BAST HAD AN INTERESTING DEFINITIONย of interesting: a boiling lake several miles wide that smelled like burning petrol and rotten meat. Our steamboat stopped short where the river met the lake, because a giant metal gate blocked our path. It was a bronze disk like a shield, easily as wide as our boat, half submerged in the river. I wasnโt sure how it avoided melting in the heat, but it made going forward impossible. On either bank of the river, facing the disk, was a giant bronze baboon with its arms raised.
โWhat is this?โ I asked.
โThe Gates of the West,โ Bast said. โRaโs sunboat would pass through and be renewed in the fires of the lake, then pass through to the other side and rise through the Gates of the East for a new day.โ
Looking up at the huge baboons, I wondered if Khufu had some sort of secret baboon code that would get us in. But instead he barked at the statues and cowered heroically behind my legs.
โHow do we get past?โ I wondered.
โPerhaps,โ a new voice said, โyou should ask me.โ
The air shimmered. Carter backed up quickly, and Bast hissed.
In front of me appeared a glowing bird spirit: a ba. It had the usual combination of human head and killer turkey body, with its wings tucked back and its entire form glowing, but something about this ba was different. I realized I knew the spiritโs faceโan old bald man with brown, papery skin, milky eyes, and a kindly smile.
โIskandar?โ I managed.
โHello, my dear.โ The old magicianโs voice echoed as if from the bottom of a well.
โBut…โ I found myself tearing up. โYouโre really dead, then?โ He chuckled. โLast I checked.โ
โBut why? I didnโt make youโโ
โNo, my dear. It wasnโt your fault. It was simply the right time.โ
โIt was horrible timing!โ My surprise and sadness abruptly turned to anger. โYou left us before we got trained or anything, and now Desjardins is
after us andโโ
โMy dear, look how far youโve come. Look how well you have done. You didnโt need me, nor would more training have helped. My brethren would have found out the truth about you soon enough. They are excellent at sniffing out godlings, I fear, and they would not have understood.โ
โYou knew, didnโt you? You knew we were possessed by gods.โ โHosts of the gods.โ
โWhatever! You knew.โ
โAfter our second meeting, yes. My only regret is that I did not realize it sooner. I could not protect you and your brother as much asโโ
โAs much as who?โ
Iskandarโs eyes became sad and distant. โI made choices, Sadie. Some seemed wise at the time. Some, in retrospect…โ
โYour decision to forbid the gods. My mum convinced you it was a bad idea, didnโt she?โ
His spectral wings fluttered. โYou must understand, Sadie. When Egypt fell to the Romans, my spirit was crushed. Thousands of years of Egyptian power and tradition toppled by that foolish Queen Cleopatra, who thought she could host a goddess. The blood of the pharaohs seemed weak and dilutedโ lost forever. At the time I blamed everyoneโthe gods who used men to act out their petty quarrels, the Ptolemaic rulers who had driven Egypt into the ground, my own brethren in the House for becoming weak and greedy and corrupt. I communed with Thoth, and we agreed: the gods must be put away, banished. The magicians must find their way without them. The new rules kept the House of Life intact for another two thousand years. At the time, it was the right choice.โ
โAnd now?โ I asked.
Iskandarโs glow dimmed. โYour mother foresaw a great imbalance. She foresaw the dayโvery soonโwhen Maโat would be destroyed, and chaos would reclaim all of Creation. She insisted that only the gods and the House together could prevail. The old wayโthe path of the godsโwould have to be reestablished. I was a foolish old man. I knew in my heart she was right, but I refused to believe…and your parents took it upon themselves to act. They sacrificed themselves trying to put things right, because I was too stubborn to change. For that, I am truly sorry.โ
As much as I tried, I found it hard to stay angry at the old turkey. Itโs a rare thing when an adult admits they are wrong to a childโespecially a wise, two-thousand-year-old adult. You rather have to cherish those moments.
