Read The Lost Army of Cambyses Online
Authors: Paul Sussman
Tags: #Thrillers, #Crime, #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective
pregnant with their first child.
And so he had abandoned Egyptology and
joined the police force instead. His mother
and Zenab had both begged him not to, as had his
tutor Professor al-Habibi, but he had seen no
other way of providing a decent life for his family.
The pay wasn't brilliant, but it was better than
that of a junior antiquities inspector and at least
the force offered some sort of security for the
future.
He had been sad at the time. Was still sad in a
way. It would have been nice to work among the
objects and monuments he so loved. He'd never
regretted the decision to put his loved ones first,
though. And anyway, archaeology and detective
work weren't that dissimilar. They were both about
following clues, analysing evidence, solving
mysteries. The only real difference was that while
the archaeologist tended to unearth wonderful
things, it was the detective's lot, more often than not,
to find terrible ones.
He drew on his cigarette. The argument behind
him was getting louder. There was a hammering
sound, as of someone banging his fist on a desk, and
then suddenly the door of al-Masri's office flew open
and a wiry man in a dirty djellaba emerged. He
turned briefly to scream, 'I hope a dog shits on your
grave!' before stomping angrily out of the building,
gesticulating wildly with his arms.
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'And I hope two dogs shit on yours!' bellowed
al-Masri after him. 'And piss on it too!'
Khalifa smiled to himself and, flicking away his
cigarette, stood. The office door was open and,
approaching, he put his head inside.
'Ya Doktora?'
The old man was sitting behind a small ply-
wood desk piled high with papers. He was tall and
thin, with a long, dark-skinned face and curly,
close-cropped hair – a typical Saidee, or native of
upper Egypt. He looked up.
'Khalifa,' he grunted. 'Well, come in, come in.'
The detective entered, al-Masri pointing him to
one of the armchairs that lined the wall.
'Damned peasant fool,' he snapped, nodding
towards the door. 'We discover what looks like an
extension of Seti I's mortuary temple in one of his
fields and he wants to plough it up and plant
molochia
on it.'
'A man has to eat,' smiled Khalifa.
'Not if it involves destroying our history, he
doesn't. Let him starve! Ignorant barbarian.' He
banged his hand on the desk, sending a sheaf of
papers tumbling to the floor. He bent down to
retrieve them. 'Tea?' he asked, head hidden
beneath the desk.
'Thanks.'
Al-Masri shouted and a young man entered.
'Get us a couple of glasses of tea, will you,
Mahmoud?' He fiddled with the papers, placing
them in one pile, then moving them to another,
then dividing them in half and placing each half
on a different pile, before finally opening a
drawer and cramming them inside. 'To hell
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with it. I won't read the damned things anyway.'
He sat back and looked over at Khalifa, hands
clasped behind his head. 'So what can I do for
you? Come to ask me for a job, have you?'
The doctor knew of Khalifa's background and
liked to tease him about it, albeit in a friendly
way. Although he never said as much, he
admired the detective. Khalifa was one of the
few people al-Masri knew whose passion for
the past came anywhere near to rivalling his
own.
'Not exactly,' smiled Khalifa.
He leaned forward and tamped out his cigarette
in an ashtray on the desk, then filled al-Masri in on
the murder of Abu Nayar. The old man listened
quietly, clicking his fingers behind his head.
'I presume you haven't heard anything?' asked
Khalifa when he'd finished.
Al-Masri snorted. 'Of course I haven't heard
anything. If there's ever a new discovery around
here we're always the last to know about it.
They're better informed on the moon.'
'But it's possible something could have been
found?'
'Sure, it's possible. I'd say to date we've only
uncovered about twenty per cent of what's left of
ancient Egypt. Perhaps less. The Theban Hills are
full of undiscovered tombs. They'll be finding
them for another five hundred years.'
Mahmoud came back with the tea.
'I think this might be something big,' said
Khalifa, taking a glass from the proffered tray and
sipping it. 'Something people are prepared to kill
for. Or to keep secret.'
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'There are people around here who'd kill for a
couple of
shabtis.'
'No, it's more than that. People are scared.
We've interviewed every antiquities dealer in
Luxor and they're all shitting themselves. This is
something important.'
The old man took his own tea and sipped it. He
seemed relaxed, but Khalifa could tell he was
interested. He sipped again and then, laying the
glass aside, came to his feet and began wandering
around the room.
'Intriguing,' he muttered to himself. 'Very
intriguing.'
'Any idea what it might be?' asked Khalifa. 'A
royal tomb?'
'Hmmm? No, not likely. Not likely at all. Most
of the great royal burials are already known,
except Tuthmosis II and Ramesses VIII. And
possibly Smenkhkare, if you accept that the body
in KV55 was Akhenaten, which personally I
don't.'
'I thought Amenhotep I's tomb was still lost,'
said Khalifa.
'Rubbish. He was buried in KV39, as any
sensible archaeologist knows. Anyway, the point is
that if it was a major royal burial it would almost
certainly be in the Valley of the Kings, and you're
not going to keep a new find there hushed up,
however many people you kill. The place is so full
of tourists you can hardly move.'
His hands were clasped behind his back, the
thumbs slowly rotating. Every now and then his
tongue slipped out and ran along his lower lip.
'What about the West Valley?' asked Khalifa,
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referring to a smaller, less-frequented gorge that
branched off the main valley about halfway along
its course.
'Sure, it's less busy, but we'd still know if any-
thing had been found there. It's not that much of
a backwater.'
'A mummy cache?'
