As Mahmoud rode back to Denderah, he was not displeased with the way things had gone. He felt that his investigation had advanced. True, there were further questions to be asked. But he felt that the number of people of whom they had to be asked had narrowed down. Admittedly, it was not going to be easy to ask them, since Suleiman was in the Sudan and likely to remain there: and the slavers were who knew where. But Suleiman would in the end be reached, and so, he thought, would be the slavers. They might well be in the same place. Their actual apprehension might have to be left to others. But in the end they would be brought home to the Parquet roost.
There was, he thought, little more that he could do here. So he was not as depressed, or as angered, as he might have been when he got back to Denderah and found a message recalling him at once to Cairo. Not as angered as he might have been, but nevertheless very surprised.
TEN
Owen was surprised, too, and thoughtful. Was this an expression of rivalries inside the Parquet? Of the jealousies of the old? He knew that Mahmoud’s speedy ascent was resented by some inside the Parquet. Mahmoud had told him that some of the senior people there had it in for him because of his political sympathies, that possibly his very assignment to the case had been a means of getting him out of the way. Owen thought that sometimes Mahmoud’s fear was overdone but guessed there might be something in it.
But what troubled him was the possibility that Mahmoud had been whisked back to Cairo precisely because someone there was worried that he was actually getting somewhere. And didn’t want him to.
And how far was this connected with the slavery issue? Strictly speaking, that was Owen’s concern and not Mahmoud’s; but the two cases — Soraya’s murder and the revival of slaving — were connected, and perhaps others knew that as well as he did. It was something to be looked into when he returned to Cairo.
And, fortunately, that was just about to happen. The action had moved on, almost certainly into the Sudan, and there was little point in him staying on here. Apart from anything else, by this time the mountains of papers on his desk would be toppling over and something had to be done about them. Nikos, who, he knew, believed that any time spent out of the office was time ill-spent, wanted him back.
There were one or two things, however, to be settled before he left. The first was what was to be done about Mustapha. Clearly he had to be formally charged and brought before a court. Owen himself could not do this: all that sort of thing had to be handed over to the Parquet. In fact, formally, it had already been handed over to the Parquet, in the shape of Mahmoud.
He and Mahmoud discussed the matter. Mahmoud agreed to bring Mustapha before a court. The question, though, was which court. The obvious answer was the one in Cairo. But there were arguments against that. In Cairo the trial could easily become enmeshed in politics and not get anywhere. Denderah was a long way from Cairo. Especially in terms of the urgency with which the legal system would address it. Better somewhere away from Cairo, sophisticated enough to be able to handle the issue, not so sophisticated as to be more interested in playing political games than bringing the issue to a conclusion. They decided that Mahmoud would take him to Luxor. The court there was sufficiently developed to be able to take on the trial and, being closer to the scene of the crime, might even be able to address it more easily.
So Mahmoud and Mustapha took the train south and Owen the next train north. Owen was the only passenger to get on at Denderah. He looked for Clarke but did not see him. Bibikr, who had come to the station to see Owen off, said he would have gone back to the coast with the gum arabic.
Owen was a little surprised at this, given Clarke’s previous fussiness over the guns and his insistence on overseeing personally anything to do with guns. No doubt, though, he would have made special arrangements.
Owen, of course, had also made arrangements.
‘I don’t know that I can!’ said Nassir, the warehouse clerk. ‘I’m that busy this morning!’
‘Too busy for a cup of coffee?’ said Georgiades, affecting amazement.
‘Well …’
‘Not even one?’
‘A quick one!’ stipulated the clerk.
Which stretched until it was no longer a quick one — but, then, there was a lot to catch up on after the weekend and the latest reckless ventures of Georgiades’ wife.
‘But hasn’t she got shopping to do?’
‘Tell me about it!’ said the Greek gloomily.
‘A man must eat!’
‘Oh, I eat all right. She looks after that side well.’
‘But not the other side?’ said Nassir hopefully. The Greek was sparing of details but the clerk had gathered the impression that that side was pretty good, too; remarkably so, in fact.
‘Take aubergines,’ said the Greek.
‘Aubergines?’ said Nassir, disappointed.
‘She went down to the market this morning to get some. A few, for lunch. And she came back with two barrow loads! “What’s this?” I said. “Are we feasting the neighbourhood, or something?”
‘“That’s an idea!” she said. “We could charge twenty piastres a head. Two hundred and fifty people — I could get more aubergines if I haven’t got enough. That’s five thousand piastres. Cost, definitely less than two. That’s three thousand profit. With that I could buy …”
‘“Just stick to aubergines,” I said. “And my lunch!” But there you are, you see: she goes out to buy a simple thing and finishes by buying up the whole market!’
‘May Allah preserve us!’ said Nassir. ‘She goes out to buy a few things for your lunch, and in a moment she’s disrupted the whole economy! There’s suddenly a shortage of aubergines!’
‘And the trouble about that,’ said the Greek, ‘is that it pushes the price of aubergines up, and then she comes back to the market and makes a killing! And everybody else in the market is going mad!’
‘The worries of having a wife!’
The clerk looked reluctantly at his watch. ‘I have to go. There is much to do today, with Clarke Effendi coming back.’
‘He’s coming back, is he?’
‘Sent a message.’
‘And what about the goods?’
‘They’ll be arriving on the train before. I’ve got to get down there and see them off the train. He doesn’t like to have them hanging about by themselves even for a moment.’
‘And then you’ve got to move them on, I suppose.’
‘First, to the warehouse, and then on from there afterwards. But he likes to see to that himself.’
‘Another night job.’
‘It could be. It very well could.’
‘You’d best be getting along, then. And I’ve got to be getting back to my wife. To stop her.’
‘Stop her?’
‘She’s thinking of putting the money she makes from the aubergines into night dresses.’
‘Night dresses!’ said Nassir, sitting down again.
‘She knows a chap who’s got a lot of night dresses on his hands. A shop went bust and left him with a lot of stock to dispose of. She reckons she could get them for two piastres each. Now, four hundred and sixty at two piastres …’
But, enticing as this prospect was, from more than one point of view, the warehouse clerk was forced to tear himself away.
The Greek ambled along the street, exchanging greetings with everyone he passed, calling in at the barber’s for a brief word which became several words, and coming to a stop at the broad pan of the pavement restaurant, where he sniffed the air appreciatively.
‘It’s different,’ he said.
‘Always the same!’ decreed the restaurant owner. ‘We never change.’
‘Is it the oil?’
‘Just the same. It may be slightly different this morning,’ he conceded. ‘We’ve opened a new tin. But the oil is just the same. I get it from Feisal.’
He dipped a spoon in and tasted it. ‘Well, I think it’s just the same!’ he said. ‘Here, you try.’