Agatha Christie Fullscreen Death comes at the end (1944)

Pause

It is insupportable to be bullied and nagged at by a fussy, self-important old man who gives me no scope at all to show what I can do."

"No," said Kait sharply.

"I say no, Sobek."

He stared at her, recalled by her tone into noticing her presence.

He was so used to her as a merely soothing accompaniment to his talk that he often forgot her existence as a living, thinking, human woman.

"What do you mean, Kait?"

"I mean that I will not let you be foolish.

All the estate belongs to your father - the lands, the cultivation, the cattle, the timber, the fields of flax - all! When your father dies it will be ours - yours and Yahmose's and our children's.

If you quarrel with your father and go off, then he may divide your share between Yahmose and Ipy - already he loves Ipy too much.

Ipy knows that and trades on it.

You must not play into the hands of Ipy.

It would suit him only too well if you were to quarrel with Imhotep and go away.

We have our children to think of."

Sobek stared at her.

Then he gave a short surprised laugh.

"A woman is always unexpected.

I did not know you had it in you, Kait, to be so fierce."

Kait said earnestly: "Do not quarrel with your father.

Do not answer him back.

Be wise for a little longer."

"Perhaps you are right - but this may go on for years.

What my father should do is to associate us with him in a partnership."

Kait shook her head. "He will not do that.

He likes too much to say that we are all eating his bread, that we are all dependent on him, that without him we should all be nowhere."

Sobek looked at her curiously.

"You do not like my father very much, Kait."

But Kait had bent once more to the toddling baby.

"Come, sweetheart - see, here is your doll.

Come, then - come..."

Sobek looked down at her black bent head.

Then, with a puzzled look, he went out.

III

Esa had sent for her grandson Ipy.

The boy, a handsome, discontented-looking stripling, was standing before her whilst she rated him in a high shrill voice, peering at him out of her dim eyes that were shrewd although they could now see little.

"What is this I hear?

You will not do this, and you will not do that?

You want to look after the bulls, and you do not like going with Yahmose or seeing to the cultivating?

What are things coming to when a child like you says what he will or will not do?"

Ipy said sullenly: "I am not a child.

I am grown now - and why should I be treated as a child? Put to this work or that with no say of my own and no separate allowance!

Given orders all the time by Yahmose!

Who does Yahmose think he is?"

"He is your older brother and he is in charge here when my son Imhotep is away."

"Yahmose is stupid - slow and stupid.

I am much cleverer than he is.

And Sobek is stupid too for all that he boasts and talks about how clever he is!

Already my father has written and has said that I am to do the work that I myself choose -"

"Which is none at all," interpolated old Esa.

"And that I am to be given more food and drink and that if he hears I am discontented and have not been well treated he will be very angry."

He smiled as he spoke, a sly up-curving smile.