Egyptian Realms
The Soul Jar, Olivia Lorenz
Lucy goes to Egypt to mend her broken heart. Her salvation
comes from an unlikely source – Khnum, god of creation.
Khnum needs Lucy's help to fashion a new
soul-jar for Osiris, king of
the Underworld, but Seth, Lord of Darkness, is determined to
stop them from their task.
Never Say Die, Anna Fallon
Imagine year 2150, spiritually enlightened, demons common as
mud. Violet and Tyler wake up dead, apparently trapped in a
tomb...but are they?
Ancient Jems, Bridghid Parkinson
Jemmie discovers a hidden cavern at a student archeology dig
when the cavern collapses beneath her feet. Can she resist
the heated temptations of Egypt?
Entombed, Mae Powers
While searching for a rare type of
marshmallow plant, Callie Owens comes across an ancient
underground tomb, complete with a cursed mummy, who puts a
delightful hex on her heart and body and entombing her
within his immoral crypt.
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EXCERPTS
The Soul Jar
by
Olivia Lorenz
The gods were in an uproar.
Rumour ran the length of the
Nile, from the Delta cities of
Egypt to the Aswan Dam. Even those deities still dwelling in
the remote regions beyond the Fourth Cataract heard of the
calamity, and all hastened to Luxor to take part in the
council.
Bes, the squat, ugly god of
protection and childbirth, hitched a ride on Sobek’s
felucca. He knew even as he clambered aboard that it was
unlikely that they’d make it to the Temple of Karnak in time to sit at the
council. As usual, any decision would be made by the highest
members of the pantheon, and the rest of them would just
abide by their decision. But Bes still wanted to go to Luxor,
even if he’d get there late. It had been centuries since the
gods had convened like this, and he hoped to catch up with
some old friends.
He settled himself on a
cushion close to the helm, where he could keep a watchful
eye on Sobek. Now there was a mean-looking devil! Tall and
rangy, he had a long, saturnine face that could transform
into a crocodile’s head whenever worshippers were nearby. In
the glory days of Egypt, he’d ruled over the annual
inundation of the river, representing both its positive and
negative aspects. In the modern world, the flooding of the
Nile was controlled by dams and sluices. Bes had heard that
these days, Sobek earned his living by organising river
cruises for tourists.
It was a bit of a comedown
for a god, but it had happened to them all. Ancient deities
worshipped for millennia had been rejected in favour of
monotheistic religions. Bes had seen it before, when the
heretic pharaoh Akhenaten had tried to impose his crazy idea
of a single solar cult upon his subjects. That hadn’t lasted
very long: the people had preferred the comfort of having
many gods, from whom they could pick their favourites.
But then had come
Christianity, and, after that, Islam, and over time, the old
gods had been forgotten. Temples and shrines lay empty, the
only offering being the gradual creep of sand. The
descendants of high priests tore down the temples and carted
away the stone to build their houses.
As the worshippers and rites
dwindled and died, so too did the power of the old gods. Bes
shuddered to remember those dark times. Gods could not die
unless at Heaven’s command, and so instead they’d withered,
become shadows of their former selves. They’d watched the
monotheistic religions flourish and divide, until finally,
some people began to return to the old ways.
Archaeologists came to
examine the temples and tombs. Nobles and even an emperor
came from afar to pay their respects. And then had come the
discovery of the tomb of Tutankhamun—heir to that fool
Akhenaten, of all people—and the modern world had gone crazy
about ancient Egypt.
Of course, worship these days
wasn’t so much from following the proper rites and making
the correct sacrifices. It was more slapdash than that. Any
attention, be it academic or New Age, counted as a kind of
worship—but the gods had moved with the times and were
slowly regaining their power. The major deities of the
pantheon, such as Re, Osiris, Hathor, Isis, and Horus, still
seemed to be the most popular gods, just as they were back
in the New Kingdom.
It was the more minor deities
like Sobek who missed out, Bes thought. It was hardly fair,
but then, fate was a strange thing. He stopped thinking so
much and stretched out his rotund body on the cushion. It
was a pleasant day in early spring, and the sun was
blissfully warm on his skin. Bes smiled.
“What’s so funny?” growled
Sobek from the helm of the boat.
“I was just remembering the
good old days,” Bes said. “What fun we had back then! That
business with Horus and Seth and the lettuce… It still makes
me laugh to think of it.”
Sobek snorted. “You shouldn’t
laugh. Seth was tricked.”
“It was fair enough after
what he did to Horus,” Bes argued.
“It’s in the past. Let’s not
talk about it.” Sobek turned away and stared at the wash the
felucca made as it cut through the water.
