The fig tree murder, p.5
The Fig Tree Murder, page 5
‘They’re not exactly my friends. One of them’s the new mamur out at Heliopolis.’
‘Who’s the girl?’
‘His daughter. I can’t figure her out,’ admitted Owen.
‘I can!’
Zeinab was silent for a moment. Then she said:
‘How can a mamur afford to shop at Anton’s?’
‘That’s what I’m wondering,’ said Owen.
‘I shall tell Anton that he needs to be more selective in his clientele. He can start by throwing out that other man.’
‘Malik? He’s a Pasha’s son!’
‘Good!’ said Zeinab gleefully. ‘In that case I shall certainly ask Anton to throw him out!’
***
Owen was a little taken aback when he returned to his office to find that the venue for his meeting had been changed. It was now to be held at the Savoy Hotel, which was roughly where he had just come from. His meetings were not normally held at the Savoy Hotel, but he had hopes that this might create a precedent.
At the meeting were a representative of the Ministry of Justice, McPhee, the Deputy Commandment of Police, two lawyers and Malik appearing for the appellants, and himself, and the subject of the meeting was an application to open new premises under the licensing laws.
Or, rather, not quite an application.
‘A formal application will be made later,’ said one of the lawyers, smiling. ‘At this stage all we are doing is testing the ground. We are seeking to establish whether there would be any objection in principle to an application such as ours.’
‘The government’s policy is to restrict the number of gambling houses,’ said McPhee severely.
‘And quite rightly, too. There are far too many low dens where the practices are, frankly, far from commendable. Our application is not of that sort. It relates to the opening of a casino in the Palace Hotel at Heliopolis.’
‘Palace Hotel?’ said McPhee, puzzled. ‘There isn’t one!’
‘It’s being built.’
The man from the Ministry of Justice, an Egyptian, looked at his papers.
‘A casino wasn’t mentioned in the original planning application,’ he said.
‘Well, no. It has only recently come home to us how attractive an additional amenity it would be.’
‘It’s the government’s policy not to allow new premises to be opened,’ said McPhee.
‘But surely that only applies to Cairo proper, where there is already too great an abundance of such places? We are talking about the New Heliopolis, where there isn’t even one at the moment!’
‘It is a general restriction,’ said the man from the Ministry of Justice.
‘But how can it apply to a place like the New Heliopolis, which wasn’t even projected when the legislation was framed?’
‘The legislation covers future development.’
‘I put the question because of the special character of the Heliopolis development. It is to be a City of Pleasure. That was stated explicitly at the stage of the initial planning application. I would suggest that approval of the initial concept implies approach of consequent developments.’
‘I would challenge the view that a casino is a consequent development,’ said Owen. ‘Amenities in general, yes, a casino in particular, no.’
‘But I think you have to have regard to other developments: the racetrack—’
‘God, yes!’ said Malik.
‘—which is an important feature of the new sporting complex. You can hardly have a racetrack without gambling!’
‘God, no!’ said Malik.
‘Thank you, Mr Hosnani. I argue firstly, that implicit in the approval of the racetrack was approval of related gambling facilities—’
‘But they’re not related!’ protested Owen.
‘It’s all the same thing,’ said Malik. ‘What you lose on the swings, you lose on the roundabouts.’
‘A casino is quite different!’
‘Not in character, Captain Owen. And that is really my point: the character of Heliopolis as a City of Pleasure.’
‘I’m all for pleasure,’ said Malik.
‘Thank you, Mr Hosnani. We are not talking about some low, vicious den but about a tasteful, discreet, modest development in a major hotel—’
‘Modest?’ said the man from the Ministry of Justice, studying his papers. ‘It’s gigantic!’
‘There’s another point about character,’ said Owen. ‘Have you thought about the proximity to the gathering place for the Mecca caravan?’
‘Ah, Captain Owen!’ said the lawyer, smiling. ‘I think you’re a little out of date, you know. We all go by train now.’
‘Do we?’ said Malik, startled.
‘No,’ said Owen. ‘Not everyone. There’s still a caravan.’
‘For how long? No, Captain Owen—’ the lawyer smiled and shook his head—‘we must look to the future. And Heliopolis is the future.’
‘I think we have to have regard to local religious feeling,’ said Owen.
The other lawyer intervened.
