Read The Lost Army of Cambyses Online
Authors: Paul Sussman
Tags: #Thrillers, #Crime, #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective
wall.
'Oh God.' She was choking. 'Oh no.'
She ran across and fell to her knees, seizing his
hand. It was cold and stiff. She didn't bother try-
ing to revive him.
'Dad,' she whispered, stroking his unkempt grey
hair. 'Oh my poor Dad.'
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7
LUXOR
As Inspector Khalifa stared down at the corpse, he
was reminded of the day they had brought his
father's body home.
He'd been six at the time and hadn't really
understood what was going on. They had carried
the body into the living room and laid it out on the
table. His mother, weeping and tearing at her
black robes, had knelt at its feet, while he and his
brother Ali had stood side by side at its head,
holding hands, staring at the pale, dust-covered
face.
'Don't worry, Mother,' Ali had said. 'I will look
after you and Yusuf. I swear.'
The accident had happened only a few blocks
from where they lived. A tourist bus, going too
fast for the narrow streets, had spun out of control
and slammed into the rickety wooden scaffolding
on which his father had been working, bringing
the whole structure down. Three men had been
killed, his father one of them, crushed beneath a
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ton of bricks and wood. The tour company had
refused to accept responsibility and no
compensation had ever been paid. The people in
the bus had escaped unharmed.
They had lived in Nazlat al-Sammam in those
days, at the foot of the Giza plateau, in a cramped
mud-brick shack from whose roof you could look
directly out over the Sphinx and the pyramids.
Ali had been the older by six years, strong and
clever and fearless. Khalifa had idolized him,
following him everywhere, mimicking the way he
walked and the things he said. To this day, when
he was annoyed, he would mutter 'Dammit!', a
word he had learnt from his brother, who in turn
had picked it up from a British tourist.
After their father had died, true to his word, Ali
had left school and gone to work to support them.
He had found a job at the local camel stables,
mucking out, repairing the saddles, taking the
camels up onto the plateau to give rides to
the tourists. On Sundays Khalifa had been allowed
to help him. Not during the week, however. He
had begged to be allowed to work with his brother
full time, but Ali had insisted he concentrate on his
studies instead.
'Learn, Yusuf,' he had urged him. 'Fill your
mind. Do the things I can't. Make me proud of
you.'
Only years later had he discovered that every
day, as well as buying them food and clothes and
paying their rent, Ali had put aside a little of his
meagre earnings so that when the time came he,
Khalifa, would be able to afford to go to university.
He owed his brother so much. Everything. That was
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why he had named his first son after him – to show
that he recognized the debt.
His son, however, had never seen his uncle, and
never would. Ali was gone for ever. How he
missed him! How he wished things could have
turned out differently.
He shook his head and returned to the business in
hand. He was in a white-tiled room in the base-
ment of Luxor general hospital and in front of him
the body they had found that morning was
stretched out on a metal table, naked. A fan
whirled above his head; a single strip light added
to the cold, sterile atmosphere. Dr Anwar, the
local pathologist, was bent over the body, poking
at it with his rubber-gloved hands.
'Very curious,' he kept muttering to himself.
'Never seen anything like it. Very curious.'
They had photographed the corpse where it had
washed up beside the river and then zipped it into
a body-bag and brought it back to Luxor by boat.
There had been a lot of paperwork to fill out
before they could get it examined and it was now
late afternoon. He had sent Sariya to make
enquiries about any person reported missing
within a radius of thirty kilometres, thus sparing
his deputy the unpleasant business of witnessing
the autopsy. He himself was finding it hard not to
gag. He was desperate for a cigarette and every
now and then reached instinctively into his pocket
for the packet of Cleopatras, although he didn't
take them out. Dr Anwar was notoriously strict
about smoking in his morgue.
'So what can you tell me?' asked Khalifa,
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leaning against the cool tile wall, fiddling with a
button on his shirt.
'Well,' said Anwar, pausing for a moment to
think. 'He's definitely dead.' He let out a guffaw
of laughter, slapping his belly appreciatively.
Anwar's bad jokes were as notorious as his dislike
of smoking. 'Apologies,' he said. 'In very bad
taste.'
Another chuckle escaped him and then his face
straightened and he was serious again. 'So what
do you want to know?'
'Age?'
'Difficult to be precise, but I'd say late twenties,
possibly a bit older.'
'Time of death?'
'About eighteen hours ago. Maybe twenty.
Maximum twenty-four.'
'And he's been in the water all that time?'
'I'd say so, yes.'
'How far could he have floated in twenty-four
hours do you think?'
'Absolutely no idea. I'm interested in bodies,
not currents.'
Khalifa smiled. 'OK, cause of death?'
'I would have thought that was obvious,' said
Anwar, looking down at the mutilated face. It had
been cleaned of mud and looked, if anything, even
more grotesque than when Khalifa had first seen
it, like a badly carved joint of meat. There were
lacerations elsewhere on the body, too – on the
arms and shoulders, across the belly, on the tops
of the thighs. There was even a small puncture
mark in the scrotum, which Anwar had taken
great delight in pointing out. Sometimes, Khalifa
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thought, the man was just a little too enthusiastic
about his job.
'What I meant was . . .'
'Yes, yes, I know,' said the pathologist. 'I was
being facetious. You want to know what caused
the injuries.'
He leaned back against the examination table
and ripped off his gloves, the rubber making a
snapping sound as it peeled from his hands.