Bes rolled over on the
cushion to look at the crocodile god. Sobek was a miserable
devil, but if there was one thing guaranteed to get him
talking, albeit in complaint, it was a discussion of the
good old days. For him to be so silent was out of character.
Bes watched Sobek pick at a splinter of wood on the helm and
wondered what was wrong.
He was about to ask, when
suddenly Sobek jerked on the helm and the felucca veered
sideways. He squawked in protest as he tumbled from the
cushion. “What are you doing?”
Sobek nodded towards the
right bank. “There’s Khnum. Thought he might want a ride,
too.”
“Khnum? I haven’t seen him in
twelve centuries!”
Bes jumped back onto the
cushion and peered over the side of the boat as Sobek tacked
it closer to the riverbank. He waved enthusiastically at
Khnum, the ram-headed god of fertility and creation. In the
old days, they’d worked closely together, with Bes passing
on information about which couples had conceived so that
Khnum could fashion in clay the forms of the babies. Only
when he’d lovingly sculpted each child would he hand it over
to the greater gods, who would breathe life into the clay
figures.
For millennia, Khnum’s
potter’s wheel had kept turning, populating Egypt with
pharaohs, slaves, nobles, scribes and workers. Then, when
the crisis of faith happened and the people turned to
monotheism, Khnum and other creator gods had realised that
mankind could reproduce without divine assistance—or, if
divine assistance was needed, humans simply called on their
single God.
Bes thought it was a shame.
It was his opinion that humans created without Khnum’s help
were ordinary looking, without a spark of true beauty. There
were exceptions, of course, but in general, he preferred the
times when Khnum would painstakingly create each new
individual, using all of his considerable talent.
Now Bes looked forwards to a
good gossip with his former colleague. He grinned as Khnum
waded out into the river and hauled himself onto the deck.
“Thanks,” Khnum said with a
nod to Sobek, who just grunted in reply.
Bes eyed his old friend. When
he wasn’t sporting the curly-horned ram’s head, Khnum was
rather a handsome fellow, with straight, regular features, a
full mouth and wide dark eyes that occasionally held a
faraway expression. Today, they were wary and resigned, his
state of mind emphasised by the way he hunched his body as
he sat on the deck between Bes and Sobek.
“So,” Bes asked, “what have
you been doing with yourself all these years?”
Khnum shrugged. “You know.
This and that.”
“No, I don’t know. Tell me
what you found to do in these modern times. I hear Hathor is
making a lot of money—and more importantly, she’s collecting
worship—with her beauty products and sex toys business. And,
of course, Re went into the whole solar energy
thing—predictable, but gaining in popularity. And Bastet,
what a clever girl she was…”
Sobek gave an exaggerated
sigh, interrupting Bes’ monologue. “Didn’t you ask Khnum a
question?”
Bes sat up straight. “I did.
And he didn’t answer it.” He clapped his hands at Khnum.
“Come, come, lad! Let’s hear it. What have you been up to? I
imagine you’re a famous potter or craftsman now. Our sacred
Nile clay hasn’t changed in two millennia, so you must still
be making wonderful ceramics, even if you can’t fashion
mankind from clay any more.”
Khnum shook his head, lifting
his powerful shoulders in a shrug. “I haven’t done
anything.”
Bes stared at him, puzzled.
“Nothing at all?”
“Nothing.” Khnum smiled at
him, but he looked dispirited. “I spent a lot of time out in
the Western Desert, and then this past half-millennia, I’ve
been beyond the cataracts in the
kingdom of Nubia.”
“Not much to do out there,”
Sobek remarked.
“No,” Khnum agreed. “I was
repairing some of the old pyramids and tombs out there. The
ones the archaeologists will never find because of the sand
cover. But we know where they are.”
“Not much point in fixing
something that no one will see.”
Bes glanced at Sobek in
irritation. “You know as well as I do that the ba-birds
of those who rest in those tombs see them. More than that,
they need them.” He turned and gave Khnum a beaming smile.
“I think it’s admirable that you should spend your time
rebuilding tombs. After all, if you can help birth mankind
then you can help them to maintain their status in the
afterlife, too…”
Sobek snorted, but Khnum
smiled gratefully.
“So you both heard the
summons, then?” he asked.
Bes raised his eyebrows.
“Summons? No, I just heard a rumour that Osiris’ soul-jar
had been destroyed, and that Banebdjedet was loose with
nowhere to take shelter. No idea how it happened. You’d
think that Osiris would be careful with his soul. It’s
confusing enough that he split himself into two separate
entities, but to keep part of himself in a jar… why, it’s
almost like being human, isn’t it? The spirit contained
within a clay form.”
