‘Well, there’s no need for you to rise like a fish!’
‘No, sir.’ They sounded, however, unconvinced.
‘Nice fishing at Machen, sir!’ one of them called out as they left.
The Egyptian came across to Owen as soon as they were gone.
‘Have I got it right?’ he said. ‘They are also from the Pays de Galles?’
Professional Egyptians, as well as upper-class Egyptians, tended to speak French more readily than they did English. Many of them had been to France for their education. Mahmoud El Zaki had not. He had done all his training in the Khedivial School of Law. The Egyptian legal system, however, was heavily based on the French and the whole legal culture was strongly French.
‘That’s right,’ said Owen. ‘It’s a Welsh regiment.’
‘I’m surprised you keep them together,’ said the Egyptian.
‘Isn’t there the risk of rebellion?’
‘No, no, no. It’s not like that. The English conquest of Wales was so long ago that most people have forgotten it. Well, almost.’
The Egyptian was not entirely convinced.
‘There seemed to me to be animosity,’ he said. ‘Those other men were English, yes? An English regiment?’
‘Some Cornishmen might dispute it, but yes. The conquest of Cornwall was even longer ago than the conquest of Wales.’
The Egyptian shook his head in wonderment.
‘I thought the British were all the same,’ he said. ‘Of course, I knew that you were from the Pays de Galles. You had told me. But I had thought that you were an exception. British is not English, then?’
‘Oh, no. It is Welsh and Scottish and Irish and—’
‘Cornish?’
‘If you go far enough back. And other things as well.’ The Egyptian looked thoughtful.
‘It sounds like Cairo to me.’ He glanced at his watch.
‘Look,’ he said, ‘I won’t take up your time now. Why don’t we have a coffee somewhere? Sidi Hassim’s, in an hour’s time?’
***
The trouble with the Cairo late-night café culture was that after the evening came the morning. Sleeping outside in the garden, because of the heat, Owen habitually awoke with the sun, no matter what time he’d gone to bed the night before. The result was that he’d normally passed his peak for the day by about nine, which was, of course, when the committees usually began, and after that it was all downhill. This morning he was present in the flesh but fragile in the spirit.
‘We’re always having meetings,’ he complained to Paul.
‘Yes, I know,’ said Paul, ‘and we could do without this one. However, a formal request has come in, or is about to come in, from Captain Shearer which, I think, needs discussion.’
‘Hasn’t it come in yet?’ said the major, equally fed up at having to be present. ‘If it’s not come in, why not wait until it does?’
‘Because that would rule out some of the options open to us.’
‘Such as?’
‘Not putting in a formal request.’
‘The Army does not change its mind,’ said Shearer stiffly.
‘Keeping it informal, you mean?’ asked the major. ‘Well, that’s usually best. Keep things off paper.’
‘I agree with you in principle, sir,’ said Shearer. ‘In fact, that’s exactly what I tried to do last night. Only this other Johnny said that things had already got past that stage.’
‘Who is the other Johnny?’ asked Paul.
‘Mahmoud,’ said Owen.
‘Mahmoud El Zaki? The Parquet’s already involved? This makes it more difficult.’
‘Presumably there was a complaint,’ said Owen.
‘Actually,’ said McPhee, Deputy Commandant of the Cairo Police, present this morning, ‘there were two.’
‘And they’ve assigned an officer already? That’s pretty quick off the mark!’
‘I think they’ve got a duty-officer system,’ said Owen, ‘and Mahmoud was probably the lawyer on duty. Anyone else would have left it till morning.’
‘It had to be Mahmoud!’ said Paul, vexed.
‘Difficult man, eh?’ said the major.
‘That was certainly my impression last night, sir,’ said Shearer.
‘Difficult?’ said Paul. ‘No. Conscientious.’ He turned to Owen. ‘You know Mahmoud,’ he said. ‘It was only last night. They can hardly have got started. Do you think that there’s any chance—?’
‘No,’ said Owen. ‘He’ll see it as a matter of principle.’
