Read The Lost Army of Cambyses Online
Authors: Paul Sussman
Tags: #Thrillers, #Crime, #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective
street someone was banging a drum. There was a
long silence.
'Perhaps I should leave you, Inspector,' said
Omar quietly, standing. 'It is not right to intrude
upon your grief like this.' He began moving
towards the door.
'The piece,' said Khalifa.
'Sorry?'
'The piece of wall. Did you see it?'
'Yes,' said Omar. 'I saw it.'
'Snakes along the bottom? Hieroglyphs?'
Omar nodded.
'The signs. The hieroglyphic signs. Can you
remember any of them?'
Omar thought for a moment and then, coming
forward, took Khalifa's pen and drew on the piece
of paper in front of him. The detective looked
down.
'You're sure this is what you saw?'
'I think so. Do you know what it is?'
'Mer,'
said Khalifa. 'The sign for a pyramid.'
He stared down for a moment longer and then,
folding the paper, put it in his pocket.
'Thank you, Omar,' he said. 'I know
how difficult it was for you to come here
today.'
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'Just find my friends, Inspector. That's all I ask.
Just find my friends.'
For a moment it looked as if he was going to
extend his hand, but in the end he just nodded
curtly and left the room.
Khalifa spent twenty minutes filling Sariya in on
what had happened in Cairo and getting the
details of Suleiman's death. Then, as requested, he
went upstairs to see the chief inspector.
Normally Hassani liked to keep him waiting for
at least a few minutes before admitting him to his
office. Today, however, he was ushered straight in.
Not only that, but for once he was given a halfway
decent chair to sit on.
'I'll have a progress report on the case typed up
by noon,' he began, hoping to pre-empt the
inevitable questions about where the report was.
Hassani, however, waved his hand dismissively.
'Don't worry about that. I've got some good
news, Yusuf.'
He sat back in his chair and jutted out his chin,
adopting much the same pose as President
Mubarak in the photograph above him.
'I'm pleased to inform you,' he said
portentously, 'that your promotion application
has been approved. Congratulations.'
He smiled, although something about his
expression suggested he wasn't quite as pleased as
he was trying to look.
'You're joking,' said Khalifa.
The smile faded slightly.
'I never tell jokes. I'm a policeman.'
'Yes, sir. Sorry.' He didn't know what to say.
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It was the last thing he'd been expecting.
'I want you to take the rest of the day off, go
home, tell the wife, celebrate. Then tomorrow I'm
sending you up to a conference in Ismailiya.'
'Ismailiya?'
'Some hokum about urban policing in the
twenty-first century. Three days of it, God help
you. These are the sort of things you have to put
up with if you want to get on in the force.'
Khalifa said nothing. He was delighted, of
course. At the same time, however, there was
something . . .
'What about the case?' he asked.
Again that dismissive wave of the hand, that
not-quite-genuine smile.
'Don't worry about the case, Yusuf. It can wait
for a couple of days. Go up to Ismailiya, do the
conference, then when you get back you can pick
it up again. It'll wait.'
'I can't just leave it, sir.'
'Relax! You've been promoted! Enjoy it!'
'I know, but . . .'
Hassani started laughing. A loud, boisterous
laugh that filled the room and drowned out
Khalifa's words.
'Here's a turn-up for the books, eh! Me telling
one of my men to work a bit less hard! I hope
you're not going to tell anyone. It could ruin my
reputation!'
Khalifa smiled, but wouldn't be deflected.
'Three people have been murdered, sir. Two more
have disappeared. I've got a definite link with Sayf
al-Tha'r, and possibly the British embassy as well.
I can't just drop this.'
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Hassani continued to chuckle. In his eyes, how-
ever, Khalifa could see annoyance. Annoyance
bordering on anger.
'Don't you want this promotion?' he asked.
'Sir?'
'It's just that you don't seem particularly happy
about it. Or particularly
grateful.'
He stressed the last word, as though urging
Khalifa to take note of it.
'I am grateful, sir. But people's lives are in
danger. I can't just disappear to Ismailiya for three
days.'
Hassani nodded. 'Think we can't take care of
things here without you, is that it?'
'No, sir. I just—'
'Think the force won't be able to operate in
your absence?'
'Sir—'
'Think you're the only one who's interested in
law and order and right and wrong?'
His voice was getting louder. A vein was pulsing
up in his neck. 'Well, let me tell you, Khalifa, I've
spent my entire life working for the good of this
country and I'm not going to sit here and listen to
a little shit like you make out you're the only one
who cares.' He was breathing heavily. 'Now
you've got what you wanted. You've got your
fucking promotion. And tomorrow, if you know
what's good for you, you're going to Ismailiya.
And that's the end of it.'
He pushed himself away from the desk, got
to his feet and strode to the window, where he
stood looking out with his back to Khalifa,
cracking his knuckles. Khalifa lit a cigarette,
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not bothering to ask permission.
'Who got to you, sir?' he said quietly.
Hassani didn't reply.
'That's what this promotion's about, isn't it?
Somebody got to you. Somebody wants me off
this case.'
Still Hassani was silent.
'It's a trade-off. I get the new job and in return
I forget about the investigation. That's the deal,
isn't it? That's the bribe.'
Hassani's fingers were cracking so loudly it
seemed as though they were going to break.
Slowly he turned round.
'I don't like you, Khalifa,' he growled. 'I never
have and I never will. You're arrogant, you're
insubordinate, you're a fucking pain in the arse.'
