answer for you.â
âNot his girlfriend,â Tia said, pointing to herself. âRemember?â
He tossed the balled-up papyrus at me. I ducked out of the way.
âIt doesnât count,â Imsety said. âWhich means you have only one chance left.â
I wasnât about to complain. I hadnât known the answer, and this way, I still had a head of hair.
âBring it on,â I said. âIâm ready.â
âNo cheating this time,â Qeb said.
Tia made a pretend motion of zipping her mouth and tossing away a key.
Imsety pulled the final piece of papyrus from the Canopic jar. âLast question. Whatâs theâ¦â he started. âOh, come on. This is way too easy.â
I deserved something easy. My quest for vengeance was noble and just. Horemheb had to be eliminated.
âRead it.â
âFine,â Imsety said. âWhatâs the volume of a pyramid? Seriously? Thatâs like basic pharaoh training one-oh-one.â
âDarn right it is,â I said. Iâd learned about the great pyramids of Giza when I was six years old. My tutors had drilled me, making sure I could do all the calculations in my head. I silently sent them a prayer of thanks. âArea of the base times the height divided by three.â
Imsety ripped the slip of papyrus in half and threw it to the ground. âI cannot believe we didnât even get to shave your head.â
After the questions, I couldnât, either.
âMaybe next time,â I said. âNot.â
The final ankhâthe golden one in the centerâshimmered and twisted upward, pulling the entire wall with it. A dark room lay ahead. Iâd won.
âGuess I won,â I said.
âWell played,â Qeb said. âI thought we had you there with that dead king thing.â
I thought so, too, but I didnât dare voice it. The gods could play by any rules they wanted. I didnât want them to retract my victory.
âYeah, not everyone knows about Seti the First being cut into pieces and buried under the obelisks,â Imsety said. âOur dad told you, didnât he?â
Horus had never mentioned anything of the sort. I had no clue the obelisks had been built on top of Pharaoh Seti the Firstâs body parts. Who knew?
âYep,â I lied. âYou know Horus.â
Full of more secrets than Imsety was full of hot air.
âYou should stop by more often, little Tut,â Qeb said, mussing my hair, which I was very happy to still have.
âYou should drop by the town house sometime,â I said. âHorus would love to see you.â
âThatâs debatable,â Qeb said. It was so hard to read what he was really thinking with that falcon head of his.
âSure he would. Just not on the new moon.â If Qeb dropped by then, Horus might kill him. Letâs put it this way: new moons and Horus? Not the best of friends. During the new moon, Horus went totally blind. Not just missing-one-eye blind, but couldnât see out of the other one either. And when Horus was blind, Horus was dangerous. And pretty much crazy. Heâd tried to scratch both my eyes out one time. Gil had almost pulled Horusâs claws out, heâd been so mad. That had been a thousand years ago, and ever since, Horus disappeared for a few days around the new moon.
Qeb clacked his falcon beak, which made me guess he was laughing. âRight. I almost forgot about that.â
I never forgot about it. The image of my eyeballs clawed out made it impossible to forget.
Ahead of us, the dark room beckoned. I couldnât risk losing entry.
âCome on.â I grabbed Tiaâs hand and pulled her through the open doorway. And then the door lowered behind us. We were swallowed in darkness.
Â
8
WHERE THE SHABTIS DRAW BLOOD
âItâs dark in here,â Tia said not two seconds after the ankh door lowered behind us.
Even though I knew it was showing off, I
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