Hi everyone! Thank you so much for 62 followers, that means so much to me!!! As a celebration, here is another instalment of Sekhemkhet. If you're new here, please note that the series
starts with Sekhemkhet's Curse
, then it's Sekhemkhet's Promise (part one and two) and this is the newest addition, Sekhemkhet's Promise Part Three. I know where the story is going after this and I don't think there will be too many more chapters before a conclusion is reached (probably about 2 or 3).
As always, please leave a comment and let me know what you think! There's nothing I love more than hearing from you, it keeps me writing : )
Thanks for reading! Xox
Ps, hope you like love triangles ;)
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Contrary to what Anabeth had thought would happen, Sekhemkhet left the room almost immediately after she had agreed. Apparently, the real decisions would be made over the coming weeks, after a considerable amount of debate.
There was a lot that Anabeth didn't understand but that had to be discussed. The legalities of who owned the artefacts -- Sekhemkhet and his family or the country of Egypt and, therefore, the British -- who had to pay for the shipping of the artefacts, how the artefacts should be handled, which artefacts could travel, and which had to remain, the list went on. Anabeth excused herself after an hour of listening to agendas being made. They hadn't actually begun any discussions -- there was so much to cover that it required a meeting just to plan.
In all honestly Beth had found herself wandering the halls of the museum in the hopes that she would be lured to a quiet room again, but it didn't happen. It was clear that he would be deciding when and where they were to see each other in spite of what she may have wanted.
A further thirty minutes later, Mr Banks found Anabeth on one of the benches just inside the great hall, watching the visitors come in and out.
"I'll have to write to your father as soon as we return to Lord Darnley's home," Mr Banks informed her, pulling a cigarette from the inside pocket of his jacket. Anabeth hummed a reply, noticing that Mr Banks made no attempt to light the cigarette, he just fiddled with it.
"Why did Akhenaten call you Henutsen?" Mr Banks asked, after a brief silence.
"Strange, wasn't it? I can't imagine," Anabeth answered, attempting to seem uninterested. In reality she was becoming terribly aware that Mr Banks was more than he seemed on the surface. Nothing got past this man, and she was beginning to wonder how much her father was paying him to accompany her.
"So, you understand Arabic?" Mr Banks frowned, shocking Anabeth.
"I understand bits and pieces. I mostly just picked up the name because I knew it from reading about Sekhemkhet. Interesting story really, and not one known by many. I didn't realise that he was calling
me
Henutsen, by he was looking at me when he said it. I thought it was facetious to be perfectly frank." She was babbling but she couldn't help herself. How was she to explain that she could only understand Arabic when Sekhemkhet spoke it? When she'd first come off the train and the men had crowded them, she'd had no idea what they were shouting.
"I just wanted to make sure you know what you're doing," Mr Banks looked at her with all the tenderness of a father looking at his youngest daughter. "I have no doubt that this is a wonderful opportunity for a young woman such as yourself -- exciting to see a bit of the world and such. But it all comes at a cost, Miss Brightbury. Unfortunately, ambitious women aren't in demand in the courting world of England."
"You sound like my mother," Beth smiled in an attempt to thank Mr Banks. She wouldn't say the words aloud, but she hoped he heard them all the same.
Thank you for looking out for my best interests, but no. I'd rather have a few years of fabulous adventure than a lifetime of sordid, 'suitable' marriage.
All in all, it took two weeks for the decisions to be finalised. Two long weeks for Anabeth, spending her days wandering the museum, or staying with Lady Darnley. The latter had only happened twice. The first time she had assumed it had just been a bad experience. Lady Darnley had had friends over for afternoon tea and a game of cards, but she made no effort to introduce Beth to any of the ladies (all of whom had looked at her as though she were one of the artefacts up for debate). Eventually Beth made her excuses and returned to her room where she read for most of the day. However, the second time showed no improvement. When Beth had joined Lady Darnley for breakfast, she had managed to find out that the Lady was going into town to buy sewing supplies. Beth had eagerly agreed to join her, but in the time it took her to go upstairs and change into something more suitable, Lady Darnley had left. After that Beth had Peter collect her in the morning so she could at least have some amicable company for a part of the day.
The real trouble that Anabeth found was the lack of a certain now-living-male. Too often she found herself late at night with her fingers slipping into her heat. She played and massaged and fantasised all she could, but it held no great pleasure for her. She had no word from him, which was infuriating to such a degree that she had lost her wits one day in one of the quieter wings of the museum.
Anabeth had looked around her to make sure she was alone. There was a definite breeze in this room that there hadn't been in any of the others and she was beginning to wonder if it was the same breeze that she had felt on her balcony.
Could it be Sekhemkhet?
She wondered.
And so, she did the only logical thing she could think of.
"Sekhemkhet?" She called out, her eyes closed, he fingers spread to feel the breeze running through them.
"No, I believe that is a picture of Ramses the third," a voice came from behind her. It was a woman, perhaps Egyptian, though wearing what seemed to be Parisian clothing. Her face was beautiful; well defined with high cheek bones and big brown eyes, her dark hair pinned up, framing her face. Anabeth felt small beside her. The woman was rich, Beth could tell from her clothing, but there was more than that. There was an air of sophisticated confidence about her that only came from being raised in a family with power.
"Oh," Anabeth turned from the woman to look at the painting in front of her. She was correct, though there was no inscription underneath. "I'm sure you're right," Beth laughed lightly. "I know so little about the history of Pharaohs."
"I can tell," the woman walked to stand beside Beth, moving with such grace it was almost cat-like. Her voice oozed superiority. Beth had never felt so small. "You're about fifteen hundred years off."
Anabeth smiled again before excusing herself. She had wanted to shout that she knew that. She knew who Ramses the third was and who his children were and that,