Read The Lost Army of Cambyses Online
Authors: Paul Sussman
Tags: #Thrillers, #Crime, #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective
pectoral; a small terracotta ointment jar with the
face of the dwarf-god Bes stamped on it; and three
pale-blue faience
shabtis.
He examined them one by
one, turning them over in his hand, and then turned
to the girl. She was no longer there.
'Maia,' he called, standing and, when she didn't
reply, walking back through into the shop. 'Maia!'
She had gone. And so too, he noticed, had al-
Ghul's bronze lamp. He went to the front door
and stepped outside, but she was nowhere to be
seen.
'Goodbye, Maia,' he said quietly. 'May Allah
smile upon you.'
L U X O R
Suleiman al-Rashid was dozing on a mat in the
shade behind his mobile lavatory when he heard
the creak of metal steps as someone climbed
into the trailer above him.
Normally he would have gone round to see if
they needed toilet paper and to make sure he was
suitably positioned for any baksheesh they might
offer once they emerged. The midday heat was too
intense, however, and so he remained where he
was, head cradled on his arm, while from above
came the thump of feet on the hollow trailer floor.
He didn't immediately register anything un-
toward. There was, admittedly, a curious
splashing sound, but he presumed the customer
was simply ladling water from the bucket in the
corner of the trailer into the basin of the urinal to
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clean it out. There was no need to, since Suleiman
made a point of keeping the trailer spotless, but
some people, especially the Germans, were
obsessive about these things and, rolling onto his
side with a grunt, he left them to get on with it.
Then, however, he smelt petrol, and at the same
time heard a loud dripping as something leaked
from the trailer and splashed onto the sandy
ground beside him. He struggled to his feet.
'Hey!' he shouted, making his way round to the
front of the trailer. 'What's—'
A heavy blow from behind pitched him forward
onto the trailer steps.
'Get him in here,' hissed a voice from above.
A pair of strong arms circled Suleiman's waist
and he felt himself being heaved upwards.
Someone else grabbed him from above and he was
half dragged, half pushed into the trailer's interior.
He tried to struggle, but he was still groggy from
the blow to his head and offered only token
resistance. The stench of petrol made him gag.
'Cuff him,' came the voice. 'There. To the pipe.'
There was a click as something closed around
his wrist. His arm was yanked violently upwards
and then another click. He winced as the handcuff
bit into his flesh.
'Now petrol.'
Something was poured over his face and
djellaba. He tried to get out of the way, but his
arm was held fast by the cuff. The liquid stung
his sightless eyes and made his mouth burn. He
couldn't see his attackers, but then he didn't need
to. He knew who they were.
The pouring stopped. There was a clatter as an
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empty jerrycan was thrown aside and then the
clump of feet as his assailants jumped from
the trailer. For a moment everything was silent and
then he heard a match being struck. Curiously, he
felt no fear. Anger, yes, and sorrow for his family.
How would they survive without him? But not
fear.
'Ibn sharmouta! Ya kha-in!'
hissed a voice from
outside. 'Son of a whore! Traitor! This is what
happens to those who inform on Sayf al-Tha'r!'
There was a brief silence and then Suleiman
heard a whoosh of flame and felt a fierce heat
rushing towards him across the flimsy plywood
floor.
'May God have mercy on your souls!' he
whispered, yanking desperately at the cuff around
his wrist. 'May the Almighty forgive you!'
And then the fire swallowed him and all that
could be heard were his screams.
CAIRO
An hour after leaving Iqbar's shop, Khalifa was
sitting opposite Crispin Oates in his office at the
British embassy. He hadn't bothered to call before-
hand to ask for an appointment, had just turned
up unannounced. Oates clearly hadn't been
pleased about the intrusion, but had had little
choice other than to invite the detective in. He was
getting his own back now by being as patronizing
and unhelpful as possible, albeit with impeccable
English politeness.
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'And you've no idea where this Tara Mullray
has gone?' Khalifa asked.
Oates sighed wearily. 'None at all, Mr Khalifa.
As I explained to you just a few minutes ago I last
saw Ms Mullray the day before yesterday when I
picked her up from her hotel and brought her to
the embassy. Since then I've had no contact with
her at all. Um, I'm afraid it's a no-smoking office.'
Khalifa had just removed his cigarettes from his
jacket. He put them back again, hunching forward
slightly, the artefacts from Iqbar's shop weighing
heavy in his inside pocket.
'Was she acting strangely in any way?' he asked.
'Miss Mullray?'
'Yes. Miss Mullray.'
'How do you mean strangely?'
'I mean did she seem . . . preoccupied?'
'She had just found her father's body. I would
have thought we'd all seem a little preoccupied in
such circumstances, wouldn't you?'
'What I mean is . . . you must excuse my
English, it is not . . .'
'On the contrary, Mr Khalifa, your English is
excellent. Much better than my Arabic.'
'What I mean is, when you last saw Miss Mullray
did she appear as though she was in any sort of
trouble? Frightened, perhaps? Under threat?'
No, replied Oates, so far as he could recall she
had appeared none of these things. 'I have told all
this to the men from Giza, you know. Of course,
I'm more than happy to co-operate, but it does all
seem a little . . . repetitive.'
