10

Lines in the sand

Callisthenes tossed a clay tablet aside and leaned forward, resting his head in his hands. He had risen early — far earlier than normal — in an effort to bring some semblance of order to his life. Since returning from Delphi, he had done little actual work. The chaotic ruin around him bore mute witness to that fact. He had a mercantile empire to run. Rolls of papyrus lay in a wicker basket, contracts that could not be processed until he affixed his seal to them. Letters, both papyrus and clay, awaited his perusal, his reply. A ship captain from Cyprus had a hold full of Iberian tin to sell, and his man in Byblos needed more capital to make the purchase. Bankers on Delos wanted payment for a lost shipment of wine. A consortium of Athenian artists sought his aid to purchase marble from Tura …

Callisthenes tried to concentrate, but found his gaze drawn to the flickering flame of his candle. His imagination swirled with scenes of glory, with triumphs earned in close combat. What was it like to stand shoulder to shoulder with Death, to feel the press of bodies and hear the whistle and crunch of blades? What was it like to feel hot blood spraying from a dying man? How alive it must feel, this dealing of death. Callisthenes returned to himself with a start and shuffled through the rolls of papyrus, the tablets of dried clay, looking for something he knew he would not find among them.

Freedom.

He had lived a life of safety, shackled by the chains of caution and cushioned by the blanket of wealth. He had never placed his life on the line for a cause; never risked his neck for an ideal. Grounded by the reality of invoices and bills of lading, Callisthenes did not realize, until now, how much he longed to be free, a footloose wanderer. He sighed. A fine dream, but his life was something altogether different, his father had made sure of that. His life was respectable.

"Master! " a voice echoed through the silent villa.

Callisthenes heard the slap of bare feet on stone. The Greek frowned as a slave rushed into his office. "What is it, Nebamun? "

"Soldiers, master!"

"Bring their officer to me, and see that the others are comfortable." This was how it happened before, how he became Phanes' envoy to Delphi. What did that madman want now? Suddenly, an icy sense of dread clutched the merchant's heart. Could Phanes know his true feelings? Could someone, somewhere have fingered him? Despite his dreams to the contrary, Callisthenes was a soft man, and images of torture too hideous to comprehend ran through his mind. He had to stay calm.

Callisthenes glanced up as Nebamun ushered a Greek officer into his presence. The soldier wore a cuirass of burnished bronze, and his shield bore the head of Medusa, Phanes' emblem. He stood straight and tall, his manner deferential.

"How may I help you, captain?" Callisthenes said, his voice far steadier than he could have hoped for.

"We have orders to escort you to the temple of Egyptian Hephaestus."

Callisthenes nodded. He placed his hands palms down on his desk, surveying the papyri, tablets, and ostraka representing a lifetime of hard work and respect, tangible evidence of a huge empire. An empire he was about to destroy. "Fine. Await me out front."

The soldier nodded and left the room.

The summons could only be a ploy, a precursor to murdering him for his betrayal. Callisthenes wasted no time speculating on how Phanes found out. It was purely academic. It was enough for him that he did know, and desired revenge. Sweat poured down the Greek's face. Callisthenes opened an ornate trunk and took out a small bag of gold and a thin-bladed knife. He secreted these in his robe, then glanced about his office. This must be what freedom felt like: a dull ache in the pit of his stomach, a tightness in his chest. Callisthenes was not so sure freedom agreed with him.

The Greek opened the rear door of his office and scurried down the shallow stone steps that led to his garden. All around, Memphis shivered and came alive, rising like the sacred baboons of Thoth to greet the sun with howls of adoration. Soon, the oppressive heat would return; the sky would glow white-hot and the stones underfoot would burn like slag from an ironmonger's forge. For now, the air was crisp and cool, spiced with the smell of baking bread and the light fragrance of water lilies arising from his garden pool. Gathering his robes about him, Callisthenes darted through the garden and paused to unlatch the back gate.

