Read The Lost Army of Cambyses Online
Authors: Paul Sussman
Tags: #Thrillers, #Crime, #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective
vicinity, as though he had not been alone when
the accident happened. The body was so badly dis-
figured it could only be conclusively identified
after dental records had been sent over from the
United States.
27
3
L O N D O N , FOURTEEN MONTHS LATER
Dr Tara Mullray brushed a strand of coppery hair
from her eyes and continued along the gantry. It
was warm up there under the lamps and a sheen
of sweat glowed on her smooth, pale forehead.
Beneath, through the ventilation holes in the tops
of their tanks, she caught brief glimpses of the
snakes, but she paid them no more attention than
they did her. She'd worked in the reptile house for
over four years and the novelty of its inhabitants
had long since worn off.
She passed the rock python, the puff adder, the
carpet viper and the Gabon viper, eventually coming
to a halt above the black-necked cobra. It was curled
in the corner of its tank, but as soon as she arrived
it raised its head, tongue flickering, its thick, olive-
brown body moving from side to side like a
metronome.
'Hi, Joey,' she said, putting down the bin and
snake hook she was carrying and squatting on the
gantry. 'How are you feeling today?'
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The snake probed the underside of the tank's
lid, inquisitive. She put on a pair of thick leather
gloves and also protective goggles, for the cobra
could, and did, spit venom.
'OK, lover boy,' she said, grasping the snake
hook. 'Medication time.'
She bent forward and eased the top off the tank,
leaning backwards as the snake's head rose to
meet her, its hood slightly distended. In one clean,
choreographed movement she grasped the handle
of the bin lid, scooped the snake up with the hook
and, keeping her eyes on it all the time, dropped it
into the bin and slammed the lid down on top.
From inside came a soft slithering sound as the
cobra explored its new surroundings.
'It's for your own good, Joey,' she said. 'Don't
be getting angry now.'
The black-necked cobra was the one snake in
the collection she didn't like. With the others, even
the taipan, she was perfectly at ease. The cobra,
however, always made her feel nervous. It was
crafty and aggressive, and had a bad temper. It had
bitten her once, a year ago, as she removed it from
its tank for cleaning. She'd hooked it too far down
the body and it had managed to swing round and
lunge at the back of her bare hand. Fortunately it
was just a dry bite with no venom injected, but it
had shaken her. In almost ten years of working
with snakes she'd never before been bitten. Since
then she had treated it with the utmost caution
and always wore gloves when she had to handle it,
something she didn't do with the other snakes. She
checked the lid to make sure it was secure and,
lifting the bin, set off back down the gantry,
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manoeuvring her way carefully down a set of steps
at the end and walking along a corridor to her
office. She could feel the snake moving inside the
container and slowed her step, trying not to jolt it
too much. No point in disturbing it more than was
necessary.
Inside the office Alexandra, her assistant, was
waiting. Together they removed the cobra from
the bin and laid it out on a bench, Alexandra hold-
ing it flat while Tara squatted down to examine it.
'It should have healed by now,' she sighed,
probing an area midway along the snake's back
where the scales were swollen and sore. 'He's been
rubbing it against his rock again. I think we
should leave his tank bare for a while to give it
time to mend.'
She removed some antiseptic from a cupboard
and began gently cleaning the wound. The snake's
tongue flicked in and out, its black eyes staring up
at her menacingly.
'What time's your flight?' asked Alexandra.
'Six,' replied Tara, glancing up at the clock on
the wall. 'I'm going to have to go as soon as I've
finished here.'
'I wish my dad lived abroad. It makes the
relationship seem so much more exotic.'
Tara smiled. 'There are many ways you could
describe my relationship with my father, Alex, but
exotic isn't one of them. Careful of his head there.'
She finished cleaning the affected area and,
squeezing a blob of cream onto her finger, smeared
it along the snake's flank.
'While I'm away he needs to be cleaned every
couple of days, OK? And keep up with the
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antibiotics until Friday. I don't want the cellulitis
spreading.'
'Just go and have a good time,' said Alexandra.
'I'll call at the end of the week to make sure
there aren't any complications.'
'Will you stop worrying? Everything'll be fine.
Believe it or not the zoo can survive without you
for two weeks.'
Tara smiled. Alexandra was right. She got too
intense about her work. It was a trait she'd in-
herited from her father. This would be the first
proper holiday she'd had for two years and she
knew she ought to make the most of it. She
squeezed her assistant's arm.
'Sorry. Over-reacting.'
'I mean it's not like the snakes are going to miss
you, is it? They don't have feelings.'
Tara assumed a mock-insulted face. 'How dare
you talk about my babies like that! They'll cry for
me every night I'm away.'
They both laughed. Tara took the snake hook
and, working together, they returned the cobra to
its bin.
'You OK to put him back?'
'Sure,' said Alexandra. 'Just go.'
Tara grabbed her coat and crash helmet and
headed for the door.
'Antibiotics till Friday, remember.'
'Go, for Christ's sake!'
'And don't forget to take out his stone.'
'Jesus, Tara!'
Alexandra snatched up a cloth and threw it.
Tara ducked and, laughing, ran away down the
corridor.
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'And make sure you wear the goggles when you
put him back,' she called over her shoulder.
'You know what a bastard he is after he's had his
medication!'