‘Well, it is a matter of principle,’ said Shearer. ‘Does the Army come under Egyptian law?’
‘Can’t have that!’ said the major, aghast.
‘I absolutely agree, sir,’ said Shearer. ‘And therefore I think the issue must be faced. Settle it once and for all. That was exactly my thinking last night. If the Johnnies want it formal, then let them have it formal; and see if they like the consequences!’
‘Hear, hear!’ said the major.
‘Look,’ said Paul, ‘the only way we get by in Egypt is by not facing issues. We take damned good care to see that issues are not faced.’
‘Chickening out!’ said Shearer contemptuously.
‘Damned shillyshallying!’ said the major.
‘And this is for a very good reason,’ said Paul; ‘the ground we stand on is shaky.’
‘Not while the Army’s here!’ said Shearer.
‘By God, no!’ said the major.
‘I’m thinking of the formal, legal grounds by which we justify our presence here.’
‘Well,’ said Shearer, ‘I don’t think we need to think too much about that. We’re here, aren’t we?’
‘It’s a question of how we appear in the eyes of other countries.’
‘Other countries!’ said the major dismissively.
‘I agree, sir,’ said Shearer. ‘The Army will look after that!’
‘One of the complaints,’ said McPhee, ‘came from the Russian Chargé.’
‘Russian Chargé!’ said Paul.
‘Apparently the soldiers assaulted him.’
‘God Almighty!’ said Paul. ‘It’s already an international incident!’
‘Gentlemen. We should not lose our heads—’ began Shearer.
‘Heads?’ said Paul. ‘Heads? And what do you think will happen to yours when the Commander-in-Chief, the Prime Minister back in London, learns that the country’s been committed to war through the actions of a junior captain?’
‘Perhaps we should think again,’ said the major. ‘Maybe it would be best after all if the whole thing was handled informally.’
‘Too late,’ said Paul. ‘It’s in the hands of the Parquet now. The Nationalists will have us over a barrel. They’ll exploit it internationally. Even your ambassador can’t walk along the street without being bloody jumped on by British soldiers.’
‘We’ll confine them to barracks,’ said the major. ‘Keep them off the streets for a time. Can’t we hush this thing up?’
‘Not a chance!’ said Paul, beginning to enjoy himself. ‘The Parquet’s Nationalist. It’s rubbing its hands at all the trouble it’ll be able to cause.’
‘It wouldn’t be possible—would it—to get the Chargé to withdraw his complaint?’ said the major desperately. ‘I mean, they wouldn’t be able to go ahead then, would they? They’d have to, well, drop it.’
Paul affected to consider.
‘I could go and grovel to the Chargé, I suppose,’ he said unwillingly.
‘Well, look—’
‘I could give it a go. There’d have to be a written apology, of course.’
‘You could manage that, couldn’t you?’
‘It wouldn’t have to be from me. It would have to be from you.’
‘The Army?’ The major swallowed; sw
allowed again. ‘I think that could be arranged.’
‘And Captain Shearer withdraws his request?’
‘In the circumstances,’ mumbled Shearer.
‘Right, then!’ said Paul, triumphant, beginning to gather his papers. ‘We—’
‘Excuse me,’ said McPhee, the Deputy Commandant, with his usual slightly anxious old-world courtesy, ‘haven’t you forgotten something? There was another complaint.’
‘My God!’ said Paul. ‘It’s all Europe now!’
‘No, no,’ said McPhee seriously. ‘It’s not from the Diplomatic this time.’
‘Who is it, then?’
‘The leader of the Mingrelian community.’ There was a little silence.
‘What did you say?’
‘Mingrelian.’
‘Oh, Mingrelian, Mingrelian!’ said Paul, starting up. ‘My God!’ he said, catching Owen’s eye, ‘Mingrelian!’
‘Mingrelian!’ responded Owen loyally, seeing that something of the sort was required but not, however, having the faintest idea what it was all about, never, indeed, having heard of anything Mingrelian before. ‘Mingrelian!’ he said, shaking his head.
