Read The Lost Army of Cambyses Online
Authors: Paul Sussman
Tags: #Thrillers, #Crime, #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective
cut back to create a doorway. You can see the
ancient chisel marks.'
Half of the entrance was blocked with shale and
rubble, leaving a metre-wide opening at the top.
Daniel put his head through and flashed the torch
around in the pitch blackness. There was a sudden
flurry and something shot out into the night.
'What the fuck?' gasped Tara.
'Bats.' He smiled. 'They love tombs. Nothing to
worry about.'
He took another look around with the torch
and then clambered through the opening. Tara
came to her feet, ready to follow. As she did so she
trod on a slab of loose shale which slid from
beneath her foot, causing her to lose her balance.
She swayed for a moment, clawing desperately at
the sides of the gully, and then the entire shale bed
gave way and she was on her back and sliding
downwards towards the edge of the cliff, scree
rushing beneath her like water down a chute.
'Tara!' cried Daniel.
Her arms flailed wildly as she grappled for a
handhold. In the narrow funnel of the cleft the hiss
of slipping stone was magnified tenfold so that it
seemed as if she was caught up in a raging torrent.
Dislodged scree vomited out of the mouth of the
gully beneath her and disappeared into nothing-
ness. Daniel stood helplessly in the tomb doorway,
313
watching as she slid further and further down.
Only when she was almost at the cliff edge, and it
seemed certain that she would be dragged over it
by the force of sliding rubble, did she finally
manage to jam her foot against an outcrop of rock
and stop her descent. There was a long silence and
then the distant clatter of stones as they hit the
ground far below.
'Shit,' she gasped.
She lay still for a moment, breathing heavily,
and then, very carefully, stood up, keeping both
feet planted firmly against the walls of the gully,
where the rock was solid.
'Are you OK?' he called.
'Just about.'
'Stay there. Don't move.'
He clambered out of the tomb, shone the torch
beam across the shale, then edged his way care-
fully down towards her, grasping her outstretched
hand and half leading, half pulling her back up to
the top of the slope again. Her clothes and face
were grey with dust, her shirt torn at the elbow
and stained with blood.
'You're hurt,' he said.
'It's fine,' she replied, shaking the dust out of
her hair. 'Come on, let's see what's in the tomb.'
He smiled, despite himself. 'And I thought I was
obsessed. You should have been an archaeologist,
Tara.'
She grinned at him. 'Not enough excitement,'
she said.
Inside the entrance they found themselves in a
narrow sloping corridor. From this side, by the
314
light of the torch, they could see that the bottom
half of the doorway was blocked with a wall of
mud bricks, against which the scree had become
piled. For a long while Daniel stood in silence
gazing around him.
'Originally the whole doorway would have been
bricked up,' he said eventually. 'Over the years
more and more rubble would have got piled up
against it, until only the top part was left clear.
Whoever found the tomb knocked that in and left
the bottom half of the blocking intact.'
He flicked the torch to the side.
'See, there are the bricks.'
Swept up against the wall of the corridor was a
pile of whole and broken mud bricks. He poked
among them and lifted one up. On its face was
imprinted a design of nine kneeling men, their
hands tied behind their backs, with a seated jackal
above them.
'What's that?' she asked.
'The seal of the royal necropolis,' he said, smil-
ing to himself. 'Nine bound captives surmounted
by Anubis the jackal. If the door blocking was still
in place, with the necropolis seal on it, that means
the tomb was intact when it was found.
Untouched since antiquity. About as rare as they
get.'
He stared down at the brick for a moment
longer, then laid it gently back on the floor and
shone the torch down the corridor, its beam
punching a narrow hole through the enveloping
blackness. By its light they could see that the shaft
sloped gently downwards for thirty metres before
opening out into what looked like a chamber of
315
some sort. Beyond the margins of the torchlight
the darkness was thicker and more tangible than
any darkness Tara had ever known. They began to
move forwards, Daniel flashing the torch over the
neatly chiselled walls, ceiling and floor. After a few
paces, however, he stopped.
'What?' asked Tara.
'There's something moving down there.'
'Bats?'
'No, on the floor. There.'
He dropped the beam. Something was coming
towards them, fast.
'Daniel,' she said, trying to sound calm, 'stand
very still and don't make any sudden movements.'
BETWEEN CAIRO AND LUXOR
The night train to Luxor was less crowded than it
had been coming in the opposite direction and
Khalifa had almost an entire carriage to himself.
He removed his shoes, lit a cigarette and began
going through the files on Dravic, which Tauba
had had photocopied for him. Behind him, at the
far end of the carriage, two backpackers, a boy
and a girl, were playing cards. The files didn't
make pleasant reading. Born in 1951, in the
former East Germany, Dravic was the son of an SS
officer who had subsequently joined the
Communist Party and risen through the ranks to a
position of some prominence.
As a boy he had excelled at school, especially in
languages, and, aged only seventeen, had won a
316
place at the University of Rostock, where he had
gained a doctorate in Near Eastern Archaeology.