He took a step forward, jaw set, like a fighter
stepping into the ring. 'You're also the best
detective we've got on this force. Don't think I
don't know that. And although you might not
believe it, I've never wished you any harm. So
listen to me, and listen closely: take this
promotion, go to Ismailiya, forget about the case.
Because trust me, if you don't, there's nothing I
can do to protect you.'
He held Khalifa's eyes for a moment and then
turned back towards the window.
'And shut the door behind you,' he said.
365
31
T H E WESTERN DESERT
The first thing Tara noticed was the heat. It was as
though she was drifting upwards from the depths
of a cool lake, and with every fathom she rose the
water around her grew hotter and hotter until
eventually she surfaced into what felt like a raging
inferno. She was sure that if she stayed up there
she would be burnt alive and, flipping over, she
tried to swim back down again, back into the cool,
dark depths below. Her body, however, seemed to
have assumed an irresistible buoyancy and, try as
she might, she couldn't get herself more than a few
inches below the surface. She struggled for a
while, fighting to propel herself downwards, but it
was no good and eventually she gave up and,
rolling onto her back, floated resignedly upwards
into the flames. Her eyes blinked open.
She was lying inside a tent. Beside her, gazing
down, was Daniel. He reached out and stroked
her hair.
'Welcome back,' he said.
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Her head ached and her mouth felt dry and
thick, as though it was full of paper. She lay still
for a while and then struggled into a sitting
position. Two metres away, in front of the tent
doorway, sat a man with a gun cradled in his lap.
'Where are we?' she mumbled.
'In the middle of the western desert,' replied
Daniel. 'In the Great Sand Sea. I'd guess about
midway between Siwa and al-Farafra.'
She was struggling to breathe it was so hot. The
air seared her mouth and throat, as though she
was drinking lava. She couldn't see much through
the tent door, just a lot of sand rising up in front
of her. From somewhere nearby she could hear
shouting and the putter of generators. She was
painfully thirsty.
'What time is it?'
He glanced at his watch.
'Eleven.'
'I was in the boot of a car,' she said, trying to
marshal her thoughts. 'And then a helicopter.'
'I don't remember anything about the journey.'
He shrugged. 'Just the tomb.'
He reached up gingerly and touched the side of
his head. The blood she had seen on his face and
neck had been wiped away, if indeed she hadn't
just dreamed it. She moved her hand along the
matted floor and grasped his fingers.
'I'm so sorry, Daniel,' she said. 'I should never
have got you involved in this.'
'I got myself involved.' He smiled. 'It's not your
fault.'
'I should have just left the piece of wall at
Saqqara, like you said.'
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Leaning forward, he kissed her forehead.
'Maybe. But think of all the fun we'd have missed
if you had. I never had this much excitement
digging.' He ran his hands through his hair. 'And,
anyway, this way we get to be around when they
make the greatest discovery in the history of
archaeology. I reckon that's worth a little bump on
the head.'
She knew he was trying to cheer her up and did
her best to respond. The truth was, however, that
she felt sick and frightened and hopeless and,
despite the jokes, knew Daniel felt exactly the
same. She could see it in his eyes and the listless
slump of his shoulders.
'They're going to kill us, aren't they?'
'Not necessarily. There's a good chance that
once they've found the army—'
She looked him in the eyes. 'They're going to
kill us, aren't they?'
He was silent for a moment and then looked
down at the floor. 'Yes,' he said. 'I expect they
probably are.'
They lapsed into silence. Daniel hunched for-
ward, clasping his arms around his legs, resting his
chin on his knees. Tara stood and stretched, head
throbbing. The guard continued to stare at them,
expressionless. He was making no effort to cover
them with his gun and for a moment she had a
wild notion that they could overpower him and
escape. Almost immediately she dismissed the
thought. Even if they did get out of the tent where
would they go? They were in the middle of a
desert. The guard, she realized, was just for show.
Their real captors were the sand and the heat. She
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felt like crying, but her eyes were too dry for tears.
'I'm thirsty,' she mumbled.
Daniel lifted his head and addressed the guard.
'Ehna aatzanin. Aazin mayya.'
The guard stared at them for a moment and
then, without taking his eyes off them, shouted to
someone outside. A few minutes later a man came
into the tent with an earthenware jar, which he
handed to Tara. She lifted it to her lips and drank.
The water was warm and tasted of clay, but she
gulped at it nonetheless, finishing half the jar
before passing it to Daniel, who drank too. A
helicopter thudded overhead, causing the material
of the tent to billow and ripple.
The morning dragged by. The heat, if anything,
grew even more intense, drying the sweat on
Tara's face and neck almost as soon as it formed.
Daniel dozed for a while, head resting in her lap.
More helicopters passed overhead.
After about an hour their guard was changed
and they were brought food – raw vegetables,
cheese, pieces of flat, unleavened bread, sour and
dry and difficult to swallow. She tried to force it
down, but had no appetite. Neither did Daniel and
most of the food went uneaten. The new guard
was as silent and impassive as his predecessor.
She must have fallen asleep because when she
woke again the food had been removed and the
original guard was back. She caught and held his
eye, trying to make some sort of connection with
him. He just stared at her, his expression cold and
unyielding, and after a while she dropped her
gaze.
'There's no point trying to communicate,' said
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Daniel. 'So far as they're concerned, we're no better
than animals. Worse. We're
Kufr.
Heathens.'
She lay down again, her back to the guard, and
closed her eyes. She tried to think of her flat, of the
reptile house, of Jenny, of crisp December after-
noons in Brockwell Park. Anything to take her
away from the present. She couldn't hold the