10
AT PORT SAID, Osi came alive. The stink and roar of the harbour drew him, pale and blinking, into the daylight, and opened his mouth to a stream of facts. Victor snapped at him to pipe down and Isis was made sorry enough by his crestfallen expression to say, ‘Tell me about the Ptolemaic Temples again,’ and to pay attention for 5 minutes.
Once they were on solid ground and out of the ship-board breeze, the heat was glorious, like nothing Isis had known before – or like the lovely heat of the bath where every bit of you can move and relax and you feel as if you could grow an inch all round.
Melissa was going to work in Alexandria, and she and Victor kissed goodbye on the quayside where a taxi was waiting to carry her away. The kiss was the long sort on the mouth and Isis saw a man look daggers as he went past and spit on the ground, but Victor and Melissa didn’t care. Uncle Victor emerged from the kiss with red smeared round his mouth, his whole face damp and swollen.
Victor took the children to the Hotel Cecil, where they were to meet the guides who would take them to Evelyn and Arthur. They strolled through an avenue of towering palms to enter the hotel, and sat in a cool, mirrored lobby drinking crushed lemon with ice and sugar you could spoon in yourself, as much as you liked. In her greed, Isis made her own drink rather too sugary, even for her own sweet tooth. Victor drank beer and ordered a plate of sandwiches. It was quiet in the hotel after the noisy quay, and Isis shook her head as if to dislodge water in her ears. Osi was staring with his mouth agape at the frieze of hieroglyphs that ran round the walls.
‘That doesn’t make sense,’ he said, pointing.
‘I expect it’s decoration,’ said Victor.
‘But it’s not proper. It’s not right. It should be right.’
‘No matter.’ Victor raised his eyebrows at Isis.
The sandwiches came stuck together with cocktail sticks. As Victor unspeared his sandwiches, Isis collected the sticks, which would do very well for her cribbage board.
‘You’ve still got lipstick on you,’ she told Victor. She pointed to the place and with a thick cotton napkin he wiped the last trace of Melissa away.
‘Are you sad to say goodbye?’ Isis said, examining him for signs of being love-lorn. ‘When you write her a letter, can I add a line?’
Uncle Victor shook his head. ‘She’s not the type you write to,’ he said.
‘What type would you write to, then?’
His answer was a scowl and she saw his leg was jumping. Well, even if he didn’t, she would to write to Melissa. When they’d said goodbye, Melissa had crushed Isis against her thin silky dress so that she could feel the complications of flesh and straps and smell violets, smoke and sweat. The pale fluff on her face had been clouded with perspiration and her feet squashed much too tight into high-heeled sandals. You could see the clefts between her chubby toes pressed tight together by the shiny leather. Isis was fascinated by the way her body was there, hidden by her clothes, but still shouting here I am, while most people’s bodies were simply hidden and gave you no cause to think about them. Victor had certainly kissed Melissa in the dark of the cabin and perhaps been allowed to move aside the straps and silk to see and touch her pearly, naked skin.
Victor lit a cigarette and Isis left him alone and nibbled a sandwich, egg with cress, wondering if he was putting on a brave face. He’d certainly seemed extremely sweet on Melissa. When Isis had returned Salamander Summer, Melissa had given her another book: Desert Longing, and said that she could regard it as a parting gift.
‘Eat your sandwich,’ she said to Osi, and without taking his eyes off the wall, he reached out and she watched as the cocktail stick spiked him up the nostril. She sniggered and he swung his leg and caught her on the shin. It really hurt and mortifying tears jumped into her eyes.
‘Don’t kick me,’ she yelled.
Osi stuck out his tongue, clotted with half-chewed sandwich.
‘For God’s sake!’ Uncle Victor snapped. Isis rubbed her shin and looked round, but there was no one taking any notice, only the brown man who had brought their food and drinks standing with his back to the door, a perfectly neutral expression on his face.
The sandwich had a funny taste, something was different, the kind of egg or butter or cress or something, and it wasn’t quite nice. But still she finished one and reached for another. Osi had discarded his cocktail stick, but she left it, not wanting one that had been up his nose.
Victor had had another beer and smoked two more cigarettes before the guides arrived. One of them was old, one young, both dressed in white jellabas over dark trousers.
