Authors: James Patterson
Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Romance, #Suspense, #Thriller, #Anthologies (multiple authors), #Fiction - Espionage, #Short Story, #Anthologies, #Thrillers, #Suspense fiction; English, #Suspense fiction; American
border. I own it, and when I can look at that border and know
that no danger will ever come across it again, then we will build
a stone house and live in it.”
They slept for a time, took turns on watch. Greta was awake
when the ragged peddler sidled up to them like an apparition
from the slimy water of the cellar itself. She touched Hareet, who
opened his eyes but did not move.
“The mirror could be mended,” the peddler whispered in
English.
Hareet took his hand from the pistol under his ragged robes.
Greta slipped her knife back up her voluminous sleeve.
“We had to kill two,” Hareet said.
“They were found. Fortunately, I had seen the mirror five
minutes before. What is your assignment?”
“The ammunition dumps, supply depots, fuel centers.”
“Impossible. The maps and information are in General Staff
Headquarters,” the peddler said.
“I can get in,” Hareet said.
“But not out, Captain. No way you can get out. Not with the
data in usable form.”
“Why?” Greta asked.
The filthy peddler sat against the wet stone walls, seemed to
close his eyes and go to sleep. “Because our Arab friends have
become modern, Lieutenant. At least at General Staff Headquarters. The documents will have been chemically treated so
that no one can touch them undetected, or film them undetected. A sophisticated touch supplied by their friends in the big-
207
ger nations. Also, to get out you must pass two ranks of guards
and locked gates, and a bank of detectors that detect film or the
documents themselves.”
“So if we steal them, they would know at once and change the
locations.”
“If you got them out, the present locations would be changed
as fast as they could do it. Perhaps a short delay in their plans,
and no help to us.”
“And we could only make the attempt once,” Greta said.
“No matter how many attempts we made, the data is useful
to us only as long as they do not know we have it,” Hareet said.
“It must be taken and sent to our forces undetected.”
“And that can’t be done, Captain,” the peddler said. “We’ll
have to beat them head to head, no matter how bad that looks.”
“Everything can be done in some way,” Hareet said, and sat
for a time in the raw stench of the cellar filled only with the
sound of running and dripping water. “Our man inside General
Staff Headquarters is still there at his job?”
“Yes.” The peddler nodded. “But there is no way—”
“The main building with the information we need is inside a
courtyard?”
“Yes. And there is a locked gate in the outer wall of the
courtyard.”
“Where are the detectors?”
“At the door of the building.”
“How is the security inside the building in the day and the
night?”
“In the day, fairly tight. At night, poor. They rely on the wall
and outer gates and perimeter guards. The guards inside make
rounds but don’t go into the offices. The staff officers don’t trust
the soldiers with keys to the offices. That’s their weakness.”
“And we’ll use it,” Hareet said.
“Can we go in together, Paul?” Greta said.
“Of course not,” Hareet said simply. Then he smiled at her.
208
“But perhaps we can find some private place later tonight. A place
for us to sleep.”
She smiled in return. “Tonight, then.”
Hareet and the peddler lay down on the stone. Greta sat up,
watching. Hareet and the peddler talked for a long time. It was
well past midnight when the peddler left alone. Hareet and Greta
pretended to sleep for another hour, then slipped out of the
dank cellar together.
“Our peddler gave me another address,” Hareet said. “Somewhere we can be alone. It’s not far.”
They both knew the danger of such a move, every moment on
the streets brought the possibility of being stopped, observed,
making a mistake. Every new place exposed them to more contacts, more unexpected events. But they both also knew the risks
of tomorrow.
The place turned out to be a small room on the second floor
above a dark bookshop owned by an old Coptic Christian widow
with patriotic slogans in her window. The peddler himself let
them in, had a room of his own on the first floor where he had
lived for over a year.
“It’s as safe as anything can be here,” the peddler said, and left
them alone in the tiny room with its one bed and some chairs
and a cabinet they could barely see. There was no light.
They didn’t need a light. After they had made love once more,
Hareet held her close against him for the rest of the night as if
to build a wall of protection that would keep her safe. He was
not a demonstrative man; Greta knew he was afraid for what
could happen to her, to them, when the night ended.
The guards paced at the gates in the outer wall of Army General Staff Headquarters far out on the edge of the city. They
looked up as they walked their posts to watch their jets fly
high above in beautiful formation. The ragged people on the
streets cheered the jets and the guards as they shuffled past the
front gates.
209
Among the throngs of people that passed the gates was a tall,
dark-skinned man with a pointed beard, thick glasses and a fez.
He walked purposefully, with an arrogant bearing. With the tasseled fez he wore a dark Western suit and immaculate pale kid
gloves. The crowds of fellahin gave him respectful room as he
strode around and through them.
Hareet, in the dark makeup and wearing the gloves to conceal
his missing finger, turned into a side street at the corner of the
wall and proceeded on his inspection of the headquarters building. The side wall was broken by only another high wooden gate,
locked on the inside and outside. In the rear, the wall stretched
without a break, and on the fourth side there was only a narrow,
barred gate, also locked on the inside and outside and patrolled
by a guard.
The building inside the high stone wall was from the last century and only two stories high. The roof had a steep pitch, and
the windows of the upper floor were barred and shuttered. Two
armored cars slowly patrolled the street all around the building,
moving in opposite directions.
Hareet, his study completed, walked to a house a few blocks
from the headquarters, and there changed into the flowing and
ragged burnoose of an Arab country. He removed the fez and
glasses, replaced the fez with a keffiyeh, and rearranged his false
beard. He strapped his left arm to his side, and assumed a limp
in his left leg.