‘Them above all!’ said Paul, all dejection.
‘Look,’ said the major apprehensively, ‘if they’re a particularly difficult lot—’
‘Difficult!’ said Paul. ‘Difficult! Not content with having provoked a world war, you bring out on to the streets the most bloodthirsty, intransigent—’
‘Armed uprising?’ said Shearer. ‘We can handle them!’
‘Both of them?’ said Paul. ‘At once?’
‘We’ll cope,’ said the major. ‘We’ll cope.’ He looked, however, distinctly worried. ‘Two fronts,’ he said. He shook his head. ‘Don’t like it,’ he said.
‘None of us like it,’ said Paul bravely. ‘We have to look issues in the face, though. There may be still time, however. I’ll go straight to the Russian Chargé and grovel. Oh, no, wait a minute. First, we need a letter of apology.’
‘I’ll see to it,’ said the major.
‘Right. Then keep your men off the streets—’
‘Lie low for a bit. Right, I get the picture,’ said Shearer.
‘And persuade the Army to refrain, at least for a time, from assaulting the minority of the population it hasn’t so far assaulted.’
‘Right,’ said the major. Paul looked pleased.
‘That’s it, then?’
‘The complaint from the Mingrelians,’ McPhee gently prompted.
‘Ah, yes. Well,’ said Paul, looking at Owen; ‘something for the Mamur Zapt, isn’t it?’
‘Thanks very much,’ said Owen.
***
‘Paul,’ he said worriedly, as they walked away together. ‘Who the hell are the Mingrelians?’
‘Don’t ask me,’ said Paul. ‘Never heard of them.’
***
‘Just bring me the Mingrelian file, will you?’ said Owen casually, glancing up at Nikos as the Official Clerk entered the room.
‘The what file?’
‘Mingrelian.’
Nikos stood for a moment, stunned. He liked to claim he had a file on everything. He believed he had the universe under control. Now the earth had moved.
‘Mingrelian. Oh yes, Mingrelian,’ he said, recovering quickly. He stopped in the doorway. ‘It may take a bit of time,’ he warned.
‘I’ll bet,’ said Owen.
Nikos went out grim-faced.
***
‘Do you realize what you’ve done?’ demanded Georgiades.
‘He hasn’t got a file!’ chortled Owen.
‘He’ll have one soon. Those people were happily getting on with their lives unknown to the world. Now you’ve dragged them into history!’
‘Ever heard of them?’
Georgiades rubbed his chin. There was a faint rasp. It was difficult to shave close in the heat.
‘The name seems vaguely familiar. Something to do with the Church?’
***
‘The Church!’ said McPhee, shocked. ‘Really, Owen! And you the son of a minister! It is true that they are members of the Orthodox communion at one remove, so to speak, since the Georgian Church is autocephalous—’
‘Georgia? Is that where they come from?’
‘ The Caucasus, rather. They are a separate linguistic community. Linguistic, not religious. How could you think, Owen—?’ said McPhee reproachfully.
***
Later in the morning Owen took pity on Nikos.
‘There’s been a complaint, apparently, about the behaviour of some British soldiers last night. It came from the leader of the Mingrelian community. Can you get me the details? At least the name.’
‘The Parquet?’
‘Yes.’
‘I’ll go directly to them,’ said Nikos, straight-faced. ‘It’ll be quicker than finding the file.’
***
Owen guessed that he was getting near the place when he began to see increasing numbers of Albanians and Montenegrins standing about at street corners wearing national dress. It was not that the Caucasus was part of the Balkans, just that in Cairo certain groups of communities tended to stick together and the nationalities of the Eastern Mediterranean constituted one such group. Not all of them, however, insisted on wearing national dress. That was a peculiarity of the Albanians and Montenegrins, adopted, Owen thought, chiefly because it was a lot less strenuous to stand about all day in picturesque dress in front of the tourists’ hotels charging for photographs than to work for a living. Anyway, they looked splendid chaps in their high boots and their billowing trousers and with a whole armoury stuck in their belts.
