Read The Lost Army of Cambyses Online
Authors: Paul Sussman
Tags: #Thrillers, #Crime, #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective
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Initially he took them due east, about a kilometre,
putting two huge dunes between them and the
valley where the army was buried. Only then did
they turn south again, opening the throttle and fly-
ing back towards the huge rock, now lost
somewhere ahead and to their right.
'We'll run parallel to the valley till we're level
with the camp,' he explained. 'At least that way
we've got a chance of getting close to it. If we'd
gone back the way we'd come they'd have spotted
us a mile off. Nothing wrong with staying alive as
long as we can.'
They kept their eyes open for any sign of move-
ment on the dunes to either side and, once, Daniel
stopped and cut the engine, closing his eyes and
listening for anything that might indicate they'd
been seen. There was nothing. Just sand and
silence and stillness.
'It's like the whole thing was just a dream,' said
Tara.
'If only.'
They roared on for another five minutes until
Daniel judged they were about level with the
camp, whereupon he angled the bike up towards
the summit of the right-hand dune. The slope was
steep, and they only just made it to the top, the
engine whining in protest. The pyramid-shaped
outcrop reared in front of them and slightly to
their left, two dunes away, with below it, hidden,
the camp and excavations. There was no sign of
any guards.
'Where are they?' asked Tara.
'No idea. They must have all gone down into
the camp.'
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He eased back the throttle and took them down,
across and up the side of the next dune. There was
now only one dune between them and the army.
They could hear vague sounds, shouts and
hammering. The landscape, however, remained
resolutely empty.
'It's eerie,' she said. 'Like the desert's full of
invisible people.'
Daniel cut the engine and again surveyed the
land in front of them. Then, slowly, he eased his
hand off the brake and freewheeled silently down
the side of the dune, their velocity carrying them
fifty metres across the flat before they finally came
to a halt. They dismounted and he laid the bike on
the sand.
'We'll go on foot from here. I don't want to risk
starting the engine. Too much noise. If anyone sees
us . . . Well, there's not much we can do. Run for
it, I guess.'
They walked to the foot of the dune and started
upwards, eyes fixed on the summit above, dread-
ing the moment when someone would appear and
spot them. No-one did, however, and, hearts
thudding with exertion, they reached the top and
threw themselves onto their bellies, crawling
slowly forward over the cool sand until they could
gaze down into the valley below.
They were directly above the excavation crater,
the vast rock in front of them, the camp away to
their left. Droves of men were scurrying frantically
to and fro, packing away artefacts – swords, shields,
spears, armour – and loading crates onto camels.
'Looks like they're getting ready to leave,' said
Daniel, grimacing at the way the objects were
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being treated. 'Look, they're not even bothering to
use straw to pack them. They're just dumping
them in the boxes.'
They lay still, surveying the scene. A huge figure
was striding among the workmen, shouting and
gesticulating. Dravic. Tara felt a spasm of disgust
and turned her eyes away.
'What's that?'
She indicated a man down by the edge of the
crater, close to the base of the pyramid rock,
fiddling with what looked like a small grey box, a
confusion of cables tangled around his feet.
Daniel's eyes narrowed.
'Oh God!' he gasped.
'What?'
'Detonator.'
A brief pause.
'You mean . . .'
'They're going to blow it up,' he said, his face
pale with horror. 'That's what Sayf al-Tha'r meant
the other night. It's the only way they can
guarantee the value of what they've got. The
greatest find in the history of archaeology and
they're going to destroy it. Oh Jesus.' He grimaced
as though in physical pain.
'So what do we do?' she said.
'I don't know, Tara.' He shook his head. 'I just
don't know. If we try to go down here they'll see
us immediately.'
He tore his eyes away from the detonator and,
raising himself, looked away to his left.
'We might be able to get down further along,
beside the camp, but it's dangerous. Someone just
has to look up and that's it.'
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'We've come this far. If there's a chance of
getting down we should try it.'
'But what then? The detective guy could be
anywhere. There are a hundred tents down
there.'
'Let's just get down, eh?'
He smiled, despite himself. 'That's what I love
about you, Tara. Never answer a question today
that you can put off till tomorrow.'
He glanced down at the camp again and then,
easing himself back from the summit, came to his
feet and started along the flank of the dune. Tara
followed. They had gone only a few metres when
they heard something behind them: a distant thud
as of drums being beaten. They stopped, turned,
listened. The noise grew louder.
'What is it?' she asked.
'I don't know. It sounds like . . .'
He cocked his head, concentrating.
'Shit!'
He dragged her down onto the sand.
'Helicopters!'
They lay still, faces pressed into the dune as the
sound grew steadily louder. Soon it was all around
them, filling their ears. Sand started to blow off
the top of the dune, sheets of it, swirling over
them, the wind punching down from above. The
first helicopter roared past, no more than ten
metres overhead. Another went over, and another,
and another, more and more of them, like a swarm
of giant locusts, turning the sky dark, on and on,
until eventually they had all passed and the down-
draught subsided again.
For a moment the two of them lay still, then
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crawled back up to the ridge and took in the scene
below.
