Read The Lost Army of Cambyses Online
Authors: Paul Sussman
Tags: #Thrillers, #Crime, #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective
They sat up when they heard him enter. He looked
briefly at Tara and then spoke to the guard in
Arabic. Daniel grimaced.
'You animal, Dravic,' he hissed. 'One day I'll
kill you.'
Dravic burst out laughing. 'Then you'll have to
come back from the dead to do it.' He spoke to the
guard again and left.
'What was all that about?' Tara asked.
Daniel didn't say anything, just sat staring at the
ends of his boots. He seemed reluctant to answer.
'What did he say?'
He muttered something.
'What?'
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'He said they're to take you to his tent in two
hours.'
She looked down at her watch. Eight-fifteen.
She felt as if she was going to be sick.
LUXOR
As Khalifa had expected, Zenab wasn't happy
with him. She was watching television with Ali
and Batah when he came in, and fixed him with
one of her fiercest glares.
'You didn't see me, Dad,' chided Ali. 'I was on the
Tutankhamun float. I was one of his fan-bearers.'
'I'm sorry,' said Khalifa, squatting in front of his
son and ruffling his hair. 'There was something I
had to finish at work. I would have been there if I
could. Here, I bought you something. And you,
Batah.'
He reached into the plastic bag he was carrying
and pulled out a shell necklace, which he gave to
his daughter, and a plastic trumpet.
'Thanks, Dad!' cried Ali, seizing the instrument
and blowing loudly on it. Batah rushed out to look
at herself in the mirror. Ali followed.
'It's once a year, Yusuf,' said Zenab when they
were alone. 'One afternoon a year. They so
wanted you to be there.'
'I'm sorry,' he said again, reaching for her hand.
She withdrew it and, standing, moved across the
room and closed the door.
'I got a call this morning,' she said, turning.
'From Chief Hassani.'
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Khalifa said nothing, just pulled out his
cigarettes.
'To say how pleased he was about your
promotion. How it would mean more money, a
subsidized flat, a new school for the kids. I said,
"It's the first I've heard about it." He said you'd be home soon to tell me. That it was a really good
career move for you. Went on and on about it.'
'Bastard,' muttered Khalifa.
'What?'
'He's getting at me, Zenab. Getting at me
through you. Telling you all the good things this
promotion will mean and hoping you'll persuade
me to take it.'
'You're not going to take it?'
'It's complicated.'
'Don't fob me off! Not this time. What's
happening, Yusuf?'
Ali started banging on the door. 'Mum! I want
to watch television.'
'Your father and I are talking. Go and play with
Batah.'
'I don't want to play with Batah.'
'Ali, go and play with Batah! And keep the noise
down or you'll wake the baby.'
There was a defiant trumpet toot and the sound
of a door slamming. Khalifa lit his cigarette. 'I
have to go back to Cairo,' he said. 'Tonight.'
She was still for a moment and then came over
and knelt before him, her hair spilling across his
thighs.
'What is this, Yusuf? I've never known you like
this before. Tell me. Please. I have a right to know.
Especially when it's affecting our lives like this.
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What is this case? Why won't you take the
promotion?'
He put his arms around her and rested his fore-
head on her head. 'It's not that I don't want to tell
you, Zenab. It's just that I'm frightened.
Frightened of getting you involved. It's so
dangerous.'
'Then I have even more right to know. I am your
wife. What affects you affects me too. And our
children. If there is danger I should know about
it.' 'I don't fully understand it myself. All I know is
that innocent people's lives are in danger and I'm
the only one who can save them.'
They remained like that for a moment and then
she pushed him away, looking up into his eyes.
'There's something else, isn't there?'
He didn't speak.
'What?'
'It's not . . .'
'What, Yusuf?'
'Sayf al-Tha'r,' he said quietly.
Her head dropped. 'Oh God, no. That's in the
past. It's finished.'
'It's never been finished,' he said, staring down
at his knees. 'That's what I've realized with this
case: it's always here inside me. I've tried to forget
about it, to move on, but I can't. I should have
stopped them. I should have helped him.'
'We've been over this, Yusuf. There was nothing
you could have done.'
'But I should at least have tried. And I didn't. I
just let them take him away.' He could feel tears
welling in his eyes and fought to keep them back.
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'I can't put it into words, Zenab. It's as if I'm
carrying a huge weight on my back. Always
I'm thinking about Ali. About what happened.
About how I could have done more. And now,
with this case, I have a chance to put things right.
Maybe not bring Ali back, but at least redress
some of the evil that's been done. And until I do
that I'll always be incomplete. Half of me will
always be trapped in the past.'
'I'd rather have half a husband than a dead one.'
'Please try to understand. I have to see this
through. It's important.'
'More important than me and the children? We
need you, Yusuf.' She seized his hands. 'I don't
care about the promotion. We don't need more
money, a fancy flat. We get along fine. But I care
about you. My husband. My love. I don't want
you to be killed. And you will be if you carry on
with this. I know you will be. I can feel it.' She was
crying now and buried her face in his lap. 'I want
you here, with us, safe,' she said, choking. 'I
want us to grow together, a family.'
