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A scene from the Anson Hunter Egypt adventure fiction series |
“We
know the ancient Egyptians had a firm conviction that you could take it all
with you when you died, provided your worldly goods were placed in your tomb
with you," Anson said to her. "Food, wine, furniture, games, weapons, treasures... They believed
that the afterlife would be a continuation of life on the Nile, only better,
but with the same sorts of challenges.
"Now
imagine if we died and woke up in the next world to learn that they were right
- only the ancient Egyptians owned any stuff. The rest of us arrive
empty-handed. Mind you, not many ancient Egyptians retained their worldly goods
for long with the systematic depredation of tomb robbers and of archaeology.
But
picture this…”
He
shared a fantasy with her.
“…
It's the Field of Reeds and a man is running plish, plash, plish in the
shallows of the riverbank in the dawn mist.
We
are born alone, we die alone and we arise again alone and he is alone now,
peering through the mist for another sign of life after death.
Reeds
whip against his legs and body. Do scaly crocodiles lurk in here? Surely not.
These are the fields of Aaru, not the
menacing underworld that he has just passed through. That guardian-haunted journey
of gateways, passages and passwords of the night still cling to him like a
nightmare does to the newly awakened and he puts on a spurt to distance himself
further from it.
Yet
he longs for a weapon to defend himself.
Something.
A rock. Even a stick in case he has to fight off an unknown terror.
His
instinct for protection tells him to be afraid, yet he wonders what he should
ever have to fear in this place. Then he recalls that here in this realm of the
Field of Reeds men walk among the gods and demigods.
He
hears a cracking voice that seems to bend the reeds like a breeze with its
force.
“Who enters the reeds? And what riches and
offerings do you bring with you?”
‘Riches?’
he thinks.
He
is a poor man, a tomb guard, and he went to his grave with only a basket of
food, his spear and a jar of beer, which he left behind when he ran out of the
open tomb mouth to emerge into the dawn of another world.
Almost
too late, he sees a figure standing in the mist like a statue. It is a giant,
grim-faced being wearing a skull gap and a tightly fitting gown.
A
neter, or god. Or perhaps a demi-god.
The
air thins and chills and he smells a curious odour like burning gum. The
perfume of divinity. The entity wears a thin curled beard and holds the symbol
of a god in his hand. An axe like a flag on a long pole.
The
running man drops to his belly and lies still in shallow water, plunged into
shock and cold, amid a crowd of bending reeds, their acid-green pungency
filling his nostrils.
“Bring wealth and you will be served,” the cracking voice said. “Bring no wealth and you must serve. You can run as they all do to
escape eternal servitude, but you will be hunted down.”
What
does this mean? That to those who have will be given and to those who have not,
what little they have shall be taken from them?
Not
paradise, but eternal servitude!
This
does not seem like a fitting reward for one who has been justified by Osiris in
the Hall of Judgement.
Is
having a soul free of guilt not enough to earn rest and eternal bliss? Does he
have to buy paradise?
“So you choose to hide and run?” the unseen god thundered. “Then the demigods will come after you. Men and women with serpent
heads. Lioness women. Jackal men. And you have nothing to protect yourself with
because you are one who has brought nothing... ”
‘I
still have my spear back there in the tomb,’ he thinks. ‘Shall I return for
it?’
No.
He’s come too far now.
Better
to crawl in a wide circle around the being and keep going.
There
must be other tombs, other new arrivals that have brought things too. A spear.
Bow and arrows. A sword.
And
gold - that might be useful in this place.
Other tombs.
He
is shocked by his own thoughts. Is he going steal grave goods from a tomb?
He
remembers the words that he recited to Osiris in the Negative Confession:
I
have wronged none…
I
have not stolen.
I
have done no evil.
He
has sworn these things before the Judge of the Dead in order to enter the Field
of Reeds and now he is planning to commit the very sins he denied.
Is it his fate to become a tomb robber in
heaven...?”
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