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second year in the reign of Akhnetut the f irst it was quiet in the palace. ominously quiet. as though something terrible was about to happen.
darwishi ur-atum msamaki minkabh ishaq eboni, son of pharaoh Akhnetut i and his wife enisis, was lying in bed in the coolest room in the palace. not that it helped. darwishi was boiling hot.
scrambled to its feet again. All of a sudden it turned around and looked Rudy right in the face.
Rudyās heart nearly stopped. He thought: Get out of here. If you donāt run away, it will get you! But his legs wouldnāt move. He thought: Scream then. Shout! Scare him!
āBoo,ā Rudy groaned.
The shape stayed where it was.
āBoo! Go away! Boo! Hellllp!ā
The thing took a step towards him.
āEurgh! Aargh! Whaaaaaaah!ā Rudy screamed.

The next lightning strike hit the tree. A deafening thunderclap made the ground shake as though a herd of elephants was stampeding past. Dazed, Rudy saw the large tree fall. Suddenly his legs started working again. He ran like the wind. The tree toppled onto the wreck, the diesel burst into ļ¬ames and a few seconds later the entire truck exploded. Rudy was hurled to the ground. He looked at the ļ¬reball in dismay. And then at the ditch. The ļ¬gure had disappeared without a trace.

room, slammed the door and leaned against it. His heart was racing. That wasnāt a doll! The mummy was alive! He had seen it with his own eyes. Hadnāt he? Hey? Was he going mad?
He opened the door and cautiously peered through the chink. He wasnāt going mad. The mummy swung both of his legs out of the bed, sat on the edge and looked out of the window. It was open a little. Thatās how he got in, Angus realised in a ļ¬ash.
The mummy obviously hadnāt seen Angus. He

stood up and began to nose around. He picked up a pen from Angusā desk, held it up to his head and dropped it again, he did the same with a few books, a notebook and a pair of socks. Meanwhile he babbled away, āghleitsaā and āghotepā and words like that. Then he picked up Angusā radio. He turned a dial and all of a sudden loud music blared out. The mummy was terriļ¬ed. He dropped the radio and dived under Angusā bed. Normally Angus would have roared with laughter, but no sound came out of his mouth.
After a while, the mummy crawled out from under the bed again and tiptoed towards the radio. He bent down, listened and all of a sudden gave the radio a big whack. āsirsar!ā he hissed. The music stopped immediately. The mummy said something else foreign, maybe it was āhoorayā or āI wonā or something like that. Next he walked to Angusā wardrobe and began to make a big mess of all the clothes. When heād ļ¬nished, he started trampolining on the bed, jumping from the pillow onto the duvet and back again.
Angus had had enough. He wasnāt going to wait until the mummy had destroyed his entire bedroom, he had to fetch his father!
He closed the door and ran downstairs.
Nick was sitting in his red armchair in front of the television with his eyes closed. He often had a nap there. He did this every evening and Angus wasnāt allowed to speak to him for half an hour, unless the house was on ļ¬re. If there was a mummy in the house, it was probably alright too.
in anticipation. āA straight line,ā Nick said. āAnd a triangle and a circle.ā

āA pyramid?ā Angus said at once. āThat circle is the sun. Isnāt it, Dad?ā
The mummy carried on drawing. A ļ¬gure with black hair appeared on the paper. And then that same ļ¬gure with lots of lines on it, in a box. He coloured in everything around it black.

āHeās drawing himself,ā said Angus breathlessly. āThose lines are his bandages. And that box must be a cofļ¬n.ā
They carried on watching in excitement. The mummy drew a creature with six legs.
āA ļ¬y? Or a bug?ā Nick suggested.
āNo, wait! I know!ā Angus cried. āOne of those beetles! Erm, what are they called again? ⦠Scarabs!ā

At that same moment, the mummy put his hand between his bandages and pulled something out which was hanging from a chain around his neck. Angus and his father held their breath. There was a beetle in the mummyās hand, about as big as a draughts piece. And neither of them had any doubt, the beetle was pure gold.
āA golden scarab,ā Angus whispered. āDad, it really is, Iām sure. Mr Scribble told us about them. Blasting cackdingle, may Iā¦? He reached out his hand, but the mummy shook his head violently and put the scarab back into his bandages. He picked up the pencil and carried on drawing.

