Elizabeth was stunned. “I thought it was about Allen Trumble.”
“That too. But unless we nailed bin Laden in the raid, he’ll be coming after us big time, and your dad is the only one who knows him well enough now to figure out what he’s going to do and how to stop him.”
“Where’d he get it?”
“The Russians. It’s just a demolitions device, around a kiloton, but it’s real little. Eighty pounds, fits in a suitcase. It could do a lot of bad stuff to us.”
The telephone on Rencke’s desk rang. He whipped around and snatched it up. “What?” he demanded.
Elizabeth was numb. She hadn’t any inkling of the real reason her father was going over to meet with bin Laden. She’d known that something big was in the wind, but not what. This news was simply staggering.
“Five minutes,” Rencke said, subdued. He broke the connection and called the security desk downstairs. “This is Rencke in the DO. Major Horn is coming across from the NRO’s Photo Interp Section. Give her a pass and have an escort bring her up here as soon as she arrives.”
“Who’s Major Horn?” Elizabeth asked.
Rencke went to his conference table and started taking everything off it, stacking the files and printouts in untidy piles against the wall. “She’s a friend,” he said distractedly. “A very bright friend.” He stopped and gave Elizabeth an owlish look. “She says we have some serious trouble coming our way. And Louise does not exaggerate. Never.”
Elizabeth helped him clear the table. “What kind of trouble?”
“She’s bringing over some satellite shots.” He stopped again. “But she sounded scared, Liz. I’ve never heard her like that.”
“I don’t know what else can go wrong,” Elizabeth said.
“Plenty,” Rencke told her.
Louise Horn got to Rencke’s office a few minutes later, a big leather photograph portfolio under her arm. She looked as if she hadn’t slept in a month. “Hi,” she said, almost shyly.
Rencke introduced her to Elizabeth, and they shook hands.
“You’re Kirk McGarvey’s daughter, aren’t you?” she asked.
“Yes. I’m working with Otto for now.”
Louise and Rencke exchanged a worried but warm glance. “Well, wherever your dad is right now, he’s going to want to know about this,” she said. She took a dozen 100cm X 100cm photographs that had been made from the transparencies, and spread them out in sequence on the conference table. “These are mostly enhanced KH-13 images of bin Laden’s camp before, during and after the missile raid.” She handed a large magnifying glass to Rencke.
“What am I supposed to be seeing?” he asked.
“Upper right quadrant, first three shots. There’s someone coming down the hill into the camp from the south. That’s a few minutes before the missiles hit.”
Rencke studied the photographs for a minute. “Could be Mac’s escort coming back.”
“We figured that was one possibility,” Louise said. “We don’t have any establishing shot showing him leaving, but assuming he wasn’t there during the raid …” She trailed off and looked at Elizabeth. “Sorry, but this isn’t going to get any easier, I’m afraid.”
“That’s all right,” Elizabeth said. “I’m here to do a job just like everybody else.”
“He wasn’t there,” Rencke said. “I talked to him via satellite phone.”
“Okay, maybe his escort then, or one of them.” Louise directed his attention to the next series of shots. “Lower center this time. There, below the helicopter, you can see the figure. The next is the heat bloom from a missile strike.”
Rencke studied the photo. “Right on top of him.”
“Not quite, but close,” Louise said. “You can see in the next two shots that she’s down, but primarily intact.”
Rencke and Elizabeth looked up. “She?” Rencke asked.
Louise nodded tiredly. “We weren’t sure at first, so I had my people go back and re-enhance every image we downloaded from the get-go. Then I pulled up bin Laden’s package.”
Rencke moved ahead to the next photographs, which he studied for a long time. When he looked up he handed the glass to Elizabeth. “Bin Laden is alive.”
Louise nodded. “I hope they don’t shoot the messenger, but somebody’s got to tell the navy that they missed.”
Elizabeth bent over the table and studied the images, especially the last few, which showed bin Laden carrying the body of a woman, her long black hair streaming nearly to the ground. “Who is she?” Elizabeth asked, looking up.
Louise took two more photographs out of the portfolio. One was a blown-up and enhanced section of one of the satellite photos, showing the face and neck of the body in bin Laden’s arms. The second was a file photograph of a young, beautiful woman dressed in traditional garb, except that her face and hair were uncovered. They were the same woman.
“Sarah bin Laden. His daughter.”
It hit Elizabeth all at once. “My God, I know her.”
“How? Where?” Rencke demanded.
“I don’t know, but her face, it’s so familiar to me.”
“The Bern Polytechnic,” Louise said. “I checked the records, she was there one year the same time you were. I wondered if you would remember her.”
“She was younger than me, I think, but we might have had a couple of the same classes.” Elizabeth looked up in amazement. “I remember her because she always had bodyguards around her. Some of the other girls thought it was cool, but I thought it was a pain in the neck.” She looked at the photograph again. “She was sorta quiet, and very smart. But she was never allowed to go into town, or on trips with us. I remember that, because we all thought it was sad, you know. The poor little Arab rich kid.”
“Well, our missiles killed her and not bin Laden,” Louise said.
