Read The Lost Army of Cambyses Online
Authors: Paul Sussman
Tags: #Thrillers, #Crime, #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective
his nostrils.
'When was it found?'
'Just before dawn,' replied his deputy. 'Probably
floated down from upriver and got caught in a
boat propeller, which is why the arms are all cut
up.'
'It was like this when you got here? You haven't
touched anything?'
Sariya shook his head.
Khalifa squatted beside the body, examining the
ground around it. He lifted the wrist, noting a
tattoo on the middle of the forearm.
'A scarab,' he said, smiling faintly. 'How
inappropriate.'
'Why inappropriate?'
'To the ancient Egyptians the scarab was a
symbol of rebirth and renewal. Not something
that's going to happen to our friend here by the
looks of things.' He laid the wrist down again.
'You've no idea who reported it?'
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Sariya shook his head. 'Wouldn't give his name.
Called the station from a payphone and said he'd
found it when he came down here to fish.'
'You're sure it was a payphone?'
'Pretty much. He cut off mid-sentence, like he'd
run out of money.'
Khalifa was silent for a moment, thinking, and
then, lifting his head, nodded towards a clump of
trees fifty metres away, beyond which could be
seen the roof of a house. The thin black line of a
telephone cable was clearly visible beneath its
eaves. Sariya raised his eyebrows.
'So?'
'The nearest payphone's two kilometres away,
back in town. Why didn't he just call from there?'
'I guess he was in shock. It's not every day
corpses wash up along these shores.'
'Precisely. You'd have thought he'd want to report
it as quickly as possible. And why wouldn't he leave
his name? You know what people around here are
like. Never miss a chance to get in the news.'
'You think he knew something?'
Khalifa shrugged. 'It's just strange. Like he
didn't want anyone to know it was him who'd
found the body. Like he was scared.'
There was a loud splash as a heron took off
from among the reeds, rising clumsily into the air
and arcing off downstream. Khalifa watched it for
a moment, then, with a shake of his head, turned
his attention back to the corpse. He worked his
hands into the trouser pockets and removed a
penknife, a cheap lighter and a slip of soggy paper,
folded. He laid the last on, the corpse's back and
carefully opened it out.
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'Train ticket,' he said, leaning close to examine
the faded writing. 'Return to Cairo. Dated four
days ago.'
Sariya handed him a plastic bag and he dropped
the objects into it.
'Come on, give me a hand here.'
Together they squatted beside the body and, get-
ting their hands beneath it, rolled it over onto its
back, the mud squelching beneath their feet. As
soon as he saw the face Sariya staggered away,
retching violently.
'Allah u akbar,'
he choked. 'God almighty!'
Khalifa bit his lip, forcing himself to look. He
had seen bodies before, of course, but never one as
badly mutilated as this. Even beneath its mask of
mud it was clear there wasn't much of the face left.
The left eye-socket was empty, the nose a mass of
ribboned flesh and cartilage. He stared at it for a
while, struggling to connect it with something that
might once have been alive. Then, coming to his
feet, he went over to Sariya and laid his hand on
his shoulder.
'Are you all right?'
Sariya nodded, putting a finger against one of
his nostrils and blowing hard so that a glob
of mucus flew out onto the sand. 'What happened
to him?'
'I don't know. Maybe a propeller, like you said,
although I don't see how a propeller could have
taken the eye out, or caused those sorts of wound.'
'You're saying someone did this deliberately?'
'I'm not saying anything. Just that a propeller
would churn the flesh up, not slice it like that.
Look how the skin has . . .' He could see his
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deputy was about to retch again and stopped mid-
sentence, not wishing to upset him more. 'We'll
wait for the autopsy,' he said after a pause.
He lit a couple of cigarettes and handed one to
Sariya, who took a deep drag before throwing it
aside and scrambling up the bank to be sick again.
Khalifa turned away and wandered back to the
river's edge, gazing over to the far shore. A pro-
cession of Nile cruisers was lined up along the
bank, with beyond them, just visible, the first
pylon of Karnak Temple. A felucca crossed his line
of sight, its giant triangular sail cutting across
the sky like a blade. He flicked his cigarette
into the water and sighed. It was, he suspected,
going to be a while before he got a chance to work
on his fountain again.
As Inspector Khalifa stood beside the river, a
group of tourists on donkeys were winding their
way up into the hills behind him. There were
twenty of them, Americans mostly, moving in
single file, with an Egyptian boy at their head to
guide them and another at the rear to make sure
no-one got left behind. Some clung nervously to
their saddles, uncomfortable on the precipitous
path, grimacing at every bump and jolt. One
in particular, a large woman with sunburnt
shoulders, was not enjoying the experience.
'They never said it would be this steep,' she
kept shouting. 'They said it would be easy. Oh
Christ!'
Others, however, seemed more relaxed, turning
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from side to side in their saddles to take in the
spectacular views. The sun was up now and the
plain beneath them throbbed and shimmered in
the heat. Far off could be seen the winding silver
ribbon of the Nile, with beyond it the jumbled
mass of eastern Luxor and beyond that a blur of
desert and mountains, no more than a rumour
against the white-blue sky. Their guide stopped
every now and then to point out some of the sights
below: the Colossi of Memnon, small as toys from
that distance; the broken ruins of the Ramesseum;
the vast compound of Ramesses III's mortuary
temple at Medinet Habu. Those who were not too
nervous lifted their cameras and snapped a photo.
