Read The Lost Army of Cambyses Online
Authors: Paul Sussman
Tags: #Thrillers, #Crime, #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective
She checked her passport and flight tickets, and
set off towards the station, smiling. In Cairo,
apparently, the temperature was up in the eighties.
36
4
CAIRO
'It's time to close up for the night, little one,' said
old Ikhbar. 'Time for you to go home, wherever
that might be.'
The girl stood motionless, playing with her hair.
Her face was dirty and a dribble of snot glistened
beneath her nose.
'Off you go,' said Iqbar. 'You can come and help
me tomorrow if you want.'
The girl said nothing, just stared at him. He
took a step towards her, limping heavily, his
breath coming in gasps.
'Come on now, no games. I'm an old man and
I'm tired.'
The shop was getting dark. A single bare light
bulb cast a weak glow, but in the corners the
shadows were thickening. Heaps of bric-a-brac
sunk slowly into the gloom, as though into water.
From outside came the honking of a moped horn
and the sound of someone hammering.
Iqbar took another step forward, belly bulging
37
beneath his djellaba. There was something menac-
ing about his rotten brown teeth and black
eye-patch. His voice, however, was kindly and the
girl showed no fear of him.
'Are you going home or not?'
The girl shook her head.
'In that case', he said, turning away and
shuffling towards the front of the shop, 'I'll have
to lock you in for the night. And of course it's at
night that the ghosts come out.'
He stopped at the door and removed a bunch of
keys from his pocket.
'Did I tell you about the ghosts? I'm sure I did.
All antique shops have them. For instance, in that
old lamp there' – he indicated a brass lamp sitting
on a shelf – 'lives a genie called al-Ghul. He's ten
thousand years old, and can turn himself into any
shape that he wants.'
The girl stared at the lamp, eyes wide.
'And you see that old wooden chest there, in the
corner, the one with the big lock and the iron bands
across it? Well, there's a crocodile in there, a big
green crocodile. By day he sleeps, but at night he
comes out to look for children. Why? So he can eat
them, of course. He grabs them in his mouth and
swallows them whole.'
The girl bit her lip, eyes darting between the
chest and the lamp.
'And that knife, up there on the wall, with the
curved blade. That used to belong to a king.
A very cruel man. Each night he comes back,
takes his knife and cuts the throats of anyone
he can lay his hands on. Oh yes, this shop is
full of ghosts. So if you want to stay here for
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the night, my little friend, be my guest.'
Chuckling to himself he pulled open the door, a
set of brass bells jangling as he did so. The girl
came forward a few paces, thinking she was going
to be locked in. As soon as he heard her move,
Iqbar swung around and, raising his hands as
though they were claws, roared. The girl screamed
and laughed, scampering off into the shadows at
the back of the shop, where she crouched down
behind a pair of old wickerwork baskets.
'So she wants to play hide and seek, does she?'
growled the old man, limping after her, a smile on
his face. 'Well, she'll have a hard job hiding from
Iqbar. He might only have one eye left, but it's a
good eye. No-one can hide from old Iqbar.'
He could see her lurking behind the baskets,
peering out through' a gap between them. He
didn't want to spoil her fun too quickly and so
deliberately shuffled past her and instead opened
the doors of an old wooden cupboard.
'Is she in here, I wonder?'
He made a show of peering into the cupboard.
'No, not in the cupboard. She's cleverer than I
thought.'
He closed the cupboard and passed into a room
at the back of the shop, where he made as much
noise as he could opening drawers and banging on
filing cabinets.
'Are you in here, little monster?' he cried, enjoy-
ing himself. 'Hiding in my secret office? Oh she's a
clever one, she is!'
He clattered around for a while longer and then
hobbled out again, stopping directly in front of the
baskets. He could hear the girl's muffled giggles.
39
'Now, let me think. She wasn't in the cupboard,
and she wasn't in the office, and I'm sure she
wouldn't be silly enough to hide in the wooden
chest with the crocodile. Which, if I'm right, only
leaves one place for her to be. And that's right
here, behind these baskets. Let's see if old Iqbar's
right.'
He bent down. As he did so the bells on the
door jangled and someone entered the shop. He
straightened and turned. The girl remained where
she was, hidden.
'We were just closing,' said Iqbar, shuffling
forward towards the two men who were standing
in the doorway. 'But if you want a look around,
please take your time.'
The men ignored him. They were young, in their
early twenties, bearded; each was dressed in a
grubby black robe with a black
'imma
wound low
around his forehead. They gazed around the shop
for a moment, sizing it up, and then one of them
stepped outside and signalled. He came back in,
followed a moment later by another man, white-
skinned.
'Can I help you?' asked Iqbar. 'Are you looking
for anything in particular?'
The newcomer was a giant, tall and broad, way
too big for his cheap linen suit, which strained
under the pressure of his massive thighs and
shoulders. He held a half-smoked cigar in one
hand and a briefcase in the other, the letters CD
stamped into the battered brown leather. The left
side of his face, from the temple down almost to
the mouth, was splashed with a livid purple birth-
mark. Iqbar felt a shiver of fear.
