Read The Lost Army of Cambyses Online
Authors: Paul Sussman
Tags: #Thrillers, #Crime, #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective
man to the next, sizing up his chances. There was
a brief painful silence, the calm before the storm,
and then, suddenly, raucous laughter.
'The cigarette, you idiot! Don't you want a
light?'
It took a second for Khalifa to register what
they meant, and then the air whooshed from his
lungs in a deep sigh of relief. He lifted a hand and
touched the cigarette in his mouth.
'That's what a night in the desert does to you,'
he said, laughing with the others. 'Turns your
mind.'
The man flicked a lighter and held out the
flame. Khalifa leaned forward and puffed the
cigarette into life.
'The sooner we get out of this god-forsaken
place the better,' he said.
Murmurs of agreement.
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He took a couple more puffs, nodded a farewell
and started away again. This time no-one called
him back. He was through.
The eastern horizon was definitely greying now.
Khalifa crossed the valley and climbed to the top of
the next dune, the huge rock rearing monstrously to
his left, silent and immutable, a pivot on whose
point the entire sky seemed to balance. At the
summit he passed between two lookouts, neither of
whom paid him any attention, and gazed down at
the chaotic scene below – the crater, the tents, the
camels, the piles of boxes and artefacts. Droves of
black-robed figures were moving to and fro, most
of them packing and loading crates, although a
small group was working within the crater itself,
wading among the tangled corpses, doing something
with lengths of cable. There was a large man in a
white shirt standing above them, supervising their
work. Dravic, he guessed.
He gazed down at them for a few moments and
then turned his attention back towards the camp,
just in time to see a fair-haired woman disappear-
ing into a tent right in the centre. He noted its
position, between a row of fuel drums and a pyra-
mid of straw bales, and then started down the
slope. As he did so an amplified voice drifted up
from beneath:
'Allah u akbar! Allah u akbar!'
The call to dawn prayers. He quickened his
descent, pulling the scarf back up across his face.
A tide of men streamed through the camp and out
onto a flat area of sand to the south of it, where
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they lined up in rows, facing east. Sayf al-Tha'r
moved with them, but turned aside on the edge of
the camp and stepped into a tent with an antenna
jutting above it. A man rose as he entered, but Sayf
al-Tha'r waved him back to his seat in front of
heavy radio apparatus.
'The helicopters?'
The man handed him a piece of paper. 'Just
taken off.'
'No problems?'
'None. They'll be here in under an hour.'
'And the guards? Nothing?'
The man shook his head.
'Keep me informed,' said Sayf al-Tha'r and
stepped out of the tent again.
The tide of men was thinning now as the last
stragglers hurried towards the prayer area, leaving
the camp deserted. The lookouts had remained in
position, but they too were facing east, heads
bowed. He gazed up at them, black hummocks
strung out along the dune-tops like a line of
vultures, and then turned and made his way
back through the camp. The sound of prayer
wafted through the air like a breeze.
He reached his own tent and threw back the
flap. As he bent to step inside he stopped suddenly,
shoulders tense. Slowly he stood and turned, eyes
darting to left and right. He came forward half a
step, eyes probing the shadowy labyrinth of
canvas and equipment, but there was nothing and
after a moment he shook his head, turned and dis-
appeared inside, the canvas flap dropping down
behind him.
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NEAR THE LIBYAN BORDER
The helicopters flew low, hugging the desert,
twenty of them, like a flock of carrion birds
sweeping over the sands. One was slightly ahead
of the others and those behind followed its every
movement, rising and falling as it rose and fell,
swinging to left and right, a perfectly choreographed
dance of flight. They were large machines, heavy,
their lumpen bodies somehow at odds with the
grace of their movement. In their cockpits human
forms could just be made out. They rushed on
ahead of the dawn, slicing through the silence as
the sky slowly turned to red.
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40
T H E WESTERN DESERT
Khalifa remained hidden among a jumble of oil
drums until the camp had emptied completely. He
then made his way swiftly through the twisting
avenues of equipment and tents, searching for the
one into which the girl had disappeared. He
reckoned he had fifteen minutes, twenty at the
outside.