Apart from the crunch and clatter of donkeys'
hooves and the voice of the woman with sunburnt
shoulders, they climbed in virtual silence, awed by
the scenery.
'Beats the shit out of Minnesota,' muttered one
man to his wife.
Eventually they came up onto the summit of the
hills and the path widened and flattened out, run-
ning evenly for a while before dipping away again
into a broad rocky valley.
'That is Valley of Kings in front,' shouted their
guide. 'Hold tight. Path down is very steep.'
'Christ!' came a shrill voice from behind him.
They had just started across the ridge, the
donkeys zigzagging their way between scattered
rocks, when a man suddenly leaped up from the
shadow of a boulder where he had been lying. His
djellaba was filthy and ragged, and his matted hair
came down well below the level of his shoulders,
giving him a wild, unkempt look. In his hand he
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carried something wrapped in brown paper. He
hurried over to them.
'Hello hello good morning good night,' he
jabbered, his words all running together. 'Look
here please friends. I have something good I know
you like.'
The donkey guide shouted at him in Arabic, but
the man ignored him and went up to one of the
tourists, a young woman in a large straw sunhat.
Lifting the object in his hand he pulled back the
brown paper to reveal a cat carved out of dark
stone.
'You see lady very very lovely carving. You buy
you buy. I very poor need eat. You beautiful
lady you buy!'
He thrust the carving towards her with one
hand, while lifting the other to his mouth in an
eating motion.
'You buy you buy. I no eat for three days. Please
you buy. Hungry. Hungry.'
The woman stared fixedly ahead, taking no
notice of him, and after stumbling beside her for a
few metres the man gave up and turned his
attention to the rider behind.
'Look look mister lovely carving. Very good
quality. How much you pay give me price give me
price.'
'Ignore him,' called the guide over his shoulder.
'He's mad.'
'Yes yes mad,' laughed the ragged man, twirling
round a couple of times and slamming his foot on
the ground in a sort of dance. 'Mad mad. Please
you buy no food I hungry. Best quality give me
price mister.'
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The man too ignored him and the ragged figure
began to scuttle up and down the line, his cries
becoming increasingly hoarse and desperate.
'You no like cat I have other carvings. Many
many carvings. Please please you buy. Antiquities?
I have antiquities. Three thousand per cent gen-
uine. You need guide I very good guide I know all
these hills every little bit. I show you kings valley
and queens valley very cheap. I show you tomb
very beautiful. New tomb no-one else know. I
need eat. No eat for three days.'
By now he was at the back of the line and,
urging his donkey forward, the boy at the rear
barged him out of the way, kicking him in the ribs
as he passed. The ragged man fell to the ground in
a swirl of dust and the tourists moved on.
'Thank you thank you thank you!' he cried,
rolling around like a wounded animal, his hair fly-
ing from side to side. 'So kind lovely tourist to
help me. No want cat no want see tomb no want
guide. I die! I die!'
He screwed his face into the ground, weeping,
hammering his fists on the sand.
The tourists, however, did not see him, for they
had already passed round an outcrop of rock and
begun their descent into the Valley of the Kings. It
was steep, as the guide had warned them, with a
near-vertical drop away to their right. The woman
with sunburnt shoulders clutched the neck of the
donkey and trembled, too frightened even to
complain. The wails of the madman gradually
grew fainter until they disappeared altogether.
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6
CAIRO
Tara waited at the airport until past ten a.m., by
which point her eyes were red from lack of sleep
and she was dizzy with tiredness. She had called
her father every half-hour, wandered round and
round the arrivals hall, even taken a taxi over to
the domestic terminal in case he'd gone to the
wrong place. All to no avail. He wasn't at the air-
port, he wasn't at his dig house, he wasn't at his
flat in Cairo. Her holiday had gone wrong before
it had even started. She clambered onto her seat
for the umpteenth time and gazed around the con-
course. So many people were now milling to and
fro, however, that even if her father had been
among them she wouldn't have seen him. She
jumped down, went over to the payphone and
called the dig house and flat one last time. Then,
swinging her bag over her shoulder and slipping on
her sunglasses, she went outside and hailed a taxi.
'Cairo?' asked the driver, a burly man with a
thick moustache and nicotine-stained fingers.
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'No,' Tara replied, sinking wearily into the back
seat, 'Saqqara.'
Her father had been excavating at Saqqara, the
necropolis of the ancient Egyptian capital
Memphis, for the best part of fifty years.
He had dug at other sites around Egypt, from
Tanis and Sais in the north right down to Qustul
and Nauri in upper Sudan, but Saqqara had
always been his first love. Each season he would
take up residence in his dig house and remain
there for three or four months at a stretch,
painstakingly working over a small area of sand-
blown ruins, uncovering a few more metres of
history. Some seasons he wouldn't dig at all, but
would spend his time in restoration work or
recording the previous year's finds.