Read The Lost Army of Cambyses Online
Authors: Paul Sussman
Tags: #Thrillers, #Crime, #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective
they tried to reach out to these people, to offer
them some hope of a better future.
He came to his feet.
'Do you like candy?' he asked.
For the first time the girl gave him her full
attention. 'Yes,' she said.
'Wait here a moment.'
He went outside to the sweet stall in front of the
shop, where he bought two large slabs of pink
sugar-cake. When he came back he found that the
girl had wandered further into the shop. He
handed her the candy and she began to nibble it.
'Do you know what's in there?' she said, point-
ing at a large brass lamp.
'I don't, no.'
'A genie,' she replied, mouth full. 'He's called
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al-Ghul. He's ten million years old and can turn
himself into things. When the men came I wanted
him to help Mr Iqbar, but he didn't.' She said it so
innocently that it was a moment before Khalifa
realized the significance of her words. Laying his
hand gently on her shoulder, he turned her
towards him.
'You were here when the men came and hurt Mr
Iqbar?'
The girl was concentrating on her candy slab
and made no reply. Rather than push her he just
stood where he was, silent, waiting for her to
finish her sweet.
'What's your name again?' she asked eventually,
looking up.
'Yusuf,' he replied. 'And yours?'
'Maia.'
'That's a pretty name.'
She was examining her second candy slab. 'Can
I keep this till later?' she asked.
'Of course.'
She made her way round to the back of the
counter, where she pulled out a piece of tissue
paper and wrapped up the candy, putting it in the
pocket of her dress.
'Do you want to see something?' she asked.
'OK.'
'Close your eyes, then.'
Khalifa did as he was asked. He heard the soft
patter of feet as she came out from behind the
counter and hurried towards the back of the shop.
'Now open them,' she said.
He did so. She had disappeared.
He waited for a moment and then moved slowly
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in the direction from which her voice had come,
peering to left and right into the gloom, until
eventually he spotted the top of her head peeping
out above the old wickerwork baskets.
'That's a good hiding place,' he said, leaning over.
She looked up at him and smiled. Slowly, how-
ever, the smile seemed to tighten and collapse in
on itself, and suddenly she was weeping un-
controllably, hot tears cutting lines through the
muck of her face, her tiny body trembling like a
leaf. He reached over and lifted her up, holding
her close against his shoulder.
'There, there,' he whispered, stroking her filthy
hair. 'Everything's going to be OK, Maia.
Everything will be fine.'
He began pacing up and down the shop, hum-
ming an old lullaby his mother used to sing to
him, allowing her tears to run their course.
Eventually the trembling began to subside and her
breathing returned to normal.
'You were hiding behind the baskets when the
men came, weren't you, Maia?' he said quietly.
She nodded.
'Can you tell me about them?'
A long pause, and then: 'There were three,' she
whispered in his ear. Another pause, and then:
'One had a hole in his head.'
She leaned away from him a little.
'Here!' she said, touching Khalifa's forehead
with her finger. 'And another one was big like a
giant, and white, and he had a funny face.'
'Funny?'
'It was purple,' she said, running her hand down
the side of his cheek. 'Here it was purple. And here
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it was white. And he had a thing like a knife that
he hurt Mr Iqbar with. And the other two were
holding him. And I wanted al-Ghul to come out
and help, but he didn't.'
She was talking fast now, the story spilling out
of her in a breathless jumble of words: how the
bad men had come and started asking Iqbar
questions; how she'd watched from her secret
hiding place; how they'd cut old Iqbar and con-
tinued to cut him even after he'd told them
everything they wanted to know; how after they'd
gone she'd been scared because there were ghosts
in the shop, and had run away, and hadn't told
anybody because if her mother had known she
was with Iqbar rather than out begging she would
have beaten her.
Khalifa listened quietly, stroking the girl's hair,
allowing her to tell the story in her own way,
slowly piecing together the narrative from her
rambling commentary. When, finally, she had
finished speaking, stopping suddenly in the middle
of a sentence like a toy whose battery has run out,
he lifted her onto the counter and, removing his
handkerchief, dabbed her eyes dry. She pulled out
her second piece of sugar candy and began
nibbling at its corner.
'You mustn't be cross with al-Ghul, you know,'
he said, wiping away the snot beneath her nose.
'I'm sure he wanted to help. But he couldn't get
out of his lamp, you see.'
She looked up at him over her candy. 'Why?'
'Because a genie can only come out of his lamp
if someone rubs it. You have to summon him into
our world.'
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Her brow furrowed as she absorbed this in-
formation, and then a small smile curled across
her mouth, as though a friend whom she had
thought had wronged her had somehow proved to
be loyal after all.
'Shall we rub the lamp now?' she asked.
'Well, we could,' replied Khalifa, 'but you have
to remember that you can only summon a genie
three times. And it would be a shame to summon
him for no reason, wouldn't it?'
Again the girl's brow furrowed.
'Yes,' she said eventually. And then, almost as
an afterthought, 'I like you.'
'And I like you too, Maia. You're a very brave
girl.'
He waited a moment and then added, 'Maia, I
need to ask you some questions.'
She didn't reply immediately, just bit off another
piece of candy and started swinging her legs so
that the heels banged against the front of the
counter.
'You see, I want to catch the people who hurt
Mr Iqbar. And I think you can help me. Will you
help me?'
Her heels continued to thud metronomically
against the counter-front.
