With a silent but heartfelt curse, Bak ducked away. His chest hurt, and he needed to cough. His legs and body felt heavy and ungainly, too awkward to battle the ever-swifter flow of the current. He swam toward the light, aware his time was running out. Yet he was too near his quarry to give up without another try. He angled his ascent to close again on the officer.
Huy saw him that time and identified him. He swung away from the hull and dove toward him, wrapping his arms around Bak, pinning Bak's arms to his sides. Together, they began to sink. Conscious of the fire in his lungs and his rapidly waning stamina, Bak struggled to free himself. Huy clung with a strength born of utter terror. With growing desperation, Bak tore his lower body away from Buy's and kneed the older man in the privates. The water cushioned the blow, but it was solid enough to hurt. Huy jerked back and doubled up with pain. Bak caught him by an arm and, forcing his weary muscles to one last effort, propelled himself upward.
Huy was like an anchor. Bak's arms and legs were leaden, the temptation to breathe almost beyond resistance. He felt sure they were both going to drown.
And then his head broke the surface.
He raised the older officer's head out of the river, gulped air, coughed, teok in more air. The water he had swallowed rose into his throat, threatening to erupt. Half-sick and bone-weary, Bak felt the strong pull of the current and heard the roar of rapids. He glanced around, saw they were racing toward a narrow churning waterway below two small islands, little more than outcropping rocks. The side channel, he thought, south of the island fortress. The rapid ahead was smaller than the one below the fortress but equally dangerous. As tired as he was, as unable to fight the maelstrom, they would both be pounded to death if they were sucked into its swirling waters.
At the speed they were traveling downstream, they would reach the first of the eddies within moments.
Huy moaned, coughed up water, and glanced around bleary-eyed. His body tensed, and he grabbed Bak, his terror renewed by the roar of the rapids and the speeding water. Too exhausted for a long, drawn-out fight and closing on the turbulence, Bak hit him on the jaw. Huy's head snapped back, his eyes closed, and he went limp.
Across the channel to the north lay the large island on which the fortress stood. The structure, built on the higher ground at the far end, was hidden from view by protruding rocks and brush. It was too far away and the rapids too loud for its occupants to hear a shout for help, too far away for an exhausted man to swim, especially one burdened by a senseless man. Feeling the pull of friendly faces and hot food, Bak turned with reluctance toward the tiny barren island to the south. He took another deep breath of air, more for moral support than from need, and began to swim, towing Huy behind him. Bits of foam, washed toward them, beckoning. Spray filled the air.
He was so tired he did not realize they had reached the island until he stumbled onto solid rock. He struggled to his feet, dragged Huy to safety, and collapsed on his knees. Bowing his head to the ground, he offered a silent prayer of gratitude to the lord Amon.
"I owe you my life." Huy, his face pale, greenish almost, sat with his back against a large rough boulder not far from the river's edge, letting the sun dry his clothing and heal his abused body. "If I had a daughter, she'd be yours. But I've no daughter, and nothing less would be of sufficient value to repay you."
"In a way, you have repaid me. I know now for a fact you're not the man I've been seeking."
Bak sat on a jagged chunk of rock, the highest point on the island, keeping an eye on the channel the boats traveled when going back and forth between Iken and the island fortress. He was tired and bruised, his knees abraded. His arms and legs were weak and shaky. His kilt was filthy and torn from hem to waist. The hour was late, the sun close to setting, but with luck and the lord Amon's favor, another boat would make the trip before darkness fell. He had no wish to spend the night on this rocky outcrop, an irregular mass of jagged, water-worn stone.
Huy managed a wan smile. "I tried to drown you. How can you be sure my terror wasn't pretense?"
"I doubt the lord Amon himself could turn a man into so accomplished an actor," Bak said in a wry voice, "but I've a more substantial reason as well."
They both spoke louder than normal to make themselves heard above the tumbling waters.
"And that is…?" Huy asked.
"When we reached the harbor, we found my skiff holed for what seemed like no good reason. So instead of my vessel, we used yours. It, too, had been damaged, though in such a way we wouldn't notice until too late. You'd never have set foot on it if you'd done the dirty work yourself."
If possible, Huy's face turned paler than before. "My skiff was damaged deliberately?"
Bak described the damage to the hull, the missing dowel and butterfly cramp. "And from the way the stanchion broke, it must also have been weakened."
Huy's face turned grim as the truth began to dawn. "We were meant to die together."
"Exactly." Bak rubbed the back of his neck, trying to banish the soreness from his muscles. "I might've taken my boat out alone, but with a hole in its hull, I couldn't. You were busy through much of the day, watching your officers and their men practice the drills they'll perform for Amon-Psaro, so you couldn't take your skiff out until they'd finished."
Huy muttered a savage oath. "I worked the men like oxen, making no secret of the fact that I wanted to quit early because we planned to sail to the island."
"Many things could've gone wrong." Bak's voice was as grim as Huy's face. "For example, I could've taken a barge to the island, though I've never done so before, and waited for you there. But I didn't. Everything fell into place for our would-be slayer, just as it was meant to."
Huy eyed a heron wading in a shallow backwater across the channel and scowled. "1 can understand Puemre's murderer wishing you dead, especially if you're treading close on his heels. But why slay me?"
Bak gave the older officer a speculative look. "What do you know of Puemre's death that you've failed to tell me?" "Why would I hold anything back?" Huy snapped. "Puemre was a swine, true, and I've no reason to grieve for him, but his death-any death-is an offense to the lady Maat. A lie only magnifies that offense."
"You must know something," Bak insisted.
Huy scrambled to his knees-not for the first time-and leaned out over the river. He wretched once and again and again, vomiting water yellow with bile, his body, racked with pain and exhaustion. When he finished, he leaned back against the boulder and closed his eyes. Bak allowed him to rest. Huy was a strong and determined man, but no longer young. He had spent the heat of the day standing beneath the blazing sun and had come close to drowning. He had earned Bak's respect, and he had earned the right to be left in peace while he collected himself.
"I know Puemre's father is the chancellor," Huy said, his eyes still closed, "a favorite of Maatkare Hatshepsut herself, and laying hands on his slayer would naturally be important to you. But you seem driven by the task."
"I'd forgotten Nihisy," Bak admitted, laughing softly at himself. "I've been too worried for Amon-Psaro."
Huy's eyes snapped open. "Amon-Psaro? What are you talking about? Have you been holding secrets within your heart that bear on the workings of this garrison?"
Bak hastened to tell him all he knew. "So you see now why I dared not trust you," he concluded, "and why I've asked the questions I have."