โI forgive you, Iskandar,โ I said. โHonestly. But Set is about to destroy North America with a giant red pyramid. What do I do about it?โ
โThat, my dear, I canโt answer. Your choice…โ He tilted his head back toward the lake, as if hearing a voice. โOur time is at an end. I must do my job
as gatekeeper, and decide whether or not to grant you access to the Lake of Fire.โ
โBut Iโve got more questions!โ
โAnd I wish we had more time,โ Iskandar said. โYou have a strong spirit, Sadie Kane. Someday, you will make an excellent guardian ba.โ
โThanks,โ I muttered. โCanโt wait to be poultry forever.โ
โI can only tell you this: your choice approaches. Donโt let your feelings blind you to what is best, as I did.โ
โWhat choice? Best for whom?โ
โThatโs the key, isnโt it? Your fatherโyour familyโthe godsโthe world. Maโat and Isfet, order and chaos, are about to collide more violently than they have in eons. You and your brother will be instrumental in balancing those forces, or destroying everything. That, also, your mother foresaw.โ
โHang on. What do youโโ
โUntil we meet again, Sadie. Perhaps some day, we will have a chance to talk further. But for now, pass through! My job is to assess your courageโand you have that in abundance.โ
I wanted to argue that no, in fact, I didnโt. I wanted Iskandar to stay and tell me exactly what my mother had foreseen in my future. But his spirit faded, leaving the deck quiet and still. Only then did I realize that no one else on board had said a thing.
I turned to face Carter. โLeave everything to me, eh?โ
He was staring into space, not even blinking. Khufu still clung to my legs, absolutely petrified. Bastโs face was frozen in mid-hiss.
โUm, guys?โ I snapped my fingers, and they all unfroze.
โBa!โ Bast hissed. Then she looked around and scowled. โWait, I thought I saw…what just happened?โ
I wondered how powerful a magician had to be to stop time, to freeze even a goddess. Some day, Iskandar was going to teach me that trick, dead or no.
โYeah,โ I said. โI reckon there was a ba. Gone now.โ
The baboon statues began to rumble and grind as their arms lowered. The bronze sun disk in the middle of the river sank below the surface, clearing the way into the lake. The boat shot forward, straight into the flames and the boiling red waves. Through the shimmering heat, I could just make out an island in the middle of the lake. On it rose a glittering black temple that looked not at all friendly.
โThe Hall of Judgment,โ I guessed.
Bast nodded. โTimes like this, Iโm glad I donโt have a mortal soul.โ
As we docked at the island, Bloodstained Blade came down to say good-bye.
โI hope to see you again, Lord and Lady Kane,โ he hummed. โYour rooms will be waiting aboard the Egyptian Queen. Unless, of course, you see fit to release me from service.โ
Behind his back, Bast shook her head adamantly.
โUm, weโll keep you around,โ I told the captain. โThanks for everything.โ
โAs you wish,โ the captain said. If axes could frown, Iโm sure he would have.
โStay sharp,โ Carter told him, and with Bast and Khufu, we walked down the gangplank. Instead of pulling away, the ship simply sank into the boiling lava and disappeared.
I scowled at Carter. โโStay sharp?โโ โI thought it was funny.โ
โYouโre hopeless.โ
We walked up the steps of the black temple. A forest of stone pillars held up the ceiling. Every surface was carved with hieroglyphs and images, but there was no colorโjust black on black. Haze from the lake drifted through the temple, and despite reed torches that burned on each pillar, it was impossible to see very far through the gloom.
โStay alert,โ Bast warned, sniffing the air. โHeโs close.โ โWho?โ I asked.
โThe Dog,โ Bast said with disdain.
There was a snarling noise, and a huge black shape leaped out of the mist. It tackled Bast, who rolled over and wailed in feline outrage, then raced off, leaving us alone with the beast. I suppose she had warned us that she wasnโt brave.
The new animal was sleek and black, like the Set animal weโd seen in Washington, D.C., but more obviously canine, graceful and rather cute, actually. A jackal, I realized, with a golden collar around its neck.
Then it morphed into a young man, and my heart almost stopped. He was the boy from my dreams, quite literallyโthe guy in black Iโd seen twice before in my ba visions.