'OK,' she said.
He heaved himself up beside her. She snuggled
up against him.
'You said that the bad men wanted something
from Mr Iqbar, Maia. Can you remember what it
was?'
She thought for a moment and then shook her
head.
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'Are you sure?'
Again a shake of the head.
'Can you remember what Mr Iqbar told the
men? What he said to them when they were hurt-
ing him?'
'He said it was sold,' she replied.
'And who did he say he'd sold it to? Can you
remember?'
She looked down and screwed up her face,
thinking, watching her feet as they rose and fell.
When she eventually looked up at him her ex-
pression was apologetic.
'It's OK,' he said, stroking her hair. 'You're
doing fine. Just fine.'
He needed to help her more. Give her some
clues to jog her memory. He thought about his
earlier conversation with Tauba and decided to try
a long shot.
'Did Mr Iqbar say he'd sold this thing to an
Englishman?'
A sudden, vigorous nod.
'Did he say he'd sold it to an Englishman who
was working at a place called Saqqara?' He said
the word slowly, spelling it out. There was a brief
pause and then another nod. He decided to
backtrack.
'Maia, can you remember a man coming into
this shop a few days ago?'
He had seen Professor Mullray lecture a couple
of times at the American University, years ago, and
scoured his brain now for an image of the man.
'He would have been a tall man, Maia. Old.
With lots of white hair, and funny little round
glasses and . . .'
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She interrupted him, excited. 'He could pull his
thumb off!' she cried. 'It was funny.'
He had come into the shop several days ago, she
explained, and while Iqbar had gone to look for
something in the room at the back, he had asked
her if she wanted to see a magic trick and when
she had said, 'Yes!' he had gripped his thumb and
pulled it right off his hand. It had made her laugh,
she said.
'And did he buy something from Mr Iqbar?'
asked Khalifa.
She worked one of her fingers up into her
nostril. 'A picture,' she said.
'A picture?'
She removed the finger, its tip glistening, and
drew a square on the counter-top.
'It was like this. There were snakes along the
bottom. And . . .' She paused, searching for the
right word. '. . . shapes,' she said eventually.
Shapes, thought Khalifa. Shapes. It could be
hieroglyphs. An object with hieroglyphs on it.
'I helped Mr Iqbar wrap it up,' the girl con-
tinued. 'In a box. I always helped him wrap things
up.'
She bit into her candy. Khalifa slipped from the
counter and began pacing up and down the shop.
These are the pieces of the jigsaw, he thought to
himself: Nayar comes to Cairo and sells some
artefact to Iqbar. Mullray buys it from Iqbar and
takes it back to Saqqara. Nayar is killed. Iqbar is
killed. Mullray dies of a heart attack, which might
or might not be a coincidence. Mullray's daughter
comes to Saqqara and removes the object. People
unknown try to stop her.
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Far from becoming clearer, the whole thing
seemed more confused than ever. What was
Mullray doing handling stolen antiquities? What
exactly had happened yesterday at Saqqara? How
was Mullray's daughter involved?
The object, he thought to himself. That's the
key. What is this object everyone wants so badly?
What is it? What? What?
He turned back to the girl. There was no point
asking her about the picture again. Clearly she'd
told him everything she could about it. The only
other possibility was that she knew of other
artefacts Iqbar had received from Nayar and
which might, just might, still be on the premises
somewhere.
'Maia,' he asked gently, 'did Mr Iqbar have
a secret hiding place here in the shop? A
special place where he put all his important
things?'
She didn't reply, her eyes revolving away from
his and coming to rest on her knees. Something
about her manner – the tightness of her mouth,
her clenched fists – told him his question had
struck a chord.
'Please help me, Maia. Please.'
Still she didn't say anything.
'I think Mr Iqbar would want you to tell me,' he
said, taking her hands. 'Because if you don't I can't
catch the people who did those bad things to him.'
She was silent for a moment longer and then
looked up at him.
'If I show you where it is can I have al-Ghul's
lamp?'
Khalifa smiled and lifted her to the ground.
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'That sounds like a fair deal to me. You show
me the hiding place, you get the genie.'
The girl chuckled, pleased with the bargain,
and, taking Khalifa's hand, pulled him into the
room at the back of the shop.
'I'm the only person in the world who knows
about it,' she said, going up to the wooden
guardian statue in the corner of the room. 'Even
the ghosts don't know. It's a secret.'
The statue was black, with a gold headdress,
staff and sandals, and a splayed gold kilt. The girl
placed her hand on the underside of the kilt, which
appeared to be solid wood, and pushed hard.
There was a faint click and a hidden drawer
slowly descended, like a clip from the butt of a
pistol. The girl took it from its slot and laid it on
the floor, then turned back to the statue and care-
fully unscrewed one of its toes, revealing a cavity
from which she removed a small metal key. This
she inserted into a lock in the lid of the drawer,
turning it twice and opening it.
'Good, isn't it?' she said.
'It certainly is,' said Khalifa, kneeling beside her.
'Very good.'
The drawer was divided into two compart-
ments. In one was a thick roll of banknotes, some
legal documents and a jar full of nuggets of uncut
turquoise. In the other was a cloth bundle done up
with string. Khalifa removed the bundle and
untied the string, letting out a low whistle when he
saw what was inside.
There were seven objects: an iron dagger with a
rough leather strip wrapped around its handle; a
silver amulet in the shape of a Djed pillar; a gold
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