Read The Lost Army of Cambyses Online
Authors: Paul Sussman
Tags: #Thrillers, #Crime, #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective
Helmi shook his head. Khalifa sat silent for a
moment, thinking.
'Any chance I could talk to your friend at Giza?'
'Sure, but he won't tell you anything I haven't.
And anyway, he's been moved off the case now.
Al-Mukhabarat took over last night.'
'Secret service?' Khalifa sounded surprised.
'Apparently they want to keep the whole thing
hush-hush. Bad publicity for Egypt and all that,
what with a tourist being involved. It wasn't even
on the news.'
Khalifa doodled in his notebook.
'Anyone else I could talk to?' he asked after a
pause.
Helmi was brushing crumbs from his desk. 'I
think there was some guy at the British embassy
who knew the girl. Orts or something. Junior
attaché. That's about all I know.'
Khalifa scribbled the name on his pad and put it
away.
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'You think there's a connection?' asked Tauba.
'No idea,' said Khalifa. 'I can't see any obvious
link. It just feels . . .' He paused, and then, not
bothering to finish the sentence, held up the Iqbar
report. 'Can I get a copy of this?'
'Sure.'
'And I'd like to see the old man's shop. Is that
possible?'
'No problem.'
Tauba rooted through his desk and produced an
envelope. 'Address and keys. It's up in Khan al-
Khalili. We've done all the fingerprints and
forensics.'
He threw it over to Khalifa, who caught it and
stood.
'I should be back in a couple of hours.'
'Take your time. I'll be here till late. I'm always
bloody here till late.'
They shook hands and Khalifa started across
the office. He had almost reached the door when
Tauba called after him.
'Hey, I forgot to ask. Khalifa . . . your family's
not from Nazlat al-Sammam, are they?'
A momentary pause.
'Port Said,' said Khalifa and disappeared into
the corridor.
LUXOR
The biggest regret of Dravic's life, the only regret,
in fact, was that he hadn't killed the girl. After
fucking her he should have cut her throat and
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dumped her in a ditch somewhere. But he hadn't.
He'd let her crawl away. And of course she'd
crawled straight to the police and told them what
he'd done and bang! That had been the end of his
career.
OK, so he'd got a good lawyer and they'd
persuaded the jury it was consensual. Mud sticks,
however. The world of Egyptology is a small one
and before long everyone knew that Casper
Dravic had raped one of his dig volunteers and,
worse, got away with it. The teaching posts had
dried up, the concessions been refused, the
publishers stopped answering his calls. Thirty
years old and his career was over. Why oh why
hadn't he just killed her? It wasn't a mistake he'd
ever make again. That he had ever made again.
He shook his head to bring himself back to the
present and waved his hand at the cafe owner,
indicating he wanted more coffee. Beside him a
young couple, blond, Scandinavian, were hunched
over a guidebook marking things in it with a pen.
The girl was attractive, with full lips and long,
pale legs. He allowed himself to dwell for a
moment on the thought of her screaming in pained
ecstasy as he drove himself hard into her tight pink
anus, then forced his mind back to the business of
the tomb.
They'd spent most of the previous night remov-
ing the last of the artefacts – the wooden funeral
stelae, the basalt Anubis, the alabaster canopic
jars. All that remained now was the coffin itself,
with its brightly painted panels and clumsy hiero-
glyphic text. They'd take that out tonight.
Everything else had been crated up and sent south
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to the Sudan, from where it would be moved on to
the markets of Europe and the Far East.
It was a good haul, one of the best he'd seen.
Late Period, Twenty-seventh Dynasty, a hundred
separate objects, crudish workmanship but all in
good condition – should raise a few hundred
thousand or more. Which on 10 per cent com-
mission meant a nice fat pay-out for him.
Compared to the main prize, however, it was small
fry. Compared to the main prize every object he'd
ever smuggled was small fry. This was the big one.
The break he'd been waiting for. The end to all his
troubles.
Only if he found that missing piece, though.
That was the key. Lacage and the Mullray woman
had his future in their hands. Where were they?
What were they planning? How much did they
know?
His initial worry had been that they would take
the piece straight to the authorities. The fact that
they hadn't was a source both of relief and of
concern to him. Relief because it meant there was
still a chance of getting it back. Concern because it
suggested the two of them might be going after the
haul themselves.
That was his real fear now. Time was running
out, as Sayf al-Tha'r had said. They couldn't wait
for ever. The longer the two of them had the
piece the more chance there was of the prize slip-
ping from his grasp. All his hopes, all his
dreams . . .
'What are you doing?' he muttered to himself.
'What the fuck are you doing?'
There was a tut of disapproval from nearby.
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Looking up he saw the Scandinavian couple
staring at him.
'Yes?' he growled. 'Something wrong?'
They paid up hurriedly and left.
His coffee arrived and he slurped at it, gazing up
at the Theban Hills in front of him, brown and
massive against the pale-blue cushion of the sky.
