Read The Lost Army of Cambyses Online
Authors: Paul Sussman
Tags: #Thrillers, #Crime, #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective
the
filet mignon
fits the bill.'
'Has it got a sauce on it? I don't want anything
with a sauce on it. Just a plain steak.'
Squires summoned the waiter. 'The
filet
mignon,'
he asked, 'does it come with a sauce?'
'Yes, sir. A pepper sauce.'
'I don't want a pepper sauce,' insisted Massey.
'Just a plain steak. No shit on it. Can you do a
plain steak?'
'I'm sure we can, sir.'
'OK, give me one of those, medium rare, with
french fries.'
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'And to start, sir?'
'Christ, I don't know. What's that thing you're
having, Squires?'
'The seafood pancake.'
'OK, give me one of those. And medium rare on
the steak.'
'Jolly good,' smiled Squires. 'The seafood
pancake and quail for me, and could you please
bring the wine list.'
He handed his menu up to the waiter, who
bowed deferentially and disappeared.
Massey tore off half a bread roll and, smearing it
with butter, jammed it in his mouth. 'So what's
going on?' he asked, chewing.
'Well,' said Squires, watching the American's
mouth with a mixture of fascination and disgust,
'it seems our friends have finally turned up in
Luxor. Isn't that right, Jemal?'
'They got in this afternoon,' confirmed the
Egyptian.
'This whole charade is fucking ridiculous.'
Massey grunted. 'We know where the piece is.
Why don't we just go in and get it? Stop pussying
around.'
'Because there's too great a danger of giving
ourselves away,' explained Squires. 'We shouldn't
show our hand until we absolutely have to.'
'We're not playing pinochle here.'
The American sniffed. 'There's a lot riding on
this.'
'I appreciate that,' said Squires. 'For the
moment, however, it's better that we stay in
the background. Why take unnecessary risks when
Lacage and the girl can take them for us?'
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'I don't like it,' said Massey, chewing. 'I don't
fucking like it.'
'Everything will work out.'
'I mean, Sayf al-Tha'r . . .'
'Everything will work out,' repeated Squires, a
faint hint of annoyance creeping into his voice, 'so
long as we keep our nerve.'
The waiter came back with the wine list and,
returning his glasses to his nose, Squires began to
study it. Massey got to work buttering the second
half of his roll.
'There is one slight problem,' said Squires after
a moment, not raising his eyes.
'Here it comes,' growled Massey. 'What?'
'A policeman. From Luxor. It appears he's
found out about the missing hieroglyphs.'
'Fucking Jesus fuck! Do you have any idea
what's at stake here?'
'I have every idea,' said Squires, the annoyance
in his voice now unmistakable. 'I do not, however,
intend to get hysterical about it.'
'Don't you patronize me, you cock-sucking
limey—'
Jemal slammed his fist on the table, making
their cutlery jump and glasses rattle. 'Stop it,' he
hissed. 'This is not helpful.'
The three of them sank into an angry silence.
Massey devoured the rest of his roll. Squires
played distractedly with his fork. Jemal started
telling off his worry beads.
'Jemal is right,' said the Englishman eventually.
'Arguing among ourselves is less than productive.
The question is, what do we do about this fellow
from Luxor?'
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'I would have thought that was obvious,'
snapped Massey. 'This thing's too important to let
some hick paper-pusher screw everything up.'
'Holy God,' hissed Jemal. 'You're saying we
should kill him? A policeman?'
'No, we buy him a dress and take him dancing
for the night! What the fuck do you think I'm
saying?'
The Egyptian stared at Massey with undisguised
loathing, his fists clenching and unclenching on
the tablecloth. Squires laid aside the wine list and,
placing his hands together, rested his chin on the
tips of his fingers.
'Elimination does seem rather drastic in the
circumstances,' he said quietly. 'Using a sledge-
hammer to crack a nut and all that. I see no reason
why we shouldn't be able to solve the problem
without recourse to violence. Jemal?'
'I'll get him taken off the case,' he said. 'No
problem.'
'I think that would be best,' agreed Squires. 'A
dead policeman could lead to all sorts of un-
necessary complications. Make sure you keep an
eye on him, though.'
Jemal nodded.
'I still say we should take him out,' grumbled
Massey. 'Keep things clean.'
'It might come to that eventually,' said Squires.
'But for the moment I would suggest restraint is
the order of the day. This thing's led to too many
deaths already.'
'If you want a Nobel Peace Prize you're in the
wrong fucking business.'
Squires ignored the sarcasm and returned to his
299
examination of the wine list, running his finger up
and down the selection. At the far end of the
restaurant a man started playing the piano.
'There is one interesting thing about this police
chap,' he said. 'It seems he has a bit of a history
with Sayf al-Tha'r. Isn't that right, Jemal?'
'Apparently he has a score to settle,' said the
Egyptian, clicking his beads. 'Family business.'
'For fuck's sake,' snorted Massey.
'Yes, it is somewhat extraordinary, isn't it?'
Squires smiled, his composure now fully restored.
'What a tiny world we live in, eh? Ah! I do believe
those are our seafood pancakes approaching. A
half-bottle of Chablis to wash them down,
perhaps, and then onto a Burgundy for the main
course.'
