Read The Lost Army of Cambyses Online
Authors: Paul Sussman
Tags: #Thrillers, #Crime, #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective
Dravic pulled open his trousers and, reaching
beneath her belly, started to undo her jeans.
I'm going to be raped, she thought to herself in
a detached sort of way. Dravic is going to rape me
and there's nothing I can do about it.
She could see the trowel lying on the floor ten
feet away and reached towards it, even though she
knew she could never reach it.
I wonder how much it'll hurt, she thought.
He grabbed her hair and yanked her head back
while at the same time tugging down her jeans and
knickers. She closed her eyes and clenched her
teeth, waiting for the assault.
It didn't come. She could feel the weight of
Dravic on top of her, his fist on her buttocks, but
he seemed to have stopped still, as though frozen.
'Come on,' she said impatiently. 'Just get it over
with.'
Still he didn't move. She opened her eyes again
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and twisted round. He was looking towards the
door, head cocked, listening. She listened too.
Initially it was all just a confused buzz. Then,
gradually, like a radio being tuned in, the sound
grew clearer. Shouting. Dozens of voices shouting.
Dravic remained where he was for a moment and
then, muttering, came to his feet and rebuckled his
trousers. The shouting was growing louder
and more urgent, although she couldn't make out
what was being said. Dravic retrieved his trowel,
looked back at her and then, throwing aside the
tent flap, stepped out into the night. She was
alone.
For some moments she lay where she was, her
face thick and heavy, the burns on her skin aching
viciously. Then, rolling onto her back, she pulled
up her jeans and struggled to her feet.
Several minutes passed and then a guard
stepped into the tent. He looked at her and there
was a momentary flicker of apology in his eyes, as
if he disapproved of what Dravic had done and
wanted her to know that. Then, with a twist of his
head, he motioned her outside.
Dravic was nowhere to be seen. The whole
camp, indeed, was empty, like a ghost town. The
guard pointed with his gun, up towards the
mound they'd stood on earlier in the day. As she
came to the top she saw that Daniel was already
there, flanked by two guards. He turned.
'Oh Jesus,' he said, choking at the sight of her
ripped shirt and bruised skin. 'Oh Jesus, what's
the bastard done to you?' He pushed past his
guards and ran to her, wrapping his arms around
her. 'I'll kill him. I'll kill the animal!'
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'I'm OK,' she said. 'I'm fine.'
'Did he . . . ? '
She shook her head.
'I heard you screaming. I wanted to do some-
thing, but they had a gun on me. I'm so sorry,
Tara.'
'It's not your fault, Daniel.'
'I'll kill him! I'll kill all of them!'
The intensity of his embrace was hurting her
and she pushed him away.
'I'm fine,' she said. 'Honestly. What's going on?
There was shouting.'
He was staring at the burn marks on her skin,
eyes filled with disgust and guilt.
'I think they've found something,' he mumbled.
'Dravic is down in the excavation trench.'
She grasped his hand and together they went
forward to the front of the mound.
Since they'd been there that afternoon a vast
round crater had been sucked out of the valley
floor, exposing the base of the pyramid rock like
the root of an enormous tooth. Dravic was at the
bottom, side on to them, kneeling, poking at
the ground with his trowel. The rest of the men
were above, gazing down, expectant. The cold
white light of the arc lamps lent the scene an
unearthly, dreamlike quality.
'What have they found?' she asked.
'I don't know,' said Daniel. 'We're too far
away.'
Dravic shouted and one of the men threw a
brush down to him. He took it and began flicking
at the area in front of his knees, stopping every
now and then and leaning forward, staring intently
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at the ground. After a minute he laid the brush
aside and resumed scraping with his trowel, alter-
nating between the two as he slowly cleared back
the gravelly sand before him, revealing something,
although Tara couldn't make out what it was.
Several minutes passed. More of the object was
exposed now and she could see that it was semi-
circular in shape, like the upper part of a wheel.
Dravic continued clearing around it before
eventually laying aside his tools, gripping the thing
with both hands and pulling. His shoulders
bunched with the effort, but the object wouldn't
come and he was forced to take up the brush and
trowel again and clear away more sand. Despite
what he'd just done to her, Tara nonetheless found
herself absorbed in his actions. Daniel was leaning
forward, hand tight in hers, his anger suddenly
forgotten.
Again Dravic laid aside his tools, and again
grasped and pulled at the object. Still it wouldn't
come. He shuffled backwards slightly to give him-
self more leverage, adjusted his grip and, throwing
back his head, heaved with all his might, veins
bulging in his neck. For a moment the world
seemed to stop dead, as if the scene in front of
Tara was a photograph rather than an event
happening in real time. Then, slowly, inch by inch,
the object started to rise. Daniel took a step for-
ward. Up it came, resisting all the way, the desert
reluctant to release its treasure, up and up, until
suddenly the ground's jaws broke and, in a spray
of sand and small pebbles, the object came free. A
shield, huge, round, heavy, its convex face gleam-
ing in the glare of the lamps. Dravic held it aloft
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and the men began cheering wildly, yelling, clap-
ping, stamping their feet.
'I've found you, you bastard!' bellowed Dravic.
