Read The Lost Army of Cambyses Online
Authors: Paul Sussman
Tags: #Thrillers, #Crime, #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective
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16
CAIRO
Tara woke with a start. She sat up groggily and
looked around, realizing she was in bed in Daniel's
hotel room. For a horrified moment she thought
perhaps . . . Then she saw she was still fully
clothed and at the same time noticed the sheets
lying on the sofa opposite, where presumably he
had slept. She looked at her watch. It was almost
midday.
'Bollocks,' she muttered, staggering to her feet,
head throbbing.
There was a bottle of mineral water beside the
bed and, unscrewing the cap, she took a long swig.
Noise drifted up from the street outside. There
was no sign of Daniel. No note.
Something inside her felt inexplicably soiled by
the previous night's encounter, as if by coming
here she had somehow let herself down. She
wanted to get out quickly before he came back
and, finishing the water, she scribbled a note
apologizing for having fallen asleep, picked up her
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knapsack and left. She didn't tell him where she
was staying.
Back on the street she headed towards the huge
stone gateway they'd passed through the night
before. Then, fearful suddenly of bumping into
Daniel, she swung round and set off in the oppo-
site direction, following the narrow street deeper
into the old Islamic quarter.
It was hot and dusty, and a swell of people
jostled all around her – women carrying baskets of
newly baked bread on their heads, merchants
hawking their wares, children juddering along on
the backs of donkeys. In other circumstances she
might have enjoyed the scene: the alien sounds and
smells, the colourful stalls with their baskets of
dates and dried hibiscus petals, the cages crammed
with rabbits and ducks and chickens.
As it was, she felt tired and confused. Sudden
harsh noises assaulted her ears – the clanging of
hammers, the blare of a moped horn, a burst of
music from a radio – drilling into her head and dis-
orientating her. The smell of refuse and spices made
her faintly nauseous, while there was something
claustrophobic about the way the crowd pressed in
from all sides, clasping her in a stranglehold of mov-
ing bodies. She passed a group of boys unloading
sheets of brass from the back of a lorry, a girl stand-
ing on top of a pile of jute sacks, two old men
playing dominoes at the roadside, and all of them
seemed to be staring at her. A man on a wooden
scaffold shouted something, but she ignored him
and pushed on through the throng, bumping into
people, struggling for breath, wishing she was back
in her hotel room, cool and quiet and safe.
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After about ten minutes she came upon a
butcher killing chickens at the side of the road.
One by one he pulled the birds from a cage, nudg-
ing back their beaks with his thumb and slitting
their throats before dropping them into a blue
plastic barrel, their wings still flapping feebly. A
semi-circle of onlookers had gathered to watch
and Tara joined them, sickened by the scene but
curiously compelled by it too.
She didn't notice the men at first, so mesmerized
was she by the sight of the butcher's knife slicing
across the soft pink-white flesh of the chickens'
throats. It was only after she'd been watching for
a couple of minutes that she happened to glance
up and see them standing across from her, two of
them, bearded, with black djellabas and
'immas
bound low about their heads. Both were gazing
directly at her.
She held their look for a moment, then returned
her attention to the butcher. Two more birds were
slaughtered and then she glanced up again. They
were still staring at her, their expressions hard,
unflinching. There was something unsettling
about them and, detaching herself from the group,
she moved off down the street. The men waited a
few seconds, then followed.
After fifty metres she stopped in front of a shop
selling backgammon boards. The black-robed
figures stopped as well, making no effort to
disguise the fact they were watching her. She
moved on again and the men moved as well, keep-
ing about thirty metres behind, their eyes never
leaving her. She quickened her step and turned
right into another street. Ten paces, fifteen,
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twenty, and there they were behind her again. Her
heart started to pound. This street was even
narrower than the one before and seemed to get
narrower still the further she went along it, the
buildings to either side inching together like
the jaws of a vice, the crowds becoming ever more
compressed. She could sense her pursuers getting
closer. Another street opened up ahead and to the
right and, pushing her way through the crowd, she
ducked down it.
This one was deserted and for a moment she felt
relieved, glad to have got out of the crowd. Then
she began to wonder if she had made a mistake.
Here she was exposed; there was no-one she could
call to for help. The emptiness seemed suddenly
threatening. She spun round, intending to burrow
her way back into the throng, but the men had
come up more quickly than she had expected and
were now just ten metres away. For a moment she
stood staring at them, frozen, then turned and
started to run. Five seconds and then behind her
the thud of pursuing feet.
'Someone help me!' she cried, her voice sound-
ing muffled and weak, as though she was shouting
through a cloth.
Fifty metres along she swerved left into another
street, then right, then left again, no longer caring
where she was going, just wanting to get away.