Once he crossed this threshold, there was no turning back. In a literal sense he had reached a crossroads. Perhaps he could manipulate Phanes into believing …? No. Phanes was beyond being used. If he did not act now, he would not see the end of this day. He knew it in his marrow.

"Winged Hermes, give me strength!" he whispered, and then he was gone.

The merchant dwelt in a section of the city reserved for wealthy Egyptians, lesser aristocrats and scribes of modest rank. Three streets over, the White Citadel rose on its manmade acropolis. He hurried south, hoping to lose himself in the tight warrens of the Foreign Quarter. He would have to skirt the bloody Square of Deshur, where the Greek companies would be mustering, but he couldn't envision any problems. The growing dread of battle had fairly well cleared the streets.

"Merchant!" a voice bawled. "Why do you run?" Callisthenes glanced over his shoulder and saw three soldiers pounding after him. They played their parts well; their surprise looked genuine. Callisthenes cursed his fat, his years of indolence. He had little chance of escaping three men in their prime. Perhaps, though, he could outwit them.

"What's wrong with you, merchant?"

Callisthenes took a side street, remembering the story of the labyrinth at Knossos, on Crete. He would confuse the soldiers by taking side streets and alleys, lose them by guile rather than force. White linen awnings fluttered in the light dawn breeze; a haze of cooking smoke wafted through the air. He whirled and plunged down an alley that stank of urine and rotting vegetables. Here, all was midnight and shadow. He hurried past an open doorway and …

Hands clutched at Callisthenes. The Greek had time for a single bleat of terror before a spade-like palm clamped over his mouth. He felt himself dragged into a darkened building. Behind him, something crashed into his pursuers. The sounds of butchery, of flesh giving way beneath a keen edge, sent a wave of nausea through the Greek. A single terrible wail rose in pitch, only to be abruptly cut off.

The hands holding the merchant steadied him until he found his legs. Dark faces pressed close. Egyptians. Men Callisthenes knew. Thothmes was there, as was Ibebi, the haughty merchant Amenmose, squat little Hekaib, and a woman he was unfamiliar with. The men were weaponless, though their eyes burned with a righteous fury. A larger shadow loomed in the doorway.

"We're even now, Greek," a voice hissed. Barca.

"I had thought you'd be gone from here, off to join Pharaoh's army," Callisthenes said, breathing heavily.

"I'll be joining that fight soon enough," Barca replied. "What was that about?" He nodded back out the door, indicating the dead soldiers. To Hekaib he said: "Strip them. Divide the weapons and armor. Bring me the largest cuirass."

Callisthenes shrugged. "Phanes. Somehow he must have learned about my change of heart toward his cause. He sent his thugs to kill me."

"You have nothing to lose, then?" Barca extended his knife to Callisthenes. "Take this, fight with us."

"He's Greek!" Thothmes hissed. The others echoed his indignation. A single sweep of Barca's eyes silenced them.

"And I am Phoenician. It matters little. What matters is his life will be worth even less than yours should Phanes win. Is it not his right to defend himself?"

Thothmes and the others said nothing, unable to find fault with Barca's logic. Grudgingly, they nodded. Barca turned to Callisthenes, proffering the hilt again. "You are a man of Naucratis. If you won't fight for your Pharaoh, then fight for the land that has adopted you. And if that does not stir your blood, then fight for your life."

Callisthenes stared at the weapon. "I–I have never …" He took the blade gingerly, as if Barca handed him a scorpion, then looked around at his newfound allies. "I know where we can find weapons."


At cockcrow, the Greek army marshaled in the Square of Deshur. Under Hyperides' watchful eye, three companies of peltasts — archers from Crete in their felt caps, tunics of supple leather covering their torsos — marched past, forming around the hardened bronze center of the hoplites. Guidons snapped and fluttered in the morning's breeze. The skirl of pipes punctuated every move the companies made. The Ithacan gestured, and in response a horn sounded above the din. By column, the Greeks took the first step onto the road of conquest. Egyptians lined that road, silent, hoping beyond hope that dusk would find the Greeks dead and bleeding in the sand beyond the city. No maidens rushed out to kiss the departing soldiers; no old men bid farewell with a knowing salute. Only dark impassive faces and eyes brimming with hate.

