I
Scientists, or some scientists for
occasionally one learned person differs from other
learned persons tell us they know all that
is worth knowing about man, which statement, of course,
includes woman. They trace him from his remotest
origin; they show us how his bones changed and his
shape modified, also how, under the influence of his
needs and passions, his intelligence developed from
something very humble. They demonstrate conclusively
that there is nothing in man which the dissecting-table
will not explain; that his aspirations towards another
life have their root in the fear of death, or, say
others of them, in that of earthquake or thunder;
that his affinities with the past are merely inherited
from remote ancestors who lived in that past, perhaps
a million years ago; and that everything noble about
him is but the fruit of expediency or of a veneer
of civilisation, while everything base must be attributed
to the instincts of his dominant and primeval nature.
Man, in short, is an animal who, like every other
animal, is finally subdued by his environment and
takes his colour from his surroundings, as cattle
do from the red soil of Devon. Such are the facts,
they (or some of them) declare; all the rest is rubbish.
At times we are inclined to agree
with these sages, especially after it has been our
privilege to attend a course of lectures by one of
them. Then perhaps something comes within the
range of our experience which gives us pause and causes
doubts, the old divine doubts, to arise again deep
in our hearts, and with them a yet diviner hope.
Perchance when all is said, so we
think to ourselves, man is something more than
an animal. Perchance he has known the past, the
far past, and will know the future, the far, far future.
Perchance the dream is true, and he does indeed possess
what for convenience is called an immortal soul, that
may manifest itself in one shape or another; that may
sleep for ages, but, waking or sleeping, still remains
itself, indestructible as the matter of the Universe.
An incident in the career of Mr. James
Ebenezer Smith might well occasion such reflections,
were any acquainted with its details, which until
this, its setting forth, was not the case. Mr.
Smith is a person who knows when to be silent.
Still, undoubtedly it gave cause for thought to one
individual namely, to him to whom it happened.
Indeed, James Ebenezer Smith is still thinking over
it, thinking very hard indeed.
J. E. Smith was well born and well
educated. When he was a good-looking and able
young man at college, but before he had taken his degree,
trouble came to him, the particulars of which do not
matter, and he was thrown penniless, also friendless,
upon the rocky bosom of the world. No, not quite
friendless, for he had a godfather, a gentleman connected
with business whose Christian name was Ebenezer.
To him, as a last resource, Smith went, feeling that
Ebenezer owed him something in return for the awful
appellation wherewith he had been endowed in baptism.
To a certain extent Ebenezer recognised
the obligation. He did nothing heroic, but he
found his godson a clerkship in a bank of which he
was one of the directors a modest clerkship,
no more. Also, when he died a year later, he
left him a hundred pounds to be spent upon some souvenir.
Smith, being of a practical turn of
mind, instead of adorning himself with memorial jewellery
for which he had no use, invested the hundred pounds
in an exceedingly promising speculation. As it
happened, he was not misinformed, and his talent returned
to him multiplied by ten. He repeated the experiment,
and, being in a position to know what he was doing,
with considerable success. By the time that he
was thirty he found himself possessed of a fortune
of something over twenty-five thousand pounds.
Then (and this shows the wise and practical nature
of the man) he stopped speculating and put out his
money in such a fashion that it brought him a safe
and clear four per cent.
By this time Smith, being an excellent
man of business, was well up in the service of his
bank as yet only a clerk, it is true, but
one who drew his four hundred pounds a year, with
prospects. In short, he was in a position to
marry had he wished to do so. As it happened,
he did not wish perhaps because, being
very friendless, no lady who attracted him crossed
his path; perhaps for other reasons.
Shy and reserved in temperament, he
confided only in himself. None, not even his
superiors at the bank or the Board of Management, knew
how well off he had become. No one visited him
at the flat which he was understood to occupy somewhere
in the neighbourhood of Putney; he belonged to no
club, and possessed not a single intimate. The
blow which the world had dealt him in his early days,
the harsh repulses and the rough treatment he had
then experienced, sank so deep into his sensitive
soul that never again did he seek close converse with
his kind. In fact, while still young, he fell
into a condition of old-bachelorhood of a refined
type.
Soon, however, Smith discovered it
was after he had given up speculating that
a man must have something to occupy his mind.
He tried philanthropy, but found himself too sensitive
for a business which so often resolves itself into
rude inquiry as to the affairs of other people.
After a struggle, therefore, he compromised with his
conscience by setting aside a liberal portion of his
income for anonymous distribution among deserving
persons and objects.
While still in this vacant frame of
mind Smith chanced one day, when the bank was closed,
to drift into the British Museum, more to escape the
vile weather that prevailed without than for any other
reason. Wandering hither and thither at hazard,
he found himself in the great gallery devoted to Egyptian
stone objects and sculpture. The place bewildered
him somewhat, for he knew nothing of Egyptology; indeed,
there remained upon his mind only a sense of wonderment
not unmixed with awe. It must have been a great
people, he thought to himself, that executed these
works, and with the thought came a desire to know more
about them. Yet he was going away when suddenly
his eye fell on the sculptured head of a woman which
hung upon the wall.
Smith looked at it once, twice, thrice,
and at the third look he fell in love. Needless
to say, he was not aware that such was his condition.
He knew only that a change had come over him, and never,
never could he forget the face which that carven mask
portrayed. Perhaps it was not really beautiful
save for its wondrous and mystic smile; perhaps the
lips were too thick and the nostrils too broad.
Yet to him that face was Beauty itself, beauty which
drew him as with a cart-rope, and awoke within him
all kinds of wonderful imaginings, some of them so
strange and tender that almost they partook of the
nature of memories. He stared at the image, and
the image smiled back sweetly at him, as doubtless
it, or rather its original for this was
but a plaster cast had smiled at nothingness
in some tomb or hiding-hole for over thirty centuries,
and as the woman whose likeness it was had once smiled
upon the world.
A short, stout gentleman bustled up
and, in tones of authority, addressed some workmen
who were arranging a base for a neighbouring statue.
It occurred to Smith that he must be someone who knew
about these objects. Overcoming his natural diffidence
with an effort, he raised his hat and asked the gentleman
if he could tell him who was the original of the mask.
The official who, in fact,
was a very great man in the Museum glanced
at Smith shrewdly, and, seeing that his interest was
genuine, answered
“I don’t know. Nobody
knows. She has been given several names, but none
of them have authority. Perhaps one day the rest
of the statue may be found, and then we shall learn that
is, if it is inscribed. Most likely, however,
it has been burnt for lime long ago.”
“Then you can’t tell me anything about
her?” said Smith.
“Well, only a little. To
begin with, that’s a cast. The original
is in the Cairo Museum. Mariette found it, I
believe at Karnac, and gave it a name after his fashion.
Probably she was a queen of the eighteenth
dynasty, by the work. But you can see her rank
for yourself from the broken uraeus.”
(Smith did not stop him to explain that he had not
the faintest idea what a uraeus might be, seeing
that he was utterly unfamiliar with the snake-headed
crest of Egyptian royalty.) “You should go to
Egypt and study the head for yourself. It is one
of the most beautiful things that ever was found.
Well, I must be off. Good day.”
And he bustled down the long gallery.
Smith found his way upstairs and looked
at mummies and other things. Somehow it hurt
him to reflect that the owner of yonder sweet, alluring
face must have become a mummy long, long before the
Christian era. Mummies did not strike him as
attractive.
He returned to the statuary and stared
at his plaster cast till one of the workmen remarked
to his fellow that if he were the gent he’d go
and look at “a live’un” for a change.
Then Smith retired abashed.
On his way home he called at his bookseller’s
and ordered “all the best works on Egyptology”.
When, a day or two later, they arrived in a packing-case,
together with a bill for thirty-eight pounds, he was
somewhat dismayed. Still, he tackled those books
like a man, and, being clever and industrious, within
three months had a fair working knowledge of the subject,
and had even picked up a smattering of hieroglyphics.
In January that was, at
the end of those three months Smith astonished
his Board of Directors by applying for ten weeks’
leave, he who had hitherto been content with a fortnight
in the year. When questioned he explained that
he had been suffering from bronchitis, and was advised
to take a change in Egypt.
“A very good idea,” said
the manager; “but I’m afraid you’ll
find it expensive. They fleece one in Egypt.”
“I know,” answered Smith;
“but I’ve saved a little and have only
myself to spend it upon.”
So Smith went to Egypt and saw the
original of the beauteous head and a thousand other
fascinating things. Indeed, he did more.
Attaching himself to some excavators who were glad
of his intelligent assistance, he actually dug for
a month in the neighbourhood of ancient Thebes, but
without finding anything in particular.
It was not till two years later that
he made his great discovery, that which is known as
Smith’s Tomb. Here it may be explained that
the state of his health had become such as to necessitate
an annual visit to Egypt, or so his superiors understood.
However, as he asked for no summer
holiday, and was always ready to do another man’s
work or to stop overtime, he found it easy to arrange
for these winter excursions.
On this, his third visit to Egypt,
Smith obtained from the Director-General of Antiquities
at Cairo a licence to dig upon his own account.
Being already well known in the country as a skilled
Egyptologist, this was granted upon the usual terms namely,
that the Department of Antiquities should have a right
to take any of the objects which might be found, or
all of them, if it so desired.
Such preliminary matters having been
arranged by correspondence, Smith, after a few days
spent in the Museum at Cairo, took the night train
to Luxor, where he found his head-man, an ex-dragoman
named Mahomet, waiting for him and his fellaheen labourers
already hired. There were but forty of them,
for his was a comparatively small venture. Three
hundred pounds was the amount that he had made up his
mind to expend, and such a sum does not go far in
excavations.
During his visit of the previous year
Smith had marked the place where he meant to dig.
It was in the cemetery of old Thebes, at the wild spot
not far from the temple of Medinet Habu, that is known
as the Valley of the Queens. Here, separated
from the resting-places of their royal lords by the
bold mass of the intervening hill, some of the greatest
ladies of Egypt have been laid to rest, and it was
their tombs that Smith desired to investigate.
As he knew well, some of these must yet remain to be
discovered. Who could say? Fortune favours
the bold. It might be that he would find the
holy grave of that beauteous, unknown Royalty whose
face had haunted him for three long years!
For a whole month he dug without the
slightest success. The spot that he selected
had proved, indeed, to be the mouth of a tomb.
After twenty-five days of laborious exploration it
was at length cleared out, and he stood in a rude,
unfinished cave. The queen for whom it had been
designed must have died quite young and been buried
elsewhere; or she had chosen herself another sepulchre,
or mayhap the rock had proved unsuitable for sculpture.