‘With the greatest respect,’ he said, ‘I’m not sure that the Mamur Zapt is the best interpreter of religious feeling.’
‘No?’ said the man from the Ministry of Justice.
‘No. There is, in fact, very considerable local support for the venture. I would go so far as to say that it has captured the imagination of the local populace. As Mr Hosnani, here, is in a position to testify.’
‘You’re damned right,’ said Malik. ‘We’re all in favour. Can’t wait to get started.’
‘With the greatest respect,’ said Owen, ‘I doubt whether Mr Hosnani is in a position to testify; not, at least, as far as the views of the ordinary man are concerned.’
‘I’m a local resident, aren’t I?’ said Malik indignantly.
Chapter Four
A few people stood around but, compared with what it would have been in the city, it was nothing. In the city, the crowd would have filled the street. Here, an old man looked up while watering his goats, some women with jugs on their heads paused on their way to the well, men stooping in the fields looked as they straightened their backs for a moment. One or two villagers had come out to see what was going on; and beside the Tree, Daniel, the Copt, stood vigilant, hoping somehow to turn this into a bargain.
The space in front of the Tree was roped off and some men in police tunics and military-style tarbooshes were crouched down examining the ground. Despite the sun, which made the sand so hot that it almost burned the hand, they had bare feet; and although they looked not very different from ordinary city policemen, they were in fact men of the desert. They were the police force’s professional trackers.
Some of their achievements were legendary. On one occasion some goods had been thrown out of a train in the middle of the desert. Accomplices waiting on camels had taken them to Port Said, over a hundred miles away; where the trackers had found them in the market, identifying them by camel track alone.
‘I had thought it might be too late,’ said Mahmoud, ‘and, of course, the ground at the railhead was very disturbed. There had been so many people milling about that first day. But out beyond the disturbed ground they were able to pick up the trail. It was partly the different kinds of sand they found on the body, but then they also found tracks.’
‘And it led back to here?’ said Owen.
‘Yes. This is where he was killed.’
One of the trackers looked up and pointed to a patch of ground.
‘He fell here?’
Owen bent down and looked closely. He didn’t really expect to see anything and he wasn’t disappointed. However, he knew the trackers well enough to believe them. On second thoughts, that might be a slight declivity.
The tracker pointed to one side of it and made smoothing movements with his hand. Yes, you could argue that something had been dragged. He stood up and, beckoning to Owen to follow him, set off across the desert, pointing to the ground.
To him it was as plain as a pikestaff. To Owen it was the next best thing to invisible; only, from time to time, the tracker bent down and showed him marks which he certainly could see. The difficult thing was pulling the marks together to establish the trail as a whole. This was where, presumably, the different types of sand came in. Here again, to Owen the differences were practically indistinguishable. To the trackers they leaped out a mile.
The tracker led him across the desert to the railway, where some of the men he and Mahmoud had talked to the previous day were laying the track. New lengths had been added. The tracker disregarded these and took Owen straight to the place where he had first seen the body.
Owen walked back with him to the Tree.
‘It’s a long way to drag someone.’
The tracker shrugged.
‘Perhaps he didn’t have a donkey,’ he said.
It was a long way. You wouldn’t have done it lightly. It must have been done deliberately, to make, as Mahmoud had suggested, a point.
But then, it was a long way and if it had been done deliberately, premeditated, why had not the attacker thought of the carrying? Here, in the heat, almost every little thing was carried on the back of a donkey. True, the attack had been at night, when it had been cool. All the same, it was a long way.
He said this to Mahmoud.
‘Yes,’ said Mahmoud, ‘I’ve been thinking that too.’
‘Why not a donkey?’
‘Because there are other donkeys about. It might have called out.’
‘We’re some way from the village,’ Owen objected.
‘Yes, but there are donkeys about. There’s one over there, for instance, among those trees by the well.’
Owen nodded, accepting.
‘It had to be a long way,’ said Mahmoud. ‘The railway track was where he wanted the body to be in the end. But Ibrahim wasn’t going to walk there himself. If he was going to be trapped by a meeting, the meeting would have to be close to the village. Close, but not too close. Here, by the Tree,’ said Mahmoud, looking around him, ‘would be just about right.’
***
The Copt had been watching the goings-on with interest. Owen walked over to him.