‘I’m Haru,’ the younger man said, extending his hand to Victor, who was in the act of unfolding himself from a low chair. ‘I apologise for our lateness. This,’ he stood back and gestured to the older man, ‘is my Uncle Akil, he’s a cook and a very fine one too, though his English is not so good.’ Haru’s English was perfect and only faintly accented. Both men were bearded and wore skullcaps, and sandals that revealed their naked, dusty toes.
‘Why should it be?’ Isis said kindly. ‘I don’t speak a syllable of your language.’
Haru smiled. ‘You must be Isis. And Osiris. Grand names! Welcome.’ His teeth were startlingly white against his coffee-coloured lips and the thick black of his beard, and his eyes shone damson dark. His smile flashed on and off like the beacon of a lighthouse, and when it was off he looked rather frightening.
Victor and Haru moved towards the hotel doors to converse about the journey south, and Osi followed, rummaging through his satchel, to show Haru something. Isis remained at the table finishing the rest of the sandwiches and sipping Victor’s abandoned beer. Akil had stayed just where he was, face to the floor and so it was safe to stare. It seemed queer to have a cook who was a man. She had a pang thinking of Mary all alone in Little Egypt where it would be so cold. How she would enjoy this warmth. One day they should bring her here, to this hotel where people would serve her with drinks and sandwiches and she wouldn’t have to lift a blessed finger nor skivvy in any perishing kitchen while she was at it. Isis smiled. Though Mary liked to say perishing kitchen, it was really the warmest place in the house.
Akil’s small black cap perched on hair like wire wool and there was a deep scar on one side of his face that dragged his eyebrow down over half his eye and pulled his mouth out of line. How did you do it? she longed to ask. It could have been a fight, or even an attack by a lion. Or maybe, like Victor, he’d been in the war. Was Egypt in the war? She didn’t even know that. Akil’s skin was thick leathery brown, so unlike the pearly stuff Melissa was covered in, or the flaking slackness of Mrs Grievous’, who might be dead by now. A rosy taste filled her mouth at the thought of that poor old duck and she swallowed more of the sour, flat beer.
Their luggage had already been loaded onto the back of the lorry that Haru was to drive to Cairo, where they’d meet Evelyn and Arthur, transfer to a dhow and sail down the Nile, in style. ‘In style upon the Nile,’ Victor said, in an attempt at gaiety.
But the lorry part of the trip was far from stylish. Akil and Osi sat under canvas in the back with the trunk, and Victor and Isis in the cab, while Haru drove. Surely Victor should have let Osi be inside? Isis thought, since he was supposed to be looking after them, but she could feel a throb in her shin still and why should she care if Osi got covered in dust?
The heat didn’t suit Victor one bit and he was shiny with grease and sweat, with a beer stain, already, on his pale trousers and his linen jacket shamefully crumpled. They had bottles of water and cut-up pineapple to quench their thirst on the long hot drive, much of it over bumpy, sunburnt land. Haru was a fast driver who swore in Egyptian, and swerved and tooted the horn, and the seats were rock hard. Before they’d been driving for half an hour, Isis could feel the bones in her own plump bottom, so goodness knows how Victor and Osi, neither of whom had any padding, were feeling.
The landscape was tedious and Isis shut her eyes, leant her head against Victor’s arm, and managed to sleep, drooling and bouncing against his sleeve. Now and then he took out his cigarettes and offered one to Haru so that the cab was full of smoke, as well as blindingly hot and bright.
Later in the journey, Haru pointed out that they were following the Nile into Cairo, and the land had become green with palm trees and tall crops – sugar cane, Haru said. He stopped at a place with a WC that was actually just a filthy hole behind a screen, so that they could make themselves comfortable. Haru returned to the cab with pieces of sugar cane for the twins to chew on. Isis put hers between her lips and puffed as if it was a fat cigar, and Victor laughed and squeezed her leg.
‘Soon be there,’ he said.
Haru pressed his hooter as they overtook a man with a great net of melons balanced on the back of a poor sagging donkey. They were passing houses now with luxuriant gardens, oxen grazing on patches of roadside grass, cats and chickens and children. There were women in long frocks with scarves over their heads, which must be beastly hot, and every person they passed gawped and pointed at the lorry. Most of the vehicles they saw, as they came into the town, were horse- or ox-drawn, and there were bicycles too, piled with much more than they were meant for, whole families sometimes, wobbling along the rutted road.
