Read The Lost Army of Cambyses Online
Authors: Paul Sussman
Tags: #Thrillers, #Crime, #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective
a load of silly superstition if you ask me.' He
opened his cigarette pack but, finding it empty,
scrunched it up into a ball and threw it into the
corner of the room. 'I do believe in evil, though.
Something dark that grabs hold of a man's mind
and heart and turns him into a monster. I've seen it.
And it's evil that we're up against here. Pure evil.'
He leaned forward and began massaging his
eyes with his thumbs.
'Allah guide us,' he muttered. 'Allah give us
strength.'
Later, after eating a couple of boiled eggs and
some cheese for his breakfast, Khalifa crossed the
river and hopped onto a service taxi, staying with
it as far as Dra Abu el-Naga, where he got off,
paid the twenty-five piastre fare and began
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walking up the road towards the Temple of
Hatshepsut at Deir el-Bahri.
The temple had always been one of his favourite
monuments. A breathtaking complex of halls and
terraces and colonnades, it was cut into the living
rock at the base of a hundred-metre cliff face.
Every time he saw it he was staggered by its
audacity. It was one of the wonders of Luxor. Of
the whole of Egypt. Of the world.
A tarnished wonder, though. In 1997 sixty-two
people, tourists mostly, had been massacred there
by fundamentalists. Khalifa had been interviewing
someone in a nearby village at the time and had
been among the first policemen on the scene. For
months afterwards he had woken in the night,
sweat-covered, hearing again the squelch of his
feet on the blood-covered floors. Now, whenever
he saw the temple, his appreciation was marred by
a shiver of nausea.
He walked on until he came to a point where a
row of dusty souvenir shops sprang up on the
right-hand side of the road. Their owners stood in
front of them, calling out to passing tourists, urg-
ing them to come and inspect their postcards and
jewellery and sunhats and alabaster carvings, each
insisting that his particular wares were by far the
cheapest and best in Egypt. One bustled up to
Khalifa brandishing a T-shirt with a garish hiero-
glyph motif on the front, but the detective waved
him away and, turning off to the right, crossed a
tarmacked car park and came to a halt in front of
a mobile lavatory.
'Suleiman!' he called. 'Hey, Suleiman, are you
there?'
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A small man in a pale green djellaba emerged,
limping slightly. A long scar ran diagonally across
his forehead, starting beside his left eye and dis-
appearing up beneath his hairline.
'Inspector Khalifa, is that you?'
'Salaam Alekum.
How are you, my friend?'
'Kwayyis, hamdu-lillah,'
smiled the man. 'Well,
thanks be to Allah. Will you have tea?'
'Thank you.'
'Sit, sit!'
The man waved Khalifa to a bench in the shade
of a nearby building and set about boiling a kettle
behind the trailer. When it was ready he poured
out two glasses and carried them across, picking
his way carefully over the uneven ground as
though fearful of tripping. He handed one glass to
Khalifa and sat, setting his own glass down on the
bench beside him. Khalifa took the man's hand
and pressed a plastic bag into it.
'Some cigarettes.'
Suleiman fumbled in the bag and removed a
carton of Cleopatras.
'You shouldn't have, Inspector. It's me who
owes you.'
'You don't owe me anything.'
'Apart from my life.'
Four years ago Suleiman al-Rashid had been
working as a guard at the temple. When the
fundamentalists came, he had been shot in
the head trying to shield a group of Swiss women
and children. In the aftermath of the attack every-
one assumed he was dead, until Khalifa found a
faint pulse and called the medics over to help him.
It had been touch and go for several weeks, but
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eventually he had pulled through. His injuries had
left him blind, however, and he had been unable to
resume his job as a guard. Now he ran one of the
site toilets.
'How's the head?' Khalifa asked.
Suleiman shrugged and rubbed his temples. 'So-
so,' he said. 'Today it aches a bit.'
'You see the doctor regularly?'
'Doctors! Pah! Scum!'
'If it's hurting you should get it checked.'
'I'm fine as I am, thank you.'
Suleiman was a proud man and Khalifa knew
better than to press the point. Instead he asked
him about his wife and family, and teased him
because his team, el-Ahli, had lost to his, Khalifa's,
team, el-Zamalek, in the recent Cairo derby. Then
they fell silent. Khalifa sat watching a group of
tourists descending from their coach.
'I need your help, Suleiman,' he said eventually.
'Of course, Inspector. Anything. You know you
only have to ask.'
Khalifa sipped his tea. He felt bad about involv-
ing his friend, playing on his sense of obligation.
He'd been through enough already. But he needed
information. And Suleiman always kept his ear to
the ground.
'I think something has been found,' he said. 'A
tomb, or a cache. Something important. No-one's
talking, which isn't surprising, except it's not just
greed that's keeping them quiet, it's fear. People
are terrified.' He finished his tea. 'Have you heard
anything?'
His companion said nothing, just continued
rubbing his temples.
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'I don't like asking you, believe me. But one
man's been killed already and I don't want anyone
else to be.'
Still Suleiman said nothing.
'Is there a new tomb?' asked Khalifa. 'Not much
goes on around here that you don't hear about.'
Suleiman adjusted his position and, picking up
his tea, began sipping it slowly.
'I've heard things,' he said, staring straight
ahead of him. 'Nothing definite. Like you say,
people are frightened.'