Smith shrugged his shoulders and moved
on, sinking trial pits and trenches here and there,
but still finding nothing. Two-thirds of his
time and money had been spent when at last the luck
turned. One day, towards evening, with some half-dozen
of his best men he was returning after a fruitless
morning of labour, when something seemed to attract
him towards a little wadi, or bay, in the hillside
that was filled with tumbled rocks and sand.
There were scores of such places, and this one looked
no more promising than any of the others had proved
to be. Yet it attracted him. Thoroughly
dispirited, he walked past it twenty paces or more,
then turned.
“Where go you, sah?” asked his head-man,
Mahomet.
He pointed to the recess in the cliff.
“No good, sah,” said
Mahomet. “No tomb there. Bed-rock too
near top. Too much water run in there; dead queen
like keep dry!”
But Smith went on, and the others followed obediently.
He walked down the little slope of
sand and boulders and examined the cliff. It
was virgin rock; never a tool mark was to be seen.
Already the men were going, when the same strange
instinct which had drawn him to the spot caused him
to take a spade from one of them and begin to shovel
away the sand from the face of the cliff for
here, for some unexplained reason, were no boulders
or debris. Seeing their master, to whom
they were attached, at work, they began to work too,
and for twenty minutes or more dug on cheerfully enough,
just to humour him, since all were sure that here
there was no tomb. At length Smith ordered them
to desist, for, although now they were six feet down,
the rock remained of the same virgin character.
With an exclamation of disgust he
threw out a last shovelful of sand. The edge
of his spade struck on something that projected.
He cleared away a little more sand, and there appeared
a rounded ledge which seemed to be a cornice.
Calling back the men, he pointed to it, and without
a word all of them began to dig again. Five minutes
more of work made it clear that it was a cornice,
and half an hour later there appeared the top of the
doorway of a tomb.
“Old people wall him up,”
said Mahomet, pointing to the flat stones set in mud
for mortar with which the doorway had been closed,
and to the undecipherable impress upon the mud of
the scarab seals of the officials whose duty it had
been to close the last resting-place of the royal dead
for ever.
“Perhaps queen all right inside,”
he went on, receiving no answer to his remark.
“Perhaps,” replied Smith,
briefly. “Dig, man, dig! Don’t
waste time in talking.”
So they dug on furiously till at length
Smith saw something which caused him to groan aloud.
There was a hole in the masonry the tomb
had been broken into. Mahomet saw it too, and
examined the top of the aperture with his skilled
eye.
“Very old thief,” he said.
“Look, he try build up wall again, but run away
before he have time finish.” And he pointed
to certain flat stones which had been roughly and
hurriedly replaced.
“Dig dig!” said Smith.
Ten minutes more and the aperture
was cleared. It was only just big enough to admit
the body of a man.
By now the sun was setting. Swiftly,
swiftly it seemed to tumble down the sky. One
minute it was above the rough crests of the western
hills behind them; the next, a great ball of glowing
fire, it rested on their topmost ridge. Then
it was gone. For an instant a kind of green spark
shone where it had been. This too went out, and
the sudden Egyptian night was upon them.
The fellaheen muttered among themselves,
and one or two of them wandered off on some pretext.
The rest threw down their tools and looked at Smith.
“Men say they no like stop here. They afraid
of ghost! Too many afreet live in these
tomb. That what they say. Come back finish
to-morrow morning when it light. Very foolish
people, these common fellaheen,” remarked Mahomet,
in a superior tone.
“Quite so,” replied Smith,
who knew well that nothing that he could offer would
tempt his men to go on with the opening of a tomb after
sunset. “Let them go away. You and
I will stop and watch the place till morning.”
“Sorry, sah,” said
Mahomet, “but I not feel quite well inside; think
I got fever. I go to camp and lie down and pray
under plenty blanket.”
“All right, go,” said
Smith; “but if there is anyone who is not a
coward, let him bring me my big coat, something to
eat and drink, and the lantern that hangs in my tent.
I will meet him there in the valley.”
Mahomet, though rather doubtfully,
promised that this should be done, and, after begging
Smith to accompany them, lest the spirit of whoever
slept in the tomb should work him a mischief during
the night, they departed quickly enough.
Smith lit his pipe, sat down on the
sand, and waited. Half an hour later he heard
a sound of singing, and through the darkness, which
was dense, saw lights coming up the valley.
“My brave men,” he thought
to himself, and scrambled up the slope to meet them.
He was right. These were his
men, no less than twenty of them, for with a fewer
number they did not dare to face the ghosts which they
believed haunted the valley after nightfall.
Presently the light from the lantern which one of
them carried (not Mahomet, whose sickness had increased
too suddenly to enable him to come) fell upon the
tall form of Smith, who, dressed in his white working
clothes, was leaning against a rock. Down went
the lantern, and with a howl of terror the brave company
turned and fled.
“Sons of cowards!” roared
Smith after them, in his most vigorous Arabic.
“It is I, your master, not an afreet.”
They heard, and by degrees crept back
again. Then he perceived that in order to account
for their number each of them carried some article.
Thus one had the bread, another the lantern, another
a tin of sardines, another the sardine-opener, another
a box of matches, another a bottle of beer, and so
on. As even thus there were not enough things
to go round, two of them bore his big coat between
them, the first holding it by the sleeves and the
second by the tail as though it were a stretcher.
“Put them down,” said
Smith, and they obeyed. “Now,” he
added, “run for your lives; I thought I heard
two afreets talking up there just now of what
they would do to any followers of the Prophet who mocked
their gods, if perchance they should meet them in
their holy place at night.”
This kindly counsel was accepted with
much eagerness. In another minute Smith was alone
with the stars and the dying desert wind.
Collecting his goods, or as many of
them as he wanted, he thrust them into the pockets
of the great-coat and returned to the mouth of the
tomb. Here he made his simple meal by the light
of the lantern, and afterwards tried to go to sleep.
But sleep he could not. Something always woke
him. First it was a jackal howling amongst the
rocks; next a sand-fly bit him in the ankle so sharply
that he thought he must have been stung by a scorpion.
Then, notwithstanding his warm coat, the cold got
hold of him, for the clothes beneath were wet through
with perspiration, and it occurred to him that unless
he did something he would probably contract an internal
chill or perhaps fever. He rose and walked about.
By now the moon was up, revealing
all the sad, wild scene in its every detail.
The mystery of Egypt entered his soul and oppressed
him. How much dead majesty lay in the hill upon
which he stood? Were they all really dead, he
wondered, or were those fellaheen right? Did their
spirits still come forth at night and wander through
the land where once they ruled? Of course that
was the Egyptian faith according to which the Ka,
or Double, eternally haunted the place where its earthly
counterpart had been laid to rest. When one came
to think of it, beneath a mass of unintelligible symbolism
there was much in the Egyptian faith which it was
hard for a Christian to disbelieve. Salvation
through a Redeemer, for instance, and the resurrection
of the body. Had he, Smith, not already written
a treatise upon these points of similarity which he
proposed to publish one day, not under his own name?
Well, he would not think of them now; the occasion
seemed scarcely fitting they came home
too pointedly to one who was engaged in violating a
tomb.
His mind, or rather his imagination of
which he had plenty went off at a tangent.
What sights had this place seen thousands of years
ago! Once, thousands of years ago, a procession
had wound up along the roadway which was doubtless
buried beneath the sand whereon he stood towards the
dark door of this sepulchre. He could see it as
it passed in and out between the rocks. The priests,
shaven-headed and robed in leopards’ skins,
or some of them in pure white, bearing the mystic symbols
of their office. The funeral sledge drawn by
oxen, and on it the great rectangular case that contained
the outer and the inner coffins, and within them the
mummy of some departed Majesty; in the Egyptian formula,
“the hawk that had spread its wings and flown
into the bosom of Osiris,” God of Death.
Behind, the mourners, rending the air with their lamentations.
Then those who bore the funeral furniture and offerings.
Then the high officers of State and the first priests
of Amen and of the other gods. Then the sister
queens, leading by the hand a wondering child or two.
Then the sons of Pharaoh, young men carrying the emblems
of their rank.
Lastly, walking alone, Pharaoh himself
in his ceremonial robes, his apron, his double crown
of linen surmounted by the golden snake, his inlaid
bracelets and his heavy, tinkling earrings. Pharaoh,
his head bowed, his feet travelling wearily, and in
his heart what thoughts? Sorrow, perhaps,
for her who had departed. Yet he had other queens
and fair women without count. Doubtless she was
sweet and beautiful, but sweetness and beauty were
not given to her alone. Moreover, was she not
wont to cross his will and to question his divinity?
No, surely it is not only of her that he thinks, her
for whom he had prepared this splendid tomb with all
things needful to unite her with the gods. Surely
he thinks also of himself and that other tomb on the
farther side of the hill whereat the artists labour
day by day yes, and have laboured these
many years; that tomb to which before so very long
he too must travel in just this fashion, to seek his
place beyond the doors of Death, who lays his equal
hand on king and queen and slave.
The vision passed. It was so
real that Smith thought he must have been dreaming.
Well, he was awake now, and colder than ever.
Moreover, the jackals had multiplied. There were
a whole pack of them, and not far away. Look!
One crossed in the ring of the lamplight, a slinking,
yellow beast that smelt the remains of dinner.
Or perhaps it smelt himself. Moreover, there
were bad characters who haunted these mountains, and
he was alone and quite unarmed. Perhaps he ought
to put out the light which advertised his whereabouts.
It would be wise, and yet in this particular he rejected
wisdom. After all, the light was some company.
Since sleep seemed to be out of the
question, he fell back upon poor humanity’s
other anodyne, work, which has the incidental advantage
of generating warmth. Seizing a shovel, he began
to dig at the doorway of the tomb, whilst the jackals
howled louder than ever in astonishment. They
were not used to such a sight. For thousands of
years, as the old moon above could have told, no man,
or at least no solitary man, had dared to rob tombs
at such an unnatural hour.
When Smith had been digging for about
twenty minutes something tinkled on his shovel with
a noise which sounded loud in that silence.
“A stone which may come in handy
for the jackals,” he thought to himself, shaking
the sand slowly off the spade until it appeared.
There it was, and not large enough to be of much service.
Still, he picked it up, and rubbed it in his hands
to clear off the encrusting dirt. When he opened
them he saw that it was no stone, but a bronze.
“Osiris,” reflected Smith,
“buried in front of the tomb to hallow the ground.
No, an Isis. No, the head of a statuette, and
a jolly good one, too at any rate, in moonlight.
Seems to have been gilded.” And, reaching
out for the lamp, he held it over the object.
Another minute, and he found himself
sitting at the bottom of the hole, lamp in one hand
and statuette, or rather head, in the other.
