James Clavell - Whirlwind

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James Clavell - Whirlwind Page 42

by Whirlwind(Lit)


  there were onions and other things to chop and the goat meat to grind, so she continued happily, absently humming or doing a little dance step in time with the music. the kitchen was small and difficult to work in, unlike the huge, high-beamed kitchen in the lovely, old, sprawling spanish hacienda in lubbock that her family had had for almost a century, where she and her brother and sister had grown up. but she did not mind being cramped or cooking without the proper utensils. she was glad for something to do to take her mind off the question of when she would see her husband again.

  it was saturday that conroe had left to go to bandar delam with the mullah, she thought, trying to reassure herself. today's tuesday, that's only three days and today's not even over yet. last night he was on the hf. "hi, honey,

  everything's fine here no need to worry. sorry, got to go airtime's restricted for the moment, love you and see you soon," his voice so grand and confident but, even so, she was achingly sure she had heard a nervousness that had filled her mind and permeated her dreams. you're just imagining it. he'll be back soon leave dreams to the night and work on your daydream that all is very fine. concentrate on cooking!

  she had brought the packets of chili powder with her from london, with extra spices and paprika and cayenne pepper and ginger, fresh garlic and dried chili peppers and dried beans and little else but some night things and toilet paper in the one tote bag that she had been allowed to carry aboard the 747. chili makings because starke adored mexican food and particularly chili, and they both agreed that apart from curry, it was the only way to make goat meat palatable. no need to bring clothes or anything else with her because she still had some in their apartment in tehran. the only other gift she had brought was a small bottle of marmite that she knew genny and duncan mclver loved on the hot buttered toast made from the bread genny would bake when she could get the flour and the yeast.

  today manuela had baked bread. the three loaves were in their baking dishes, cooling on the counter under muslin to keep the few flies off. damn all flies, she thought. flies destroy the summer, even in lubbock... ah lubbock, wonder how the kids are.

  billyjoe and conroe junior and sarita. seven and five and three. ah, my beauties, she thought happily. i'm so glad i sent you home to my daddy and our ten thousand acres to roam on, granddaddy starke nearby: "but wear your snake boots, y'hear now!" in that lovely rough so tender drawl of his.

  "texas forever," she said out loud and laughed at herself, her nimble fingers busy chopping and grinding and spooning, tasting the brew from time to time, adding a little more salt or garlic. out of the window she saw freddy ayre crossing the little square to go up to their radio tower. with him was pavoud, their chief clerk. he's a nice man, she thought. we're lucky to have loyal staff. beyond them she could see the main runway and most of the base, snowcovered, the afternoon sky overcast, hiding the mountaintops. a few of their pilots and mechanics were absently kicking a football, marc dubois who had flown the mullah back from bandar delam among them.

  nothing else was going on here, just servicing aircraft, checking spares, painting no flying since sunday and the attack on the base. and the mutiny. sunday evening three mutineers, one airmen and two sergeants from the tank regiment, had been court-martialed and, at dawn, shot. all day yesterday and today the base had been quiet. once, yesterday, they had seen two fighters rush into the sky but no other flights which was strange as this was a training base and usually very busy. nothing seemed to move. just a few trucks, no

  tanks or parades or visitors this side. in the night some firing and shouting that had soon died down again.

  critically she peered at herself in the mirror that hung on a hook over the sink that was f lied with dirty pans and dishes and measuring spoons and cups. she moved her face this way and that and studied her figure, what she could see of it. "you're f the now, honey," she said to her reflection, "but you better haul ass and go ajogging and quit with the bread and the chili and wine and tostadas, burritos, tacos, and refried beans and ma's pancakes dripping with homegrown honey, fried eggs, crisp bacon, and pan fries..."

  the brew began to spit, distracting her. she turned the flame down a fraction, tasted the thickening reddish stew, still fiery from not enough cooking. "man alive," she said with relish, "that's going to make conroe happiertn a pig in wallah..." her face changed. it would, she thought, if he was here. never mind, the boys will like it just fine.

  she began the washing up, but she could not divert her thoughts from bandar delam. she felt the tears welling. "oh, shit! get hold of yourself!"

  "casevac!" the faint shout outside startled her and she looked out of the window. the football had stopped. all the men were staring at ayre who was running down the outside stairs of the tower, calling to them. she saw them crowd around him, then scatter. ayre headed for her bungalow. hastily she took off her apron, tidying her hair, brushed away her tears, and met him at the doorway.

  "what is it, freddy?"

  he beamed. "just thought i'd tell you their tower just got me on the blower and told me to ready a 212 for an immediate casevac to istahan they've got approval from iranoil."

  "isn't that kinda far?"

  "oh, no. it's just two hundred miles, a couple of hours there's plenty of light. marc'll overnight there and come back tomorrow." again ayre smiled. "good to have something to do. curiously, they asked for marc to do it."

  "why him?"

