Scorpion Betrayal (2 page)

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Authors: Andrew Kaplan

BOOK: Scorpion Betrayal
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“How did it go?” the owner asks.

“Burn this,” he says, handing him the bloody towel.

“Your blood?”

He shakes his head.

“Good,” the owner says, and throws the bloody towel into a metal bin. “The airports are closed. How will you get out of the city?”

He stares at the man. “Did I say I was leaving the city?”

“No, of course not,” the owner stammers. “
Lo tismah.
Let me assist you with that,” he says, coming over to help smooth the
gallabiya.

He touches the back of the owner's head almost gently, then forces it down and slides the crook of his left arm under the man's neck, locking it at the wrist with his right hand in a guillotine choke hold, cutting off the flow of blood through the carotid artery to the brain. Pulling his left wrist up toward his shoulder with his right hand, he tightens the hold even more as the owner struggles, jerking and hitting him with his fists.

Within seconds the owner is unconscious. He holds on until certain the man is dead, then lets the body slump on the floor. Stepping over it, he moves to the mirror and arranges the turban. His forehead is smudged with dirt, but he leaves it that way, to look like a typical street porter or
farsha
seller, and slips the Rolex into his pocket. He pours lighter fluid from the cache of cigarettes behind the counter, which every shopkeeper in Egypt keeps for customers, over the bloody towel and then lights it. An acrid wet cloth smoke rises from the metal bin as he checks outside from the shop doorway. It is almost dark, the last traces of light barely visible, the humidity creating haloes around the lights dangling from the arched doorways of the souk.

S
tepping outside the shop, he wove through the crowds of locals and tourists, a common street sight in his
gallabiya,
not drawing any attention. He stopped at a vegetable seller's stall, picked up an onion, tossed a fifty piastre coin to the seller and continued walking as he bit into the onion. The smell of it would dissuade people in the Metro from getting close to him, he thought, eating it quickly, his eyes tearing.

Hearing motion behind him, he moved to the side. Three policemen, riot guns at the ready, ran toward him. Heart pounding, he watched as they jogged past. As planned, he'd been almost invisible to them, an ordinary
arzuiya
day laborer who wanted no trouble with the authorities. He did not hurry, despite the fact that he had to get through quickly in case they shut the Metro down.

One of two Egyptian women in Western clothes and headscarves wrinkled her nose at the onion smell as he passed. Good, he thought as he crossed the avenue and joined the crowd headed toward the Metro station; she had seen him only as a smelly
arzuiya.

He was now approaching the danger spot, the choke point. Spotlights had been set up, turning the area near the Metro entrance bright as a movie set. Three police riot vans blocked the street and dozens of helmeted riot police fanned out, forming a perimeter and scanning the crowds as they approached the Metro past the
farsha
sellers' tables on the sidewalk, the sellers calling, “Come and buy! Fresh juice! Come and look!” If he was going to be caught, it would be here, or later on, when he left Egypt. He had no illusions about what the Mukhabarat would do to him if he were captured. It was why he'd had to kill the store owner, whom he decided was either too curious or could not have withstood the torture cells.

He spotted one of the policemen, a young man, studying him as he approached the Metro stairs. But then the man's eyes moved on to a pretty young woman in a pink head scarf, who was being jostled and groped by a male office worker as she started down the stairs. The young policeman smiled and nudged the policeman next to him as the woman tried to move away in the crowd.

The subway platform was packed with commuters, the women moving toward the center, where the women-only cars would stop. Next to him, two men were talking about the attack at the café, and he felt a shiver of joy as they blamed it on the Israelis.

“What can you expect from the Israelis? They don't care who they kill,” one of them said. “Women, children. It makes no difference.”

“It's not just the Israelis. It's all the Jews. Have you read the
Protocols of Zion
? It opened my eyes. It's all documented,” the other said, motioning him closer, their voices drowned by a rush of air and the sound of the train coming.

There was a surge on the platform as soon as the train stopped and the doors opened, men shoving to get out of the train against the rush of men pushing into the car. He squeezed in and checked the map. There were eight stops to Shobra, the working-class district where he had rented an apartment a week earlier. He glanced around. No one was looking at him. One or two office workers had sniffed and tried to move away from his onion smell, which was stronger than the omnipresent smell of sweat and cigarette smoke that permeated Cairo Metro trains.

At the next stop, riot police were deployed at intervals on the platform. He tensed as a policeman got on and began asking to see passengers' identity cards, the card every Egyptian carried, without which it was impossible to get services or shop in any of the state-run supermarkets. The policeman looked at each passenger's card one at a time and then at faces and hands.

As the policeman approached, he reached under the
gallabiya
and into his pants pocket, fingers touching the Placeholder's gun. He felt inside his wallet and retrieved the fake ID card supplied by the Brothers. It still looked too new for a poor
arzuiya
coming home from work, and he worried that it wouldn't hold up. He had tried to scuff and dirty it when he first got it, but it still looked fresh. With the policeman only a few passengers away, he cupped the fake ID in his left hand as his right closed on the Placeholder's gun. The policeman grabbed for a pole to keep from falling as the train pulled into the Road El-Farag station, then glanced at the remaining passengers as if suspicious of all of them. The doors opened and the policeman suddenly got off. He watched the policeman on the platform as more passengers got on. When the doors closed again, he realized he had stopped breathing.