In person, if possible, Anubis was even more drop-dead gorgeous. [Oh…ha, ha. I didnโt catch the pun, but thank you, Carter. God of the dead, drop-dead gorgeous. Yes, hilarious. Now, may I continue?]
He had a pale complexion, tousled black hair, and rich brown eyes like melted chocolate. He was dressed in black jeans, combat boots (like mine!), a ripped T-shirt, and a black leather jacket that suited him quite nicely. He was long and lean like a jackal. His ears, like a jackalโs, stuck out a bit (which I found cute), and he wore a gold chain around his neck.
Now, please understand, I am not boy crazy. Iโm not! Iโd spent most of the school term making fun of Liz and Emma, who were, and I was very glad
they werenโt with me just then, because they wouldโve teased me to no end.
The boy in black stood and brushed off his jacket. โIโm not a dog,โ he grumbled.
โNo,โ I agreed. โYouโre…โ
No doubt I wouldโve said delicious or something equally embarrassing, but Carter saved me.
โYouโre Anubis?โ he asked. โWeโve come for the feather of truth.โ
Anubis frowned. He locked his very nice eyes with mine. โYouโre not dead.โ
โNo,โ I said. โThough weโre trying awfully hard.โ
โI donโt deal with the living,โ he said firmly. Then he looked at Khufu and Carter. โHowever, you travel with a baboon. That shows good taste. I wonโt kill you until youโve had a chance to explain. Why did Bast bring you here?โ
โActually,โ Carter said, โThoth sent us.โ
Carter started to tell him the story, but Khufu broke in impatiently. โAgh!
Agh!โ
Baboon-speak must have been quite efficient, because Anubis nodded as if heโd just gotten the whole tale. โI see.โ
He scowled at Carter. โSo youโre Horus. And youโre…โ His finger drifted towards me.
โIโmโIโm, umโโ I stammered. Quite unlike me to be tongue-tied, Iโll admit, but looking at Anubis, I felt as if Iโd just gotten a large shot of Novocain from the dentist. Carter looked at me as if Iโd gone daft.
โIโm not Isis,โ I managed. โI mean, Isis is milling about inside, but Iโm not her. Sheโs just…visiting.โ
Anubis tilted his head. โAnd the two of you intend to challenge Set?โ โThatโs the general idea,โ Carter agreed. โWill you help?โ
Anubis glowered. I remembered Thoth saying Anubis was only in a good mood once an eon or so. I had the feeling this was not one of those days.
โNo,โ he said flatly. โIโll show you why.โ
He turned into a jackal and sped back the way heโd come. Carter and I exchanged looks. Not knowing what else to do, we ran after Anubis, deeper into the gloom.
In the center of the temple was a large circular chamber that seemed to be two places at once. On the one hand, it was a great hall with blazing braziers and an empty throne at the far end. The center of the room was dominated by a set of scalesโa black iron T with ropes linked to two golden dishes, each big enough to hold a personโbut the scales were broken. One of the golden dishes was bent into a V, as if something very heavy had jumped up and down on it. The other dish was hanging by a single rope.
Curled at the base of the scales, fast asleep, was the oddest monster Iโd seen yet. It had the head of crocodile with a lionโs mane. The front half of its body was lion, but the back end was sleek, brown, and fatโa hippo, I decided. The odd bit was, the animal was tinyโI mean, no larger than an average poodle, which I suppose made him a hippodoodle.
So that was the hall, at least one layer of it. But at the same time, I seemed to be standing in a ghostly graveyardโlike a three-dimensional projection superimposed on the room. In some places, the marble floor gave way to patches of mud and moss-covered paving stones. Lines of aboveground tombs like miniature row houses radiated from the center of the chamber in a wheel-spokes pattern. Many of the tombs had cracked open. Some were bricked up, others ringed with iron fences. Around the edges of the chamber, the black pillars shifted form, sometimes changing into ancient cypress trees. I felt as if I were stepping between two different worlds, and I couldnโt tell which one was real.