He turned his head suddenly, looking towards
the hills, running his sightless eyes across the
shimmering walls of yellow-brown rock.
'You think we're being watched?' asked Khalifa,
following the direction of Suleiman's gaze.
'I know we're being watched, Inspector. They're
everywhere. Like ants.'
'Who's everywhere? What do you know,
Suleiman? What have you heard?'
Suleiman continued to sip his tea. His eyes,
Khalifa noticed, had started to water.
'Rumours,' he muttered eventually. 'Hints. A
word here, a word there.'
'Saying?'
Suleiman's voice dropped to a whisper. 'That
they've found a tomb.'
'And?'
'And there's something extraordinary in it.
Something priceless.'
Khalifa swirled the tea dregs around the bottom
of his glass. 'Any idea where?'
Suleiman nodded towards the hills. 'Out there
somewhere.'
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'Out there is a very big area. Anything more
specific?'
A shake of the head.
'Sure?'
'Sure.'
A long pause. The tarmac of the car park un-
dulated in the heat. From somewhere behind them
came the braying of a donkey. Nearby a European
couple were haggling with a taxi driver over the
fare down to the river.
'Why's everyone so frightened, Suleiman?'
asked Khalifa gently. 'Who's got to them?'
Silence.
'Who am I dealing with here?'
Suleiman came to his feet, picking up the two
empty glasses. He seemed not to have heard the
question.
'Suleiman? Who are these people?'
The attendant began making his way back
towards the toilet trailer. When he spoke he didn't
turn his head.
'Sayf al-Tha'r,' he said. 'It is Sayf al-Tha'r they
are afraid of. I'm sorry, Inspector, I have work to
do. It was good of you to come.'
He clambered up the trailer steps and dis-
appeared inside, closing the door behind him.
Khalifa lit a cigarette and leaned back against the
wall. 'Sayf al-Tha'r,' he whispered. 'Why did I know
it would be you?'
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ABU SIMBEL
The young Egyptian mingled with the crowd, his
baseball cap pulled low about his eyes. He looked
no different from the other tourists milling around
the feet of the four giant statues, except that he
seemed to be muttering to himself and to take little
interest in the huge seated figures rearing over-
head. Rather, his attention was focused on the
three white-uniformed guards sitting on a bench
nearby. He glanced at his watch, swung his knap-
sack off his shoulder and began undoing the
straps.
It was mid-morning. Two coaches of American
tourists had just arrived, disgorging a stream of
passengers onto the tarmac, all of them wearing
yellow T-shirts. Postcard sellers and trinket
hawkers swarmed around them.
The young man now had his knapsack open. He
dropped to one knee and fiddled inside it. To his
left a group of Japanese tourists were grouped
around their guide, who was holding a fly whisk
in the air so they could see where she was.
'The great temple was built by the Pharaoh
Ramesses II in the thirteenth century BC,' she
shouted, 'and was dedicated to the gods Re-
Harakhty, Amun and Ptah . . .'
One of the three guards was looking at the
muttering figure. His two companions were smok-
ing and talking together.
'The four seated statues represent the King-God
Ramesses. Each is over twenty metres high . . .'
The American tourists had started to arrive,
laughing and chattering. One of them had a video
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camera and was issuing instructions to his wife,
telling her to go forward, move to the left, look
up, smile. The young Egyptian stood again, one
arm still inside the rucksack. The guard continued
to stare at him, then nudged his companions, who
ceased their conversation and looked towards him
too.
'The smaller statues between the legs of
Ramesses represent the king's mother, Muttuya,
his favourite wife, Nefertari, and some of his
children . . .'
The young man's voice suddenly grew louder.
Several people turned to look at him. He closed his
eyes briefly and then, smiling broadly, withdrew
his arm from the bag, a Heckler and Koch sub-
machine gun clutched in his hand. In the same
movement he swept his cap from his head, reveal-
ing a deep vertical scar running between his
eyebrows.
'Sayf al-Tha'r!' he cried and, pointing the gun
into the crowd, pulled the trigger. There was a
click, but no gunfire.
The three policemen leaped to their feet, grap-
pling with their rifles. Everyone else just stood
where they were, horrified, rooted to the spot. For
a moment everything was still while the gunman
clawed frantically at his weapon, then he snatched
at the trigger again and this time the Heckler and
Koch fired. There was a furious cracking sound
and bullets scythed into the crowd, tearing flesh,
snapping bone, spattering the sand with blood.
People began running madly, some away from the
gunman, others, confused, directly towards him,
screams of pain and terror filling the air. The man
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with the video crumpled; the three guards were
thrown backwards and down. Above the roar of
his gun and cries of distress the young man could
be heard singing and laughing.
The barrage continued for perhaps ten seconds,
enough to leave a field of bodies at the feet of the
great statues. Then the Heckler and Koch jammed
again and the air was curiously silent. The gun-
man fought with his weapon for a moment, and
then, throwing it aside, fled into the desert.
He didn't get far. Five of the trinket sellers
chased after him and, dragging him to the ground,
began kicking him with their bare feet, his head
jerking back and forth like a ball.
'Sayf al-Tha'r,' he cried, laughing, blood burst-
ing from his nose and mouth. 'Sayf al-Tha'r!'