  "i don't know. maybe because he's french and they're the ones who helped khomeini. well, got to go. your chili smells great. marc's peed off he's missing it." he walked off, heading for the office, tall and handsome.

  she stood at the doorway. mechanics were wheeling out a 212 from the hangar and marc dubois, zipping up his winter flight overalls, waved gaily as he hurried over to watch the flight check. then she saw the procession of four cars approaching along the boundary road. so did freddy ayre. he frowned and went into the office. "have you got the clearance ready, mr. pavoud?"

  "yes, excellency." pavoud handed it to him.

  ayre did not notice the tension in the man, nor that his hands were shaking.

  "thanks. you'd better come too in case it's all in farsi."

  "but, excell "

  "come on!" buttoning his flight jacket against the breeze, ayre hurried out. pavoud wiped his sweating palms. the other iranians watched him, equally anxious.

  "as god wants," one of them said, blessing god it was pavoud, not him.

  at the 212 the ground check continued. ayre arrived as the cars arrived. his smile vanished. the cars were crammed with armed men, green bands, and they fanned out around the chopper, a few uniformed airmen among them.

  the mullah hussain kowissi got out of the front seat of the lead car, his turban very white and his dark robes new, his boots old and well used. over his shoulder was his ak47. clearly he was in command. other men opened the back doors of the first car and half pulled colonel peshadi out, then his wife. peshadi shouted at them, cursing them, and they backed off a little. he straightened his uniform greatcoat and braided, peaked cap. his wife wore a heavy winter coat and gloves and a little hat and shoulder bag. her face was white and drawn but, like her husband, she held her head high and proudly. she reached back into the car for a small tote bag but one of the green bands grabbed it, and after a slight hesitation handed it to her.

  ayre tried to keep the shock off his face. "what's going on, sir?"

  "we're... we're being sent to isfahan under guard! under guard! my base... my base was betrayed and is in the hands of mutineers!" the colonel did not keep the fury off his face as he whirled on hussain, in farsi: "i say again, what has my wife to do with this? eh?" he added with a roar. one of the nervous green bands nearby shoved a rifle into his back. without looking around the colonel smashed the rifle away. "son of a whore dog!"

  "stop!" hussain said in farsi. "it is orders from isfahan. i've shown you the orders that you and your wife are to be sent at once't "

  "orders? a dung filthy piece of p
aper scrawled in an illegible illiterate handwriting and signed by an ayatollah i've never heard of?"

  hussain walked over to him. "get aboard, both of you," he warned, "or i'll have you dragged there!"

  "when the aircraft is ready!" contemptuously the colonel took out a cigarette. "give me a light," he ordered the man nearest to him, and when the man hesitated, he snarled, "are you deaf? a light!"

  the man smiled wryly and found some matches, and all those around nodded approval, even the mullah, admiring courage in the face of death courage in the face of hell, for surely this man was a shah man and headed for hell. of course hell! didn't you hear him shout, "long live the shah," only hours ago when, in the night, we invaded and took possession of the camp and his fine house, helped by all the base's soldiers and airmen and some of the officers,

  the rest of the officers now in cells? god is great! it was the will of god, god's miracle that the generals caved in like the walls of shit the mullahs told us they were. the imam was right again, god protect him.

  hussain went over to ayre who was rigid, appalled by what was going on, trying to understand, marc dubois beside him, equally shocked, the ground check stopped. "salaam," the mullah said trying to be polite. "you have nothing to fear. the imam has ordered everything back to normal."

  "normal?" ayre echoed angrily. "that's colonel peshadi, tank commander, hero of your expeditionary force sent to oman to help put down a marxistsupported rebellion and invasion from south yemen!" that had been in '73 when the shah was asked for help by oman's sultan. "hasn't colonel peshadi got the zolfaghar, your highest medal given only for gallantry in battle?"

  "yes. but now colonel peshadi is needed to answer questions concerning crimes against the iranian people and against the laws of god! salaam, captain dubois, i'm glad that you're going to fly us."

  "i was asked to fly a casevac. this isn't a casevac," dubois said.

  "it's a casualty evacuation the colonel and his wife are to be evacuated to command headquarters in isfahan." hussain added with a sardonic smile, "perhaps they are casualties."

  ayre said, "sorry, our aircraft are under license to iranoil. we can't do what you ask."

  the mullah turned and shouted, "excellency esvandiary!"

  kuram esvandiary, or"hotshot" as he was nicknamed, was in his early thirties, popular with the expats, very efficient, and s-g trained he had had two years of training at s-g hq at aberdeen on a shah grant. he came from the back and, for a moment, not one of the s-g men recognised their station manager. normally he was a meticulous dresser and clean-shaven, but now he had three or four days' growth of heavy beard, and wore rough clothes with a green armband, slouch hat, an m16 slung over his shoulder. "the trip's sanctioned, here," he said, giving ayre the usual forms, "i've signed them and they're stamped."

  "but, hotshot, surely you realize this isn't a legitimate casevac?"