From above the layout of the camp had seemed
perfectly clear. Now, at ground level, it wasn't so
easy to orientate himself. Everything looked the
same and the landmarks he had noted a few
moments before – the row of fuel drums, the stack
of straw bales – were nowhere to be seen. He put
his head through a couple of doorways, thinking
they might be the ones, but there was nothing
inside and he was just beginning to get desperate
when he emerged from behind a teetering wall of
crates and saw ahead of him, beside a heap of
bales, the tent he was looking for. He grunted with
relief and, hurrying forward, drew back its flap
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and leaned in, machine-gun held ready in front of
him.
It wasn't necessary, for the guard he'd been
expecting wasn't there. Neither, however, was the
girl. Instead, kneeling with his back to the door,
was a solitary figure, his forehead pressed to the
floor. Khalifa made to step back, realizing he'd
again got the wrong tent, but something stopped
him. He couldn't see the man's face, nor even
much of his shape beneath his costume of black
robes. Somehow, however, he knew. It was Sayf al-
Tha'r. He raised his gun, finger ready to squeeze
the trigger.
If the kneeling figure noticed the policeman, he
gave no indication, but continued with his
prayers, oblivious to the presence behind him.
Khalifa's finger tightened on the trigger, squeezing
the metal tongue back until it was just a twitch
away from firing. From this distance there was no
way he could miss. The tent's interior seemed to
echo with the beating of his heart.
The man straightened, stood, recited, knelt
again. One twitch of the finger, thought Khalifa,
that's all it would take. One twitch and the figure
in front of him would be dead. He thought of Ali
and raised the muzzle slightly, aiming it at the base
of the man's head. He drew a deep breath, bit his
lip, then lowered the weapon again, eased his
finger off the trigger and stepped backwards and
out of the tent.
For a moment he stared at the worn canvas flap,
a strangely hollow feeling in the pit of his
stomach. He could only have been looking at the
man for a few seconds, but in that time the sky
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suddenly seemed to have become much lighter,
dawn sweeping swiftly in from the east like a
wave. They'd be finishing prayers soon. He turned
and hurried off through the camp.
'I wonder how Joey is,' mumbled Tara.
She was sitting on the tent floor, hugging her
knees, rocking back and forth. Daniel lay beside her,
drumming his fingers on the ground, occasionally
lifting his arm to look at his watch.
'Who's Joey?' he asked.
'Our black-necked cobra. At the zoo. He's not
been well.'
'I would have thought you'd have had enough
of cobras to last you a lifetime.'
She shrugged. 'I never particularly liked him,
but then . . . you know . . . when you think you'll
never see him again . . . I hope Alexandra's kept
up with his antibiotics. And taken his rock out. He
had a skin disease, you see. Was rubbing himself
up against it. Damaging the scales.'
She was rambling, talking for the sake of talk-
ing, as if by making conversation she could
somehow put off the moment when they would be
taken outside and . . . what? Shot? Beheaded?
Stabbed? She looked at their guard. Not the boy
Mehmet any more, an older man. She pictured
him holding a gun to her head and firing; the
sound, the feel, the explosion of blood, her blood.
She began wringing her hands.
'What the hell was it with you and snakes any-
way?' muttered Daniel, struggling into a sitting
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position. 'I never understood the attraction.'
Tara smiled ruefully. 'In a funny way it was Dad
who got me interested in them. He hated them,
you see. It was the one chink in his armour. Made
me feel like I had some sort of power over him. I
remember some students once hid a rubber one in
his bag and when he opened it . . .'
Her voice trailed off, as if she realized there was
no point finishing the story because neither of
them was going to laugh. There was a long, heavy
silence.
'What about you?' she asked eventually, desper-
ate to keep the conversation going. 'You've never
told me why you became an archaeologist.'
'God knows. I've never really thought about it.'
Daniel was fiddling with the lace of his boot. 'I've
just always loved digging, I guess. I remember
before my parents died, when we lived in Paris, we
had a garden and I used to dig these holes at the
bottom of it, looking for buried treasure. Huge
holes, deep, like craters. Dad said if I wasn't care-
ful I'd end up in Australia. That's where it started,
I suppose. And then I was given a book with
pictures of the Tutankhamun treasures, and some-
how the digging and Egypt . . .'
The tent flap was drawn back and a guard
stepped in, his scarf wrapped close around his face
against the dawn chill. The guard on the floor
started getting to his feet. As he did so, the new
arrival brought the metal butt of his machine-gun
down hard on the side of the man's head. He
slumped backwards, unconscious. Daniel leaped
to his feet, Tara beside him. Khalifa pulled the