Khnum laughed. “You make it
sound so poetic. What about you, Sobek?”
The crocodile god corrected
their course and squinted up at the sails. “I heard a
rumour, too: that Seth caused the jar to break. Then I heard
that the gods would convene at Karnak, and so I set sail at
once to see if it was true.”
“We still won’t get there in
time to hear the final decision,” Bes said with a
disappointed sigh. “Not at the speed we’re travelling.”
“We’re sailing against the
current,” Sobek reminded him. “If you wanted to get there
faster, you should have taken the chariot with Sekhmet.”
Bes shuddered. “No, thank
you! A lovely lady, but she’s in with those war-mongers, and
let me tell you, it’s difficult enough being the god of
protection as it is these days without inviting trouble by
hanging around with a crowd like that.”
Sobek grimaced, indicating
Khnum.
Bes frowned, and then his
brow cleared and he hurried to apologise. “I’m so sorry,
Khnum. I completely forgot about that business with your
wife.”
He felt guilty as he saw a
shadow pass over Khnum’s face. Obviously, the creator god
was still sensitive about the messy divorce that had taken
place back in the Ptolemaic period of Egypt’s history. Bes
could have told his friend that it would all end in tears:
the marriage of Menhit, a stunning, savage Nubian war
goddess, and the thoughtful, artistic Khnum had little
chance of working. None of the gods had been surprised when
Menhit ran off with Onuris, a war god who hung out with
Sekhmet and the other dangerous deities who liked causing
trouble. Khnum had been left with a young son, Hike, whom
he’d fashioned himself on his potter’s wheel.
Thinking of the lad prompted
Bes to ask, “And how’s Hike?”
Khnum smiled, his expression
alive for the first time that day. “He’s great. You remember
he was promoted to a minor magic and medicine deity? He
decided to continue in that field. He’s a surgeon.”
“How delightful! And the
gratitude of his patients is worship enough for him, I
imagine. It must be the same amount that I get, although
Hike is earning it in the modern way, and I’m just lucky.”
Khnum looked at him. “Where
childbirth and babies are concerned, I guess all women
remain superstitious.”
“Not just women, but men,
too,” Bes said fondly. “Did I tell you I had fifteen
offerings from men last month? Mostly locals, of course, but
these days, there are plenty of foreigners who come here to
ask for a child or to ask my blessing on their newborns…”
“I’ve never understood why
those foreigners should want to come here,” Sobek said
abruptly. “Egypt is only a narrow strip of black earth
surrounded by red desert. This is a place of death, not
life.”
“You’re such a misery!”
“Look at it,” Sobek
continued, gesturing at either side of the riverbanks.
“Cliffs to the left and collapsing temples to the right.
Scorching sun overhead. There’s nothing to recommend it.”
“Apart from a fascinating
history and a vast pantheon of gods,” Bes said, sitting up
and jabbing a finger at Sobek. “And you’re one of those
gods. Hathor’s tits, you ferry tourists up and down our
sacred Nile practically every day!”
“Maybe I’m bored with it.”
Sobek’s expression was dark with disappointment. “This is my
river. I know I share it with Hapi, but it was mine first.”
Bes rolled his eyes. “I
thought it was Khnum’s first.”
The creator god raised his
hands. “Don’t look at me. I can barely keep track of the
different spheres of our influence. I started out as the god
of the inundation a long time ago, but I prefer getting my
hands dirty in a more creative way. I’m happy with my
potter’s wheel and a lump of Nile clay.”
“You might be happy, but I’m
not,” Sobek snapped. “The
Nile is supposed to flood on my
command. The people are supposed to bring me gifts to
encourage good harvest. It’s all right for you, Bes. Your
sphere of influence is on something mysterious and divinely
important. No man would ever dismiss childbirth to a
planning committee the way they did the Nile, especially if
it was his child growing in the belly of his woman.”
“The modern world does have
ways of ensuring conception,” Bes told him. “Men like to
think they can control many things in nature, but they
cannot. Just because they build dams to control the Nile
flood, or they make babies in test-tubes, it doesn’t mean
we’re not wanted or needed any more.”
“Wait.” Sobek stilled the
helm and stood with his head cocked to one side. “Do you
hear that?”
Bes listened, hearing the
chatter of dozens of divine voices.
“They’re annoyed that I
didn’t reach Karnak in time for the council,” Khnum said
quietly. “Re will make an announcement in a moment.”
“You were summoned?” Bes
asked, frowning.
Khnum nodded. “Yes, I told
you…”
“Shh!” Sobek held up a hand
for silence, and they all looked up towards the face of the
sun high above them.
