Read The Lost Army of Cambyses Online
Authors: Paul Sussman
Tags: #Thrillers, #Crime, #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective
'Although not very far.'
'No,' he agreed. 'Not very far. But forward at
least.' He took another long draw on his cigarette.
'I shall miss my wife and children.'
They gazed out across the desert, smoking,
silent. The sun heaved itself slowly upwards and
the air began to shimmer. All around dunes
rippled away to the horizon. It was curious to
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think that only a while ago the world had been
turning itself inside out. Everything now seemed
so serene and ordered. It was beautiful, thought
Tara, the land's curvaceous symmetry, the shifting
colours of the sand. Before she'd looked on the
desert as her prison. Now, even though she was
going to die out here, she felt curiously at one with
it.
She finished her cigarette and flicked it aside.
The tobacco had made her head swim, so that as
she looked down it seemed as if the sand below
was trembling. Or at least a small patch of it was,
close to the base of the great rock. She took a
couple of deep breaths, closed her eyes and looked
again. The tremble was still there, a sort of
bulging, as though the desert was gasping for
breath. She nudged Khalifa and nodded towards
it. He frowned and came to his feet. She did the
same.
'What is it?' she asked.
'I don't know. It's strange. Like water boiling.'
'Is it the heat?'
'Doesn't look like it.'
'Sinking sand?'
'I don't think so.'
He gazed for a moment longer and then started
cautiously down the side of the dune, Tara follow-
ing. The bulging was growing more violent now,
the sand swirling and throbbing as if a giant foot
was being ground into the valley floor. It stopped
suddenly, started again, stopped, and then, with a
loud, bugle-like bellow, the desert's surface
sheered open and a large ungainly figure heaved
itself upwards into the daylight, sand showering
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all around it. Khalifa cried out in amazement and
began running down the side of the dune.
'Jamal!' he laughed. 'Praise be to Allah! Jamal!
Camel!'
He reached the bottom of the slope and slowed,
anxious not to frighten the creature. It seemed
unfazed by his presence, and allowed him to come
up and take its harness.
'Welcome, my friend,' he said, stroking its
velvety muzzle. 'We are happy you could join us.'
He turned towards Tara.
'It seems my pessimism was premature, Miss
Mullray. My friend here can smell water five
hundred miles away. Whichever is the nearest
oasis, he will lead us to it.'
He came up on tiptoe and whispered something
into the camel's ear. It sneezed and then slowly
lowered itself onto its knees, front legs breaking
first, then the rear ones. Khalifa began un-
strapping the crates on its back.
'I used to work with camels,' he said over his
shoulder, 'when I was young. Some skills you
never forget.'
He pulled the crates off and rolled them aside,
adjusting various straps and harnesses. The camel
nibbled his ear.
'They are wonderful animals. Tireless, loyal and
so beautiful. The one drawback is that their breath
is not nice. But then we all have our faults, don't
we? Aha!'
He held up a small water canteen he'd found
beneath a flap of the saddle.
'Not much left by the sound of it, but enough, I
think, to stop us dying of thirst. Please.'
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He stepped back and held out his arm, indicat-
ing that she should mount. She came forward,
laughing, and clambered onto the saddle. Khalifa
climbed up behind her.
'My friend warned me to stay away from
camels,' she said. 'The handlers are all perverts,
apparently.'
'I am a married man, Miss Mullray.'
'I was just teasing.'
'Ah, I see.' He chuckled. 'Yes. English humour.
It is, how do you say, an acquired taste. Although
Benny Hill – he was very funny.'
He raised his hand and slapped it against the
camel's rump, letting out a loud shout. The
creature levered itself upwards, pitching Tara first
forwards and then back. Khalifa took the reins
around her waist.
'If we keep going we should make it in two
days,' he said, 'three at the outside. The camel
might be the ship of the desert, but I'm afraid this
isn't going to be a luxury cruise.'
'I can handle it.'
'Yes, Miss Mullray, I have no doubt that you
can. You seem a remarkable woman. I should very
much like you to meet my wife and children.'
He slapped the camel on the flank again and it
started to lope forwards.
'Yalla besara!'
he cried. '
Yalta nimsheh!
Hurry up! Let's go!'
They came to the pyramid rock, towering dark
and monstrous above them, a vast black monolith
erupting from the deep places of the desert, im-
possibly ancient, inestimably powerful, Time's
sentinel. It seemed to throb slightly in the heat and
575
to give off a sound, a sort of deep brooding growl,
as though telling them they could pass, but warn-
ing them never to return. And then they were past
and moving away down the valley.
'I am building a fountain, you know,' said
Khalifa after a while. 'I want my home to be full
of the sound of running water.'
'It sounds wonderful,' said Tara, smiling.
'There will be blue and green tiles, and shells
from the seashore, and plants around the edge.
And at night there will be lights to make the water
sparkle as though it is full of diamonds. It will be
very beautiful.'
'Yes,' she said, closing her eyes. 'I think it will.'
Khalifa flicked the reins and they broke into a
trot, the pyramid rock slowly dropping away
behind them, as if receding in time. All around the
desert shimmered and swelled with the morning
heat.
'Besara, besara!'
he cried.
'Yalla nimsheh, yalla
nimsheh!'
AUTHOR'S NOTE
The Lost Army of Cambyses
was written and
edited well before the appalling events of 11
September 2001. Although the issue of Middle
Eastern terrorism is central to the narrative, the
book is nonetheless a work of imaginative
fiction and should only be read as such. It is in
no way intended to reflect real events.
GLOSSARY
Abu el-Haggag
Patron sheikh of Luxor (born
Damascus
c.
1150). A
moulid
in his honour is held annually in Luxor, two weeks before Ramadan.