“The Queen of the Mask!”
he gasped. “The same the same!
By heavens, the very same!”
Oh, he could not be mistaken.
There were the identical lips, a little thick and
pouted; the identical nostrils, curved and quivering,
but a little wide; the identical arched eyebrows and
dreamy eyes set somewhat far apart. Above all,
there was the identical alluring and mysterious smile.
Only on this masterpiece of ancient art was set a whole
crown of uraei surrounding the entire head.
Beneath the crown and pressed back behind the ears
was a full-bottomed wig or royal head-dress, of which
the ends descended to the breasts. The statuette,
that, having been gilt, remained quite perfect and
uncorroded, was broken just above the middle, apparently
by a single violent blow, for the fracture was very
clean.
At once it occurred to Smith that
it had been stolen from the tomb by a thief who thought
it to be gold; that outside of the tomb doubt had
overtaken him and caused him to break it upon a stone
or otherwise. The rest was clear. Finding
that it was but gold-washed bronze he had thrown away
the fragments, rather than be at the pains of carrying
them. This was his theory, probably not a correct
one, as the sequel seems to show.
Smith’s first idea was to recover
the other portion. He searched quite a long while,
but without success. Neither then nor afterwards
could it be found. He reflected that perhaps
this lower half had remained in the thief’s
hand, who, in his vexation, had thrown it far away,
leaving the head to lie where it fell. Again
Smith examined this head, and more closely. Now
he saw that just beneath the breasts was a delicately
cut cartouche.
Being by this time a master of hieroglyphics,
he read it without trouble. It ran: “Ma-Mee,
Great Royal Lady. Beloved of ”
Here the cartouche was broken away.
“Ma-Me, or it might be Ma-Mi,”
he reflected. “I never heard of a queen
called Ma-Me, or Ma-Mi, or Ma-Mu. She must be
quite new to history. I wonder of whom she was
beloved? Amen, or Horus, or Isis, probably.
Of some god, I have no doubt, at least I hope so!”
He stared at the beautiful portrait
in his hand, as once he had stared at the cast on
the Museum wall, and the beautiful portrait, emerging
from the dust of ages, smiled back at him there in
the solemn moonlight as once the cast had smiled from
the museum wall. Only that had been but a cast,
whereas this was real. This had slept with the
dead from whose features it had been fashioned, the
dead who lay, or who had lain, within.
A sudden resolution took hold of Smith.
He would explore that tomb, at once and alone.
No one should accompany him on this his first visit;
it would be a sacrilege that anyone save himself should
set foot there until he had looked on what it might
contain.
Why should he not enter? His
lamp, of what is called the “hurricane”
brand, was very good and bright, and would burn for
many hours. Moreover, there had been time for
the foul air to escape through the hole that they
had cleared. Lastly, something seemed to call
on him to come and see. He placed the bronze
head in his breast-pocket over his heart, and, thrusting
the lamp through the hole, looked down. Here there
was no difficulty, since sand had drifted in to the
level of the bottom of the aperture. Through
it he struggled, to find himself upon a bed of sand
that only just left him room to push himself along
between it and the roof. A little farther on
the passage was almost filled with mud.
Mahomet had been right when, from
his knowledge of the bed-rock, he said that any tomb
made in this place must be flooded. It had
been flooded by some ancient rain-storm, and Smith
began to fear that he would find it quite filled with
soil caked as hard as iron. So, indeed, it was
to a certain depth, a result that apparently had been
anticipated by those who hollowed it, for this entrance
shaft was left quite undecorated. Indeed, as
Smith found afterwards, a hole had been dug beneath
the doorway to allow the mud to enter after the burial
was completed. Only a miscalculation had been
made. The natural level of the mud did not quite
reach the roof of the tomb, and therefore still left
it open.
After crawling for forty feet or so
over this caked mud, Smith suddenly found himself
on a rising stair. Then he understood the plan;
the tomb itself was on a higher level.
Here began the paintings. Here
the Queen Ma-Mee, wearing her crowns and dressed in
diaphanous garments, was presented to god after god.
Between her figure and those of the divinities the
wall was covered with hieroglyphs as fresh to-day
as on that when the artist had limned them. A
glance told him that they were extracts from the Book
of the Dead. When the thief of bygone ages had
broken into the tomb, probably not very long after
the interment, the mud over which Smith had just crawled
was still wet. This he could tell, since the clay
from the rascal’s feet remained upon the stairs,
and that upon his fingers had stained the paintings
on the wall against which he had supported himself;
indeed, in one place was an exact impression of his
hand, showing its shape and even the lines of the
skin.
At the top of the flight of steps
ran another passage at a higher level, which the water
had never reached, and to right and left were the
beginnings of unfinished chambers. It was clear
to him that this queen had died young. Her tomb,
as she or the king had designed it, was never finished.
A few more paces, and the passage enlarged itself into
a hall about thirty feet square. The ceiling
was decorated with vultures, their wings outspread,
the looped Cross of Life hanging from their talons.
On one wall her Majesty Ma-Mee stood expectant while
Anubis weighed her heart against the feather of truth,
and Thoth, the Recorder, wrote down the verdict upon
his tablets. All her titles were given to her
here, such as “Great Royal Heiress,
Royal Sister, Royal Wife, Royal Mother, Lady of the
Two Lands, Palm-branch of Love, Beautiful-exceedingly.”
Smith read them hurriedly and noted
that nowhere could he see the name of the king who
had been her husband. It would almost seem as
though this had been purposely omitted. On the
other walls Ma-Mee, accompanied by her Ka,
or Double, made offerings to the various gods, or uttered
propitiatory speeches to the hideous demons of the
underworld, declaring their names to them and forcing
them to say: “Pass on. Thou art pure!”
Lastly, on the end wall, triumphant,
all her trials done, she, the justified Osiris, or
Spirit, was received by the god Osiris, Saviour of
Spirits.
All these things Smith noted hurriedly
as he swung the lamp to and fro in that hallowed place.
Then he saw something else which filled him with dismay.
On the floor of the chamber where the coffins had been for
this was the burial chamber lay a heap
of black fragments charred with fire. Instantly
he understood. After the thief had done his work
he had burned the mummy-cases, and with them the body
of the queen. There could be no doubt that this
was so, for look! among the ashes lay some calcined
human bones, while the roof above was blackened with
the smoke and cracked by the heat of the conflagration.
There was nothing left for him to find!
Oppressed with the closeness of the
atmosphere, he sat down upon a little bench or table
cut in the rock that evidently had been meant to receive
offerings to the dead. Indeed, on it still lay
the scorched remains of some votive flowers.
Here, his lamp between his feet, he rested a while,
staring at those calcined bones. See, yonder was
the lower jaw, and in it some teeth, small, white,
regular and but little worn. Yes, she had died
young. Then he turned to go, for disappointment
and the holiness of the place overcame him; he could
endure no more of it that night.
Leaving the burial hall, he walked
along the painted passage, the lamp swinging and his
eyes fixed upon the floor. He was disheartened,
and the paintings could wait till the morrow.
He descended the steps and came to the foot of the
mud slope. Here suddenly he perceived, projecting
from some sand that had drifted down over the mud,
what seemed to be the corner of a reed box or basket.
To clear away the sand was easy, and yes,
it was a basket, a foot or so in length, such a basket
as the old Egyptians used to contain the funeral figures
which are called ushaptis, or other objects
connected with the dead. It looked as though
it had been dropped, for it lay upon its side.
Smith opened it not very hopefully, for
surely nothing of value would have been abandoned
thus.
The first thing that met his eyes
was a mummied hand, broken off at the wrist, a woman’s
little hand, most delicately shaped. It was withered
and paper-white, but the contours still remained; the
long fingers were perfect, and the almond-shaped nails
had been stained with henna, as was the embalmers’
fashion. On the hand were two gold rings, and
for those rings it had been stolen. Smith looked
at it for a long while, and his heart swelled within
him, for here was the hand of that royal lady of his
dreams.
Indeed, he did more than look; he
kissed it, and as his lips touched the holy relic
it seemed to him as though a wind, cold but scented,
blew upon his brow. Then, growing fearful of
the thoughts that arose within him, he hurried his
mind back to the world, or rather to the examination
of the basket.
Here he found other objects roughly
wrapped in fragments of mummy-cloth that had been
torn from the body of the queen. These it is needless
to describe, for are they not to be seen in the gold
room of the Museum, labelled “Bijouterie de
la Reine Ma-Me, XVIIIeme Dynastie. Thebes
(Smith’s Tomb)”? It may be mentioned,
however, that the set was incomplete. For instance,
there was but one of the great gold ceremonial ear-rings
fashioned like a group of pomegranate blooms, and the
most beautiful of the necklaces had been torn in two half
of it was missing.
It was clear to Smith that only a
portion of the precious objects which were buried
with the mummy had been placed in this basket.
Why had these been left where he found them?
A little reflection made that clear also. Something
had prompted the thief to destroy the desecrated body
and its coffin with fire, probably in the hope of
hiding his evil handiwork. Then he fled with
his spoil. But he had forgotten how fiercely mummies
and their trappings can burn. Or perhaps the thing
was an accident. He must have had a lamp, and
if its flame chanced to touch this bituminous tinder!
At any rate, the smoke overtook the
man in that narrow place as he began to climb the
slippery slope of clay. In his haste he dropped
the basket, and dared not return to search for it.
It could wait till the morrow, when the fire would
be out and the air pure. Only for this desecrator
of the royal dead that morrow never came, as was discovered
afterwards.
When at length Smith struggled into
the open air the stars were paling before the dawn.
An hour later, after the sky was well up, Mahomet
(recovered from his sickness) and his myrmidons
arrived.
“I have been busy while you
slept,” said Smith, showing them the mummied
hand (but not the rings which he had removed from the
shrunk fingers), and the broken bronze, but not the
priceless jewellery which was hidden in his pockets.
For the next ten days they dug till
the tomb and its approach were quite clear. In
the sand, at the head of a flight of steps which led
down to the doorway, they found the skeleton of a
man, who evidently had been buried there in a hurried
fashion. His skull was shattered by the blow
of an axe, and the shaven scalp that still clung to
it suggested that he might have been a priest.
Mahomet thought, and Smith agreed
with him, that this was the person who had violated
the tomb. As he was escaping from it the guards
of the holy place surprised him after he had covered
up the hole by which he had entered and purposed to
return. There they executed him without trial
and divided up the plunder, thinking that no more was
to be found. Or perhaps his confederates killed
him.
Such at least were the theories advanced
by Mahomet. Whether they were right or wrong
none will ever know. For instance, the skeleton
may not have been that of the thief, though probability
appears to point the other way.
