Read The Lost Army of Cambyses Online
Authors: Paul Sussman
Tags: #Thrillers, #Crime, #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective
someone styling himself 'The Scribe of Amun, Son
of Ipu'. One of the ancient necropolis workmen,
probably, who must have sat in this very same seat
more than three thousand years ago, enjoying the
same view as Khalifa, and listening to the same
silence, and perhaps even feeling the same things.
He reached out and touched the inscription.
'What should I do?' he sighed, running his
fingers across the crudely incised images. 'What's
the right thing? Tell me, Son of Ipu. Give me some
sign. Because I sure as hell—'
He was interrupted by a clatter of stones. He
turned and looked up. A gaunt, filthy man was
staring down at him from a shelf a few metres
above.
'Sorry sorry forgive me Allah have mercy!'
gabbled the man in Arabic, slapping his head.
'Clumsy stupid fool tread in the wrong place.'
He tied his djellaba in a knot around his waist
and, swinging his emaciated legs over the edge of
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the shelf, clambered down the cracked rock face.
'You talk to the ghosts!' he jabbered as he
descended. 'I talk to the ghosts too. Hills full of
ghosts! Thousands of ghosts. Millions of ghosts.
Some good, some bad. Some are terrible! I have
seen.'
He was on the ground now and scrabbled round
to crouch at Khalifa's feet. 'I live with the ghosts.
I know them. They are everywhere.' He pointed
behind Khalifa's head. 'There is one. And there is
another. And there, and there, and there. Hello
ghosts!' He waved. 'They know me. They are
hungry. Like me. We are all hungry. So hungry.'
He fumbled among the folds of his robes, pulling
out a crumpled paper packet. 'You want scarab?'
he asked. 'Best quality.'
Khalifa shook his head. 'Not today, my friend.'
'Look, look, very best, no better in Egypt. Just
look. Please.'
'Not today,' repeated Khalifa.
The man glanced around and shuffled a little
closer, lowering his voice. 'You like antiquities? I
have antiquities. Very good.'
'I'm a policeman,' said Khalifa. 'Be careful what
you say.'
The man's smile faded. 'Fake antiquities,' he
said hurriedly. 'Not real. Fake, fake. Make them
myself. Make the fake. Ha, ha, ha.'
Khalifa nodded and, pulling out a cigarette, lit
it. The man stared at him, like a dog waiting for a
titbit. Feeling suddenly sorry for him, Khalifa
threw him the pack of Cleopatras.
'Have them,' he said, 'and leave me in peace.
OK? I want to be alone.'
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The man took the cigarettes. 'Thank you,' he
said. 'So kind. Ghosts like you. They tell me to tell
you. They like you very much.' He held his hand to
his ear as if listening. 'They say if you ever have
problems you come up here and talk to them and
they give you many good answers. Ghosts will pro-
tect you.' He stuffed the cigarettes into a pocket of
his robe and stood. 'You want guide?' he asked.
'I want to be left in peace,' said Khalifa.
The man shrugged and, blowing his nose on the
hem of his djellaba, set off along the path at
the foot of the cliff face, oblivious to the rocks
beneath his bare feet.
'You want to see Kings Valley,' he called over
his shoulder, 'Hatshepsut, tombs of nobles? I
know all places round here. Very cheap.'
'Some other time,' Khalifa shouted after him.
'Not today.'
'I show you places no-one else see. Very good
places. Special places.'
Khalifa shook his head and, turning away,
gazed out across the empty hills. The madman
stumbled on, until he was almost at the point
where the path curved out of sight behind a high
shoulder of rock.
'I take you to secret places!' he cried.
Khalifa ignored him.
'New tomb that no-one else knows! Very good!'
He disappeared round the shoulder of rock.
There was a brief hiatus and then, suddenly, as if
someone had kicked him from behind, Khalifa
flew to his feet.
'Wait!' he shouted, his voice magnified and
echoed by the rock walls. 'Wait!'
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He scrambled down to the path and ran after
the man, who, on hearing his cry, had stepped
back round the corner.
'A new tomb that no-one else knows,' panted
Khalifa, coming up to him. 'You said a new tomb
that no-one else knows.'
The man clapped his hands. 'I found it!' he
cried. 'Very secret. The ghosts took me there. You
want to see?'
'Yes,' said Khalifa, his heart racing. 'I do want
to see. I want to see it very much. Take me.'
He clapped the man on the shoulder and they
set off together up into the hills.
At first Khalifa couldn't be sure the madman's
tomb was the same as the one Nayar had found.
As al-Masri had pointed out, these hills were full
of old shafts. It was more than possible his guide
had stumbled on a completely different one, one
that had no relevance at all to the case he was
dealing with.
Then, after much cajoling, he persuaded the
man to show him the antiquities of which he had
spoken and his doubts were dispelled. There were
three
shabtis,
each identical to the ones he'd found
in Iqbar's shop, and a terracotta ointment jar with
a Bes face stamped onto it, again identical to the
one from Iqbar's cache. It was clear they all came
from the same hoard. He handed the artefacts
back and reached for his cigarettes, realizing only
when his hand was in his pocket that he'd given
them away.
'Give me a cigarette, will you?' he said.
'No!' replied the man. 'They're mine!'
