Read The Lost Army of Cambyses Online
Authors: Paul Sussman
Tags: #Thrillers, #Crime, #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective
It was a frugal existence, monastic almost – just
himself, a cook and a small group of volunteers –
but it was the one place in the world, Tara
believed, where he was truly happy. His infrequent
letters revealed, in their minute descriptions of the
progress of his work, a sense of contentment that
seemed wholly absent from the other areas of his
life. That's why she had been so surprised when he
had asked her out to stay with him – this was his
world, his special place, and it must have taken a
leap of faith on his part to invite her into it.
The journey from the airport wasn't a comfort-
able one. Her driver seemed to have no concept of
road safety, thinking nothing of overtaking on
tight corners and in the face of heavy oncoming
traffic. On one stretch of road, alongside a foetid
green canal, he pulled out to go past a small truck
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only to see a lorry approaching from the opposite
direction. Tara assumed he would pull in again.
Far from it. He hammered his palm on the horn
and pressed his foot to the floor, moving slowly
past the truck which, in response, started to go
faster, as though racing. The oncoming lorry grew
larger by the second and Tara felt her stomach
knot, convinced they were going to crash. Only at
the last minute, when it looked as if a head-on
collision was inevitable, did the driver yank his
wheel to the right, swerving in front of the truck
and missing the front of the lorry by what looked
like a matter of centimetres.
'You frightened?' he laughed as they sped on.
'Yes,' Tara replied curtly. 'I am.'
Eventually, and much to her relief, they turned
right off the main road and, after following a
smaller, tree-lined road for a few kilometres, came
to a halt at the foot of a steep sandy escarpment,
above which peeped the upper courses of a step-
shaped pyramid.
'You get ticket here,' said the driver, pointing to
a ticket window in a building to the right.
'Do I need one?' she asked. 'My father works
here. I've come to visit him.'
The driver leaned out and shouted something at
the man sitting in the window. They held a brief
conversation, in Arabic, and then another man,
young, came out of the building and bent down to
the taxi, looking at Tara.
'Your father work here?' His English was
heavily accented.
'Yes,' she said. 'Professor Michael Mullray.'
'Excellent!' The man smiled broadly. 'Everybody
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know the Doktora. He most famous Egyptologist
in world. He my good friend. He teach me
English. I take you dig house myself.'
He came round to the other side of the taxi and
slipped into the passenger seat, giving instructions
to the driver.
'My name Hassan,' he said as they moved off. 'I
work here at main
teftish.
You very welcome.' He
extended a hand, which Tara shook.
'I was supposed to meet my father at the air-
port,' she said. 'I think we must have missed each
other. Is he here, do you know?'
'I sorry, I only just come. He probably in dig
house. You look like to him, you know.'
'Like him,' smiled Tara. 'I look like him. You
don't need the "to".'
The man laughed. 'You look like him,' he said
carefully. 'And you are good teacher like to him
too.'
They followed the road up to the top of the
scarp and then turned right onto a bumpy track
that ran along the edge of the desert plateau. The
step pyramid was behind them now, with two
other smaller pyramids nearby, both ruined and
slumped, so that Tara had the impression they
were all images of the same pyramid in different
stages of collapse. To the right the patchwork
fields of the Nile plain shimmered in the morning
heat; to the left the desert rolled and bumped off
towards the horizon, barren and empty and
desolate.
A hundred metres along the track they passed
through the middle of a small settlement and
Hassan signalled the driver to stop.
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'This
teftish,'
he said, indicating a large yellow
building to the right. 'Saqqara main office. I stop
here.
Beit Mullray,
your father dig house, more
further. I tell driver how go there. If you have
problem you come back here.'
He climbed out, said something to the driver
and they moved off again, continuing for another
two kilometres before pulling over beside a low,
one-storey house standing on the very edge of the
escarpment.
'Beit Mullray,'
said the driver.
It was a long, ramshackle building, painted a
dusty pink and arranged around three sides of
a sandy courtyard, in the centre of which stood a
huge wood and wire excavator's sieve. A rickety
wooden tower with a water tank on top stood at
one end of the building, a pile of wooden crates at
the other, with a mangy dog dozing in the shade
beside them. The windows were all closed and
shuttered. There seemed to be no-one around.
The driver said he'd wait, arguing that if her
father wasn't there he could take her back to
Cairo, where he knew lots of good hotels. She
declined the offer and, removing her bag from the
boot, paid the fare and set off towards the house,
the taxi reversing behind her and driving off in a
cloud of dust.
She crossed the courtyard, noticing what looked
like a row of painted stone blocks beneath a
tarpaulin in the corner, and hammered on the
front door. No response. She tried the handle.
The door was locked.
'Dad!' she called. 'It's Tara!'
Nothing.
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She walked around to the rear of the house. A
long shady terrace ran its full length, with pots of
dusty geraniums and cacti, some gnarled lemon
trees and a couple of stone benches. There were
fabulous views eastwards across the green Nile
plain, but she was oblivious to them. Removing
her sunglasses, she went up to one of the shuttered
windows and peered through the peeling slats. It
was dark inside and apart from the edge of a table
with a book on it she could see nothing. She
looked through another shutter further along,
making out a bed with a pair of battered desert
boots tucked beneath it, and then walked round to
the front of the house and hammered on the door
again. Still nothing. She walked back out onto the
track, stood looking to left and right for a few
moments, then returned to the terrace and sat
down on one of the concrete benches.