Abu Sir
Group of pyramids to the south of Giza,
dating to Fifth Dynasty
(c.
2465–2323 BC).
Afterlife Books
Series of ancient Egyptian texts
describing the afterlife. Most date from the New
Kingdom, although they can ultimately be traced
back to the Pyramid Texts of the Old Kingdom.
Their names – Book of the Dead, Book of Gates,
Book of Caverns etc. – are modern.
Akhenaten
Eighteenth Dynasty pharaoh. Ruled
c.
1353–1335 BC. Father of Tutankhamun.
Akhet
One of three seasons into which the ancient
Egyptian year was divided (the others were Peret
and Shemu). Akhet was the season of the Nile
flood, covering roughly June to September.
Akhetaten
City built by the pharaoh Akhenaten
on the banks of the Nile, roughly midway between
modern Cairo and Luxor. Name means 'Horizon
of the Aten'.
579
Al-Ahram
Popular Egyptian newspaper. Title
means 'The Pyramids'.
Al-Jihad
A militant Egyptian fundamentalist
group.
Al-Mukhabarat al-'amma
Egyptian general
intelligence and security service.
Amarna
Modern name for the ruins of Akhetaten.
Amenhotep I
Early Eighteenth Dynasty pharaoh.
Ruled
c.
1525–1504 BC.
Amenhotep III
Eighteenth Dynasty pharaoh.
Ruled
c.
1391–1353 BC. Father of Akhenaten,
grandfather of Tutankhamun.
Ammonians
Ancient name for the inhabitants of
the oasis of Siwa. Name derives from the ancient
Egyptian god Amun, who had an oracle at Siwa.
Anubis
Ancient Egyptian god, depicted as a jackal
or a man with the head of a jackal. God of the
necropolis and mummification.
Basbousa
Sweet pastry made with semolina, nuts
and honey.
Beit
House, home.
Belzoni, Giovanni Battista
(1778–1823).
Explorer. Discovered the tomb of Seti I in the
Valley of the Kings.
Bes
Dwarf-god. Protector of pregnant women.
Cambyses
Son of Persian emperor Cyrus the
Great. Born
c.
560 BC. Succeeded father as King of
Persia 529 BC. Conquered Egypt in 525 BC,
becoming the first pharaoh of Twenty-seventh
Dynasty. Died
c.
522 BC at Ecbatane, Syria,
possibly by assassination or suicide. Portrayed by
contemporary chroniclers as a mad despot.
Canopic jars
Four jars holding the viscera of a
mummified body.
580
Caria
A region of the ancient Near East, in the
south-west of modern Turkey, colonized by the
Greeks. Famed for its mercenaries.
Carnarvon
George Edward Stanhope Molyneux
Herbert, fifth Earl of Carnarvon (1866–1923).
Collector and amateur Egyptologist. Patron of
Howard Carter.
Carter, Howard
(1874–1939). Egyptologist.
Discovered the tomb of Tutankhamun (1922).
Cartouche
An oval with a horizontal line at the
bottom in which a pharaoh's name was written in
hieroglyphs.
Colossi of Memnon
A pair of colossal seated
statues on the west bank of the Nile at Luxor.
Formerly part of the mortuary temple of
Amenhotep II
I.
Cromer
Evelyn Baring, first Earl of Cromer
(1841–1917). English Consul-General and de
facto ruler of Egypt from 1883 to 1907.
Cuneiform
Ancient Mesopotamian wedge-shaped
script.
Dahshur
Pyramid field south of Saqqara. Site of
the famous 'bent' pyramid of Snofru.
Danishaway
Village in the Delta region of
northern Egypt. Scene of an infamous incident in
1906 in which four innocent Egyptians were exe-
cuted following an altercation with British soldiers.
Djed pillar
An ancient Egyptian symbol of stabil-
ity depicted as a pillar surmounted by four
horizontal branches. Considered to represent the
backbone of the god Osiris.
Davies, Nina MacPherson
(1881–1965). Artist.
Published several volumes on ancient Egyptian
tomb paintings.
581
Djellaba
Traditional robe worn by Egyptian men
and women.
Eighteenth Dynasty
First of the three dynasties of
the New Kingdom,
c.
1550–1307 BC.
Faience
A material made of fired quartz, with a
glazed outer layer. Used extensively in ancient
Egypt for jewellery, small vessels,
shabtis,
etc.
Fellaha
(pl.
fellahin)
Peasant.
Gates of the Dead
Ancient Egyptian name for the
Valley of the Kings.
Hajj
Pilgrimage to Mecca, one of the 'five pillars'
of the Moslem faith. The other four are the
sha-
hada
(declaration of faith),
salah
(prayer, recited five times a day),
zakah
(the giving of alms) and
the observance of the fast at Ramadan.
Hatshepsut
Eighteenth Dynasty queen, wife of
Tuthmosis II, who ruled Egypt
c.
1473–1458 BC
as joint pharaoh with her stepson Tuthmosis III.
Her mortuary temple on the west bank of the Nile
at Luxor is one of Egypt's most spectacular
monuments.
Herodotus
(
c.
485–425 BC). Greek historian,
known as 'the father of history'. Famous for his
Histories
outlining the causes and events of the
wars between the Greeks and the Persians.
Horemheb
Last pharaoh of the Eighteenth
Dynasty (although for some Egyptologists he is
regarded as the first pharaoh of the Nineteenth
Dynasty). Formerly commander-in-chief of the
Egyptian army under Tutankhamun.
Imam
Leader of congregational prayer in the
mosque.
Imhotep
Ancient Egyptian architect and
physician. Designed Egypt's first true pyramid –
582
the Step Pyramid of the Third Dynasty pharaoh