The funeral was yesterday;
celebrating the life and death of my truest friend Octavius, late of the
Egyptian administration and earlier of the legions of Rome. The expected
throngs filled my vision as priests, almost uncountable, filled the air
with his praises. There were priests from every religion he had learned,
Egyptians representing Osiris and Anpu, a Roman for Jupiter, Greeks, Persians,
even a Jew. They lined up behind the body, mummified in Egyptian
tradition, and in turns spoke similar words.
I nearly slept during the
Greek's low and long mumbled ceremony, but the Jew cried out in a rage
halfway through it: "How dare you speak so quietly. News of
the death of such a man should be screamed from the mountaintops.
Octavius was a great man, who dealt with all equally, who gained the trust
of all those here." Here I turned and looked at the assembled throng.
"And who was finally brought to death by fortune." I had not heard
that before and wondered greatly at its meaning. "This is a death
that should be called forth so that those beyond will know what sort of
man comes."
There was a roar of approval
from the crowd, and I have no doubt that 'those beyond' - although I have
always wanted to know 'beyond what?' (perhaps why I was never able
to become a priest myself) - knew exactly what sort of man was coming.
The body was interred, and
this is worth noting as well, not in the after death home of the Roman
agents, but in an area where many Egyptian nobles sleep for eternity.
There was weeping, and shrieking to the sky after the Jew's suggestion,
and off to one side there were a few silent people in hooded robes.
Curious - as I have been told, I am too curious by half - I approached
them. There were five, and as I approached I saw that two were Roman
men of similar age to the deceased, one was an Egyptian woman, one was
a child, perhaps a teenager, and though I could not see him well he seemed
to be of mixed blood. The last was younger and a bit away from the others;
a woman, and Egyptian, and beyond that all I could tell was that she was
the most beauteous woman I had ever seen.
I neared and four of them
turned. The more distant woman's gaze never left the place of the
body. Bowing neatly to the Romans as was proper, I greeted them.
"I am a mourner and I wished
to mourn with those who seemed to need it most," I told them. Very
neat explanation, and it's times like this I understand why my father thought
to make me a priest. The gods must have some contact with me to fabricate
a line like that.
The woman smiled as the
men dismissed me. Closer now, I could see into the hoods although
the bright sun cast shadows as dark as the eyes of my beloved. The
woman I recognized as Octavius' consort from the single time I had met
her; the only time I saw Octavius after leaving Alexandria the summer after
I was told I would never be a priest. That would mean that the child
was his son, and twelve. I had not seen the boy since his babyhood;
I had been told his age was three at the time. Had it really been
ten years since I had seen Octavius? I do not feel as a man nearing
forty, but I suppose I must be.
The Romans, then. Who were
they? I recalled briefly young friends that Octavius had in his legion;
one of them I had seen that day ten years ago, glaring at this lady consort.
So I greeted him, "Caius, governor from Alexandria, I bid you greeting."
The man looked at me, and
I saw recognition dawn. "The young priest. You've hair now,
I didn't recognize you."
"Alas, I never finished
my training and was unable to honour my line by becoming a priest.
I would join you in mourning a lost friend. Though I knew him less
time than you did, I grieve for him greatly."
The three adults consulted
through looks. "We are heading to Octavius' estate now that his body
is gone," the woman, Eshe I remembered her name to be, answered me.
"Five makes a more fitting number to remember him than four. You
knew him in youth, I knew him as a woman, Caius and Antony knew him throughout
life and as men, and Nuru knew him as a son knows a father. It is
fitting."
I felt my face reflect my
confusion. "But you have five already, do you not?" I asked, looking
up and pointing to where the other woman had been. She was no longer
there, nor was there sign that she had stood there watching the burial.
I followed the four to a carriage and we all sat lost in our own thoughts.
Mine at least revolved around the dead man and the two times I had had
occasion to see him.
The first time I met Octavius
Julius we were both young. I was in Alexandria to learn to be a priest.
He had just arrived as a legionary. One day he had asked for an escort
around the city. I had been giving the teachers trouble, so they
put the task on me.