“Adkins has to see this,” Elizabeth said, a cold fist closing around her heart. Bin Laden would be insane with rage now.
Rencke’s brain was going a mile a minute. “The President has to be informed,” he said distractedly. He focused on Louise. “Good job, kiddo,” he said softly. “But you’d better stick around, there’s gonna be some questions.”
“I figured as much,” she said. “I’ll be next door in the Pit if you need me. Maybe we can come up with something else. The weather over there is still on our side.” She glanced at Elizabeth. “Too bad about his daughter.”
“He’s going to come after my father,” Elizabeth said.
“I think you’re right,” Louise replied. “But from what I understand, your dad is a pretty tough dude himself.” She smiled. “It’s not over so don’t count him out yet.” She turned back to Rencke. “When you’re ready for a break give me a call. We can go over to my apartment and I’ll fix us some supper.”
“I’ll call you,” Rencke promised, but he’d already lifted the phone to Dick Adkins.
SEVENTEEN
To Kabul
McGarvey pulled off the side of the highway and got out to check under the hood. An armored scout car was parked a couple of hundred yards away at the road to the airport.
They might be looking for a Rover, but they were expecting an American. McGarvey had taken the time to pull Farid’s clothes over his khakis and sweater. He wore a cap, and although he was clean shaven he’d wrapped a cotton scarf around his neck and chin. It might be unclear to someone passing, or to someone standing beside the road exactly who or what he was.
The trip down the valley from the bombed-out village, and the path along the river cliffs in the dark had taken him much longer than he expected. It had already been light when he’d passed Charikar. Stopped now beside the road he was seeing a lot of traffic, most of it big trucks bringing food into the city from the countryside.
By now Farid and the other mujahed would be missed. Someone else might have been sent to find out what had happened, and each hour that passed the likelihood that the Taliban in Kabul had been notified increased exponentially. It was important that he get
to a place of relative safety very soon so that he could get a few hours’ rest, and hopefully something to eat and drink. He was at his extreme physical limit. He was having trouble concentrating on what he was doing, trouble keeping in focus.
He closed the Rover’s hood and got back behind the wheel. A couple of cars and a broken-down old bus passed him, none of the drivers slowing for the checkpoint. In the rearview mirror a minute later McGarvey saw what he had been looking for. A convoy of what appeared to be at least six large trucks lumbered down the highway, a cloud of blue-gray exhaust trailing behind them.
He put the car in gear and waited until the lead truck was almost upon him, then suddenly gunned the engine and pulled out in front of it. McGarvey glanced in the rearview mirror in time to see the driver shake a fist at him as the distance between them closed alarmingly fast. He stomped the gas pedal to the floor and the Rover shot out ahead, at the same moment the scout car’s turret hatch opened, and a man popped up.
He was a soldier, McGarvey could see that much as he got closer, and he was speaking into a microphone. Seventy-five yards away, the turret started to move as a plume of diesel smoke blossomed out of the exhaust stack, and the scout car lurched toward the highway.
McGarvey checked the rearview mirror again, and then slowed down so that the lead truck was once more right on his bumper. The scout car crew had spotted him and they were going to try to intercept him. But they had to know that if they fired there was a good chance they’d hit the truck right behind him too. At the very least they would cause a tremendous accident that would probably end up with a lot of casualties, ruined food supplies and a traffic jam that would be snarled for most of the morning.
Thirty yards out the muzzle of the main 14.5 mm heavy machinegun came around to point directly at him, and the scout car stopped just off the highway’s paved surface. It would be like shooting fish in a barrel. There wasn’t the slightest chance that the gunner would miss. McGarvey could see that the soldier in the turret was an officer, and he was frantically speaking into his microphone while gesticulating for McGarvey to pull over.
A string of several cars and a couple of trucks was coming out of the city. The officer turned and spotted them as they were nearly on top of his position. He bent down and shouted something through the open turret. At the last possible instant the cars flashed past the scout car as McGarvey, the six trucks directly on his tail, also passed, and the moment to open fire was gone.
McGarvey breathed a sigh of relief, and allowed himself to relax for just a minute. The first problem, getting past the airport checkpoint, was solved, but now he was faced with the even larger problems of getting into the city, ditching the car and making it on foot to the ambassador’s old residence compound. Then he would have to get inside past any guards that the Taliban might have posted because of the riots, and somehow deal with the two caretakers. They were there to protect American property so he could not harm them. Yet they were in fact employees of the Taliban government so they wouldn’t hesitate to try to arrest him, which might end up becoming his biggest problem this morning. But he needed food and drink and rest, and he needed it very soon.
He gradually sped up, putting more distance between himself and the convoy of trucks. He kept a sharp eye for military vehicles, and he kept checking the sky to make sure they hadn’t sent a helicopter gunship after him. If they did that he wouldn’t stand a chance out here in the open.
