âYou stupid idiot. Give it to me!' I shouted.
I looked up the alley. The Nubian boys were gathering. The kid in my grip bit me hard. I whacked him on the side of the head.
âI'm Medjay, and if you don't give me that blade and run, you'll be in prison,' I said to the rich boy. He glanced at me pathetically, gave the dagger to me, and just stood there hopelessly.
âGo!' I yelled. He finally scarpered. I pressed the blade against the Nubian boy's neck vein, which pulsed delicately. He was wearing a carved amulet, bearing the sign of an arrow, his symbol of belonging, and of protection. The same one the dead boys had worn.
âWhat is it you want, Medjay man?' he demanded.
âI want you to take me to your boss,' I replied.
He laughed in my face, a practised snarl of contempt, smirking and scoffing.
âWho do you think you are?' he said.
I slapped him hard across the face a few times.
âThink you're a soldier, a big man, a brave?' I said, jabbing the blade harder against his skin. He stared at me incredulously, licking the blood from his lips. Now I saw a glint of fear in his eyes.
âI'll kill you for this disrespect,' he said, glancing at his approaching colleagues. I shoved him around, and shouted at them all.
âI'm a man with questions, and I want some answers. And believe me, I'll cut out his eyes before he can blink if you come any closer.' And I raised the dagger to show I was serious.
The boy clicked his tongue. His eyes moved from side to side as he tried to work out what to do next.
âYou'll never walk away from this place. The shadows will kill you. You will be cut up into little pieces!' he offered, brazening out the situation.
I punched him hard in the kidneys. He buckled up, and his colleagues drew back a little, spitting, calling oaths and shaking their heads.
âHere's the deal. Either I arrest you for possession of opium, which means you'll end up in prison and I'll personally make sure you never see daylight again, or else you take me to whoever it is runs your gang.'
The boy just laughed with contempt.
âYou're a madman. You think you can just go on in and talk to the boss? You? You'd be dead meat before you made it through the door.'
âThat's my problem. Show me the door. Or I'll cut out your eyeâ¦' I said.
And I pressed the point of the blade home right next to his eye, producing a dot of blood, to show him I was serious. Suddenly his bravado vanished, and he started to whisper, âDon't don't don'tâ¦'
My hand was shaking, we both realized.
âNow tell your little friends to fuck off, unless you want to let them see you piss yourself,' I said quietly.
He motioned to the other boys to back off. They drifted away into the shadowy passages.
The crude wooden door he took me to gave away nothing of the business inside. The sign of the arrow was drawn on it, big and crude. Someone had added a pair of gigantic balls to the symbol. Inside I could hear raucous laughter, and wild shrieks.
He knocked, according to a code. Someone was talking, cursing the interruption, and the door creaked open a fraction on its hingesâjust enough for me to slam it wide and enter. Inside everything was squalid: naked young girls in opium drowses lay in desultory poses on couches or on the floor, and young men in groups shouted aggressively in triumph as they played euphoric games of
senet
, or traded jokes and insults. But as soon as the men saw me, they leapt to their feet, jeering provocatively, making threatening gestures with their knives, and pornographic ones with their fists and tongues, ululating as they approached. Behind them I saw a few small, long-necked jars of opium juice. These lads were the next step up from the boy I was with. All wore the arrow amulet on leather necklaces. All wore their hair braided in the same style. I held the dagger close to the boy's throat. Suddenly he was angry and vicious, knowing he had been badly shamed, and fearing his life was worth even less than mine to his gang. A couple of the larger, more senior lads stepped forward, their ostentatious knives drawn.
âGentlemen, I know this visit is unannounced, but I want to speak to your glorious leader. About thisâ¦'
And I held up a papyrus bearing the sign of the black star. They stared at it. One grabbed it from my hand, his eyes glittering.
âWhere did you get this?' he demanded.
âFrom the mouth of a dead dealer,' I said. âWe both know what it's about, and I've got information. But I'll only talk to your leader.'
I was blindfolded, and made to wait on a low stool. I listened to the shouts and arguments, and the taunts that came my way. But none of the lads harmed me. Finally I was yanked to my feet, and we set off. Three of them pushed me roughly through passageways and side streets, accompanied by the boy. I could hear the business of the city going on in the distance, and I knew we had moved out of the slum, into a better area. Whenever anyone approached they were warned away. Eventually we arrived at our destination. I was ushered inside. The air was cool, and smelt clean, and I heard the sound of water, and splashing, and the giggling, seductive laughter of girls. The blindfold was removed.
I was in a bathhouse, in one of the private chambers set out with couches for resting. Before me stood a Nubian man, tall and slim. He gazed at me. His stony eyes were alert with intelligence. He wore many gold necklaces, and bangles. He cracked his neck dramatically, and sauntered over to assess me more closely, running his long, ostentatiously serrated gold dagger around me, as if I were a slave he might acquire or destroy.
âWho brought this person uninvited into our place?' he asked quietly.
The Nubian boy was terrified. He looked down. The man raised his chin, almost tenderly.
âYou made a mistake, Dedu. A bad mistake. You've betrayed us all. Do you understand that?'
The boy nodded slowly. His lower lip was trembling now.
âPleaseâ¦' he whispered.
âPlease what?' said the man.
âPlease, my lord. Don't kill me.'
The man pondered, watching the boy.
âWait there,' he said. âThink about your error.'
The boy nodded and bowed humbly. I didn't have time to feel sorry for him.
Then the gang leader turned to me.
âNormally, I only see Medjay officers by appointment, by night. Is this visit for business, or pleasure?' he asked.
âSomething of both,' I responded.
He chuckled, playing with his knife, executing complex little moves he'd honed for performance and intimidation.
âYou've got a lot of audacity coming in here like this. Now I have to decide whether to kill you or listen to you. I think I'll listen to you, and then kill you afterwards. You'd better have a good story. Who knows? It might even prolong your lifeâfor a while.'
He threw out the men who had brought me and the pretty young girls who lay about on the couches. Then, when they had all sauntered or scurried away, and only he, Dedu and two bodyguards remained, he offered me a low stool, with exaggerated politeness.
âI'll stand. I've come to discuss this.'
I held out the papyrus. He glanced at it, nonchalant.
âSo what?'
âI found it in the mouth of my closest friend. His head had been separated from his body.'
âAh, your closest friend.' He grunted with sarcastic sympathy. âAlas, death is everywhere. The God Seth, Lord of Chaos and Confusion, is surely walking the streets of this city once more. Now he does not even spare the fine law-enforcing officers of the Medjay. What are things coming to? And what is it you want from me?'
âI'm sure you are also familiar with this symbol. It has been found in the mouths of othersâdead young dealers who were, I'm sure, in your employment.'
âAnd so?'
âAnd so we have something in common,' I said.
Suddenly his knife slammed into the wall, just a hair's breadth from my face, near my eye, and juddered there. I stared at him, unmoved.
âYou and I have nothing in common. And I still don't know why you are here. I think, and I can find no answer. You had better help me out, quickly,' he said.
âYou, I assume, want to know who has been slaughtering your boys, and taking away your business.'
âAnd what do you want?' he asked.
âI want to know who killed my friend. And I want to kill him.'
He nodded, delighted by this.
âAh, revenge, it is so beautiful,' he said. âBut my question is this:
what can you do for me that I can't do for myself?
'
âA deal. Mutual benefit. We share all our knowledge. I'm a Medjay detective. This gives me authority, and it grants me access to places you could never reach. However, you will back me up. You will tell me what you know about this new gang. We'll combine intelligence. You provide the force, if and when the time comes. And then you can take your revenge. But the crucial clause is this: the killer of my friend is mine to do with as I choose.'
He put the tips of his fingers carefully together and smiled.
âYou think this is funny?' I said. âYou think I'm here to amuse myself?'