‘The house of Sorgos?’
The Montenegrin thought for a moment and then took Owen familiarly by the arm and led him down a narrow alley and out into a small close of very old houses, so old that they were threatening to slide into each other and their heavy, wooden meshrebiya windows bowed down almost to the ground. The Montenegrin stopped before the door of one of them.
‘The house of Sorgos,’ he said, saluted and left. Owen knocked on the door.
It was opened by one of the most beautiful women Owen had ever seen.
He was quite taken aback, firstly because he had expected the door to be opened by a servant—few houses were so poor as to be without a servant of some sort—and secondly because she was unveiled. He had grown so used to women being in veils that now he was disconcerted to see one without one. What sort of woman would come to the door without a veil on?
Not that sort of woman, he realized at once. This one was soberly dressed and serious looking.
‘Yes?’
‘The house of Sorgos?’ She nodded.
‘Is he at home?’
‘No. What is your business?’
‘I am the Mamur Zapt. I would like to talk to him.’
‘He is not at home,’ she said, ‘but he will be back soon. Would you like to come in?’
She led him into a small room sparely furnished in the Eastern style, with marble tiles on the floor and carpets on the walls. He sat down on a low divan with various bits of brassware on a table before him.
‘I will bring some coffee.’
Unusually, there were books. They were scattered everywhere, on the tables, on the floor, in the little niches where there should have been pots, in piles against the walls.
‘My father collects stories,’ she said, pulling up a brazier and putting the pot down beside him.
‘Collects them?’
‘Yes. The original manuscripts if he can, early printed versions if he can’t.’
‘And they are to do with what?’
‘Folk stories, epics, wonder tales.’
‘The Arabian Nights?’
‘He would like to think
so. My father is in Paris now.’
‘Buying?’
‘Selling.’
‘Oh!’
‘He hates it. He hates parting. But obviously we have to live. And anyway, we have the story.’
‘In what language?’
‘Any language.’
‘It was just that—you are Mingrelian, aren’t you?’
‘Yes.’ She was a little surprised. ‘How did you know? Oh, my grandfather!’
‘You don’t confine yourselves to stories of the Caucasus?’
‘The Caucasus was long ago,’ she said, ‘and my grandfather does not like to talk about it. We have been in Cairo now for thirty years. Longer, even, than the British!’
The serious face suddenly dissolved. Owen was enchanted. But still uncomfortable.
‘You are Christian, of course?’
‘Of course.’
‘I was missing the veil.’
‘I do wear a veil when I go out. It saves trouble with the neighbours. But not at home.’
‘Your grandfather allows you considerable freedom,’ he observed.
It wasn’t just the Muslims who liked to keep their women private. It was the Italians, the Greeks, the Levantines, the Albanians, all the Balkan countries. You could live in Egypt forever and never meet a single woman socially. Until he had met Zeinab, Owen had felt very deprived.
‘He believes in freedom,’ she said. ‘That, of course, is why we left Russia. As they call our country now.’
‘I hadn’t realized there was such a community of you here.’
‘Well, it isn’t such a community really. There are only about sixty families. When you are as small as that you have to fight very hard in order to survive. Marriage becomes important. Children become important. You must not let the language die out.’
‘And you? Are you married?’ She laughed.
‘Not yet,’ she said. ‘The problem is, you have to marry a Mingrelian.’
‘The trouble with freedom,’ said Owen, ‘is that it broadens the outlook.’
He heard someone come in through the outer door and rose to his feet.
‘You have a visitor, Grandfather,’ said the girl. ‘The Mamur Zapt!’
An old man came into the room. Owen knew, of course, that he must be old; but that was not the immediate impression he gave. He had the same handsome features as the girl and his hair still retained some of the same striking black. He strode vigorously across the room and clasped Owen by the hand.
The Mingrelian Conspiracy Page 3