A box again, this time with the scarab in it. And up above it a lightning strike which ended right on top of the beetle. And then a lot of ļ¬ames. And then a running ļ¬gure.

Nick had moved the kitchen table towards the open window and had got out three plates, three cups and three knives. Angus put all the spreads on the table. Butter, chocolate spread, peanut butter, honey, pâté and cheese.
āAlright. First honey then,ā Nick said. He spread honey on half a slice of bread and put it on Dummieās plate. āWhat was that thing for enjoy your food again?ā
ābil hennah il shiffa,ā Angus said. āAlright. bil hennah, erm⦠stuff,ā Nick said Dummie took a big bite. Angus and his father watched Dummieās face expectantly. A bit of sludge oozed from Dummieās mouth and his skin stretched worryingly tight over his bones. Next thing his teeth fall out, Angus thought.
āThatās good, he likes it,ā Nick said happily.

āblegh!ā said Dummie at that same instant. He gagged and spat up a mouthful of brown sludge onto the tablecloth.
āStrewth,ā Nick said in dismay. He pulled a face and cleared it up. Then he spread the other half of the slice with peanut butter. But that came back out again halfdigested too after a few seconds. āStrewth!ā Nick cried again. Dummie gave up. When Nick offered him a dry slice of bread, he shook his head. Nothing more passed his lips.
āHe has to eat. If he doesnāt eat, heāll die,ā said Nick anxiously.
āHeās already dead,ā Angus said. āAnd hang on, perhaps he doesnāt have a stomach anymore!ā He knew that kind of thing from the Egypt competition, that they took the stomach and intestines out of the mummies sometimes.
āNow youāre teaching me something,ā his father said with sudden relief. āWell, that should solve another problem.ā
āWhich one?ā
āThen he doesnāt need to poo,ā Nick chuckled.
āTo poo?ā Angus roared with laughter. And his father did too, and because they were laughing, Dummie joined in. āmaashi! maashi!ā he cried. Then they couldnāt stop laughing and neither could Dummie. He laughed his head off and looked terrible, with his crooked, open mouth full of brown teeth and bits of peanut butter.
āWhat a sight!ā Nick howled.
āHorrible,ā Angus hiccupped.
Nick cleared the table and Angus got out the chessboard. He set up the pieces and began teaching Dummie how to play chess. It wasnāt a great success. Dummie understood that they had to take turns and that the pieces all did something different. But when Angus took one of his pawns and put it next to the board he became cross. āsirsar!ā he cried and put the pawn back on the board.
āThatās how youāre supposed to play it,ā Angus protested. āWatch.ā He took Dummieās knight with his own knight and cried, āHooray!ā and clapped his hands.
Dummie instantly swept all of Angusā other pieces from the board with his other knight and shouted āGhooray!ā at least ten times. Then Angus put the chessboard back in his bedroom.
He was still upstairs when he heard an enormous scream coming from downstairs.
Angus dashed down the stairs and ran into the sitting room. Dummie had got the vacuum cleaner out of the cupboard, taken a roll of toilet paper and held the end of it to the hose. The hose was blocked and the vacuum cleaner bellowed like it was about to explode. A second later, Nick ran into the room.
āNo! Thatās naughty!ā he shouted angrily. And then he shouted āWhumpy dumpman!ā just as loudly. He put the vacuum cleaner back in the hall cupboard and slammed the door behind him. āOutside, both of you! Go play on the swing or something!ā
Angus looked at his fatherās stern expression and smiled secretly to himself. He cheerfully pulled Dummie out to the swing, which was hanging from a tree in the back garden. But Dummie had other plans. He took a running jump, grabbed onto a branch and swung himself up. He was as agile as a monkey and in no time at all he was right at the top of the tree.