Re was the head of the gods
for the sole reason that his rays saw everything that
happened on the earth, at least during daylight hours. Bes
had always found him to be rather pompous and
unapproachable, but he tried to look attentive as the sun
god made his announcement.
Gods of Egypt,
boomed Re in his dry tones, hear the decree of the High
Council of the Upper Pantheon! Know this, o denizens of
Kemet: that on this day, Osiris, the Lord of the Underworld,
did have broken his most precious possession—the soul-jar of
his spirit Banebdjedet, who now does roam without substance
or home through the ruins of
Karnak…
Bes yawned. “By Min’s balls,
I wish he’d get on with it.”
Khnum put a hand over his
mouth to stop from laughing out loud.
Also on this day,
continued Re, we did summon the High Council and also
several amongst our number whom we thought could help in
this matter. May it be noted that Seth, Lord of Darkness,
did not respond to our summons…
Sobek turned the helm, and
the rudder made a small splash.
A decision was reached
without some of our council being present,
Re droned, and this is what was decided. That Banebdjedet
should remain in
Karnak for his own safety, and
for the safety of Osiris, for the soul and the god should
not be separated. I myself will safeguard Banebdjedet during
the day; at night, the
ba-birds of our
most noble pharaohs shall keep watch alongside Khonsu.
“Stuck in Karnak!” Bes
exclaimed. “Well, at least he won’t get bored there. All
those tourists, and, of course, the son et lumiere.
That’ll drive any self-respecting ba mad within a few
days.”
These measures are
temporary. Re’s
stentorian voice drowned out the rest of Bes’ comment. We
are commissioning a new soul-jar, the finest and most
beautiful that can be made; and even though our potter did
not deign to show himself, we are certain that Khnum can
create a worthy home for Banebdjedet within a few days.
Bes glanced at Khnum. “You
okay? You don’t look too happy. This is the commission of
the millennia. You won’t have had a project like this since
you made Osiris’ original soul-jar.”
“I know,” he said, dejection
rather than excitement in every line of his body.
Sobek leaned on the helm.
“So what’s the problem?”
Khnum sighed and raked his
hands through his hair. “You want to know why I went into
the desert for so long and rebuilt tombs rather than do
anything creative? It wasn’t because of Menhit and the
divorce. It’s not because I’m lacking inspiration, either. I
simply don’t have the motivation. That’s my problem—no
motivation.”
Sobek raised his eyebrows.
“The most senior members of the pantheon told you to make a
new soul-jar in a few days. Isn’t that motivation enough?”
“It doesn’t work like that.”
Khnum gazed at them both, his fists bunched in frustration.
“I can’t create something without a spark. Even for the
simplest jar, there needs to be something divine.
Inspiration is one thing; the act of creation needs to be
nurtured if the finished piece is to be a thing of beauty.
It can’t be forced. It just… happens.”
“Like falling in love,” Bes
said softly.
Khnum nodded. “Yes. Like
falling in love.”
Sobek shook his head and
returned his attention to their course. “Heaven save me from
you artistic types,” he muttered. “I don’t understand you at
all.”
Never Say Die
by
Anna Fallon
Halloween night, 2150
Ty’s lips felt aflame with passion
anytime he managed to press them to Violet's mouth. He loved
her plump, raspberry-colored lips, but Violet allowed him
very little kissing opportunity. His every emotion needed to
be conveyed through this kiss. The moment proved to be one
of those lucky times when Ty enjoyed a little more freedom.
No woman affected him like this, not only did he want to
kiss her endlessly; he wanted to fuck her mercilessly. She
drove him crazy, took his temper and his sexual want to the
edge of reason. Women always came to him easily, with the
exception of Violet Symons. The one Ty wanted and needed the
most. He’d never been past first
base with Violet, unless second base meant her stinging
slaps to his cheek. If only his ass cheeks rang with those
slaps, he would be in heaven!
Burning with inhuman lust, as she allowed his lips to roam
over hers, Ty hoped tonight to be the night she accepted him
as her lover. He welcomed her response as her mouth opened,
giving his tongue access. Knowing his chance might last only
a few seconds, he tried to pass on his feelings. Hopefully
the hint would not be subtle. Their last shared kiss did not
do the trick. A whole six months ago and not so much as a
quick peck since. Violet played it cagey and demonstrated
extreme resourcefulness to avoid his advances. The words
'give up' simply did not exist in Ty's dictionary, not when
it concerned stealing an opportunity such as this.