Three helicopters were hovering over the valley.
The others were coming in to land, half to the
south of the camp, the others to the north. As soon
as their wheels touched the ground, workers
pressed in all around, ready to start loading crates.
There was a brief pause and then, as one, the
cargo doors slid open. The black-robed men bent
to lift their loads. As they did so, suddenly, shock-
ingly, a vicious pulse of smoke and flame erupted
from the sides of the helicopters and there was a
furious crackle of gunfire.
'What the . . .'
Sayf al-Tha'r's men flew backwards, the crates
and their contents shredding under the hail of
bullets. The gunfire intensified, now coming from
the airborne helicopters too. Black-robed figures
were scattering in all directions, bullets sweeping
after and over them, cutting them down as they
ran. Some tried to return fire, but were picked off
almost immediately by the helicopters hovering
overhead. Camels thundered madly to and fro,
trampling anyone who got in their way.
'It's a massacre,' Tara whispered. 'God
almighty, it's a massacre.'
There were shouts and screams, and the whoosh
and boom of exploding oil drums. Figures began to
leap out of the helicopters, a surge of khaki, crouch-
ing low, fanning out, shooting. Black-robed bodies
lay strewn across the ground like spatters of ink.
Daniel came to his feet. 'I'm going down!'
She began to stand too, but he clamped his hand
to her shoulder.
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'Stay here! I'll try to find the detective and get
him out. Watch for us!'
Before she could say anything he was gone,
sprinting along the ridge and then down towards
the camp. At the bottom one of Sayf al-Tha'r's
men came running from between the tents. He saw
Daniel and raised his gun, but was thumped to the
ground by a storm of bullets from above, the sand
around him staining red with blood. Barely break-
ing his stride Daniel stooped, seized the man's gun
and ran on into the camp, disappearing behind a
veil of smoke. Tara leaned forward, trying to see
where he'd gone. Suddenly her head was yanked
back and she was looking up at the sky.
'I believe we have some unfinished business,
Miss Mullray. I do hope you don't enjoy it.'
'You love him, don't you?' said Khalifa gently.
'Sayf al-Tha'r.'
He was sitting cross-legged on the ground. A
few paces away, just inside the tent entrance, sat
Mehmet, a gun balanced on his thigh, eyes fixed
on Khalifa's face.
'I loved him too once, you know. More than
anyone in the world. Anyone.'
The boy was silent.
'I was like you. I would have died for him.
Happily. But now . . .' He dropped his head. 'Now
there's nothing but pain. I hope you never have to
feel that. Because to love someone and then hate
them is a terrible thing.'
They sat motionless, Khalifa staring at his
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hands, the boy staring at Khalifa. A faint thudding
came drifting into the tent, growing gradually
more insistent. The boy stood and, keeping his
gun trained on his prisoner, pushed back the flap.
'Looks like you'll be leaving soon,' said Khalifa.
Outside men were hurrying past. The thud of
rotors grew louder, the air vibrating with the
sound until eventually it was all around. The boy
leaned out and looked up, smiling, enjoying the
warmth of the sun and the buffeting of the wind.
His prisoner was right. Soon they would be leav-
ing. He and Sayf al-Tha'r. And soon, too, all bad
things in the world were going to end. That was
why they'd come out here. To make paradise on
earth. To do God's bidding. He felt a surge of hope
and happiness.
'I'll never hate him,' he said, turning back
towards Khalifa, knowing he wasn't supposed to
talk but unable to stop himself. 'Never. Whatever
you say. He's a good man. No-one ever cared for
me except him.' His smile widened. 'I do love him.
I will always be at his side. I will never fail him.'
He stared down, eyes bright with love and
innocence, and then, suddenly, there was a deaf-
ening roar and something ripped through the
canvas above. It slammed the boy onto his knees,
slicing the side of his head away, spilling blood
and brain across his shoulder. For a second he
remained like that, teetering, the smile still fixed
on his bloodied mouth, and then he pitched face
forward on top of Khalifa, knocking him back-
wards onto the floor. More bullets spat down
from above, slamming into the boy's limbs and
torso, causing his body to jerk like a marionette,
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before the helicopters trained their weapons else-
where and the body was still, fingers bent into
claws as though clinging to the edge of a precipice.
For a moment Khalifa was too shocked to
move. Then slowly, gingerly, he rolled the corpse
away and stood. The roof of the tent was a tangle
of shredded canvas, the sandy floor pitted with
craters. If the boy hadn't fallen on top of him he'd
have been killed, no doubt about it. He bent and
felt for a pulse, knowing it was futile, and then ran
his fingertips over the boy's eyes, closing the eye-
lids.
'He didn't deserve you,' he whispered.
Flames had started licking up the back of the
tent, filling the interior with smoke. Coughing,
Khalifa heaved off his blood-sodden robes and
snatched up the boy's gun. He took a final look
down at the punctured corpse and then threw
back the flap and ducked outside.
The camp had become an inferno. Everywhere
there were flames and smoke. Shadowy figures
loomed through the haze, some running, others
sprawled lifeless on the ground. High above three