  "my name's esvandiary mr. esvandiary," he said without a smile and ayre flushed. "and it's a legitimate order from iranoil who employ you under contract here in iran." his face hardened. "if you refuse a legitimate order in good flying conditions, you're breaking your contract. if you do that without cause then we've the right to seize all assets, aircraft, hangars, spares, houses, equipment, and order you out of iran at once."

  "you can't do that."

  "i'm iranoil's chief representative here now," esvandiary said curtly. "iranoil's owned by the government. the revolutionary komiteh under the leadership

  of the imam khomeini, peace be upon him, is the government. read your iranoil contract also the contract between s-g and iran helicopters. are you flying the charter or refusing to?"

  ayre held on to his temper. "what about... what about prime minister bakhtiar and the gov "

  "bakhtiar?" esvandiary and the mullah stared at him. "haven't you heard yet? he's resigned and fled, the generals capitulated yesterday morning, the imam and the revolutionary komiteh are iran's government now."

  ayre and dubois and those expats nearby gaped at him. the mullah said something in farsi they did not understand. his men laughed.

  "capitulated?" was all ayre could say.

  "it was the will of god the generals came to their senses," hussain said, his eyes glittering. "they were arrested, the whole general staff. all of them. as all enemies of islam will be arrested now. we got nassiri too you've heard of him?" the mullah asked witheringly. nassiri was the hated head of savak whom the shah had arrested a few weeks ago and who was in jail awaiting trial. "nassiri was found guilty of crimes against humanity and shot along with three other generals, rahimi, martial law governor of tehran, naji, governor general of isfahan, paratrooper commander khosrowdad. you're wasting time. are you flying or not?"

  ayre was barely able to think. if what they say is true, then peshadi and his wife are as good as dead. it's all so fast, all so impossible. "we... of course we will fly a... a legal charter. just exactly what is it you want?"

  "to transport his excellency mullah hussain kowissi to isfahan at once with his personnel. at once," esvandiary interrupted impatiently, "with the prisoner and his wife."

  "they're... colonel and mrs. peshaditre not on the manifest."

  even more impatiently esvandiary ripped the paper out of his hands, wrote on it. "now they are!" he motioned past ayre and dubois to where manuela was standing in the background, her hair carefully tucked into a hat, wearing overalls. he had noticed her the moment he had arrived enticing as always, unsettling as always. "i should arrest her for illegal trespass," he said, his voice raw. "she has no right on this base there are no married quarters, nortre any allowed by base and s-g rules."

  over by the 212, colonel peshadi angrily shouted in english, "are you flying today or not? we're getting cold. hurry it up, ayre i want to spend as little time as possible with these vermin!"

  esvandiary and the mullah flushed. ayre called back, feeling better for the man's bravery, "yes, sir. sorry. okay, marc?"

  "yes." to esvandiary, dubois said, "where's my military clearance?"

  "attached to the manifest. also for your return trip tomorrow." esvandiary

  added in farsi to the mullah: "i suggest you board, excellency."

  the mullah walked off. guards motioned peshadi and his wife aboard. heads high, they went up the steps without faltering. armed men piled in after them and the mullah took the front left seat beside dubois.

  "wait a minute," ayre began, now over the shock. "we're not flying armed men. it's against the rules yours and ours!"

  esvandiary shouted an order, jerked a thumb at manuela. at once four armed men surrounded her. others moved much closer to ayre. "now, give dubois a thumbs-up!"

  grimly aware of the danger, ayre obeyed. dubois acknowledged and started up. quickly he was airborne. "now into the office," esvandiary said above the howl of the engines. he called the men off manuela and ordered them back into the cars. "leave one car here and four guards i have more orders for these foreigners. you," he added toughly to pavoud, "you get an up-to-date on all aircraft here, all spares, all transport, as well as the quantity of gasoline, also numbers of personnel, foreign and iranians, their names, jobs, passport numbers, residence permits, work permits, flying licenses. understand?"

  "yes, yes, excellency esvandiary. yes, cert "

  "and i want to see all passports and permits tomorrow. get busy!"

  the man left hurriedly. esvandiary was bowed through the front door. he led the way into starke's office and took the main chair and sat behind the desk, ayre following him. "sit down."

  "thanks, you're so kind," ayre said witheringly, taking the chair opposite him. the two men were of an age and they watched each other.

  the iranian took out a cigarette and lit it. "this will be my office from now on," he said. "now that at long last iran is back in iranian hands we can begin to make the necessary changes. for the next two weeks you will operate under my personal guidance until i am sure the new way is understood. i am the top iranoil authority for kowiss a
nd i'll issue all flight permits; no one takes off without written approval and always with an armed guard an "

  "it's against air law and iranian law and it's forbidden. apart from that it's bloody dangerous. finish!"

  there was a big silence. then esvandiary nodded. "you will carry guards who will have guns but no ammunition." he smiled. "there, you see, we can compromise. we can be reasonable, oh, yes. you'll see, the new era will be good for you too."

  "i hope it is. for you too."

  "meaning?"

  "meaning every revolution i've ever read about always begins by feeding off itself, friends quickly become enemies and even quicker die."

 

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