Read The Lost Army of Cambyses Online
Authors: Paul Sussman
Tags: #Thrillers, #Crime, #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective
over each other, lost in a blur of sand and sky and
flailing limbs.
At the bottom Tara somersaulted away from the
dune and slammed onto the sand. For a moment
she lay still, dizzy and disorientated, then
staggered to her feet. Dravic had tumbled away
from her on the lower part of the slope, and was
now ten metres away. He too was coming to
his feet, the sharpened trowel still clenched in his
hand. Blood was dripping from his nose.
'You bitch.' He coughed. 'You fucking bitch.'
He started towards her, his feet sinking deep
into the sand. Surprisingly deep, given that they
were now back on level ground. Tara backed
away, ready to turn and run. The giant heaved his
leg out and took another step, but went in even
deeper, above the knees. Suddenly he wasn't look-
ing at her any more. He leaned back and tugged at
the leg, but something seemed to be holding it
from below and it wouldn't come.
'Oh no!' There was fear in his voice. 'Oh no,
not that!' He looked up at Tara, face suddenly
weak with terror. 'Please, not that!'
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For a moment he was still, something almost
childlike in his pleading eyes, and then he began to
fight, face contorted in a rictus of strain and
horror. He bucked up and down, trying to yank
his legs free, but all he did was drive himself
deeper into the quicksand, sinking to the level of
his thighs, then his groin and then his waist. He
leaned back, placed a hand to either side of him
and pushed, but his arms just sank in too. He
dragged them out, still clutching his trowel, and
tried again, but with the same result. The sand was
now lapping against his ribs. He began to weep.
'Help me!' he screamed at Tara. 'For God's
sake, help me!' He was holding a hand out
towards her, desperate. 'Please! Oh please! Help
me!'
Tears were streaming down his face, his arms
windmilling. He started screaming, a high bestial
wail of despair, his fists beating on the sand, his
upper body heaving and writhing as though he
was being electrocuted. But the desert refused to
ease its grip, slowly pulling him down, taking him
up to the level of his armpits, then his shoulders
and then all that was left of him was his huge
head and the upper part of one arm, the trowel
still clasped in his hand. Unable to watch any
more, Tara turned away.
'Oh no!' he screamed at her back. 'No! Don't
leave me alone! Please don't leave me alone! Help
me! Get me out!'
She began to walk back up the dune.
'Please!' he wailed. 'I'm sorry for what I did! I'm
sorry! Please don't leave me like this! Not on my
own! Come back! Come back, you bloody whore!
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I'll kill you! I'll fucking kill you! Oh God, help me!
Help me!'
His screams continued until she was about
halfway up the dune, then ceased abruptly. Near
the top she turned and looked back down. She
could just make out the topmost part of his head
still protruding above the sand and, beside it, his
trowel. She shuddered and carried on to the
summit.
The battle was all but over by the time Tara
reached the dune-top. Fires were raging every-
where and the air was heavy with smoke and
fumes, but the gunfire had dropped off and the
three hovering helicopters had landed. Khaki-clad
figures, obviously soldiers, were picking their way
methodically through the wreckage, stopping
every now and then to pump bursts of bullets into
the black-robed bodies lying strewn across the
ground. Camels wandered aimlessly to and fro.
She couldn't see any of Sayf al-Tha'r's men still
standing.
She surveyed the scene for a while, then noticed
two small figures set apart from the rest, close to
the base of the great black rock. They were some
distance away, but one was wearing a white shirt
and she was sure it was Daniel. She started down
the side of the dune. At the bottom she pulled her
shirt over her face against the fumes and began
moving through the carnage. Soldiers were every-
where. She tried to stop one to ask what was going
on, but he simply walked right past her as though
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she didn't exist. She tried again, with the same
result, so she just continued onwards towards the
pyramid rock, skirting the edge of the excavation
trench and eventually coming to the two figures
she'd seen from above. Daniel was nearer, sitting
on the sand gazing down into the trench, a
machine-gun slung across his shoulder. Khalifa
was beyond him, leaning against the outcrop, a
cigarette in his mouth, face swollen and bruised,
shirt stained with blood. They looked up as she
approached, but neither said anything.
She went to Daniel, squatted beside him and
took his hand, squeezing. He squeezed back, but
still said nothing. Khalifa inclined his head
towards her.
'You are OK?' he asked.
'Yes. Thank you. You?'
He nodded and drew deeply on his cigarette.
She wanted to ask what was going on, who the
soldiers were, what it all meant, but sensed he
didn't want to talk and so said nothing.
Nearby a camel was chewing at a bale of straw,
the crate on its back peppered with bullet holes.
The sun was up and the air was growing hotter.
Five minutes passed, ten, and then they heard
the distant pulse of an approaching helicopter. It
grew louder and louder and then swung in over
the top of the dune opposite, hovering above the
valley for a moment before coming down fifty
metres from where they were sitting. Sand sprayed
towards them and they turned their heads. The
camel loped away along the side of the crater.
As soon as it was on the ground the pilot killed
the engine and the rotors slowed. Several soldiers
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hurried towards it and there was the clatter of a
door being slid back on its far side. They heard an
indistinct babble of voices, and then four figures
appeared from around the front of the helicopter.
