The Leper King
Chapter 70: Smoke Over the Delta
CHAPTER 70 - 70: SMOKE OVER THE DELTA
Date: April 20th, 1180
Location: Fustat, Egypt
The scent of burned timber and saltwater still clung to the winds blowing inland from Alexandria. In the vast gardens of Fustat, far south of the devastation, Emir Qara al-Fadl paced in tight circles beneath a shaded arcade. Scrolls and sealed letters lay scattered on the marble bench beside him, their wax cracked open, the words inside burned into his memory.
The Sicilians had not just raided a fishing village.
They had struck Alexandria, the great city of the sea.
They had taken gold, torn through the harbor, desecrated a mosque, and burned the lighthouse steps.
And then, like wolves, they had vanished.
The Emergency Council
Within hours of receiving the first messenger — a half-dead courier from a merchant galley that had escaped the harbor as flames rose — Qara al-Fadl had called an emergency session with other regional emirs. The courtyard of the governor's residence was filled with raised voices, clattering sandals, and the scraping of parchment.
Emir Yahya ibn Tamim of Bilbays arrived pale and sweating.
"You were supposed to guard the coast!" he hissed at Qara. "How do foreign dogs sack Alexandria and sail away with half the harbor's wealth?"
Qara shot him a withering glare. "It was not my fleet that vanished into the Nile months ago. You left the coast bare."
A third voice interjected — that of old Emir Asim al-Bahr, the commander of the Nile naval levy.
"They came like ghosts, with siege engines from the ships. We were not prepared... because no one thought the Franks had the gall to strike here. Not since the Fatimids fell."
The room fell into silence.
Then, Qara spoke. "We have one duty now. Tell the Sultan. Tell him everything."
Letters to Damascus
In the hours that followed, three letters were written — all sealed with the emerald-green sigils of the Egyptian frontier emirs. They were written in haste, but their tone was grave.
To the Most Illustrious Sultan Salah ad-Din, Guardian of the Faith, Sword of Islam, Defender of the Nile and the Two Holy Sanctuaries,
Disaster has fallen upon us. The Sicilian fleet has attacked Alexandria. They struck from the sea with fire and steel, landing troops at dawn, supported by engines of war from their ships. The harbor has been destroyed. The mosque at the sea gate burned. Stores of gold and supplies taken. The port rendered useless.
We beg your swift response. If they return, we cannot guarantee the defense of the Delta. The people are terrified. Ships will not dock. Merchants flee. We request naval reinforcements, engineers, and fresh troops. If they strike again, it may be Damietta... or even Rosetta next.
Your loyal servant in urgency,
Qara al-Fadl, Emir of Fustat
The other letters mirrored its tone — panic, desperation, and a painful confession: they had been outmaneuvered.
Whispers in the Streets
As the messengers rode north toward Damascus, word of the raid spread faster than they did.
In Alexandria's smoking remains, hundreds of laborers worked to clear wreckage. Fishermen wailed over ruined docks. The faithful wept for the desecrated mosque. And far more dangerous than grief was doubt.
"If the Franks can do this here," one merchant whispered, "where is the Sultan's protection?"
"The coast burns, and he watches the mountains in Syria," another spat.
In the caravanserais of Fayyum and Giza, whispers grew louder. Egypt, they said, had been left exposed — abandoned while the Sultan built up his armies in the Levant.
Saladin's Silence
Back in Fustat, Emir Qara al-Fadl stood alone that night on a balcony overlooking the Nile. The stars shimmered over the dark waters. No reply had yet come from Damascus.
But he knew what must already be happening.
Saladin would not take this lightly.
The raids were not just attacks.
They were distractions, perhaps, to something larger.
He closed his eyes and muttered a prayer.
"Ya Allah, give our Sultan wisdom. For if more ships come... we may lose the Nile itself."