Nothing more was found in the tomb,
not even a scarab or a mummy-bead. Smith spent
the remainder of his time in photographing the pictures
and copying the inscriptions, which for various reasons
proved to be of extraordinary interest. Then,
having reverently buried the charred bones of the
queen in a secret place of the sepulchre, he handed
it over to the care of the local Guardian of Antiquities,
paid off Mahomet and the fellaheen, and departed for
Cairo. With him went the wonderful jewels of
which he had breathed no word, and another relic to
him yet more precious the hand of her Majesty
Ma-Mee, Palm-branch of Love.
And now follows the strange sequel
of this story of Smith and the queen Ma-Mee.
II
Smith was seated in the sanctum of
the distinguished Director-General of Antiquities
at the new Cairo Museum. It was a very interesting
room. Books piled upon the floor; objects from
tombs awaiting examination, lying here and there;
a hoard of Ptolemaic silver coins, just dug up at
Alexandria, standing on a table in the pot that had
hidden them for two thousand years; in the corner
the mummy of a royal child, aged six or seven, not
long ago discovered, with some inscription scrawled
upon the wrappings (brought here to be deciphered
by the Master), and the withered lotus-bloom, love’s
last offering, thrust beneath one of the pink retaining
bands.
“A touching object,” thought
Smith to himself. “Really, they might have
left the dear little girl in peace.”
Smith had a tender heart, but even
as he reflected he became aware that some of the jewellery
hidden in an inner pocket of his waistcoat (designed
for bank-notes) was fretting his skin. He had
a tender conscience also.
Just then the Director, a French savant,
bustled in, alert, vigorous, full of interest.
“Ah, my dear Mr. Smith!”
he said, in his excellent English. “I am
indeed glad to see you back again, especially as I
understand that you are come rejoicing and bringing
your sheaves with you. They tell me you have been
extraordinarily successful. What do you say is
the name of this queen whose tomb you have found Ma-Mee?
A very unusual name. How do you get the extra
vowel? Is it for euphony, eh? Did I not know
how good a scholar you are, I should be tempted to
believe that you had misread it. Me-Mee, Ma-Mee!
That would be pretty in French, would it not? Ma
mie my darling! Well, I dare say
she was somebody’s mie in her time.
But tell me the story.”
Smith told him shortly and clearly;
also he produced his photographs and copies of inscriptions.
“This is interesting interesting
truly,” said the Director, when he had glanced
through them. “You must leave them with
me to study. Also you will publish them, is it
not so? Perhaps one of the Societies would help
you with the cost, for it should be done in facsimile.
Look at this vignette! Most unusual. Oh,
what a pity that scoundrelly priest got off with the
jewellery and burnt her Majesty’s body!”
“He didn’t get off with all of it.”
“What, Mr. Smith? Our inspector reported
to me that you found nothing.”
“I dare say, sir; but your inspector did not
know what I found.”
“Ah, you are a discreet man! Well, let
us see.”
Slowly Smith unbuttoned his waistcoat.
From its inner pocket and elsewhere about his person
he extracted the jewels wrapped in mummy-cloth as
he had found them. First he produced a sceptre-head
of gold, in the shape of a pomegranate fruit and engraved
with the throne name and titles of Ma-Mee.
“What a beautiful object!”
said the Director. “Look! the handle was
of ivory, and that sacre thief of a priest
smashed it out at the socket. It was fresh ivory
then; the robbery must have taken place not long after
the burial. See, this magnifying-glass shows it.
Is that all?”
Smith handed him the surviving half
of the marvellous necklace that had been torn in two.
“I have re-threaded it,”
he muttered, “but every bead is in its place.”
“Oh, heavens! How lovely!
Note the cutting of those cornelian heads of Hathor
and the gold lotus-blooms between yes, and
the enamelled flies beneath. We have nothing
like it in the Museum.”
So it went on.
“Is that all?” gasped
the Director at last, when every object from the basket
glittered before them on the table.
“Yes,” said Smith.
“That is no. I found a broken
statuette hidden in the sand outside the tomb.
It is of the queen, but I thought perhaps you would
allow me to keep this.”
“But certainly, Mr. Smith; it
is yours indeed. We are not niggards here.
Still, if I might see it ”
From yet another pocket Smith produced
the head. The Director gazed at it, then he spoke
with feeling.
“I said just now that you were
discreet, Mr. Smith, and I have been reflecting that
you are honest. But now I must add that you are
very clever. If you had not made me promise that
this bronze should be yours before you showed it me well,
it would never have gone into that pocket again.
And, in the public interest, won’t you release
me from the promise?”
“No,” said Smith.
“You are perhaps not aware,”
went on the Director, with a groan, “that this
is a portrait of Mariette’s unknown queen whom
we are thus able to identify. It seems a pity
that the two should be separated; a replica we could
let you have.”
“I am quite aware,” said
Smith, “and I will be sure to send you
a replica, with photographs. Also I promise to
leave the original to some museum by will.”
The Director clasped the image tenderly,
and, holding it to the light, read the broken cartouche
beneath the breasts.
“‘Ma-Me, Great Royal Lady.
Beloved of ’ Beloved of whom?
Well, of Smith, for one. Take it, monsieur, and
hide it away at once, lest soon there should be another
mummy in this collection, a modern mummy called Smith;
and, in the name of Justice, let the museum which inherits
it be not the British, but that of Cairo, for this
queen belongs to Egypt. By the way, I have been
told that you are delicate in the lungs. How is
your health now? Our cold winds are very trying.
Quite good? Ah, that is excellent! I suppose
that you have no more articles that you can show me?”
“I have nothing more except
a mummied hand, which I found in the basket with the
jewels. The two rings off it lie there. Doubtless
it was removed to get at that bracelet. I suppose
you will not mind my keeping the hand ”
“Of the beloved of Smith,”
interrupted the Director drolly. “No, I
suppose not, though for my part I should prefer one
that was not quite so old. Still, perhaps you
will not mind my seeing it. That pocket of yours
still looks a little bulky; I thought that it contained
books!”
Smith produced a cigar-box; in it
was the hand wrapped in cotton wool.
“Ah,” said the Director,
“a pretty, well-bred hand. No doubt this
Ma-Mee was the real heiress to the throne, as she describes
herself. The Pharaoh was somebody of inferior
birth, half-brother she is called ‘Royal
Sister,’ you remember son of one of
the Pharaoh’s slave-women, perhaps. Odd
that she never mentioned him in the tomb. It looks
as though they didn’t get on in life, and that
she was determined to have done with him in death.
Those were the rings upon that hand, were they not?”
He replaced them on the fingers, then
took off one, a royal signet in a cartouche, and read
the inscription on the other: “‘Bes
Ank, Ank Bes.’ ‘Bes the Living, the
Living Bes.’
“Your Ma-Mee had some human
vanity about her,” he added. “Bes,
among other things, as you know, was the god of beauty
and of the adornments of women. She wore that
ring that she might remain beautiful, and that her
dresses might always fit, and her rouge never cake
when she was dancing before the gods. Also it
fixes her period pretty closely, but then so do other
things. It seems a pity to rob Ma-Mee of her pet
ring, does it not? The royal signet will be enough
for us.”
With a little bow he gave the hand
back to Smith, leaving the Bes ring on the finger
that had worn it for more than three thousand years.
At least, Smith was so sure it was the Bes ring that
at the time he did not look at it again.
Then they parted, Smith promising
to return upon the morrow, which, owing to events
to be described, he did not do.
“Ah!” said the Master
to himself, as the door closed behind his visitor.
“He’s in a hurry to be gone. He has
fear lest I should change my mind about that ring.
Also there is the bronze. Monsieur Smith was ruse
there. It is worth a thousand pounds, that bronze.
Yet I do not believe he was thinking of the money.
I believe he is in love with that Ma-Mee and wants
to keep her picture. Mon Dieu! A well-established
affection. At least he is what the English call
an odd fish, one whom I could never make out, and
of whom no one seems to know anything. Still,
honest, I am sure quite honest. Why,
he might have kept every one of those jewels and no
one have been the wiser. And what things!
What a find! Ciel! what a find! There
has been nothing like it for years. Benedictions
on the head of Odd-fish Smith!”
Then he collected the precious objects,
thrust them into an inner compartment of his safe,
which he locked and double-locked, and, as it was
nearly five o’clock, departed from the Museum
to his private residence in the grounds, there to
study Smith’s copies and photographs, and to
tell some friends of the great things that had happened.
When Smith found himself outside the
sacred door, and had presented its venerable guardian
with a baksheesh of five piastres, he walked a
few paces to the right and paused a while to watch
some native labourers who were dragging a huge sarcophagus
upon an improvised tramway. As they dragged they
sang an echoing rhythmic song, whereof each line ended
with an invocation to Allah.
Just so, reflected Smith, had their
forefathers sung when, millenniums ago, they dragged
that very sarcophagus from the quarries to the Nile,
and from the Nile to the tomb whence it reappeared
to-day, or when they slid the casing blocks of the
pyramids up the great causeway and smooth slope of
sand, and laid them in their dizzy resting-places.
Only then each line of the immemorial chant of toil
ended with an invocation to Amen, now transformed
to Allah. The East may change its masters and
its gods, but its customs never change, and if to-day
Allah wore the feathers of Amen one wonders whether
the worshippers would find the difference so very
great.
Thus thought Smith as he hurried away
from the sarcophagus and those blue-robed, dark-skinned
fellaheen, down the long gallery that is filled with
a thousand sculptures. For a moment he paused
before the wonderful white statue of Queen Amenartas,
then, remembering that his time was short, hastened
on to a certain room, one of those which opened out
of the gallery.
In a corner of this room, upon the
wall, amongst many other beautiful objects, stood
that head which Mariette had found, whereof in past
years the cast had fascinated him in London.
Now he knew whose head it was; to him it had been
given to find the tomb of her who had sat for that
statue. Her very hand was in his pocket yes,
the hand that had touched yonder marble, pointing
out its defects to the sculptor, or perhaps swearing
that he flattered her. Smith wondered who that
sculptor was; surely he must have been a happy man.
Also he wondered whether the statuette was also this
master’s work. He thought so, but he wished
to make sure.
Near to the end of the room he stopped
and looked about him like a thief. He was alone
in the place; not a single student or tourist could
be seen, and its guardian was somewhere else.
He drew out the box that contained the hand.
From the hand he slipped the ring which the Director-General
had left there as a gift to himself. He would
much have preferred the other with the signet, but
how could he say so, especially after the episode
of the statuette?
Replacing the hand in his pocket without
looking at the ring for his eyes were watching
to see whether he was observed he set it
upon his little finger, which it exactly fitted. (Ma-Mee
had worn both of them upon the third finger of her
left hand, the Bes ring as a guard to the signet.)
