for a gap in the barriers.
Near the front of the barrier stood a chauffeur wearing peaked cap and polished boots, with a printed board that read Ashraf al-Mansur resting in the crook of his elbow. ZeeZee walked past the man without even breaking his stride.
First things first, and that meant hitting the local shops.
ZeeZee’s other clothes were on their way to Zanzibar in an overhead locker, courtesy of Ottoman Airways. At least he sincerely hoped they were. He’d left his briefcase behind at Cairo aboard the Seattle/Zanzibar flight for exactly that purpose.
Everything he stood up in had been bought duty-free on the plane, paid for with a platinum HKS that had arrived along with his passport. And yellow shirts with beige elephants weren’t his first or even second choice of clothing. The garment was what the Boeing’s on-board boutique had had in his size.
Cairo was where he’d switched planes, to a Lufthansa local flight. There’d been one moment in a steel-and-glass corridor between Cairo arrivals and local departures when he’d been tempted to keep walking and lose himself in the chaos of the capital.
Quite why he hadn’t was a question ZeeZee would ask himself later, when he finally stopped moving long enough to think. But first he needed new clothes and then he had to find the al-Mansur madersa, whatever that was…
CHAPTER 6
29th June
“Now the graveyard was haunted by Ifrits who were of the Only True Faith,” announced Hani. Her new uncle was late. Her aunt was furious about something, as always. So the small child was busy amusing herself.
“And in that night, as Hassan lay sleeping with his head leaning against his father’s grave, came an Ifritah who marvelled at Hassan’s loveliness and cried, ‘Glory to the True God. This is a creature from paradise.’ Then the Ifritah spiralled high into the dark firmament as was her custom and there met a Djinn on the wing who saluted her and she asked, ‘Where hast thou come from?’
“‘From old Cairo,’ he replied.
“‘Wilt thou come and look at the loveliness of the boy who sleeps in yonder graveyard? For thou wilt see no boy more beautiful.’
“And the Djinn nodded and said, ‘I will…’ And together they descended through the chill night sky to where Hassan…”
“Stop talking to yourself,” demanded Lady Nafisa, as she swept through the door of the haramlek’s nursery and frowned at the sight of a puppy sat in the middle of a spreading puddle. If there was anything she hated worse than Hani wasting her time on computer games it was that animal.
“I’m not talking to myself, I’m writing a story for Ali-Din.”
The child’s tone was scrupulously polite. But her dark eyes were defiant and she looked at her puppy with pride.
“And I’ve already warned you,” said Lady Nafisa firmly, “not to bring that thing up to the nursery.”
“But it’s my nursery and I always mop up after him.” At nine Hani already considered herself too old to beg, so she kept her voice steady, as if she really couldn’t see why there should be a problem. This was an old argument. One that had got her slapped at least twice and sent up to her room more times than she could remember.
“Ali-Din belongs in the courtyard and besides…”
“Yes, I know,” Hani said heavily, “Ali-Din is a boy dog.”
Nothing male was allowed on the third floor of the al-Mansur madersa, Aunt Nafisa’s house on Rue Sherif. In the five hundred years it had been standing no man had entered the haremlek. Now there was no one but Hani or her aunt to use the echoing rooms, where dust gathered in a dry fountain and geckos died and desiccated, unnoticed and unmourned.
“Disobey me again and I have him destroyed.”
“What if I change his name?” Hani demanded, not even prepared to acknowledge her aunt’s threat. “Then can he be female?”
“No,” Lady Nafisa hissed in irritation, resisting the urge to re-check her watch. A Cartier case with Swiss