It was the first time I
had seen a man with fire coloured hair and eyes that looked like my sea.
He seemed so far from his home, but he gave me a crooked smile and said
hello in my language. I returned the greeting with some frippery
about gods shining on him.
His smile grew to a laugh
and he said in Latin that I shouldn't assume he knew more Egyptian than
that. I smiled and said I'd teach him. My learning should be
worth something, I said in his language that I knew the man behind me who
had thought to punish me didn't know. He laughed again, and the foreign
face became familiar to me in that gesture.
We left and I showed him
the city. I showed him much in the months before I was sent away.
He loved it all, and told me so; first in his language and then, increasingly,
in mine. We spoke of his home and mine, of his work and mine.
He said that he had joined the army just for this, to see other places.
"If I were to be sent from
my land I would die," I told him, not understanding that wish. "How
could you leave all that you know for a stranger's shore?"
"Because," he answered in
my tongue with his crooked smile, "That stranger could be the best friend
I could have."
His words warmed me.
After a time he grew curious
about what I learned. He wanted to know about our gods. I laughed
at him, but he didn't know how long he would be among us and wanted to
know our gods so they could be his. I heard later that he spoke with the
Greeks and the Jews and any he could find. Perhaps he was looking
for his goddess.
He laughed at me and at
my father when he learned who my god was. "How can any wonder why
you seem favored by the gods when you're named for one?" he asked amid
laughs. "Romans don't call their children gods. Themselves,
or their fathers, but not their sons."
I watched him until he controlled
his laughter and then continued. Somehow, Octavius' interest and
laughter were the only things that made my training worthwhile to me.
Perhaps I loved him. He was what made the sun rise and set in my
life, rather than Ra, or any of my gods. He was the one who made
sense of the world to me, and not my teachers. It is possible that
I loved him. But I never thought he was mine.
"I knew he never loved me,"
Eshe spoke first of us all, and I wondered at how her thoughts so perfectly
mirrored my own. "Perhaps now that he is dead one of you will tell
me of the woman he mourned?"
"I would, lady," Antony
told her, "But we were never privileged to learn her name."
She sat back with a sad
laugh. "And I had thought you all conspired to keep me from her.
All I ever heard from he who was my love were words of a goddess."
"So he kept his promise,"
I said to myself, louder than I should have. They all turned to me.
"Please, sir, enlighten
us if you know anything of the matter," Antony more ordered than requested.
I sighed, sharing one of
my hoarded and treasured memories of my truest friend.
"Have you ever loved a god?"
Octavius asked me one evening when we were meeting after dinner.
"I love all the gods," I
answered as a good initiate should.
He smiled at me. "No,
my friend, have you loved a god. As you love a woman."
I shrugged, a graceless
gesture that Octavius made charming somehow. I suffered by comparison.
"I have never loved a woman," I said to him frankly.
His face froze and he looked
at me. "Do you love men?" he asked.
I blinked a few times and
cursed my sheltered life that it took me moments to guess his meaning.
My face flushed when I realized. "No!" I protested. "I was
marked by my father to lead a celibate life dedicated to the gods."
Octavius nodded understanding
and favored me with a pitying look. He then threw himself on the
ground, rolling a few times. "I have loved a god. A wondrous
creature, more beautiful than any I have seen on this earth, male or female."
He smiled at me, face radiant. "I have loved both, my friend, but
I will never love another but my sad-eyed goddess."
I had thought little of
his vow at the time, but after, when I thought of the moment, I realized
he held a kite's feather in his hand.
Eshe nodded her understanding,
though the men still looked confused.
"Perhaps a priest may be
taken in by that explanation," Caius said, and I recalled how deeply his
hate of me went, "But I have known Octavius his whole life. He never
was favored of Roman gods, why should foreign ones care about him?"
His bitterness, even now
that my friend was dead, saddened me. "How can you know Octavius
and not see that he was favored by every god? How can you have been
to that funeral and not see that any god would love him?" I asked.