‘Are you here all the time, Daniel?’
‘Certainly,’ said the Copt. ‘It’s my property, isn’t it?’
‘Nights, too?’
‘Well, no. I have a wife to keep warm.’
‘And where do you keep her warm, Daniel?’
‘At Tel-el-Hasan.’
‘Ah, Heliopolis? Where they are building?’
‘Where they are building, unfortunately. I offered them my land but the Khedive got there first.’
‘It’s his land, is it?’
‘Most of it is just desert. But he claimed that it belongs to him.’
‘And you go back there every night?’
‘I do.’
‘Do you walk?’
‘Walk?’ said Daniel, astonished. ‘Walking is for fellahin. I have a donkey.’
‘And at what time is it that you set out from here?’
‘When the sun is two fists above the horizon. Leave it any later and it would be dark when I got home. I wouldn’t want that. There are bad men about,’ he said, looking at the spot where the trackers were crouching. ‘Muslims,’ he added.
‘And when do you return?’
‘At sunrise. Leave it any later and who knows how many may have been carving at the Tree.’
‘And on the night the man was killed you saw nothing untoward as you left?’
‘No.’
‘Nor as you came the next morning?’
‘What might I have seen?’
‘I was just wondering.’
‘The other men have already asked me this,’ said Daniel. ‘Both that one’—pointing at Mahmoud—‘and the other one before.’
Owen, following the point, saw again the donkey among the trees.
‘That donkey over there: is it yours?’
‘It is; and the trees should be mine by rights also. For when the Virgin rested beneath the Tree, she went down to the well for water with which to wash the Child’s garments. And when she threw away the water afterwards, trees of holy balsam sprang up. Those trees. Worth a lot of money. And by rights,’ said Daniel bitterly, ‘they should be mine. For they would not have been there had not the Virgin rested under my Tree.’
‘Who do they belong to?’
‘There are those in the village who say they are wild trees, that they belong to everyone. But the well isn’t wild, is it? Someone put it there. The same with the trees. Someone planted them. And that someone was the Virgin after she had rested under my Tree. They don’t belong to everyone; they belong to me. And that old bastard over there is letting his goats devour my substance!’
***
The goats were rising on to their hind legs and tearing at the branches. From where they tore, a strong, sweet, herby smell drifted across to Owen.
‘Fine beasts!’ he said to the old man.
‘Two are milking,’ said the old man.
‘This is a handy place for you,’ said Owen. ‘Both water and food.’
‘They don’t like the leaves all that much,’ said the old man. ‘We might move on soon.’
‘You’ve been here a day or two?’
The old man nodded.
‘What do you do at night? Leave them?’
‘I stay with them,’ said the old man. ‘They’re used to me.’
‘So you were here the other night, the night the man was found?’
He nodded again.
‘And did you hear anything that night?’
‘I heard the doves in the trees.’
‘And then, when it grew dark and the doves settled down, did you hear anything then?’
‘The goats were restless.’
‘They were disturbed, perhaps?’
‘Perhaps,’ agreed the old man.
‘What by?’
The old man considered.
‘People,’ he said at last.
‘Up here? By the Tree?’
‘That’s where they were.’
‘There were more than one of them, then?’
‘That is so.’
‘And what did you hear?’
‘Talking.’
‘Loud talking?’
‘Not very loud.’
‘Were they fierce with one another?’
‘No,’ said the old man, surprised. He considered for a moment. ‘One of them was a woman,’ he volunteered hesitantly.
‘Ah? You heard her talking? And the other was a man? Or perhaps there was more than one man?’
‘Just the one.’
Owen tried, unsuccessfully, to get more out of him, then went and told Mahmoud.
‘She was wrong, then,’ said Owen.
‘She?’
‘Jalila. The woman he had been seeing.’
He told Mahmoud what she had said to Asif.
‘She reckoned it would be no good him seeing another woman after what he had been doing with her! Evidently she was wrong.’
‘Or lying.’
‘I don’t think she was lying,’ said Owen.
‘Probably not. Let us accept, then, that she was wrong. He was going out to see another woman.’
‘We can’t be absolutely sure. But it seems very likely.’
‘It would have to have been,’ said Mahmoud, thinking, ‘a woman in the village. In that case someone else in the village will almost certainly know her.’
