by Mark Greaney
On her computer in front of her were two reports, neither finished. One was an incident report upon which she was to put in writing as much as she could remember about her discovery of the Russian Rosoboronexport aircraft in Darfur and the men on board, along with any names, corroborating witnesses, et cetera, et cetera. She had only opened the template and put in information regarding her initial plan to enter Darfur with false credentials. Even this part of the document was difficult for her to write. So much had happened since her time in Khartoum, skulking around other NGO offices looking for her way into Darfur, that it seemed to be relegated to the portion of her brain reserved for distant memory.
The other was her report about the murder of two wounded and defenseless gunmen by an American John Doe who had flown into Al Fashir with the Russian aircraft. She’d all but finished this report. She could not get it out of her mind, but she was not sure if she was writing it in an attempt to purge her thoughts of the atrocity, or if she would, indeed, file the report and open an investigation into this man. She was torn by her official obligation and her feelings towards this stranger. He had helped her and convinced her he was not evil, but she was concerned that he was an individual teetering on the edge, a man who needed to be stopped before more atrocities were committed.
And what to make of the news that the president of the Sudan had been kidnapped during a massive battle with rebels on the east coast of the country? Could Six have had some involvement with that? The timing was right, but Six did not seem like a man who could control a force of Sudanese rebels.
He could barely control himself.
Her desk phone rang. “Ellen, there is someone calling himself ‘Six’ on the phone for you.”
“I’ll take it.” And then, “Hello?”
“Three days are up. I thought you would have caught me by now.”
“Where are you?”
Instead of an answer to her question, he said, “We need to talk.”
“This . . . situation, going on in Sudan right now. There is not much information . . . I know there has been a battle. The president is missing. It happened right when you said something would happen, so at first I assumed that you somehow had something to do—”
“I have Abboud. I have him right here with me.”
Her voice was soft but intense. “Oh my God.”
“Crazy, huh?”
Ellen breathed nervously into the phone. She looked out of her office door, then stood up quickly and shut it, nearly pulling the phone off her desk while doing so. “What . . . Who are you . . . What are you going . . . Why are you calling me?”
There was no response at first. She could hear the pounding of her own heart.
“Do you want him?”
“What?”
“Abboud. He’s yours if you want him.”
“Me?”
“Yes. And just so you know, I didn’t kill any Chinese. That’s on the news these days, I hear.”
“Yes, it is.”
“That wasn’t me. I kidnapped Abboud, but now I don’t really know what to do with him.”
Ellen’s voice was still barely a whisper. “Didn’t you . . . think about that beforehand?”
“Yeah . . . plans change. Deals fall through. You know how it is.”
“Right.” She had no idea what he was talking about.
“Look. He has information about Russia and China. He says the two are going to start a proxy war over Sudan unless he does something to stop it.”
“Yes, there have been rumors.”
“What do you think?”
“Well . . . I’m not an expert in that; I am more involved in the armaments—”
“I’m pretty sure you are the most expert person I can get on the phone for a chat at the moment. I’m asking you what you think.”
“I think President Abboud is absolutely correct.”
Court filled her in on what he’d learned. She admitted to knowing part of the story, but she was fascinated that Six’s information came directly from the president of the Sudan himself.
“He says a deal was in the works for him to turn himself in to the ICC.”
She cleared her throat and spoke in a normal register. “Above my pay grade, Six.”
“Well, how ’bout this? How ’bout you go tell the big shots at your organization that if they can find a way to pick me and Abboud up from the Red Sea coast, then they can have him. That ought to bump up your pay grade a bit.”
Ellen bristled. “I’m not here for the money.”
“Okay, donate it to charity; I don’t give a shit. I just want to stop the situation here from getting any worse.”
“That’s your only motivation?”
“Yes.”
“How can I believe that?”
“I’ve been ordered to kill the fucker. I would love to kill the fucker. I think you, of all people, can believe that. But I’m not going to, because I think he can actually save lives.”
Gentry imagined Ellen still more or less in shock over what happened in Darfur. He knew she probably didn’t trust him, and this phone conversation was surely another surreal event that her brain was having trouble processing, so he was not surprised that she hesitated for a long time. Finally she cleared her throat. “I’ll go upstairs right now, talk to the prosecutor himself. We’ll find a way to come and get Abboud.”
“Excellent.”
“Will you be coming to The Hague with him?”
Court sniffed. “And deprive the International Criminal Court of another fruitless manhunt?”
She chuckled. She had a nice laugh, throaty and unguarded. Court was pretty sure he’d never heard it before. She answered finally, “I have not begun the process of preparing an indictment against you.”
“‘Yet,’ you mean?”
Another pause. Gentry could tell by the breaks between her words that she had been wrestling with this very issue. “There’s a good man in you, Six. I can see him through the cracks in your hard shell.”
“You’re a shrink now?”
