The Book of Two Ways Page 36

That I can’t stop looking at you.

Even when I didn’t want to. Even when he was being a dick. Even when I was resolutely trying to ignore him—I was always aware of where Wyatt was, in proximity to me, in the desert, in the Dig House, in my thoughts.

The truth stung at my lips. “I changed my mind,” I said. “Dare.”

“You don’t get to renege.”

“Sure I do. American rules.”

“That’s BS.”

“You’re going to back down from a chance to give me a dare?”

He considered this for a moment. “Eat a bug,” Wyatt decreed.

I got to my feet unsteadily, bobbing along the half wall that lined the roof of the Dig House. I found something crawling along the railing and without thinking too hard about it, I plucked it off and popped it into my mouth. “Mmm. The crunchy kind.”

Wyatt gaped at me. “You just ate a fucking beetle.”

I shrugged. “Tell me something I don’t know.”

“In addition to dancing, I can tell the difference between a dessert fork and an oyster fork and I know that you only pass to the left at a dinner table.” It hadn’t been an official question in the game, but I didn’t interrupt Wyatt as he answered me. “Eleanora DeBussy taught dance, and also etiquette. And she drummed Debrett’s Peerage into my head.”

“What’s that?”

“A very archaic and bullshit book about the titled gentry in the United Kingdom.”

I remembered his friends calling him Mark, short for marquess. When I thought of titles, I pictured Jane Austen and gilded ballrooms and fat men in tails with quizzing glasses. Wyatt was frowning, lost somewhere inside himself, and he looked so miserable that I wanted to break him free. I felt an ache under my ribs, a shifting surprise at feeling more for him than just annoyance. “Hey,” I said. “Your turn. Truth.”

Wyatt cleared his throat. “Worst day ever?”

“My father was killed on duty. He was in the army.”

He scooted to sit beside me, so that our shoulders were bumping up against each other. “That’s truly terrible,” he said.

“That wasn’t actually the worst day,” I admitted. “It was like three years later, when I realized my mother was never going to get over it.”

I tilted my head back, because I didn’t think I could bear to see the pity in Wyatt’s eyes, and goddammit, I saw the rabbit constellation he had been talking about.

“My older brother died of Hodgkin’s lymphoma when I was twelve,” Wyatt said softly. “He was the Earl of Rawlings, not me. I was the bonus child and perfectly happy doing my own thing. It was the only time I’ve truly felt tied to anything noble. I mean, imagine being the child of a king who dies, and being named the new regent at the very moment all you want to do is burst into tears. My father has made it quite clear that I’m to get over this childish fascination I have with Egypt, to quit being Indiana Jones and come home and work in an investment bank and make gobs of money. But I never wanted that life. I want my own.” Wyatt huffed out a self-deprecating laugh. “My God, that took a turn,” he said. “What was your best day?”

I was dimly aware that we had emptied the bottle of champagne. “Every summer my mom would take my brother and me to Newburyport for an afternoon. There’s a bird sanctuary out on Plum Island, and at the very tip of it is a beach. They only let a certain number of cars out there, so it always feels deserted. We’d watch the plovers nesting or walk along the water—it’s so cold there, you can’t feel your ankles after a few minutes. We’d collect the things that get thrown back from the sea—a boot, a fishing lure, once a whole plastic shipping container filled with canned tuna.” I hesitate. “It doesn’t sound so amazing, talking about it. But it was just the three of us, in a place where I only ever remember being happy, and I don’t have too many of those places.”

When I looked up, Wyatt was staring at me as if he’d never seen me before, and maybe that was true. Maybe I hadn’t let him. “Truth or dare,” he said. “Take the dare.”

My teeth sank into my bottom lip, and Wyatt flinched.

“Dare.” The word fell dry from my mouth like an autumn leaf.

“Forgive me, Olive.”

I felt a prickle of fear, the sixth sense you have when you know your life is about to be cleaved into before and after. “For what?”

“This,” Wyatt said, and he leaned forward and kissed me.

The night tightened around us, a noose. Wyatt’s hand slipped under my braid, curving around the nape of my neck. I tasted champagne and butterscotch and shock. Somehow, Wyatt was just as surprised as I was.