What he couldn't figure out was how, if Lacage
and the girl were going for the prize themselves,
they could do it with just that one fragment. Sure,
Lacage was supposed to be one of the best
Egyptologists around. Maybe he could put it all
together from a single piece. Dravic doubted it,
however. They'd need more. And to get more
they'd have to come to Luxor. That was why he
was waiting here rather than in Cairo. This was
where they'd surface. He was sure of it. It was just
a matter of time. Which was, of course, something
he didn't have much of.
He finished his coffee and, reaching into his
jacket, pulled out a cigar, long and fat. He rolled it
between finger and thumb, enjoying the crackling
sound of the dried tobacco leaf, and then put it in his
mouth and puffed it into life. The warm caress of the
smoke on his palette calmed him and improved his
mood. He stretched out his legs and began thinking
about the Mullray woman, his mind wandering over
her body – the slim hips, the firm breasts, the tight
backside. The things he'd like to do to her. The
things he
would
do. The thought of it made him
purr with pleasure. Something she certainly
wouldn't be doing once he got started on her. He
looked down at the ungainly bulge in his trousers
and burst out laughing.
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23
CAIRO
Iqbar's shop was in a narrow street off Sharia al-
Muizz, the jostling thoroughfare which runs like
an artery through the heart of Cairo's Islamic
quarter. It took Khalifa a while to find the street
and even longer to find the shop, which had a
dirty steel security shutter pulled down across its
front and was half hidden behind a stall selling
nuts and sweetmeats. He tracked it down eventu-
ally and, throwing up the shutter, unlocked the
door and stepped inside, bells jangling above his
head.
The interior was cluttered and murky, with
racks of bric-a-brac rising from floor to ceiling,
and tangles of brass lamps, furniture and other
assorted oddments piled high in the corners.
Wooden masks peered down at him from the
walls; a stuffed bird hung from the ceiling. The air
smelled of leather, old metal and, it seemed to
Khalifa, death.
He looked around for a moment, eyes adjusting
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to the gloom, and then moved towards the counter
at the back of the shop, where an area of floor had
been circled in chalk, the planks stained dark
brown by Iqbar's blood. Several smaller chalk
circles, orbiting the larger one like moons around
a planet, highlighted traces of spongy grey cigar
ash. He stooped and prodded one and then,
straightening, moved round to the back of the
counter.
He didn't hold out much hope of finding any-
thing. If, as he suspected, Iqbar had bought
antiquities from Nayar, the chances were they had
either been sold on or removed by the people
who'd murdered him. Even if there was something
here he doubted he'd locate it. The antique dealers
of Cairo were notoriously skilful in concealing
their valuables. Still, it was worth having a poke
around.
He opened a couple of drawers and rummaged
through their contents. He lifted the bottom of a
large mirror hanging on the wall on the off chance
it might conceal a safe, which it didn't. Squeezing
past a pair of old wickerwork baskets he
wandered into a room at the back of the shop,
flicking a switch inside the door to turn on the
light.
It was a small room, cluttered like the rest of the
place, with a row of battered filing cabinets
against one wall and, in the corner, a life-sized
wooden statue in black and gold, a cheap repro-
duction of the guardian statues from the tomb of
Tutankhamun. Khalifa walked over to it and
looked it in the eyes.
'Boo!' he said.
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The filing cabinets were full to overflowing with
crumpled papers and after twenty minutes he gave
up trying to make any sense of them and went
back out into the shop.
'Like looking for a needle in a haystack,' he
muttered to himself, gazing at the junk-laden
shelves. 'And I don't even know if there
is
a needle
in the haystack.'
He poked around for over an hour, opening a
box here, a drawer there, before eventually giving
up. If there were any clues here to the old man's
murder they were lost somewhere deep among the
jumbled mayhem, and short of emptying the place
completely there was no way he was going to find
them. He took a last look behind the counter,
switched off the light in the back room and, with
a resigned sigh, took the keys out of his pocket
and moved towards the front door.
A face was looking at him through the glass.
It was a small face, dirty, pressed so close to the
pane that the tip of the nose had become flattened.
Khalifa came forward and opened the door. A
ragged-looking girl, no more than five or six years
old, was standing on the threshold, looking
intently past him into the shop behind. He
dropped to his haunches.
'Hello,' he said.
The girl seemed hardly to notice him, so focused
was she on the interior of the shop. He took her
hand.
'Hello,' he said again. 'My name's Yusuf.
What's yours?'
The girl's brown eyes flicked onto his face for a
moment before returning to the scene behind him.
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She withdrew her hand and pointed into the
gloom.
'There's a crocodile in there,' she said, indicat-
ing an old wooden chest with an intricately carved
brass lock.
'Is there?' Khalifa smiled, remembering how, as
a child, he had firmly believed there was a dragon
living beneath his parents' bed. 'And how do you
know that?'
'It's green,' she said, ignoring the question, 'and
at night it comes out and eats people.'
Her limbs were painfully thin, her belly dis-
tended. A street child, he guessed, sent out to
scavenge by parents who could find no other way
to support her. He brushed a tangle of hair away
from her eyes, sorry for her. No wonder the funda-
mentalists gained so much support, he thought.
Their methods might be grotesque, but at least