Read The Lost Army of Cambyses Online
Authors: Paul Sussman
Tags: #Thrillers, #Crime, #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective
details he knows the better.'
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There was the rattle of various locks being
undone and the door swung open.
'My apologies for keeping you waiting. Please,
do come in.'
Samali was tall and very thin, completely bald,
with a faint sheen to his skin as though he was
wearing moisturizer. He turned and led them
down a hallway into a large living room, all very
minimalist, with pale wood floors, white walls
and a scattering of leather and metal furniture.
Through a door to the side Tara glimpsed two
young boys, one wearing a bathrobe. The door
swung to almost immediately, however, and they
were gone.
'I don't think we've met,' smiled Samali.
'Tara Mullray,' said Daniel. 'An old friend.'
'How enchanting.'
He stepped forward and took her hand, raising
it and kissing the backs of her fingers, his nostrils
dilating momentarily, as if he was smelling her
skin. He lowered the hand again and waved them
both towards a large leather sofa.
'A drink?'
'Whisky,' said Daniel.
'Miss Mullray?'
'The same. Thank you.'
He turned to a drinks cabinet and, removing a
decanter, poured out two glasses, clinking an ice
cube into each. He handed the drinks over and sat
down opposite them, picking up a jade cigarette
holder and screwing a cigarette into it.
'You're not having one?' asked Daniel.
'I prefer to watch,' said Samali, smiling.
He lit the cigarette and drew deeply on the
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mouthpiece. His eyebrows were very thin and very
dark and, Tara realized suddenly, highlighted with
liner.
'So,' he said, 'to what do I owe the pleasure?'
Daniel glanced up at him and then away
towards the window, fingers drumming nervously
on the edge of the sofa.
'We need help.'
'But of course you do,' said Samali, still smiling.
He turned towards Tara, crossing his legs and
smoothing the material of his slacks with his hand.
'I am what is rather crudely termed a fixer, Miss
Mullray. A much-maligned species, until someone
actually needs something. Then, suddenly, we
become indispensable. It is a rewarding vocation'
– he waved his hand, indicating the expensive flat –
'although a dispiriting one. A man in my
profession soon learns he is never the object of a
purely social visit. There is always, what is the
word, an agenda.'
He said it jokingly, although in his eyes there
was something cold, as if he understood their
politeness was just an act and wanted them to
know that his was too. He leaned his head
back and drew slowly on the cigarette holder,
gazing up at the ceiling.
'So,' he said. 'What do you need, Daniel?
Problems with your dig permit, is it? Or perhaps
Steven Spielberg has expressed an interest in film-
ing your work and you require help with the
necessary permissions.'
He chuckled at his joke. Daniel downed his
whisky and laid aside the glass.
'I need information,' he said tersely.
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'Information!' cooed Samali. 'But how very
flattering. That a scholar of your repute should
come to me for advice. I really can't think what it
might be that I could know and you don't, but
please, ask away.'
Daniel hunched forward, the leather upholstery
creaking beneath him. Again his eyes flicked up to
Samali and again they swerved away towards the
window, unwilling to meet the older man's gaze.
'I want to know about Sayf al-Tha'r.'
The briefest hint of a pause.
'Anything in particular?' asked Samali. 'Or just
a general resume?'
'I want to know about Sayf al-Tha'r and
antiquities.'
Again, a whisper of a hesitation on Samali's
part.
'Might I ask why?'
'It's best I don't go into details. For your safety
as much as ours. There's a particular antiquity we
believe he wants and we need to know why.'
'How very cryptic of you, Daniel.'
He lifted his left hand and began examining the
nails. Tara thought she could hear whispering
from the room to the side.
'This mysterious antiquity,' said Samali. 'Would
I be right in thinking it is in that box in Miss
Mullray's bag?'
Neither Tara nor Daniel spoke.
'I take it from your silence that it is.' He flicked
his eyes at Tara. 'Might I see it, please?'
She stared at him, then across at Daniel, then
down at the knapsack in her lap. There was a silence
and then the throaty rasp of Samali's chuckle.
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'No doubt Dr Lacage has told you not to show
it to me. Another lesson one soon learns in my line
of business. That one is very rarely trusted.'
He gazed at them for a moment and then waved
his hand.
'It is of no consequence. Keep it to yourselves if
you prefer it that way. It simply makes it more
difficult for me to answer your question. Like try-
ing to play a hand of poker when one is prevented
from seeing all of one's cards.'
He resumed his examination of his nails.
'So you want to know about the Sword of
Vengeance and antiquities, do you?' he mused. 'A
most perilous line of enquiry. And what, I
wonder . . .'
'Is in it for you?' Daniel stood, picked up his
glass and crossed to the drinks cabinet, pouring
himself another whisky. His hand seemed to be
trembling. 'Nothing. I'm asking you to help us out
of the goodness of your heart.'
Samali's eyebrows arched upwards. 'Well, well.
First I am cast as the fount of all wisdom, then the
great philanthropist. By the time we are finished I
shall barely know who I am.'
'I can give you a few hundred dollars. Three,
maybe four. If that's what it takes.'
Samali tutted. 'Please, Daniel. I might be a self-
made man, but at least I've done my self-making
in style. I am not a common street whore taking
cash handouts in return for services rendered. You
can keep your four hundred dollars.'
He took another slow puff on the cigarette
holder, smiling faintly, as though he was enjoying
Daniel's discomfiture.
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'Although, of course, nothing in life is wholly
free. Especially information about someone as
dangerous as Sayf al-Tha'r. So let's just leave it
that you owe me. And one day I might call the
debt in. Agreed?'