From Batah's bedroom came the muffled
screech of his son's trumpet. Firecrackers were
popping in the street below. He stroked her hair.
'There's nothing in the world more important to
me than you and the children,' he whispered.
'Nothing. Not the past, not my brother, certainly
not my own life. I love you more than I could ever
express. I would do anything for you. Anything.'
He lifted her head so that their eyes were joined.
'Tell me to drop the case, Zenab. Tell me and I
will, without a moment's hesitation. Tell me.'
For a long while she held his stare, her eyes huge
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and brown and moist. Then, slowly, she came to
her feet.
'What time's your train?' she said quietly.
'The last one goes at ten.'
'Then you'll just have time for dinner.'
She shook back her hair, and went out into the
kitchen.
He left at nine-fifteen. With him he had a holdall
containing a change of clothes, some food and his
revolver, a Helwan 9mm, standard police issue.
He also had 840 Egyptian pounds, money they'd
been putting aside towards making the Hajj to
Mecca. He felt terrible about taking it, but it was
the only cash they had in the flat and he'd need it
to get where he was going. Whatever else
happened over the next few days he promised
himself he'd replace it.
He turned left out of his block and set off on the
fifteen-minute walk to the station, the night air
echoing to the bang of firecrackers as people
celebrated the feast of Abu el-Haggag. He wondered
whether he should go via the office to pick up more
ammunition, but decided against it. There was too
big a risk of bumping into one of his colleagues. He
needed to get out of Luxor without anyone know-
ing. He glanced at his watch. Nine-twenty.
The crowds grew heavier as he came into the
centre of town. The streets around Luxor Temple
were teeming. Children in party hats ran to and
fro throwing firecrackers; impromptu bands –
mizmars
and drums mainly – played at the road-
side. The sweet sellers could barely keep up with
demand.
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In a small park beside the temple a group of
zikr
dancers were performing – two lines of men facing
each other, swaying from side to side in time to the
devotional chanting of a
munshid
at their head. A
large crowd had gathered to watch them and
Khalifa slowed too. Not to observe the dancers,
but to check out the men who were following him.
He couldn't be sure how many of them there
were, nor when they'd latched onto him, but
they were definitely there. Three, maybe four,
mingling with the revellers, clocking his every
move. One he'd spotted as he stopped to buy some
cigarettes, another as he stood aside to let through
a procession of men on horseback. Just a
momentary glimpse, a fleeting eye-contact before
they'd melted back into the throng. They were
good, he could tell that much. Trained. Secret
service, maybe. Or military intelligence. For all he
knew, they could have been with him all day.
Standing in the park now, he ran his eyes over
the crowd. Ten metres away a man was leaning
against some railings. His eyes kept flicking up
towards Khalifa and the detective began to think
maybe he was one of them. Then a woman came
up and the two of them walked off together, arm
in arm. Nine-thirty. Khalifa lit a cigarette and
moved away.
He had to lose them before he got to the station.
He wasn't sure precisely who they were or what
they wanted, but he did know that if they got any
inkling of where he was going they'd try to stop
him. And if they stopped him once he wouldn't get
another chance. He had to lose them.
Nine-thirty-one. He turned left down a narrow
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street, past a group of children watching television
on the pavement. He quickened his step and
turned right down another street. Two old men
were playing
siga
in the dust, using stones as
counters. He hurried past them and dodged left
again, down a winding alley. Twenty metres along
a motorbike was parked up against a wall and he
glanced in its wing mirror. He was alone. He
broke into a trot.
For ten minutes he zigzagged through the back-
streets of Luxor, taking sudden unexpected turns,
constantly looking behind him, before eventually
emerging into Midan al-Mahatta, the square in
front of the station, with its red obelisk and
fountain that never seemed to work. He breathed
a sigh of relief and stepped out into the road,
glancing to the right to check for traffic. As he did
so he noticed a suited figure standing in a shadowy
doorway opposite, staring straight at him.
'Dammit!' he hissed.
The Cairo train was already waiting at the
platform, passengers jostling around it, porters
hefting bags up through its doors. There was no
way he was going to get to it without being seen.
He looked down at his watch. Nine-forty-three.
Seventeen minutes.
For a moment he stood still, uncertain what to
do, then, suddenly, turned left down Sharia al-
Mahatta, away from the station, walking fast. It
was a crazy idea, mad, but he couldn't think of
anything else. He had to get home.
He took the shortest route he knew, weaving
through the back streets, not bothering to look
behind him, knowing they'd be there. He reached
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the apartment block in ten minutes, sprinting
up the stairs and bursting through the front door.
'Yusuf?' Zenab came out of the living room.
'Why have you come back?'
'No time to explain,' he gasped, pulling her into
the kitchen. He threw up his watch arm. Nine-
fifty-three. This was going to be horribly close.
He pulled open the kitchen window and looked
down into the narrow alley below. As he'd
expected there were two men standing there in the
shadows, covering the building's rear entrance.
The twenty-metre drop made his head spin. He
looked over at the roof of the block opposite,