Read The Lost Army of Cambyses Online
Authors: Paul Sussman
Tags: #Thrillers, #Crime, #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective
'Do you wish we hadn't?'
'What, made love?' He smiled. 'No, it was
wonderful. Why, do you?'
She pulled him to a halt and, standing on tiptoe,
kissed him passionately on the lips.
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'I'll take that as a no then,' he said, laughing.
They wandered on, arms round each other,
deeper and deeper into the hills, the world about
them deathly silent apart from the clunk of their
feet, the whisper of the wind and, occasionally, the
far-off howl of a wild dog.
So far as Tara could make out, they were cross-
ing a broad plateau on top of the massif. To their
right the land sloped upwards slightly, blocking
any view in that direction. To the left it ran flat for
several hundred yards before dropping away into
a shadowy confusion of cliffs and wadis. Ahead
loomed the distant outline of higher peaks,
black against the deep grey-blue of the sky. She
had no idea where they were going, nor did she
really care. She was happy just to be at his side,
holding him, feeling his warmth and strength and
power.
Eventually, after they had been walking for over
an hour, Daniel slowed and stopped. The path at
this point dipped slightly, crossing a shallow, dried-
up watercourse that cut directly across their way,
meandering from right to left like the track of
some enormous snake. Tara circled her arms
around his waist.
'You're trembling,' she said.
'I'm just cold. I'd forgotten how chilly it gets up
here at night.'
She dug her hands into the back pockets of his
jeans and nuzzled her face against his neck. 'I
suppose we ought to think about going back.
We've been away for almost three hours. Omar
might be worrying.'
'Yes,' he said, 'I suppose we should.'
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Neither of them moved. A shooting star flashed
above them.
'If it was light we could try going down a
different way,' he said eventually. 'There are all
sorts of paths you can follow. Best not to risk it in
the dark, though. These hills are full of old tomb
shafts. If you stray off the track and fall into one,
chances are you won't get out again. A few years
ago a Canadian woman went into one over by
Deir el-Bahri. No-one heard her screaming. She
eventually died of starvation. When they found
her body . . .'
He stopped suddenly, body tensing.
'What?' said Tara.
'I thought I heard . . . Listen!'
She tilted her head but could hear nothing but
the gusting of the breeze.
'What?' she repeated.
'There was a . . . there, again! Listen!'
Now she could hear it too. Away to their left,
towards the cliffs. A faint clanking of stones, as if a
hammer was being tapped lightly on an anvil.
Someone was coming towards them. She strained
her eyes, trying to make them out, but it was too
dark.
'Probably an army patrol,' said Daniel, drop-
ping his voice. 'We'd better make ourselves
scarce.'
He pulled her across the watercourse and round
behind a huge boulder on its far side, where they
crouched down in the shadows.
'What's the problem?' she whispered.
'They get suspicious if anyone's up here after
dark. Think they're up to no good. We're
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Westerners, so the chances are there wouldn't be
any problems, but in our current situation I think
it's best if we avoid any brushes with the
authorities.'
They peered over the top of the boulder.
'What if they see us?' she asked.
'Stay where you are and make sure they know
you're a tourist. These guys are just young
conscripts and from what I've heard they're more
than a little trigger happy.'
The sound of footsteps was unmistakable now.
There were muffled voices too, and the low, dirge-
like sound of someone singing. Tara bit her lip.
Sod's law, she thought, after all they'd been
through, to end up getting shot by accident. She
could feel Daniel's hand on her arm. His grip was
tense.
It took another minute for the patrol to come
into sight. One moment the landscape was empty,
a confused mesh of shadow and half-light, then,
suddenly, figures began to emerge, moving along
the bed of the dried-up water channel. Initially
they all seemed to merge together, a single
silhouette swaying against the background gloom.
Gradually, however, their outlines grew sharper
until eventually Tara could see them clearly in
the moonlight: nine men, walking in single file, the
ones at the rear carrying what looked like a coffin.
Striding at the head of the line, slightly in front of
the others, was a huge figure in a pale suit. Tara's
insides lurched violently.
'Oh God,' she hissed. 'It's him!'
She leaned out to get a better view, her foot
dislodging a small shower of pebbly gravel down
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into the watercourse. The clatter seemed to fill the
night. Daniel grabbed her arm and pulled her
around the back of the rock out of sight, clamping
his hand over her mouth.
The two of them remained completely still,
hardly daring to breathe. The footsteps came
nearer and nearer, clumping up the rocky channel
until they were so close that Tara could make out
the individual voices of the men. It seemed
inevitable she and Daniel would be found and her
leg muscles tightened, ready to run. At the last
moment, however, when the men were practically
on top of them and she could actually smell the
odour of Dravic's cigar, they suddenly turned aside
onto the path and moved off at right angles to the
watercourse, away from the Nile valley, the sound
of their feet gradually receding as they trudged
deeper into the hills.
For several minutes Tara and Daniel remained
where they were. Then slowly, cautiously, Daniel
came to his feet and peered over the top of the
rock. She came up beside him, watching as
the column slowly dissolved into the shadows.
'What were they doing up here?' she whispered.
'They've been in the tomb.'
She looked at him questioningly.
'Well, what the hell else would they be doing up
here? Having a quiet evening stroll? With a
coffin?'
He stepped out from behind the rock and gazed
after the men.
