Read The Lost Army of Cambyses Online
Authors: Paul Sussman
Tags: #Thrillers, #Crime, #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective
waved the severed digit around in the air.
On the morning of her fifteenth birthday – and
this was her favourite memory – she had woken to
find an envelope addressed to her sitting on her
44
mantelpiece. Opening it, she had found the first
clue in a treasure trail that had taken her all round
the house and garden before eventually leading
her up into the attic, where she had discovered an
exquisite gold necklace concealed at the bottom of
an old trunk. Each clue had taken the form of a
rhyming verse and been written on parchment,
with drawings and symbols to add to the air of
mystery. Her father must have spent hours arrang-
ing it all. Later he had taken her mother and her
out to dinner, regaling them both with wonderful
tales of excavations and discoveries and eccentric
academics.
'You look beautiful, Tara,' he had told her, lean-
ing forward to adjust the new gold necklace,
which she had worn specially. 'The most beautiful
girl in the world. I am very, very proud of you.'
It was moments like these – few and far between
as they were – that somehow balanced out her
father's coldness and self-absorption, and bound
her to him. It was why she had phoned him two
years after her mother's funeral, asking for a
reconciliation after their long silence. And it was, in
a sense, why she was travelling to Egypt now.
Because she knew that deep down, in his own way
and despite his innumerable faults, he was a good
man and he loved her, and needed her too, just as
she needed him. And of course there was always the
hope – just as there was every time she saw him –
that maybe this time things would be different.
Maybe they wouldn't bicker and shout at each other
and sulk, but would be happy and relaxed in each
other's company, like a normal father and daughter.
Maybe this time they could make things work.
45
Some chance, she had thought to herself as
they'd begun their descent. You'll be pleased to see
him for about five minutes, and then you'll start
arguing again.
'I suppose you know,' said her neighbour
jovially, 'that more planes crash during landing
than at any other time during the flight.'
Tara had ordered more ice cubes from the
stewardess.
She emerged finally into the airport arrivals hall
almost an hour after they'd touched down. There
had been an interminable wait at passport control,
followed by a further delay at the baggage
carousel, where security guards were carrying out
random luggage checks.
'Sayf al-Tha'r,' a fellow passenger had said to
her, shaking his head. 'What problems he causes.
That one man can bring the country to a
standstill!'
Before she could ask what he meant he had
spotted his luggage and, signalling a porter to
collect it for him, marched off into the crowd. Her
own bag had come round a few minutes later and,
everything else for the moment forgotten, she had
hefted it onto her shoulder and set off through
customs, heart thudding with anticipation.
Since her father had first said he'd come out to
meet her she had imagined herself emerging into
the arrivals hall to find him standing there wait-
ing, the two of them yelping with joy and rushing
towards each other, arms open. As it was, the only
person who greeted her was a taxi driver touting
for work. She peered along the row of faces lining
46
the arrivals barrier, but her father's wasn't among
them.
The terminal, even at that hour, was busy.
Families greeted and took leave of each other
noisily, children played among the plastic chairs,
package tourists crowded around harassed-
looking reps. Black-uniformed policemen were
very much in evidence, guns held across their
chests.
She waited at the barrier for a while and then
began wandering around the hall. She went out-
side, where a tour rep mistook her for one of his
party and tried to hustle her onto a coach, then
came back in again, walking around for a while
longer before changing some money, buying a
coffee and sitting down in a seat that afforded a
good view both of the entrance and the barrier.
After an hour she called her father from a pay-
phone, but there was no reply either from his dig
house or the flat he kept in central Cairo. She
wondered if his taxi had been held up in
traffic – she presumed he would have come in a
taxi, he'd never learnt to drive – or if he had fallen
ill or, and with her father it was always a possi-
bility, simply forgotten that he was supposed to be
meeting her.
But no, he wouldn't have forgotten. Not this
time. Not after sounding so pleased that she was
coming. He was late. That was all. Just late. She
got herself another coffee, settled back in the chair
and opened a book.
Damn, she thought. I didn't get his
Times.
47
5
LUXOR, THE NEXT MORNING
Inspector Yusuf Ezz el-Din Khalifa rose before
dawn and, having showered and dressed, went
into the living room to say his morning prayers.
He felt tired and irritable, as he did every morning.
The ritual of worship, the standing and kneeling
and bowing and reciting, cleared his head. By the
time he was finished he felt fresh and calm and
strong. As he did every morning.
'Wa lillah al-shukr','
he said to himself, moving
into the kitchen to make coffee. 'Thanks be to
God. His power is great.'
He put on some water to boil, lit a cigarette and
looked out at a woman hanging washing on the
roof opposite, which was just below the level of
his kitchen window, about three metres away.
He'd often wondered whether it would be possible
to jump from his building to hers, across the
narrow alley that divided them. When he was
48
younger he would probably have tried
it. Ali, his brother, would certainly have been up
for the challenge. Ali, however, was dead and he
himself now had responsibilities. It was a twenty-
metre drop to the ground and with a wife and
three young children he couldn't afford to take
such risks. Or perhaps that was just an excuse.
After all, he'd never liked heights.
