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The Mingrelian Conspiracy mz-9

Page 10

by Michael Pearce


  ‘So do I,’ said Mustapha. ‘Any moment now she’ll be giving him my money.’

  The woman flashed him an indignant glance.

  ‘Come and sit down,’ she said to Selim.

  ‘I could do with a drink,’ said Selim.

  ‘Water or coffee?’

  ‘There you are!’ cried Mustapha. ‘There goes my money!’

  ‘Coffee, please,’ said Selim.

  She led him off into the kitchen.

  ‘You haven’t got any more men outside, have you?’ asked Mustapha. ‘I mean, I might as well feed the whole Bab-el-Khalk while I’m at it.’

  His wife poked her head back into the room.

  ‘God looks after the hospitable,’ she said reprovingly.

  ‘Well, I wish He’d make a start, then.’

  Mustapha sat down gloomily at a table and motioned to Owen to join him.

  ‘This is very bad for business, you know. People don’t like to come here if they think there’s a chance of them being knocked on the head.’

  ‘Custom falling off?’

  ‘Not so far,’ Mustapha admitted. ‘But I’m having to work extra hard to keep it up. I used to get a storyteller in only on slack days. Now I’m paying for one all the time.’

  ‘Eats into profits?’

  ‘Increases the losses. Now there’s a thing. Had a chap in this week offering to insure against losses. A fat Greek.’

  Owen winced.

  ‘Tempting!’ said Mustapha. ‘Especially when you’re in my position. I said, did it include losses caused by standing out against protection? Certainly, he said. Well, I mean, it’s tempting. I mean, we’re not getting far as we are, are we?’

  ‘Oh, yes, we are,’ said Owen. ‘Getting that man yesterday was a breakthrough. Once you’ve got one member of a gang, it’s generally easy to get the others.’

  ‘You think so? You really think so?’

  ‘Oh, yes.’

  ‘Well…well, I hope you’re right.’

  Mustapha cheered up.

  ‘How about some coffee? Mekhmet! Where are you, you idle bastard? Some coffee for the Effendi! And for me, too, while you’re at it!’

  He looked around the cafe with satisfaction.

  ‘Soon get things moving again.’

  ‘I’m sure of that.’

  ‘And you really reckon things might be coming to an end?’

  ‘Yes. He’s beginning to talk.’

  ‘Good. Well, take my advice and kick the bastard’s balls through the back of his ass. Make sure he talks on!’

  ‘Yes, he’s saying things already,’ said Owen. ‘But one of them has surprised us. I’d just like to check it with you. It’s the name of the gang. What was it you told us?’

  ‘I didn’t tell you,’ said Mustapha.

  ‘But we heard all the same. Black Scorpion?’

  Mustapha nodded.

  ‘Are you sure?’

  ‘Look, Effendi, you don’t make mistakes on things like that. “Oh dear, sorry, paid the wrong gang. Made a mistake!” It’s not like that, Effendi, believe me!’

  ‘I just wanted to be sure.’

  ‘They even wrote it down. The first time. Just so as I would know.’

  ‘Got the note?’

  Mustapha heaved himself painfully off his seat and disappeared upstairs. A minute or two later he was back, holding a scruffy piece of paper in his hand.

  Owen looked at it.

  ‘This is puzzling,’ he said.

  ‘Oh, why? It’s the Black Scorpion, isn’t it? Look, there!’ He pointed with a grubby forefinger.

  ‘Yes. But the man we’ve got, the men who came yesterday, were not from the Black Scorpion gang. They were from another one.’

  Mustapha sat down heavily.

  ‘ Another one?’

  ‘So he says. The Edge of the Knife.’

  Mustapha was silent for quite some time.

  ‘Two of them,’ he said at last. ‘ Two of them. God, how many more?’

  “Oh! Oh! Oh!” cried the names as the blind man landed on top of them. The blind man felt the bag with his hands “Got you!” he said triumphantly. There was a long silence, about as long as it takes for a dog to drink a bowl of water, and then one of the names said: “Got who?” “Why, Rice Pudding’s new name, of course!” said the blind man. “Ah, yes, but how will you know which one of us it is?” Well, the blind man thought and thought-’

  The storyteller was seated on the stone mastaba, or bench, which ran along the front of the cafe. Around him, some sitting on the mastaba beside him, others on the ground, yet others, detained by the story as they passed by, standing in the street, was a circle of listeners. At the back of the crowd, engrossed, was Selim. Owen edged his way round towards him.

