Oh man. Scott hated these little existential brain farts of his, especially when they threw up the whole alternate universe theory of never knowing what might’ve gone down from any given choice, because you’re no longer there to witness what else might have been.
Nevertheless, as usual, he still wondered if he’d done nothing or done something else, where would he be now? Okay, so he might be feeling guilty about leaving Kaisha to her own fate. Or, yes possibly, he might even have chased after the big bald guy chasing the petite young woman, but…
Face it, Scotty-boy, you made a stupid mistake this time. There is a huge likelihood that the big dude out there and the beautiful mistress in here actually have nothing to do with why you’re even in Tokyo.
Kaisha was fumbling for his hand.
Except that you are now irretrievably involved in whatever it is, and that guy out there won’t care why.
‘We must go,’ she whispered in his ear.
Of course we must. Scott allowed her to lead him further into the dark. A moment later they heard the bad guy, for want of a better designation, thumping his body against the unyielding door. Then Scott fell over something.
‘You want him to catch us?’ Kaisha hissed.
‘Sorry, next time I’ll hurt myself quietly,’ Scott said, getting to his feet. ‘Where are we going anyway?’
‘Don’t know where we are. Can’t say where we’re going.’
‘That’s very enigmatic Kaisha, but it doesn’t instil a lot of confidence.’
‘I’m not here to boost your ego, Mr Dreher.’ A sliver of light briefly illuminated the right side of Kaisha’s face. She’d apparently found a door that opened, and then closed it again.
‘Then call me Scott,’ he said.
‘Why?’
‘Why not?’ He shrugged into the dark. ‘What’s in there?’
‘Internet café,’ she reported. ‘Wait here.’
‘Wait for what?’ Scott asked, but Kaisha had already gone, shutting the door behind her again.
It suddenly occurred to him that this mess he’d been dragged into might just be a domestic argument. Okay, a really bloody one, if Kaisha’s clothes were any indication. But given what he knew - or rather everything he didn’t - this could be the violent payoff for a sexual convergence gone wrong. And that meant that this was none of his business. Baldy out there could be the third wheel in some kind of threesome, or even a four-way kink, if Hiro’s wife counted for anything.
It was probably all unrelated to The Plot, as Scott had dubbed this latest investigative crusade. It was likely his reason for being in Japan, and for organising a secret rendezvous with a computer game creator, had merely collided with a domestic situation that was running its own course. Yep. Love and betrayal smashes headlong into international terrorist plot - happens every day.
Except that Hiroyuki Kaga was dead.
And that’s what The Plot was all about. Except that Scott had assumed the targets would be high-profile politicians not software designers.
Whoa buddy, hang on. Hiro was only allegedly dead. What’s more, it was only according to Hiro’s alleged mistress that he even was no longer living, and that his purported end had not come about by natural causes.
Perfect, Scott! You’re hiding in the dark with a woman you’ve never laid eyes on before, who tells you that a man you’ve never met, but were supposed to, was brutally murdered, possibly by the thug currently out hunting you both in the alley.
Death stalks indeed.
And another thing, she’s not actually here any more.
The door opened suddenly, all the way this time, making Scott jump back.
Kaisha was standing there with a dweeby teenager wearing a Stargate T-shirt and SG1 vest, the pockets of which held at least five computer gizmos and a couple of cell phones.
Scott recognised his younger self in the kid before him. Even Japanese nerds look like nerds.
‘You coming?’ Kaisha asked.
‘Again - where?’
‘Again, Scott, don’t know but I plan to go far away from this place. Spaceboy here said he will check the street for the Bad Arsehole, so we can leave. But you can stay if you want.’
‘No, no, I’m with you, Kaisha,’ Scott surrendered. ‘Lead on Spaceboy.’
Kaisha nodded to the kid who weaved ahead towards the front of the noisy and crowded café which was, conveniently for them, lit only by computer monitors, video game consoles and plasma screens.