There was only one school in Polderdam and it was called Hobble Primary or Hobbleās for short. Hobble Primary was on the edge of the village. It was a cheerful white building with red window frames and in front of it there was a large playground with a couple of playground toys for the infants and an enormous climbing frame for everyone. Angus was in Mr Scribbleās class. Mr Scribble
was the oldest teacher at Hobbleās. He walked with a stoop, his face was covered in wrinkles and he wore old-fashioned clothes, like trousers with sharp creases and shirts with a stripy tie. Just like all old teachers, Mr Scribble loved books. He said he had read all the books in the library, and Angus believed him too. His teacher was like a walking computer. It didnāt matter what he asked, Mr Scribble always knew the answer. He understood everybody, always wanted to help and hardly ever got angry. Angus thought Mr Scribble was the beeās knees.

āExactly. Youāre our relative, a distant nephew of an aunt who moved abroad. You got burned in a ļ¬re and now you have bandages. You understand?ā
āYes, I understand,ā said Dummie.
āLetās practice then,ā Nick said. āWhat are you?ā

āI am not mummy,ā said Dummie.
āNo, you mustnāt say that. You should say, āI got burned.ā
āI got burned,ā Dummie repeated obediently.
Then Nick asked Dummie all the questions the children would also ask him.
āWho are you?ā
āI am relative of Angus. I got burned.ā
āDoes it hurt?ā
āNo.ā
āWhich country are you from?ā
āEgypt.ā
āHow old are you?ā
āEight or nine?ā Dummie asked. Somehow he didnāt know.
āWeāll say ten, so that you can be in Angusā class,ā Nick said.
āI am ten, so I go in Anghusās class,ā Dummie said.
āWhere are your mother and father?ā
āI donāt know,ā Dummie said.
āNo, you have to say: āThey got burned too. They are still in Egypt.āā
āThey got burned too. They are still in Egypt,ā Dummie repeated.
This went on for a while. Nick asked questions about his old house and about the ļ¬re. About his old school. About his family. They practised all evening until Dummie only gave the right answers.
Nick leaned back in his chair. āI think youāre ready,ā he said.
Angus wasnāt sure. āHe could just blurt it out,ā he said.
āHeās the cleverest little fellow I ever met,ā his father said. āHe wonāt blurt anything out.ā
āOh,ā Angus said. It was a shame that he wasnāt the cleverest little fellow his father had ever met. But he knew that already really ā half of his class were cleverer than he was.
āAnd one more thing,ā Nick said to Dummie. āYou have to leave your scarab at home.ā
Dummie shook his head at once.

The next morning they got up early. Nick prepared two rucksacks. In Dummieās he put a can of air freshener in case he began to smell, and an empty lunchbox and a beaker. āJust like everyone else, then he wonāt stand out,ā he said. As though a mummy with a bag wouldnāt stand out as much as a mummy without one, thought Angus.
Dummie had to wear Angusā old clothes and a pair of trainers. āGhappy to gho, nice! See you later!ā he said happily.
Angus got on his bike. āSee you later!ā he called out, as cheerfully as he could.
āYes, nice! Nice!ā Dummie cried.
Angus cycled slowly to school. Nice? Nice? He suddenly had a terrible ache in his stomach, thatās how nice it was. The closer he got to the school, the more sure he became. Everyone would see at once that Dummie was a mummy. Did his father really think that anyone would fall for it? Theyād take him away that very afternoon and stick pins in him. He wouldnāt feel that but afterwards theyād saw open his skull and even a dead mummy wouldnāt be able to survive that.
By the time Angus got to school, he was stiff with nerves. His ļ¬ngers were shaking so much he couldnāt lock his bike. Maybe he was suffering from shock too. He walked into the classroom with leaden feet.
Mr Scribble had put an extra table next to his. He looked up and winked at Angus. When everyone had arrived he stood up in front of the class and winked at Angus a second time. āGirls and boys, I have some good news. Weāre welcoming a new boy in the class,ā he said.
There was a short silence.
āIs he good-looking?ā Annalisa asked.

that was true. But he was dead. Or at least he had been. It wouldnāt take much more to drive you mad. They ate broccoli soup, played a game and watched television.
Everything had gone well, Angus thought that evening in bed. He had to believe in it, his father had said. maashi, he would.