Khufu loped straight over to the broken scales and climbed to the top, making himself right at home. He paid no attention to the hippodoodle.
The jackal trotted to the steps of the throne and changed back into Anubis.
โWelcome,โ he said, โto the last room you will ever see.โ
Carter looked around in awe. โThe Hall of Judgment.โ He focused on the hippodoodle and frowned. โIs that…โ
โAmmit the Devourer,โ Anubis said. โLook upon him and tremble.โ
Ammit apparently heard his name in his sleep. He made a yipping sound and turned on his back. His lion and hippo legs twitched. I wondered if netherworld monsters dreamed of chasing rabbits.
โI always pictured him…bigger,โ Carter admitted.
Anubis gave Carter a harsh look. โAmmit only has to be big enough to eat the hearts of the wicked. Trust me, he does his job well. Or…he did it well, anyway.โ
Up on the scales, Khufu grunted. He almost lost his balance on the central beam, and the dented saucer clanged against the floor.
โWhy are the scales broken?โ I asked.
Anubis frowned. โMaโat is weakening. Iโve tried to fix them, but…โ He spread his hands helplessly.
I pointed to the ghostly rows of tombs. โIs that why the, ah, graveyard is butting in?โ
Carter looked at me strangely. โWhat graveyard?โ โThe tombs,โ I said. โThe trees.โ
โWhat are you talking about?โ
โHe canโt see them,โ Anubis said. โBut you, Sadieโyouโre perceptive.
What do you hear?โ
At first I didnโt know what he meant. All I heard was the blood rushing through my ears, and the distant rumble and crackle of the Lake of Fire. (And Khufu scratching himself and grunting, but that was nothing new.)
Then I closed my eyes, and I heard another distant soundโmusic that triggered my earliest memories, my father smiling as he danced me round our house in Los Angeles.
โJazz,โ I said.
I opened my eyes, and the Hall of Judgment was gone. Or not gone, but faded. I could still see the broken scales and the empty throne. But no black columns, no roar of fire. Even Carter, Khufu, and Ammit had disappeared.
The cemetery was very real. Cracked paving stones wobbled under my feet. The humid night air smelled of spices and fish stew and old mildewed places. I mightโve been back in Englandโa churchyard in some corner of London, perhapsโbut the writing on the graves was in French, and the air was much too mild for an English winter. The trees hung low and lush, covered with Spanish moss.
And there was music. Just outside the cemeteryโs fence, a jazz band paraded down the street in somber black suits and brightly colored party hats. Saxophonists bobbed up and down. Cornets and clarinets wailed. Drummers grinned and swayed, their sticks flashing. And behind them, carrying flowers and torches, a crowd of revelers in funeral clothes danced round an old- fashioned black hearse as it drove along.
โWhere are we?โ I said, marveling.
Anubis jumped from the top of a tomb and landed next to me. He breathed in the graveyard air, and his features relaxed. I found myself studying his mouth, the curve of his lower lip.
โNew Orleans,โ he said. โSorry?โ
โThe Drowned City,โ he said. โIn the French Quarter, on the west side of the riverโthe shore of the dead. I love it here. Thatโs why the Hall of Judgment often connects to this part of the mortal world.โ
The jazz procession made its way down the street, drawing more onlookers into the party.
โWhat are they celebrating?โ
โA funeral,โ Anubis said. โTheyโve just put the deceased in his tomb. Now theyโre โcutting the body loose.โ The mourners celebrate the dead oneโs life with song and dance as they escort the empty hearse away from the cemetery. Very Egyptian, this ritual.โ
โHow do you know so much?โ
โIโm the god of funerals. I know every death custom in the worldโhow to die properly, how to prepare the body and soul for the afterlife. I live for death.โ
โYou must be fun at parties,โ I said. โWhy have you brought me here?โ โTo talk.โ He spread his hands, and the nearest tomb rumbled. A long
white ribbon shot out of a crack in the wall. The ribbon just kept coming, weaving itself into some kind of shape next to Anubis, and my first thought was, My god, heโs got a magic roll of toilet paper.
