Read The Lost Army of Cambyses Online
Authors: Paul Sussman
Tags: #Thrillers, #Crime, #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective
It was by now late afternoon and the sinking
sun was casting dappled patterns across the
uneven pavement. She gazed around her, taking in
the police emplacements along the embassy wall, a
beggar squatting at the roadside, a man pulling
a cart piled high with watermelons and then,
glancing down at the map, set off.
Oates had explained that this part of Cairo was
known as Garden City and as she navigated her
way through a maze of leafy avenues she realized
why. It was quieter and more sedate than the rest
of the metropolis, a faded remnant of the colonial
era, with large dusty villas and everywhere trees
and flowering shrubs – hibiscus, oleander,
jasmine, purple jacaranda. The air echoed to the
twitter of birds and was heavy with the scent of
mown grass and orange blossom. There seemed to
be few people around, just a couple of women
pushing prams and the odd suited executive.
Many of the villas had limousines parked in
front of them and policemen stationed at
their front doors.
She walked for about ten minutes before she
reached Sharia Ahmed Pasha, on the corner of
which stood her father's apartment block, a turn-
of-the-century building with huge windows and
intricate iron-work balconies. Once it must have
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been a cheerful shade of yellow. Now its exterior
was grey with dust and grime.
She went up the front steps and pushed open the
door, stepping into a cool marble foyer. To one
side, sitting behind a desk, was an old man, pre-
sumably the concierge. She approached, and after
a confused conversation conducted in sign lan-
guage, managed to convey who she was and why
she had come. Muttering, the man came to his
feet, removed a set of keys from a drawer and
shuffled over to a cage lift in the corner, pulling
back the doors and ushering her in.
The apartment was on the third floor at the end
of a silent, gloomy corridor. They stopped in front of
the door and the concierge fiddled with the keys,
trying three in the lock before he found the right
one.
'Thank you,' said Tara as he opened the door.
He remained where he was.
'Thank you,' she repeated.
Still he showed no sign of moving. There was an
embarrassed silence and then, realizing what was
expected, she fished out her purse and handed him
a couple of notes. He looked at them, grunted and
shuffled away down the corridor, leaving the keys
in the door. She waited till he had gone, and then
turned and stepped into the apartment, taking the
keys and closing the door behind her.
She was in a dark, wood-floored vestibule, off
which opened five rooms – a bedroom, a bath-
room, a kitchen and two others, both piled high
with books. All the windows were closed and
shuttered, giving the place a musty, abandoned
feel. For the briefest moment she thought she
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could sense a lingering odour of cigar smoke, but
it was too intangible for her to be sure and after
sniffing the air a couple of times she dismissed it.
Probably just polish or something, she thought.
She went through into the main room, switch-
ing on the light as she went. There were books and
papers everywhere, piles of them, like drifts of
leaves. The walls were hung with pictures
of excavations and monuments; in the far corner
sat a dusty cabinet full of cracked earthenware
pots and faience
shabtis.
There were no plants.
Like somewhere that's been preserved for
posterity, she thought. To show how people lived
in a different time.
She wandered around, picking things up, peer-
ing into drawers, seeking out her father. She found
one of his diaries from the early 1960s, when he
had been excavating in the Sudan, his small,
precise writing interspersed with fading pencil
drawings of the objects he had been unearthing. In
one of the rooms she discovered some of the books
he'd written –
Life in the Necropolis: Excavations
at Saqqara, 1955–85; From Snofru to Shepseskaf
– Essays on the Fourth Dynasty; The Tomb of
Mentu-Nefer; Kingship and Disorder in the First
Intermediate Period.
She flicked through a photo
album – pictures of a large sandy trench which, as
the album progressed, got deeper and deeper until,
on the last pages, the outlines of what looked like
a stone wall began to emerge. There seemed to be
nothing in the apartment but his work. Nothing
that spoke of warmth or love or feeling.
Nothing of the present.
Then just as she was starting to feel oppressed
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by the place, two surprises. Beside her father's bed
– hard, narrow, like a prison cot – she found a
photograph of her parents on their wedding day,
her father laughing, a white rose in his buttonhole.
And in the dusty cabinet in the living room,
wedged between two earthenware pots, a child's
drawing of an angel, the edges of its wings marked
out with silver glitter. She had made it years ago at
nursery school, for Christmas. Her father must
have kept it all this time. She took it out, turned it
over and read on the back, in her spidery child's
writing: 'For my daddy'.
She stared at it for a moment and then,
suddenly, uncontrollably, began to cry, slumping
down onto a chair, her body racked with sobs.
'Oh Dad,' she choked. 'I'm sorry, I'm sorry.'
Later, when the tears had slowed, she collected
the photo from the bedroom and put it in her
knapsack, along with the drawing. She also took a
photograph of her father standing beside a large
stone sarcophagus, flanked by two Egyptian work-
men. (She remembered him explaining to her as a
child that the word 'sarcophagus' came from the
Greek for 'flesh eater', an image that had so dis-
turbed her she had been unable to sleep that night.)
She was just debating whether to take a couple
of his books as well when the phone rang. She
paused, uncertain whether or not to answer it.
After a moment she decided she ought to and went
through into the living room, hurrying over to the
desk on the far side, where the phone was sitting
on top of a pile of manuscripts. Just as she reached
it the answering machine clicked on and suddenly
the room was full of her father's voice.