"One such as Octavius breathes life into the dead eyed, comfort to the
heartsick. He had no enemies save one, and that is rare for a person
who lives life as fully as he lived. He radiated energy, kindness,
acceptance. He forgave where no others would and had the best the
world could offer anyone. How can you say he was not favored by gods?"
Antony laughed, a deep,
rich sound, while Caius glared at me. I bowed my head, remembering
a long ago conversation I should not have heard. "I see now why you
should have been a priest," Antony said. "But not why you were refused
as one."
With a smile to the friend
of my friend, the only one of the trio still in the army, I told him "They
wished for those who sought not for answers but for traditions. I
asked them why and they could not answer. I have sought my gods all
my life in ways they would not approve, but perhaps in ways Octavius would
have."
We were all silent for a
few moments, thinking of Octavius' lifelong search through every religion
he could find for answers. As Nuru began speaking of his father I
lapsed back into my own thoughts, of the conversation I should not have
heard between two men.
"I have told you, Caius,"
Octavius said in the tired voice I had come to associate with our second
meeting. "I cannot love you now."
"You did," Caius said, voice
strident. "Why is now different than our youth? That Egyptian
whore you bed?"
"You know my feelings for
her. Because I have loved you I can't now. It would do you
disservice to love you when my heart is another's."
"Your goddess," Caius said
bitterly.
"Yes," Octavius answered.
He sighed. "And only one understands that."
"That priest?" Caius asked.
"Have you bedded him?"
After a pause Octavius spoke
again, voice startled. "Amon? Never! I could not.
My love for him grew before I loved her and I would not defile it by the
comparison that must come. It is why I can no longer love you, my
Caius. I would ask your forgiveness, but you don't seem inclined
to give it."
"Octavius, you were my only
love! Why must you do this?"
I could hear the proud man
nearing tears. At the time I rejoiced, but now I thought of him only
with pity.
Nuru had finished and Eshe
took over and told the story of their meeting; a story I had heard before,
and one made more poignant by recent revelations. I had thought,
the last time it was told to me, that it had ended with her winning his
love, but as she herself admitted it was untrue. All were silent
as she began, speaking of the day she had met him, when he was mourning
a lost love.
I saw Caius look at me and
knew he thought I was that love, as she had appeared in Alexandria only
a few days after my departure. I smiled at him, knowing the truth.
"She's gone, Amon," he said,
despair in his voice.
"Who is gone?" I asked him.
"My goddess, my sad-eyed
goddess. The only one I can ever love again. She hasn't been
there for days now." He threw himself on the ground, his face, always
alive with motion, still.
"Perhaps she has been busy,"
I suggested. "Goddesses have work as all others have work."
He looked up at me, eyes
coming back from the great distance they had been looking at me from.
"Don't you have work, Amon? It's midday. I didn't think priest
initiates had days off."
"They don't," I answered.
"I-- have been relieved of my training. They decided I would not
make a proper priest."
"That's wonderful!" he said,
with a smile that almost matched his usual one. "Now you'll have
more time."
"Yes," I said slowly, "But
I will have more time away from here. I'm to return to Memphis this
afternoon. After I talk to you, actually."
His smile faded, despair
further clouding his face. "You're leaving as well? Do all
Egyptians I love leave me?"
I knelt next to him, reaching
a hand down to take his. "If given the choice, none would leave you,"
I answered honestly. "But I must."
He nodded, gripping my hand
hard. As I rose, he pressed something to my palm. "May she
gift you with a love like I have known. May any gods you believe
in walk with you, my friend."
I smiled, then walked away
without looking back. It wasn't until I boarded the boat to take
me home that I even opened my hand.
He had given me the kite
feather.
Eshe finished her story with
a slight laugh. "He asked me to marry him when Nuru came, but I said
I'd only marry him when his heart was mine." Her smile faded.
"I always thought the day would come someday."
"I judged him wrongly,"
I muttered in wonder into the silent room. All eyes turned toward
me and I was forced to give up another memory; more painful but no less
treasured. One that showed the depth of our trust.