The next morning Angus cycled to school in better spirits. He had slept well and had given Dummie a fright in the morning by wrapping bandages around his own head and shaking him awake, mooing like a cow. Dummie had screamed his head off and his father had rushed into the bedroom so fast heād tripped and landed on top of Dummie. Dummie had immediately given him a punch on his nose and then theyād all rolled around until theyād fallen through Angusā bed. All three of them had had a ļ¬t of giggles. Angus chuckled to himself as he thought of his father at home mending the bed with a red nose. Dummie was eager to get to school and he was too. Who cared about Annalisa and her childish nonsense? He would just ignore her.
But within ļ¬ve minutes his happy mood had vanished.
āLook, thereās that dumbo stink-bag,ā Annalisa called as Angus and Dummie cycled onto the playground. āStink-bag! Stink-bag!ā

āYou are wuss!ā Dummie shouted back. āYou are thickghead! Stupid! Stupid! Stupid!ā
Annalisa pinched her nose. āI donāt talk to no-face, dumb-dummy stink-bags,ā she said haughtily.
Angus saw Dummie drawing his hand into a ļ¬st and quickly pulled him off in the other direction. āJust leave it,ā he said.
A little while later Annalisa pinched her nose again in the classroom and screwed up her face very noticeably. āCan I open a window! It stinks here,ā she complained.
āDonāt be a moron,ā Ebbi said. He knew what she was getting at. Most of the other children did too, actually. And they werenāt planning on joining in.
aback. āHow was school?ā
āDummie really doesnāt feel well,ā Angus said. āAnd he seems angry. He put his ļ¬ap down.ā
Nick dried his brushes absent-mindedly. āI know,ā he said. āHe just keeps going on about the scarab.ā
Then Angus had a very worrying idea. It was as though someone was choking him, he felt so suffocated. Dummieās words shot through his head like a lightning strike. āI canāt without scarab. Without scarab I am dead.ā
āDad, could⦠could⦠could it have to do with the scarab? That he gets ill without it?ā he asked.
Nick looked him in the eye. Angus hoped that heād say it was nonsense and that everyone got sick from time to time, even someone who was already dead. But his father said, āIāve thought about that too, son. All day in fact.ā That made Angus even more worried.
They went into the house and Angus couldnāt think of anything to do apart from sitting in his room with a book. But he didnāt read a word, just stared at the bump under Dummieās bedclothes. Dummie hadnāt used the toilet freshener today, he stank of rotten eggs and dead mice.
Angus and Nick ate in silence and Dummie wanted to go back upstairs right away. He was ill, he said, and he felt cold. Angus laid his hand on Dummieās head and he did feel cold. Angus shivered. āAre you sure he canāt have ļ¬u, Dad? Itās going around,ā said Angus. āThen it will clear up on its own, wonāt it? Weāll just wait for that, wonāt we, Dad?ā
His father nodded and said, āWeāll just wait for

