Read The Lost Army of Cambyses Online
Authors: Paul Sussman
Tags: #Thrillers, #Crime, #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective
Then, in a hidden pocket inside one of the other
pockets, he discovered one more photo. It was
creased and faded, the corners dog-eared, but still
recognizable: a young man, handsome, similar to
the one in the ID photo but sterner, more severe,
with piercing eyes and a mop of black hair falling
down over a high, intelligent forehead. He was
staring straight into the camera, one arm hanging
at his side, the other lying on the head of a small
stone sphinx. On the back was written, 'Ali, out-
side the Cairo museum'.
Sayf al-Tha'r's hand started to tremble.
He was still staring at the photo when Dravic
staggered up onto the top of the dune.
'What's going on?' puffed the German.
'We start flying the artefacts out tomorrow,'
said Sayf al-Tha'r.
476
'What?'
'I want the helicopters here at first light.'
'I thought you said we weren't going to use
helicopters.'
'The plan has changed. We take as much as we
can by helicopter, the rest goes with the camel
train. I want us off this site within twenty-four
hours.'
'For Christ's sake, we can't just—'
'Do it!'
Dravic glared angrily at him and, snatching a
handkerchief from his pocket, began mopping at
his sodden brow.
'There's no way we can get everything in place
by tomorrow. No fucking way. We only found the
rear of the army this morning. It's almost three
kilometres away. It'll take us at least two more
days to get the whole thing rigged.'
'Then we put more men on it. We put all the
men on it. As of now we stop digging and con-
centrate on preparing the army for our departure.'
'What's the problem, for Christ's sake?'
Sayf al-Tha'r gazed down at the photo in his
hand. 'Someone knows. A policeman. He's out
here. In the desert. Near.'
For a moment Dravic stared at him in-
credulously, then burst out laughing.
'This is what you're shitting your pants over?
One fucking policeman out here on his own?
Jesus! We send out a patrol, we shoot him, end of
story. It's not like there's anywhere he can hide.'
'We go tomorrow.'
'There's not time, I tell you! We need at least
two more days to get everything ready. If we don't
477
do this properly the stuff we've got won't be
worth shit. Do you understand that? It won't
be worth shit!'
Sayf al-Tha'r looked up, eyes steely. 'We go
tomorrow. There is no more to be said.'
Dravic opened his mouth to argue, but realized
it was futile. Instead he hawked up a glob of
tobaccoey mucus, spat it a centimetre from Sayf
al-Tha'r's foot and, turning, set off back down the
dune.
A generator chugged into life and the arc lamps
flared on, flooding the excavations with a wash of
icy light. Sayf al-Tha'r took no notice, just stared
back down at the photo in his hand.
'Ali,' he whispered to himself, grimacing
slightly, as though the words tasted bitter on his
tongue. 'Ali Khalifa.'
He was still for a moment and then suddenly,
violently, he tore the picture apart and threw the
pieces into the wind. They scattered across the top
of the dune, fragments of face lying confusedly at
his feet like the shards of a broken mirror.
It was dark when Khalifa finally crawled out from
beneath the overhang. Or at least as dark as it gets
in the desert, which never sees an absolute black-
ness, merely a ghostly half-light as if a soft gauze
has been draped across the landscape. He stood
for a moment gazing out across the dunes, the
moon, as he had hoped, not too bright, and then
brought his attention back to his immediate
surroundings. He had a long walk ahead of him
478
and no time to waste. Beneath him a precipitous,
thirty-metre slide of hard-packed sand dropped
sharply downwards. He looked to left and right
along the ridge, casting around for a gentler place
to descend, but the gradient was just as acute in
both directions and so, mumbling a swift prayer,
he threw his holdall down, sat at the top of the
slope and, machine-gun cradled in his lap, lay
back and slid.
He picked up speed immediately. He tried to
brake himself with his feet, but it didn't have any
effect other than to fill his shoes with sand. Faster
and faster he went, the wind hissing in his ears, the
bottom of his shirt rucking up so that the sand
scraped viciously against the bare flesh of his
lower back. Halfway down he hit a heavy ripple
and went into a roll, bouncing downwards in a
flurry of dislodged sand and whirling limbs, the
machine-gun slamming painfully against his chest
and chin. He hit the bottom shoulder-first and was
slammed round onto his face, tasting sand on his
lips and tongue.
'Ibn sharmoota,'
he mumbled. 'Son of a bitch.'
He lay still for a moment and then, spitting,
came shakily to his feet and looked back up the
slope. It appeared even steeper from the bottom
than it had from the top, a near-vertical wall of
sand, with a deep, swerving groove marking the
line of his descent. He whispered another brief
prayer, this one of thanks for still being alive, and,
brushing sand out of his hair, retrieved his bag and
set out across the desert.
He walked throughout the night, the world
479
around him silent aside from the soft crunch of his
footfall and the rasp of his breath. He knew he
was leaving a trail that would be easy to follow,
even in the dark, but there was nothing he could
do about it and so he just ploughed forward as
best he could. He kept the GPS unit in his hand
and referred to it occasionally to check how far he
still had to go. For his bearings, however, he had
no need of it, for the pyramid rock was clearly
visible, glowing mysteriously in the darkness. He
guessed they must have lights rigged around its
base.
