Read The Lost Army of Cambyses Online
Authors: Paul Sussman
Tags: #Thrillers, #Crime, #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective
PROLOGUE
T H E WESTERN DESERT, 523 BC
The fly had been pestering the Greek all morning.
As if the furnace-like heat of the desert wasn't
enough, and the forced marches, and the stale
rations, now he had this added torment. He cursed
the gods and landed a heavy blow on his cheek,
dislodging a shower of sweat droplets, but missing
the insect by some way.
'Damned flies!' he spat.
'Ignore them,' said his companion.
'I can't ignore them. They're driving me mad! If
I didn't know better I'd think our enemies had sent
them.'
His companion shrugged. 'Maybe they have.
They say the Ammonians have strange powers. I
heard they can turn themselves into wild beasts.
Jackals and lions and suchlike.'
'They can turn themselves into anything they
want,' growled the Greek. 'When I get my hands on
them I'll make them pay for this damned march.
Four weeks we've been out here! Four weeks!'
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He swung his water-skin from his shoulder and
drank from it, grimacing at its hot, oily contents.
What he'd give for a cup of cool, fresh water from
the hill springs of Naxos; water that didn't taste as
if fifty pox-ridden whores had just bathed in it!
'I'm giving up this mercenary business,' he
grunted. 'This campaign's the last.'
'You say that every time.'
'This time I mean it. I'm going back to Naxos to
find a wife and a nice bit of land. Olive trees –
there's money in that, you know.'
'You'd never stick it.'
'I will,' said the Greek, taking another vain swat
at the fly. 'I will, you know. This time it's
different.'
And this time it was different. For twenty years
he'd been fighting other people's wars. It was too
long, and he knew it. He couldn't stand these
marches any more. And the pain from the old
arrow wound had been getting worse this year.
Now he could barely lift his shield arm up above
the level of his chest. One more expedition and
that was the end of it. He was going back to grow
olive trees on the island of his birth.
'So who are these Ammonians anyway?' he
asked, taking another gulp of water.
'No idea,' his companion replied. 'They've got
some temple Cambyses wants destroyed. There's
an oracle there, apparently. That's about all I
know.'
The Greek grunted, but didn't pursue the con-
versation. In truth he wasn't much interested in
those he fought against. Libyans, Egyptians,
Carians, Hebrews, even his fellow Greeks – it was
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all the same to him. You turned up, killed who you
had to kill and then joined another expedition, as
often as not against the very people who'd just
paid you. Today his master was Cambyses of
Persia. Yet not so long ago he'd fought against
that same Cambyses in the army of Egypt. That's
how it was in this business.
He took another swig of water, allowing his
mind to drift back to Thebes, to his last day there
before they'd set out across the desert. He and a
friend, Phaedis of Macedon, had taken a skin of
beer and crossed Iteru, the great river, to the valley
they called the Gates of the Dead, where it was
said many great kings were buried. They'd spent
the afternoon drinking and exploring, discovering
a narrow shaft at the foot of a steep slope of
rubble into which, as a dare, they'd both crawled.
Inside the walls and ceiling had been covered in
painted images and the Greek, pulling out his
knife, had begun carving his name into the soft
plaster: ΔYMMAXOΣ O MENENΔOY NAΞIOΣ
TAYTA TA ΘAYMAΣTA EIΔON AYPION
TOIΣ THI AMMONIΔI EΔPAI ENOIKOYΣIN
EΠIΣTPATEYΣΩ EIΓAP . . . 'I, Dymmachus, son
of Menendes of Naxos, saw these wonders.
Tomorrow I march against the Ammonians.
May . . .'
But before he could finish, poor old Phaedis had
knelt on a scorpion, letting out an almighty
scream and scrabbling out of the shaft like a
frightened cat. How he'd laughed!
The joke had been on him, however, for
Phaedis's leg had swelled to the size of a log and
he'd been unable to march with the army the next
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day, thus missing four weeks of torment in the
desert. Poor old Phaedis? Lucky old Phaedis more
like! He chuckled at the memory.
He was dragged from his reverie by the voice of
his companion.
'Dymmachus! Hey, Dymmachus!'
'What?'
'Look at that, you dolt. Up ahead.'
The Greek lifted his eyes and stared forward
along the line of marching troops. They were
passing through a broad valley between high
dunes and there ahead, its outline warped by
the fierce glare of the midday sun, rose a huge,
pyramid-shaped rock, its sides so uniform
they seemed to have been deliberately carved
into that shape. There was something faintly
menacing about it, standing silent and alone in the
otherwise featureless landscape, and the Greek
involuntarily raised his hand to the Isis amulet at
his neck, muttering a swift prayer to ward off evil
spirits.
They marched on for another half-hour before a
halt was called for the midday meal, by which
time the Greek's company was almost alongside
the rock. He staggered towards it and slumped
down in the sliver of shade at its foot.
'How much further?' he groaned. 'Oh Zeus,
how much further?'
Boys came round with bread and figs and the
men ate and drank. Afterwards some fell to
scoring their names into the surface of the rock.
The Greek leaned back and closed his eyes, enjoy-
ing the sudden breeze that had come up. He felt
the tickle of a fly as it landed on his cheek, the
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same one, he was sure, as had been tormenting
him all morning. This time he made no attempt to
swat it, allowing it to wander back and forth
across his lips and eyelids. It took off and landed
again, took off and landed, testing his resolve. Still
he didn't move and the insect, lulled into a false
sense of security, finally settled on his forehead.
With infinite care the Greek raised his hand, held
it for a moment six inches from his face, then
slammed it violently against his temple.