He had the fancy to approach the effigy of Ma-Mee wearing
a ring which she had worn and that came straight from
her finger to his own.
Smith found the head in its accustomed
place. Weeks had gone by since he looked upon
it, and now, to his eyes, it had grown more beautiful
than ever, and its smile was more mystical and living.
He drew out the statuette and began to compare them
point by point. Oh, no doubt was possible!
Both were likenesses of the same woman, though the
statuette might have been executed two or three years
later than the statue. To him the face of it
looked a little older and more spiritual. Perhaps
illness, or some premonition of her end had then thrown
its shadow on the queen. He compared and compared.
He made some rough measurements and sketches in his
pocket-book, and set himself to work out a canon of
proportions.
So hard and earnestly did he work,
so lost was his mind that he never heard the accustomed
warning sound which announces that the Museum is about
to close. Hidden behind an altar as he was, in
his distant, shadowed corner, the guardian of the
room never saw him as he cast a last perfunctory glance
about the place before departing till the Saturday
morning; for the morrow was Friday, the Mohammedan
Sabbath, on which the Museum remains shut, and he
would not be called upon to attend. So he went.
Everybody went. The great doors clanged, were
locked and bolted, and, save for a watchman outside,
no one was left in all that vast place except Smith
in his corner, engaged in sketching and in measurements.
The difficulty of seeing, owing to
the increase of shadow, first called his attention
to the fact that time was slipping away. He glanced
at his watch and saw that it was ten minutes to the
hour.
“Soon be time to go,”
he thought to himself, and resumed his work.
How strangely silent the place seemed!
Not a footstep to be heard or the sound of a human
voice. He looked at his watch again, and saw that
it was six o’clock, not five, or so the thing
said. But that was impossible, for the Museum
shut at five; evidently the desert sand had got into
the works. The room in which he stood was that
known as Room I, and he had noticed that its Arab
custodian often frequented Room K or the gallery outside.
He would find him and ask what was the real time.
Passing round the effigy of the wonderful
Hathor cow, perhaps the finest example of an ancient
sculpture of a beast in the whole world, Smith came
to the doorway and looked up and down the gallery.
Not a soul to be seen. He ran to Room K, to Room
H, and others. Still not a soul to be seen.
Then he made his way as fast as he could go to the
great entrance. The doors were locked and bolted.
“Watch must be right after all.
I’m shut in,” he said to himself.
“However, there’s sure to be someone about
somewhere. Probably the salle des ventes
is still open. Shops don’t shut till they
are obliged.”
Thither he went, to find its door
as firmly closed as a door can be. He knocked
on it, but a sepulchral echo was the only answer.
“I know,” he reflected.
“The Director must still be in his room.
It will take him a long while to examine all that
jewellery and put it away.”
So for the room he headed, and, after
losing his path twice, found it by help of the sarcophagus
that the Arabs had been dragging, which now stood
as deserted as it had done in the tomb, a lonesome
and impressive object in the gathering shadows.
The Director’s door was shut, and again his
knockings produced nothing but an echo. He started
on a tour round the Museum, and, having searched the
ground floors, ascended to the upper galleries by
the great stairway.
Presently he found himself in that
devoted to the royal mummies, and, being tired, rested
there a while. Opposite to him, in a glass case
in the middle of the gallery, reposed Rameses II.
Near to, on shelves in a side case, were Rameses’
son, Meneptah, and above, his son, Seti II, while
in other cases were the mortal remains of many more
of the royalties of Egypt. He looked at the proud
face of Rameses and at the little fringe of white
locks turned yellow by the embalmer’s spices,
also at the raised left arm. He remembered how
the Director had told him that when they were unrolling
this mighty monarch they went away to lunch, and that
presently the man who had been left in charge of the
body rushed into the room with his hair on end, and
said that the dead king had lifted his arm and pointed
at him.
Back they went, and there, true enough,
was the arm lifted; nor were they ever able to get
it quite into its place again. The explanation
given was that the warmth of the sun had contracted
the withered muscles, a very natural and correct explanation.
Still, Smith wished that he had not
recollected the story just at this moment, especially
as the arm seemed to move while he contemplated it
a very little, but still to move.
He turned round and gazed at Meneptah,
whose hollow eyes stared at him from between the wrappings
carelessly thrown across the parchment-like and ashen
face. There, probably, lay the countenance that
had frowned on Moses. There was the heart which
God had hardened. Well, it was hard enough now,
for the doctors said he died of ossification of the
arteries, and that the vessels of the heart were full
of lime!
Smith stood upon a chair and peeped
at Seti II. above. His weaker countenance was
very peaceful, but it seemed to wear an air of reproach.
In getting down Smith managed to upset the heavy chair.
The noise it made was terrific. He would not
have thought it possible that the fall of such an
article could produce so much sound. Satisfied
with his inspection of these particular kings, who
somehow looked quite different now from what they
had ever done before more real and imminent,
so to speak he renewed his search for a
living man.
On he went, mummies to his right,
mummies to his left, of every style and period, till
he began to feel as though he never wished to see
another dried remnant of mortality. He peeped
into the room where lay the relics of Iouiya and Touiyou,
the father and mother of the great Queen Taia.
Cloths had been drawn over these, and really they looked
worse and more suggestive thus draped than in their
frigid and unadorned blackness. He came to the
coffins of the priest-kings of the twentieth dynasty,
formidable painted coffins with human faces. There
seemed to be a vast number of these priest-kings,
but perhaps they were better than the gold masks of
the great Ptolemaic ladies which glinted at him through
the gathering gloom.
Really, he had seen enough of the
upper floors. The statues downstairs were better
than all these dead, although it was true that, according
to the Egyptian faith, every one of those statues
was haunted eternally by the Ka, or Double,
of the person whom it represented. He descended
the great stairway. Was it fancy, or did something
run across the bottom step in front of him an
animal of some kind, followed by a swift-moving and
indefinite shadow? If so, it must have been the
Museum cat hunting a Museum mouse. Only then
what on earth was that very peculiar and unpleasant
shadow?
He called, “Puss! puss! puss!”
for he would have been quite glad of its company;
but there came no friendly “miau”
in response. Perhaps it was only the Ka
of a cat and the shadow was oh! never mind
what. The Egyptians worshipped cats, and there
were plenty of their mummies about on the shelves.
But the shadow!
Once he shouted in the hope of attracting
attention, for there were no windows to which he could
climb. He did not repeat the experiment, for
it seemed as though a thousand voices were answering
him from every corner and roof of the gigantic edifice.
Well, he must face the thing out.
He was shut in a museum, and the question was in what
part of it he should camp for the night. Moreover,
as it was growing rapidly dark, the problem must be
solved at once. He thought with affection of
the lavatory, where, before going to see the Director,
only that afternoon he had washed his hands with the
assistance of a kindly Arab who watched the door and
gracefully accepted a piastre. But there was
no Arab there now, and the door, like every other
in this confounded place, was locked. He marched
on to the entrance.
Here, opposite to each other, stood
the red sarcophagi of the great Queen Hatshepu
and her brother and husband, Thotmes III. He looked
at them. Why should not one of these afford him
a night’s lodging? They were deep and quiet,
and would fit the human frame very nicely. For
a while Smith wondered which of these monarchs would
be the more likely to take offence at such a use of
a private sarcophagus, and, acting on general principles,
concluded that he would rather throw himself on the
mercy of the lady.
Already one of his legs was over the
edge of that solemn coffer, and he was squeezing his
body beneath the massive lid that was propped above
it on blocks of wood, when he remembered a little,
naked, withered thing with long hair that he had seen
in a side chamber of the tomb of Amenhotep II. in
the Valley of Kings at Thebes. This caricature
of humanity many thought, and he agreed with them,
to be the actual body of the mighty Hatshepu as it
appeared after the robbers had done with it.
Supposing now, that when he was lying
at the bottom of that sarcophagus, sleeping the sleep
of the just, this little personage should peep over
its edge and ask him what he was doing there!
Of course the idea was absurd; he was tired, and his
nerves were a little shaken. Still, the fact
remained that for centuries the hallowed dust of Queen
Hatshepu had slept where he, a modern man, was proposing
to sleep.
He scrambled down from the sarcophagus
and looked round him in despair. Opposite to
the main entrance was the huge central hall of the
Museum. Now the cement roof of this hall had,
he knew, gone wrong, with the result that very extensive
repairs had become necessary. So extensive were
they, indeed, that the Director-General had informed
him that they would take several years to complete.
Therefore this hall was boarded up, only a little
doorway being left by which the workmen could enter.
Certain statues, of Seti II. and others, too large
to be moved, were also roughly boarded over, as were
some great funeral boats on either side of the entrance.
The rest of the place, which might be two hundred
feet long with a proportionate breadth, was empty save
for the colossi of Amenhotep III. and his queen Taia
that stood beneath the gallery at its farther end.
It was an appalling place in which
to sleep, but better, reflected Smith, than a sarcophagus
or those mummy chambers. If, for instance, he
could creep behind the deal boards that enclosed one
of the funeral boats he would be quite comfortable
there. Lifting the curtain, he slipped into the
hall, where the gloom of evening had already settled.
Only the skylights and the outline of the towering
colossi at the far end remained visible. Close
to him were the two funeral boats which he had noted
when he looked into the hall earlier on that day, standing
at the head of a flight of steps which led to the
sunk floor of the centre. He groped his way to
that on the right. As he expected, the projecting
planks were not quite joined at the bow. He crept
in between them and the boat and laid himself down.
Presumably, being altogether tired
out, Smith did ultimately fall asleep, for how long
he never knew. At any rate, it is certain that,
if so, he woke up again. He could not tell the
time, because his watch was not a repeater, and the
place was as black as the pit. He had some matches
in his pocket, and might have struck one and even have
lit his pipe. To his credit be it said, however,
he remembered that he was the sole tenant of one of
the most valuable museums in the world, and his responsibilities
with reference to fire. So he refrained from striking
that match under the keel of a boat which had become
very dry in the course of five thousand years.
Smith found himself very wide awake
indeed. Never in all his life did he remember
being more so, not even in the hour of its great catastrophe,
or when his godfather, Ebenezer, after much hesitation,
had promised him a clerkship in the bank of which
he was a director. His nerves seemed strung tight
as harp-strings, and his every sense was painfully
acute. Thus he could even smell the odour of
mummies that floated down from the upper galleries
and the earthy scent of the boat which had been buried
for thousands of years in sand at the foot of the pyramid
of one of the fifth dynasty kings.
Moreover, he could hear all sorts
of strange sounds, faint and far-away sounds which
at first he thought must emanate from Cairo without.