Above the Square, Phanes trod the paving stones of the western pylon of the temple of Ptah. His armor gleamed in the sun; a white cloak billowed out behind him. The look on his face was one of barely controlled rage. Nicias stood to one side, out of the path of his commander's anger.

"What the hell happened? Why did he bolt?"

Nicias shrugged. "I have no answer for you, strategos, though privately I've always felt Callisthenes to be more Egyptian than Greek."

That idea struck Phanes crossly, something he had not envisaged. Could Callisthenes, jolly Callisthenes, betray him? Lysistratis had thought so. If his sympathies did lay with the Egyptian people, then he could have leaked details of Phanes' plans to Pharaoh's agents at any time. Suddenly everything the merchant touched grew suspect; every delay, every word, every question became the work of a traitor. Phanes gave Nicias a look that would curdle milk. "You think he's double-crossed me?"

"Why else would he run?"

"If he has betrayed me, he'll not live long enough to savor it. It's too late to alter our plans. Send word to the men inside the temple walls to remain vigilant, as a precaution." He would deal with Callisthenes later. Phanes took a deep breath as he turned to face the rising sun. "Can you feel it? The air itself is alive."

The cloudless sky faded from light blue in the west to white and orange in the east. The Nile glittered like liquid silver. Phanes peered down on the temple grounds. His men were moving into position; sunlight angling through decorative pylons and colonnades struck fire from breastplates, helmets, and spear tips. A short avenue of human-headed sphinxes led from the quay to the temple proper. Phanes chose that spot as the site of Pharaoh's death.

"It's a fine day to die, should the gods decree it," Nicias said.

"Not for us, my friend," Phanes said. "This is our day for triumph." Below them, his men ushered the gaggle of captive priests through the temple gates. He spotted Ujahorresnet among them. "Bring me the high priest of Neith."

Soldiers relayed the order. Ujahorresnet was cut from the herd and escorted up the long interior stairs of the pylon. He marched like a man going to meet his doom. Would Petenemheb's fate be his, a sacrifice to the crude gods of Hellas? Whatever Phanes' designs, the priest resolved to meet it with head held high.

Ujahorresnet blinked as he emerged into the bright morning sunlight. He paused at the head of the stairs. The view from atop the pylon was staggering. Off to the west, cloaked in haze, he could make out the pyramids of Saqqara; the smaller bench-like mastaba tombs were dark smudges against the lighter sands. Even the plumes of dust rising from the wheels of Pharaoh's chariotry could be plainly seen.

"Impressive, is it not?" Phanes said.

Ujahorresnet tore his gaze away from the distant panorama. "Very. Should I thank you for not betraying me to my colleagues, or should I brace myself for a long fall?"

"I like your mettle, Ujahorresnet. If things were different, I think you and I might have become friends. Have you, in your new-found piety, decided to put aside the terms of our agreement?"

Ujahorresnet sighed. He had wrestled with that same question for much of the night. The thirst for vengeance had sent him astray, to be sure, but the idea of an Egypt reinvigorated by foreign rulers, by men who would give his countrymen a new sense of themselves, remained unchanged. "No, general. I will honor our agreement. Egypt still suffers the rot of corruption. A symptom of that rot was my misguided attempt to use you as a tool of my vengeance. The Goddess has shown me the error of my ways." Ujahorresnet gripped the Greek's arm. "Make sure your plan is sound, general. If you die. ."

"All men die," Phanes said. "But not all men stand on the threshold of greatness. If I die today, if the Fates forsake me, then so be it. I will enter Elysium secure in the knowledge that I stood where so few men ever had."

"And where is that?"