She was worried now. Her father had let her
down on numerous occasions – too many to
remember – but she sensed that this time it was
different. Perhaps he had been taken ill or had had
some sort of accident? Scenarios flicked through
her head, each more upsetting than the one before.
She stood up and banged on the shutters again,
more out of frustration than hope.
'Where are you, Dad?' she muttered to herself.
'Where the fuck are you?'
She waited at the house for almost two hours,
wandering around, peering through the shutters,
occasionally hammering on the door, beads of
sweat bubbling across her forehead, eyes heavy
with exhaustion. A group of children playing in
the village beneath spotted her and came
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scrabbling up the dusty slope at the back of the
building, shouting, 'School pen! School pen!' She
took some pens out of her bag and handed them
round, asking if any of them had seen a tall man
with white hair. They didn't seem to understand
and once they had their pens they disappeared
down the escarpment again, leaving her alone
with the flies and the heat and the silent, shuttered
house.
Eventually, when the sun was at its zenith and
she was so tired she could barely keep awake, she
decided to go and look for Hassan, the man she'd
met earlier. She knew if her father had just been
delayed somewhere he would be angry at her for
making a fuss, but by now she was too concerned
to care. With her one remaining pen she scribbled
a note explaining what she was doing and wedged
it in the front door. She then set out back along the
dusty track towards the distant serrated bulk of
the step pyramid, the sun burning down on her,
the world silent apart from the crunch of her foot-
fall and the occasional whirr of a passing fly.
She had been walking for about five minutes,
head bowed, when something caught her eye away
to the right, a momentary glint. She stopped and
looked in that direction, shielding her eyes. There
was someone standing over there, about two
hundred metres out into the desert, on top of a
sandy hillock. They were too far away, and the
sun too bright, to make out much about them,
except that they seemed to be extremely tall and
dressed in white. There was another brief glint
and she realized they must be looking through
binoculars, the sun reflecting off the lenses.
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She turned away, assuming it was just a tourist
exploring the ruins. Then the thought struck her
that perhaps it was an archaeologist who might
know her father. She swung back again, intending
to call out, but whoever it was had disappeared.
She scanned the undulating mounds of sand and
rubble but there was no-one there and, after a
moment, she continued on her way, uncertain
whether it wasn't just something she had
hallucinated in her exhaustion and worry. Her
head had started to swim and her temples were
throbbing. She wished she had some water with
her.
It took her another twenty minutes to reach the
teftish,
by which point her shirt was damp with
sweat and her limbs ached. She found Hassan and
explained what was going on.
'I sure everything OK,' he said, ushering her to
a chair in his office. 'Perhaps your father go out
walking. Or to excavation.'
'Without leaving a note?'
'Perhaps waiting in Cairo?'
'I've called his flat and there's no reply.'
'He knew you come today?'
'Of course he knew I was coming today,' she
snapped. There was a moment's silence. 'I'm
sorry,' she said. 'I'm tired and worried.'
'I am understanding, Miss Mullray. Please, be
very calm. We find him.'
He picked up the walkie-talkie lying on his
desk, pressed a button on the side and spoke into
it, carefully enunciating the words 'Doktora
Mullray'. There was a crackle of static and then
several other voices, one after another, responded.
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The official listened, spoke again and then laid the
walkie-talkie down.
'He not at excavation and no-one see him. Wait
here please.'
He went into another room across the hall.
There was a low murmur of voices. He was back
within a minute.
'He go Cairo yesterday morning, then come
back Saqqara in afternoon. No-one see him since
then.'
He picked up the phone. Again he held a brief
conversation, emphasizing the words 'Doktora
Mullray'. He was frowning when he replaced the
receiver.
'That Ahmed. He driving taxi for your father.
He say your father tell him come
Beit Mullray
last
night, take him to airport, but when Ahmed come
your father not there. Now I worried too. This not
like the Doktora.'
He was silent for a moment, tapping his fingers
on the desk, and then, opening a drawer, he pulled
out a set of keys. 'This spare keys to dig house,' he
explained. 'We go see.'
They left the office and he pointed towards a
battered white Fiat parked outside. 'We take car.
Quicker.'
He drove fast, the car bumping and jolting
along the uneven track, skidding to a halt in front
of the house. They walked down to the front door,
where Tara immediately noticed that the note she
had left was gone. Her heart surged and, rushing
forward, she tried the door handle. It was still
locked and there was no reply to her frantic
knocking. Hassan selected a key from the ring,
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slipped it into the lock and turned it twice, throw-
ing the door open and walking in. Tara followed.
They were in a long whitewashed room, with a
rectangular dining table at the end nearest them
and at the other a couple of moth-eaten sofas and
a fireplace. Other rooms opened off to left and
right, in one of which Tara could make out the
edge of a wooden bedframe. It was dark and cool,
with a faintly sweet aroma in the air, which she
realized after a moment was the smell of cigar
smoke.
Hassan walked across and threw open a
window. Sunlight spilled across the floor. She saw
the body immediately, slumped against the far