He had published his first book at the age of
twenty – an analysis of Minoan Linear A script –
and had thereafter produced a stream of other
works, one of which, on Late Period Greek settle-
ments in the Nile Delta, was still regarded as a
standard text on the subject.
Khalifa finished his cigarette and lit another
one, remembering how he'd read the Greek settle-
ments book for an essay he'd written at university.
He stared out of the window for a moment,
the landscape flat, dark and empty apart from the
occasional lights of a far-off house or village, then
returned his attention to the papers in front of
him.
From the outset Dravic's academic achieve-
ments had been overshadowed by a tendency to
violence. At the age of twelve he had put out a
fellow pupil's eye during a playground fight, only
narrowly escaping criminal proceedings after the
intervention of the local Party supremo, a friend of
his father's. Three years later he had been im-
plicated in the murder of a vagrant who had been
found burnt to death in a local park, and the
year after in the gang rape of a young Jewish
girl, on each occasion escaping punishment
because of his father's connections. Khalifa shook
his head, appalled.
The German had begun excavating in his early
twenties, first in Syria, then Sudan and then Egypt,
where he had worked for five consecutive seasons
at Naukratis in the Delta. Despite persistent
rumours of antiquities smuggling and worse, no
317
charge against him had ever been sustained, and
his career had flourished. There was a photograph
of him shaking hands with President Sadat and
another of him being presented with an award by
Erich Honecker.
He had seemed destined for great things. Then,
however, had come the incident with the dig
volunteer. Although it had occurred in Egypt, the
girl had been German, and that's where he'd been
tried. He'd got away with it, but this time the mud
had stuck. His research fellowship had been
revoked, his dig concessions cancelled, he had
stopped publishing.
That was two decades ago. Since then he had
earned his living on the antiquities market, putting
his expertise to use procuring and authenticating
items for various wealthy patrons. In 1994 he had
been arrested in Alexandria for possession of
stolen antiquities and had served three months in
Cairo's Tura prison, where the last known photo
of him had been taken. Khalifa held it up – a
black-and-white prison mug shot, the German
standing against a wall holding a card with a num-
ber on it to his chest, scowling at the camera, huge
and malevolent. Khalifa shivered.
After his release from Tura, Dravic had gone
underground, entering and leaving the country
illegally, organizing the smuggling of artefacts and
their sale on the black markets of Europe and the
Far East. Despite warrants for his arrest in seven
countries, and numerous sightings, he'd always
managed to keep one step ahead of the law.
Details of his recent movements were sketchy.
All that was known was that he'd started working
318
for Sayf al-Tha'r in the mid-1990s, and had been
with him ever since. There were rumours of secret
Swiss bank accounts, links with neo-Nazi organiz-
ations, even covert involvement with Western
intelligence agencies, but most of it was hearsay.
After 1994 the German had kept a low profile.
One thing was certain, however – he was about as
bad as they got.
Khalifa worked his way through to the end of
the file, then stood to stretch his legs, wandering
up to the far end of the carriage, where the two
backpackers had put away their cards and were
now listening to a cassette player. He nodded a
greeting and asked them where they were going.
They ignored him – probably worried I'm trying to
sell them something, he thought, smiling to himself
– and with a shrug he wandered back to his seat, lit
another Cleopatra and got started on the patholo-
gist's report on old man Iqbar. The backpackers'
music seemed to blend with the rhythm of the
train's wheels, as though both were part of the same
tune. He could feel his eyes drooping.
Just south of Beni Suef the train juddered to a
halt. It remained stationary for five minutes, emit-
ting a soft hissing sound as though catching its
breath, and then started moving again. Another
minute passed and then he heard the door of the
carriage open behind him. There was a pause, then
a shout and a crash. The music from the cassette
player stopped abruptly. He turned.
Three men in black djellabas were standing over
the backpackers, whose cassette player lay
smashed on the floor. One of the men grabbed the
boy by the hair, yanked his head back and, in a
319
movement so swift Khalifa barely saw it, slashed a
knife across his throat. Blood jetted out over the
carriage floor.
The detective leaped to his feet, reaching for his
gun. Then he realized he'd left it in Luxor and so
looked around wildly for something else to use as
a weapon. Someone had left a pile of books on the
seat opposite him. He began throwing them at
the men.
'Police!' he yelled. 'Drop your weapons.'
They laughed and began moving towards him.
He held his ground for a moment, then turned and
ran, crashing through the door at the end of the
carriage and into the next one along. There were
more people here, including a group of children
clutching brass lamps.
He ran forward between the seats, but snagged
his foot on a can of edible oil and fell. A hand
clasped his forehead and yanked his head
backwards.
'God help me!' he coughed. 'Allah protect me!'
A face loomed right up against his, huge, big as
a beach ball, half white, half purple.
'Poor little Ali,' chuckled the man. 'Ali, Ali, Ali!'
He was holding a trowel, diamond-shaped, its
edges sharpened. With a bellow of laughter he