Read Herring on the Nile Online
Authors: L. C. Tyler
‘Gunshot wound. Not breathing. No pulse. What would you say?’
‘Did you see who shot him?’
‘No.’
‘Where are you?’
‘The boat is somewhere between Edfu and Kom Ombo. The engines have given up and we’re drifting with the current – sideways.’
‘That’s a big stretch of river, but we’ll find you. Can’t be that many vintage paddle steamers heading for Esna sideways. Anyway, it looks as though the terrorists have
decided to bring their timetable forward. They’ll move now to take control of the boat. We think that others will come out and join them.’
‘And then?’
‘They are aiming to make the biggest splash they can. They’ll probably blow up the
Khedive
with everyone on board – it’s a high-profile target. But we don’t
think that the two currently on the boat have the explosive with them. You’ll be OK until they are reinforced.’
‘Are you sure?’
‘To be absolutely honest? No, not really.’
‘What do I do then?’
‘Where are you now – you personally, not the boat?’
There were footsteps outside.
‘I’m in what everyone thinks is an empty cabin, with the door locked,’ I whispered. ‘Hold on – somebody is trying the door handle now – no, it’s OK,
they’ve moved on.’
‘You’ll need to make your own judgement as to what you should do. I repeat: The terrorists will shortly try to take over the boat. The two who are on board will probably gather
everyone together to keep an eye on them. Where could they do that?’
‘The saloon probably – maybe the dining room.’
‘OK. Wait a bit and see what develops. You’ll need to disrupt their plans if you can. I’d say don’t take any risks, but the fact is that doing nothing may mean that you
just get blown up with everyone else. You probably don’t have any absolutely safe options. The main thing is that we stop them making contact with their local counterparts. Hopefully we can
locate you and get help for you within the next hour. We should already have a fix on this call. It’s just a matter of getting a team to you. Are you armed?’
‘Yes, I have Purbright’s gun.’
‘Do you know how to use it?’
‘No,’ I said.
‘Then preferably don’t even try. Otherwise, if your life is in danger, point it, squeeze the trigger slowly. Don’t jerk it. Anything else?’
‘Yes,’ I said. ‘Is the safety catch on when it’s up or down?’
I put the phone back in my pocket and slid down behind the bed. Looking across its smooth white surface I could just see out through the porthole onto the deck. Looking across
its smooth white surface I could also see a small black object that my eyes had missed when I had first entered the cabin. I raised myself a little to get a better view. Resting in a slight
indentation, and half wrapped in a standard-issue white cotton hand towel, was a gun. Either it was the murder weapon or the
Khedive
was a floating arsenal.
It was at that moment that the boat, which had been drifting peacefully downstream, hit (as I later learned) a sandbank, and I was thrown against the bed.
For the next ten minutes or so I stayed where I was and tried to work out what Purbright would have done. Surprise was undoubtedly the key to it all, but what exactly would it take to surprise
them? What was happening out there? As each minute passed, my own information about who was where and what was going on was getting more and more out of date. Occasionally a figure passed by the
porthole. At one point I heard a boat’s engine and crawled over to the porthole to get a better view. It proved to be another, smaller cruiser. I hoped they might send people on board to
investigate but after a short exchange with us the other boat moved on.
It occurred to me that if the terrorists now had everyone gathered in the saloon, my absence would be very obvious and a more thorough search of the boat would begin. Just staying put
wasn’t much of an option. If there were currently only two terrorists, as Purbright had implied, and I could distract them for long enough, the passengers and crew should be able to overcome
and disarm them.
Footsteps approached again and a key was inserted in the lock. I held my breath and aimed the gun at the door, ready to fire if necessary, but I had latched the door on the inside. After a few
ineffectual attempts, the footsteps receded again. It would not take them long to work out that there had to be somebody inside the cabin. Time was running out. Unlatching the door, I cautiously
went out onto the deck. It was deserted. The dining room too was empty. I noticed one of the crew members moving around – so the crew were not being held then? This seemed odd, unless they
were all in league with the gang that had taken over the boat. It would obviously make everything far more difficult – indeed impossible – if we had a dozen or so crew to deal with as
well as the two terrorists.