He couldn’t help but think about Sarah bin Laden. In another time and place she could have gone to London for her education, and could have eventually taken over the family’s business interests. He had no doubt that she would have been good at it, because she was bright and she had proved how adaptable she was by existing in Afghanistan disguised as a mujahed. He could see her in a private jet flitting from one world capital to another, attending high-level business meetings; informing her business opponents, with an arched eyebrow, that they had no conception of what truly difficult negotiations could be like. She’d been there, seen that, done that.
The city gradually enfolded him like a dirty pair of trousers. Low, mud-brick buildings on either side of the highway gave way to larger and thicker concentrations of walled compounds, and rat warrens of hovels rising up from the floor of the river valley into the arid, treeless hills overlooking the city.
Unlike the day he came in from the airport when the streets were all but devoid of life, traffic this morning was fairly heavy, and the marketplaces, as he approached the city center, were filled with shoppers. Out this early, he suspected, to beat the summer heat.
As best he could remember from studying the maps and files he’d brought with him in his laptop, the ambassador’s residence was not too far from the old embassy, which was on Ansari Wat in the northeastern part of the city called Wzir Akbar Khan Mena. He’d seen the embassy on the way in from the airport and he had a fuzzy idea how to get from it to the residence. But Otto warned him that the anti-American rioting was concentrating around the old embassy. No one would expect him to walk into the middle of a demonstration, but it might be his safest bet for now.
In the distance ahead he spotted a roadblock. Several army trucks and jeeps, and at least one armored car blocked the main road. He slowed down. The officer at the airport checkpoint would have radioed that the Rover had passed him and was on the way into the city. They were waiting for him, and he looked for someplace to ditch the car.
The main street was filled with people, and as McGarvey got even closer he realized that the roadblock had been set up not to catch him, but to allow the crowd to get across. Off to the right, in the direction the people were moving, was the old American embassy. What he was seeing was more people being directed toward the demonstration. Like most of these riots it was being choreographed by the government, and they had their hands full. It gave him the advantage for the moment.
A block away he pulled into a narrow side street that wound its way past a series of shops, a lot of them closed, and some three- and four-story European-style structures that looked like apartment buildings.
He came to a large park ringed by apartment buildings. At one end of the park was a mosque, its minaret rising into the cloudless, pale blue sky. The traffic was very light now, and what few people were on foot seemed to be heading up toward the embassy.
McGarvey drove slowly down an alley between buildings and found a parking spot beside an old Mercedes and a small Fiat delivery van. He got out and walked back down the alley to the street, then crossed the park, pulling the scarf over his mouth so that only his nose and eyes were left uncovered.
When they found the Rover they would have no idea where he had gotten himself to. It was unlikely that they would believe he had headed into the crowd around the old embassy. They might think that he was trying to make it to another embassy, or even out to the airport, anywhere but toward the heart of the anti-American disturbance.
A block beyond the park, down a pleasant, tree-lined street of upscale private homes, all of them protected behind tall brick walls, he heard the noise of a crowd and he guessed that he was getting close to the embassy. There were no street signs back here, and the only people he saw was a band of young men a couple of blocks away down an intersecting avenue.
He stopped to get his bearings.
He figured that he had to be within a half-mile of the embassy, which put him somewhere in the vicinity of the ambassador’s residence. If he had his laptop finding the place would be easy. But he remembered that it was at the end of a short dead-end street, behind which was a two-block-square neighborhood of weavers’ workshops and retail stores. Before the Taliban had taken over, and even before the Russians had started their war here, the area had been a busy one, catering mostly to foreigners with money. Afghan rugs and carpets had been one of the major cottage industries in the city. Dealers from all over the world had come here to pick up bargains for resale in their stores in all the major Western cities. All that was a thing of the past, but the wo
rkshops were still in business, or at least some of them were according to the State Department report he’d read. And some carpets still found their way out of the country. He headed to the right, away from the noise of the crowd.
Two blocks later he came to the dead-end street. There was a Russian jeep parked in front of the compound’s main gate. Two men in uniform were lounging back, their feet propped up on the open doors. Nothing was happening here and they were obviously bored and inattentive.
McGarvey stepped back out of sight around the corner. Behind the walls a Georgian mansion rose four stories, its windows shuttered. The house could have been directly transplanted from a fashionable London neighborhood. It looked out of place, which was typical of a lot of American installations around the world. Most U.S. ambassadors did not speak the language of their assigned country, and many of their embassies and residences stuck out like sore thumbs. It was a holdover from a more arrogant colonial period.
He turned around and walked to the last intersecting street he had passed and followed it, coming to the rug weavers’ district. The streets were quite narrow, as they were in the other traditional working class areas of the city. Not a single person was about, and all the shops and houses were closed, some of them boarded up. The neighborhood had the feel of abandonment, fallen on hard times.
McGarvey made his way to a small, boarded-up shop that he figured was directly behind the ambassador’s compound. Nothing, not even a dog or a scrap of paper, moved on the street, nor did he spot anyone looking out a window or a doorway at him.
The scraps of wood nailed over the door were mostly rotten, and came away easily. McGarvey stacked them on a nearby pile of trash, then, checking one last time to make sure that he wasn’t being observed, kicked the door in, the old, soft metal lock disintegrating with the first blow.
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