My hand settled over his heart, as if I could weigh it against a feather of truth.

Then I pushed him away, stumbled to my feet, and ran like hell.

* * *

BY THE TIME we break for tea at 10:00 A.M. I feel like I’ve been awake for days. My muscles ache as I stretch them, leaving the shaded comfort of the tomb for the blaze of sun outside. The gaffir, a painfully thin man with the face of an apple dried in the sun, brings us tea and pours it into small glasses. You would think that drinking a hot beverage in the desert is like striking a match on the surface of the sun—superfluous—but it turns out to be just the opposite. Somehow, the hotter the drink, the cooler your body becomes. “Shokran,” I say, as he hands me my glass, and he ducks his head and offers a smile missing multiple teeth.

Wyatt is the last one to the tent, accompanied by the inspector, Omar, whose motorbike has been fixed. “Ah,” the inspector says, his eyes lighting on me. “This is the one.” I wonder what Wyatt has told him. He gives a little bow. “I am pleased to make your acquaintance.”

He turns to Wyatt, resuming a discussion about how much longer it might be before they are ready to open the burial chamber. I try not to eavesdrop, but I realize Joe and Alberto are doing the same thing. When Wyatt says that they’ll likely be able to get into the burial chamber tomorrow, and that Mostafa Awad—the head of antiquities—is coming, a current of palpable excitement whips between us.

“We’ve been at this for weeks,” Joe murmurs to me. “Guess you’re the lucky charm.”

Alberto grunts and leaves the gaffir’s tent.

In ancient tombs, there were public parts, and private spaces. The public space was where visitors could mill. The private part was where the deceased was actually buried. A shaft was dug perpendicular to the floor of the tomb, and then a small burial niche was carved out horizontally at its base. After a coffin was lowered down the shaft and tucked into the burial niche, a limestone slab or blocks would have been placed in front of the entrance to the chamber. Then the shaft would have been filled with sand and dirt, and another limestone slab would have capped it, sealing off the entrance to the private part of the tomb.

That slab was moved aside weeks ago; if Wyatt is confident that we’ll be entering the burial chamber tomorrow, it means that the shaft is very nearly clear as well.

From the corner of my eye, I watch him down the glass of hot tea in nearly a gulp, and then clap Omar on the back. Abdou ducks into the tent, apologizing for the interruption, and hands Wyatt a stack of papers. “Three more hours and we’ll probably quit for the day,” Joe tells me. “It’s too fucking hot to be here after two P.M.”

“Inshallah,” I answer, and he grins.

“You ready?”

“To bend myself into a figure eight under a natural rock ledge? You bet,” I say. “There’s a reason grad students are your age, and not mine.”

I’m following Joe out of the tent when I hear Wyatt’s voice. “Dawn. A word?”

Joe raises his eyebrows: Good luck with that. The gaffir takes the glasses and teapot outside, leaving me alone with Wyatt. He is seated, and from where I am standing, I can’t read his expression. Then I realize that he isn’t holding a stack of papers.

“That’s my iPad,” I say, stupidly.

“Technically,” Wyatt answers, “it’s mine.”

Immediately my heart starts hammering. Was I supposed to bring it with me to the gaffir’s tent, lest it get stolen? Did he look at my work, and find it lacking?

Is this the moment he sends me home?

I watch him flip it open, scroll through the work I have saved. He enlarges one of the areas I have been tracing, one with considerable damage. In the back of his throat, he makes a small sound. “I can do better,” I blurt out.

“No, you can’t,” Wyatt says, and everything inside me turns to stone.

He flips down the magnetic cover and hands it to me. “I have never seen anyone as good as you are at drawing hieroglyphs,” he murmurs. “It’s like you’re a scribe yourself.”

I feel blood rush to my cheeks. “Thanks.”

“Clearly it’s going well,” he says.

“I’m glad I can be helpful.”

“Likewise,” Wyatt replies, tipping back the brim of his hat so I can see his eyes. “Although I still am not quite sure what I’m helping with.”