Gradually his feet settled into a rhythm. Slowly
up each dune, faster down the far side, and then
an even stride across the flattish desert floor to the
bottom of the next slope. Up, down, across; up,
down, across; up, down, across.
He had twenty-eight kilometres to cover and for
the first half of the journey he managed to stay
focused on his surroundings, keeping his ears and
eyes sharp for any sign he was being pursued. As
the hours passed, however, and the kilometres
slipped away, so his mind began to wander.
He found himself thinking of Zenab, of the first
time they'd met shortly after he'd started at
university. A group of them had gone to the zoo
for the afternoon and Zenab had been one of
them, a friend of a friend of a friend. They'd
wandered around gazing at the animals, Khalifa
far too shy to talk to her, until eventually they'd
stopped in front of a cage with a polar bear inside,
swimming sadly round in its pool of milky water.
'Poor thing,' Khalifa had said with a sigh. 'He
wants to go home to the Antarctic'
480
'The Arctic, I think.' She had been beside him.
'Polar bears come from the Arctic. You don't get
them in the Antarctic. Penguins, yes, but not polar
bears.'
He had blushed a deep shade of magenta, over-
whelmed by her long hair and huge eyes.
'Oh,' was all he had managed to say. 'I see.'
And that had been it. He hadn't spoken to her
for the rest of the afternoon, too tongue-tied with
shyness. He smiled at the memory. Who would
have thought that from such unpromising
beginnings . . .
To the west a shooting star flared brilliantly for
a moment and disappeared. Up, down, across. Up,
down, across.
Now he was thinking of his children. Batah, Ali,
baby Yusuf. He remembered each of their births as
if it had happened only yesterday. Batah, their
first, had taken almost nineteen hours to arrive.
'Never again,' Zenab had muttered afterwards.
'I'm never going through that again.'
But she had gone through it again, and a few
years later Ali had arrived, and then baby Yusuf,
and who knows, maybe there would be more. He
hoped so. He imagined a whole crowd of children
playing around the fountain he was building in his
hall, floating their toys in its water, their laughter
echoing around the flat.
A slight breeze came up, making the dunes
around him whisper, as if they were talking about
him. Up, down, across. Up, down, across. He lit a
cigarette.
Now his children too were drifting away and he
was thinking of his father and mother. How his
481
father used to pick him up and swing him round
by his feet, how his mother would sit cross-legged
on the roof of their house shelling termous beans.
He stayed with them for a while and then moved
on again, thinking of Professor al-Habibi and Fat
Abdul, of the Cairo Museum and the camel yard,
cases he'd dealt with, cases he'd solved. Image
after image drifted through his mind, as if he was
sitting in a cinema watching the narrative of his
own life slowly unfolding in front of him.
And of course inevitably, inexorably, his
thoughts came round to his brother.
Good things at first: the games they had played,
the adventures they had had, an old derelict river
cruiser from whose upper deck they used to dive
into the Nile. Then how Ali had started to change,
growing harder, more distant, getting in trouble,
doing bad things. Finally, unavoidably, the day his
brother had died. The day Khalifa's own life had
fallen apart. It had all happened so quickly, so
unexpectedly. The fundamentalists had come to
their village one afternoon looking for foreigners,
bent on killing. There had been shooting, seven
people had died, including three terrorists. Khalifa
had been at university at the time and had only
heard about it on the radio. He had rushed home
immediately, knowing instinctively that Ali had
been caught up in it. His mother had been sitting
alone in a chair staring at the wall.
'Your brother is dead,' she had said simply, face
blank. 'My Ali is dead. Oh God, my poor heart is
broken.'
Later Khalifa had gone out and wandered the
streets. The bodies of the fundamentalists had not
482
yet been removed and had been lying in a row on
the pavement, blankets thrown over their faces,
policemen standing by, chatting and smoking. He
had gazed down at them, trying to connect them
with the brother he had loved, and then turned
away. He had walked up onto the Giza plateau, up
to the pyramids, and then further up, climbing
block over block to the very summit of the great
Pyramid of Cheops, to the place where he and Ali
had sat as children, the world spread out below
like a map. And there, at what felt like the apex of
the world, he had slumped down and wept, over-
whelmed with shame and horror, unable to believe
what had happened, unable to understand it, the
late afternoon sun hovering above his head like a
vast thought bubble, full of fire and pain and
confusion.
Ali, his brother. The brother who had become a
father. Who had made him what he was, who had
inspired him in all things. So much strength. So
much goodness. Dead for fourteen years now, but
still it weighed him down. And always would,
until he stood face to face with the man responsible
for that loss. Until he stood face to face with Sayf
al-Tha'r. That was why he had come out here. To
look Sayf al-Tha'r in the eyes. Even if he had to die
to do it. To confront the man who had destroyed
his family.
Khalifa stumbled up to the top of a dune and
realized with a shock that he had almost reached
his destination. Ahead, less than two kilometres
away, the great pyramidal rock loomed vast and
menacing, a patina of brilliant light pulsing all