Heavy wooden doors flashed past to either side,
and at one point she stopped and hammered on
one, but there was no response and after a few
seconds she ran on again, terrified that if she
waited any longer she would be caught. The sound
of her pursuers' feet seemed to echo all around,
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magnified and distorted by the narrow streets, so
that it seemed as if they were coming from in front
as well as behind. She had lost all sense of
direction. Her head throbbed. She felt sick with
fear. She continued running for what felt like an
age, zigzagging deeper and deeper into the
labyrinth of back streets before eventually emerg-
ing into a small, sun-filled square with other
streets leading off it in different directions. There
was a stunted palm tree at its centre, with an old
man sitting in the shade beneath it. She ran over to
him.
'Please,' she pleaded. 'Please. Can you help me?'
The man looked up. Both eyes were milky
white. He held out his hand.
'Baksheesh,' he said. 'Baksheesh.'
'No,' she hissed, desperate, 'no baksheesh. Help
me!'
'Baksheesh,' he repeated, grabbing her sleeve.
'Give baksheesh.'
She tried to pull away, but he wouldn't let go,
his fingers clutching her shirt like a claw.
'Baksheesh! Baksheesh!'
There was a shout and the sound of running
feet. She looked up wildly. Four streets led into the
square, including the one she had entered by. She
swung her eyes from one to the other, trying to
work out where the sound was coming from, the
whole square throbbing with the pounding of feet,
as though someone was playing a drum. For a
moment she remained motionless, unable to
decide which direction she should take. Then, her
terror giving her an unexpected strength, she
ripped her arm away from the blind man and ran
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full tilt towards the street opposite the one she had
first come down. Even as she approached it she
saw two bearded figures turn a corner up ahead
and charge straight towards her. She swerved and
made for one of the other streets, but then,
prompted by some instinct she couldn't fully
explain, swerved again and ran towards the street
she had entered by.
She stopped at its mouth and turned, gasping
for breath. The two black-robed men were enter-
ing the square. They spotted her and slowed,
glancing to their right, towards the street she'd
almost gone down but had then shied away from.
There was a pause and then a huge figure
emerged, the same figure she had seen at Saqqara
and outside her hotel. His suit was crumpled and
his piebald face beaded with sweat. For a moment
he stood staring at her, breathing heavily, then he
reached into his pocket and pulled out what
looked like a small builder's trowel.
'Where is it?' he snarled, moving towards her.
'Where is the piece?'
'I don't know what you mean,' gasped Tara.
'You've got the wrong person.'
'Where is it?' he repeated. 'The missing piece.
The hieroglyphs. Where are they?'
He was halfway across the square now, almost
at the palm tree.
'Baksheesh!' wailed the blind man, grabbing at
the giant's linen jacket, clasping a handful of
material. 'Baksheesh.'
The giant tried to brush him off but couldn't.
He cursed and, raising the handle of his trowel,
smashed it down into the blind man's nose. There
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was a loud cracking sound, like twigs, and a
deafening scream of pain. Tara didn't wait to see
any more. She turned and fled. From behind came
the thunder of pursuing feet.
She ran and ran, blood pounding in her ears,
swinging left beneath an arch into a sort of tunnel
which led into a courtyard full of women washing
clothes. She rushed past them and out through a
gate into a street. There were more people here.
She wheeled right into another street and suddenly
there were people everywhere, and shops and
stalls. She slowed momentarily, heaving for air,
and then pushed on. Almost immediately, how-
ever, strong hands seized her and spun her round.
'No!' she cried. 'No! Let me go.'
She fought, punching out with her fists.
'Tara!'
'Let me go!'
'Tara!'
It was Daniel. Rearing over him, its twin
minarets piercing the pale afternoon sky, was the
stone gateway near the hotel. She had come full
circle.
'They're trying to kill me,' she gasped. 'They're
trying to kill me and I think they killed Dad too.'
'Who? Who's trying to kill you?'
'Them.'
She turned and pointed. The street, however,
was so jammed with people that even if her pur-
suers had been among them it would have been
impossible to spot them. She searched for a
moment and then, turning back to Daniel, buried
her face in his shoulder and clung to him.
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LUXOR
As Khalifa walked away from the Temple of
Hatshepsut, mulling over what Suleiman had told
him, he passed a couple of young boys coming up
from Dra Abu el-Naga on camelback. They were
laughing together, flicking at the camels with their
sticks, urging the ungainly beasts forward with the
traditional camel driver's cries of
'Yalla besara!'
and '
Yalla nimsheh!'
('Hurry up! Let's go!'). He
turned to watch them and suddenly the
present seemed to evaporate and he was a child
himself again, back at the camel stables in Giza
with his brother Ali, in the old days before every-
thing fell apart.
Khalifa had never been sure when Ali had first
gone over to Sayf al-Tha'r. It hadn't been a sudden
association. Rather, a gradual assimilation; a slow
ripple effect that had carried his brother in-
exorably away from his friends and family and
into the arms of violence. Khalifa had often
thought that if only he had noticed earlier how Ali
was changing, hardening, perhaps he could have
done something. But he hadn't noticed. Or at least
he'd tried to persuade himself that things weren't
as bad as they seemed. And because of that Ali had
died. Because of him.
Islam had always been a part of their lives and