“Bad news. It doesn’t take a shrink to see the cracks in you.”
“You don’t know me.”
She changed gears. “I know you are not CIA. I made some calls. My sources say they don’t have anyone in Darfur.”
“Like I told you.”
“But if you are not CIA, then who are you?”
“It doesn’t matter.”
“It absolutely does, Six. The ICC will not help you if they don’t know who they are dealing with.”
“I am privately contracted.”
“A private party has hired you to kidnap the president and hand him over to the ICC?”
“Yeah.”
“Then they told you to kill him.”
“Right again.”
She paused a long time, disbelieving, perhaps. Finally, “Who is this private party?”
“Can’t tell you.”
“You have to.”
Court knew it would come to this. He tried to sell it with a straight face, though he was speaking on his satellite phone. “Okay. I’ve been contracted by private U.S. citizens. People in the arts and entertainment industry, mainly.” Oryx himself had given him this idea.
“In the arts and . . . So . . . are you saying movie stars are paying you to do this?”
“Well. Yeah. I guess I am.”
“That is your story?”
He smiled. She was a smart woman. Too smart to believe him, but also too smart to not turn away the president handed over to her organization on a silver platter. She’d play along. “And I’m sticking to it,” he replied.
“Okay.” It was said with a worried tone, like she wasn’t sure she’d be able to sell this fantasy to her superiors any better than Six had to her. “I’ll call you back. Are you safe for now?”
Court exhaled. “Oh yeah, snug as a bug, Ellen.”
“I’ll hurry.”
FORTY-SEVEN
Dawn rose over the still waters of the Red Sea as C
ourt drove the Skoda north on the coastal highway that led from Port Sudan to the Egyptian border. Out the driver-side window he could just see the Red Sea Hills, and out the passenger side, past Oryx’s bruised and impassive face, he looked out over the water as the blackness of dark warmed into the softness of the predawn.
An hour earlier he’d skirted to the west of Port Sudan under cover of darkness, and now the Skoda had the flat road to itself. Court had worried about military checkpoints, but there were none. He’d seen several police cars hours earlier, but in his dark car he never once felt exposed.
The coastal road turned inland for a few miles, towards the hills but not that far to the east, and then it cranked back to the north. At seven a.m. he turned off the highway and followed a sand and dirt and coral path that headed back towards the water. He passed small towns on both sides of the road. They were higher than the road on rocky plateaus that continued on to the sea.
It had taken a full day for the ICC to put a plan together to take possession of Oryx, and Court was not privy to many of the details. All he knew was that he was to drive himself and his captive to a Dutch-run seaside scuba diving resort just twenty miles from the Egyptian border and wait for a pickup by a team of ICC investigators who were on their way from Greece. Ellen Walsh would not be with them, and Court found this unfortunate, though he did not want her exposed to danger.
Gentry himself had no intention of leaving with the ICC team. No, he would put Oryx in the speedboat, or the helicopter, or the SUV, or however the president was to be extracted, and then Court would go in the other direction. He figured he could get a small dive boat from the resort and head north towards Egypt. He’d run out of gas before the border, but then maybe he could land and hitchhike farther north, make the border crossing in the desert in the night with some friendly Bedouins.
He’d have to do this all with a raging infection in his back and no antibiotics or pain meds. He’d poured the last of his antiseptic on his wound before he and Oryx set out from their second hide the evening before, and he’d dumped the narcotics in a ditch fifteen minutes later, so great was his desire to consume them. He’d have to do without a respite from the agony, and he told himself that this would make him tougher, sharper, more ready for what was to come around the next corner.
But mostly it just made him even more miserable.
He still had the receiver that broadcast the GPS coordinates of the Hannah. He’d taken the time to disassemble the device with his multi-tool to ensure there was no tracking transmitter hidden inside that would have sent his own position back to Hightower and the Hannah . The receiver told him the CIA boat was still to the southeast, in international waters. Hightower had not called him in a day and a half, and Court was worried by the long silence. Zack could be anywhere, either on the Hannah, back in the States, or standing in the road just up ahead with an anti-tank launcher.
Zack was scarier than the GOS, the NSS, certainly scarier than the ICC.
The unpaved road turned to the north and continued on, but a driveway led towards the ocean and the resort. In the quickly growing sunlight Gentry could see a medium-sized main building, and on either side of it little individual bungalows on the beach, backlit by the orange sun one-third exposed on the horizon’s line of the Red Sea. But a heavy chain sagged three feet off the drive, locked to upright posts in cement on either side. The chain did not look particularly formidable, but there was no way the little black Skoda was going to successfully ram through it and then keep going.
Two hundred meters, low sand dunes on either side, brown sea grasses blowing gently in the warm breeze. They’d have to walk the rest of the way.
Court pulled the car to the side of the road.
“Out,” he ordered Abboud.
