Read The Lost Army of Cambyses Online
Authors: Paul Sussman
Tags: #Thrillers, #Crime, #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective
occurred to him the tomb itself might be a fake. So
in many ways we owe you a sincere debt of
gratitude.'
He smiled warmly and crunched the remainder
of his sweet.
'I'm going back to the helicopter now,' he said,
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looking over at Daniel again. 'I'll leave the final
farewells to you. Wouldn't want to get in the way
or anything. Miss Mullray, Inspector Khalifa, it's
been a pleasure. Really it has.'
He nodded at the two of them and, raising his
hand in farewell, set off across the sand, hair
blowing in the wind.
'So what now?' asked Tara.
'Now', said Khalifa, 'I think Dr Lacage is going
to kill us.'
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43
THE WESTERN DESERT
Daniel swung the gun from his shoulder and
pointed it at them.
'There was no way they could let us go,' said
Khalifa. 'Not after all they've told us. We know
too much. They couldn't risk it getting out.'
'Daniel?' Tara's voice was bewildered, lost.
'Like the inspector says, you know too much.'
His voice was hard, his eyes empty. 'I can't let any-
thing get in the way, not after I've come this far.'
He pointed with the muzzle, indicating they
should move down to the edge of the trench.
'Perhaps I should have said no when they first
asked me to help them,' he said. 'Not got involved.
But then it didn't have to end like this, did it? If the
piece hadn't gone missing everything would have
been all right. Who knows, Tara, maybe we would
have met again under different circumstances.'
They had reached the trench. He motioned
them to turn round so their backs were to him. A
sea of broken corpses stretched away in front of
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them, rising and falling and swelling and churn-
ing, as if twisted by some mysterious current.
Beside her Tara could hear Khalifa reciting a
prayer. Involuntarily her hand came out and
clutched his.
'I don't expect you to understand,' said Daniel.
'I don't really understand myself. All I know is
that it was unbearable not being allowed to
excavate any more. Watching from the sidelines
while other people got the concessions to dig the
valley. My valley. People who didn't know a
fraction of what I know. Feel a fraction of the
passion. Stupid people. Ignorant people. And all
the while the fear that maybe they'd find some-
thing. Discover a new tomb. Beat me to it. It was
. . . horrible.'
The wind was tugging angrily at Tara's hair,
although she was hardly aware of it.
I'm going to be shot, she thought. I'm going to
die.
'I dream of it, you know,' said Daniel, smiling
faintly. 'Finding a new tomb. Dravic was right. It
is an addiction. Imagine it – breaking through a
doorway into a chamber that was sealed five
centuries before the birth of Christ. Imagine the
intensity of something like that. Nothing could
ever come close to it.'
Away to their right there was a roar and a whine
as the blades of the Chinook started to rotate, cut-
ting at the wind. Other helicopters were also
starting their engines. Soldiers began filing back
through the camp and clambering inside them.
'It's funny,' Daniel shouted, raising his voice to
be heard above the scream of the motors and the
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hiss of the wind, 'when we were in the tomb, you
and me, Tara, when I was looking at the images on
the walls, translating the text, even though I knew
it was a fake, that it was me who'd done it all,
there was still a part of me that felt it was real.
Like I'd discovered something truly unique.
Something wonderful. Wonderful things.'
He began laughing.
'That's what Carter said, you know. When he
looked into the tomb of Tutankhamun for the first
time. Carnarvon said, "What can you see?" and
Carter replied, "Wonderful things." That's why I
have to keep digging, you see. Because there are so
many wonderful things still to find.'
There was a click as he drew back the bolt of
the gun. Khalifa's hand tightened around Tara's.
'Try not to be afraid, Miss Mullray,' he said.
'God is with us. He will protect us.'
'You really believe that?'
'I have to believe that. Otherwise what is there?
Only despair.'
He turned to her and smiled. 'Trust in him, Miss
Mullray. Trust in anything. But never despair.'
The helicopters began lifting off, the wind
buffeting them back and forth. Tara and Khalifa
stood looking at each other. She didn't feel any
fear, just a sort of exhausted resignation. She was
going to die. That was it. There was no point in
arguing or struggling.
'Goodbye, Inspector,' she said, squeezing his
hand, the wind pummelling furiously all around
her. 'Thank you for trying to help me.'
A sheet of sand blew up into her face and the
sun seemed to dim. She turned her head out of
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the wind, closed her eyes and waited for the
bullets.
The desert possesses many forces with which to
subdue those who trespass into its secret wastes. It
can throw down a heat so blistering that skin
shrivels like paper in a flame, eyeballs boil, bones
seem to liquefy. It can deafen with its silence,
crush with its emptiness, warp time and space so
that those passing through it lose all sense of
where or when or even who they are. It will grant
visions of heart-leaping beauty – a cascading
waterfall, a balmy oasis – only to snatch them
away again the moment you reach out towards
them, sending you mad with the agony of un-
realized desires. It will raise mountainous dunes to
block your path, shift itself into labyrinths from
which you have no hope of escaping, suck you
downwards into the unfathomable depths
of its belly. Of all the weapons in its fearful
armoury, however, none is more powerful, more
absolute in its destruction, than that which they
call the Wrath of God: sandstorm.
