations. “It’s getting too hot
for no hat. You must be careful you
can’t afford to play tricks with the sun in Egypt.
It’s better to worship it like Akhnaton than
to trifle with it.”
“All right, I’ll go,”
Meg said, and as she went she wondered how it came
to pass that Akhnaton was both a sun-worshipper and
a devout believer in the Kingdom of God which is within
us.