***
‘Women in this village are a loose lot!’ said Sheikh Isa fiercely.
They had run into him on their way back to Matariya.
‘Well, that’s the way of it!’ said Owen, shaking his head sadly.
‘Is it that they do not listen to their husbands’ words?’ asked Mahmoud sympathetically. ‘Or is it that the husbands do not hear your words?’
‘Women are immoral; men are weak,’ said Sheikh Isa.
‘Temptresses, all of them!’ said Owen.
‘That slut Jalila! She should be stoned, for a start!’
‘One bad date infects the others,’ said Mahmoud.
‘They ought to make an example of her! I’ve been saying that for a long time. But will they listen to me?’
‘I expect that’s because too many have been seeing her themselves,’ said Owen naughtily.
Sheikh Isa glared at him.
‘If they have,’ he said fiercely, ‘then they should mend their ways!’
‘Perhaps the fate of Ibrahim will be a lesson to them.’
Sheikh Isa gave him a quick look. He was, for all his vehemence, Owen realized, no fool.
‘Was that it?’ he said.
‘We do not know,’ said Mahmoud, ‘but we wonder. And we wonder especially who was the other woman that he was seeing.’
‘Another?’ Sheikh Isa smote his brow. ‘Another woman, you say? Besides Jalila?’ Mahmoud nodded.
‘Whores!’ shouted Sheikh Isa. ‘All of them! Whores!’
Passers-by in the street looked up with interest.
‘Well, possibly not all of them,’ said Owen. ‘Perhaps, in fact, just one. Apart from Jalila, of course.’
‘A woman was speaking with Ibrahim on the night he was killed,’ said Mahmoud. ‘After he had been to Jalila’s. We would like to know who she was.’
‘It may be, indeed, it is quite likely, that he had seen her before,’ said Owen.
‘In which case,’ said Mahmoud, ‘someone in the village may know her.’ Sheikh Isa looked at him thoughtfully.
‘They may indeed,’ he said. ‘There are people in the village who make it their business to know everyone else’s business. And tell it!’ he shouted suddenly. ‘Gossips, slanderers, spies! Women!’
‘Well—’
‘Come with me!’ shouted Sheikh Isa. ‘I know who will know!’
***
An old woman came to the door.
‘Who’s the girl?’
‘His daughter. I can’t figure her out,’ admitted Owen.
‘I can!’
Zeinab was silent for a moment. Then she said:
‘How can a mamur afford to shop at Anton’s?’
‘That’s what I’m wondering,’ said Owen.
‘I shall tell Anton that he needs to be more selective in his clientele. He can start by throwing out that other man.’
‘Malik? He’s a Pasha’s son!’
‘Good!’ said Zeinab gleefully. ‘In that case I shall certainly ask Anton to throw him out!’
***
Owen was a little taken aback when he returned to his office to find that the venue for his meeting had been changed. It was now to be held at the Savoy Hotel, which was roughly where he had just come from. His meetings were not normally held at the Savoy Hotel, but he had hopes that this might create a precedent.
At the meeting were a representative of the Ministry of Justice, McPhee, the Deputy Commandment of Police, two lawyers and Malik appearing for the appellants, and himself, and the subject of the meeting was an application to open new premises under the licensing laws.
Or, rather, not quite an application.
‘A formal application will be made later,’ said one of the lawyers, smiling. ‘At this stage all we are doing is testing the ground. We are seeking to establish whether there would be any objection in principle to an application such as ours.’
‘The government’s policy is to restrict the number of gambling houses,’ said McPhee severely.
‘And quite rightly, too. There are far too many low dens where the practices are, frankly, far from commendable. Our application is not of that sort. It relates to the opening of a casino in the Palace Hotel at Heliopolis.’
‘Palace Hotel?’ said McPhee, puzzled. ‘There isn’t one!’
‘It’s being built.’
The man from the Ministry of Justice, an Egyptian, looked at his papers.
‘A casino wasn’t mentioned in the original planning application,’ he said.
‘Well, no. It has only recently come home to us how attractive an additional amenity it would be.’
‘It’s the government’s policy not to allow new premises to be opened,’ said McPhee.
‘But surely that only applies to Cairo proper, where there is already too great an abundance of such places? We are talking about the New Heliopolis, where there isn’t even one at the moment!’