40
'Can I help you?' he repeated.
The huge man closed the shop door gently, turn-
ing the key in the lock and nodding at his two
companions, who moved towards Iqbar, faces
expressionless. The shopkeeper backed away until
he came up against the shop counter.
'What do you want?' he said, beginning to
cough. 'Please, what do you want?'
The huge man walked up to Iqbar and stood in
front of him, their bellies almost touching. He
gazed at him for a moment, smiling, and then, lift-
ing his cigar, stubbed it out on the old man's
eye-patch. Iqbar screamed, flailing his hands in
front of his face.
'Please, please!' He coughed. 'I have no money.
I am poor!'
'You have something that belongs to us,' said
the giant. 'An antiquity. It came to you yesterday.
Where is it?'
Iqbar was doubled up, arms held over his head.
'I don't know what you're talking about,' he
wheezed. 'I have no antiquities. It is illegal to deal
in them!'
The giant signalled to his two henchmen and
they grabbed the old man's elbows, forcing him
upright. He stood with his head turned to one
side, cheek jammed against his shoulder, as though
trying to hide. One of the men's headscarves had
slid upwards slightly, revealing a thick scar run-
ning up the centre of his forehead, smooth and
pale as though a leech was clinging to the skin.
The sight of it seemed to terrify the old man.
'Please!' he wailed. 'Please!'
'Where is it?' repeated his inquisitor.
41
'Please, please!'
The giant muttered something to himself and,
placing his briefcase on the floor, took out what
looked like a small grouting trowel. The diamond-
shaped blade was dull, save around its edges,
where the metal shone as though it had been
sharpened.
'Do you know what this is?' he asked.
The old man was staring at the blade, mute with
terror.
'It is an archaeologist's trowel,' grinned the
giant. 'We use it to scrape back soil, carefully, like
this . . .' He demonstrated, passing the trowel
back and forth in front of the old man's terrified
face. 'It has other applications as well, though.'
With a swift movement – surprisingly swift for
a man of his size – he swept the trowel upwards,
slashing its edge across Iqbar's cheek. The skin
flapped open like a mouth and blood streamed
down over the old man's robe. Iqbar screamed and
struggled pathetically.
'Now,' said the giant, 'I ask you again. Where is
the piece?'
Behind the baskets the girl prayed for al-Ghul
the genie to come out of his lamp and help the old
man.
It was past midnight when the plane touched
down.
'Welcome to Cairo,' said the air hostess as Tara
stepped out of the cabin into a blast of hot air and
diesel fumes. 'Enjoy your stay.'
42
The flight had passed off uneventfully. She had
been sat in an aisle seat beside a red-faced couple,
who spent the first half of the journey warning her
of the stomach problems she was bound to suffer
as a result of Egyptian cooking and the second half
sleeping. She'd drunk a couple of vodkas, watched
half the in-flight movie, bought a bottle of Scotch
from the duty-free trolley and then eased her seat
back and gazed up at the ceiling. She had wanted
to smoke, as she always did when she flew, but
had ordered a regular supply of ice cubes instead.
Her father had worked in Egypt since she was a
child. He was, according to those who knew about
such things, one of the most celebrated
Egyptologists of his time. 'He's right up there with
Petrie and Carter,' one of his colleagues had once
told her. 'If there's anyone alive who's done more
to advance our understanding of the Old Kingdom
I've yet to meet them.'
She ought to have been proud. As it was, her
father's academic achievements had always left her
cold. All she knew, and all she ever had known
from earliest childhood, was that he seemed more
content in a world that had been dead for 4,000
years than he did with his own family. Even her
name, Tara, had been chosen because it in-
corporated the name of the Egyptian sun god Ra.
Each year he would travel out to Egypt to
excavate. To start with he'd gone only for a month
or so, leaving each November and returning just
before Christmas. As she had grown older, how-
ever, and her parents' marriage had slowly broken
apart, he'd spent longer and longer there.
'Your father's seeing another woman,' her
43
mother had once told her. 'Her name's Egypt.' It
had been meant as a joke, although neither of
them had laughed.
Then the cancer had come and her mother had
begun her rapid decline. It was during this period
that, for the first time, Tara had really come to
hate her father. As the disease chewed away at her
mother's lungs and liver and her father had kept
his distance, unable to offer even a few salutary
words of support, she had felt an all-consuming
fury towards this man who seemed to value tombs
and old potsherds more than his own flesh and
blood. A few days before her mother's death she
had called him in Egypt and screamed obscenities
down the phone at him, surprising even herself
with the violence of her rage. At the funeral they
had barely acknowledged each other, and after-
wards he had moved to Egypt full time, teaching
eight months of the year at Cairo's American
University and excavating for the other four. They
didn't speak for almost two years.
And yet, for all that, there were good memories
of him too. Once, for instance, as a young child,
she had been crying about something and to stop
her tears he had performed a magic trick whereby
he had appeared to remove his thumb from the
rest of his hand. She had laughed uproariously and
urged him to do it again and again, staring in
wonder as he had repeatedly separated his thumb
from his palm, groaning in mock agony as he