They had to stop as a flock of grubby, runty-looking sheep – or were they goats? – crossed the road, and when they set off again, a crowd of boys ran along beside them waving sticks and shouting. Isis didn’t know whether to wave or to pretend she hadn’t noticed. But soon they speeded up and left the boys and their shouts behind.
The plan, Victor had explained, was to meet Evelyn and Arthur at the house of the Hudsons, friends who lived in a suburb of Cairo, to stay the night, and early tomorrow embark on the sail to Luxor. Now that they were near, Isis was in a fidget of excitement about seeing Evelyn and Arthur after such an age. It would be interesting, after all, to see them in their natural habitat; in their element. She allowed herself to daydream that they had already found the tomb of Herihor, so all they’d need to do would be to have a quick look and then return home all together. She could go to school, and maybe Osi, and the shut-up parts of the house would come alive with all the money they’d get from the grave goods. They would be famous, and Isis would be a little famous too, just by being their daughter. When it was over she would forgive them for being Egyptologists, she might even be proud.
‘Oh yes, I was there,’ she’d tell her new pals. Imagine friends, with houses you could visit, other girls to talk to and confide in. She could learn to dance and all the plumpness would fall away. She would grow her hair long and wear it pinned up with a silvery comb, and Osi, he would make friends too, perhaps, or just become an Egyptologist himself and spend his whole life grubbing happily in the desert. It seemed what he was born for – the only thing.
The lorry stopped in a leafy street where wide verges of shorn brown grass separated the road from the footpaths and, set back behind palms and clambering greenery, was a row of great mysteriously-shady houses. Haru jumped down from the cab to find the home of the Hudsons. Isis climbed out stiffly; her posterior and legs were bruised by all the jolting and her head ached. She ran her fingers through her stiff, tangled hair; it hadn’t been washed since they’d left home and she must look a perfect fright. Uncle Victor didn’t care about such things, but she didn’t want the Hudsons to think she was a guttersnipe. Osi climbed out of the back of the lorry and she looked at him with despair, he was at his awkward worst and resembled nothing more than the bedraggled nestling of a bird of prey crammed into human clothes.
Victor lit up a cigarette and leaned his back against a tree. Looking up into the waving fronds, Isis saw branches of dates. Arthur always made a great to-do of presenting a crate of dates to Mary when they arrived home, as if she should be delighted and surprised. ‘I suppose we can live on them when Mr Burgess strikes us off his books,’ Mary had muttered last time, when Arthur had left the room. The dates on this tree were tight and green and the ground beneath was strewn with crunchy broken palm fronds. A bird screeched and screeched, though Isis couldn’t see it, and a skeletal dog skulked along the pavement.
‘Poor thing!’ she said and went to pet it, but one of its eyes was missing and the socket weeping yellow pus and she shrank away disgusted.
Haru came back frowning, speaking rapidly to Akil, who shrugged his shoulders and spat.
‘They are not at the address I have.’ He waved a piece of paper at Victor who took and examined it as smoke leaked from his mouth.
‘Perhaps we have the number wrong?’ he said.
‘I have tried, no one knows this address or the names of these people.’
‘Maybe it’s the wrong road?’ Isis suggested.
Haru shook his head and puffed out angrily. ‘Wrong road!’ he said. ‘What am I to do?’ He snatched back the paper from Victor and stamped off across the road again.
‘What if we can’t ever find them?’ Isis’ voice rose into a childish wail.
Victor had no answer to that; he simply stood watching for Haru’s return, a baffled expression on his face. They waited for an age while Haru tried the rest of the houses in the street. He found the right one at last, but it was shut up, and a servant told him the Hudsons had gone away.
‘Gone away?’ Isis felt a plummeting sensation in her belly. ‘Gone where?’
‘I say, that’s the bally limit,’ Victor said weakly.
‘I’m sure it’ll be all right,’ Isis said. She took his hand. ‘It’s just a misunderstanding.’
He looked down at her with a dent between his eyes, and she noticed the flaring of his pupils.
‘Let’s not panic,’ she said. He was a fragile man still and the only time he was all right, really, was when he was with a lady. Now that Melissa had gone she would have to manage to keep him calm somehow or other.
‘Do you think you should take one of your pills?’ she suggested.
He gave her a glazed look, but nodded and took a tablet from the little brown bottle in his pocket.
‘We need refreshment,’ she decided, ‘while we think what to do.’