Read The Lost Army of Cambyses Online
Authors: Paul Sussman
Tags: #Thrillers, #Crime, #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective
over them, wielding a mace. In the last scene there
was only a single figure, still against the same
yellow background, with behind him, taller, a
young man holding an ankh-sign in his hand, and
wearing a headdress shaped like a lotus flower.
'It's telling a story,' said Daniel. 'These figures in
the upper register, they're soldiers. See: spears,
bows, shields. They seem to be marching across a
desert. And then in the next register, that figure
with the mace and the animal head, that's Seth, the
god of war and chaos. And deserts too. He's
striking them down. So it looks like they were
defeated in battle, although there's no indication
of who the enemy was. And then in the bottom
register that figure with the lotiform headdress,
that's Nefertum, god of regeneration and rebirth.'
'Meaning?'
Daniel shrugged. 'Maybe that the spirit of the
army lives on despite its defeat. Or that some of
the soldiers survived the battle. It's hard to be sure
with Egyptian symbolism. They thought very
differently from the way we do now.'
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He stared at the images for a while longer, then
turned away and shone the torch at the walls to
either side of the corridor opening, which were
covered in columns of neat black hieroglyphs. At
the bottom of the left-hand wall, about midway
along, was a small gap in the text.
'That's where our piece comes from,' he said.
'See, the snakes fit into the line along the bottom
of the wall.'
He squatted down, Tara at his side. The dark-
ness seemed to push in around them as though
they were immersed in a black liquid. She could
hear her heart beating.
'Well, go on then,' she urged. 'Put it back. It's
what we came here for.'
He glanced over at her, then swung the knap-
sack from his back, took out the box and,
removing the piece of plaster, fitted it carefully
back into position. Once it was in place it was
almost impossible to tell it had ever been taken
out.
'So what does it say?' she asked.
He looked over at her again, then stood, took a
few paces back and wove the torch over the
hieroglyphs.
'The text starts here,' he said, 'to the left of the
door, and reads top to bottom and right to left.'
He stared at the wall a while longer, and then
began to read, the torch beam rising and falling as
it followed the columns of text, his translation
swift and assured. In the narrow confines
of the tomb his voice took on a distant, echoing
quality, as though it was coming from far back in
time. Tara felt the hairs on her neck stand up.
330
'I, ib-wer-imenty and am laid here in year
twelve of the king of upper and lower Egypt Se-
tut-ra Tar-i-ush . . .
that's the Egyptian royal
titulary of the Persian emperor Darius . . .
day
four, first month of Akhet. Beloved of Darius, true
servant of his affection, king's protector beloved of
his lord, follower of the king, overseer of the army,
the justified, the faithful, the true. In Greece I was
at his side. In Lydia I was with him. In Persia I did
not fail him. In Ashkalon I was there.'
He paused. They had reached the bottom of the
third column.
'What does all that mean?' she asked.
'Well, it dates the tomb to the First
Persian Period. The Persians conquered Egypt
under Cambyses in about 525 BC. Darius
succeeded Cambyses in 522 BC. This guy died in
year twelve of Darius's reign, so about 510 BC.'
She could almost hear his mind whirring.
'This guy must have been one of Darius's
generals. That's what titles like
shemsu nesu,
follower of the king, and
mer-mesha,
overseer of
the army, usually mean. You've no idea how im-
portant this is. The tomb of one of the king's
generals. And from the sixth century, too. Almost
no burials from that period have ever been found
in Thebes. It's fabulous.'
'Go on,' she said. 'What does the rest say?'
He swung the torch up to the top of the fourth
column.
'The Nubians I destroyed at my master's bid-
ding, grinding them to dust, winning great fame.
The Greeks I made to bow low. The Libyans I
smote to the farthest horizon, and made to taste
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death. My sword was mighty. My strength was
great. I had no fear. The gods were with me.'
He flashed the torch downwards momentarily.
'OK. Our piece starts at the beginning of this
next column.'
He raised the beam again, and continued.
'In year three under the person of the king of
upper and lower Egypt Mes-u-ti-ra Kem-bit-jet . . .
again, an Egyptian royal titulary, Cambyses this
time . . .
before I found great fame,
in the third
month of peret, I, ib-wer-imenty
went into the
western desert, to sekhet-imit, to destroy the king's
enemies.'
He stopped again, a sudden, puzzled look on his
face.
'What?' she asked.
'Sekhet-imit, that's . . .'
He paused for a moment, thinking, and then,
without finishing his sentence, began translating
again, his voice slower now, more deliberate, as
though he was checking and rechecking every
word.
'At the place
of the pyramid, 90 iteru
to the
south and east of sekhet-imit, in the midst of
the valley of sand, as we took our noonday meal,
a great storm happened.
The world was black. The
sun no more. 50,000 went down into the sand. I
alone was spared by the mercy of the gods. Sixty
iteru I walked alone through the desert, south and
east to the land of the cows. Great was the heat.
Great thirst I suffered. Great hunger I suffered.
Many times I died. But I came to the land of the
cows. The Gods were with me. I was very great in
their favour
. . .'
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His voice trailed off. She looked over at him.
His lips were moving, but no sound was coming
out. Even in the enveloping blackness she could
see that his face had gone a deathly, luminous
white. His hand was trembling, causing the torch
beam to judder over the wall.