‘It is a general restriction,’ said the man from the Ministry of Justice.
‘But how can it apply to a place like the New Heliopolis, which wasn’t even projected when the legislation was framed?’
‘The legislation covers future development.’
‘I put the question because of the special character of the Heliopolis development. It is to be a City of Pleasure. That was stated explicitly at the stage of the initial planning application. I would suggest that approval of the initial concept implies approach of consequent developments.’
‘I would challenge the view that a casino is a consequent development,’ said Owen. ‘Amenities in general, yes, a casino in particular, no.’
‘But I think you have to have regard to other developments: the racetrack—’
‘God, yes!’ said Malik.
‘—which is an important feature of the new sporting complex. You can hardly have a racetrack without gambling!’
‘God, no!’ said Malik.
‘Thank you, Mr Hosnani. I argue firstly, that implicit in the approval of the racetrack was approval of related gambling facilities—’
‘But they’re not related!’ protested Owen.
‘It’s all the same thing,’ said Malik. ‘What you lose on the swings, you lose on the roundabouts.’
‘A casino is quite different!’
‘Not in character, Captain Owen. And that is really my point: the character of Heliopolis as a City of Pleasure.’
‘I’m all for pleasure,’ said Malik.
‘Thank you, Mr Hosnani. We are not talking about some low, vicious den but about a tasteful, discreet, modest development in a major hotel—’
‘Modest?’ said the man from the Ministry of Justice, studying his papers. ‘It’s gigantic!’
‘There’s another point about character,’ said Owen. ‘Have you thought about the proximity to the gathering place for the Mecca caravan?’
‘Ah, Captain Owen!’ said the lawyer, smiling. ‘I think you’re a little out of date, you know. We all go by train now.’
‘Do we?’ said Malik, startled.
‘No,’ said Owen. ‘Not everyone. There’s still a caravan.’
‘For how long? No, Captain Owen—’ the lawyer smiled and shook his head—‘we must look to the future. And Heliopolis is the future.’
‘I think we have to have regard to local religious feeling,’ said Owen.
The other lawyer intervened.
‘With the greatest respect,’ he said, ‘I’m not sure that the Mamur Zapt is the best interpreter of religious feeling.’
‘No?’ said the man from the Ministry of Justice.
‘No. There is, in fact, very considerable local support for the venture. I would go so far as to say that it has captured the imagination of the local populace. As Mr Hosnani, here, is in a position to testify.’
‘You’re damned right,’ said Malik. ‘We’re all in favour. Can’t wait to get started.’
‘With the greatest respect,’ said Owen, ‘I doubt whether Mr Hosnani is in a position to testify; not, at least, as far as the views of the ordinary man are concerned.’
‘I’m a local resident, aren’t I?’ said Malik indignantly.
Chapter Four
A few people stood around but, compared with what it would have been in the city, it was nothing. In the city, the crowd would have filled the street. Here, an old man looked up while watering his goats, some women with jugs on their heads paused on their way to the well, men stooping in the fields looked as they straightened their backs for a moment. One or two villagers had come out to see what was going on; and beside the Tree, Daniel, the Copt, stood vigilant, hoping somehow to turn this into a bargain.
The space in front of the Tree was roped off and some men in police tunics and military-style tarbooshes were crouched down examining the ground. Despite the sun, which made the sand so hot that it almost burned the hand, they had bare feet; and although they looked not very different from ordinary city policemen, they were in fact men of the desert. They were the police force’s professional trackers.
Some of their achievements were legendary. On one occasion some goods had been thrown out of a train in the middle of the desert. Accomplices waiting on camels had taken them to Port Said, over a hundred miles away; where the trackers had found them in the market, identifying them by camel track alone.
‘I had thought it might be too late,’ said Mahmoud, ‘and, of course, the ground at the railhead was very disturbed. There had been so many people milling about that first day. But out beyond the disturbed ground they were able to pick up the trail. It was partly the different kinds of sand they found on the body, but then they also found tracks.’
‘And it led back to here?’ said Owen.
‘Yes. This is where he was killed.’
One of the trackers looked up and pointed to a patch of ground.
‘He fell here?’
Owen bent down and looked closely. He didn’t really expect to see anything and he wasn’t disappointed. However, he knew the trackers well enough to believe them. On second thoughts, that might be a slight declivity.