It was clear that the boat had come to rest on one of the larger sandbanks in this stretch of river – a sandbank boasting luxuriant reeds and grasses, together with a number of flourishing
bushes. The
Khedive
’s bows were still in the water, but the stern was firmly wedged in place, surrounded by driftwood and vegetation. The small tender which in happier times had rested
on a platform just behind the paddle wheels, had been knocked sideways. One of the ropes that normally held it in place had parted company with it and it now hung at an angle. However we were all
to leave the
Khedive
, it would not be on board the tender.
Over the ship’s rail I could however see a motorboat heading in our direction. It was still a long way off, but it was travelling fast. Whether it was the terrorists’ reinforcements
or Purbright’s colleagues coming to the rescue, my course of action was clear. Gripping the gun firmly in my hand, I walked round to the door that led to the saloon. I opened it carefully.
Elsie’s two ‘policemen’ were standing facing the rest of the passengers, who were sitting round in a circle – Lizzi Hull on the floor, the rest in chairs. Captain Bashir was
leaning against a pillar, looking very pissed off, over to one side.
If I was quick, I could save the whole lot of them. And myself. I pointed the pistol straight at Majid and Mahmoud.
‘I want both of you on the floor with your hands behind your backs,’ I said. ‘Elsie, find some rope now and tie them up.’
Fifteen
‘Ethelred, you pillock,’ I said. ‘These guys are policemen. Purbright, whoever or whatever he is, is dead. The police want everyone to remain here until their
colleagues arrive.’
‘I know Purbright’s dead,’ said Ethelred, the gun still pointing at the two inspectors.
‘Do you? OK, then you’ll understand we need to let the two police inspectors get on with their job of finding out who killed him. If, following your helpful advice, I tie them up,
then I’m going to spend the next thirty years in some Egyptian jail. So, I’d rather not if it’s all the same to you. Where the hell did you get that gun anyway?’
‘It’s Purbright’s. These two aren’t policemen any more than I am. They told me they were bankers.’
‘We’re working undercover,’ said Majid. His voice was a bit muffled because, taking no chances, he was keeping his face to the floor. ‘Obviously I couldn’t tell you
we were with the police. You can check our warrant cards if you wish.’
‘You mean the fake warrant cards?’ sneered Ethelred. ‘I’m hardly going to be taken in by those, am I?’ I couldn’t help feeling that the less he said now, the
less stupid he would look in about ten minutes’ time.
Mahmoud turned slightly. ‘Could you please just put the gun down, Mr Tressider? You’ve made a mistake – that’s all. Things are very tense and we understand that you may
have got hold of the wrong end of the stick. We are keen that, for your sake and ours, you don’t do anything stupid. Just put the gun on the floor and come over and join the
others.’
‘Who,’ I asked Ethelred, ‘told you that Inspector Majid and Inspector Mahmoud were terrorists?’
He paused. ‘I phoned a number that Purbright gave me before he was shot.’
‘And who did you speak to?’
‘They didn’t say,’ said Ethelred.
‘But they specifically said that the terrorists were posing as policemen?’
‘No,’ said Ethelred. ‘They just said there were terrorists on board.’
‘OK – let’s get this right. You are threatening to shoot two inspectors from the Cairo police force on the grounds that some guy you’ve never spoken to before, and whose
name you don’t know, told you they
might
be terrorists?’
‘You’re twisting what I say,’ said Ethelred, but you could see he was beginning to doubt whether you should believe everything the Voices tell you. He turned and addressed the
room more generally. ‘Who shot Purbright if not these two?’
Hmmm. I went through possible suspects. Proctor and Jane Watson had been with me when the shot was fired. In which case that left everyone else. Annabelle? Campion? Sky Benson? The two nice
Americans? Campion and Sky Benson had been planning something. But . . . hey! . . . it wasn’t my problem to solve. The police were here and they could sort it all out, if Ethelred would just
let them get up off the floor and start sorting.
‘We don’t need to know that,’ I said. ‘Point the gun somewhere else for a moment, or better still give it to a responsible grown-up, and then Inspector Majid and
Inspector Mahmoud can start questioning everyone.’
‘Which of you two bastards shot Purbright?’ demanded Ethelred, in a way that he would probably regret when his words were read back to him by the prosecuting counsel.