  ‘ “I know,” he said at last. “I’ll feel you.” And he put his hand in the bag and caught hold of one of the names. “Get your hands off me, you great, rude, dirty fellow!” said a shrill little voice. “That doesn’t sound like Rice Pudding’s new name,” said the blind man, “and it doesn’t feel like Rice Pudding’s new name, either. It’s all hard and sharp.” And he dropped the name back in the bag and caught hold of another one. This one was soft and round. “Hello, big boy!” it said in a low, husky voice-’

  ‘This is beginning to get interesting,’ said Selim.

  ‘Now the blind man knew very well that this was not Rice Pudding’s new name but he allowed himself to be beguiled. “I’ll just have another feel to make sure,” he said to himself-’

  ‘Very sensible,’ said Selim, ignoring Owen’s signals.

  ‘-when, all of a sudden, something wriggled out of the bag and ran off down the street. The blind man made a grab for it but it was too late. Even worse, he had left the top of the bag open and all the other names began to scramble out and run away. All sorts of names came scrambling out of the bag. There were red names and green names, fat names and thin names, old ones and young ones. There were men’s names and women’s names; and there were names from all the peoples of the world.’

  ‘In the bag?’ said someone in the front row.

  ‘Yes.’

  ‘All the peoples in the world?’

  ‘Yes.’

  ‘Including English?’

  ‘Certainly.’

  ‘That doesn’t seem right,’ objected someone in the second row.

  ‘You’ve got to draw the line somewhere!’ declared a man at the back.

  Owen at last succeeded in prising Selim away.

  ‘I’ve got to go,’ said Owen. ‘Will you be all right on your own for a bit?’

  ‘Oh, yes, Effendi,’ Selim assured him, with a glance over his shoulder towards the kitchen.

  ‘I’ll send some more men down. I can only spare two for the moment, unfortunately. We’re very stretched just now.’

  ‘Send Abdul, Effendi. He’s simple but strong. And Fazal. He’s a mean bastard, just the man.’

  ‘I’ll do my best. I don’t think they’d better be actively in the cafe, though. It would be too noticeable. Perhaps they’d better hang around outside. Not in uniform, obviously.’ Selim didn’t like this.

  ‘Effendi, it’s bad for those idle bastards to have nothing to do. Especially when I’m working. Look, I’ve got a better idea. My wife’s got a cousin, he’s a Nubian wrestler, big, really big, half savage, too, they’re all like that down there. It’s all right in the women, adds a bit of something, you know- where was I? Oh, yes, Babakr. Well, as I say, he’d break your back as soon as look at you. Now, for a few piastres-’

  ‘So,’ said Mahmoud, ‘you think it’s a criminal gang, do you?’

  Owen nodded.

  ‘Pretty sure. It’s based on the Fustat. The man we took yesterday comes from near the ferry and I wouldn’t be surprised if the rest did too. They don’t operate outside the Fustat much, which is another thing that makes me think they’re not a club. The clubs stick mostly to the schools and El Azhar all in the modern city, and that’s where the targets are, too. This ch
ap said they kept south of the Citadel.’

  ‘What were they doing up here, then?’

  ‘Someone asked them to do a job for him. Actually, I’d like to know about that. Who asked them and why? It could still be political.’

  Mahmoud nodded. In principle-and Mahmoud was the sort of man for whom principles stick up all over the place- the distinction Owen was making was one that he could not accept. The Parquet, in his view, should be responsible for all judicial investigation and he objected strongly to the Mamur Zapt having reserved powers in cases where a political dimension was suspected. In practice, he understood the distinction very well.

  ‘So,’ he said, ‘what is it that you are proposing?’

  ‘Well, in the ordinary way of things, if I thought something was criminal, I’d pass it over to the Parquet. But there’s a question mark about this.’

  ‘Who commissioned the job?’

  ‘Yes. But not just that.’

  He told Mahmoud about the possibility that a second gang was involved.

  ‘I suppose I ought to hang on to it until I’m sure, but the fact is I’ve got a lot on at the moment and if it’s just criminal I’d rather hand it over to the Parquet right away. There’s work to be done on it and if we hang around it might all go cold.’