He flapped open his napkin and laid it carefully
on his lap, waiting for his food to arrive.
Professor Mohammed al-Habibi's eyes were
aching. He rubbed them slowly, working the
knuckles of his clenched fists deep into the
wrinkled sockets, and for a moment the pain
lessened a little. As soon as he started looking at
the artefacts again the ache returned, as bad as
before, making his temples throb. It was a prob-
lem he often experienced these days. He was
getting old and his eyes could no longer take the
strain. He knew he ought to pack up and go home,
give himself a rest, but he couldn't. Not yet.
Not until he'd discovered everything the objects
had to tell him. Yusuf was his friend, after all. He
300
owed it to him. And, in a sense, to Ali too. Poor
Ali.
He poured another slug of sherry into his glass,
the last of the bottle, relit his pipe and, lifting his
magnifying glass, bent down to resume his
examination of the gold pectoral.
There was something puzzling about the objects
his young friend had brought him. Not so much in
the way they looked, but rather in the way they
felt. Artefacts were, to Habibi, like living things.
They sent out signals. Communicated. Provided
you knew how to listen, they could tell you all
sorts of interesting things. In this case, however,
the more he listened, the more perplexed he
became.
When he had first examined them, while
Khalifa was there, he had not been struck by any-
thing especially out of the ordinary. The artefacts
were of simple manufacture and common design,
easily datable, the same as dozens of similar
objects on display in the museum below.
It was only after Khalifa had left that he'd
started to have doubts. There was no particular
reason: just a niggling sense that despite their
apparent plainness, the objects were nonetheless
trying to tell him something specific.
'What are you saying?' he pondered aloud, rov-
ing across the face of the pectoral with his
magnifying glass. 'What do you want me to hear?'
It was completely dark in the office now, apart
from the pool of light cast by his desk lamp.
Occasionally he heard the footfall of a security
guard passing along the corridor outside, but
otherwise the museum was silent. A thick fug of
301
bluish pipe smoke hung over his head like a
raincloud.
He laid aside the pectoral and picked up the
dagger, holding it by the blade and turning
the handle back and forth in the light. It was a
simple piece, perfectly common, twelve inches
long, iron, with some crude bronze inlay at the top
of the blade and a strip of browned leather
wrapped tightly around the handle to improve the
grip. Typical of its period. He had authenticated
one almost exactly the same only a few months
previously.
He finished his sherry and took a puff on his
pipe, a cloud of smoke for a moment obscuring
the object in front of him. When he could see it
clearly again he noticed that the leather wrapping
was ever so slightly loose at the lower end of the
handle, close to where it joined the blade. He
tweaked it gently and the strip began to unwind.
At first he thought they were just tiny scratch
marks. Only when he twisted the handle so that
the glare of the lamp was not falling directly on it,
and held the magnifying glass right up close, did
he realize that the marks were actually letter signs.
Not Persian or Egyptian, as he would have
expected, but Greek. A series of tiny Greek letters
crudely inscribed into the metal of the handle.
ΔYMMAXOΣ MENENΔOY – Dymmachus, son of
Menendes. His eyes blinked in surprise.
'Well, well, well,' he muttered. 'So that's your
little secret, is it?'
He wrote the words down on the pad beside
him, spelling them out letter by letter, checking
and rechecking to make sure he had them right.
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Then he laid the dagger down, lifted the pad and
sat back in his chair.
'Where have I seen that before?' he said aloud.
'Where? Where?'
For twenty minutes he sat without moving,
staring into space, occasionally lifting his sherry
glass and tilting it up to his mouth, even though
there was no longer any sherry in it. Then,
suddenly, he threw aside the pad, scrambled to his
feet and made for the bookcase on the far side of
the room, moving surprisingly quickly for a man
his age.
'Impossible!' he said. 'It can't be!'
He ran his finger urgently along the rows of
books before eventually levering one from the
middle of the case: an old leather-bound volume
with thick, parchment-like pages and its title
inscribed in gold lettering on the spine:
Inscriptions grecques et latines de tombeaux des
rois ou syringes a Thebes. J. Baillet.
He hurried
back to his desk and, swiping his arms across it to
clear a space, laid the book down beneath the
lamp and began leafing rapidly through the pages.
Outside the security guard shouted, 'Good
evening, professor,' as he passed the door, but the
old man ignored the greeting, so engrossed was he
in the volume before him. The silence of the room
seemed to magnify the excited rasping of his
breath.
'It's impossible,' he muttered. 'Impossible! But,
my God, if it's not . . .'
303
28
LUXOR, THE THEBAN HILLS
It was too cold to lie naked for long, even behind
the windbreak. After they had made love they
pulled their clothes back on and, with Daniel
taking the knapsack, wandered further into the
hills, the wind pushing at their backs, the landscape
glowing a dull silver in the moonlight. Tara
clutched Daniel's arm, her body suffused with a
rich, warm glow, a delicious ache between her legs.
She had forgotten what a powerful lover he was.
'What are you looking for?' she asked after a
while, noticing the way his head was turning this
way and that, eyes scanning the shadowy slopes.
'Hmm? Oh, nothing really. It's just been a while
since I was last up here.'
She tightened her grip on his arm.