‘We are not even carrying guns, Mr Tressider,’ said Inspector Mahmoud. ‘You may search us if that would reassure you.’
‘No, of course they’re not carrying guns,’ said Ethelred to the rest of us. ‘They threw the gun onto the bed in the empty cabin next to the dining room.’
‘If we are terrorists taking over the boat,’ said Majid, ‘why would we throw away our only gun just as we might need it?’
‘Good point, Inspector. Tressider is talking complete crap, as usual,’ said Proctor. ‘Ethelred, just give them the bloody gun and come and join us.’
‘If not them, who shot Purbright?’ Ethelred repeated.
On the one hand, this was Ethelred being tedious and repetitious. On the other, it was still a relevant consideration. One of us, passengers or crew, must have shot Purbright, because we were on
a boat, and nobody could have easily joined us or left us. Allowing the policemen to get up and do their job was probably going to take us further than Ethelred waving a gun around, but in the end
what he was saying was true. The final result of any investigation would be to reveal a killer in our midst. The important question was, in the meantime, did we feel safer with two policemen
guarding us or one crime novelist? The Home Office, who have a bit of experience in these matters, tend to employ policemen.
‘Mr Tressider, unless you wish to convince us
you
shot Mr Purbright, will you please put down that gun?’ asked Mahmoud.
‘No,’ said Ethelred.
It was a bit of a stand-off. Ethelred continued to point the gun. The chugging of the outboard engine was now very close indeed.
‘Ethelred, I think you should let them get up and hand over the gun,’ I said. ‘It won’t look good if you are still pointing it at them when the other police
arrive.’
‘Elsie, get some rope,’ said Ethelred. ‘Look – you can use those curtain ties over there.’
Well, the point had come for decisive action. A writer in jail was no good to me.
‘OK,’ I said. ‘Let’s tie these bastards up. I’m no good at knots though. You get the rope. I’ll cover them with the gun.’
‘Good plan,’ said Ethelred.
I got up and walked over to him. He passed me the gun. Honestly, if I wasn’t such a good agent, I’d seriously consider becoming a hostage negotiator.
Sixteen
I passed her the gun.
We were back in business. I reckoned if I could get these two immobile, I could hold off the motorboat with a few shots if necessary. Purbright’s people could then take over when they
arrived.
‘You two stay there,’ I said to Mahmoud and Majid. I selected three or four of the curtain cords and turned round to check that the terrorists were behaving themselves. It transpired
that they now had the gun and were pointing it at me.
‘But . . .’ I said.
‘I’m sorry, Ethelred. It was for your own good,’ said Elsie.
‘You idiot,’ I said. ‘You’ve given the gun to the terrorists!’
‘She’s given the gun to the
police
,’ said Proctor.
‘Thank goodness,’ said Campion, who seemed to feel it was payback time both for making him lecture to the group and for the dinner-jacket business.
So it wasn’t just Elsie then. The passengers seemed united in making sure the boat was blown out of the water. I looked from one to another to see if there was the slightest indication
that anyone believed me, but Campion had apparently spoken for them all. There was general relief that the only weapon immediately available was now in the possession of crazed suicide bombers.
‘Well done, Elsie,’ said Proctor.
‘If you would now like to take a seat, Ethelred,’ said Mahmoud, the gun still aimed between my eyes, ‘we can then wait calmly for our colleagues to arrive.’
I turned to the others. ‘Listen to me,’ I said. ‘Their “colleagues” are bringing explosives to blow up the boat.’
‘You’re a laugh a minute, Ethelred,’ said Majid. ‘You should do stand-up – honest. Actually, you will be pleased to learn, we’re not currently planning to
blow anything up. So, let’s all wait patiently for just another couple of moments. Thank you. Inspector Mahmoud, would you kindly go and ensure our local colleagues know where we
are?’
I was speculating on what it would feel like to be killed in an explosion when Tom said casually: ‘You guys really are from the Cairo police, then?’
‘This is what we have been trying to explain to you all for some time,’ said Majid.
‘You’ve been liaising with the British police over this?’
‘Scotland Yard,’ said Majid.
‘That would be with SCD 5, I guess?’