“I’ve never been here before,” said the president. “But I know what this place is. There is decadence here. Alcohol was found once, five years ago. We could not punish the owners, a European couple, with more than fines. I think maybe they were shut down for a summer.” He sniffed through his injured nose. “Infidels.”
“Out,” Court instructed once again. He climbed out of the driver’s side and moved quickly around the front, opened the passenger-side door, took the president by the shirt, and lifted him to his feet.
“When will the transport arrive?”
“I don’t know.”
“How will they get past the coastal patrol boats?”
Court pushed him forward towards the bungalows. “I don’t know.”
“Where will the ship go when it leaves here? All the way to port in the west or will we—”
“I don’t know.”
“Mr. Six. You have no real plan, do you? Let me get in touch with some of my contacts in the West. I can make arrangements that would be satisfactory to everyone.”
“No.”
“We, my friend, are on exactly the same team here. You understand that now, don’t you? I will contact some people with whom I have done business for many years. They are very loyal to me—”
“That’s what I’m afraid of,” said Court distractedly. He pushed the president forward again up the sand-strewn driveway, past a low sign in Arabic, but his eyes were off to the right, into the distance, into the deep morning shadows. Some six hundred meters away, a half kilometer back from the coastline to the south, the terrain rose sharply at the rocky plateau. There, in the morning shadows, the sun reflected off of the windows and tin roofs of squat, square buildings. Court could see no movement, no sign of life at all, but he felt exposed nonetheless.
He’d made it just over halfway to the bungalows with no more protest from Abboud. Then the president spun around abruptly. Court’s eyes had drifted back to the south, but he quickly turned his attention back to his captive.
“I want you to make a promise to me. If we are still here tomorrow, it will be very dangerous for both of us. For you especially, because, unlike you, I do still have some friends out there, looking for me, wanting to help me. If we remain here for twenty-four hours, you can be sure that someone, one of the staff, one of the owners, someone who saw the car along the road to the beach, someone will report us. Then they will come, and by ‘they,’ I mean everyone. Friend and foe will descend upon us. I was a general long before I was president, and you have chosen for us absolutely indefensible ground. Our back to the ocean, our front to tens of thousands of square meters of sand dunes. This is a deplorable place for us to fight—”
“Shut up.”
“—and you don’t even know when help will arrive, or in what form the help will come? I should think you could have chosen a better—”
“Shut up!” Court said again, shoving Abboud forward, angrier than ever at the man, principally because the man was absolutely correct in everything he said. This was a mess, this one-man extraction attempt in denied territory by an unknown force.
Court shoved the president again. It made him feel a bit better to deflect some of the focus of his wrath on someone other than himself.
His phone rang.
Seventy meters to go.
He answered it. He hoped it was Ellen with details that would cause his mood to improve. “Yeah?”
“S’up, Court? How’s life treating you?”
Fuck. It was Zack, and a conversation with Zack right now would do nothing good for Gentry’s disposition.
Still, Court thought, maybe he could glean some intel from Sierra One. If Zack was calling, that meant Zack was not sneaking up behind him at that very moment. “Things just could not possibly be any better, Hightower. Thanks for asking.”
Sixty meters.
“Yeah? You come to your senses and draw a knife across your boyfriend’s throat yet?”
“Sure did.”
“How come I don’t believe you?”
“’ Cause there just isn’t enough trust in the world.”
“Yeah. That is a shame, isn’t it? Look, bro, I just wanted to give you a bit of good news because, despite your bullshit, I t
hink you could probably use it.”
Abboud turned around as he walked, tried to ask Court who was on the phone, but Gentry just stiff-armed him forward again.
“Good news? Well, okay, I guess I’ll take it.”
“Figured as much. Here it is. Today, buddy, is your lucky day.”
Fifty meters.
“Okay. I’ll bite. Why is today my lucky day, Zack?”
There was a long pause. Court thought he could hear Zack’s face rubbing his mouthpiece, his stubbled beard scratching the microphone. Finally, Sierra One answered. “Today is your lucky day, because you are my secondary target, and I am pretty sure I’m only going to have time to get one shot off.”
Forty met—Huh?
Court stopped in his tracks. Jacked his head to the south. To the buildings some seven hundred meters distant. A flicker of light in a deep morning shadow flashed from the roof of the highest building on the plateau.
In less than one half second, Gentry turned his head back to president Abboud, propelled his body forward towards the walking man, reached out both arms, and dropped the sat phone. At the same moment he also screamed a single word.
“Down!”
President Bakri Ali Abboud’s shoulders raised in surprise of the scream from behind. Then the right side of his neck seemed to quiver, as if slapped hard. The left side of his neck blew apart, blood and tissue flung towards the sand dunes to the north side of the road, leaving Oryx instantly decapitated save for some skin and muscle that remained. His head spun around on its axis and flopped backwards as his torso went limp and dropped straight to the sandy driveway.