Cairo Surrender

British solicitor Sir Cecil Pells has brought his American ward, naive golden-haired youth Michael Powell, on an educational trip to Egypt at one of the worst possible moments in Mideast history. Anti-British and nationalist sentiments have been increasing for four years and have just reached their peak with the violent reaction to the reparations demanded for the 1924 assassination in Cairo of the British governor of the Sudan. Westerners and Egyptian British sympathizers alike are being kidnapped for ransom—or worse—by the score on the streets of Cairo. Sir Cecil and Michael, the lone orphan and heir of an American industrial fortune, sup in the Gentlemen’s Dining Room of Cairo’s venerable Shepheard’s Hotel, center of the British colonial society in Cairo, on the eve of a journey up the Nile to visit the recently opened tomb of the boy pharaoh, Tutankhamun. Here the appearance of the handsome, fair-haired youth captures the notice of several men, including the Egyptian novelist and prominent wealthy citizen—and notorious debaucher of young men—Rushdy Abazar. Before the evening is over, Michael has been kidnapped and imprisoned . . . with Rushdy Abazar.

Michael has led a sheltered and highly controlled life, with all his natural curiosity and budding interests stifled by an oppressive guardian. To distract the distraught American, Abazar, the master storyteller, weaves for him enticing stories of the ultimate pleasure while depicting their current shared circumstances as proof of the fickleness and fleeting security of life. Does Michael want to live before he dies is the question that Abazar spins for the impressionable youth. There is little doubt what Abazar is interested in during days of cat-and-mouse maneuvering, but what he seeks is not easily attainable—and the whole situation has a hint of mystery and questionability about it. Is Abazar saving or destroying Michael?

1026472648
Cairo Surrender

British solicitor Sir Cecil Pells has brought his American ward, naive golden-haired youth Michael Powell, on an educational trip to Egypt at one of the worst possible moments in Mideast history. Anti-British and nationalist sentiments have been increasing for four years and have just reached their peak with the violent reaction to the reparations demanded for the 1924 assassination in Cairo of the British governor of the Sudan. Westerners and Egyptian British sympathizers alike are being kidnapped for ransom—or worse—by the score on the streets of Cairo. Sir Cecil and Michael, the lone orphan and heir of an American industrial fortune, sup in the Gentlemen’s Dining Room of Cairo’s venerable Shepheard’s Hotel, center of the British colonial society in Cairo, on the eve of a journey up the Nile to visit the recently opened tomb of the boy pharaoh, Tutankhamun. Here the appearance of the handsome, fair-haired youth captures the notice of several men, including the Egyptian novelist and prominent wealthy citizen—and notorious debaucher of young men—Rushdy Abazar. Before the evening is over, Michael has been kidnapped and imprisoned . . . with Rushdy Abazar.

Michael has led a sheltered and highly controlled life, with all his natural curiosity and budding interests stifled by an oppressive guardian. To distract the distraught American, Abazar, the master storyteller, weaves for him enticing stories of the ultimate pleasure while depicting their current shared circumstances as proof of the fickleness and fleeting security of life. Does Michael want to live before he dies is the question that Abazar spins for the impressionable youth. There is little doubt what Abazar is interested in during days of cat-and-mouse maneuvering, but what he seeks is not easily attainable—and the whole situation has a hint of mystery and questionability about it. Is Abazar saving or destroying Michael?

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Cairo Surrender

Cairo Surrender

by Habu
Cairo Surrender

Cairo Surrender

by Habu

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Overview

British solicitor Sir Cecil Pells has brought his American ward, naive golden-haired youth Michael Powell, on an educational trip to Egypt at one of the worst possible moments in Mideast history. Anti-British and nationalist sentiments have been increasing for four years and have just reached their peak with the violent reaction to the reparations demanded for the 1924 assassination in Cairo of the British governor of the Sudan. Westerners and Egyptian British sympathizers alike are being kidnapped for ransom—or worse—by the score on the streets of Cairo. Sir Cecil and Michael, the lone orphan and heir of an American industrial fortune, sup in the Gentlemen’s Dining Room of Cairo’s venerable Shepheard’s Hotel, center of the British colonial society in Cairo, on the eve of a journey up the Nile to visit the recently opened tomb of the boy pharaoh, Tutankhamun. Here the appearance of the handsome, fair-haired youth captures the notice of several men, including the Egyptian novelist and prominent wealthy citizen—and notorious debaucher of young men—Rushdy Abazar. Before the evening is over, Michael has been kidnapped and imprisoned . . . with Rushdy Abazar.

Michael has led a sheltered and highly controlled life, with all his natural curiosity and budding interests stifled by an oppressive guardian. To distract the distraught American, Abazar, the master storyteller, weaves for him enticing stories of the ultimate pleasure while depicting their current shared circumstances as proof of the fickleness and fleeting security of life. Does Michael want to live before he dies is the question that Abazar spins for the impressionable youth. There is little doubt what Abazar is interested in during days of cat-and-mouse maneuvering, but what he seeks is not easily attainable—and the whole situation has a hint of mystery and questionability about it. Is Abazar saving or destroying Michael?


Product Details

BN ID: 2940033197156
Publisher: BarbarianSpy
Publication date: 03/16/2012
Sold by: Smashwords
Format: eBook
File size: 579 KB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Habu is one of the pen names of a former supersonic spy jet pilot, intelligence agent, male model, movie actor, and diplomat. A wild youth in South East Asia was spent enjoying whatever sexual opportunities came his way, and much of his gay male writing is about recalling incidents from those days and inventing ones he’d perhaps have liked to experience. He now leads a very quiet and ordinary life.

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