"On the brink of immortality! "

A messenger rushed up the stairs to the pylon's roof. "A sail, strategos!" he said, out of breath. He pointed off to the north. Phanes followed his gesture, grinned. True enough, a sail glimmered through the morning haze.

"What is it?" Ujahorresnet said, shading his eyes.

"Pharaoh's barge, the Kbepri, and she'll dock within the hour." Phanes turned to his men. "Get to your stations!"

Ujahorresnet hastened to stay abreast of the fighting men as they made their way down from the pylon and through the temple. He followed Phanes through the Temple of the Hearing Ear, built by great Ramses, and through a succession of decorative pylons dedicated to a smattering of different pharaohs. Their footfalls echoed about the great hypostyle hall. The noise and movement, the flash of sunlight on bronze, the cool shadows, all gave the priest a disjointed sensation, as if he stood outside his body and watched.

Word of the Khepri's approach had circulated through the ranks. All around the temple enclosure, soldiers hurried to take up their positions. A squire hustled to Phanes' side bearing his helmet and shield. The general caught up his helmet by its white horsehair crest.

"Any word from the scouts?"

The squire shook his head. "No word, sire."

Silence fell over the temple precinct.

Phanes stopped and glanced around. Save for a single squad, a guard of honor, his men had faded into the shadows of the first pylon, called the Gate of the Dawn; they were ready to charge the quay at Phanes' command. Nicias, he could barely discern, along with scores of hoplites, crouched down behind the row of sphinxes leading to the quay. All was in readiness.

"You are fond of tales and stories," Ujahorresnet said. "My own misfortune reminds me of the Tale of the Doomed Prince. Perhaps you could apply its lesson to your own situation."

"Enlighten me, priest."

"The prince was a son of a Pharaoh from antiquity, an ambitious man who lusted after his father's throne. This prince tried everything he could to remove his sire, from assassins in the night to fomenting uprisings among client-kings, all to no avail. At his wit's end, the prince begged and pleaded with the demonic Apophis. The Great Serpent heard the young man's cries and sent a cobra to do what had to be done. His father dead, the prince gained his throne."

"An encouraging tale," Phanes said, accepting his shield from the squire. The silvered Medusa head flashed in the sun.

"There is more to it. You see, even though he had attained his dream, this prince-turned-Pharaoh could not enjoy his triumph. He could not sleep without seeing his father's poison-wracked face. He could not eat for fear of assassination. He could not trust for fear of betrayal. Be careful what you wish for, general. The reality of power is never as sweet as the dream of it."


In the red haze of dawn, a horseman thundered through the northern suburbs of Memphis. He was a scout, dusty and haggard, his leather corselet streaked with blood. The narrow road he traveled widened into a tiled court with carefully manicured trees and a stone-curbed pool of water lilies. To the right lay a sheltered colonnade that led to a complex of buildings attached to the temple of Thoth; to the left, an avenue of hard-packed dirt wound down to the Nile's edge; straight ahead, obelisks rose above the trees, marking the northern entrance to the temple of Sokar. The air smelled faintly of hyacinth.

The horseman reined in, unsure of his bearings. A solitary soldier, lounging near the pool, looked up, frowning.

"What word do you bring, brother?" the soldier said. He looked foreign, though he wore the bronze cuirass of a hoplite ranker, a line grunt; the bruises on his face bore silent witness to the brutality of their training.

The scout leapt from his horse. "T-the army!" he huffed. "Has it marched out yet? Quick, man! "

The soldier bolted upright. "Scarcely a half-hour gone, why?"

The scout cursed. "Their infantry landed a few miles north, a heavily reinforced regiment shored up by elements of the Calasirian Guard! Their vanguard engaged us north of Saqqara. I fought clear and hurried back with word."

"They'll be cut to ribbons! " the soldier said, fingering the hilt of his knife.

"That'll be the right of it," the scout nodded, kneeling at the pool's edge and scooping up handfuls of water. "That's why I have to warn them! See to my horse, friend," the scout said. He looked askance at the powerfully built soldier. "I must. ."

