It was fortunate, perhaps, that he was going to be rather too busy to think about women while he was here—he found the challenge in those blue eyes really quite intriguing.
Which was really slightly crazy, he told himself with a hint of self-mocking amusement—he had never been attracted to that prickly, aggressive type; he liked his women sweet and soft and feminine. The heat must be getting to his brain!
He was a week early; April, the Department of Antiquities had told her, and it was still only March. Joanna felt a knot of angry frustration twist in her stomach. There was still months of work to do to excavate the tombs properly, and soon it would be too hot to work at all—and by the time the weather began to cool again, in September or October, the whole side of the valley would have been reduced to rubble, ripped apart for the extraction of the valuable mineral ore in the rocks.
They would never have done this to her father, she reflected bitterly. Maybe she should swallow her pride after all, and ask him to pull strings for her, while there was still time. He would do it, of course; naturally he had been ready to offer any help she needed with her ‘little project’.
Her mouth twisted into a wry smile. Maybe he couldn’t help it, but his attitudes were as ancient and dusty as the mummies he was such an expert on. The illustrious Professor Julian Holloway, reknowned Egyptologist and Fellow of the Royal Society, was a plain old-fashioned chauvinist, and just couldn’t imagine why his only daughter might want to establish a name for herself in her own right.
To be honest, it wasn’t the most important dig in the world. There were hundreds—thousands—of ancient tomb-sites scattered along the banks of the Nile, and there was no reason to suppose this one would have escaped the attentions of grave-robbers when even most of the those in the Valley of the Kings, a little way further downriver, had been comprehensively stripped of all their treasures. The only reason she’d been granted permission to excavate them was that they were about to be destroyed.
She hadn’t expected Alexander Marshall himself to show up, especially alone and in a battered old Land Rover. She had recognised him at once, of course—he was rarely out of the news, if not for his ruthless business dealings then for his outrageous private life. He had even been prepared to shove his own father and elder brother aside to gain control of his company—and the scandal of his divorce, and his numerous affairs, had been a staple of the tabloid front pages for years.
It was obvious how he had earned his reputation, she mused, slanting him a covert glance from behind the useful defence of her dark sunglasses. He had put his own sunglasses on now, but the way he had looked at her before had made her feel…as if she wasn’t wearing any clothes.
He was perhaps even better-looking in the flesh than in those fuzzy black and white newspaper pictures, she acknowledged with some reluctance—the camera couldn’t really do justice to those strong-boned, aquiline features, or catch the crisp curl of his dark hair.
But there was no mistaking his arrogance, nor his ruthlessness—it was written into every cynical line of that hard mouth. And though he was a good many years younger than her father—the newspapers had him down as thirty-five—she would guess that he was just as much of an obdurate chauvinist.
They reached the top of the low rise that hid the tombs from the road. The dark, gaping tomb-entrances were in two rows, six on the lower level, three above, carved deep into the weathered yellow limestone of the hill. She gazed at them with a sharp twinge of regret; three and a half thousand years they had been here, and now in a few more weeks they would be gone.
Alex glanced around the bleak site, one dark eyebrow lifted in faint surprise. ‘Who’s in charge of the dig?’ he enquired.
Joanna’s eyes glittered with icy anger; she might have known he would assume that it would be a man in charge. ‘I am,’ she ground out.
He smiled in wry apology. ‘I see. Have you found anything interesting?’
She shrugged her slim shoulders. ‘No spectacular caches of gold, if that’s what you mean,’ she conceded reluctantly. ‘This site is nothing like as grand as the ones up in the Valley of the Kings. But it’s telling us a great deal about the day-to-day lives of the ordinary people— what they ate, how they prepared their food, how they organised their households. We could probably find out a lot more…’ She slanted him a look of bitter resentment. ‘But of course, now that you’ve arrived, we won’t get the chance.’
He lifted one dark eyebrow in quizzical enquiry. ‘I gather from that remark that you know who I am?’
‘Of course.’ She injected her voice with several degrees of frost. ‘Mr Makram from the D of A warned me you’d be coming—though I wasn’t expecting you until next month.’
‘I’m sorry,’ he responded on an inflection of sardonic humour.
Joanna felt her palm itch to slap that arrogant face. He was just mocking her; he knew full well that there was nothing she could do to prevent him starting work on his contract whenever he liked.
‘Well, if you’ve seen enough, please excuse me,’ she rapped tautly, turning him an aloof shoulder. ‘I’m afraid I have a great deal of work to do.’
Unfortunately the dignity of the effect was somewhat marred when she missed her footing on the rough ground, and slipped. A strong hand caught her instantly, like a vice around her arm.
‘Careful,’ he advised smoothly. ‘If you broke your ankle out here you could be in big trouble.’
A sudden rush of heat flowed through her, and she felt her heartbeat skip oddly. ‘Th…thank you,’ she managed, her voice a little unsteady. ‘I’m perfectly well able to take care of myself.’
‘Really? I’m glad to hear it.’ He let go of her arm. ‘I’d like to take a look at these tombs of yours—if you’d be so kind as to show me?’
She slanted him a look of wary suspicion, sceptical of the interest he was showing. But if there was the slightest chance…She would very much have preferred not to have had to spend any more time in his company, but if she could persuade him to delay starting his quarrying, even for just a few weeks, it would be worth it.
‘All right,’ she conceded somewhat ungraciously. ‘This way. You’ll have to mind your head—the roof’s quite low.’
She led him down the slope, and into the second tomb on the lower level—the best one they had found so far. Picking up her torch, she shone the beam to light the way down the narrow passage carved into the living rock. Every time she came here, she felt again that sense of awe for all the timeless ages that had passed since men had first hewn out this place; just touching the rough walls, she felt as though she was making some kind of tenuous link with those long-past generations.
‘Careful,’ she warned. ‘It’s a steep slope, but it’s not far to the bottom. We’ve put in a rope hand-grip to help. Wait here till I get down, then I’ll shine the torch for you.’
She clambered carefully down, and then called up for him to follow, playing the torch-beam on the rough-hewn ground underfoot as he edged his way after her. He was so tall that he had to bend almost double to avoid hitting his head on the roof. As he reached the bottom and straightened beside her, Joanna found herself suddenly a little breathless—but then it was always rather hot and airless down here.
She flashed the torch around the walls, showing him the paintings, thousands of years old but so incredibly well-preserved that they could have been painted only yesterday. ‘This is the first chamber,’ she explained, a hint of proprietorial pride in her voice. ‘We think it was built for a local viceroy of the eighteenth dynasty—that would put it at about the fourteenth-century BC. The decoration is typical of the period.’
‘Very nice.’ He sounded genuinely impressed. He reached out his hand to touch the hieroglyphics carved into the rock. ‘I wonder what these mean?’
‘“Behold Osiris, the scribe of the holy offerings of all the gods. Worship to thee who has