Making the most of this newfound freedom, he touched her
soft tongue with his. His cock immediately sprang up, ready
for action. Remembering the time her hand gripped at his
erection only served to inflame his desire. Chancing a
little daring exploration, his fingers ventured to a
hardened nipple. Ty longed to suck the elongated nub into
oblivion. He knew Violet loved the touch because her pelvis
thrust forward as he gently squeezed. Maybe this time.
Hoping he would get to show the depth his passion to her
repeatedly with his cock and by feasting on her dripping
pussy. Perhaps this time, the woman he loved and respected
more than anyone else in the world would let him show her
how deeply he loved.
Trying to fuck anyone else now proved impossible. Once upon
a time, he could. Just after he and Violet first met, he
still saw other women. Before long, he imagined
Violet was with him each time he had sex with another woman.
He longed for Violet to be with him each time. Others
only acted as poor substitutes. This left him disappointed
afterwards, and no woman deserved to be treated like that.
If he couldn’t give one hundred percent to any woman, even
if only for the night, he wouldn’t give anything at all. And
so began this torrid game of cat and mouse.
The kiss continued. Usually by now the slap landed, and
they'd argue over nothing. She proved to be feisty to say
the least. Violet had been emotionally hurt. Ty didn’t know
how, and he never asked. God! I don’t have that much of a
death wish!
Perhaps, on this Halloween night, common sense would finally
prevail and she would take him to her soul, here in this
alley. Wishful thinking, his fingertips plucked at
the captured nipple causing her luscious body to push
against his. Her tongue gently massaged along his as a small
moan escaped her throat. It took all of his concentration
not to throw her down and make her take him.
He let the thought of her moist mouth on his swollen cock
linger a little, but he knew he would come prematurely if he
even imagined such contact in the slightest. Home in the
shower is okay, but here in the flesh? Definitely not cool.
Ever so lightly, Ty’s hand left her breast and traveled
lower, to brush her mound. Violet’s leg came up to wrap
around his. Bingo!
A neon glow penetrated his eyelids. He popped his eyes open.
An eerie glow filled the alley way. I've heard about
getting the green light, but this is ridiculous! A
small, pointy horned demon, colored a deep shade of green,
waved a crystal, and Ty felt a searing pain inside his head.
Fuck, of all the timing to be usurped by a demon!
Their lips parted now, he felt Violet's hot breath on his
cheek.
"What the f...?" she started.
Feeling his consciousness drift off, he heard a distant,
booming voice. Tyler struggled to really understand what the
voice said, it just sounded so relaxing. His heartbeat
slowed, and he let himself succumb to the darkness
Ancient Jems
by
Bridghid Parkinson
A Prayer of a Chance
Chaperoning students through a cheap survey, some
Egyptologist I turned out to be, huh? Jemmie couldn’t
contain the thoughts running through her mind.
She craved that choice tidbit in her research she could use
to get the grants that would eventually lead to bigger
research assignments and a better position. A master’s
degree got her a position with the Molina-Hammond Research
Foundation, for clerical work for the research teams, and
part time teaching at the university. Little fieldwork
graced her resume, she’d only been to Egypt twice, and it
was in school. Completing her degrees became a slow process
between student financing and the need to work.
Trying to keep her mind quiet in the days before departure,
she loaded the hand tools and checked her list of supplies.
The most needed items were the cameras, computers and the
boxes of batteries for the cameras. The facility thrived on
having a dozen people look over a group of digital
photographs. With modern technology, the need for travel
dropped, and lab work was more common.
The surveys to get the pictures examined in the lab were
often specially arranged packages with students. Though this
was the first excursion with students, she wanted the choice
assignments in a dig and she knew it would come once she
proved her skills.
On her list, she thought they could use more brushes, but
that would only be if they actually found anything. Chances
were tiny, but a few shards of pottery would be the best
that these guys could hope for in the surveys scheduled or
in the tours planned through Luxor and the well-excavated
Valley of the Kings.
She tried to get the tour changed to the area of Abydos with
emphasis on the Eastern side of the Nile; an area she
surveyed in detail in satellite images, but there was no
hope of a change the tour to a less traveled region. Random
digs turning up anything significant were a fanciful dream.
Proving the need for a dig took significant research and
applications for grants from rich foundations before anyone
bought a shovel. Jemmie kept working in research and
preservation, but she wanted to find her own dig site.
Meeting the students at the airport was a pleasure because
they all arrived early or at least arrived with enough time
to spare to keep the group from feeling rushed.
On the flight to Egypt, she enjoyed the last bits of
civilization. As she lifted her bourbon and soda, she
admired the manicure that should be gone soon. That’s the
way it should be. Maybe next time you can convince Drew
about your survey.