They stared at each other for a moment and
then Daniel downed his drink. 'Agreed.' He
poured himself another large shot and returned to
the sofa.
Samali's cigarette had burnt down to the butt
and, leaning over, he tamped it into a metal
ashtray.
'Of course, I have no links with Sayf al-Tha'r's
organization. Let that be understood from the
start. Anything I tell you is purely hearsay.'
'Go on.'
'Well,' he said, smoothing down his slacks
again, 'it would appear that for some years now
the dear man has been funding his operations
through covert trading of antiquities.' He began
screwing another cigarette into the holder. 'By all
accounts he knows more about Egyptian artefacts
than most experts, so it's an obvious source of
income for him. The only source, given that his
activities have alienated just about every other
fundamentalist group in Egypt. Even al-Jihad
won't touch him.'
He came to his feet and wandered slowly over
to the window, afternoon sunlight reflecting off
his scalp so that it looked as if his head was made
of polished brass.
'He runs a veritable little cottage industry, by all
accounts. Artefacts are stolen from digs, looted
from newly discovered tombs, removed from
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museum stores. They're sent south to the Sudan
and then shipped out to middlemen in Europe and
the Far East, who sell them on to private buyers.
The proceeds are then filtered back into the region
and used . . . well, I think we all know what
they're used for.'
'There's a big man,' said Tara, 'with a birthmark
on his face.'
Samali remained at the window, staring down at
the street.
'Dravitt,' he said. 'Drakich, Dravich, something
like that. German, I believe. Sayf al-Tha'r's eyes
and ears here in Egypt. I'm afraid I can't tell you
much about him. Except that the rumours are not
pleasant.'
He turned back to them.
'I don't know what's in that box of yours,
Daniel, but if, as you say, Sayf al-Tha'r wants it,
then I can assure you that sooner or later Sayf al-
Tha'r will get it. Antiquities are his lifeblood.
When it comes to acquiring them he is utterly
ruthless.'
'But it's not even valuable,' said Daniel. 'Why
should he be so desperate to get his hands on this
one thing?'
Samali shrugged. 'How can I tell you if you will
not show it to me? I can only repeat what I have
already said: that if Sayf al-Tha'r wants it, Sayf al-
Tha'r will get it.'
He padded slowly back to his chair and, retriev-
ing his lighter, lit his cigarette.
'Perhaps I will have a drink after all,' he said.
'The afternoon appears to have grown
uncommonly hot.'
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He crossed to the cabinet and poured himself a
glass of an opalescent yellow liqueur.
'What about the British embassy?' asked Tara.
There was a momentary pause and then a loud
clank as Samali dropped an ice cube into his glass.
'The British embassy?'
His voice sounded innocent, although its regis-
ter seemed to have risen ever so slightly, as if
someone was squeezing his neck.
'It seems they want this thing too,' said Daniel.
'Or at least the cultural attaché does.'
Another clank. Samali laid aside the tongs and,
lifting his drink, took a long sip, his back still to
them.
'What on earth makes you think the British
cultural attaché wants your antiquity?'
'Because he's been lying to us,' said Tara.
Samali took another sip and wandered back
towards the window. For a long while he was
silent.
'I shall give you a piece of advice', he said
eventually, 'and I shall give it to you for free. Get
rid of this antiquity, whatever it is, and leave
Egypt. Do it quickly, do it today. Because if you do
not you will die.'
A chill ran up Tara's spine. Involuntarily she
reached out and took Daniel's hand. His palm was
damp with sweat.
'What do you know, Samali?' he asked.
'Very little. And I'm happy to keep it that way.'
'But you know something?'
'Please,' said Tara.
Again a long silence. Samali finished his drink
and stood with the empty glass hanging at his side,
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puffing on his cigarette holder. The windows
appeared to be heavily glazed, for no sound came
up from the street below. The whispering from the
side room had stopped.
'There is . . . how shall I put it . . . a conduit,' he
said eventually, slowly. 'For stolen antiquities. Via
the British embassy. And the American one, too, if
what I've heard is correct, which it may well not
be. These are simply rumours, you understand.
Rumours of rumours. Chinese whispers. Objects
are removed from museums, it is said, taken out of
the country under diplomatic cover, sold on
abroad, profits paid into secret bank accounts, all
very cloak and dagger.'
'Jesus Christ,' muttered Daniel.
'Oh that's only the half of it,' said Samali, turn-
ing. 'The embassies organize the export of the
objects. It is, however, our own security service
that arranges their theft in the first place. Or at
least an element within the security service. This
runs high and deep, Daniel. These people have
contacts everywhere. They know everything. For
all we know they could be watching and listening
to us this very minute.'
'We have to go to the police,' said Tara. 'We
have to.'
Samali laughed bitterly. 'You are not listening to
what I'm saying, Miss Mullray. These people are
the police. They're the establishment. I cannot
overemphasize how much power they wield. They
manipulate you without you even knowing you
are being manipulated. Compared to them Sayf al-
Tha'r is your closest ally.'
'But why?' said Daniel. 'Why for this one piece?'
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Samali shrugged. 'That, as I have already told
you, I can't answer. What I can see is that on the
one side there are the embassies and the secret
service . . .' He raised the hand with the glass in it.
'And on the other side Sayf al-Tha'r . . .' He raised
his other hand. 'And in between, about to be
crushed into a million pieces . . .'
'Us,' whispered Tara, stomach churning.
Samali smiled.
'What can we do?' she said. 'Where can we go?'
The Egyptian didn't reply. Daniel was sitting
forward, staring at the floor. The box in Tara's lap