After leaving Alexandria
I lived life as well as I could. I had a love for a time, and I felt
that I loved as strongly as he had. When she chose another, I felt
I despaired as greatly as he had. My love - my only love! - had chosen
a Roman over me. I wept bitter tears, screamed to the heavens for
retribution, tore my hair. I could neither eat nor sleep for days,
and I worried both my family and the few friends I had made. Friends
I ultimately lost after I recovered.
My recovery was sped by
a group. At the time I thought that the gods had sent them to aid
me. I still think that, though for other reasons. Either way,
they turned my life around. They gave me a purpose.
Free Egypt. Kill the
invaders.
After they were done with
me, I blamed the Romans for every sorrow that had entered my life.
In my own mind I thought of Octavius and added him to the army of darkness
that Romans were. He had had an Egyptian lover. He now had
another, who had given him a child and who he still hadn't married.
That brought dishonour to all of us and showed what he thought of us.
When the leader of my local
unit discovered our friendship he decided I could finally be useful and
he sent me back to Alexandria for the first time in almost ten years to
kill the man who used to be my closest friend.
She opened the door to the
house and my breath was taken away. Then Octavius appeared behind
her and my purpose was almost forgotten. How could this man be what
I was taught to hate? This man who seemed to have all the cares of
the world on him and whose laughing mouth and eyes had been twisted by
a lifetime of doubt and despair was my enemy?
His face lit up as he saw
me. "Amon! My friend! Come in and meet a Jew," he said,
ushering me inside. He was studying with the Jew, learning the man's
religion as he had learned mine.
"Tell him about my goddess,"
he practically ordered me.
"I did not know your goddess,
Octavius," I said, some of my anger returning.
He waved a hand as though
it weren't important. "Just tell him about her. Tell him about
Nephthys. I want to know if she's in the Jew's life too. If
I have any chance at finding her."
My eyes widened and I didn't
know if I should pity him or hate him. Did he really think he had
loved a goddess or was he - as my comrades would have insisted - giving
himself false ties to my home to ingratiate himself with the people.
I complied with his request, telling the Jew about the mourning goddess
who cares for the dead.
Once the man had left, Octavius
rested back in his seat looking discouraged. Eshe, whose name I learned,
came in with her child and entertained us with stories. When she
was distracted from speaking by the need to tend her son, I told stories
for all of them.
Caius came in at some point
and drew the conversation to himself. Eshe left soon after.
I could see the animosity between them. Glancing at Octavius I knew
he saw it too and was pained. Shortly after, Caius drew Octavius
aside for a private conversation. When Octavius reentered the room
he was alone.
He smiled at me tiredly, and drew me to my feet. "Join me in
a drink, my friend, and tell me how you have been."
The opportunity could not
have been better. When his back was turned, I would drop the poison
I had been given into his drink. His hand caught mine before the
tablet could leave my fingers. I looked up at the man standing at
my side with the sad, betrayed eyes, and wished that I could reverse time
and not do it.
"I could have you killed,
Amon," he said quietly. "Or exiled."
In the silence that lowered
between us, youthful words rang out. "If I were to be sent from my land
I would die."
He sighed. "This is
not the first attempt," he said, releasing my hand, and dropping into a
seat. He looked back up at me with searing gaze. "Was it your
attempt alone?" I paused for too long, deciding if it would be better
to betray the group. "I see," he said finally. "I will not
exile you, Amon. We are the only ones here. I won't let others
know."
I bowed to him in gratitude
and turned to leave.
"Amon," he called.
I turned back and he was staring at the floor. "I still consider
you my truest friend."
"And you are mine, Octavius,"
I answered.
He nodded and I left, never
to see him again.
"I am telling you this,"
I finished my tale calmly, "Because I feel that you will all honor his
decision in the matter."
Antony cleared his throat.
"As a general, I cannot condone my friend's choice. We have, however,
all seen and admired your histories of Rome and Egypt." He smiled
slightly at me. "He used to brag that you were his friend."
I smiled back, silently
thanking him for that.
"You are safe," Eshe said.
"And welcome here, as an honoured friend of my love."
I rose to bow to her.
I stayed and listened to Antony and Caius speak, smiling at the Octavius
they painted with their words, thinking about my friend and his Nephthys,
and fingering an old kite feather in my pocket.
