The Masada Complex (11 page)

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Authors: Avraham Azrieli

BOOK: The Masada Complex
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Elizabeth McPherson sat at the prosecution table. The arguments had been intense, but her meticulous preparations had paid off again. Judge Tolstoy Rashinski pounded his gavel. “This court hereby accepts Miss McPherson’s position that the Immigration Service proved that this couple’s marriage was a scheme to obtain a green card for the husband.”

Defense counsel stood up. “Your Honor, the evidence points that way, but now they are in love.
Really!”
He motioned at the dyed-blonde, skeletal woman and her Mexican husband. “It would be a crime to separate them just because of a technicality.”

“The law,” Elizabeth stood, “is not a technicality, and this case is not a romance novel. Immigration fraud requires deportation.”

The young woman suddenly spoke up. “But I’m pregnant.”

“The child’s welfare,” defense counsel declared, “takes precedent!”

“I object!” Elizabeth could not believe her ears. This pitiful flat-chested woman was
pregnant
?

But the judge had no choice. He sent the two lawyers, the court reporter, and the young woman to the ladies’ room, where she proved her condition by urinating on a store-bought pregnancy test.

Back in the courtroom, the judge glanced at the proof without touching it and brokered a compromise, which Elizabeth had to accept. Instead of deportation, which would make the Mexican ineligible forever, he would leave the United States voluntarily and apply again.

Judge Rashinski ordered him handed to the Border Patrol to be escorted across the border. While Elizabeth was packing up her papers, she saw the Mexican kneel before his purported wife and bury his face in her tummy.

 

Professor Levy Silver crossed Encanto Park in a measured stroll, the beret pulled down to his brow. He stopped to let an open train with squealing kids rumble across the path. Passing the pedal-boat rental dock, he approached the service shed by the shore of the lake. The combination of extreme heat and standing water made it hard to breathe, but he knew there was no risk of running into any acquaintances from Temple Zion.

The service shed sat on a concrete pad that jutted into the brown water. Silver stood at the edge, hands behind his back. He wondered whether fish survived in the thick broth that licked his shoes.

“Professor!”

Silver waved at the approaching pedal boat.

Rajid helped him into the boat and pedaled away from shore. His tanned legs moved smoothly, his muscles bulging under the white shorts. As always, the handler from Ramallah wore enough cologne to ward off the stench of the lake.

“Let me help you.” Silver’s shoes rested on the rubber pedals and joined the turning motion. He adjusted his beret and wiped the sweat off his forehead.

“A fantastic day,” Rajid declared, “isn’t it?”

The handler was always cheerful, but the years had taught Silver to be wary of his temper. They met regularly on the first Tuesday of each month, though it was unclear how he was able to travel so freely. “Did you have a good flight?”

“As the Prophet said,
Allah’s angels would fly from one end of the earth to the other, singing their Master’s praise.

“On the River Jordan,” Silver sighed, “angels sing. In Arizona, they dehydrate.”

Rajid laughed as he pedaled the boat to the middle of the lake, where he slowed down. His perennial smile contrasted with the mirror shades on his eyes. He handed Silver a backpack. “Some dried figs and the best hashish. And cash for wrapping up the operation.”

Wrapping up?
Silver shook his head. “This was the first phase. My work must continue.”

“You have done well. Humiliating the Zionists is a victory for Palestine.”


Allah hu Akbar
,” Silver said humbly.

“But we worry that the Jews might figure a way to turn the situation to their advantage.”

“Fear not. We shall soon celebrate their final doom.” Professor Silver took his feet off the pedals and rested his legs. “In time, we shall bring a truly final solution to what the Germans had accomplished in Europe.”

Rajid turned to him, the black shades reflecting Silver’s face. “But if the truth comes out, the Zionists would emerge stronger. The Americans hate dirty tricks—except their own.”

“I’m in control of the situation.” Silver removed his glasses. “However, I have a problem with my eye. I must go to Hadassah Hospital in Jerusalem. They invented a new treatment—”


Jerusalem?”
Rajid laughed. “You’re in America. Go to the doctor here.”

“Here one needs papers, Social Security, health insurance, mailing address. I don’t have any of those. I exist on a cash basis.”

Rajid found this even funnier. “
Cash and carry!

Silver didn’t see the humor. “The experimental treatment at Hadassah can save my vision. And, like any Jew, I can become an Israeli citizen overnight, entitled to free medical care.”

“Too risky.” Rajid pedaled a few rounds. “What about the photo montage we made for you? Mahfizie’s daughter can arrange American papers.”

“To enable me to travel, yes. But she can’t cure my eye!” Silver paused. “I’ll stay in Jerusalem only a few days.”

“Out of the question.” Rajid shifted in the seat, and the boat rocked, sending little ripples toward a grassy island. “You must remain here to tie up the loose ends.”

Silver wiped the back of his neck. “Listen, young man. I have done the impossible for Palestine. Soon the Israelis will be pulled off the American tit!”