Fingers like iron clamped around the back of the scout's neck. "You should have stayed and died with your mates, boy-fucker! " the soldier, Barca, hissed. The scout had time for a sharp intake of breath before Barca's knife smashed through his heart.

The Phoenician eased the corpse to the ground.

Callisthenes and a handful of men crept out of hiding. "That was close," the Greek whispered. Barca nodded, lost in thought.

Their numbers had swelled since acquiring Callisthenes' aid. Another ten men had joined their cause. Ten farmers and one frightened Greek merchant. This smacked of suicide. Still, for the folk of Memphis to have any chance of aiding their Pharaoh, they had to have weapons beyond crude spears and hunting knives. Phanes had emptied the White Citadel of troops, sending half out to engage the chariots while the rest remained inside Ptah's temple, supported by two companies of peltasts along the perimeter. These peltasts were the Phoenician's target. They were mercenaries, archers and slingers, provincials from the Aegean who were only lightly armored and marginally trained. Barca knew if his Egyptians hit them hard enough, they would crack like sun-dried plaster.

And, the key to hitting them hard enough lay in weaponry. Javelins, swords, perhaps bows and arrows would do the trick. As for armor, Barca doubted they would find anything useful except for bucklers of hippopotamus hide. Body armor was out of the question. Each Greek cared for his own breastplate and helmet, or had a squire look after it for him.

With weapons, more Egyptians would follow. He had sent Amenmose, Hekaib, and Ibebi to spread the word, albeit quietly, and Jauharah to gather what medical supplies she could. Once the fight was joined, Egyptian casualties would be catastrophic. Still, it was the best he could hope for.

"The weapons are kept in there," Callisthenes hissed, pointing through the colonnade. Barca spotted a squat building sitting off by itself, across a grassy square littered with stone blocks. High windows pierced the sides of the supposed armory, and the door looked ancient, its bronze bindings green with verdigris. "My father's hired man was a scribe here. Before he died, he told me how the old Pharaohs had kept a spare weapons dump near the northern entrance of Sokar's temple."

Barca led his raiders through the colonnade. The precinct was a scriptorium, a scribal college where young men trained to serve the god Thoth and, by extension, Pharaoh. Here, the builders of Memphis chose function over ornamentation; mud brick walls plastered and whitewashed, decorated with simple scenes of scribes and officials. The dominant symbol was that of Thoth, baboon-god of wisdom. Painted hieroglyphs related the saga of man's quest for knowledge and offered prayers for Thoth's renewed patronage.

"Get in there quickly," Barca told his companions. "But quietly. Phanes has Egyptian allies, too. No need to draw undue attention to ourselves. Stick to the shadows and keep your wits about you and we'll get out of this with our hides intact. Any questions?" The Egyptians stared at him, their eyes glassy with fear. "Good. Let's go."

Thothmes led the way, keeping low to the ground, running with a long, loping stride that reminded Barca of a jackal; next came Callisthenes, the merchant sweating like a man going to his execution. One by one, the others followed, with Barca bringing up the rear.

The thick door stymied them.

"Locked," Callisthenes whispered. The merchant rolled his eyes in terror.

"I can pick it," Thothmes said. The others disagreed.

Barca snatched a sledge from a stonecutter named Khety and smashed the door open with a single explosive blow. "Grab everything you can and get out," he said as the echo of splintering wood faded away.

Inside, dust swirled through the thin morning light seeping down from the high windows. Bronze swords stood ready for battle, rank after rank of spears stretched back into darkness. Bow staves and sheaves of arrows flanked a heap of round wood and leather shields bearing the shenu, the namerings, of Wahibre Psammetichus, first of the Saite kings. The Egyptians laughed among themselves as they scattered and looted the armory.

