herself on finding Dr Ferguson. There weren’t many women being trained in surgery. On the other hand, there weren’t many positions open to women surgeons. Ferguson had
worked in the slums of Boston, Massachusetts, and according to Nefret she had expressed herself as more concerned with saving abused women than men who were fool enough to go out and get themselves
shot. She and Sophia ought to get along.
As Ramses had rather expected, Nefret decided to spend the rest of the day at the hospital. She was in her element, with two women who shared her skills and her beliefs, and Ramses felt a faint,
unreasonable stir of jealousy. He kissed her good-bye and saw her eyes widen with surprise and pleasure; as a rule he didn’t express affection in public. It had been a demonstration of
possessiveness, he supposed.
Walking back towards the hotel, head bent and hands in his pockets, he examined his feelings and despised himself for selfishness. At least he hadn’t insisted she wait for him to escort
her back to the hotel. She’d have resented that. No one in el-Wasa would have dared lay a hand on her, but it made him sick to think of her walking alone through those noisome alleys, at a
time of day when the houses would be opening for business and the women would be screaming obscene invitations at the men who leered at them through the open windows.
His parents were already at the hotel, and when he saw what his mother had found that morning, he forgot his grievances for a while. The little ointment jar was in almost perfect condition, and
he was inclined to agree with her that the scraps of jewellery – beads, half of a gold-hinged bracelet, and an exquisitely inlaid uraeus serpent – had come from the same Eighteenth
Dynasty tomb Cyrus had told them about.
‘Aslimi claimed the seller was unknown to him?’ he asked. ‘That’s rather odd. He has his usual sources and would surely be suspicious of strangers.’
‘Aslimi would not dare lie to me ,’ his mother declared. She gave her husband a challenging glance. Emerson did not venture to contradict her. He had something else on his
mind.
‘Er – I trust you and Nefret have given up the idea of visiting the coffeeshops?’
‘I wasn’t keen on the idea in the first place,’ Ramses said.
‘Well. No need for such an expedition now; your mother questioned the dealers and none of them had heard of the Master’s return. Be ready to take the train tomorrow, eh?’
‘That depends on Nefret. She may not want to leave so soon.’
‘Oh. Yes, quite. Is she still at the hospital? You arranged to fetch her home, I presume.’
‘No, sir, I didn’t.’
Emerson’s brows drew together, but before he could comment his wife said, ‘Is there something unusual about that ointment jar, Ramses?’
He had been holding it, turning it in his hands, running his fingers along the curved sides. He gave her a smile that acknowledged both her tactful intervention and her perceptiveness.
‘There’s a rough section, here on the shoulder. The rest of it is as smooth as satin.’
‘Let me see.’ Emerson took it from him and carried it to the window, where the light was stronger. ‘By Gad, you’re right,’ he said, in obvious chagrin.
‘Don’t know how I could have missed it. Something has been rubbed off. A name? An inscription?’
‘The space is about the right size for a cartouche,’ Ramses said.
‘Can you see anything?’
‘A few vague scratches.’ Direct sunlight shimmered in the depths of the pale translucent stone. ‘It looks as if someone has carefully removed the owner’s name.’
‘Not the thief, surely,’ his mother said, squinting at the pot. ‘An inscribed piece would bring a higher price.’
‘True.’ Emerson rubbed his chin. ‘Well, we’ve seen such things before. An enemy, wishing to condemn the owner to the final death that befalls the nameless, or an ancient
thief, who intended to replace the name with his own and never got