The Heretic Queen (42 page)

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Authors: Michelle Moran

Tags: #Fiction, #Historical

BOOK: The Heretic Queen
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I nodded.

"How long have you known this?" he exclaimed.

"Woserit told me." I walked with him into the ship's royal cabin. A bed had been placed beneath painted images of Sekhmet slashing her enemies.

"What else did she tell you?"

I searched Ramesses's face and determined to roll the knucklebones. "Woserit believes that Henuttawy wants Paser because he's the one man who won't have her."

We took chairs that had been arranged around a Senet board. "I am wary of Henuttawy," Ramesses confided. "She's beautiful, but under that beauty is something dark. Don't you think?"

I had to stop myself from telling him everything I knew about Henuttawy's darkness, from reaching across the table and shaking him awake, imploring him to see what his aunt truly was. Instead I replied, "I would be very careful before trusting her advice."

WE SAILED along the river for three days, stopping at night to cook on the shore and drink barrels of
shedeh
from Malkata's winery. I was the only woman in the fleet, and if not for the boy who would play the role of princess when we reached the Northern Sea, I would have been the youngest as well. We sang and ate roasted duck in bowls from the palace, and the fat from the meat dripped off the soldiers' fingers as they sat around the fires.

On the fourth night, Ramesses announced, "We have asked the locals and there is word that the Sherden were here a few nights ago. They have raided a ship bound for my father's palace in Avaris."

The men around the fires began to grumble their indignation.

"Tomorrow, we will send a scout," Asha said. In the silvery light of the moon, he looked older than his nineteen years. When we were students in the edduba, he had broken the hearts of all the girls; I wondered now if he had met anyone yet, and whether he would marry. "The scout will go by land," he went on, "and when the Sherden have been spotted, we will send out
Amun's Blessing
and follow close behind. The fleet will wait at the bend in the river, and the scout will go out a second time. When he signals that the Sherden have approached our merchant ship, we will sail and attack!" Asha sprang to his feet for emphasis, and the cheers of the men rang out along the deserted stretch of riverbank.

Late that night, Ramesses stood behind me in our cabin and caressed my shoulders. We breathed together in the darkness, naked except for my long kilt. He removed the linen slowly, letting it fall in a pool at my feet. I shivered from his touch and he took me in his arms, carrying me to the ebony bed. He pressed his body against mine, inhaling the oil of jasmine from my skin. Over the sound of the ship groaning against its moorings, there was no one who could hear us, and when we finally fell asleep, it was in each other's arms.

A SHRIEK pierced the morning's stillness. Ramesses and I sat up in our bed, shaken from deepest sleep. I couldn't tell what it was. A child, an animal?

When it sounded again, we rushed to find our sheaths, and on the shore we saw the boy, who was dressed in a woman's wig and heavy bangles, weeping into his hands. A large soldier was shaking him by the shoulders.

"Leave him!" I cried, and the boy gaped up at me as if I had saved him from a tutor's merciless beating. When I reached the shore, he ran and clung to my leg, refusing to let go.

"He won't do it, Your Majesty!" the soldier shouted. "He is too afraid. We promised his father, the Stable Master, seven gold deben for his son to walk the decks, and he swore to us that his child was no coward!"

The boy began to cry loudly again, pathetic wails, and I pressed my hand softly to his cheek. "Shh, nothing terrible will happen to you."

"But what of
us,
Your Majesty!" the soldier protested. "What will we do with the Sherden so close? A young girl may not have any breasts, but if we use a man, how will we explain . . ."

"Maybe a soldier can wear the disguise," I suggested, "and he can stand with his back to the ship's railing?"

The man snorted. "And if the spies glimpse the muscles in his shoulders? We need someone who can pass for a woman. We need a princess's dowry ship that will lure them out!" He turned in supplication to Ramesses. "Please, tell me. What shall we do, Your Highness?"

I wondered if fatherhood had changed Ramesses, for instead of growing impatient with the child, he was watching him with pity. When the boy began to whimper again, I pried him from my kilt and said firmly, "I should go."

Ramesses looked at me, and concern was etched upon his face. "You understand this is dangerous, Nefer. You would need to carry a weapon."

"I can strap a knife to my thigh."

The soldier fumbled for his words. "But . . . but you're a
woman!
" he exclaimed. "You're a
princess.
Your life would be at risk--"

"And what is our alternative?" I demanded. "To waste days and let these Sherden slip away?"

His cheeks flared like a cobra's. "For this child to put on a wig and do as he's told! You realize, boy, that your father will be expecting his gold deben?" The little boy looked up with wide, frightened eyes and began to tremble. "He will be angry when you return without it!"