'Got you, you bastard!' he cried, staring down
at the remains of the fly smeared across his palm.
'At last!'
His triumph was short-lived, however, for at
that moment a faint murmur of alarm came drift-
ing forward from the rear of the column.
'What is it?' he asked, wiping away the fly and
standing, hand on sword. 'An attack?'
'I don't know,' said the man beside him.
'There's something going on behind us.'
The hubbub was growing. Four camels
thundered past, their packs trailing in their wake,
froth dripping from their mouths. Screams could
be heard and muffled shouting. The breeze, too,
was getting stronger, buffeting into his face,
making his hair flicker and dance.
The Greek shielded his eyes and stared south-
wards along the valley. There seemed to be a sort
of darkness coming up behind them. A cavalry
charge, he thought at first. Then a sudden furious
gust of wind smacked into his face and he heard
clearly what had until now been just a garbled cry.
'Oh Isis,' he whispered.
'What?' said his companion.
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The Greek turned to him. There was fear in his
eyes. 'Sandstorm.'
Nobody moved or spoke. They'd all heard of
the sandstorms of the western desert, the way they
came out of nowhere and swallowed everything in
their path. Whole cities had been devoured by
them, it was said, entire civilizations lost.
'If you meet a sandstorm there's only one thing
to do,' one of the Libyan guides had told them.
'What?' they had asked him.
'Die,' he had replied.
'Save us!' someone croaked. 'May the gods pro-
tect us!'
And then, suddenly, everyone was running and
shouting.
'Save us!' they screamed. 'Have mercy on us!'
Some threw aside their packs and charged
madly up the valley. Others laboured up the side
of the dune, or fell to their knees, or crouched
down in the shelter of the pyramid rock. One man
fell face forward into the sand, weeping. Another
was trampled by a horse as he struggled to mount
it. The Greek alone held his ground. He neither
moved nor spoke, just stood leaden-limbed as the
wall of darkness rolled inexorably towards him,
seeming to gather speed as it came. More pack
animals thundered past and men too, their
weapons discarded, faces twisted in terror.
'Run!' they screamed. 'It's already taken half the
army! Run or you'll be lost!'
The wind was raging now, whipping sheets of
sand about his legs and waist. There was a roar,
too, as of a surging cataract. The sun dimmed.
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'Come on, Dymmachus, let's get out of here,'
cried his companion. 'If we stay we'll be buried
alive.'
Still the Greek didn't move. A faint smile
twisted his mouth. Of all the deaths he had
imagined, and there had been many, this one had
never crossed his mind. And this his last
campaign, too! It was so cruel it was laughable.
His smile broadened and despite himself he began
to chuckle.
'Dymmachus you fool! What's wrong with
you?'
'Go,' said the Greek, shouting to be heard above
the rising bellow of the storm. 'Run if you want!
It makes no difference. For myself, I shall die
where I stand.'
He drew his sword and held it in front of him,
gazing at the image of a coiling serpent inscribed
onto its gleaming blade, the jaws levering open
around the sword's tip. He had won it over twenty
years ago in his first campaign, against the
Lydians, and had carried it with him ever since, his
lucky mascot. He ran his thumb along the blade,
testing it. His companion took to his heels.
'You're mad!' he screamed over his shoulder.
'You filthy mad fool.'
The Greek ignored him. He gripped his weapon
and stared at the great darkness looming ever
closer. Soon it would be upon him. He flexed his
muscles.
'Come on then,' he whispered. 'Let's see what
you're made of.'
He felt suddenly light-headed. It was always like
this in battle: the initial fear, the leaden limbs, and
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then the sudden surge of battle joy. Perhaps grow-
ing olive trees wasn't for him after all. He was a
machimos.
Fighting was in his blood. Perhaps this
was for the best. He began to chant, an old
Egyptian charm to ward off the evil eye:
'Sakhmet's arrow is in you!
The magic of Thoth is in your body!
Isis curses you!
Nephthys punishes you!
The lance of Horus is in your head!'
And then the storm hit, pulsing against him
with the force of a thousand chariots. The wind
nearly swept him off his feet and the sand blinded
him, ripping at his tunic, tearing at his flesh.
Shadowy forms loomed through the darkness,
arms flailing, their screams drowned by the
deafening roar. One of the army's standards, torn
from its mounting, flew against his legs and clung
there for a moment before being snatched away
again and disappearing into the maelstrom.
The Greek slashed at the wind with his sword,
but it was too strong for him. It pushed him back-
wards and to the side, and eventually forced him
down onto his knees. A fist of sand punched into
his mouth, choking him. Somehow he struggled
onto his feet again, but was knocked down almost
immediately and this time didn't get up. A wave of
sand swept over him.
For a few moments he bucked and struggled,
and then lay still. He felt, suddenly, very weary
and very calm, as if he was floating underwater.
Images drifted slowly through his mind – Naxos,
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where he had been born and raised; the tomb in
Thebes; Phaedis and the scorpion; his first
campaign all those many years ago, against the
fierce Lydians, when he had won his sword. With
a final supreme effort of will he lifted the weapon
high in the air above him, so that even when the
rest of him had been buried its thick blade still
protruded above the surface of the sands, the
inscribed serpent coiling around it, marking
the spot where he had fallen.
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1
C A I R O , SEPTEMBER 2000
The limousine pulled slowly out of the embassy
gates, long and sleek and as black as a whale,
pausing momentarily before easing forward into
the traffic. Two police motorcycles took up
position in front of it, two behind.
For a hundred metres the convoy continued
straight, trees and buildings slipping past to either
side, then swung right and right again, onto the