Drew Hammond, Director of the foundation. Recluse. The
director’s office wasn’t on the research campus so she never
saw him in daily work, but she could quickly reach him on
the phone. The old researchers were entitled to be as
eccentric as their subject was.
With the empty glass on her tray, she nestled back as the
students chatted excitedly. The flight sounded more like a
distinguished dorm room or well-educated tourists debating
the relationships of the kings and coregents within the
major dynasties of Egypt. Even the quiet young man, Bill,
joined in the debates of the Kings.
Carter, the leading male of the group, took pride in
knowledge of the dynasties. “The Twelfth Dynasty ended…Queen
Sobekneferu didn’t produce an heir. With all the
inter-family marriage in royalty, it’s amazing they could
produce children at all. She was the first queen of Egypt.
Her sculptures are defaced and there is no mention of how
she died, she may have been murdered.”
Another student pointed out. “She was not the first,
Nitocris in the Sixth Dynasty…”
“Sure! She lived long enough to kill the people that killed
her brother-husband King…oh, heck…what was his name?”
Jemmie wasn’t opening her eyes to join in the conversation.
She kept her eyes closed and focused on the persistent
memory of the satellite image. West of Dendara the Nile
River snakes around to a village called Balabish within the
black land along the riverbank. East of Balabish laid a
ridge with the most unusual segment of stone, it looked like
a flat wall, but all of the ridges in the area lacked the
same distinction and characteristics. Most of the sand had
eroded the sides of the ridges to a slope, but this feature
remained perpendicular. Full review of the area weather
patterns indicated winds should have worn back the upper
edge of this ridge over the last two to three thousand
years, but even then, the base would remain prominent.
The slight vibration of the airliner only lulled Jemmie into
a light sleep clouded with the warmth of bourbon. She took
comfort in remembering the many digital photos taken by
tourists and experts along the larger temples and tombs,
she’d compare her translation of the glyphs to existing
references. She could read, with some help in references,
the hieroglyphs and the hieratic scripts.
Her mind became foggy as sleep began to overtake her.
In a temple with tall columns, she began to read the
inscriptions to the Goddess Hathor, Goddess of Love. On the
ground at her feet lay colored marbles, baskets of flowers,
dishes with strong incense, and lanterns filled with oil.
The inscriptions were brightly colored with fresh paints
over the carved inscriptions and pictures. The stars with
five points in several of the pictures described a prophesy
of a woman coming with great beauty from the heavens. Her
visit, a gift of the Gods.
Pictograms on the door described more. Cats. A picture of a
pool with a man and a woman bathing near a large well. A
picture of a man hugging a woman. The man had no hair, he
was a priest purified for special duty to the Gods. A
pictogram of a house or a temple above the man and woman.
Hathor. Ma’at. Isis. Wings spread over the gardens.
Protection. A temple. Lush gardens against a desert ridge.
Jemmie looked up and saw the decree over the door. The
cartouche of Hathor and a directive declared that she would
be the gift of the Gods. The name was inscribed within a
cartouche—Nmsth. Royal or devine, this person became highly
revered and only one priest tended to her.
A woman’s voice rang out, echoing through the temple. She
comes. Sardotep, you have three days until she arrives.
A man ran to a large bowl and gazed to the water within.
Jemmie saw his face clearly. His skin smooth, and his eyes
were dark, reflecting his wonder. The contrast of his white
robes against his dark skin shimmered in the ripples around
him. His angular facial features were as chiseled as the
stone temple behind him.
Don’t be afraid. The woman’s voice echoed. He is
pure. His strength in his hands and in his staff, he will
serve you with the same faith he has given the Gods.
“I knew you would come,” a man’s voice said. “Nomesteh, The
Seers have foretold it before I was born. I made
preparations.”
On the wall behind him, another pictogram showed the naked
priest holding the woman in white robes, and her head looked
up to the heavens, a drawing of the moon and stars. His
staff stuck out from behind his body, however, the curled
end was not on the other side. Not a literal staff, it’s
his staff…his penis.
The pitch and sensation of falling terrified Jemmie from her
dreams. She gripped the arms of the seat and realized she
wasn’t in a temple, she was on an airplane over the Atlantic
Ocean, on their way to Luxor, Egypt.
“Sorry about that folks,” The Captain announced, “it’s just
a little turbulence as we pass over a storm.”
Jemmie immediately reached for her carry on luggage under
her seat. In the folder of images she printed from the
Temple of Hathor, she found the same image of a woman, held
tight by a priest, her face looking up to the heavens, and
his staff was not seen except for a short length behind his
body. Jemmie knew in the late dynasties that the Egyptians
began to replace potentially offensive glyphs, including the
pictograms for birth and death, with a generic slash. This
was the first time she’d seen evidence of a celebration of
sexual power.