The afternoon traffic was heavy, but she wove
skilfully through it on her moped, crossing
the Thames at Vauxhall Bridge and opening the
throttle for the last couple of miles down to
Brixton. Every now and then she checked her
watch. Her flight left in just over three hours and
she hadn't even packed yet.
'Bollocks,' she muttered beneath her helmet.
She lived alone, in a cavernous basement flat
backing onto Brockwell Park. She'd bought it five
years ago, with money her mother left her, and her
best friend Jenny had moved into the spare room
as a lodger.
For a couple of years they'd lived a life of care-
free bohemianism, throwing parties, drifting in
and out of relationships, not taking anything too
seriously. Then Jenny had met Nick and within a
few months they'd moved in together, leaving Tara
to manage the flat alone. The mortgage repay-
ments were ruinous, but she didn't take in another
lodger. She enjoyed having her own space. She
sometimes wondered if she could ever settle down
with a man in the way Jenny had. Once, years ago,
there had been someone, but that was long since
over. On the whole she was happy with her own
company.
The flat was a mess when she came in. She
poured herself a glass of wine, stuck on a Lou
Reed CD and walked through to the study,
32
jabbing the 'Play' button on the answerphone. A
metallic female voice announced, 'You have six
messages.'
Two were from Nigel, an old university friend,
the first inviting her to dinner on Saturday, the
second cancelling the invitation because he'd
remembered she was going away. One was from
Jenny warning her not to go on any camel rides
because all the handlers were perverts, one from a
school confirming a talk she was to give on snakes
and one from Harry, a stockbroker who'd been
pursuing her for two months and whose calls she
never returned. The final message was from her
father.
'Tara, I was wondering if you could bring me
some Scotch. And
The Times.
If there are any
problems call me, otherwise I'll meet you at the
airport. I'm, uh . . . looking forward to seeing you.
Yes, um, really looking forward to it. Bye then.'
She smiled. He always sounded so awkward
when he tried to say something affectionate. Like
most academics Professor Michael Mullray was
only really at home in the world of ideas.
Emotions got in the way of clear thinking. That
was why he and her mother had split up. Because
he couldn't cope with her need for feeling. Even
when she'd died six years ago he'd struggled to
show any emotion. At her funeral he'd sat at the
back, alone, expressionless, lost in his own
thoughts, and left immediately afterwards to give
a lecture in Oxford.
She finished her wine and went into the kitchen
to refill her glass. She knew she ought to tidy the
flat, but time was pressing, so she contented
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herself with taking out the rubbish and doing the
washing up before going into the bedroom to
pack.
She hadn't seen her father for almost a year, not
since he was last in England. They spoke on the
telephone occasionally, but the conversations were
functional rather than warm. He would tell her
about some new object he'd unearthed, or a class he
was teaching; she'd dredge up some gossip about
friends and work. The calls rarely lasted longer than
a few minutes. Each year he sent her a birthday card
and each year it arrived a week late.
She'd thus been surprised when last month, out
of the blue, he'd called and invited her to stay. He
had lived abroad for five years and this was the
first time he had suggested she come out.
'The season's all but over,' he'd said. 'Why not
get yourself a flight? You can stay in the dig house
and I can show you some of the sights.'
Her immediate reaction had been one of
concern. He was old, well into his seventies, and
had a weak heart, for which he was on constant
medication. Perhaps this was his way of saying his
health was failing and he wanted to make his
peace before the end. When she'd asked, however,
he'd insisted he was perfectly well and merely
thought it would be nice for father and daughter
to spend a bit of time together. It was unlike him
and she'd been suspicious, but in the end she'd
thought what the hell and booked a flight. When
she'd called to let him know when she'd be arriv-
ing he had seemed genuinely pleased.
'Splendid!' he had said. 'We'll have a fine old
time.'
34
She sifted through the clothes on her bed, pick-
ing out the items she wanted and throwing them
into a large holdall. She felt like a cigarette, but
resisted the temptation. She hadn't smoked for
almost a year and didn't want to start again, not
least because if she could make the full twelve
months she stood to win a hundred pounds from
Jenny. As she always did when the urge came upon
her, she fetched an ice cube from the freezer and
sucked that instead.
She wondered whether she should have bought
her father a present, but there wasn't time now
and, anyway, even if she had got him something he
almost certainly wouldn't like it. She remembered
the acute disappointment of Christmases as a child
when she would plan for weeks what to give him,
only for him to open her carefully chosen gift,
mumble a half-hearted 'Lovely, dear. Just what I
wanted,' and then disappear into his paper again.
She'd get him some duty-free whisky and a
Times,
and perhaps some aftershave, and that would have
to do.
Throwing a few last odds and ends into the bag,
she went into the bathroom and took a shower.
Part of her was dreading the trip. She knew they'd
end up arguing, however hard they tried to avoid
it. At the same time she couldn't help feeling
excited. It was a while since she'd last been abroad
and if things got really bad she could always
take off on her own for a few days. She wasn't a
kid any more, dependent on her father. She could
do whatever she wanted. She increased the heat
of the shower and threw her head back so that
the water slashed against her breasts and stomach.
35
She began humming to herself.
Afterwards, having locked all the windows, she
stepped outside with her holdall and slammed the
door behind her. It was dark now and a light
drizzle had begun to fall, making the pavements
glow under the streetlights. Normally this sort of
weather depressed her, but not this evening.