Agency Rules - Never an Easy Day at the Office (27 page)

BOOK: Agency Rules - Never an Easy Day at the Office
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“Sir, I only followed the intelligence,”
Imtiaz’s voice cracked as the General hovered over his seat.


Imtiaz, let’s be honest with each other. You didn’t follow any intelligence. You followed your ambitions,” the General said placing his mammoth hands on his shoulders. He cringed under the weight of those hands. “Your only salvation is if Faheem admits to his double game.”

The General stepped back and gazed around the table, looking into each committee member
’s eyes, at times looking through the person in the chair. His gaze finally settled on Kamal, who shifted uncomfortably in his seat. It had been a long debrief, and his ribs were aching from holding his spine up for so long.

“Captain, you are dismissed until eleven hundred hours tomorrow morning,” he said. “Guards!”

The door to the room swung open quickly and the two men standing outside filled the doorframe. “Please assist the Captain back to his vehicle,” the General said.

As the guards helped him out of the chair, Kamal could feel the sweat dripping down his back. Kamal was grateful to have been spared the General
’s wrath, although he knew that it was just beginning for the men who were still in the conference room. The confrontation would be a different kind as he would come face to face with the man who had tried to kill his friend and him.
Faheem had escaped then, I’ll make sure that he doesn’t escape now.

 

 

 

 

Chapter 15

 

The hardest part is over, Kamal thought to himself as he moved down the corridor. For the last five hours, he had been examining every aspect of the FC plot to kidnap him.
There is no other way to think of it right now, other than an FC plot
. There was no evidence of his involvement in the Prime Minister’s assassination, nor would there ever be, but the accusation had served as the basis for Brigadier Imtiaz’s authorization.

He hobbled down the hall, stopping every few feet as the pain medication he had taken earlier began to wear off. The guards had been helpful in getting him up from the chair, but once outside the door, they returned to their posts and Kamal had limped his way back to the elevator on his own. He was halfway down the hall when he finally stopped and leaned against the wall. The pain from his injuries, coupled with complete immobility for five hours, began to cloud his senses. Pulling out his handkerchief, his hand grazed across the pack of Benson & Hedges nestled in his breast pocket.

“Soldier,” he called back down the corridor. “Is there somewhere that I can have one of these?” he said shaking the cigarette pack for the guard to see.

The guards both glanced at each other and one made an inaudible comment before the other moved down the hall to Kamal.
Wow, he doesn’t look happy with my request
, Kamal thought as the guard neared him.

“Sir, there
’s a smoking area just around the corner,” the guard said, gesturing to the other end of the corridor. “I can escort you there,” he said, moving away from Kamal.

“Normally, I wouldn
’t have an issue going to the smoking areas,” Kamal called out to the guard, “but maybe you didn’t notice… I am pretty badly injured and moving to the smoking area would be like walking down a flight of steps for me right now.”

The guard stopped and turned back to Kamal, wondering what he would like him to do.

“Look, the last time I was here,” Kamal explained, “the guards on duty were kind enough to open an office for me to smoke in. I can’t be seen in uniform or at the ISI headquarters, so they made an accommodation for me.” He pointed to one of the many offices that lined the corridor. The guard was unimpressed with his request.

“Sir, there is a smoking area that I can take you to,” the guard repeated, mechanically. “We have wheelchairs if you are unable to move under your own power, but I can
’t let you smoke in one of the private offices.”

“And I can
’t be seen outside this building in uniform!” Kamal reiterated for the soldier, as he pushed himself off the wall.

“Sir, I have orders…” the guard started, but a door opened between Kamal and the elevator,  and the guard stopped to turn and see where the interruption came from.

From the door emerged the one person that Kamal didn’t want to face right now. She seemed to not notice the other people in the corridor as she quickly pulled the door closed behind her and used her keys to lock it. Turning her head, she saw the two of them standing about twenty feet down the corridor.
It doesn’t look like our faces registered with her
, he thought as she turned and started towards the elevator. But something must have clicked, because she turned and marched back in their direction.

“Kamal?” she asked.

“Hello Sara,” Kamal answered. “How are you?

Sara looked at the broken soldier before her, and he caught a fleeting look of shock and concern. “What the hell happened to you?”

“Classified,” Kamal replied jokingly.

“Classified?” she said, with anger in her voice. They had spent a great deal of time talking to each other during Kamal
’s last visit to headquarters. “Is that… what the…” She fumed, paused, and Kamal could almost see the smoke rising. “Fuck you and your classified,” she said.

“Sara…” Kamal called, as she turned to walk away. “Can you stop and listen for a minute?”

“Sorry Kamal,” Sara replied without missing a step, “I’m not cleared for classified information.”

The guard hid his amusement at the response, but Kamal wasn
’t amused at all. He gathered up the remaining energy in him and hobbled his way down the corridor until he caught up with her.

“It was a joke, Sara,” Kamal said, as he caught up with her at the elevator, out of breath and wincing in pain. “I didn
’t want to say anything in front of the guard.” The ping from the elevator was loud.

The doors to the elevator opened and she stepped in, not answering his clarification. “Aren
’t you headed downstairs?” she asked as she turned to hit the button on the elevator. Kamal jammed his crutch into the elevator doors as they began to close, forcing them open again.

“Yes, I am.”

“Then maybe you should get in,” she said with a smile.

* * *

It wasn’t unusual for soldiers to be roaming around Timergara bazaar. Actually, it was quite a common occurrence, Faheem thought as a faded green pickup swept past him. From the border post, there were only two markets, Khar and Timergara, where any supplies could be obtained outside the military supplies that come twice monthly. The Khar bazaar was often where basic supplies were purchased, anything else required a trip to Timergara. But today, there seemed to be more uniformed personnel than usual.