"Then I will give him the deben," I said. "And walk the decks instead. Then, when the Sherden arrive, I will lock myself in the cabin just as he was going to."

The soldier looked at Ramesses. "Your Highness, this is your wife!"

"And that's why I trust her to act responsibly. We shall keep her close."

The soldier stared at us, shocked beyond words, as we returned to the ship. Then the scout who had left in the night appeared with news. The Sherden had been spotted only a short distance away, in the channels and passages leading to the Northern Sea. Immediately,
Amun's Blessing
weighed anchor, and I sat in the cabin watching the soldiers in their merchants' clothes, laughing at one another and relishing their new roles.

"I want you to use the crossbar when we arrive." Ramesses indicated the lock on the cabin's door and added, "I'll post soldiers outside and two within. No matter what happens, Nefer, whatever you think you hear outside, you're not to come out."

"We don't even know that we will find them today--"

"We don't have to worry about finding them," he said darkly.

"Their spies along the shore will find us once we dock in Tamiat and unload the barrels."

"How do you think they will send word to their ships?"

"Polished bronze mirrors . . . light signals," he guessed, and stood. "As I said before--do not come out of this cabin. Not even if you think I've been wounded. This isn't a game. These are men who haven't seen a woman in a very long time. They live on the water and eat what they catch. A glimpse of you and they will be beating down this door."

Listening to the seriousness in his voice, I felt real fear. "But if you're wounded, you will take shelter in this cabin. You won't fight if you're wounded."

"I will fight until the Sherden have been defeated!" he swore, and I was afraid of where his rashness might lead. He cupped my chin in his hand. "You are the bravest woman I have ever known. But if something were to happen to you--"

"It won't. I won't open the door. I'll lock myself in, and the guards will protect me."

For the rest of the morning, we prepared. Ramesses watched me dress first, telling me which wig he preferred, and which bangles--though I had brought them for the boy--would catch the light best. I took extra care in applying my paint, making the lines both dark and bold so that even from far away it was clear that my lips had been reddened. When I was finished, only my throat remained bare, and as Ramesses fastened my golden pectoral, I could feel his breath warm and fast on my neck. I turned, and though I wanted to run my hands over his chest, I slowly fastened his leather armor. He had strapped a hidden dagger to his thigh, and when he knelt to do the same for me, I realized, "Your hair. Merchants wear their hair in single braids, not loops."

Though we hadn't washed properly in several days, his hair still smelled of lavender from the baths of Malkata, and when I stepped back to look at him, I sighed. "I wonder if there has ever been a Pharaoh who has looked this beautiful before battle?"

Ramesses laughed. "I'll need a steady arm far more than beauty before these days are over."

AT MIDDAY, we emerged from the soil-laden channels of the Nile, and an endless expanse of blue stretched before us. The Northern Sea.

Our ship arrived at the port of Tamiat that afternoon, and Ramesses took my hand. "We're here. The soldiers will start unloading the barrels on the quay." He smiled at me, but I could see apprehension in his eyes. "Are you ready?"

I checked my image in the polished brass. My breasts were still heavy from childbirth, and my Nubian wig fell across my shoulders in small, perfect braids. My earrings were turquoise, and even my sandals were encrusted with precious stones. There was no one who would mistake me for a commoner, and certainly not for a man.

I followed Ramesses onto the deck, and Asha teased him. "That kilt becomes you, Ramesses!" It was threadbare and worn, taken from a merchant outside Malkata, and he looked like he belonged washing the decks. Only his sandals, which were thick heeled and well made, gave him away.

"Laugh," Ramesses rejoined, "but I'm not the one who smells of fish."

Asha smelled himself; the cloak he was wearing was repugnant, and I wondered who he had taken it from. Then both men turned to me, and Ramesses asked, "You know what to do?"

I nodded. Seven soldiers disguised as merchants had tethered us to the quay and began unloading the sand-filled barrels. I stood on the prow, letting the pale sunlight reflect from my jewels, and inhaled the scent of sea air and brine. The ocean was nothing like the waters of the Nile. Frothy waves spilled onto the beach, surging shoreward, then back again as though they'd been caught in a fisherman's net and hauled out to sea.

Then a pair of tall ships appeared to windward, and the men working around me grew tense. I looked at Ramesses, who was waiting on the prow with a polished mirror, and from the stern a soldier cried eagerly, "It's the Sherden! I can see it from their pennants, Your Highness!"

Ramesses held the polished mirror above his head, and the three scouts who waited in the distance to give word to the other ships disappeared.

Asha turned to me. "Get yourself into the cabin. Lock the door!"

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