Then I realized it was cloth, a length of white linen wrappingsโmummy wrappings. The cloth twisted itself into the form of a bench, and Anubis sat down.
โI donโt like Horus.โ He gestured for me to join him. โHeโs loud and arrogant and thinks heโs better than me. But Isis always treated me like a son.โ
I crossed my arms. โYouโre not my son. And I told you Iโm not Isis.โ
Anubis tilted his head. โNo. You donโt act like a godling. You remind me of your mother.โ
That hit me like a bucket of cold water (and sadly, I knew exactly what that felt like, thanks to Zia). โYouโve met my mother?โ
Anubis blinked, as if realizing heโd done something wrong. โIโI know all the dead, but each spiritโs path is secret. I should not have spoken.โ
โYou canโt just say something like that and then clam up! Is she in the Egyptian afterlife? Did she pass your little Hall of Judgment?โ
Anubis glanced uneasily at the golden scales, which shimmered like a mirage in the graveyard. โIt is not my hall. I merely oversee it until Lord Osiris returns. Iโm sorry if I upset you, but I canโt say anything more. I donโt know why I said anything at all. Itโs just…your soul has a similar glow. A strong glow.โ
โHow flattering,โ I grumbled. โMy soul glows.โ โIโm sorry,โ he said again. โPlease, sit.โ
I had no interest in letting the matter drop, or sitting with him on a bunch of mummy wrappings, but my direct approach to information gathering didnโt seem to be working. I plopped down on the bench and tried to look as annoyed as possible.
โSo.โ I gave him a sulky glare. โWhatโs that form, then? Are you a godling?โ
He frowned and put his hand to his chest. โYou mean, am I inhabiting a human body? No, I can inhabit any graveyard, any place of death or mourning. This is my natural appearance.โ
โOh.โ Part of me had hoped there was an actual boy sitting next to meโ someone who just happened to be hosting a god. But I shouldโve known that was too good to be true. I felt disappointed. Then I felt angry with myself for feeling disappointed.
Itโs not like there was any potential, Sadie, I chided myself. Heโs the bloody god of funerals. Heโs like five thousand years old.
โSo,โ I said, โif you canโt tell me anything useful, at least help me. We need a feather of truth.โ
He shook his head. โYou donโt know what youโre asking. The feather of truth is too dangerous. Giving it to a mortal would be against the rules of Osiris.โ
โBut Osiris isnโt here.โ I pointed at the empty throne. โThatโs his seat, isnโt it? Do you see Osiris?โ
Anubis eyed the throne. He ran his fingers along his gold chain as if it were getting tighter. โItโs true that Iโve waited here for ages, keeping my station. I was not imprisoned like the rest. I donโt know why…but I did the best I could. When I heard the five had been released, I hoped Lord Osiris would return, but…โ He shook his head dejectedly. โWhy would he neglect his duties?โ
โProbably because heโs trapped inside my dad.โ
Anubis stared at me. โThe baboon did not explain this.โ
โWell, I canโt explain as well as a baboon. But basically my dad wanted to release some gods for reasons I donโt quite…Maybe he thought, Iโll just pop down to the British Museum and blow up the Rosetta Stone! And he released Osiris, but he also got Set and the rest of that lot.โ
โSo Set imprisoned your father while he was hosting Osiris,โ Anubis said, โwhich means Osiris has also been trapped by myโโ He stopped himself. โBy Set.โ
Interesting, I thought.
โYou understand, then,โ I said. โYouโve got to help us.โ
Anubis hesitated, then shook his head. โI canโt. Iโll get in trouble.โ
I just stared at him and laughed. I couldnโt help it, he sounded so ridiculous. โYouโll get in trouble? How old are you, sixteen? Youโre a god!โ
It was hard to tell in the dark, but I could swear he blushed. โYou donโt understand. The feather cannot abide the smallest lie. If I gave it to you, and you spoke a single untruth while you carried it, or acted in a way that was not truthful, you would burn to ashes.โ
โYouโre assuming Iโm a liar.โ He blinked. โNo, I simplyโโ
โYouโve never told a lie? What were you about to say just nowโabout Set? Heโs your father, Iโm guessing. Is that it?โ
Anubis closed his mouth, then opened it again. He looked as if he wanted to get angry but couldnโt quite remember how. โAre you always this infuriating?โ
โUsually more,โ I admitted.