'They must know a different way down,' he
said. 'One that avoids going past the guards'
huts around the Valley of the Kings. Like I said,
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these hills are full of paths if you know where to
look.'
He stood staring into the darkness for a
moment, then, drawing a deep breath, thrust his
arms through the straps of the knapsack and
swung it onto his back.
'I want you to go back to Omar's,' he said, tak-
ing her arm and steering her back onto the path.
'Just follow the track back to the top of the Qurn
and then down the way we came. Don't stray off
it. When you get to the bottom, go to Omar's
house and stay there.'
'What are you going to do?'
'Don't worry about me. Just go.'
She shook herself free. 'You're going to look for
the tomb, aren't you?'
'Of course I'm going to look for the bloody
tomb! It's what we came here for, isn't it? Now go.
I'll follow you down.'
He tried to grab her again, but she swiped his
hand away.
'I'm going with you.'
'Tara, I know these hills. It's better if I go alone.'
'We go together. I want to know what's in there
as much as you.'
'For Christ's sake, Tara, I haven't got time to
argue! They might come back again!'
'Then we'd better get a move on.'
She stepped past him and started down the
watercourse. He came after her and, seizing her
shoulder, swung her roughly round.
'Please, Tara! You don't understand. These hills
. . . they're dangerous. I've worked out here, I
know my way around. You'll be . . .'
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'What, Daniel?' she snapped, eyes flashing. 'An
encumbrance? Is that what I'll be?'
'No, not an encumbrance, I just . . . I don't want
you to get hurt.'
There was an edge of desperation to his voice.
Despite the wind his forehead was peppered with
beads of sweat. She could feel his body shaking
beside her.
'I don't want you to get hurt,' he repeated.
'Can't you understand that? This isn't a game.'
For a brief moment they stood in silence, eyes
burning into each other. Then she shook her arm
free.
'You don't owe me anything, Daniel. You have
no debts to pay. Nothing to prove. We're in this
together. If you go, I go. OK?'
He opened his mouth to argue, but her eyes told
him it would be useless.
'You don't know what you're getting into,' he
mumbled.
'Whatever it is I'm already in it,' she replied. 'So
there's not much point being careful now. I think
we should get a move on.'
She came up on tiptoe and kissed his chin.
'I just don't want you to get hurt,' he said again,
impotently.
'Did it ever occur to you that I don't want you
to get hurt either?'
They followed the bed of the dried-up water
channel, tracing the route they had seen Dravic
and his men following. The night air was cold and
shreds of mist had started to appear, floating just
above the ground, glowing in the moonlight like
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will-o'-the-wisps. A wild dog began howling in the
distance.
For two hundred metres the channel wound
across the flat plateau. Then the land began to dip
away and the watercourse sloped with it, down
towards the southern edge of the massif.
'The hills on this side end in a series of cliffs,'
said Daniel, peering ahead through the darkness.
'The tomb's probably cut into one of those, some-
where near the line of this watercourse. Where,
though, is anyone's guess. It could be completely
inaccessible without proper climbing equipment.'
They continued downwards, the water channel
gradually turning into a steep, narrow gully, its
sides rising like walls to the left and right of them.
Its floor became choked with boulders and loose
shale and they had to pick their way carefully, dis-
lodging flurries of biscuit-like scree with every
step. Daniel pulled a mini Maglite from his pocket
and turned it on, playing the beam down the gully.
'If this lot starts sliding, we're dead,' he
muttered. 'It'll sweep us down and over the cliff
like a waterfall. If it gets much steeper, we'll have
to go back. Christ knows how they got that coffin
up here.'
Further and further they went, the gully drop-
ping ever more precipitously, its floor becoming
increasingly treacherous underfoot. Its walls were
now so close together they could touch either side
with their outstretched arms. Twice Daniel urged
Tara to go back and let him continue alone, twice
she insisted on staying with him.
'I've come this far,' she said. 'I'm not giving up
now.'
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Eventually they came to a point where the gully
bottom suddenly stepped vertically downwards,
dropping six metres onto a slope of shale, steep
and slippery as a playground slide. The slope ran
down for another twenty metres, and then,
suddenly, as if a door had been thrown open, the
walls of the gully disappeared and there was
nothing, just a column of sky and, far beneath, the
distant glimmer of a flat, silvery plain.
'That's the cliff edge,' said Daniel, pointing with
the torch beam. 'Beyond that it's a hundred-metre
drop straight down. We can't go any further.'
He gripped a crack in the gully wall, tested it to
make sure it could take his weight, and leaned out
over the edge of the step, shining his torch
downwards.
'Is there anything down there?' asked Tara.
'There's some sort of opening,' he said. 'It cuts
back into the rock underneath where we're
standing.'
He leaned out further.
'I can't see much. It's choked with scree. It's
definitely an entrance of some sort, though.' He
pulled himself back and handed her the torch.
'Hold this for me. And keep it pointing
downwards.'
He turned and, using the gully walls for
support, swung himself over the edge of the step
and down towards the shale slide below. He
moved fast, as though used to this sort of terrain,
and within thirty seconds was at the bottom. Tara
followed more slowly, testing each foothold before
she put her weight on it, fingers clasping at the
rock.
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At the bottom she found Daniel squatting in
front of a small rectangular entrance cut back into
the face of the step.
'Is this it?' she whispered.
'Well, it's definitely a tomb,' he said, taking the
torch from her. 'See, the rock's been deliberately