If only we could get closer to Dendara and the area of
Abydos.
Entombed
by
Mae Powers
Cally Stevens lay in the darkness, dazed and coughing
up dust. She felt her insides shivering unexpectedly. A
strange tingling suddenly encompassed her. Her senses had
never failed her yet, but this sensation boarded on
all-consuming. It slowly moved up her arms, down into the
pit of her stomach and then settled on her toes. Her eyes
scrunched instinctively, going from the bright sun and into
the dimly lit tunnel, then she blinked rapidly, trying to
adjust to the dimmer light supplied by the florescent rocks
fluctuating around the area.
She groped for her backpack, and pulled it off.
Rummaging inside, her hand closed around her small
flashlight and pulled it out. Adjusting the pack on her
shoulders, she slowly stood up and turned on the tiny
battery operated light. Her uncle always said to have a
flashlight handy, when she was a little girl, and Cally had
always carried one since. Now she felt glad. Thankfully, its
range lit up a good deal of space.
She got up, beaming the light ahead of her, and saw
she stood in a very small rounded chamber with only one
tunnel leading out of the cavern. A small tunnel, sloping
downwards, barely wide enough for her tall form to fit
through. She ducked her head slightly, to avoid being hit.
She followed the jagged trail for a while before she felt
the floor sloping upwards and the cavernous corridor turned
sharply to the right.
The tunnel seemed to narrow and she almost ventilated
with fear. The bottom of the cavernous tunnel became less
gravelly and she felt the softness of sand shifting beneath
her dragging feet. Using the flashlight, she noticed the
granite walls were lined with jagged cracks as if dark
lightening struck them.
A loud chattering noise made her halt in her tracks.
Rapidly the fear rose from the pits of her stomach and
shoved up into her throat. What was that noise? What
creatures of the night prowled this hidden pathway? A pain
of fear shot through her. Calm down, she told herself,
you’ll find a way out of this dungeonous labyrinth, if you
just calm down.
She forced herself to move further into the dark lit
path. For a few moments, only the dark eeriness was her
companion. She pushed herself to move faster, almost at a
jogging pace down the ancient pathway. The air became humid,
and musty smelling the further she moved. She swayed the
flashlight in front of her, and couldn’t remember if she’d
changed them since her last backpacking expedition. Why had
she gone on this foolhardy adventure now? Oh, yes, to please
her uncle, to find him a rare plant reported to be in the
area. A rare type of
Althaea
officinalis, the
marshmallow plant. If she and her uncle hadn’t both
been marshmallow nuts, she might not have done this. She
kept the sweets in her backpack at all times, along with a
tall plastic bottle of Oasis Spring water.
Cally had mapped out the area, and didn’t mean to go
too close to the marshland, where some species bloomed. Then
she’d spotted one on that slippery mound, and even trying
to catch her bearing, she still fell. The ground gave away
and she’d landed in this dark foreboding place. Wherever the
hell here was.
Then she heard a different sound, more eerie, more
droning. Cally halted abruptly and flashed the light around.
She found herself in a clearing, a smooth cavernous, rounded
area. Moving the light from side to side, she discovered
several old torches lined along a wall. Cally dug in her
pockets and was glad she’d left the matches there in her
jeans. She tentatively moved over to the ancient stick lamp
and fired up a match. It was a wonder, she thought, that it
took after trying a second match.
She turned off the flashlight to conserve the
batteries and took the torch she’d lit. She used it to light
several more. Stepping back, she observed her surroundings,
and the reality made her gulp. Before her, looked like what
seemed to be an ancient Egyptian tomb or chamber. She slowly
moved around the enormous stonewalled room. Near her, she
saw walls with hieroglyphs of women and men in various garb,
as well as exotic birds she’d never seen before. Yet, there
was something she’d never seen before in her textbook
studies. These were neither really Egyptian or Mayan
hieroglyphics, but a combination of both plus another
culture she didn’t recognize.
She moved closer to a wall containing only one long
picture. She peered closer, and the flickering light from
the torch danced across what she soon realized was the face
of a mummy buried within a wall. It seemed so life-like,
almost as if it beckoned to her to do something. But what?
She thought, peering closer. Then that strange tingling
sensation washed over her again.
She took a step back and it stopped. Cally held the
torch higher and she noticed a jewel embedded within the
chest of the mummy’s stony picture. It was oval and
surrounded by a star shaped border. The border glittered
like diamonds, but when the light of the torchlight fell
upon it, the oval jewel glowed like a tiny flaming sun. The
feeling encompassed her again, but this time she didn’t move
away immediately. She felt a sudden shaking followed by a
creaking.