Soon, however, he grew sure that their origin was
more local. Doubtless the cement work and the
cases in the galleries were cracking audibly, as is
the unpleasant habit of such things at night.
Yet why should these common manifestations
be so universal and affect him so strangely?
Really, it seemed as though people were stirring all
about him. More, he could have sworn that the
great funeral boat beneath which he lay had become
re-peopled with the crew that once it bore.
He heard them at their business above
him. There were trampings and a sound as though
something heavy were being laid on the deck, such,
for instance, as must have been made when the mummy
of Pharaoh was set there for its last journey to the
western bank of the Nile. Yes, and now he could
have sworn again that the priestly crew were getting
out the oars.
Smith began to meditate flight from
the neighbourhood of that place when something occurred
which determined him to stop where he was.
The huge hall was growing light, but
not, as at first he hoped, with the rays of dawn.
This light was pale and ghostly, though very penetrating.
Also it had a blue tinge, unlike any other he had ever
seen. At first it arose in a kind of fan or fountain
at the far end of the hall, illumining the steps there
and the two noble colossi which sat above.
But what was this that stood at the
head of the steps, radiating glory? By heavens!
it was Osiris himself or the image of Osiris, god of
the Dead, the Egyptian saviour of the world!
There he stood, in his mummy-cloths,
wearing the feathered crown, and holding in his hands,
which projected from an opening in the wrappings,
the crook and the scourge of power. Was he alive,
or was he dead? Smith could not tell, since he
never moved, only stood there, splendid and fearful,
his calm, benignant face staring into nothingness.
Smith became aware that the darkness
between him and the vision of this god was peopled;
that a great congregation was gathering, or had gathered
there. The blue light began to grow; long tongues
of it shot forward, which joined themselves together,
illumining all that huge hall.
Now, too, he saw the congregation.
Before him, rank upon rank of them, stood the kings
and queens of Egypt. As though at a given signal,
they bowed themselves to the Osiris, and ere the tinkling
of their ornaments had died away, lo! Osiris
was gone. But in his place stood another, Isis,
the Mother of Mystery, her deep eyes looking forth
from beneath the jewelled vulture-cap. Again
the congregation bowed, and, lo! she was gone.
But in her place stood yet another, a radiant, lovely
being, who held in her hand the Sign of Life, and
wore upon her head the symbol of the shining disc Hathor,
Goddess of Love. A third time the congregation
bowed, and she, too, was gone; nor did any other appear
in her place.
The Pharaohs and their queens began
to move about and speak to each other; their voices
came to his ears in one low, sweet murmur.
In his amaze Smith had forgotten fear.
From his hiding-place he watched them intently.
Some of them he knew by their faces. There, for
instance, was the long-necked Khu-en-aten, talking
somewhat angrily to the imperial Rameses II.
Smith could understand what he said, for this power
seemed to have been given to him. He was complaining
in a high, weak voice that on this, the one night
of the year when they might meet, the gods, or the
magic images of the gods who were put up for them to
worship, should not include his god, symbolized
by the “Aten,” or the sun’s disc.
“I have heard of your Majesty’s
god,” replied Rameses; “the priests used
to tell me of him, also that he did not last long after
your Majesty flew to heaven. The Fathers of Amen
gave you a bad name; they called you ‘the heretic’
and hammered out your cartouches. They were
quite rare in my time. Oh, do not let your Majesty
be angry! So many of us have been heretics.
My grandson, Seti, there” and he pointed
to a mild, thoughtful-faced man “for
example. I am told that he really worshipped
the god of those Hebrew slaves whom I used to press
to build my cities. Look at that lady with him.
Beautiful, isn’t she? Observe her large,
violet eyes! Well, she was the one who did the
mischief, a Hebrew herself. At least, they tell
me so.”
“I will talk with him,”
answered Khu-en-aten. “It is more than possible
that we may agree on certain points. Meanwhile,
let me explain to your Majesty ”
“Oh, I pray you, not now. There is my wife.”
“Your wife?” said Khu-en-aten,
drawing himself up. “Which wife? I
am told that your Majesty had many and left a large
family; indeed, I see some hundreds of them here to-night.
Now, I but let me introduce Nefertiti to
your Majesty. I may explain that she was my only
wife.”
“So I have understood.
Your Majesty was rather an invalid, were you not?
Of course, in those circumstances, one prefers the
nurse whom one can trust. Oh, pray, no offence!
Nefertari, my love oh, I beg pardon!
Astnefert Nefertari has gone
to speak to some of her children let me
introduce you to your predecessor, the Queen Nefertiti,
wife of Amenhotep IV. I mean Khu-en-aten
(he changed his name, you know, because half of it
was that of the father of the gods). She is interested
in the question of plural marriage. Good-bye!
I wish to have a word with my grandfather, Rameses
I. He was fond of me as a little boy.”
At this moment Smith’s interest
in that queer conversation died away, for of a sudden
he beheld none other than the queen of his dreams,
Ma-Mee. Oh! there she stood, without a doubt,
only ten times more beautiful than he had ever pictured
her. She was tall and somewhat fair-complexioned,
with slumbrous, dark eyes, and on her face gleamed
the mystic smile he loved. She wore a robe of
simple white and a purple-broidered apron, a crown
of golden uraei with turquoise eyes was set
upon her dark hair as in her statue, and on her breast
and arms were the very necklace and bracelets that
he had taken from her tomb. She appeared to be
somewhat moody, or rather thoughtful, for she leaned
by herself against a balustrade, watching the throng
without much interest.
Presently a Pharaoh, a black-browed,
vigorous man with thick lips, drew near.
“I greet your Majesty,” he said.
She started, and answered: “Oh,
it is you! I make my obeisance to your Majesty,”
and she curtsied to him, humbly enough, but with a
suggestion of mockery in her movements.
“Well, you do not seem to have
been very anxious to find me, Ma-Mee, which, considering
that we meet so seldom ”
“I saw that your Majesty was
engaged with my sister queens,” she interrupted,
in a rich, low voice, “and with some other ladies
in the gallery there, whose faces I seem to remember,
but who I think were not queens. Unless,
indeed, you married them after I was drawn away.”
“One must talk to one’s relations,”
replied the Pharaoh.
“Quite so. But, you see,
I have no relations at least, none whom
I know well. My parents, you will remember, died
when I was young, leaving me Egypt’s heiress,
and they are still vexed at the marriage which I made
on the advice of my counsellors. But, is it not
annoying? I have lost one of my rings, that which
had the god Bes on it. Some dweller on the earth
must be wearing it to-day, and that is why I cannot
get it back from him.”
“Him! Why ‘him’? Hush;
the business is about to begin.”
“What business, my lord?”
“Oh, the question of the violation of our tombs,
I believe.”
“Indeed! That is a large
subject, and not a very profitable one, I should say.
Tell me, who is that?” And she pointed to a lady
who had stepped forward, a very splendid person, magnificently
arrayed.
“Cleopatra the Greek,”
he answered, “the last of Egypt’s Sovereigns,
one of the Ptolemys. You can always know her
by that Roman who walks about after her.”
“Which?” asked Ma-Mee.
“I see several also other men.
She was the wretch who rolled Egypt in the dirt and
betrayed her. Oh, if it were not for the law
of peace by which we must abide when we meet thus!”
“You mean that she would be
torn to shreds, Ma-Mee, and her very soul scattered
like the limbs of Osiris? Well, if it were not
for that law of peace, so perhaps would many of us,
for never have I heard a single king among these hundreds
speak altogether well of those who went before or
followed after him.”
“Especially of those who went
before if they happen to have hammered out their cartouches
and usurped their monuments,” said the queen,
dryly, and looking him in the eyes.
At this home-thrust the Pharaoh seemed
to wince. Making no answer, he pointed to the
royal woman who had mounted the steps at the end of
the hall.
Queen Cleopatra lifted her hand and
stood thus for a while. Very splendid she was,
and Smith, on his hands and knees behind the boarding
of the boat, thanked his stars that alone among modern
men it had been his lot to look upon her rich and
living loveliness. There she shone, she who had
changed the fortunes of the world, she who, whatever
she did amiss, at least had known how to die.
Silence fell upon that glittering
galaxy of kings and queens and upon all the hundreds
of their offspring, their women, and their great officers
who crowded the double tier of galleries around the
hall.
“Royalties of Egypt,”
she began, in a sweet, clear voice which penetrated
to the farthest recesses of the place, “I, Cleopatra,
the sixth of that name and the last monarch who ruled
over the Upper and the Lower Lands before Egypt became
a home of slaves, have a word to say to your Majesties,
who, in your mortal days, all of you more worthily
filled the throne on which once I sat. I do not
speak of Egypt and its fate, or of our sins whereof
mine were not the least that brought her
to the dust. Those sins I and others expiate elsewhere,
and of them, from age to age, we hear enough.
But on this one night of the year, that of the feast
of him whom we call Osiris, but whom other nations
have known and know by different names, it is given
to us once more to be mortal for an hour, and, though
we be but shadows, to renew the loves and hates of
our long-perished flesh. Here for an hour we strut
in our forgotten pomp; the crowns that were ours still
adorn our brows, and once more we seem to listen to
our people’s praise. Our hopes are the
hopes of mortal life, our foes are the foes we feared,
our gods grow real again, and our lovers whisper in
our ears. Moreover, this joy is given to us to
see each other as we are, to know as the gods know,
and therefore to forgive, even where we despise and
hate. Now I have done, and I, the youngest of
the rulers of ancient Egypt, call upon him who was
the first of her kings to take my place.”
She bowed, and the audience bowed
back to her. Then she descended the steps and
was lost in the throng. Where she had been appeared
an old man, simply-clad, long-bearded, wise-faced,
and wearing on his grey hair no crown save a plain
band of gold, from the centre of which rose the snake-headed
uraeus crest.
“Your Majesties who came after
me,” said the old man, “I am Menes, the
first of the accepted Pharaohs of Egypt, although many
of those who went before me were more truly kings
than I. Yet as the first who joined the Upper and
the Lower Lands, and took the royal style and titles,
and ruled as well as I could rule, it is given to
me to talk with you for a while this night whereon
our spirits are permitted to gather from the uttermost
parts of the uttermost worlds and see each other face
to face. First, in darkness and in secret, let
us speak of the mystery of the gods and of its meanings.
Next, in darkness and in secret, let us speak of the
mystery of our lives, of whence they come, of where
they tarry by the road, and whither they go at last.
And afterwards, let us speak of other matters face
to face in light and openness, as we were wont to do
when we were men. Then hence to Thebes, there
to celebrate our yearly festival. Is such your
will?”
“Such is our will,” they answered.