โWhy hasnโt your family married you off to someone far, far away?โ
He asked as if it were an honest question, and now it was my turn to be flabbergasted. โExcuse me, death boy! But Iโm twelve! Well…almost thirteen,
and a very mature almost thirteen, but thatโs not the point. We donโt โmarry offโ girls in my family, and you may know everything about funerals, but apparently you arenโt very up to speed on courtship rituals!โ
Anubis looked mystified. โApparently not.โ
โRight! Waitโwhat were we talking about? Oh, thought you could distract me, eh? I remember. Setโs your father, yes? Tell the truth.โ
Anubis gazed across the graveyard. The sound of the jazz funeral was fading into the streets of the French Quarter.
โYes,โ he said. โAt least, thatโs what the legends say. Iโve never met him.
My mother, Nephthys, gave me to Osiris when I was a child.โ โShe…gave you away?โ
โShe said she didnโt want me to know my father. But in truth, Iโm not sure she knew what to do with me. I wasnโt like my cousin Horus. I wasnโt a warrior. I was a…different child.โ
He sounded so bitter, I didnโt know what to say. I mean, Iโd asked for the truth, but usually you donโt actually get it, especially from guys. I also knew something about being the different childโand feeling like my parents had given me away.
โMaybe your mum was trying to protect you,โ I said. โYour dad being Lord of Evil, and all.โ
โMaybe,โ he said halfheartedly. โOsiris took me under his wing. He made me the Lord of Funerals, the Keeper of the Ways of Death. Itโs a good job, but…you asked how old I am. The truth is I donโt know. Years donโt pass in the Land of the Dead. I still feel quite young, but the world has gotten old around me. And Osiris has been gone so long…Heโs the only family I had.โ
Looking at Anubis in the dim light of the graveyard, I saw a lonely teenage guy. I tried to remind myself that he was a god, thousands of years old, probably able to control vast powers well beyond magic toilet paper, but I still felt sorry for him.
โHelp us rescue my dad,โ I said. โWeโll send Set back to the Duat, and Osiris will be free. Weโll all be happy.โ
Anubis shook his head again. โI told youโโ
โYour scales are broken,โ I noticed. โThatโs because Osiris isnโt here, Iโm guessing. What happens to all the souls that come for judgment?โ
I knew Iโd hit a nerve. Anubis shifted uncomfortably on the bench. โIt increases chaos. The souls become confused. Some cannot go to the afterlife. Some manage, but they must find other ways. I try to help, but…the Hall of Judgment is also called the Hall of Maโat. It is meant to be the center of order, a stable foundation. Without Osiris, it is falling into disrepair, crumbling.โ
โThen what are you waiting for? Give us the feather. Unless youโre afraid your dad will ground you.โ
His eyes flashed with irritation. For a moment I thought he was planning
my funeral, but he simply sighed in exasperation. โI do a ceremony called the opening of the mouth. It lets the soul of the dead person come forth. For you, Sadie Kane, I would invent a new ceremony: the closing of the mouth.โ
โHa, ha. Are you going to give me the feather or not?โ
He opened his hand. There was a burst of light, and a glowing feather floated above his palmโa snowy plume like a writing quill. โFor Osirisโs sakeโbut I will insist on several conditions. First, only you may handle it.โ
โWell, of course. You donโt think Iโd let Carterโโ
โAlso, you must listen to my mother, Nephthys. Khufu told me you were looking for her. If you manage to find her, listen to her.โ
โEasy,โ I said, though the request did leave me strangely uncomfortable.
Why would Anubis ask something like that?