Caius spoke first, recalling
their youth together in Rome and my head was filled with images of a childish
Octavius, one mothers would preen over and fathers would brag about.
Caius' story filled the room with laughter.
After he finished, Antony
cleared his throat. In his strong, soldier's voice he declared, "Octavius
knew he would die." At the aghast looks from the others he continued.
"He did not kill himself, nor was his sickness more than the passing of
a day to heal from, but he knew he would die. I saw him last week
and he was jubilant. He said to me 'Antony, she has returned.
And when next I see her, I will go with her.' He was dead two days
later."
I straightened in my seat,
mind turning over with information. Ten years ago he had told the
Jew he would go with his goddess if given the choice.
His goddess!
He had made me recite information
on Nephthys to the Jew. A goddess who dealt with the dead.
And the kite feather I caressed.... Nephthys often appeared as a
kite. It was in that form that she was depicted on sarcophagi.
His goddess returned; a goddess of death, taking him from this life to
the next. Or perhaps taking him somewhere else to be with her.
Didn't the mourning goddess, mother of Anpu who ruled the dead, deserve
that happiness?
I rested back in my seat
to find Antony looking at me with a question in his eyes. I shook
my head. He would not understand. He continued to look at me
closely through Nuru's next remembrance, and then he rose.
"I will drink to the dead,"
he announced. "Any who would drink come with me." We all rose
and followed him. As Caius spoke with Eshe, Antony approached me.
"What do you know that we don't?" he asked.
"Nothing, sir," I answered
in all honesty. "Nuru," I addressed the boy, "I will leave early
tomorrow. I would speak with you then."
The adults tried to decide
what I was hiding as they watched me. I smiled, knowing that none
of them would guess, and raised my glass to toast he who had been a friend
to us all. They echoed my salute, added their own, and before long
we were remembering Octavius over dinner, and long into the night.
I awoke earlier than the
others, glad I had kept my head somewhat clear in the midst of the toasting.
I had a long journey ahead of me, and much to think of as I made my way
once more from Alexandria to Memphis.
Eshe had gifted me with
the remains of dinner and I wrapped these in a clean cloth for the journey
home. Perhaps if any completed the journey my beloved would wish
to taste Alexandrian food. She had never come this far. I remained
quiet to save them trouble, but hoped that the boy would remember my request
and wake. I had little idea if it was likely or not, but wished to
speak with him in private if I could. Somehow, I thought, Octavius'
son would be most likely to understand him.
As I reached the outside
door, Nuru caught up to me. He looked at me almost expectantly, as
if he knew what I wanted. At this close range I could see his father
in him, and thought that perhaps someday a goddess would come for him.
I pulled out the kite feather.
"This was a gift from your father to me." I paused, trying to remember
his words to me from that day. "May you be granted a love as strong
as his. And may your gods walk ever with you."
I paused a moment, trying
to decide what to tell him. "I was honoured last night with a wondrous
dream. There was a beautiful woman in it watching as Octavius had
his heart weighed against Maat's feather. The scales dipped deeply
with his heart on the lower scale. She took a step toward him and
he looked up to see her. Light entered his eyes, joy to his body,
and his heart was weighed equal to and no more than the feather."
I smiled at the confusion on the boy's face. "He is happy.
He is with his goddess." I rested my hand on his head. "There
is much of your father in you. I hope your path brings you as much
joy and less sorrow."
Without waiting for an answer
I bowed and left the estate. My feet took me back to the place of
his burial and I placed the remains of my meal on the altar for him.
There was a sound and I looked up in trepidation. A long, dark cloak
rested over the head of the sarcophagus. A kite sat atop it, looking
at me.
I held her eyes for a moment,
then she gave a shriek and lifted into the air, sailing straight for the
sun, it seemed. I quickly lost sight of her. But when I looked
back at the sarcophagus, there was a single feather waiting for me.
I picked it up reverently, thanking the goddess and my friend for their
gift. After running my fingers down it, I placed it in my pocket
where the last one had ridden all these years and turned to make my way
home.
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