The tracker pointed to one side of it and made smoothing movements with his hand. Yes, you could argue that something had been dragged. He stood up and, beckoning to Owen to follow him, set off across the desert, pointing to the ground.
To him it was as plain as a pikestaff. To Owen it was the next best thing to invisible; only, from time to time, the tracker bent down and showed him marks which he certainly could see. The difficult thing was pulling the marks together to establish the trail as a whole. This was where, presumably, the different types of sand came in. Here again, to Owen the differences were practically indistinguishable. To the trackers they leaped out a mile.
The tracker led him across the desert to the railway, where some of the men he and Mahmoud had talked to the previous day were laying the track. New lengths had been added. The tracker disregarded these and took Owen straight to the place where he had first seen the body.
Owen walked back with him to the Tree.
‘It’s a long way to drag someone.’
The tracker shrugged.
‘Perhaps he didn’t have a donkey,’ he said.
It was a long way. You wouldn’t have done it lightly. It must have been done deliberately, to make, as Mahmoud had suggested, a point.
But then, it was a long way and if it had been done deliberately, premeditated, why had not the attacker thought of the carrying? Here, in the heat, almost every little thing was carried on the back of a donkey. True, the attack had been at night, when it had been cool. All the same, it was a long way.
He said this to Mahmoud.
‘Yes,’ said Mahmoud, ‘I’ve been thinking that too.’
‘Why not a donkey?’
‘Because there are other donkeys about. It might have called out.’
‘We’re some way from the village,’ Owen objected.
‘Yes, but there are donkeys about. There’s one over there, for instance, among those trees by the well.’
Owen nodded, accepting.
‘It had to be a long way,’ said Mahmoud. ‘The railway track was where he wanted the body to be in the end. But Ibrahim wasn’t going to walk there himself. If he was going to be trapped by a meeting, the meeting would have to be close to the village. Close, but not too close. Here, by the Tree,’ said Mahmoud, looking around him, ‘would be just about right.’
***
The Copt had been watching the goings-on with interest. Owen walked over to him.
‘Are you here all the time, Daniel?’
‘Certainly,’ said the Copt. ‘It’s my property, isn’t it?’
‘Nights, too?’
‘Well, no. I have a wife to keep warm.’
‘And where do you keep her warm, Daniel?’
‘At Tel-el-Hasan.’
‘Ah, Heliopolis? Where they are building?’
‘Where they are building, unfortunately. I offered them my land but the Khedive got there first.’
‘It’s his land, is it?’
‘Most of it is just desert. But he claimed that it belongs to him.’
‘And you go back there every night?’
‘I do.’
‘Do you walk?’
‘Walk?’ said Daniel, astonished. ‘Walking is for fellahin. I have a donkey.’
‘And at what time is it that you set out from here?’
‘When the sun is two fists above the horizon. Leave it any later and it would be dark when I got home. I wouldn’t want that. There are bad men about,’ he said, looking at the spot where the trackers were crouching. ‘Muslims,’ he added.
‘And when do you return?’
‘At sunrise. Leave it any later and who knows how many may have been carving at the Tree.’
‘And on the night the man was killed you saw nothing untoward as you left?’
‘No.’
‘Nor as you came the next morning?’
‘What might I have seen?’
‘I was just wondering.’
‘The other men have already asked me this,’ said Daniel. ‘Both that one’—pointing at Mahmoud—‘and the other one before.’
Owen, following the point, saw again the donkey among the trees.
‘That donkey over there: is it yours?’
‘It is; and the trees should be mine by rights also. For when the Virgin rested beneath the Tree, she went down to the well for water with which to wash the Child’s garments. And when she threw away the water afterwards, trees of holy balsam sprang up. Those trees. Worth a lot of money. And by rights,’ said Daniel bitterly, ‘they should be mine. For they would not have been there had not the Virgin rested under my Tree.’
‘Who do they belong to?’
‘There are those in the village who say they are wild trees, that they belong to everyone. But the well isn’t wild, is it? Someone put it there. The same with the trees. Someone planted them. And that someone was the Virgin after she had rested under my Tree. They don’t belong to everyone; they belong to me. And that old bastard over there is letting his goats devour my substance!’
***
The goats were rising on to their hind legs and tearing at the branches. From where they tore, a strong, sweet, herby smell drifted across to Owen.