'OK, first things first. He died from shock and
loss of blood, both a result of the injuries you see
before you. There was comparatively little water
in his lungs, which means that he didn't drown
and then receive the injuries afterwards. This
happened to him on dry land and then the body
was dumped in the river. Probably not that far
away from where it was found.'
'It couldn't have been a boat propeller, then?'
'Absolutely not. You'd have a completely differ-
ent type of wound. Less clean. The flesh would
have been more churned up.'
'Crocodile?'
'Don't be stupid, Khalifa. This man has been
deliberately mutilated. And anyway, for your
information, there are no crocodiles north of
Aswan. And certainly none that smoke.' He
pointed at the man's arms, chest and face. 'Three
burn marks. Here, here and here. Cigar probably.
Too big for a cigarette.'
He fumbled in his pocket and removed a bag of
cashew nuts, offering them to Khalifa. The
detective refused.
'As you like,' said Anwar, tipping his head back
and pouring a rush of nuts into his mouth. Khalifa
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watched, wondering how he could eat with that
ripped face only a few metres away.
'And what about the cuts? What caused those?'
'No idea,' grunted Anwar, chewing. 'Some sort
of metal object, sharp obviously. Possibly a knife,
although I've seen all manner of knife injuries and
none that looked quite like this.'
'How do you mean?'
'Well, the wounds aren't neat enough. It's hard
to explain. More a gut feeling than proper science.
It was definitely a sharpened blade of some sort,
but not one with which I'm familiar. Look at this,
for instance.' He pointed to a slash on the man's
chest. 'If a knife had done that the wound would
have been narrower and not quite so . . . what's
the word . . . chunky. And look, it's slightly deeper
at one end than at the other. Don't ask me to be
more precise, Khalifa, because I can't. Just accept
that we're dealing with an unusual weapon
here.'
The inspector pulled a small pad from his
pocket and scribbled a couple of notes. The room
echoed to the sound of Anwar's chewing.
'Can you tell me anything else about him?'
'Well, he liked a drink. High levels of alcohol in
the blood. And he would seem to have had an
interest in ancient Egypt.'
'The scarab tattoo?'
'Exactly. Not the most common of designs. And
look here.'
Khalifa came closer.
'You see this bruising around the upper arms?
Here, and here, where the flesh is discoloured.
This man has been restrained, like this.'
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Anwar went behind Khalifa and grabbed his
arms, his fingers digging into the flesh.
'The bruising on the left arm is more extensive
and extends further round the arm, which suggests
he was probably being held by two people rather
than one, each gripping him in a slightly different
way. You can see by the depth of the bruising that
he put up quite a struggle.'
Khalifa nodded, bent over his notebook. 'At
least three altogether, then,' he said. 'Two holding,
one wielding the knife or whatever it was.'
Anwar nodded and, crossing to the door, put his
head out into the corridor and shouted to some-
one at the far end. A moment later two men
appeared pushing a trolley. They lifted the body
onto it, covered it with a sheet and wheeled it out
of the room. Anwar finished his nuts and, going to
a small basin, began washing his hands. The room
was silent apart from the purr of the fan.
'I'm shocked, frankly,' said the pathologist, his
tone suddenly devoid of its usual jocularity. 'I've
been doing this job for thirty years and I've never
seen anything like it. It's' – he paused, soaping his
hands slowly, his back to Khalifa – 'ungodly,' he
said eventually.
'I didn't have you marked down as religious.'
'I'm not. But there's no other way to describe
what happened to this man. I mean they didn't
just kill him. They butchered the poor bastard.'
He turned off the taps and started to dry his
hands.
'Find who did this, Khalifa. Find them quickly
and lock them away.'
The earnestness of his tone surprised Khalifa.
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'I'll do my best,' he said. 'If any more information
comes up, be sure to let me know.'
He put his notebook away and started towards
the door. He was halfway through it when Anwar
called after him.
'There is one thing.'
Khalifa turned.
'Just a hunch, but I think he might have been a
sculptor. Doing carvings for the tourists, that sort
of thing. There was a lot of alabaster dust under-
neath his fingernails and his forearms were very
built up, which might indicate he used a hammer
and chisel a lot. I might be wrong, but that's where
I'd start making enquiries. In the alabaster shops.'
Khalifa thanked him and set off down the
corridor, pulling his cigarettes from his pocket.
Anwar's voice echoed after him.
'And no smoking till you're out of the hospital!'
77
8
CAIRO
'He hated cigars,' said Tara.
The embassy official glanced across at her.
'Sorry?'
'Cigars. My father hated them. Any form of
smoking, in fact. He said it was a disgusting habit.
Like reading the
Guardian.'
'Ah,' said the official, perplexed. 'I see.'
'When we first went into the dig house there
was a smell. To start with I couldn't place it. Then
I realized it was cigar smoke.'
The official, a junior attaché named Crispin
Oates, returned his eyes to the road, honking
loudly at a truck in front of them.
'Is that significant in some way?'
'As I said, my father hated smoking.'
Oates shrugged. 'Then I guess it must have been
someone else.'
'But that's the point,' said Tara. 'Smoking
was banned in the dig house. It was an absolute
rule. I know because he wrote to me once
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saying he'd sacked a volunteer for breaking it.'
A motorbike overtook on the inside and
swerved in front of them, forcing Oates to slam his
foot on the brakes.
'Bloody idiot!'
They drove in silence for a moment.
'I'm not sure I see what you're getting at,' he
said eventually.
'Neither am I,' sighed Tara. 'Just that . . . there
shouldn't have been cigar smoke in the dig house.
I can't get it out of my mind.'