A few years ago a little more or less than 4,000, a ruler the pharaoh Mamose (fictitious) of ancient Egypt flees for his life, invaders the ruthless Hyksos from the north drive him from his throne, so he travels south. This was from the book River God by Wilbur Smith, the sequel set in the modern (1995) as archaeologists a very loose term maybe a better one is grave robbers trying to find his lost tomb hidden in a remote section of Ethiopia. The unbelievable riches is quite staggering... Countless millions of dollars however who owns it? Ethiopia or Egypt or finders keepers as the thieves from the past are reincarnated but not for the best. Sir Nicholas Quenton-Harper a British aristocrat of minor heritage that makes Indiana Jones seem like an amateur which he is technically having no degree except avarice and this is a common vice which sadly is the majority in the world, he has cash flow problems like many. It would overflow both banks of the mighty Nile River in volume, to ad interest an Egyptologist half English the other part Egyptian, Dr. Rogan Al Summa don't have to state a beauty with divided loyalty working for the government in Cairo. The seventh scroll she and her late husband discovered written by the genius Taita ( self described) a slave and eunuch but has ambitions. Clues are on the papyrus yet the amused writer is fun loving his cryptic words hard to understand, deciphering quiet a challenge. And is determined to stop thieves by ingenious traps that kill the dishonorable who desecrate the sacred resting place of his master. A German billionaire Herr von Schiller is also after the prize and murder not important as the circle tightens, his hand nears ...butchering can be profitable. A motley group for good or evil are involved in the actions. While intense scenes of carnage spills the pages red the author is fearless in perpetuating the abnormal and offending everyone, to be honest. Nevertheless interest remains high as the inevitable lovers near their goal in a labyrinth under the Blue Nile...will the waters crush them? How easily this can occur. Hazards around every corner the dark brings the nightmares, the dangers can strike at anytime, there is something about being underground, giving the imagination the full throttle, an unlit scream you can never forget, feel very apprehensive , weak and claustrophobic. The second in the series, so far six, the ancient Egyptian civilization the most intriguing of all. An imaginative story which gives the reader a picture , a piece, a peak in the land of the Nile, always flowing by in her perpetual wanderings , may it never cease. And archaeology be viewed as an art for knowledge not a treasure hunt...