It seemed to Smith that dense darkness
fell upon the place, and with it a silence that was
awful. For a time that he could not reckon, that
might have been years or might have been moments, he
sat there in the utter darkness and the utter silence.
At length the light came again, first
as a blue spark, then in upward pouring rays, and
lastly pervading all. There stood Menes on the
steps, and there in front of him was gathered the
same royal throng.
“The mysteries are finished,”
said the old king. “Now, if any have aught
to say, let it be said openly.”
A young man dressed in the robes and
ornaments of an early dynasty came forward and stood
upon the steps between the Pharaoh Menes and all those
who had reigned after him. His face seemed familiar
to Smith, as was the side lock that hung down behind
his right ear in token of his youth. Where had
he seen him? Ah, he remembered. Only a few
hours ago lying in one of the cases of the Museum,
together with the bones of the Pharaoh Uñas.
“Your Majesties,” he began,
“I am the King Metesuphis. The matter that
I wish to lay before you is that of the violation of
our sepulchres by those men who now live upon the
earth. The mortal bodies of many who are gathered
here to-night lie in this place to be stared at and
mocked by the curious. I myself am one of them,
jawless, broken, hideous to behold. Yonder, day
by day, must my Ka sit watching my desecrated
flesh, torn from the pyramid that, with cost and labour,
I raised up to be an eternal house wherein I might
hide till the hour of resurrection. Others of
us lie in far lands. Thus, as he can tell you,
my predecessor, Man-kau-ra, he who built the
third of the great pyramids, the Pyramid of Her, sleeps,
or rather wakes in a dark city, called London, across
the seas, a place of murk where no sun shines.
Others have been burnt with fire, others are scattered
in small dust. The ornaments that were ours are
stole away and sold to the greedy; our sacred writings
and our symbols are their jest. Soon there will
not be one holy grave in Egypt that remains undefiled.”
“That is so,” said a voice
from the company. “But four months gone
the deep, deep pit was opened that I had dug in the
shadow of the Pyramid of Cephren, who begat me in
the world. There in my chamber I slept alone,
two handfuls of white bones, since when I died they
did not preserve the body with wrappings and with
spices. Now I see those bones of mine, beside
which my Double has watched for these five thousand
years, hid in the blackness of a great ship and tossing
on a sea that is strewn with ice.”
“It is so,” echoed a hundred other voices.
“Then,” went on the young
king, turning to Menes, “I ask of your Majesty
whether there is no means whereby we may be avenged
on those who do us this foul wrong.”
“Let him who has wisdom speak,” said the
old Pharaoh.
A man of middle age, short in stature
and of a thoughtful brow, who held in his hand a wand
and wore the feathers and insignia of the heir to the
throne of Egypt and of a high priest of Amen, moved
to the steps. Smith knew him at once from his
statues. He was Khaemuas, son of Rameses the
Great, the mightiest magician that ever was in Egypt,
who of his own will withdrew himself from earth before
the time came that he should sit upon the throne.
“I have wisdom, your Majesties,
and I will answer,” he said. “The
time draws on when, in the land of Death which is
Life, the land that we call Amenti, it will be
given to us to lay our wrongs as to this matter before
Those who judge, knowing that they will be avenged.
On this night of the year also, when we resume the
shapes we were, we have certain powers of vengeance,
or rather of executing justice. But our time is
short, and there is much to say and do before the sun-god
Ra arises and we depart each to his place. Therefore
it seems best that we should leave these wicked ones
in their wickedness till we meet them face to face
beyond the world.”
Smith, who had been following the
words of Khaemuas with the closest attention and considerable
anxiety, breathed again, thanking Heaven that the
engagements of these departed monarchs were so numerous
and pressing. Still, as a matter of precaution,
he drew the cigar-box which contained Ma-Mee’s
hand from his pocket, and pushed it as far away from
him as he could. It was a most unlucky act.
Perhaps the cigar-box grated on the floor, or perhaps
the fact of his touching the relic put him into psychic
communication with all these spirits. At any rate,
he became aware that the eyes of that dreadful magician
were fixed upon him, and that a bone had a better
chance of escaping the search of a Röntgen ray
than he of hiding himself from their baleful glare.
“As it happens, however,”
went on Khaemuas, in a cold voice, “I now perceive
that there is hidden in this place, and spying on us,
one of the worst of these vile thieves. I say
to your Majesties that I see him crouched beneath
yonder funeral barge, and that he has with him at this
moment the hand of one of your Majesties, stolen by
him from her tomb at Thebes.”
Now every queen in the company became
visibly agitated (Smith, who was watching Ma-Mee,
saw her hold up her hands and look at them), while
all the Pharaohs pointed with their fingers and exclaimed
together, in a voice that rolled round the hall like
thunder:
“Let him be brought forth to judgment!”
Khaemuas raised his wand and, holding
it towards the boat where Smith was hidden, said:
“Draw near, Vile One, bringing
with thee that thou hast stolen.”
Smith tried hard to remain where he
was. He sat himself down and set his heels against
the floor. As the reader knows, he was always
shy and retiring by disposition, and never had these
weaknesses oppressed him more than they did just then.
When a child his favourite nightmare had been that
the foreman of a jury was in the act of proclaiming
him guilty of some dreadful but unstated crime.
Now he understood what that nightmare foreshadowed.
He was about to be convicted in a court of which all
the kings and queens of Egypt were the jury, Menes
was Chief Justice, and the magician Khaemuas played
the rôle of Attorney-General.
In vain did he sit down and hold fast.
Some power took possession of him which forced him
first to stretch out his arm and pick up the cigar-box
containing the hand of Ma-Mee, and next drew him from
the friendly shelter of the deal boards that were
about the boat.
Now he was on his feet and walking
down the flight of steps opposite to those on which
Menes stood far away. Now he was among all that
throng of ghosts, which parted to let him pass, looking
at him as he went with cold and wondering eyes.
They were very majestic ghosts; the ages that had
gone by since they laid down their sceptres had taken
nothing from their royal dignity. Moreover, save
one, none of them seemed to have any pity for his
plight. She was a little princess who stood by
her mother, that same little princess whose mummy
he had seen and pitied in the Director’s room
with a lotus flower thrust beneath her bandages.
As he passed Smith heard her say:
“This Vile One is frightened. Be brave,
Vile One!”
Smith understood, and pride came to
his aid. He, a gentleman of the modern world,
would not show the white feather before a crowd of
ancient Egyptian ghosts. Turning to the child,
he smiled at her, then drew himself to his full height
and walked on quietly. Here it may be stated
that Smith was a tall man, still comparatively young,
and very good-looking, straight and spare in frame,
with dark, pleasant eyes and a little black beard.
“At least he is a well-favoured
thief,” said one of the queens to another.
“Yes,” answered she who
had been addressed. “I wonder that a man
with such a noble air should find pleasure in disturbing
graves and stealing the offerings of the dead,”
words that gave Smith much cause for thought.
He had never considered the matter in this light.
Now he came to the place where Ma-Mee
stood, the black-browed Pharaoh who had been her husband
at her side. On his left hand which held the
cigar-box was the gold Bes ring, and that box he felt
constrained to carry pressed against him just over
his heart.
As he went by he turned his head,
and his eyes met those of Ma-Mee. She started
violently. Then she saw the ring upon his hand
and again started still more violently.
“What ails your Majesty?” asked the Pharaoh.
“Oh, naught,” she answered.
“Yet does this earth-dweller remind you of anyone?”
“Yes, he does,” answered
the Pharaoh. “He reminds me very much of
that accursed sculptor about whom we had words.”
“Do you mean a certain Horu,
the Court artist; he who worked the image that was
buried with me, and whom you sent to carve your statues
in the deserts of Kush, until he died of fevers or
was it poison?”
“Aye; Horu and no other, may
Set take and keep him!” growled the Pharaoh.
Then Smith passed on and heard no
more. Now he stood before the venerable Menes.
Some instinct caused him to bow to this Pharaoh, who
bowed back to him. Then he turned and bowed to
the royal company, and they also bowed back to him,
coldly, but very gravely and courteously.
“Dweller on the world where
once we had our place, and therefore brother of us,
the dead,” began Menes, “this divine priest
and magician” and he pointed to Khaemuas “declares
that you are one of those who foully violate our sepulchres
and desecrate our ashes. He declares, moreover,
that at this very moment you have with you a portion
of the mortal flesh of a certain Majesty whose spirit
is present here. Say, now, are these things true?”
To his astonishment Smith found that
he had not the slightest difficulty in answering in
the same sweet tongue.
“O King, they are true, and
not true. Hear me, rulers of Egypt. It is
true that I have searched in your graves, because my
heart has been drawn towards you, and I would learn
all that I could concerning you, for it comes to me
now that once I was one of you no
king, indeed, yet perchance of the blood of kings.
Also for I would hide nothing even if I
could I searched for one tomb above all
others.”
“Why, O man?” asked the Judge.
“Because a face drew me, a lovely face that
was cut in stone.”
Now all that great audience turned
their eyes towards him and listened as though his
words moved them.
“Did you find that holy tomb?”
asked Menes. “If so, what did you find
therein?”
“Aye, Pharaoh, and in it I found
these,” and he took from the box the withered
hand, from his pocket the broken bronze, and from his
finger the ring.
“Also I found other things which
I delivered to the keeper of this place, articles
of jewellery that I seem to see to-night upon one who
is present here among you.”
“Is the face of this figure
the face you sought?” asked the Judge.
“It is the lovely face,” he answered.
Menes took the effigy in his hand
and read the cartouche that was engraved beneath its
breast.
“If there be here among us,”
he said, presently, “one who long after my day
ruled as queen in Egypt, one who was named Ma-Me, let
her draw near.”
Now from where she stood glided Ma-Mee
and took her place opposite to Smith.
“Say, O Queen,” asked
Menes, “do you know aught of this matter?”
“I know that hand; it was my
own hand,” she answered. “I know that
ring; it was my ring. I know that image in bronze;
it was my image. Look on me and judge for yourselves
whether this be so. A certain sculptor fashioned
it, the son of a king’s son, who was named Horu,
the first of sculptors and the head artist of my Court.
There, clad in strange garments, he stands before
you. Horu, or the Double of Horu, he who cut
the image when I ruled in Egypt, is he who found the
image and the man who stands before you; or, mayhap,
his Double cast in the same mould.”
The Pharaoh Menes turned to the magician
Khaemuas and said:
“Are these things so, O Seer?”
“They are so,” answered
Khaemuas. “This dweller on the earth is
he who, long ago, was the sculptor Horu. But
what shall that avail? He, once more a living
man, is a violator of the hallowed dead. I say,
therefore, that judgment should be executed on his
flesh, so that when the light comes here to-morrow
he himself will again be gathered to the dead.”