The place was a gift from the gods. The desiccated air of Egypt kept the wood unwarped, the bronze free of tarnish, the leather safe from rot. From a rack along the wall Barca selected a sword, long and straight with two edges of finely honed iron. Ivory and lapis lazuli adorned the hilt. It was a princely weapon, easily worth a year's wages. The Phoenician looked around in wonder. How had all this material gone unclaimed through the years?

Callisthenes, following in his wake, picked up on Barca's unspoken question. "It's said that before the first Psammetichus became Pharaoh, he was but a prince of Sais and Memphis. During that time he built dozens of these armories and hid them from the prying eyes of his Assyrian overlord, Ashurbanipal. Most were looted through the years for this war or that, but this cache was forgotten, hidden by the priests of Thoth." Callisthenes selected a sword not unlike Barca's. "You think he knew?"

"Who?"

"The old Pharaoh. You think he knew that, in time, Egypt would again be beset by foreigners?"

"If he did, I doubt he would have welcomed the Greeks with such open arms." The words came before Barca could think about it, a knee-jerk response to a long-cherished hatred. He regretted every last syllable.

Barca's scorn struck Callisthenes like the blow of a mace. He turned away, his face downcast. "My people are a scourge! All my kinsmen ever did for Egypt was abuse her people and lust after her wealth. Every man, woman, and child of Hellas should be put to the sword before our blight spreads any farther! "

"Not all of you." Barca clapped the smaller man on the shoulder. "You are not like those others, Callisthenes. You, I would call a friend."

Callisthenes nodded, not trusting words for fear they would be rendered incoherent with emotion. He was spared answering by a commotion outside the armory.

"Barca! " Thothmes called, his voice quivering with trepidation. "Come, quick!"

The Phoenician scowled and darted past Callisthenes. Outside, the sun had risen above the surrounding buildings, flooding the scriptorium with bright yellow light. Barca shaded his eyes.

"Well, I'll be damned," he grunted.

They were surrounded by dozens of Egyptians. More waited beyond the colonnade. Tradesmen, merchants, field workers, scribes, priests … every strata of Memphite culture was represented: rich and poor, learned and ignorant, pious and profane.

Barca drove his sword point-first into the ground.

One of the men stepped forward, a captain in the temple guard by his crisp white kilt and gold-scaled corselet. "I am Pentu, and my brothers and I have come to aid you, Phoenician. Last eve the Greek seized the leaders of our temples as his hostages and slew the First Servant of Ptah to drive home his point. We could do nothing to thwart Inyotef's murder, but we can avenge him."

A ripple of consternation went through Barca's raiders. Inyotef? Murdered?

Another voice raised in anger. This from a man whose stained clothing marked him as a brick maker. "My sister died in the Greek's ambush of your Medjay. Me and mine are with you, too! " The same tale echoed from every throat, from men fed up with Greek atrocities. Whole families stood ready: fathers and sons, nephews and brothers; from freshfaced boys to gnarled grandfathers.

It was the rebellion Barca had hoped for.

"This will not be like the travesty in the Square," Barca said. "This will be true battle. It will be savage and ugly; you will hear things and see things that will stay with you till your dying day, provided you live through this one."

"We understand," Pentu said. "This is our home. We will fight to defend it."

"Make no mistake, most of you will die."

Pentu smiled mirthlessly. "We are Egyptian, my friend. We die better than most men live."


The creak of oars presaged the Khepri's approach. Seconds passed. Tense. Expectant. Thousands of eyes watched the quay. The structure was ancient, its foundations perhaps as old as Memphis itself. A canal led from the Nile, and the resulting lake provided a more stable surface for the loading and unloading of ships. Paved in brilliant white limestone and flanked by twin obelisks dedicated to Ptah, the quay formed a U-shaped niche where barques and barges could be docked even during the Nile's yearly flood.

The Khepri entered the canal, sails furled as her oarsmen propelled her slowly through the blue-green water. Sunlight gleamed on the gilded statues decorating her decks. Thin poles rising from the bow and stern displayed floating banners of deep Tyrian purple, embroidered with symbols of gods and pharaoh. Phanes trembled in anticipation.