  ‘Pass it on, by all means,’ said Mahmoud amiably.

  ‘The trouble is, I’m not absolutely sure. The other gang, you see, if there is another gang, might turn out to be a political club. I was wondering-is there any possibility of your taking this on yourself? Then if there turned out to be a political dimension we could probably handle it between us, and if there wasn’t, well, so much the better.’

  Mahmoud considered. In principle he was against this kind of thing. It blurred lines of responsibility; by agreeing you suggested that you condoned the system; and it was all horribly pragmatic. Mahmoud, again on principle, was against pragmatism. There was too much of it about and it mucked up system. And system was what Egypt all too plainly needed.

  On the other hand, the system was clearly mucked up and you had to do what you could.

  ‘Well,’ he said, weakening, ‘I suppose you could say I’m already involved.’

  ‘Already?’

  ‘So far as cafes are concerned. Those soldiers the other night,’ he supplemented.

  ‘You’re still on that?’

  ‘I certainly am. There is a major issue of principle-yes, well, I’m still pursuing it. But as to getting your case assigned to me if you transferred it-well, I could probably arrange it-’

  They got down to details. Ali, it was agreed, would be handed over to Mahmoud as soon as the case was formally transferred. Selim would be left for the moment where he was. As for reinforcements, Mahmoud, to Owen’s surprise, favoured the Nubian wrestler.

  ‘It’s only a few piastres,’ he said. ‘Wouldn’t your budget stand it?’

  ‘Well, yes, but-’

  Experience had, however, given Mahmoud a realistic sense of the rival merits in a brawl of the average Cairo constable and a Nubian wrestler.

  ‘The Nubian wrestler every time,’ he said, ‘especially if Selim has a few more friends like him. Besides, it’s better if they’re not too obviously policemen.’

  Owen promised to have a word with Selim.

  At the end they sat back.

  ‘Of course,’ said Mahmoud, ‘this doesn’t alter the principle.’

  ‘Principle?’

  ‘That there should be just one body responsible for investigation.’

  ‘That’s what the Army thinks too,’ said Owen.

  Back in his office, Owen felt pleased. He would have liked to have kept the cafe business to himself just a little longer, but Mahmoud would handle it all right and meanwhile he really ought to be concentrating on the Grand Duke’s visit. Nikos was finalizing arrangements but they would need to be talked through with the people concerned and he himself would have to do that. The procession remained the real problem, the time when Duke Nicholas would be most at risk, but Owen had cunningly delegated entire responsibility for that to the Army. ‘Unified command,’ he had muttered, and Shearer, dumb idiot that he was, had nodded agreement. So if anything went wrong he was the one who would get it in the neck.

  In fact, judging by the reports of Owen’s agents, the various protest meetings were unlikely to issue in anything serious. The groups which had come together had promptly fallen apart. Only down in the Babylon, according to Georgiades, were there still rumours of action. The committee formed there after the public meeting which Owen had witnessed was still divided over its terms of reference. However, some of the more vehement members, including Sorgos, had walked out and it was rumoured that they had set up a caucus which was pressing ahead with ideas for action. Owen decided to go and see Sorgos.

  It was not Sorgos, however, who opened the door but Katarina.

  ‘The Mamur Zapt?’ she said, surprised.

  ‘Again!’ said Owen.

  ‘My grandfather is not in.’

  ‘That may not be a bad thing.’

  ‘Oh?’

  She looked at him suspiciously.

  ‘What sort of visit is this?’ she demanded.

  ‘It’s not matrimonial, anyway.’

  Katarina started to smile, then caught her lip.

  ‘He has been to the bazaars. I am expecting him back at any moment,’ she said. ‘You may come in.’

  All over the floor were papers.

  ‘What are these?’ asked Owen.

  ‘Stories.’

  ‘Stories?’

  ‘I handle that side of the business while my father is away. Are you interested in stories?’

  ‘There is one I especially like. It is one of the Sultan Baybars stories. Its chief character is a man named John. He’s a Europeanized Christian who happens to have studied Muslim law. On the strength of this he wangles his way into being Kadi of Cairo and then from this position as supreme Law Giver he proceeds to subvert all the laws. A sort of Mamur Zapt figure.’