Three of them Tara recognized – Squires, Jemal
and Crispin Oates. The fourth, a fat balding man
dabbing at his head with a handkerchief, was a
stranger. They trudged across the sand, in-
congruous in their suits and ties, and stopped a
few metres away.
Tara and Daniel came to their feet.
'Good morning to you all,' cried Squires
jovially. 'Well, this has been an adventure, hasn't
it!'
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42
THE WESTERN DESERT
For several seconds no-one said anything. Then
the fat man spoke.
'I'll leave this to you, Squires. I've got other stuff
to deal with.'
'At least introduce yourself, old boy.'
'For Christ's sake, this isn't a goddam picnic.'
He spat and, turning, waddled away, wiping at
his neck with his handkerchief. Squires watched
him go.
'You must forgive our American friend. A
sterling fellow in his own way, but somewhat
underschooled in the arts of common politeness.'
He smiled apologetically and, reaching into his
pocket, produced a boiled sweet which he pro-
ceeded to unwrap, his long white fingers tugging
at the cellophane like the legs of a large spider.
There was an extended silence, broken eventually
by Khalifa.
'It was a set-up, wasn't it?' he said quietly, flick-
ing his cigarette down into the trench. 'The tomb,
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the text, all this . . .' He waved his arm around
him. 'All a set-up. To lure Sayf al-Tha'r back to
Egypt. Back to where you could get him.'
Squires raised his eyebrows slightly but said
nothing, just finished unwrapping his sweet and
popped it in his mouth.
Despite the heat Tara felt something cold creep-
ing across her skin. 'You mean . . .' She couldn't
get her thoughts clear.
'The tomb was fake,' said Khalifa. 'Not the
objects. They were genuine. But the wall decor-
ation, the text: all modern. Bait to attract Sayf
al-Tha'r. Brilliant, when you think about it.'
Tara stared at Squires, a look of mingled shock
and incomprehension on her face. Daniel's face
was pale, his body tense, as though he was wait-
ing for someone to hit him.
'So who exactly are you?' asked Khalifa.
'Military? Secret service?'
Squires sucked thoughtfully on his sweet.
'Elements of both really. Best not to get too
specific. Suffice it to say each of us represents our
respective governments in what might loosely be
termed an intelligence capacity.' He brushed some
fluff from his sleeve. 'So what gave it away?' he
asked Khalifa.
'That the tomb wasn't real?' The detective
shrugged. 'The
shabtis
from Iqbar's shop initially.
They were genuine, certainly, but of a later date
than the tomb they'd been taken from. Everything
else was First Persian Period. They were Second. If
they'd been earlier I could have understood. It
would simply have meant they'd been stolen from
an older tomb and reused. Later, however, just
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didn't make sense. How could an object from the
fourth century BC end up in a tomb that had been
sealed a hundred and fifty years earlier? There
were possible explanations, but it got me thinking
there was something not right about the whole
thing. It was only when I saw the tomb itself that
I was certain.'
'You clearly have an acute eye,' said Squires.
'We thought we'd got it just right.'
'You had,' said Khalifa. 'It was perfect. That's
what gave it away. Something my old professor
told me. No piece of ancient Egyptian art is ever
entirely precise. There's always at least one flaw,
however tiny. I went over every inch of that tomb
and there wasn't a single mistake. No drips of ink,
no misaligned hieroglyphs, no correctional marks.
It was faultless. Too faultless. The Egyptians were
never that exact. It had to be a fake.'
Daniel's hand slipped out of Tara's and he
moved a couple of paces away from her, shaking
his head, a barely perceptible smile pulling at his
mouth. She wanted to go over to him, hold him,
tell him he couldn't have known, but she sensed he
didn't want her near.
'Even then I still wasn't sure what was going
on,' continued Khalifa. 'Someone had clearly
gone to a lot of trouble faking a tomb. And the
purpose of that tomb seemed to be to lead
whoever found it out here into the desert. I
guessed one of the security services was involved.
It was them who were following me in Luxor. And
the British embassy too.' He glanced at Oates. 'I
couldn't see how it all fitted together, though. Still
couldn't until about half an hour ago, when
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the helicopters arrived. Then it all fell into place.'
There was a brief burst of gunfire from some-
where on the other side of the camp. A gust of hot
wind blew across them.
'Ironic, really,' sighed Khalifa. 'The amount of
money you must have spent setting this whole
thing up would have been enough to solve most of
the problems that create people like Sayf al-Tha'r
in the first place. How much did it cost you to
bury this lot out here? Millions? Tens of millions?
God, you must have emptied every museum store-
room in Egypt.'
Squires said nothing, sucking meditatively on
his sweet. Then, suddenly, he began to chuckle.
'Oh dear, oh dear, Inspector, you do seem to
have got the wrong end of the stick. The tomb was
indeed a fake, as you so cleverly deduced. And, as
you also realized, its purpose was to lead whoever
found it out here into the desert. We didn't have to
bury anything, however. It was already here.'
He noted the look on Khalifa's face and his
laughter redoubled.
'Oh yes, this is the lost army of Cambyses. The
real thing. Just as it was buried two and a half
thousand years ago. All we did was to frame a