It struck now, suddenly, uncontrollably, out of
nowhere. One moment there was the wind, the
next the desert around them seemed to erupt, a
million million tons of sand geysering upwards
into the sky so that the sun was blocked out and
the air became solid. The force of it was un-
imaginable. Crates bounced along the ground,
bales of straw disintegrated, oil drums were
sucked up into the air and spun around like leaves.
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One helicopter was smashed against the side of a
dune, two more collided with each other, explod-
ing in a ball of flame that was extinguished almost
as soon as it had flared by a choking blanket of
sand. Men were thumped to the floor, a camel
cartwheeled down the valley, heads were ripped
from emaciated corpses and sent bounding along
the ground like giant brown marbles. The noise
was excruciating.
Tara was swept forward and down into the
crater, crashing into a tangled foliage of corpses.
Bones crunched and splintered beneath her,
desiccated skin ripped like parchment, teeth
snapped from jaw sockets. She was rolled over
and over, withered arms and legs seeming to
kick and jostle her, sunken faces looming on all
sides, until eventually she came to a halt, face
buried in an ossified stomach cavity, a shrivelled
mouth pressed hard against her neck as if kissing
her. For a moment she lay still, dazed, horrified,
and then struggled to her knees and tried to stand.
The wind was too strong and punched her down
immediately. She began to crawl, palms crunching
through backs and chests, feet scrambling on a
tangled ladder of spines and skulls, bones snap-
ping beneath her like twigs. Sand scoured her flesh
and jammed its way up her nostrils and into her
ears so that it felt as if she was drowning.
Somehow she reached the top of the crater and
flopped onto her belly, pulling the material of her
shirt across her mouth. Behind her the army was
fast disappearing, swamped beneath a rising tide
of sand. At the same time, around the rim of the
crater, dozens of new bodies were appearing. A
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leathery hand emerged from the sand right in front
of her face, the fingers splayed as if reaching out
to grab her. Spears jabbed upwards; a horse
seemed to leap from the side of the dune; a head
bobbed up but was then immediately buried
again. The howling of the wind was like fifty
thousand voices screaming in battle.
She tried to look for Daniel and Khalifa, eyes
narrowed to thin slits against the storm, but she
could see nothing, just a blinding fuzz of sand.
There was a muffled roar away to her left and she
cranked her head round towards it, neck muscles
fighting against the wind's torque. The roar grew
louder and suddenly a helicopter loomed directly
overhead, impossibly low, spinning madly round
and round, out of control. For a split second she
caught sight of Squires's face in one of the
windows, mouth wide open, screaming, and then
it spun away again, pirouetting insanely towards
the deeper darkness that was the side of the
pyramid rock. There was a momentary flash of
light and heat, a rage of agonized metal and then
nothing. She came up onto her knees and, head
bowed, began to crawl forward.
After a few feet she stopped and tried to shout
out, but such was the intensity of the storm she
couldn't even hear her own voice. She crawled a
bit further and stopped again, and this time caught
a vague blur of movement ahead and to her right.
She angled towards it.
They were nearer than she had thought and
after only a few metres she was on them. Daniel
was astride Khalifa, both hands clutching the
machine-gun, which he was trying to point at
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the detective's head. Khalifa had one hand on the
muzzle of the gun, holding it away, and the other
at Daniel's throat.
Neither of them noticed her approaching and,
struggling up to them, she seized a fistful of
Daniel's hair and yanked, toppling him to the
ground. The three of them grappled together,
flattened by the gale, eyes and mouths filled with
sand. For a moment Tara and Khalifa managed to
pin Daniel down, but a furious claw of wind tore
the detective backwards and away.
Daniel grasped for the gun, which had fallen a
metre to his left. Tara lunged for it too, but Daniel
lashed out at her, knocking her to the floor, her head
narrowly missing the point of a sword. Khalifa had
battled back up onto his knees and was crawling
towards them, but the wind held him back and
allowed Daniel to seize the gun, swing it round and
slam the butt into the side of Khalifa's head, knock-
ing him sideways on top of Tara.
A billow of sand momentarily blinded them.
When they looked up again it was to see that
Daniel had squirmed away almost to the edge of
sight. As they watched, he fought his way up onto
his knees and then, in defiance of the gale, which
was blowing directly into his face, onto his feet,
staggering as if drunk, wrestling the gun muzzle
towards them. Khalifa looked around frantically.
There was a skeletal arm lying on the ground
beside him, snapped from its shoulder, and, in
desperation, he seized it around the wrist, swung
it back and launched it at Daniel. It was a weak
throw, but with the wind behind it the arm
gathered speed, cartwheeling through the air and
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slamming into Daniel's throat with the force of a
sledgehammer. He staggered backwards into the
storm, disappearing from sight. Khalifa rolled
onto his front and began crawling after him. Tara
followed.
At first they couldn't find him. Then, after they
had gone about ten metres, Khalifa tugged her
arm and pointed. She followed the line of his
finger, shielding her eyes with her hands, and