Read The Lost Army of Cambyses Online
Authors: Paul Sussman
Tags: #Thrillers, #Crime, #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective
the shaft. The man in front of Daniel raised his
gun.
'No!' screamed Tara, thinking he was going to
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shoot. Instead he swung the weapon so the butt
was towards Daniel, and smashed it into the side
of his head. Daniel crumpled to the ground,
unconscious, a trickle of blood running down his
neck. Tara went down on her knees beside him,
touching his face. She heard movement behind her,
something coming down through the air, and then,
suddenly, she was falling very fast towards what
seemed like an immense ocean of still black water.
NORTHERN SUDAN
The boy sprinted through the camp with the radio
message in his hand. A herd of goats, startled by
his approach, sprang to their feet and scattered
before him, but he ignored them and continued
running until he reached his master's tent. He
threw back the flap, panting with exertion, and
stepped inside.
The interior was dimly lit by a single kerosene
lamp. Sayf al-Tha'r was sitting cross-legged on the
carpeted floor, a book held up close to his face, so
still he might have been a statue. The boy came
towards him.
'They've found it!' he cried, unable to contain
his excitement. 'The piece. Doktora Dravic has
found it!'
The man rested the book on his lap and looked
up at the boy, face expressionless.
'It is written that we should be moderate in all
things, Mehmet,' he said quietly, 'both in our joy
and in our despair. There is no need to shout.'
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'Yes, Sayf al-Tha'r.' The boy lowered his head,
crestfallen.
'It is also written, however, that we should
rejoice mightily in the goodness of Allah. So do
not be ashamed of your joy. But control it,
Mehmet. Always control it. That is the way to
God. By becoming master of yourself.'
He held out his hand, and the boy passed him
the message. He inclined his head and read. When
he had finished he folded the message carefully
and slipped it into a pocket of his robe.
'Did I not tell you we were God's chosen?' he
said. 'So long as we stay true and trust in his
greatness, all things will come to us. And now they
have. This is a great day, Mehmet.'
A huge smile suddenly broke across his face,
like water over parched land. The boy had never
seen him smile like that, and his heart leaped at the
sight. He wanted to fall to his knees and kiss his
master's feet, tell him how much he loved him,
how grateful he was for all he had done for him.
He fought the urge, however. The way to Allah
is by becoming master of yourself. His master's
words still rang in his ears. The lesson had been
learnt. He allowed himself a smile, but no more,
even though his chest was bursting with joy.
The man seemed to understand what was going
on in his head, for he came to his feet and laid his
hand on the boy's shoulder.
'Well done, Mehmet,' he said. 'Allah will always
reward the good pupil. Just as he will always
punish the bad one. Now go and tell our people to
make ready. As soon as we know the place we
begin flying in the equipment.'
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The boy nodded and stepped back towards the
entrance.
'Master,' he said, turning, 'will all bad things
stop now? Will the
Kufr
be destroyed?'
The man's smile grew even broader. 'Of course
they will be, Mehmet. How could they not when
we have an entire army to help us?'
'Allah u akbar.'
The boy laughed. 'God is great.'
'He is. Greater than any of us could ever understand.'
When the boy had gone Sayf al-Tha'r returned
to his place beside the kerosene lamp and retrieved
his book. Its leather binding was worn and
tattered, and he cradled it gently in both hands.
The text inside was in neither Arabic nor English,
but Greek, as was the title on the cover:
HPOΔOTOY IΣTOPIAI –
The Histories of
Herodotus.
He turned up the kerosene lamp slightly, and
lifted the book to within a few inches of his face,
sighing with pleasure as he lost himself within it.
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30
LUXOR
Khalifa's train pulled into Luxor just before eight
a.m. After his nightmare he hadn't slept again and
he now felt tired and heavy-eyed. He decided to go
home and freshen up before going into the office.
The town was already busy. The Feast of Abu
el-Haggag was due to start that afternoon and
even at that hour crowds were gathering in antici-
pation, jostling around the brightly coloured
roadside stalls piled with sweets and cakes and
party hats. Normally Khalifa would have been
looking forward to the festivities. Today, however,
he had other things on his mind and, lighting a
cigarette, he set off down al-Mahatta Street,
oblivious to the bustle around him.
His flat was fifteen minutes' walk from the
centre of town, in a drab concrete block wedged
like a domino in the midst of a row of other drab
concrete blocks. Batah and Ali had already left for
school when he got in and baby Yusuf was fast
asleep in his cot. He took a shower and Zenab sat
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him down and brought him coffee and bread and
cheese. He watched her appreciatively as she
moved to and from the kitchen, her hair falling in
a black cascade almost to her waist, her hips slim
and provocative. Sometimes he forgot how lucky
he was to have her as his wife. Her family hadn't
wanted her to marry him, a penniless student from
a poor family. Zenab, however, was a wilful
woman. He smiled at the memory.
'What's funny?' she asked, carrying through a
plate of sliced tomatoes.
'I was thinking of when we first got married.
How your parents were dead against it and you
told them it was me or nothing.'
She handed him the tomatoes and sat down at
his feet.
'I should have listened to them. If I hadn't been
so stubborn, I could have had my very own Hosni
by now.'