A crippled fellahin was too common a sight in the streets of
the city for anyone to look at twice. The fellahin limped his way
to a filthy alley that paralleled the street in front of staff headquarters, and entered the rear of a building. He climbed to the
second floor and slipped into an empty room at the front. He
locked the door behind him, crossed quickly and without a limp
to the front window with its clear view of the guarded gate into
the headquarters.
Hareet sat in a chair some three feet inside the window so that
210
no sun would glint on the powerful binoculars he took from beneath his burnoose. He sat on the chair for six hours without moving, except to rest his eyes now and then, and to light a cigarette.
He scrutinized the building, and the officers who went in and out.
Late in the afternoon, a slight scratching came at the door of
the room. Hareet listened from his chair. The scratching was repeated in a definite pattern. He opened the door. The peddler
came in.
“Have you found your man, Captain?”
“A colonel of artillery,” Hareet said. “He looks enough like me
to pass. He’s in there right now. He is arrogant, the soldiers do
not seem to like him, and he drives himself. His vehicle indicates
that he is a field commander, not a staff officer. He is unusually
tall, has slightly Sudanese features, wears a monocle and strides
much as I do. He also wears gloves. He carries a swagger stick
and is annoyed at having to present credentials every time he
goes in or out of the front gate. When does the guard change?”
“In an hour.”
“Where are all the supply, fuel and ammunition depot documents we need?”
“In a small vault. It’s an old key-locked type left by the British.
With all other precautions supplied by their more modern
friends, they don’t feel a need to spend what a new vault would
cost. It won’t be hard to open, and it’s located in a file room connected to the office of the chief of supply. They may work around
the clock tonight.”
“No, not an Arab army. They will be in conferences or with
their mistresses. Come.”
Hareet and the peddler left the room, and went down to the alley.
Greta stood in the shadows of the alley dressed as a street boy.
Hareet described the colonel of artillery. “Watch for him. If he
comes out, don’t lose him.”
Hareet and the peddler returned to the building a few blocks
away where Hareet had changed from the gentleman in the fez
to the crippled fellahin. There the peddler opened a large dossier,
211
and Hareet found the picture and official history and designations of the artillery colonel he had seen go in and out the main
gate of General Staff Headquarters.
The peddler read the details. “Colonel Aziz Ramdi. Forty-two
years old. Unmarried. Sudanese mother. No foreign posts or
training, no staff time, but many commendations for bravery in
the last war with us. Commander of the Hundred and Twelfth
Field Artillery. They’re part of the city defense. Only recently
transferred to the city from service on the southern border. He
hasn’t had the plum positions, doesn’t sound like he’s made any
good connections. Probably because of that Sudanese mother.
Hard to say how well-known he could be at staff headquarters.”
“I won’t need long,” Hareet said. “It’s reasonable to assume that
a line officer who’s been out in the field and far from the capital
won’t be all that familiar to the staff here. He’s my best chance,
we don’t have a lot more time.”
The peddler nodded, and with the picture of the artillery
colonel in front of him, Hareet worked on his face until he looked
as much like Colonel Aziz Ramdi of the Hundred and Twelfth
Field Artillery as he could.
“The film could be shot over the wall from a top window,” the
peddler said. “I have the equipment.”
“They would know,” Hareet said.
“You could copy and not photograph, then the light would not
sensitize the chemicals on the documents.”
“There would not be time. I would have to touch the papers.
The data must be secured without their knowing that we have
it,” Hareet emphasized.
Hareet completed his disguise. With the peddler shuffling far
enough ahead of him that they could not be considered in any
way together, he walked back to the alley and the room across
from the headquarters. It had grown dark in the city, and large
floodlights illuminated the headquarters wall and building.
“He is still inside,” Greta said from the shadows of the alley.
An hour later, the colonel of artillery came out, got into his
212
Jeep and impatiently presented his credentials at the front gate.
He drove off to the left and made a right turn onto a narrow street
that was the direct route to his unit.
A fellahin woman dashed out of the shadows directly into the
path of his Jeep. A ragged peddler pursued her. The peddler
caught the woman in the street in front of the colonel’s Jeep,
struggled with her amid a torrent of loud screams and curses.
Ramdi jammed on his brakes, and added his own curses to the
loud Arabic.
The colonel barely felt his Jeep sway as someone jumped into
it behind him. His pistol was still under its flap when the thin
cord tightened around his throat.
Colonel Aziz Ramdi glared angrily at the officer of the guard
at the gate into headquarters. The officer of the guard was nervous as he inspected the colonel’s credentials. Only fifteen minutes ago he had checked the colonel out, and he felt ridiculous
going through the entire routine again, but he knew he would
have been even more nervous if he hadn’t. In an Arab army, independent thought and decisions are not encouraged. Another
weakness Hareet had exploited before.
The colonel made no explanation for his sudden return, sat in
stony silence through the entire careful process. But his arrogant
eyes bored through the junior officer with the clear implication
that the colonel would remember this insult. The status of recognition is also part of an army too rigid with class and privilege.
“A thousand pardons, Colonel,” the officer of the guard said,
and returned the credentials with a smart salute.
Hareet drove on into the courtyard without even returning the
salute. The junior officer swore under his breath at the back of
the arrogant colonel.
Hareet parked his Jeep as close to the main entrance of the
headquarters building as he could—a senior officer does not walk