'The army of Cambyses. I've found you!'
For a moment he stood with the shield held
triumphantly above his head and then began
screaming orders. Men swarmed down into
the trench. The shield was carried away and the
vacuums taken up again, their mouths swinging
furiously across the sand.
'Clear it!' roared Dravic. 'Clear all of it. Work!'
Initially there was nothing, just sand and more
sand, a bottomless well of yellow, so that it began
to look as if the shield might have been a one-off,
something thrown up by the desert to taunt and
tantalize them.
Then, slowly, other shapes started to appear.
Formless at first, just vague hummocks and ridges,
unsightly distortions in the smooth continuum of
the desert. As more sand was gasped away, how-
ever, they gradually took on recognizable forms.
Bodies, dozens of bodies, hundreds of them, their
flesh dried and hardened by two and a half
millennia of submersion, giving them the look not
of corpses, but rather of old men. An army of old
men. Ancient beyond reckoning, but alive none-
theless, rising wearily from the sands, blinking in
the angry light, disorientated, their weapons still
clutched firmly in their skeletal hands. There was
hair on their heads, and armour clamped around
their torsos, and, most extraordinary, expressions
on their faces – terror and pain and horror and
fury. One man appeared to be screaming, another
weeping, another laughing insanely, his mouth
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levered wide open to the sky, his throat filled with
sand.
'Jesus Christ,' whispered Tara. 'It's . . .'
'. . . fabulous,' said Daniel, breath heavy with
excitement.
'Horrible.'
Most of the figures were lying flat, steam-
rollered by the monstrous weight of the storm that
had buried them. A few, however, were on their
knees, and some were still standing upright, arms
raised protectively in front of their faces, over-
whelmed so swiftly they hadn't even had time to
fall.
As each body emerged, a host of black-robed
workers descended upon it like vultures, pulling
away its armour and equipment and passing them
up to the top of the trench, where packing crates
were being laid out ready to receive them.
Occasionally an arm or leg would snap off as the
body to which it belonged was roughly
manhandled.
'Strip them!' yelled Dravic. 'Strip them clean! I
want everything. Everything!'
An hour passed and the excavation spread out
in all directions, revealing more and more of the
army. Dravic strode back and forth barking
orders, examining objects, directing the sand-
vacuums, before eventually clambering out of the
hole and looking up at Tara and Daniel.
'I told you I'd find it, Lacage,' he shouted glee-
fully. 'I told you!'
Daniel said nothing. His eyes burned with
hatred. And also, it seemed to Tara, a hint of
envy.
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'I couldn't kill you without at least giving you
the chance to see it. I'm not that cruel!'
The German laughed and indicated to the
guards that they should take them back to their
tent.
'And Ms Mullray,' he called after them, 'our
little soiree hasn't been cancelled, merely post-
poned. I'll be sending for you again. After all this
work I'll be needing to slip into something warm
and tight.'
NORTHERN SUDAN
The boy found him standing on a dune top, alone,
gazing eastwards into the night. He climbed up to
him.
'They've found it, Master,' he said. 'The army.
Dr Dravic has just radioed in.'
The man continued staring out into the wilder-
ness, the dunes glowing silver in the moonlight,
like a sea of mercury. When he eventually spoke
his voice was subdued.
'This is the end and the beginning, Mehmet.
From today so much will be different. Sometimes
it frightens me.'
'Frightens, Master?'
'Yes, Mehmet. Even I, God's warrior, can be
scared. Scared of the responsibility I have been
given. There is so much to do. At times I think I
would just like to sleep. It's been so long since
I slept, Mehmet. Years. Not since I was a child.'
He clasped his hands behind his back. A soft
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wind started to blow. The boy was growing cold.
'We cross the border tomorrow. Mid-morning.
Inform Dr Dravic.'
'Yes, Master.'
The boy turned and started to descend. Halfway
down he stopped and looked back.
'Sayf al-Tha'r,' he called. 'You are like a father
to me.'
The man continued gazing out across the desert.
'And you are like a son to me,' he said.
His voice was quiet, no more than a whisper,
and the words dissolved into the night so that the
boy did not hear them.
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35
CAIRO
Cairo was the only practical starting point for the
journey Khalifa intended to make. The alternative
would have been to drive from Luxor to 'Ezba el
Gaga and then follow the huge loop of the desert
highway through the oases of al-Kharga and
Dakhla before cutting cross-country from al-Farafra
– a vast journey over badly maintained, heavily
policed roads that were frequently made impassable
by the drifting sands. No, it had to be Cairo. And
anyway, that was where Fat Abdul was.
His train drew into Ramesses Central just after
eight a.m. He jumped off before it had come to a
stop and, hurrying through the cavernous marble
concourse, hopped a service taxi down to Midan
Tahrir. He'd had ten hours to think about what he
was doing and more than once the doubts had
begun to creep in again. He'd pushed them
from his mind, however, and instead focused on
the journey ahead. He just hoped Abdul still
organized those desert tours.
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He crossed the square, dodging the barrage of
morning traffic, and turned down Sharia Talaat
Harb, coming to a halt in front of a glass-fronted
shop with 'Abdul Wassami Tours – Better Than
None in Egypt' stencilled above the window.