โAnd before you go,โ Anubis continued, โyou must answer three questions for me as you hold the feather of truth, to prove that you are honest.โ
My mouth suddenly felt dry. โUm…what sort of questions?โ
โAny that I want. And remember, the slightest lie will destroy you.โ โGive me the bloody feather.โ
As he handed it to me, the feather stopped glowing, but it felt warmer and heavier than a feather should.
โItโs the tail feather from a bennu,โ Anubis explained, โwhat youโd call a phoenix. It weighs exactly the same as a human soul. Are you ready?โ
โNo,โ I said, which mustโve been truthful, as I didnโt burn up. โDoes that count as one question?โ
Anubis actually smiled, which was quite dazzling. โI suppose it does. You bargain like a Phoenician sea trader, Sadie Kane. Second question, then: Would you give your life for your brother?โ
โYes,โ I said immediately.
(I know. It surprised me too. But holding the feather forced me to be truthful. Obviously it didnโt make me any wiser.)
Anubis nodded, apparently not surprised. โFinal question: If it means saving the world, are you prepared to lose your father?โ
โThatโs not a fair question!โ โAnswer it honestly.โ
How could I answer something like that? It wasnโt a simple yes/no.
Of course I knew the โrightโ answer. The heroine is supposed to refuse to sacrifice her father. Then she boldly goes off and saves her dad and the world, right? But what if it really was one or the other? The whole world was an awfully large place: Gran and Gramps, Carter, Uncle Amos, Bast, Khufu, Liz and Emma, everyone Iโd ever known. What would my dad say if I chose him instead?
โIf…if there really was no other way,โ I said, โno other way at allโ Oh,
come off. Itโs a ridiculous question.โ The feather began to glow.
โAll right,โ I relented. โIf I had to, then I suppose…I suppose I would save the world.โ
Horrible guilt crushed down on me. What kind of daughter was I? I clutched the tyet amulet on my necklaceโmy one remembrance of Dad. I know some of you lot will be thinking: You hardly ever saw your dad. You barely knew him. Why would you care so much?
But that didnโt make him any less my dad, did it? Or the thought of losing him forever any less horrible. And the thought of failing him, of willingly choosing to let him die even to save the worldโwhat sort of awful person was I?
I could barely meet Anubisโs eyes, but when I did, his expression softened.
โI believe you, Sadie.โ
โOh, really. Iโm holding the bloody feather of truth, and you believe me.
Well, thanks.โ
โThe truth is harsh,โ Anubis said. โSpirits come to the Hall of Judgment all the time, and they cannot let go of their lies. They deny their faults, their true feelings, their mistakes…right up until Ammit devours their souls for eternity. It takes strength and courage to admit the truth.โ
โYeah. I feel so strong and courageous. Thanks.โ
Anubis stood. โI should leave you now. Youโre running out of time. In just over twenty-four hours, the sun will rise on Setโs birthday, and he will complete his pyramidโunless you stop him. Perhaps when next we meetโโ
โYouโll be just as annoying?โ I guessed.
He fixed me with those warm brown eyes. โOr perhaps you could bring me up to speed on modern courtship rituals.โ
I sat there stunned until he gave me a glimpse of a smileโjust enough to let me know he was teasing. Then he disappeared.
โOh, very funny!โ I yelled. The scales and the throne vanished. The linen bench unraveled and dumped me in the middle of the graveyard. Carter and Khufu appeared next to me, but I just kept yelling at the spot where Anubis had stood, calling him some choice names.
โWhatโs going on?โ Carter demanded. โWhere are we?โ
โHeโs horrible!โ I growled. โSelf-important, sarcastic, incredibly hot, insufferableโโ
โAgh!โ Khufu complained.
โYeah,โ Carter agreed. โDid you get the feather or not?โ
I held out my hand, and there it wasโa glowing white plume floating above my fingers. I closed my fist and it disappeared again.
โWhoa,โ Carter said. โBut what about Anubis? How did youโโ
do.โ
โLetโs find Bast and get out of here,โ I interrupted. โWeโve got work to
And I marched out of the graveyard before he could ask me more
questions, because I was in no mood to tell the truth.