He added coffee and sugar to the boiling water,
allowing it to bubble up to the rim of the flask
before pouring it into a glass and going through
into the front hall, a large gloomy space off which
all the rooms in the flat opened. For six months
now he'd been building a fountain here and the
floor was an assault course of cement bags and
tiles and lengths of plastic tubing. It was just a
small fountain and the work should have taken
only a couple of weeks. Something always came
up to distract him, however, so that the weeks had
dragged into months and it was still only half
finished. There wasn't really room for it and his
wife had complained bitterly about the mess and
expense, but he'd always wanted a fountain and,
anyway, it would bring a bit of colour to their
otherwise drab flat. He squatted and poked at a
pile of sand with his finger, thinking perhaps he'd
have enough time to set a few tiles before going
into the office. The phone rang.
'It's for you,' said his wife sleepily as he entered
the bedroom, 'Mohammed Sariya.'
She handed him the receiver and slipped out of
bed, lifting the baby from its cot and disappearing
into the kitchen. His son came in and leaped onto
the bed beside him, bouncing up and down.
49
'Bass,
Ali!' he said, pushing the boy away. 'Stop
it! Hello, Mohammed. It's early. What's going on?'
The voice of his deputy echoed at the other end
of the line. Khalifa held the phone with his right
hand while using his left to fend off his son.
'Where?' he asked.
His deputy answered. He sounded excited.
'You're there now?'
Khalifa's son was laughing and trying to hit him
with a pillow.
'I told you to stop it, Ali. Sorry, what was that?
OK, stay where you are. And don't let anyone go
near it. I'll be right over.'
He replaced the receiver and, seizing his son,
turned him upside down, kissing each of his bare
feet in turn. The boy roared with laughter.
'Swing me, Dad,' he cried. 'Swing me round.'
'I'll swing you round and out of the window,'
said Khalifa. 'And then maybe you'll fly away and
let me have a bit of peace.'
He dropped the boy on the bed and went
through into the kitchen where Zenab, his wife,
was making more coffee, the baby suckling at her
breast. From the living room came the sound of
his daughter singing.
'How is he this morning?' he asked, kissing his
wife and tickling the baby's toes.
'Hungry,' she smiled. 'Like his father always is.
Do you want breakfast?'
'No time,' said Khalifa. 'I've got to go over to
the west bank.'
'Without breakfast?'
'Something's come up.'
'What?'
50
He looked at the woman hanging washing on
the roof opposite. 'A body,' he said. 'I probably
won't be home for lunch.'
He crossed the Nile on one of the brightly painted
motor launches that plied back and forth between
the two shores. Normally he would have taken the
ferry, but he was in a hurry and so paid the extra
and got a boat to himself. Just as they were pulling
off an old man came hurrying up, a wooden box
clutched under one arm. He grasped the rail of the
boat and clambered aboard.
'Good morning, Inspector,' he puffed, setting
the box down at Khalifa's feet. 'Shoeshine?'
Khalifa smiled. 'You never miss a trick, do you,
Ibrahim?'
The old man chuckled, revealing two rows of
uneven gold teeth. 'A man has to eat. And a man
has to have clean shoes, too. So we help each
other.'
'Go on, then. But be quick. I've got business on
the other side and I don't want to hang around
when we land.'
'You know me, Inspector. Fastest shoeshine in
Luxor.'
He pulled out rags, a brush and polish, and
slapped the top of his box, indicating that Khalifa
should put his feet up. A young boy sat silently
in the stern working the outboard, his face
impassive.
They slid forward through the glassy water, the
Theban Hills looming ahead, their colour chang-
ing from grey to brown to yellow in the growing
light of day. Other launches were crossing to either
51
side of theirs, one, away to the right, carrying
a group of Japanese tourists. Probably going for a
balloon ride over the Valley of the Kings, thought
Khalifa, to see the sunrise. It was something he'd
always wanted to do himself, although at three
hundred dollars a go he couldn't afford it.
Probably never would, police wages being what
they were.
They came in to the western shore, sliding into
a gap between two other launches and riding up
onto the gravel with a crunch. The old man gave
Khalifa's toecaps a last swift buff and clapped his
polish-stained hands together to show he'd
finished. The detective handed him two Egyptian
pounds, gave the same to the boy and leaped
down onto the shore.
'I'll wait for you,' said the boy.
'Don't bother,' he replied. 'See you soon,
Ibrahim.'
The detective turned and climbed to the top of
the bank, where a large crowd was waiting for the
ferry. He wove his way through the throng,
squeezing through a gap between a wall and a
rusty chain-link fence and setting off along a
narrow dirt track beside the river. Farmers were
out working in the fields, harvesting their maize
and sugar cane, and two men were up to their
waists in an irrigation ditch clearing weeds.
Groups of children in neat white shirts hurried
past him on their way to school. The heat was
rising. He lit another cigarette.
It took him twenty minutes to reach the body,
by which time the buildings of western Luxor had
receded to a distant blur and his newly polished
52
shoes were white with dust. He emerged from a
forest of reeds and there in front of him was
Sergeant Sariya, squatting on the shore beside
what looked like a bundle of wet rags. He stood as
Khalifa approached.
'I've called the hospital,' he said. 'They're send-
ing someone over.'
Khalifa nodded and descended to the water's
edge. The body was lying on its front, arms
splayed, face buried in the mud, its shirt ripped
and bloodstained. From the waist down it was still
in the water, the lapping of the waves causing it to
roll back and forth like someone rocking in their
sleep. A faint odour of decay wafted upwards to