PROXY  WHOIS  RQUOTE  TEXTS  SOFT  FOREX  BBOARD
 Music  Philosophy  Code  Literature  Russian

= ROOT|Literature|Russian|Anne_Rice|The_Mummy_or_Ramses_the_Damned.txt =

page 6 of 165



  Careful not to put his full weight on the fragile piece of furniture, Lawrence hastily 
scribbled his translations in his leather-bound book.
  
  Now and then he glanced over his shoulder at the mummy, the great King who for all die 
world looked as if he merely slept. Ramses the Immortal! The very idea inflamed Lawrence. 
He knew that he would be in this strange chamber until well after dawn.
  
  "But it must be a hoax,"  Samir said." Ramses the Great guarding the royal families of 
Egypt for a thousand years. The lover of Cleopatra?"
  
  "Ah, but it makes sublime sense!"  Lawrence replied. He set down the pen for a moment, 
staring at the papyri. How his eyes ached." If any woman could have driven an immortal 
man to entomb himself, Cleopatra would be that woman."
  
  He looked at the marble bust before him. Lovingly he stroked Cleopatra's smooth white 
cheek. Yes, Lawrence could believe it. Cleopatra, beloved of Julius Caesar and beloved of 
Mark Antony; Cleopatra, who had held out against the Roman conquest of Egypt far longer 
than anyone dreamed possible; Cleopatra, the last ruler of Egypt in the ancient world. 
But the story-he must resume his translation...
  
  Samir rose and stretched uneasily. Lawrence watched him move towards the mummy. What 
was he doing? Examining the wrappings over the fingers, examining the brilliant scarab 
ring so clearly visible on the right hand? Now mat was a nineteenth-dynasty treasure, no 
one could deny it, Lawrence thought.
  
  Lawrence closed his eyes and massaged his eyelids gently. Then he opened them, focusing 
on the papyrus before him again.
  
  "Samir, I tell you, the fellow is convincing me. Such a command of languages would 
dazzle anyone. And his philosophical perspective is quite as modern as my own."  He 
reached for the older document, which he had examined earlier." And this, Samir, I want 
you to examine it. This is none other than a letter from Cleopatra to Ramses."
  
  "A hoax, Lawrence. Some sort of little Roman joke."
  
  "No, my friend, nothing of the kind. She wrote this letter from Rome when Caesar was 
assassinated! She told Ramses she was coming home to him, and to Egypt."
  
  He laid the letter aside. When Samir had time he would see for himself what these 
documents contained. All the world would see. He turned back to the original papyrus.
  
  "But listen to this, Samir-Ramses' last thoughts: 'The Romans can not be condemned for 
the conquest of Egypt; we were conquered by time itself in the end. And all the wonders 
of this brave new century should draw me from my grief and yet I can not heal my heart; 
and so the mind suffers; the mind closes as if it were a flower without sun.'"
  
  Samir was still looking at the mummy, looking at the ring." Another reference to the 
sun. Again and again the sun."  He turned to Lawrence." But surely you don't believe it-!"
  
  "Samir, if you can believe in the curse, why can't you believe in an immortal man?"
  
  "Lawrence, you play with me. I have seen the workings of many a curse, my friend. But 
an immortal man who lived in Athens under Pericles and Rome under the Republic and 
Carthage under Hannibal? A man who taught Cleopatra the history of Egypt? Of this I know 
nothing at all."
  
  "Listen again, Samir: 'Her beauty shall forever haunt me; as well as her courage and 
her frivolity; her passion for life, which seemed inhuman in its intensity while being 
only human after all.'"
  
  Samir made no answer. His eyes were fixed on the mummy again, as if he could not stop 
looking at it. Lawrence understood perfectly, which is why he sat with his back to the 
thing in order to read the papyrus, so that he would get the crucial work done.
  
  "Lawrence, this mummy is as dead as any I have ever seen in the Cairo Museum. A 
storyteller, that is what the man was. Yet these rings."
  
  "Yes, my friend, I observed it very carefully earlier; it is the cartouche of Ramses 
the Great, and so we have not merely a storyteller but a collector of antiquities. Is 
that what you want me to believe?"
  
  But what did Lawrence believe? He sat back against the sagging canvas of the camp chair 
and let his eyes drift over the contents of this strange room. Then again he translated 
from the scroll.
  
  " 'And so I retreat to this isolated chamber; and now my library shall become my tomb. 
My servants shall anoint .my body and wrap it in fine funerary linen as was the custom of 
my time now so long forgotten. But no knife shall touch me. No embalmer shall extract the 
heart and brain from my immortal form."
  
  A euphoria overcame Lawrence suddenly; or was it a state of waking dream? This voice-it 
seemed so real to him; he fed the personality, as one never did with the ancient 
Egyptians. Ah, but of course, this was an immortal man...
  
  Elliott was getting drunk, but no one knew it. Except Elliott, who leaned on the gilded 
rail of the half-landing again in a rather casual manner that he almost never assumed. 
There was a style to even his smallest gestures, and now he carelessly violated it, 
keenly aware that no one would notice; no one would take offense.
  
  Ah, such a world, made up almost wholly of subtleties. What a horror. And he must think 
of this marriage; he must talk of this marriage; he must do something about the sad 
spectacle of his son, quite obviously defeated, who, after watching Julie dance with 
another, came now up the marble stairs.
  
  "I'm asking you to trust in me,"  Randolph was saying." I guarantee this marriage. All 
it takes is a little time."
  
  "Surely you don't think I enjoy pressing you,"  Elliott answered. Thick-tongued. Drunk 
all right." I'm much more comfortable in a dream world, Randolph, where money simply 
doesn't exist. But the fact is, we cannot afford such reverie, either of us. This 
=6=

1|2|3|4|5| < PREV = PAGE 6 = NEXT > |7|8|9|10|11|12|13|14|15.165

UP TO ROOT | UP TO DIR | TO FIRST PAGE

Google
 


E-mail Facebook Google Digg del.icio.us BlinkList Fark Furl Ma.gnolia Netscape NewsVine Reddit Slashdot Spurl StumbleUpon Technorati YahooMyWeb LiveJournal Blogmarks TwitThis Live News2.ru BobrDobr.ru Memori.ru MoeMesto.ru

0.0313201 wallclock secs ( 0.01 usr + 0.00 sys = 0.01 CPU)