This time she took several steps back, and when she
did, she felt something crunch beneath her feet. She turned
to run from the room, and that’s when she noticed the
shelves with odd shaped jars upon them, some stacks of
cloth, and prong like devices. She looked then at the slab
arising up in the middle of the room, that couldn’t be more
than waist length to her. She gulped. How had she gotten in
an ancient tomb, a place where perhaps mummies were
mummified?
She heard the scuttling sound again, and looked down
as something scraped softly against her leg. Then a slither
against her ankle made her nearly jump backwards. Her heart
thumped with a dreadful shiver of angst and she lowered the
torch to get a better look at what had touched her.
Slithering, crawly creatures like cross between a snake and
a rat squirmed around her on the old floor.
She screamed out and the echo seemed to startle them.
The echoing, creaking noise sounded again. That’s when she
noticed the ancient wall she’d touched earlier was open. She
tuned towards it, the dancing lights of the torch flickered
off the wall revealing a the gap.
No, she thought again, an opening, as if a door had
been pushed slightly ajar. Moving closer to discover only a
small closet-like recess, just big enough for some one of
maybe seven foot to fit into. What ever had been in there
was now out.
The chattering and tiny snarls of the creatures
snapped her attention back to her immediate predicament. She
took a quick wary step backwards and tripped over what she’d
only guessed to be a small boulder behind her. Cally fell
backwards certain she would succumb to the heaviness of
doom and darkness.
Then two hands grabbed her by the back of her waist,
preventing her fall. She tilted her head back and her mouth
gaped open. The torch fell from her hand, but the lights
still flickered with some life allowing her to see who, not
what steadied her.
A bandaged face with glowing orange eyes regarded her
closely. Foul breath came from it’s slit of a mouth and
nostrils blared down heavily at her. She gulped again as she
realized the tall cloth-wrapped creature was indeed a living
mummy. Like any she’d seen in the movies, or books, or at a
museum. The eyes shone ominously down at her.
It creaked and groaned all over as it looked from her,
around the room and back again, as if suddenly becoming more
aware of the surroundings. The feeling of something unusual
once more washed over her. The face now seemed to be more
animate, or what it had of one, and it acted as if were
coming out of a long deep thought. It waved a hand towards
the creatures slithering on the floor and they immediately
dispersed.
She looked in both fear and amazement as the creatures
scuttled away. Pullin from the slight hold, Cally could
sense the maleness before her. He glanced around the room as
though taking the place in for the first time. His arms came
out in a wide arc and he staggered, moving stiffly forwards
towards the altar in the middle of the room. She noticed the
jewel pendent on his neck glowing. It resembled the one on
the outside of the tomb-closet. She wondered if her having
touched the door’s jewel set him free.
Moreover, she wondered why she just stood there as if
nothing strange were happening to her. Yet she couldn’t seem
to move. It’s as if she must stand there and watch the mummy
shuffle away from her and make it to the altar. With
bandaged feet scraping the ancient earthen floor, it
shift-walked towards the slab. He groaned painfully with
each step, mastering the movement, until he slowly gained
more of his bearings.
Fright and fascination moved her forward. She followed
unwittingly, yet knew she should run in the opposite
direction, but also knew he meant to harm her, he would have
already. Her fear lessened, but only a tad bit. Finally
reaching the slab, he swayed then fell upon it. She moved
away momentarily and picked up her fallen torch.
When she turned around he was half sitting, half
lyingon the slab, glancing with those orangish spheres as if
searching for something or seeking someone. She shivered as
his eyes rested upon her once more, as if becoming
completely aware of her. She had a distinct feeling, she was
the object he searched for.
She drew closer, warily, just a little closer. He
groaned and half sat up at her approach. On a boulder nearby
she found a crook in which to set the lamp and for some
reason she pulled off her backpack. He looked weary but from
what she wasn’t sure. Still she felt he needed something
from her, perhaps some kind of nourishment.
She knew it was idiotic to do so, but she still moved
closer to him, albeit cautiously. She realized she took one
step too many when he lashed out and grasped her wrists. She
cried out as he brought her up against him. Then before she
could stop him, his mouth, or what there was of it or should
have been besides the slits, came down over hers. The musty,
strong breath suffocated her and as she tried to gasp for
air as well as fighting him of, the mummy breathed in the
fresher air from her lungs.
She felt paralyzed with fear and dread. His large
banded arms came around her and his hands held her head in
place as he continued to suck the precious air from her
lungs. She became dizzy and her head spun, and darkness soon
followed.
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