“It is my business to act as I see fit.” He caught her arm and held it tightly. “Do not question me again, Ruth.” He turned to leave, then paused in the doorway, his lean frame casting a pencil-thin shadow in the pale light. “Come to the central chamber at sunset. There is a disciplinary matter to attend to.” In a moment Kadesh was gone, leaving the faintest trace of incense hanging in the still air of the chamber.
Ruth let her breath out in a half sob, taking comfort from the child’s warm body. She had been taken from despair to elation and back in the space of an afternoon; the resultant confusion of feelings left her with nothing but a growing sense of emptiness and dread. “My sweet, my sweet,” she muttered, rocking Natasha slowly back and forth. “What will become of us? What will become of us both?”
That night, Ruth dreamt the dreams of a child. Her mother cradled her, whispered words of love. They moved silently through the familiar passages but their path ahead was strewn with flowers and the scents were those of high summer and celebration. Her mother smiled and set her down. A great gathering rose up to welcome them into the central chamber and her heart gave a small lurch when she saw him waiting. How handsome he looked, dressed in robes of white with his dark hair tied loosely back against the brown skin of his neck. She was a woman now, her steps assured and confident. She joined her love at the centre of the chamber and felt her mother’s blessing settle upon them like a gentle rain. The assembled ranks opened their mouths in silent song and she felt the thrill of destiny running through her veins. She turned to look into his eyes, but he was gone. The girl, Natasha, stood before her, her face unsmiling, accusing. A voice in her head spoke clearly: Why are you letting him do this? Look at me; I am only eight years old. .
Ruth woke with a start. She heard the sounds of gentle breathing from the bed of down and silk she had fashioned for Natasha, and her feet carried her automatically to where the girl lay. As she looked at the girl’s sleeping face the images of her dream fell away from her like fragments of translucent glass. She returned to her bed and found it cold and comfortless, eventually drifting into a half slumber as the first sounds of prayer issued forth along the tunnels and pathways of her home. High above the dawn sun sent probing fingers of light across the ancient sand, highlighting the criss-crossing of vapour trails in an otherwise unbroken sky.
Chapter 11
“Occam’s razor?” I know it — I’ve heard that somewhere…” Dracup tugged at his beard with irritation. “It’s a methodology, isn’t it? The best way to approach a problem?”
“Correct,” Sara said. “Agreed, Farrell?”
“You’re right. It’s a logical principle,” Farrell nodded. “Basically it goes something like this — ‘don’t make more assumptions than the minimum needed.’”
“In other words, you ‘shave off’ any concepts or variables that are not needed to explain or get to the bottom of what you’re trying to figure out,” Sara said.
“Good.” Dracup looked at Farrell. “So come on then. Apply that to two sevens and a sundial.”
“Well, how about ‘find the angle on the sundial for seven and take seven paces in that direction.’”
Sara gestured in a comme ci, comme ça fashion. “Could be.”
“And then what?” Dracup shrugged. “Dig a hole?” It seemed simplistic, but then that was the point Occam had tried to get over with his ‘razor’. Dracup rubbed his eyes wearily.
“Depends where the seven paces takes you, I guess,” Farrell offered. ‘If it’s diggable, dig there. Just hope it ain’t concrete.”
Dracup sighed. He was just going to have to find out by trial and error. “Right. That’s settled then. Tonight we do some midnight excavating.”
“Simon?” Sara said quietly. “Can we have a word?”
“Yes. Of course.”
“In private.”
“Oh.” He looked at Farrell apologetically. “Excuse us a moment.”
The American waved a dismissive hand. “No problem. Just pretend I’m not here.”
In the kitchen, Sara leaned on the draining board and folded her arms. “Simon, I’m really sorry. I have to go back south. Something’s come up. It’s nothing awful — don’t look at me like that.”
Dracup’s first reaction was cautious relief. “Anything I can do?”
Sara laughed softly. “You’ve enough on your plate without my problems as well. Don’t look so crestfallen.” She moved towards him and put her arms around his waist. “It’s just some domestic bother. I’ll sort it out, but I have to deal with it straight away.”
“Want to tell me about it?”
She tilted her head to one side and sighed. “Compared to your problems it’s nothing. Maria wants me to vet the new girl before she signs up.”
“Your new flatmate?” He knew she’d had issues with her landlady before — the Spanish owner of her rented house. Still, this was a bit sudden. He gave her a tight smile. “When do you need to leave?”
“Asap really. If you drop me at the airport I can be back home tonight.”
“That urgent?”
She shrugged. “I’m really sorry. You know what Maria’s like. She wants to see me first thing tomorrow.” She tapped him lightly on the nose. “But keep me in touch — I can still use my brain in transit.”
Dracup felt a strange foreboding. “Right. Sure. I’ll call the airport.”
Two hours later Dracup returned to Forest Avenue with a heavy heart. She had held him tightly in the departure lounge; her lips had spoken the expected words — “See you soon” — but Dracup worried that her eyes had said something else.
Potzner was thinking about his wife, enduring her post-lunchtime chemo. He wanted to call; to tell her that their dreams had come true, that he had the answer to her condition. Here, just take this, my darling — our guys have come up with something to regenerate your damaged cells; the cancer cells will be destroyed and replaced. And your new cells will be better than before. Stronger. Longer lasting. You’ve never seen anything like this. Trust me. Everything’s going to be fine. We’re going to live forever, you and me. Imagine that! We’re going to live forever.
He rubbed his eyes and stretched back in his chair. The afternoon had sped past like a runaway automobile. And had ended a write-off. How did he feel? Disappointed. Despairing. Desperate? The phone rang. He sighed deeply and snatched the buzzing receiver from its cradle.
“Yeah? Oh, Mr Dracup. How’s it going?” Potzner listened carefully. “Yep. Right. Okay, that sounds very promising. I kind of had a feeling that old Theodore had a trick or two up his sleeve. How’s Farrell shaping up?” Potzner gave a sardonic grin as he listened to Dracup’s reply. Farrell had an IQ of 158 and had scored the top results in his training year — in fact his had been the highest mark obtained in the Department’s rigorous logic and numeracy tests since 1969. All packaged up in a baseball star’s physique. Even Potzner thought he was too good to be true.
“He does what? Yeah, I know. But then he’ll come out with something that’ll blow you away — what’s that? Sevens?” Potzner gave a short laugh. “Yeah, just like that.”
Potzner’s PC beeped as a new email arrived. He glanced at it briefly. It was from Art Keegan, head of Molecular Biology. He knew what it would say; he’d been expecting it. He opened his drawer and extracted his A4 notepad. “Well, Mr Dracup, I wish I had some encouraging news from this end, but the fact is I don’t. What I do have is a translation of the cuneiform verses from the diagram. You want to hear them?” Potzner smiled wryly. “Yeah, I know. They don’t make a lot of sense on their own. Here they are, for what it’s worth: