Michael Pearce
The Fig Tree Murder
Chapter 1
'Its called the Tree of the Virgin, said McPhee.
Virgin? said Owen.
After the Holy Mother, said McPhee severely.
Oh.
Its a sycamore, actually. Not, of course, a sycamore as we know it. Our sycamore is a sort of maple. The Egyptian sycamore is a species of fig.
Fascinating!
He glanced at his watch.
Well, if youll excuse me-
You will call in on it?
I certainly will.
He certainly wouldnt. For he was going to Heliopolis and getting there was difficult enough anyway. The new city was five miles north of Cairo and beyond the reach of trams. A road was being built from the British barracks at Abbasiya but was not completed yet. Even if it had been, there would still have been problems. Arabeah, the citys universal horse-drawn cab? Five miles? In this heat? The Effendi must be mocking. That left Cairos normal mode of transport, the donkey. Owen was not enthusiastic.
Consulted, McPhee had suggested the new electric railway.
Its not finished yet.
Its out to Matariya. You wouldnt have far to walk. Why dont you ask them if theyve got a buggy going out to the end of the line?
Buggy? said the man at the Pont de Limoun. Of course, Effendi! At once!
Well, not quite at once. Second thoughts crossed the mans face.
Tomorrow, that is. Bokra. Yes, tomorrow, definitely!
Why not this afternoon?
Impossible, Effendi. Some difficulties at the end of the line. Something to do with an ostrich, I believe.
Owen shrugged and turned away.
A moment later the man came running after him.
Effendi! Effendi! A thousand pardons! I had not realized that you were the Mamur Zapt!
Another man, more senior, was rushing after him.
A buggy, Effendi? To the end of the line? At once!
I thought there were some difficulties?
There are, Effendi, there are! In fact, we would be most glad of your help.
I dont know that Ive a lot to contribute on ostriches, said Owen uneasily.
The man gave him a strange look.
Ostriches?
Wasnt it something to do with an ostrich?
Not as far as I know. Theres a bit of trouble up there between the labourers and the villagers. And a mans been killed.
The man was lying huddled across the very last stretch of track that had been completed. Around him was a large crowd consisting equally of labourers and villagers, not, Owen was relieved to see, at each others throats. Among them was a foreigner in a helmet, who looked up with relief as Owen approached. Monsieur le Mamur Zapt?
Oui.
He looked down at the man.
How did he get here?
I dont know. We found him here this morning.
This morning!
It was already noon.
I know! Ive tried to get him moved, but-
Hes not being moved! said one of the labourers flatly.
Just to one side. Then we could get on with-
Hes not being moved!
Its taken all morning!
Thats not my fault, said the labourer.
One of the villagers plucked at Owens arm.
Effendi, the heat-
Owen knew what he was thinking. In Egypt, bodies deteriorated rapidly. They were usually buried the next day. The body would have to be prepared, arrangements made.
A man pushed through the crowd. He wore the white turban of the religious sheikh. He walked up to the man and stood looking down at him.
Pick him up! he said.
He stays where he is! said the leader of the labourers.
The sheikh stared him hard in the face.
God must be given his due! he said harshly.
The workman shuffled his feet uneasily but held his ground. So must man, he said.
Look, said the foreigner in the helmet, why dont you let him have the body? The circumstances can be gone into later.
Its the law, said the workman.
Hes right, said Owen. When theres a death in suspicious circumstances the body has to be left untouched and the Parquet notified.
Yes, but are the circumstances suspicious? Couldnt it just be an accident?
Accident! said the leader of the workmen. This is no accident!
He could have fallen, couldnt he? Tripped over the track and-
Broken his neck? said the workman derisively.
Well, yes, he could! said the man in the helmet. Couldnt he? he appealed to Owen.
Has the Parquet been sent for?
Yes, first thing. As soon as we got here and found him. I dont know where they are! Taking their time, I suppose, like everyone else in Egypt!
At the back of the crowd a woman began ululating. From across the fields came answering cries.
Effendi! said the villager worriedly. The women-
Pick him up! ordered the sheikh.
Leave him! said the leader of the workmen.
The crowd began to murmur.
What do we care about the law? someone called out.
It wont help Ibrahim, will it? shouted someone else, a villager.
The workmen looked at their leader uneasily.
He stays where he is! said the leader.
Youve got the Mamur Zapt here, said the man in the helmet. What do you need the Parquet for? Isnt he good enough?
The man looked Owen up and down.
No, he said.
Strictly speaking, he was correct. The Mamur Zapt was not the Parquet. All the same, Owen felt irritated.
Hes a troublemaker, the man in the helmet said aside to Owen. Thats what its all about, you know.
The crowd was stirring. Villagers and workmen were separating out.
The cries across the fields were getting closer.
Pick him up! said the sheikh.
The villagers surged forward. The workmen formed up in a line between them and the body. Both sides, Owen suddenly noticed, were armed with spades.
Wait! he said. There is a way of wisdom in all this.
The Law of God, said the sheikh threateningly, does not wait on the Law of Man.
Break the law, said Owen coldly, and you will feel it.
If there is a way of wisdom, said the villager hastily, why not hear it?
Owen guessed that he was the village omda, or headman, the man who was likely to feel the law most.
The leader of the workmen shrugged.
Why not? he said.
The sheikh hesitated.
No one here wishes to offend the Law of God, said Owen, nor that of man, either. For no man wishes to see injustice. And it may be that there is injustice here. For I agree with my friend-he motioned towards the leader of the workmen-that there is much here that needs explaining. On the other hand, he continued hastily, as the sheikh opened his mouth, there are requirements of decency which must be observed.
True, said the sheikh.
The women have their duties.
Quite right! said the omda, thinking he saw the way that things were going.
But then, said Owen, the men have their requirements too.
They do?
Yes. The men of the family, and those who have worked with him, will want to know that justice has been done.
Thats right! asserted the leader of the workmen.
But- began the sheikh.
In the village, too, continued Owen quickly, addressing the crowd and bypassing the sheikh, there will be men who say: Let us proceed with circumspection, for there are dark and weighty things here.
Yes. No. You think? said the omda, spinning.
There speaks the man of experience! said Owen warmly. And there will be others among you, leaders in the village, experienced, wise, who will think as he does!
So? said the sheikh.
So? said the leader of the workmen.
In the nick of time it came to Owen.
Such wisdom should not lightly be set aside! he said sternly.
Well, no, but-
Choose three men from among you. That should take some time. Let them sit with me and with the omda -best to put him on the spot-and with the man of God-that should take care of him and then let us take counsel in front of you all.
But that will take- began the sheikh.
Effendi, the body- said the omda worriedly.
Rightly spoken! There is a need for haste. And therefore let the choosing of the men begin.
He walked purposefully aside. The members of the crowd looked at each other hesitantly.
And then began choosing.
Phew! thought Owen.
Across the fields wove a column of women in black, ululating as they came.
So, said the Consul-Generals ADC, as they sat sipping their drinks on the verandah of the Sporting Club, you referred it to committee?
Instinct, said Owen. My years of experience with the Egyptian bureaucracy have taught me thats what you do with a crisis. Fortunately, the Parquet arrived soon afterwards and I was able to hand it all over to them.
A pity, said Paul, reflecting, since you were already involved.
Ah, but that was by accident. Its really nothing to do with me at all. Not the sort of thing I handle.
He stopped.
Already? he said.
Actually, said Paul, that was what I wanted to talk to you about.
Salah-el-Din, the mamur of the new city, was waiting for him at the gate of one of the few houses that had been completed. It was a surprising house for an inspector of police, large, white-stuccoed and Indo-European in style. But the Syndicate had insisted on the house being in keeping with the character of the others in the development.
The new city was targeted at the very wealthy, who, apart from benefiting from the purity of the air, would also benefit from close proximity to the ruler of Egypt, the Khedive, who had a palace at Kubba.
The city was not built yet and it was pushing things to appoint a mamur this early, but the syndicate behind the development had requested it in the interests of community relations, which was very splendid, and had offered to pay the mamurs salary for the first two years, which was even more splendid.
They had gone so far as to put forward Salah-el-Dins name. Garvin, the Commandant of the Cairo Police Force, was normally against that sort of thing, but Salah was a bright young chap and due for promotion and they would need someone special for the job anyway. The Khedive could be relied on to make difficulties; and the Syndicates wealthy clientele would certainly feel that they merited especially sophisticated policing.
Salah-el-Din, it was suggested, was just the man for the job. Unusually for an Egyptian, he had trained abroad, not, it was true, as a policeman but as some sort of lawyer (he had come unstuck in his examinations, which was why he had descended to become a policeman) and spoke French well enough to be able to liaise with the Syndicate (which was Belgian).
Owen knew very little about him beyond the fact that he played tennis. Rather well, in fact, as Owen had discovered a few weeks ago when he had played against him during a tennis party got up by the Consul-General.