'My God,' he whispered, voice hoarse, as
though the darkness had somehow flooded his
throat.
'What?'
He didn't answer.
'What, Daniel?'
'It's the army of Cambyses.'
His eyes were wide, full of shock and triumph.
'What's the army of Cambyses?'
Again he didn't answer immediately, just stood
staring up at the wall, oblivious to her questions,
as though in a sort of trance. It was almost a
minute before he eventually shook his head, as
though to wake himself up. Taking her hand, he
led her across the chamber, back to the panel they
had been looking at earlier. He shone the torch up
at it.
'In 525 BC Cambyses of Persia conquered Egypt
and absorbed it into the Persian empire.' He could
barely keep the torch beam still. 'Some time there-
after, probably around 523 BC, he sent out two
armies from Thebes. He led the first one himself,
marching due south against the Ethiopians. The
second army was sent north-west across the desert
to destroy the oracle of Amun at the oasis of Siwa,
which the Egyptians knew as sekhet-imit, the
Place of the Palm Trees.'
He shone the torch up at the first of the three
333
images within the panel, a group of figures march-
ing across a desert.
'According to the Greek historian Herodotus,
who was writing about seventy-five years later,
the army reached an oasis called the Island of the
Blessed, which is probably modern al-Kharga.
Somewhere between there and Siwa, however, out
in the Great Sand Sea, it was overwhelmed by a
sandstorm and the entire army was destroyed.
Fifty thousand men wiped out, just like that.'
He dropped the torch to the second register, the
marching figures crushed beneath the mace of
Seth.
'No-one has ever known if the story was true.
This text proves it was. Not only that, but that one
person at least, this ib-wer-imenty, survived the
disaster. God knows how, but he did.' He lowered
the beam to the final register. 'Ib-wer-imenty with
Nefertum, god of regeneration and rebirth. That's
what this last scene means: the army was
destroyed, but our man survived.'
'But why is this so important?' she asked.
Without taking his eyes from the wall, he pulled
a cheroot from his pocket and lit it, the flare of the
match momentarily driving back the shadows and
illuminating the entire chamber.
'The mere fact that it confirms Herodotus is
significant enough. But there's more here, Tara.
Much more.'
He took her hand and led her back to the text.
'Look. Ib-wer-imenty doesn't just tell us he sur-
vived the sandstorm. He gives the precise location
where it overwhelmed the army. See: "At the place
of the pyramid, ninety
iteru
to the south and east
334
of sekhet-imit". I don't know what "the place of
the pyramid" is; presumably some sort of
pyramid-shaped limestone outcrop. But we do
know that an
iteru
is an ancient unit of measure-
ment, equivalent to about two kilometres. And
there's more further on: "Sixty
iteru
I walked
alone through the desert, south and east to the
land of the cows." The land of the cows is a trans-
lation of
ta-iht,
which was the ancient name for
al-Farafra, another oasis between Kharga and
Siwa. Don't you see, Tara? What we've got here is
effectively a map of where the army of Cambyses
was lost. Sixty
iteru
north-west of al-Farafra,
ninety
iteru
south-east of Siwa, at the place of the
pyramid. It's about as exact as you could ever get
in an ancient text. It's fabulous.'
It was hot in the tomb and his face was glisten-
ing with sweat. He pulled excitedly on his cheroot.
'Do you have any idea what this means? People
have been looking for the army of Cambyses for
thousands of years. It's become a sort of holy grail
for archaeologists. But the western desert's a big
place. All Herodotus says is that the army was lost
somewhere in the middle of it. That doesn't tell
you anything. It could be anywhere.
'With these indicators, however, you can pin-
point the spot almost precisely. The measurements
from Siwa and al-Farafra narrow it down to
perhaps a few dozen square miles. If you
surveyed that area from the air it shouldn't be too
difficult to locate a pyramid-shaped rock.
Anything like that would stick out from the dunes
like a sore thumb. You could find it in a couple of
days. Less.'
335
'But only if you had the measurements,' she
said, starting to understand.
'Exactly. That's why our piece of text is so
crucial. It's got the distance from Siwa, and part of
the hieroglyph indicating the distance from al-
Farafra. Without it you've got no more chance of
finding the army than any of the hundreds of other
explorers who've gone looking for it. No wonder
Sayf al-Tha'r wanted it so badly.'
He fell silent, staring up at the wall, eyes burn-
ing in the glow of the torch. Thoughts were
spinning through Tara's mind.
'How valuable would this army be?' she asked
after a long silence.
'An entire ancient army? Fifty thousand men,
full equipment, perfectly preserved under the
desert sands? Fuck, it would be the greatest find in
the history of archaeology. Nothing would come
close to it. Tutankhamun's tomb would look like a
cheap bric-a-brac shop by comparison. I mean
a couple of years ago a breastplate from this
period sold for over a hundred thousand dollars.
Provided he sold it off bit by bit and didn't flood
the market . . . Jesus, a find like this would make
Sayf al-Tha'r one of the richest men in the Middle
East. I dread to think what he could do with
resources like that at his disposal.'
They stood in silence. The beam of the torch
was starting to weaken, its light gradually soften-
ing from a crisp white to a flaccid yellow.
'And what about the British embassy?' asked
Tara. 'Squires and Jemal?'
'They must have found out about the tomb. If