that, son.ā But Angus could see from his face that he didnāt believe it. His throat tightened again. What if it wasnāt the ļ¬u? What if Dummie got more ill? What if he really couldnāt do without his scarab? No! He didnāt want to think about it!
When Angus went to bed, his father gave him a kiss. āThings might look better tomorrow,ā said Nick, giving him an unsuccessful wink.
āOr the day after,ā Angus said. They looked at each other and Angus was sure they were both thinking the same thing. They were thinking: as long as itās not because of the scarab.
ļ¬ibbergibbet three times.
āNow what?ā Angus asked.
āNow it hurts!ā
āI donāt mean that, I mean Dummie! Whoās going to look after Dummie?ā
āI can hop around. A bit. Iāll make it up the stairs. Rather slowly, like an old man with a hernia. Youāll have to help, though.ā
āGreat! Fantastic!ā Angus shouted angrily. He couldnāt believe it. Dummie was ill and his fatherās leg had snapped in two. It was just too much bad luck.
Now heād have to do everything on his own: heād have to look after his father and Dummie. He poured his father a cup of tea, he fried an egg, and followed his father when he went to the toilet, just in case he fell and broke his other leg. In the meantime, he went up- and downstairs constantly. Dummie didnāt need any food or drink, but Angus wanted to check as often as possible whether he was getting any better. But he wasnāt. It seemed as though Dummie was getting sicker and sicker. When Angus went upstairs for what must have been the hundredth time, he sat down on his bed. Dummie stank and muttered something incomprehensible every once in a while.
This wasnāt good, Angus thought, worried. And it was getting worse fast. Was it only six weeks ago that heād seen Dummie for the ļ¬rst time? It seemed as though heād always been there. And now⦠He couldnāt justā
His eye fell on the small green book on the bedside table. Would that be the only thing they had left of

Dummie soon? A memento? A book full of unreadable hieroglyphics? With that picture of the stupid scarab�
āIdiot!ā he suddenly shouted out loud. He could hit himself on the head! That little green book! There was a picture of the scarab in it! It might explain about the scarab! Or it might say something else useful. A medicine they could use. A clue. A⦠whatever. How could they have forgotten the book?
He grabbed it from the bedside table, ran downstairs and shoved it under his fatherās nose.
āLook! Weād forgotten all about this! It might give us the solution,ā he cried excitedly.
āThe solution? What to?ā Nick asked sheepishly.
āDummie! The reason heās sick!ā
āHuh? Yes. No. Yes, maybe,ā Nick said. He must have taken some painkillers because he looked at the book drowsily and rubbed his chin in confusion. āBut we canāt read it,ā he said.
āWe canāt. But maybe someone else can. Donāt you think? There must be people who can read this?ā
āI donāt know,ā his father said in a tired voice.
Thoughts raced around Angusā mind. When theyād just found the book all theyād done was check on the internet a couple of times and when theyād failed to

shout: āKiss! Kiss!ā They all giggled and then the whole playground was shouting out along with him: āKiss! Kiss! Kiss!ā
Dummie and Miss Frick looked at each other and Angus held his breath.
Dummie held up his hand to get their attention and it grew silent. Then all of a sudden, at the top of his voice, he shouted, āNO!ā
Then they all laughed even more and Angus almost wet his pants, Miss Frick was pulling such a crazy
face. She was laughing along, it was the only thing she could do, but like a farmerās wife with a toothache in all her teeth.

That evening, Angus, Dummie, Nick and Mr Scribble sat at the dinner table. They were having pizza with broccoli again, because they had something to celebrate. Mr Scribble had eaten with them four times over the past week and was just as used to Dummieās face as Angus and his father by now.
While the other three ate, Dummie kept on talking about the competition. Mr Scribble burst out laughing from time to time, and when Dummie told him indignantly that heād never kiss Miss Frick in his whole life and said, āI will never kiss ugly face of that wuss!ā Mr Scribble choked on his pizza three times in a row.
āWhat about if you win the national ļ¬nals next month?ā Nick joked.
Dummie pulled such a face that all three of them almost got scared. āNo!ā he said. Then he sat down in his chair and raised his arms in the air. āI am ghood!ā he said proudly.
Angus looked at his ugly face and his shining eyes and completely agreed.
āYes, you are very good,ā he said. And he hoped that Dummie would stay with them for the rest of his life. And how were they going to deal with thatā? Well, his father would probably know.