It had been almost two months since Peshawar, but it had been anything but peaceful for Faheem. After his escape from the warehouse, he had passed information through a trusted source to the compound before assuming his uniformed duties again. The message had been simple, nondescript, “It
’s done,” but questions plagued his mind and troubled his sleep.
Kaleem was dead, but what about Dawood? Did the FC get him or had he managed to escape somehow?
One question troubled him more than any other –
how was one man able to do such damage to six highly trained soldiers?
That all changed fifteen days ago when Brigadier Imtiaz called him, furious.

“What the hell did you get me into?” the Brigadier yelled into the phone.

“Sir?”

“Who told you about Dawood and Kaleem?” the Brigadier asked, almost screaming into the receiver.

“Sir,” Faheem replied. “It was talk between two known Afghanis in the Khar bazaar. We have been watching them since.”

“So you could find them… produce them in front of me if needed?”

“Without a problem, sir,” Faheem said self-assured. “Just tell me when and where.”


Good,” the Brigadier said, calming down. There was a pause and then he asked a question that shook Faheem even today when he thought of it. “The boy in the chair… have you seen him recently?”

“Sir, Kaleem died during the interrogation,” Faheem said, letting his mind return to that night and the memory of the limp body in the chair.

“He wasn’t dead when we took him to CMH,” the Brigadier answered. “And he disappeared from there soon after.” Faheem’s mind ruptured.
Was he still alive? Where the fuck had he disappeared to? He was dead when I left him and Dawood was beaten like a dog, possibly hit by the bullets I had fired.
He calmed himself, slowing his heartbeat before he answered the Brigadier.

“I can ask around, but he has not been seen or heard of since then,” Faheem said, mind racing, “I can ask where he is buried or when his
janaza
happened.”

“No!” the Brigadier yelled. “Stay away from anyone associated with him or Dawood.”

“Dawood?” Faheem asked, heart in his throat. “Isn’t he dead as well sir?”

There was a long pause again, this time making him uncomfortable. Imtiaz took a deep breath. “I
’ll be in touch when I need you to bring your sources to Peshawar. Until then, keep your head down.”

“Yes, sir.”

The past fifteen days had been filled with higher security and darting eyes for him. The nights were sweaty and sleepless, as he replayed the whole thing over and over in his head. As a result, he now slept with a pistol under his pillow and an extra sidearm under his
kameez
when he was off-duty. And the additional uniformed personnel in the market made him extra cautious and immediately aware of his surroundings.

He made his way across the street to his 1988 Toyota Corolla, plastic bags in his hands. He didn
’t feel like a watched man. It didn’t feel like anything other than a normal day of shopping for his wife and children. Unlocking the door, he smiled at the ice cream vendor where he would come with his children on Sundays. The vendor smiled back and offered him a battle of Pepsi, but Faheem’s mind looked past him at the ten soldiers enjoying themselves inside. Suddenly, he was noticing anyone in a uniform.

“Faheem sahib, Pepsi?” the vendor called to him again.

“No thank you,” Faheem said with a smile. “See you Sunday with the kids.”

Faheem placed the grocery bags in the backseat and climbed behind the wheel. He paused for a second to recite the Ayat-ul-Kursi, as had become a practice fifteen days ago, and turned the key in the ignition. The engine fired up, as it had each day since the call, and he turned onto the road for the trip three kilometers to his home. Two kilometers down the road, the faded green Army pickup cruised past him for the fourth time, pulling to a stop at the dusty road that led to his house. Faheem, disregarding the pickup, turned down the road, kicking dust up with his tires and slammed on the brakes, sliding to a stop when he saw the five soldiers blocking the road. A few seconds passed before a soldier appeared on the driver side and knocked on the window. He motioned to Faheem to roll it down. Faheem complied without hesitation.

“Identification please,” the soldier stated, glancing in the windows of the car.


Commander Faheem Khan, Bajaur FC post,” Faheem said, as he had always done when stopped at a checkpost.

“Identification please, Commander,” the soldier repeated. Faheem looked at the soldier, realizing that he was not dissuaded by his verbal identification. He took a deep breath and pulled a wad of papers from his chest pocket. Searching, he found his FC service card and handed it to the soldier. “Is there a problem?” he asked handing it over.

The soldier took the card, holding it up to compare the face on the card with the man in the car. “Please step out of the car, Commander.” Faheem felt sweat trickle down the back of his neck, as he opened the door and stepped out.

“Do you have any weapons on your person?”

“No,” Faheem said, immediately realizing that he did. He slowly reached under his
kameez
to pull out the weapon, but the soldiers didn’t like the movement, arming and aiming their weapons at him. “Wait!” Faheem said, trying to bring calm back to the situation. “I do have a weapon. I was mistaken,” he said, as calmly as he could, continuing to move his hand closer to the weapon. The soldier unwilling to take the chance of an incident, slammed him against the car and padded him down for the weapon.

“Why did you lie to me?” the soldier asked, withdrawing the weapon from the holster on his waist.

“I didn’t lie. I just forgot,” Faheem said, trying to hold back his anger at the accusation.

“Are there any others?” the soldier asked, jamming his rifle into his back.

“No, that’s the only one.”

“Empty your pockets, Commander,” the soldier said, pulling his rifle from his back.

Faheem looked around at the five AK-47s pointed at him, before slowly reaching into his chest and side pockets to remove everything he had in them. The soldier looked at each item that was placed on the hood of the car, sweeping them all up into a satchel.

BOOK: Agency Rules - Never an Easy Day at the Office
13.93Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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