'But there aren't any mummies left to cache. Or
no great ones at least, aside from a couple of the
later Ramessids, and I can't see anyone consider-
ing those worth killing for.'
'A minor royal burial, then. A prince. A
princess. A secondary queen.'
'Again, they would have been buried in the
Valley of the Kings or the Valley of the Queens.
Somewhere close to the centre of the necropolis.
These people liked to stick together.'
Khalifa leaned forward and lit a cigarette. 'An
important official? A noble?'
'More likely,' admitted the old man, 'although
I'd still be surprised. Almost every significant
official's tomb we've ever discovered has been
either in the valley or close to it. Too close to make
clandestine excavation possible. And these burials
rarely contain anything valuable. Historically
valuable certainly, but no gold or anything like
that. Or at least not enough to make it worth
killing someone for. The obvious exception being
Yuya and Tjuju, but that was a one-off.'
He stopped in front of the window, his rotating
thumbs slowing until they were almost still.
'You've got me puzzled, Khalifa. For someone
to turn up a new tomb isn't surprising in itself. As
I said, the hills are full of the damned things. But
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for someone to turn up a tomb whose contents are
worth killing for and for that same tomb to be
sufficiently off the beaten track for them to be able
to keep it so completely under wraps, now that is
unusual.'
'You've no idea, then?'
'None at all. Of course there are tales of fabu-
lous hoards of buried treasure up in the hills. The
priests of Karnak are supposed to have hidden all
the temple gold in a cave underneath the Qurn
somewhere, to stop it falling into the hands of the
invading Persians. Ten tons of the stuff by all
accounts. But they're just old wives' tales. No,
Inspector, I'm afraid I'm just as much in the dark
as you are.'
The doctor returned to his desk and sat down
heavily. Khalifa finished his tea and got to his feet.
He hadn't slept since the night before last and felt,
suddenly, exhausted.
'OK, OK,' he said, 'but if you hear anything be
sure to let me know. And no amateur sleuthing.
This is a police matter.'
Al-Masri waved his hand dismissively. 'Do you
seriously imagine I'm going to go traipsing round
these hills on my own trying to find your damned
tomb?'
'That's exactly what I imagine,' said Khalifa,
smiling fondly at the old man.
Al-Masri scowled at him for a moment,
annoyed, and then broke into a wry chuckle. 'OK,
Inspector. Have it your own way. If I hear any-
thing you will be the first to know.'
Khalifa moved to the door.
'Ma'a salama, ya
Doktora.
Peace be with you.'
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'And with you, Inspector. Although if what
you've told me of this case is true, peace is the last
thing you're going to be getting.'
Khalifa nodded and went out.
'Oh, Inspector,' al-Masri called after him.
Khalifa put his head back round the door.
'If you ever did come and ask me for a job, I'd
be more than happy to give you one. Good day.'
171
17
SAQQARA
They took a taxi out to Saqqara, following much
the same route that Tara had taken two days
before. Hassan, the man with whom she had
found her father's body, wasn't in the office. One
of his colleagues recognized her, however, and
handed over the dig-house keys. They drove on
along the escarpment and pulled up in front of the
building, telling the driver to wait while they went
inside.
The interior was dark and cool. Daniel opened
a couple of windows and pushed back the shut-
ters. She gazed around sadly, taking in the
whitewashed walls, the threadbare sofas,
the rickety bookshelves, thinking how happy her
father had been here, how the building had, in a
sense, become a part of her own life as well as his.
She wiped her sleeve across her eyes and turned to
Daniel, who was gazing at a framed print on the
wall.
'So what exactly are we looking for?' she asked.
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'No idea.' He shrugged. 'Something that looks
ancient, I guess. With hieroglyphs on it.'
He moved away from the print and began
perusing one of the bookshelves. Tara threw her
bag onto a chair and drifted into one of the rooms
off the main lounge. There was a narrow bed in
one corner, a wardrobe against the wall and, hang-
ing from the door, a tattered old safari jacket. She
delved into one of the pockets and pulled out a
wallet. She bit her lip. It was her father's.
'This is Dad's room,' she called.
He came in and together they went through her
father's possessions. There wasn't much, just a few
clothes, some camera equipment, a couple of
notebooks and, on a chair beside the bed, a
leather-bound diary. Its entries were brief and un-
revealing, concerned almost exclusively with the
progress of that season's work. There were several
mentions of Tara – whom he styled 'T' – the last
on the day before her arrival in Egypt, the pen-
ultimate day of his life:
Into Cairo morning. Meeting at American Uni. re.
next year's curriculum. Lunch Antiquities Service.
Afternoon shopping Khan al-Khalili for T.'s
arrival. Back S. late afternoon.
And that was it. Nothing that shed any light on
recent events. They laid the diary aside.
'Perhaps they've already found whatever it is,'
she said.
'I doubt it. Otherwise why would they have been
chasing you?'
'Then how do we know it's here, not in Cairo?'
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'We don't. I'm just guessing that, whatever this
thing is, your father only had it for a few days.
And since this is where he's been living for the past
three months it makes sense to start looking here.
Try the other rooms.'
They spent an hour going through the house,
looking in every drawer and cupboard, even get-
ting on their knees to peer under the beds.
Without success. Aside from her father's camera
equipment there was nothing there to interest even
a normal thief.
'I guess I must have been wrong,' said Daniel
eventually, deflated.
Tara was in one of the bedrooms. The adrenalin
had been pumping through her as they searched.
Now she was overcome by a sudden weariness.