At the last stop he exited the train and climbed the stairs. Night had fallen. The tables and trays of the
farsha
and food sellers clustered near the Metro exit were lit with kerosene lanterns. All at once, he was hungry. He bought a lamb shwarma grilled over coals and wrapped in
aysh
bread. As he ate, he tensed as an army jeep and a truck filled with soldiers passed. It was something rarely seen in this neighborhood.

“Have you heard of the bombing?” he asked the shwarma man.


Allahu akbar
. The government will find the killers,” the man said.

“Inshallah,”
he said. God willing.

He walked past apartment houses, their paint faded and cracked, laundry hanging from windows, and past a garbage-strewn lot where ragged boys played soccer by the light of a single streetlight. Was it his imagination or did the street seem emptier than usual? Just before he got to his building, he studied the street again, carefully. He saw no unmarked vans or cars with anyone sitting in them. No one loitering near one of the other buildings. No broken silhouettes on the rooflines, or street workers working late. Through some of the windows, he could see the glow of television sets.

Crossing to his building, he climbed the stairway. It smelled of poverty,
fuul,
and cigarettes. He opened his door and snapped into a shooter's position, ready to fire the Placeholder's gun, but the apartment was empty, the only light coming through the window from the streetlights outside. He went over and turned on the small TV.

The news announcer, a heavyset man with a slow, serious voice, reported that a number of suspects in the café bombing had already been rounded up. General Budawi's photograph was displayed. According to a breathless reporter standing outside the Presidential Palace in Heliopolis, only Budawi, whose heroism and patriotism was esteemed by all, and a single aide were killed. In the meantime, air travelers could expect delays because of enhanced security following the attack.

The program then returned to a popular Egyptian soap opera, where the lead actress was suggestively approached by her doctor in his office while her husband was out of town on business with his attractive female assistant. On another channel, an attractive female TV newscaster in a head scarf said that authorities were looking for a foreigner suspected in the café bombing in the Khan al Khalili. He was described as being tall and fair-haired, she said. He shut the TV off.

They were downplaying the number of casualties and rounding up the usual suspects, he thought. Budawi's deputy was probably scrambling like crazy and under intense political pressure to pick up all the pieces. As for the description of him, it was of a generic foreigner. More important, they hadn't given the media a photograph. Budawi had probably assumed he would arrest him at the café and get all the photos he needed then. With any luck, all they had of him was a voiceprint. It was obvious they were watching the airports and looking for a foreigner matching his description heading north. That was what he had expected and planned for. Still, it wouldn't be easy. They would be watching every exit from Egypt.

He took a deep breath and wiped his forehead with the sleeve of his
gallabiya.
He was still sweating. Next door, the neighbor's teenage son was playing Egyptian hip-hop music. The music echoed in the building and the empty street outside as he worked on bending and smudging the ID card and cleaning the gun and scalpel. He took a long shower, the water cool and rusty, and before he went to sleep he retaped the scalpel to the bottom of his foot.

He left the apartment shortly before dawn, the sky streaked with gold over the Nile. He took the East Delta bus from the Eltorgan bus station in the center of the city to the small port city of Hurghada some three hundred miles south on the Red Sea coast. Just before boarding the bus, he bought a live chicken at the open-air souk. The bus was stifling hot and when he glanced at a passenger's
Al Ahram,
the headline said only that the authorities were making progress in the bombing investigation.

At an army checkpoint ten kilometers outside Hurghada, two soldiers came on board and checked everyone's ID. They were looking for a foreigner; he could pass for a working-class Egyptian, he told himself, his heart pounding. His battered ID card and the chicken made them pay him little attention. They asked where he was going, and he said he was visiting his cousin in Hurghada. He hoped to work in a hotel there. The soldier shrugged and went on to the next passenger.

He traded the chicken for lunch in a worker's restaurant in Hurghada near the port and caught the ferry in the harbor to Sharm el Sheikh, the resort city at the southern tip of the Sinai peninsula. When the ferry landed, he went into a public bathroom stall and changed out of his
gallabiya
and turban into a “Rock for Africa” T-shirt, shorts, and sunglasses, more suited to the beach scene with its bikinis and Four Seasons and Starbucks cafés. At the beach at Naama Bay he connected with a pair of Danish backpackers. They went for drinks at the Camel, a rooftop bar where they were joined by a spectacular Swedish blonde who was, she said, a lingerie model in Sharm for the scuba diving “and the beautiful Arab men.” She touched his forearm with her fingers and suggested they could see the sunset better from her room.

In the morning, he left her snoring on the bed and took the ferry to Aqaba in Jordan. There were army patrols by the ferry before he left Sharm el Sheikh, but they took one look at his backpack, sunburned face, and German passport and let him pass. By mid-afternoon he was sipping a Bloody Mary in the first class cabin of a Lufthansa flight from Amman to Frankfurt, leaving behind what was to become the most intensive manhunt in human history. Before it was over, it would nearly destroy the CIA and force everyone involved into the most terrible choice of their lives, including the American agent known only as Scorpion.

CHAPTER TWO

Karachi, Pakistan

T
he steel container hung high in the air as the gantry crane swung it over to a row of containers stacked four high on the dock. Two dockworkers shared a cigarette in its shadow, unconcerned as the container passed over their heads. They knew the standard twenty-foot TEU unit was at most fifteen tons, and that the big crane could easily handle three to four times that weight. The crane lowered the container neatly into the next position in the top row as though stacking Legos and swung back for another container.

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