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'Hello, this is Michael Mullray. I'm away until
the first week in December so please don't leave a
message. You can either call me on my return or,
if it's university business, contact the faculty direct
on 7943967. Thank you. Goodbye.'
She stopped, startled by the sound, as though
a part of her father was not properly dead
but remained suspended in some sort of electronic
limbo, neither in this world nor fully departed
from it. By the time she had regained her
senses the machine had beeped and started
recording.
At first she thought the caller had hung up, for
there was no voice from the other end of the line.
Then she caught the faintest hiss of susurration,
no more than a rumour of breath, and realized the
caller was still there, just not speaking. She took a
step towards the phone and reached out, but then
snatched her hand away again. Still he didn't hang
up – she knew instinctively it was a man – just
waited, breathing, listening, as if he knew she was
in the apartment and wanted her to know that he
knew. The silence seemed to go on for an age
before eventually there was a click and the
metallic whirr of the machine resetting itself. She
stood frozen for a moment and then, gathering up
her things, hurried out of the flat, slamming and
locking the door behind her. She felt suddenly
menaced by the building: the gloomy interior, the
creaking lift, the silence. She moved quickly down
the corridor, wanting to get out. Halfway along
something caught her eye, a large beetle sitting on
the clean marble floor. She slowed to look at it,
only to discover it wasn't a beetle at all but a
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heavy nub of grey cigar ash, thick as a back-
gammon counter. She began to run.
The lift wasn't there and rather than wait for it
she took the stairs instead, leaping down them two
at a time, desperate now to get back out into the
fresh air. She reached the bottom and turned
the corner into the foyer, but suddenly her way
was blocked. She cried out, startled. It was only
the concierge.
'I'm sorry,' she said, breathing hard. 'You
surprised me.'
She handed him the keys and he took them. He
said something, his voice low, gruff.
'What?'
He repeated himself.
'I don't understand.' Her voice was beginning to
rise. She was desperate to get out.
Again he spoke, jabbering at her, and then
reached into his pocket. She had a sudden
irrational fear he was reaching for a weapon and
when he whipped his hand out again and up
towards her face she arched back away from him,
raising her arm protectively. It was only an
envelope. A small white envelope.
'Professor Mullray,' he said, waving it in her
face. 'Come Professor Mullray.'
She stared at it for a moment, breathing hard,
and then laughed. 'Thank you,' she said, taking
the letter. 'Thank you.'
The concierge turned and shuffled back towards
his desk. She wondered if she was expected to give
him another tip, but he didn't seem to be expect-
ing one and so she hurried straight out of the front
door, turning left and heading down the street,
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enjoying the space around her and the warmth of
the open air. She passed a couple of schoolchildren
in starched white shirts, and a man in uniform, a
kaleidoscope of medal ribbons on his chest. On
the other side of the road a gardener in overalls
was watering a row of dusty rose bushes with a
hose.
After twenty metres she looked down at the
envelope in her hand. Instantly the colour drained
from her face.
'Oh no,' she whispered, staring down at the
familiar handwriting. 'Not after all this time, not
now.'
The gardener stared after her and then, leaning
his head to one side, began talking into his collar.
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12
N O R T H E R N SUDAN, NEAR THE
EGYPTIAN BORDER
The boy emerged from the tent and started run-
ning, sprays of sand kicking up beneath his feet, a
herd of goats scattering in front of him. He passed
a burnt-out campfire, a helicopter covered in
netting, piles of crates, before eventually coming
to a halt in front of another tent, this one set
slightly apart from the main encampment. He
pulled a piece of paper from his robes and, draw-
ing back the flap, stepped through.
A man was standing inside, eyes closed, lips
twitching as he recited silently to himself. His face
was long and thin, bearded, with a hooked nose
and, between his eyes, a deep vertical scar, the
damaged tissue smooth and shiny as if the skin
had been polished vigorously. He was smiling
slightly, as though in rapture.
He went down on his knees, placing his palms
on the ground and touching the carpeted floor
with his nose and forehead, oblivious to the boy,
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who remained where he was, watching, a look of
awe on his face. A minute passed, two, three, and
still the hook-nosed man continued his prayers,
bowing, rising, reciting, the rapt smile never leav-
ing his face. It looked as though he would never
stop, and the boy appeared to be on the point of
leaving when the worshipper lowered his head to
the floor one last time, muttered amen, stood and
turned. The boy came forward and handed him
the piece of paper.
'This came, Master. From Doktora Dravic.'
The man took the paper and read it, his green
eyes glowing in the semi-darkness.
There was something threatening about him, a
rumour of suppressed violence, and yet, strangely,
a gentleness too in the way he laid his free hand on
the boy's head, as though to reassure him. The boy
stared at his feet, afraid and adoring in equal
measure.
The man finished reading and handed the paper
back.
'Allah, blessed be his name, gives, and Allah,
blessed be his name, withholds.'
The boy continued staring at the floor.
'Please, Master,' he whispered, 'I do not under-
stand.'
'It is not for us to understand, Mehmet,' said the
man, raising the boy's chin so that he was looking
into his eyes. The boy too had a deep scar down
the centre of his forehead.
'We must simply know that God has a purpose
and that we are a part of that purpose. You do not
question the Almighty. You merely do his bidding.