‘Fine beasts!’ he said to the old man.
‘Two are milking,’ said the old man.
‘This is a handy place for you,’ said Owen. ‘Both water and food.’
‘They don’t like the leaves all that much,’ said the old man. ‘We might move on soon.’
‘You’ve been here a day or two?’
The old man nodded.
‘What do you do at night? Leave them?’
‘I stay with them,’ said the old man. ‘They’re used to me.’
‘So you were here the other night, the night the man was found?’
He nodded again.
‘And did you hear anything that night?’
‘I heard the doves in the trees.’
‘And then, when it grew dark and the doves settled down, did you hear anything then?’
‘The goats were restless.’
‘They were disturbed, perhaps?’
‘Perhaps,’ agreed the old man.
‘What by?’
The old man considered.
‘People,’ he said at last.
‘Up here? By the Tree?’
‘That’s where they were.’
‘There were more than one of them, then?’
‘That is so.’
‘And what did you hear?’
‘Talking.’
‘Loud talking?’
‘Not very loud.’
‘Were they fierce with one another?’
‘No,’ said the old man, surprised. He considered for a moment. ‘One of them was a woman,’ he volunteered hesitantly.
‘Ah? You heard her talking? And the other was a man? Or perhaps there was more than one man?’
‘Just the one.’
Owen tried, unsuccessfully, to get more out of him, then went and told Mahmoud.
‘She was wrong, then,’ said Owen.
‘She?’
‘Jalila. The woman he had been seeing.’
He told Mahmoud what she had said to Asif.
‘She reckoned it would be no good him seeing another woman after what he had been doing with her! Evidently she was wrong.’
‘Or lying.’
‘I don’t think she was lying,’ said Owen.
‘Probably not. Let us accept, then, that she was wrong. He was going out to see another woman.’
‘We can’t be absolutely sure. But it seems very likely.’
‘It would have to have been,’ said Mahmoud, thinking, ‘a woman in the village. In that case someone else in the village will almost certainly know her.’
***
‘Women in this village are a loose lot!’ said Sheikh Isa fiercely.
They had run into him on their way back to Matariya.
‘Well, that’s the way of it!’ said Owen, shaking his head sadly.
‘Is it that they do not listen to their husbands’ words?’ asked Mahmoud sympathetically. ‘Or is it that the husbands do not hear your words?’
‘Women are immoral; men are weak,’ said Sheikh Isa.
‘Temptresses, all of them!’ said Owen.
‘That slut Jalila! She should be stoned, for a start!’
‘One bad date infects the others,’ said Mahmoud.
‘They ought to make an example of her! I’ve been saying that for a long time. But will they listen to me?’
‘I expect that’s because too many have been seeing her themselves,’ said Owen naughtily.
Sheikh Isa glared at him.
‘If they have,’ he said fiercely, ‘then they should mend their ways!’
‘Perhaps the fate of Ibrahim will be a lesson to them.’
Sheikh Isa gave him a quick look. He was, for all his vehemence, Owen realized, no fool.
‘Was that it?’ he said.
‘We do not know,’ said Mahmoud, ‘but we wonder. And we wonder especially who was the other woman that he was seeing.’
‘Another?’ Sheikh Isa smote his brow. ‘Another woman, you say? Besides Jalila?’ Mahmoud nodded.
‘Whores!’ shouted Sheikh Isa. ‘All of them! Whores!’
Passers-by in the street looked up with interest.
‘Well, possibly not all of them,’ said Owen. ‘Perhaps, in fact, just one. Apart from Jalila, of course.’
‘A woman was speaking with Ibrahim on the night he was killed,’ said Mahmoud. ‘After he had been to Jalila’s. We would like to know who she was.’
‘It may be, indeed, it is quite likely, that he had seen her before,’ said Owen.
‘In which case,’ said Mahmoud, ‘someone in the village may know her.’ Sheikh Isa looked at him thoughtfully.
‘They may indeed,’ he said. ‘There are people in the village who make it their business to know everyone else’s business. And tell it!’ he shouted suddenly. ‘Gossips, slanderers, spies! Women!’
‘Well—’
‘Come with me!’ shouted Sheikh Isa. ‘I know who will know!’
***
An old woman came to the door.