  Katarina giggled.

  ‘I recognize the story,’ she said. ‘Just.’

  ‘Allow for a little subversion,’ said Owen.

  Things were getting promising but just then there were sounds at the door.

  ‘My young friend from the mountains!’ cried Sorgos delightedly.

  Katarina scuttled out, all confusion. Sorgos looked at her retreating back in surprise; then with sudden miscomprehension.

  ‘Ah!’ he said, pleased. ‘I have returned too soon!’

  ‘Not at all! Not at all!’ said Owen hastily.

  Sorgos came into the room. As he stepped forward without his stick he stumbled slightly, overbalanced by the large bag he was carrying.

  Owen sprang forward.

  ‘Let me assist you!’ he said, putting his hand under the old man’s arm and taking the bag from him.

  ‘It is nothing,’ said Sorgos, letting Owen’s arm take his weight, however.

  Owen helped him to the divan and eased him gently down on it.

  Sorgos looked at the bag a trifle anxiously and Owen put it down beside him. It was extraordinarily heavy. But that was not surprising. For Owen had looked inside the bag and seen what it contained. Gold dust.

  Chapter 7

  Owen took an arabeah at the Place Ataba-el-Khadra and drove down the Musky, the long street which connects the European with the other quarters, until he reached the area of the bazaars. Just before the Turkish bazaar he turned left into the Khordagiya but there the way became so blocked with people, carts, stalls, donkeys and camels that he dismounted and paid off the driver. He was in any case almost at his destination: the goldsmiths’ bazaar.

  The street at that point was lined with the showcases of the goldsmiths hard at work at their smithing in the narrow, dark lanes of the bazaar. For much of the manufacture was actually carried on in the bazaar itself. It was not just a place for selling. The smiths had their workshops in the little, three-feet-wide lanes that ran back of
f the Khordagiya and in the darkness you could see the flames from their braziers and the little lights of their blowpipes.

  The area was so densely packed with people that it was difficult to move. All of them were Egyptian-the tourists made straight for the Turkish bazaar opposite-and most of them were women, heavily veiled and in featureless black; only, incongruously, their ankles showed beneath their heavy robes. And that, in fact, was the point, for almost every single one of the women wore heavy silver or gold anklets which she was anxious to display. Owen, once, taken by the workmanship, had bought one of them for Zeinab, thinking it a bracelet. Zeinab had patted him on the head and told him to give her the money next time. Between the chic Zeinab and her sisters there was something of a gap, which, she pointed out, despite his efforts, she was anxious to preserve.

  The more ordinary women of Cairo liked to carry their wealth, such as it was, about with them. No keeping it safe in dark corners for them! Perhaps surprisingly, their husbands concurred, feeling, possibly, that in this way at least their wealth was under their eye. Whatever it be, the fact was that almost every woman, except for the very poorest, carried around with her a considerable weight of gold and silver on her feet. And the goldsmiths’ business thrived!

  There they were now, the women, almost indistinguishable as individuals in the shadows in their black, massed in front of the open, glassless cases, inspecting the anklets, bracelets, necklets, talismans, rings and even diadems (when did they get a chance to wear these, Owen wondered?), all in filigree and almost all in unusually pure metal. The women’s tastes ran to the heavy, the solid and the barbaric and the work did not correspond at all to the inclinations of the tourists, who preferred the Europeanized shops of the large bazaars where the work was more delicate if far pricier.

  Owen began to move down the lanes, taking his time, stopping to chat in each workshop. In his tarboosh, and with his dark Welsh colouring, he might well have been an Egyptian; not a policeman, certainly.

  Eventually, he found the one he wanted. Yes, an old man, not Egyptian, not Greek, something in between, Turkish, perhaps, had called asking about gold.

  ‘Funny thing to ask for, isn’t it? That’s why I remember. You’d expect him to go to one of the suppliers. But he didn’t seem to know about them. I didn’t tell him, either-you don’t give all your trade secrets away, do you? Not if you’ve any sense. Maybe he’s thinking of starting a business up of his own; not him, perhaps, but a son, say, or a son-in-law. We’ve got enough people in the trade as it is, we don’t want any more.’ A funny thing to ask for, Owen agreed. Had he said what he wanted it for?

 

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