Menes bent his head upon his breast
and pondered. Smith said nothing. To him
the whole play was so curious that he had no wish to
interfere with its development. If these ghosts
wished to make him of their number, let them do so.
He had no ties on earth, and now when he knew full
surely that there was a life beyond this of earth
he was quite prepared to explore its mysteries.
So he folded his arms upon his breast and awaited
the sentence.
But Ma-Mee did not wait. She
raised her hand so swiftly that the bracelets jingled
on her wrists, and spoke out with boldness.
“Royal Khaemuas, prince and
magician,” she said, “hearken to one who,
like you, was Egypt’s heir centuries before you
were born, one also who ruled over the Two Lands,
and not so ill which, Prince, never was
your lot. Answer me! Is all wisdom centred
in your breast? Answer me! Do you alone
know the mysteries of Life and Death? Answer me!
Did your god Amen teach you that vengeance went before
mercy? Answer me! Did he teach you that
men should be judged unheard? That they should
be hurried by violence to Osiris ere their time, and
thereby separated from the dead ones whom they loved
and forced to return to live again upon this evil
Earth?
“Listen: when the last
moon was near her full my spirit sat in my tomb in
the burying-place of queens. My spirit saw this
man enter into my tomb, and what he did there.
With bowed head he looked upon my bones that a thief
of the priesthood had robbed and burnt within twenty
years of their burial, in which he himself had taken
part. And what did this man with those bones,
he who was once Horu? I tell you that he hid them
away there in the tomb where he thought they could
not be found again. Who, then, was the thief
and the violator? He who robbed and burnt my
bones, or he who buried them with reverence? Again,
he found the jewels that the priest of your brotherhood
had dropped in his flight, when the smoke of the burning
flesh and spices overpowered him, and with them the
hand which that wicked one had broken off from the
body of my Majesty. What did this man then?
He took the jewels. Would you have had him leave
them to be stolen by some peasant? And the hand?
I tell you that he kissed that poor dead hand which
once had been part of the body of my Majesty, and
that now he treasures it as a holy relic. My spirit
saw him do these things and made report thereof to
me. I ask you, therefore, Prince, I ask you all,
Royalties of Egypt whether for such deeds
this man should die?”
Now Khaemuas, the advocate of vengeance,
shrugged his shoulders and smiled meaningly, but the
congregation of kings and queens thundered an answer,
and it was:
“No!”
Ma-Mee looked to Menes to give judgment.
Before he could speak the dark-browed Pharaoh who
had named her wife strode forward and addressed them.
“Her Majesty, Heiress of Egypt,
Royal Wife, Lady of the Two Lands, has spoken,”
he cried. “Now let me speak who was the
husband of her Majesty. Whether this man was
once Horu the sculptor I know not. If so he was
also an evil-doer who, by my decree, died in banishment
in the land of Kush. Whatever be the truth as
to that matter, he admits that he violated the tomb
of her Majesty and stole what the old thieves had
left. Her Majesty says also and he
does not deny it that he dared to kiss
her hand, and for a man to kiss the hand of a wedded
Queen of Egypt the punishment is death. I claim
that this man should die to the World before his time,
that in a day to come again he may live and suffer
in the World. Judge, O Menes.”
Menes lifted his head and spoke, saying:
“Repeat to me the law, O Pharaoh,
under which a living man must die for the kissing
of a dead hand. In my day and in that of those
who went before me there was no such law in Egypt.
If a living man, who was not her husband, or of her
kin, kissed the living hand of a wedded Queen of Egypt,
save in ceremony, then perchance he might be called
upon to die. Perchance for such a reason a certain
Horu once was called upon to die. But in the
grave there is no marriage, and therefore even if he
had found her alive within the tomb and kissed her
hand, or even her lips, why should he die for the
crime of love?
“Hear me, all; this is my judgment
in the matter. Let the soul of that priest who
first violated the tomb of the royal Ma-Mee be hunted
down and given to the jaws of the Destroyer, that
he may know the last depths of Death, if so the gods
declare. But let this man go from among us unharmed,
since what he did he did in reverent ignorance and
because Hathor, Goddess of Love, guided him from of
old. Love rules this world wherein we meet to-night,
with all the worlds whence we have gathered or whither
we still must go. Who can defy its power?
Who can refuse its rites? Now hence to Thebes!”
There was a rushing sound as of a
thousand wings, and all were gone.
No, not all, since Smith yet stood
before the draped colossi and the empty steps, and
beside him, glorious, unearthly, gleamed the vision
of Ma-Mee.
“I, too, must away,” she
whispered; “yet ere I go a word with you who
once were a sculptor in Egypt. You loved me then,
and that love cost you your life, you who once dared
to kiss this hand of mine that again you kissed in
yonder tomb. For I was Pharaoh’s wife in
name only; understand me well, in name only; since
that title of Royal Mother which they gave me is but
a graven lie. Horu, I never was a wife, and when
you died, swiftly I followed you to the grave.
Oh, you forget, but I remember! I remember many
things. You think that the priestly thief broke
this figure of me which you found in the sand outside
my tomb. Not so. I broke it, because,
daring greatly, you had written thereon, ‘Beloved,’
not ‘of Horus the God,’ as you should
have done, but ’of Horu the Man.’
So when I came to be buried, Pharaoh, knowing all,
took the image from my wrappings and hurled it away.
I remember, too, the casting of that image, and how
you threw a gold chain I had given you into the crucible
with the bronze, saying that gold alone was fit to
fashion me. And this signet that I bear it
was you who cut it. Take it, take it, Horu, and
in its place give me back that which is on your hand,
the Bes ring that I also wore. Take it and wear
it ever till you die again, and let it go to the grave
with you as once it went to the grave with me.
“Now hearken. When Ra the
great sun arises again and you awake you will think
that you have dreamed a dream. You will think
that in this dream you saw and spoke with a lady of
Egypt who died more than three thousand years ago,
but whose beauty, carved in stone and bronze, has charmed
your heart to-day. So let it be, yet know, O man,
who once was named Horu, that such dreams are oft-times
a shadow of the truth. Know that this Glory which
shines before you is mine indeed in the land that is
both far and near, the land wherein I dwell eternally,
and that what is mine has been, is, and shall be yours
for ever. Gods may change their kingdoms and
their names; men may live and die, and live again once
more to die; empires may fall and those who ruled
them be turned to forgotten dust. Yet true love
endures immortal as the souls in which it was conceived,
and from it for you and me, the night of woe and separation
done, at the daybreak which draws on, there shall be
born the splendour and the peace of union. Till
that hour foredoomed seek me no more, though I be
ever near you, as I have ever been. Till that
most blessed hour, Horu, farewell.”
She bent towards him; her sweet lips
touched his brow; the perfume from her breath and
hair beat upon him; the light of her wondrous eyes
searched out his very soul, reading the answer that
was written there.
He stretched out his arms to clasp
her, and lo! she was gone.
It was a very cold and a very stiff
Smith who awoke on the following morning, to find
himself exactly where he had lain down namely,
on a cement floor beneath the keel of a funeral boat
in the central hall of the Cairo Museum. He crept
from his shelter shivering, and looked at this hall,
to find it quite as empty as it had been on the previous
evening. Not a sign or a token was there of Pharaoh
Menes and all those kings and queens of whom he had
dreamed so vividly.
Reflecting on the strange phantasies
that weariness and excited nerves can summon to the
mind in sleep, Smith made his way to the great doors
and waited in the shadow, praying earnestly that, although
it was the Mohammedan Sabbath, someone might visit
the Museum to see that all was well.
As a matter of fact, someone did,
and before he had been there a minute a
watchman going about his business. He unlocked
the place carelessly, looking over his shoulder at
a kite fighting with two nesting crows. In an
instant Smith, who was not minded to stop and answer
questions, had slipped past him and was gliding down
the portico, from monument to monument, like a snake
between boulders, still keeping in the shadow as he
headed for the gates.
The attendant caught sight of him
and uttered a yell of fear; then, since it is not
good to look upon an afreet, appearing from
whence no mortal man could be, he turned his head
away. When he looked again Smith was through
those gates and had mingled with the crowd in the street
beyond.
The sunshine was very pleasant to
one who was conscious of having contracted a chill
of the worst Egyptian order from long contact with
a damp stone floor. Smith walked on through it
towards his hotel it was Shepheard’s,
and more than a mile away making up a story
as he went to tell the hall-porter of how he had gone
to dine at Mena House by the Pyramids, missed the
last tram, and stopped the night there.
Whilst he was thus engaged his left
hand struck somewhat sharply against the corner of
the cigar-box in his pocket, that which contained the
relic of the queen Ma-Mee. The pain caused him
to glance at his fingers to see if they were injured,
and to perceive on one of them the ring he wore.
Surely, surely it was not the same that the Director-General
had given him! That ring was engraved with
the image of the god Bes. On this was
cut the cartouche of her Majesty Ma-mee! And he
had dreamed oh, he had dreamed !
To this day Smith is wondering whether,
in the hurry of the moment, he made a mistake as to
which of those rings the Director-General had given
him as part of his share of the spoil of the royal
tomb he discovered in the Valley of Queens. Afterwards
Smith wrote to ask, but the Director-General could
only remember that he gave him one of the two rings,
and assured him that that inscribed “Bes Ank,
Ank Bes,” was with Ma-Mee’s other
jewels in the Gold Room of the Museum.
Also Smith is wondering whether any
other bronze figure of an old Egyptian royalty shows
so high a percentage of gold as, on analysis, the
broken image of Ma-Mee was proved to do. For had
she not seemed to tell him a tale of the melting of
a golden chain when that effigy was cast?
Was it all only a dream, or was it something
more by day and by night he asks of Nothingness?
But, be she near or far, no answer
comes from the Queen Ma-Mee, whose proud titles were
“Her Majesty the Good God, the justified Dweller
in Osiris; Daughter of Amen, Royal Heiress, Royal
Sister, Royal Wife, Royal Mother; Lady of the Two
Lands; Wearer of the Double Crown; of the White Crown,
of the Red Crown; Sweet Flower of Love, Beautiful Eternally.”
So, like the rest of us, Smith must
wait to learn the truth concerning many things, and
more particularly as to which of those two circles
of ancient gold the Director-General gave him yonder
at Cairo.
It seems but a little matter, yet
it is more than all the worlds to him!
To the astonishment of his colleagues
in antiquarian research, Smith has never returned
to Egypt. He explains to them that his health
is quite restored, and that he no longer needs this
annual change to a more temperate clime.
Now, which of the two royal
rings did the Director-General return to Smith on
the mummied hand of her late Majesty Ma-Mee?