"Will you translate for me, priest?" he said to Ujahorresnet, his voice calm, measured.

Ujahorresnet nodded. "Should the need arise. Frankly, that barge looks deserted." Indeed, save for sailors and oarsmen there was little movement on deck. Where were the glittering ranks of Pharaoh's guard? The bureaucrats and functionaries who shadowed the Son of Ra like jackals shadow a lion? Phanes found their absence disturbing.

The barge thumped against the quay, its hull protected from damage by fenders of woven reeds. Sailors dropped down on either side, securing the Khepri with strong ropes lashed to bronze-ringed mooring posts; others lowered an elegant boarding plank of gold-chased ebony into place. The oarsmen rose from their benches, sweating from far more than the exertion of guiding their master's ship home. Many of them muttered prayers. The small hairs on Phanes' neck stirred. Something was amiss.

The crew of the Khepri glanced at one another as they edged toward the railings. The soldiers facing them radiated menace. Phanes could feel his men's impatience; it mirrored his own. They could barely contain their lusts for blood, gold, and glory.

"This feels wrong." Phanes signaled Nicias to advance. Howling like pirates, the Greeks mobbed the barge. Egyptian sailors shrieked in terror at the sight of a horde of bronze armored hoplites storming the quay. They had no fight in them. As one, they hurled themselves over the railings and into the water.

Phanes sprinted down the sphinx-lined avenue and mounted the steps leading to the quay. Ujahorresnet followed, his lips a tight line. Soldiers rushed to either end of the quay to secure their flanks. It occurred to them that the Khepri's hold could be packed with fighting men.

"Something's not right," Nicias said. "There were maybe two dozen men aboard. We. . "

Phanes shouldered past him and ascended the gangplank. Nicias and a squad of soldiers followed on his heels. No opposition greeted Phanes; he stalked to the stern of the ship, to where linen curtains hid the royal throne from view. Fabric ripped as he tore the curtains down.

The throne stood empty, save for a roll of papyrus pinned to the seat with a knife.

Nicias reached down and pulled the papyrus free. He unrolled it. It contained a single sentence, written in the priestly script.

"Hieratic," Ujahorresnet said. He glanced at Phanes. The Greek commander nodded. Nicias handed the papyrus to the old priest.

"It says: `Enjoy this, the least of my thrones, for it is as close as you will get, you ungrateful son of a whore!'." Ujahorresnet braced for a tirade.

But Phanes remained cool, calculating, even as the last piece of the puzzle clicked in his mind. "Zeus! That old bastard is craftier than I thought! He's landed his infantry elsewhere! Redeploy to the square!"

As one organism possessed of a single mind, the Greeks wheeled and made for the western gate of the temple precinct. Squads peeled off in unison, with common rankers cleaving to their file leaders, file leaders dogging the officers. They streamed through the close confines of the temple proper, the columns like tree trunks in a forest of stone.

Dodging Greeks, Ujahorresnet found his brother priests huddled about the feet of a colossal statue of Pharaoh. Like a shepherd, the First Servant of Neith gathered them together and led them back through the temple maze. Soldiers cursed as they jogged past them; the jangle of bronze on bronze, of wood striking metal, created a deafening clamor that dislocated their senses. Above the din, though, Ujahorresnet discerned a different sound, a chilling sound.

The thunder of hooves.

Phanes skidded to a halt, a curse forming on his lips. Ahead, through the gated pylon of the western entrance to Ptah's temple, the Greek saw a dust cloud rolling toward the Square of Deshur. For an instant the dust cleared, and Phanes beheld the shattered remnant of Hyperides' men, the sky above them black with arrows and javelins. Beyond, a wall of chariots loomed. Phanes' face hardened. There were more of them than he had realized. Far more.

And, he realized something else … he had been outfoxed.

"Dress the lines! " he roared, setting his helmet into place and drawing his sword. Outfoxed by an old man!

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