He nodded, as if somehow impressed by my reckless behaviour.
âYou are truly angry, my friend, and I admire your thirst for revenge. But perhaps you did not think carefully enough about coming here. Perhaps you didn't think about
respect
.'
âI thought carefully. You know who I am. You could easily kill me if you wanted. So why else would I take this kind of risk unless I wasâ
sincere
?' I replied.
He chuckled at the word, repeating it to himself as if it were the punchline of a joke. Then he reached for a jug of wine, and poured us each a measure.
âSit down, my sincere friend,' he said, in a warmer tone. âLet me tell you about myself.'
And so it was I ended up listening to one of the most notorious and ruthless bosses of the city's cartels. I found him to be a hard, intelligent businessman, with an astute sense of theatre; his own grand style of violence he deemed a necessary part of business. It was an expression of power, and a demand for respect. Of course, he was prepared to use it whenever it suited him, which was often; but he was no psychopath. In fact, he saw himself as a benefactor, for the men under his control were young, and otherwise hopeless, and he believed he was shaping their lawlessness to more useful ends. The vast profits of his trade he saw as a reasonable redistribution of wealth. He was himself simply profiting like a businessman from a new market of consumersâthe affluent young of Egypt, who could afford the luxury of opium, and then, when pleasure turned to addiction, who could maintain that, too. He had even devised a special deal; the first hit was free. Thereafter, they bought from him. He had no concern for their welfare; in the direct terms of his morality, that was their responsibility.
I began to realize this was a man who believed his actions were reasonable and principled; he saw his cartel as a family, or a kind of brigade, and its rules were based not on violence, but on trust. Most of the kids who came to him were orphaned or from homes so broken by poverty and violence they were better off without them. He gave them something to do, something to define themselves against, and a strict routine with tangible rewards. Most strangely, perhaps, he was proud of the city, and of his position.
As aânowâformer Medjay officer, I belonged on the opposite side of everything he stood for, and everything he said. And yet I found myself unable, at times, to challenge the truth of his arguments. But in any case, it was not in my interest to question him further about the less appetizing aspects of his apparently benign underworld tyranny. I only needed to know what he could tell me about the Black Star Gang.
âThey are a mystery, and they are a big problem. The supply of opium is limited, and hard to obtain, and therefore of great value; and so all the Theban gangs have always fought over it. It has been notoriously unreliable. Of course it is smuggled up the Great River, by boat. It is not so difficult to bribe the right men to smuggle the shipments through the port. And the captains take their share willingly. Sometimes the quantities are excellentâthree or more shipments in one month. But at times they have dwindled to nothing. Some of us tried to set up better, more consistent supply lines, but it was impossible. The distances were too great. The contacts were obscure. The jars are heavy, and the opium juice is inconvenient to transport. It is a strange world out there, beyond our borders, and mostly our dealers and negotiators do not return.'
âAnd now?' I asked.
âNow, suddenly, the gang war in the city has exploded again. At first we suspected each other. But soon even the most adamant of my rivals recognized this was the work of a different group. They are nothing like us.'
âTell me what you know.'
He sighed, and began to pace the chamber.
âThese killers are like the spirits of the dead. They travel in silence. They destroy everything. They go where they will ⦠and no one escapes or survives,' he said simply.
âBut how do they do that?' I wondered.
He shrugged.
âIt is their style. It's very elegant. And you know, unlike the rest of us, they don't diversify at all. Gambling, prostitution, illegal smuggling of rare goods, kidnappingâthese are all potentially lucrative areas. But as far as I know, they have shown no interest in any of thisâ'
âHow do they distribute the opium? It's one thing to import it, and to destroy the competition. It's another to set up a new distribution system of dealers,' I said.
He opened his hands wide in agreement.
âI have no idea. I am hoping you will tell me. Perhaps, when they have wiped out the rest of the opposition, they will offer us a distribution deal. No doubt the terms will not be very acceptable.'
He gazed at me, then leaned back, and roared with laughter.