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It took them over an hour to reach the top of
the gully and a further thirty minutes to work their
way down to the tomb entrance. The last part of
the descent, when they had to clamber down the
six-metre rock face above the tomb, was par-
ticularly painful for Khalifa, who had never liked
heights. The madman swarmed down without a
care in the world. Khalifa, on the other hand, took
five minutes just to pluck up the courage to begin
the descent, and when he finally did start climb-
ing, he inched his way downwards so slowly and
with such care that he seemed to be moving in
slow motion.
'Allah protect me,' he mumbled, pressing
his face against the reassuring solidity of the rock
face, 'Allah have mercy on me.'
'Come, come, come!' The madman laughed,
jumping up and down below him. 'Here's the
tomb, why do you wait, thought you wanted to
see it?'
The detective reached the bottom eventually
and, scrambling through the entrance, sank
against the wall of the corridor, breathing hard.
'Give me a cigarette,' he panted. 'And no argu-
ments, or I'll arrest you for possession of stolen
antiquities.'
Grudgingly the pack was proffered and Khalifa
took one, lighting it, closing his eyes and inhaling
deeply. After a couple of drags he started to relax.
He opened his eyes again.
A thin shaft of sunlight was pushing through the
tomb entrance, just enough to illuminate the
corridor and, at its bottom, the dark well of
the burial chamber.
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'How did you find it?' Khalifa asked, looking
around.
'The ghosts tell me,' said the madman. 'Seven
days, ten days. Not long. They tell me to come
down here. They say there is something special. So
I come down and here it is, beautiful tomb, very
secret, very special.'
He hopped to the entrance and pointed at the
gap through which they had climbed.
'See, here, when I first come there is a wall, big
wall, cover up all the door so you can't see inside.
But I knock down the wall and get inside, just like
the ghosts tell me. Very dark inside, very secret,
goes down down down. I am scared, I shake with
fear, but I go down because I want to see, like
someone is pulling me.'
His voice was getting faster. He started to move
down the corridor. Khalifa followed.
'A room,' he said, pointing downwards. 'Dark,
black, like night. I light match. Many things
inside. Hundreds of things. Wonderful things, and
terrible things. Very magic. Home of ghosts.'
They were standing in the doorway to the burial
chamber now. As Khalifa's eyes adjusted to the
gloom he could make out vague colours and
images on the wall opposite.
'Treasures, treasures, so many treasures,'
gabbled the man. 'I stay here for a night. I sleep
here with the treasures, like a king! Many dreams
I have, many strange things come to me in my
head, like I am flying over the world and see every-
thing, even what people think.' He jumped down
into the chamber. 'Later I tell my friend.'
'Your friend?' asked Khalifa.
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'Sometimes he comes in the hills, when he has
drunk, we talk, he gives me cigarettes. He has a
picture. Here.'
He pointed to his left wrist. To the spot where
Nayar had had his scarab tattoo. The detective
was starting to understand.
'I tell my friend what the ghosts have shown me.
He says, "Take me!" So I take him. He laughs very
loud. He says, "You and me will be very rich! You
and me will live like kings!" I must leave it to him,
he says. He will take things to show special
people. He will buy me a television. I mustn't
come here again, he says. I mustn't say anything.
And so I wait and wait and wait. But he doesn't
come back. And then the others come at night.
And I am alone. And there is no television. And I
am hungry. And only the ghosts are my friends.'
He sniffed and wandered forlornly round the
room, trailing his hand along the walls. Khalifa
jumped down too, noting how the section of wall
to the left of the doorway had been destroyed. He
squatted beside the pile of smashed plaster on the
floor, shaking his head, dismayed at such wanton
vandalism.
He could see the chain of events clearly. This
man had stumbled on the tomb. He had told
Nayar, Nayar had removed certain objects, includ-
ing, presumably, a piece of the wall now lying in
ruins at his feet. Sayf al-Tha'r had got wind of it.
Nayar had been killed. The rest he already knew.
He stood and began to examine the chamber.
His eyes had adjusted to the gloom now and much
of the decoration was visible, although the sides of
the room were still lost in impenetrable shadow, as
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though hung with black drapes. The man sat
down on the floor, staring at Khalifa through dole-
ful eyes, humming to himself.
'Have you been back here,' asked Khalifa, 'since
you found it?'
The man shook his head. 'But I have seen. I hide
in the rocks, very quiet, like I am a rock too. They
come at night, every night, like jackals. They take
things from the tomb, one night, two night, three
night, every night more things.'
'Last night?'
'Last night they come. Then they go. Then
others come.'
'Others?'
'Man and woman. White. I had seen them
before. They go into the tomb. They are eaten.'
'Killed?'
The madman shrugged.
'Killed?' repeated Khalifa.
'Who knows? I have not seen them with the
ghosts. Maybe they live. Maybe they don't. The
man I had seen . . .'
'What?'
He wouldn't say any more, however, and fell to
drawing patterns in the dust with his finger.
Khalifa turned back to the walls. He worked his
way slowly round the chamber, using his lighter to
illuminate the decoration where it was too dark
to see with natural light. He spent a long while in
front of the triptych that had so interested Daniel,
gazing intently at each of its three sections, and
then moved on again. He peered into the canopic
niche, at the image of the two Persians, the Greek
man before his table of fruit, Anubis weighing the
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heart of the deceased, examining every inch of the