The Camel of Destruction

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Book: Read The Camel of Destruction for Free Online
Authors: Michael Pearce
Tags: Fiction, General, Mystery & Detective
the whole country. They’ve got more in the Agricultural Society!’
    ‘Then how is it that Fingari wasn’t?’
    ‘Perhaps—he’s joined us only recently, perhaps he’s not had time to pick things up—’
    ‘How recently?’
    ‘Six months. Before that he was at Public Works.’
    ‘He came to you from Public Works?’
    ‘Yes. He was brought in specially. So that he could represent us on the Bank. To be fair, he had the background—’
    ‘Banking?’
    ‘Control of public expenditure.’
    ‘And none of you have that background?’
    ‘Not to the same extent. Public Works is large. We are— small.’
    ‘What did he do with the rest of his time? When he wasn’t working on the Bank?’
    ‘I don’t know. None of us know. He kept himself to himself.’
    ‘Did anyone work with him?’
    ‘No. His work was, as I have said, very specialized.’
    ‘So you wouldn’t know anything about these negotiations he’s been engaged in?’
    ‘Negotiations? I didn’t know he had been engaged in any. What sort of negotiations?’
    ‘I’m like you: don’t know anything about it.’
    ‘He’s certainly been going out a lot lately,’ said the man thoughtfully. ‘But we thought—you know, lunch and all that sort of thing—’
    ‘You don’t know any of the people he used to meet?’
    The man shook his head.
    ‘We didn’t really like to ask him. Thought they might be people he’d worked with when he was at Public Works.’
    ‘No names?’
    ‘They’d be in his desk diary. We’re supposed to record—’
    ‘It doesn’t seem to be here,’ said Owen, searching.
    ‘Isn’t it? It ought to be. Ya Abdul!’
    Abdul Latif appeared in the doorway.
    ‘Fingari effendi’s Green Book: have you seen it?’
    ‘It should be on the desk,’ said Abdul Latif, coming into the room.
     
    The Ministry of Agriculture was, as it happened, in the same building as the Ministry of Public Works, occupying part of a corridor on the top floor at the back, which indicated, in the subtle way of the Civil Service, its status as a
parvenu
.
    The building was in the Ministerial Quarter, the Kasr-el-Dubara, which was itself in the same state of incompleteness as the rest of Cairo. Half of it consisted of grubbed up gardens and abandoned foundations, a memento of the recent land-boom, in which the part on the river bank was to have been developed as a fashionable residential area.
    The other half of it had already been developed with imposing new Government buildings, set out in French-style ornamental parks with formal flowerbeds and cool promenades of trees.
    Owen had intended taking to the promenades but as he came round the corner of the building he saw in front of him the handsome, if rather stolid, edifice of the Ministry of Religious Endowments. Since he was in the neighbourhood…
    ‘I would like to check the details of a
waqf
I am interested in,’ he told the clerk at the Reception desk inside. ‘It’s in the Derb Aiah area.’
    The clerk, a Nikos in embryo, looked at Owen sniffily. ‘We do not classify them by areas,’ he said.
    ‘How do you classify them?’
    ‘By names.’
    ‘Shawquat.’
    ‘What sort of name is that?’
    ‘It’s the name of the beneficiary.’
    ‘Ah, we don’t classify by the names of beneficiaries. We classify by the name of the original endower.’
    ‘Mightn’t he be named Shawquat, too?’
    ‘He might; but then, again, he might not.’
    ‘Try under Shawquat,’ said Owen.
    The clerk took his time.
    ‘There are several Shawquats.’
    ‘Fine. I’ll look at them all.’
    ‘The files would be too heavy to bring.’
    ‘I’ll look at them where they are.’
    Reluctantly, the clerk took him into a back room, very large, occupying the whole of one floor of the vast building. ‘Thank you. How are they organized?’
    ‘In files.’
    Owen considered whether to pick the clerk up, shake him and drop him. But this was not one of the Ministries with an English Adviser, it was a Ministry which, in

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