'I'm sorry,' said Khalifa. 'I'll try not to take up
too much more of your time.'
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He stayed for a further twenty minutes. The
more questions he asked the more convinced he
became that Oates knew more than he was letting
on. What he knew, however, and why he should
wish to keep it secret, were things he clearly had
no intention of revealing, and eventually Khalifa
decided he'd got as much as he was going to.
Pushing back his chair, he came to his feet.
'Thank you, Mr Orts,' he said. 'I am sorry to
have troubled you.'
'Not at all, Mr Khalifa. My pleasure. And it's
Oates. OATES.' He spelt it out.
'Of course. Apologies. And I am
Inspector
Khalifa.'
They shook hands stiffly and Khalifa started
towards the door. After a couple of paces, how-
ever, he stopped and, pulling out his notebook,
scribbled swiftly on a blank page.
'One last question. Does this mean anything to
you?'
He showed the page to Oates. On it was a
rough square, just as the girl had drawn it for him
in Iqbar's shop, with some scribbled hieroglyphs
inside and, along its bottom edge, a row of
serpents. Oates glanced down, his mouth tighten-
ing ever so slightly.
'No,' he said after a brief pause, 'I'm afraid not.'
Liar, thought Khalifa.
He held Oates's eyes for a moment and then
folded the notebook and returned it to his pocket.
'Oh well,' he said, 'just a long shot. Again,
thank you for your help.'
'I don't feel I've been very helpful at all,' said
Oates.
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'On the contrary. You've been extremely . . .
informative.'
He smiled and walked out of the door.
In his office Charles Squires flicked off the inter-
com on which he had been listening to the
exchange and sat back in his chair. For a while he
remained very still, staring up at the ceiling, a
slight grimace pinching his face, and then, sitting
forward again, he lifted the telephone and dialled
swiftly. There were three rings and then a click.
'Jemal,' he said, 'I think we might have a
problem.'
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24
LUXOR
They reached Luxor midway through the after-
noon, having been travelling for almost twenty
hours.
They could have done the journey in a third of
the time. Daniel, however, had insisted on taking
an extensive detour to avoid passing through
middle Egypt.
'South of Beni Suef the whole area's crawling
with fundamentalists,' he had explained. 'You
can't spit without Sayf al-Tha'r knowing about it.
And, anyway, there's a police roadblock at every
junction. Foreigners aren't supposed to travel
through the area without an escort. We'd be
picked up before we'd gone ten kilometres.'
Rather than go directly south as the crow flies,
therefore, following the Nile highway straight
down to Luxor, they had turned east at al-Wasta
across the desert.
'We'll cross to the Red Sea,' he had told her,
tracing their intended route on a map, 'and then
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follow the coast south to al-Quseir. Then we can
turn inland again and hit the Nile here, at Q'us,
just north of Luxor. That way we cut out the
whole of this middle stretch.'
'It seems a long way round.'
'Yes,' he agreed, 'but there are benefits. Like
getting to Luxor alive.'
Amazingly, given the circumstances, Tara had
enjoyed the journey. There hadn't been much
traffic on the road east and Daniel had pushed the
speedometer up past 140 kilometres per hour,
the sun dropping swiftly behind them until
suddenly it was dark and they were alone in the
middle of the desert. The air was clear and icy
cold, and above them a twinkling canopy of stars.
'It's beautiful,' she cried as they cut through the
emptiness. 'I've never seen so many stars.'
Daniel slowed slightly. 'The Egyptians thought
they were the children of Nut,' he called, 'the
goddess of the sky. She gave birth to them each
night and then swallowed them again in the morn-
ing. They also thought they were the souls of the
dead, waiting in the darkness for the return of
the sun god Ra.'
She tightened her grip around his waist, enjoy-
ing the warmth and firmness of his body. Suddenly
everything that had happened over the last two
days seemed to recede.
They stopped for the night in a small fishing
village by the sea, finding a room above a cafe
with two beds and a window overlooking the
water.
Daniel fell asleep almost immediately. Tara lay
awake late into the night, listening to the hiss of
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the sea and gazing at Daniel's face in the moon-
light, sunburnt and strong, the brow furrowed as
though his thoughts were troubled ones. He began
muttering and, unable to stop herself, she leaned
closer to hear. It was a name. A woman's name.
Mary something. Over and over again. Mary. Her
stomach tightened and, rolling away, she stared
out of the window, inexplicably saddened.
She said nothing of it the next morning and,
after a swift breakfast, they continued south with
the dawn, down past Hurghada and Port Safaga
and El-Hamarawein until eventually they came to
al-Quseir and turned west again, the wind blasting
into their faces, the rocky desert rushing past to
either side. Daniel kept the Jawa at full speed and
Tara buried her face in his back, dreading the
moment when the journey would end and they
would once again have to face the reality of their
situation.
They reached Q'us at two, and western Luxor
half an hour later. As the cars and buildings closed
in around them and the streets filled with people,
Tara's head slumped forward against Daniel's
back, as though a great weight had descended on
it. She let out a deep sigh, her lungs aching for a
cigarette.
'So what now?' she asked as they pulled onto the
forecourt of a small Mobil garage at the edge of
town.