“All the more reason,” Rajid said, smoothing his jelled hair, “not to jeopardize our achievement.”

The professor could not believe this was happening. “I have sacrificed one eye for Palestine. Without this treatment, I will lose the other. I must go to Jerusalem!”

“After you have tied up—”

“What do you want me to tie?
Shoelaces?
This was an intricate operation, which I devised, orchestrated, and executed. I deserve some gratitude!”

Rajid’s smile was gone.

The boat rose and sank with a slight swell.

Silver sensed that this man in shorts and running shoes was capable of violence. He regretted leaving the hunting knife in the car. He glanced at the shore and wondered if anyone would notice if Rajid held his head under the filthy water until he drowned. Silver sighed. “Pardon my frustration. Blindness is a terrifying prospect.”

Rajid nodded.

“You know that I devised the plan after years of studying history. The Jews in Germany were very strong—doctors, lawyers, business leaders—just like American Jews, but once the Germans were told that the Jews caused the economic problems of the
Fatherland
, there was hate wall-to-wall. And the world did not lift a finger to help the Jews. You should read my book about the Evian Conference.”

“I read it.”

“So you understand, yes? In order to destroy the Jews, we must first ensure that the world would not come to help them in Palestine.”

“Yes.”

“My plan is working! First, the bribe, and then the senator’s suicide, which has further inflamed Americans’ anger at Israel.” Silver pretended that this rocking boat was his classroom and that Rajid was one of his students. “Palestine could only be built on the ruins of Israel, and Israel could only be destroyed if America deserted her. And American politicians follow public opinion polls like dogs after the scent of a female in heat.”

Rajid resumed pedaling, turning the boat back toward the service shed. “The woman writer is very clever. If she can trace the money to us, everything you planned for the Jews would happen to us. You must remain here to monitor her.”

“She’s no risk.” Silver chuckled. “Masada tells me everything. I’m like a father to her.”

“And the crazy Jew? He could tell someone that you sent him with the money.”

“Al Zonshine? No chance.” Silver laughed, but his laughter rang hollow even to his own ears. “He’s convinced we are agents of Judah’s Fist, clandestine Jewish warriors, saving Israel by bribing Mahoney. He thinks she followed him and got it on video.”

“The video clip you gave her? That memory stick could prove your involvement.”

“I took it back and destroyed it,” Silver lied, pretending to throw it in the water. “Gone.”

The boat rocked on a shallow swell. “Sorry,” Rajid said, “but we spent a fortune on this operation. These two Jews must be watched carefully. There is too much risk.”

“Risk?” Silver wiped his face with his hands. “I once ran through the desert with blood pouring out of my left eye and tears pouring out of my right eye for my dead son. If not for the Bedouins who saved me, I’d be dead too. But here in Arizona?” He gestured at the park. “There’s no risk.”

The pedals stopped. Rajid looked away. He flexed his fingers.

Fearing Rajid would hit him in the face, Silver raised his left hand between them, feigning a slap at a fly.

Rajid cracked his intertwined fingers. “You are a hero, Abu Faddah. Your courage is inspiring. Your ability to assume a Jewish identity is nothing short of genius.” He resumed pedaling, making enough noise to prevent anyone from picking up their conversation remotely. “But you must prevent exposure by the writer or the crazy Jew.”

“You want me to kill them?” He held his breath, hoping for a nod.

Rajid sped up, his legs pumping rapidly, raising the noise of rushing water.

“I’m not too old to kill Jews!”

The young man glanced at him, his head tilted. “Killing is not a matter of age.”

“Discreet elimination would not draw any attention.”

“Too suspicious, both of them dying. You must monitor them for a few months.”

“I don’t have a few months. And everybody would assume the Israelis killed Masada El-Tal.”

“The Israeli government will never send agents to kill a Jew. If you were a real Jew, you’d know it.” Rajid laughed at his own cleverness.

“How am I to monitor them? Sit in a tree across the street with my monocular?”

“Think of something. You are a
professor
.”

They were halfway back, and Silver knew he must convince his handler now. “Let me go to Jerusalem. A few days won’t make a difference. Masada has no clue.”

“Don’t underestimate her ability.”

Silver thought of Masada, her green gaze focused with intensity. “I cannot accept blindness!”

“We are
Fada’een!”
Rajid’s angry words rolled with a strong Arabic accent. “We fight for Palestine until victory or death. Or blindness!”

The boat nudged the concrete at the service shed, which hid them from the rest of the park. Silver’s legs shook as he tried to stand. “How can I fight on if I’m blind?”

Rajid helped him onto the shore and kissed him on both cheeks. “Allah will show you the way.” He jumped back in the boat. “Good luck, Professor.”

Silver watched Rajid pedal off into the lake. “Tell them,” he yelled, “that I wish to discuss Phase Two!”

He sat down on the concrete, his back against the wood planks of the shed, removed his beret, and wiped the sweat from his head.

Al Zonshine appeared around the corner of the shed and asked, “What’s Phase Two?”

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