Khalifa laughed and, leaning forward, kissed
her on the head. Her hair was warm and scented
and, despite his tiredness, he found it distinctly
arousing. He laid aside the plate of tomatoes and
wrapped his arms around her shoulders.
'How was Cairo?' she asked, kissing his arm.
'So-so. I saw the professor.'
'Is he well?'
'Seems so, yes. He sends his love.'
She shifted slightly and hooked her arm over his
knee. Her dress had slipped down slightly, reveal-
ing her shoulder, and the top of her chest, just
where her breasts started to swell. Khalifa lowered
his elbow and nudged the plate of tomatoes
further away.
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'What's this case you're working on, Yusuf?' she
asked gently, drawing patterns on his thigh. 'It's
important, isn't it?'
'Yes,' he replied. 'I suppose it is.'
'Can you tell me?'
'It's complicated,' he said, stroking her hair.
She knew this was his way of saying he didn't
want to talk about it and she didn't push him.
Instead, she moved round some more and, lifting
her face, kissed him softly on the lips.
'The baby's asleep,' she whispered.
Khalifa caressed her neck, breathing in the
perfume of her hair.
'I should be getting down to the office,' he said.
She kissed him again and, coming to her feet,
allowed her dress to slip off her. She was naked
underneath.
'Should you?'
He gazed at her body – slim and dark, with
high, firm breasts and a soft mound of coal-black
hair between her legs. God, she was beautiful. He
stood up and took her in his arms.
'I guess it won't matter if I'm a bit late.'
They kissed and, taking his hand, she led him
into the bedroom. She sat on the bed and un-
buttoned his shirt and trousers, pulling them
down and clasping him around the waist. He
pushed her back and lay down beside her, stroking
her breasts and belly and thighs, kissing her
shoulders, feeling her against him, breathing
her . . .
The telephone rang.
'Leave it,' said Zenab, rolling on top of him and
kneading his chest, draping her hair across his face.
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They continued for a moment longer, but then
the baby, disturbed by the ringing, started to cry
and with a groan of frustration she got up and
went over to the cot. Khalifa swung himself onto
the side of the bed and picked up the phone. It was
Professor al-Habibi.
'I hope I'm not disturbing you,' he said.
'Not at all. I was just . . . helping Zenab with
something.'
She shot him an amused look and, pulling the
screaming baby from his cot, went through into
the other room, stooping to kiss his head as she
passed. He kicked the door shut.
'Listen, Yusuf,' said the professor, 'there's some-
thing I thought you ought to know. About those
objects you brought me yesterday.'
Khalifa bent and pulled his cigarettes from the
pocket of his trousers. 'Go on.'
'I was looking at them last night, after you'd
gone, and I found an inscription on the handle of
the dagger, underneath the leather grip. Not a
proper inscription. Just words scratched into the
metal, very crude. The letters were Greek.'
'Greek?'
'That's right. And they spelled out a name.
Presumably the dagger's owner.'
'Go on.'
'The name was Dymmachus, son of Menendes.'
'Dymmachus?' Khalifa turned the name over in
his head. 'Does that mean anything to you?'
'That's the funny thing,' said Habibi, 'I was sure
I'd seen it before. It took me a while to remember
where, but then it came to me.' He paused for
dramatic effect.
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'Yes?'
'In the Valley of the Kings. The tomb of
Ramesses VI. The walls are covered in ancient
graffiti, Greek and Coptic, and one of them was
left by a certain Dymmachus, son of Menendes of
Naxos. I looked it up in my Baillet.'
'The same man?'
'Well, I can't be a hundred per cent certain, but
I'd be surprised if there were two people in Thebes
named Dymmachus with a father called
Menendes. They're hardly common names.'
Khalifa let out a low whistle. 'Incredible,' he
said.
'Indeed so. But not as incredible as what comes
next.'
Again he paused for effect, and again Khalifa
had to urge him on.
'This Dymmachus didn't just leave his name in
the tomb. He left a short inscription as well.'
'Saying what?'
'Well, it seems to be incomplete. Either it's been
written over or else he broke off in the middle of
inscribing it . . .'
There was a sound of rustling paper at the other
end of the line.
'It says: "I, Dymmachus, son of Menendes of
Naxos, saw these wonders. Tomorrow I march
against the Ammonians. May . . ." And then it
stops.'
Khalifa still hadn't lit his cigarette. 'The
Ammonians,' he said, thinking aloud. 'Wasn't that
the name the Greeks gave to the people of Siwa?'
'Exactly. From the name of the god Amun, who
had his oracle at the oasis. And so far as we are
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aware there was only one military expedition sent
against the Ammonians during this period.'
'Which was?'
Again the dramatic pause.
'The army of Cambyses.'
Khalifa's cigarette snapped in his hand. 'The
army of Cambyses! The one that was lost in
the desert?'
'So the story goes.'
'But no-one survived that. How can we have a
dagger belonging to one of its soldiers?'
'Well, that's the question, isn't it?'
Khalifa could hear the professor puffing his pipe
into life. He pulled another cigarette from his pack
and lit it. There was a long pause.
'The dagger definitely came from a Theban
tomb?' asked Habibi eventually.
'I think so,' said Khalifa. 'Yes.'
'Then there would seem to be several possible