‘Bad Arsehole?’ Scott said in Kaisha’s ear, when Spaceboy indicated they should stop and wait till he returned.
‘Very Bad Arsehole,’ she qualified.
Dargo emerged from the alley into the side street, just around the corner from where he’d seen her make contact. The drizzling rain, running off his bald head and down the back of his shirt, was only marginally less irritating than not being able to find the stupid woman. She - they - were not in the alley, and if they’d gotten through one of the other doors they could be anywhere.
But, if they’d reached this street… No, there was no parting of the throngs to his left to indicate they were fleeing in that direction. On the other hand, if they had any sense they’d have taken the short route back around the nearest corner and out of sight. Again they’d be long gone.
Dargo headed right just in case but, as he expected, found nothing out of the ordinary. He sat down on the same stool the woman had chosen in the noodle shop and ordered a sake and some sushi.
Silently cursing the universe for the unforseen fuckups that played havoc with his Work and messed with his equilibrium, he pulled his vid-phone from one of the inside pockets of his coat and dialled the Client.
‘Mark number four has been reached,’ he said when the call was answered.
‘Excellent.’
‘There may be a problem.’
‘But you never have problems, my friend.’
‘Not that I admit to,’ Dargo said. ‘This one is a woman, a local. His mistress.’
‘Is she a witness?’
‘No. But she was there, post meeting, and may have information.’ Dargo acknowledged the delivery of his food and drink with a nod.
Two men sat on the stools next to Dargo. They ordered loudly then conversed at the same volume.
‘She then met with a non-native,’ Dargo continued moving his phone to his left ear.
‘Interesting. Description?’
‘A white guy. English, American or the like. Fortyish, six foot, dark wavy hair.’
‘Ah.’
‘They ran away.’
‘From you?’ The Client seemed amused.
‘Perhaps,’ Dargo scowled. ‘She ran first, then he followed. Now they’re gone.’
‘It’s okay. We will monitor the situation. If the mistress presents a problem we will know and either recall you or have her dealt with.’
‘Do not recall me. You know my position on repairs.’
‘Ah right, only if imperative during the commission and never after the fact,’ the Client said. ‘I’ve just sent the file of your next destination and the open e-ticket info.’
Dargo’s phone began vibrating. ‘It’s incoming,’ he said and quickly read the message. ‘How lovely, I haven’t been there in a while.’
The Japanese guy on the stool next to him had no concept of personal space or privacy. He was eyeballing the vid-phone as if he had shares in it. Language proved no barrier to Dargo, as there was no mistaking the look on his face. It said ‘get lost, or die where you sit.’ The young man turned back to his friend.
Dargo put the phone to his ear. ‘I’ll get a flight out there in the morning,’ he said.
‘Good. I’ll be in touch with the details when you get there.’
The Client disconnected without further ado. Dargo pocketed his phone and turned his attention to his food.
Chapter Thirteen
Café Baba, Peshawar, Pakistan
Tuesday 5.15 pm
Majid passed the huqqa back
to the only other patron who’d spent as long as he had in this place today. The old man, barely disturbing his recumbency on the day bed by the wall, reclaimed the water pipe and gave a toothless smile.
Majid pondered the man’s existence: could he not walk at all, or did his days have no purpose? Had he already lived his life to his satisfaction, or was he burdened by it? Was he happy or oblivious? Was he lazy or had he simply become adept at stillness?
Majid’s own impetuous nature had lately been tempered by a new patience derived from his studies, but he had yet to master the stillness of self-containment. Barely on the threshold of understanding its value, he couldn’t claim it as a quality, but he did enjoy the personal control its practice seemed to be giving him.
For instance, today he would simply wonder about the old man. Tomorrow, if they were both here again, he would engage him in conversation to seek answers. For Majid this was indeed a liberating approach, for if he had no need to return here tomorrow, then he would simply continue to wonder.
All of this of course depended on what happened in the next little while. He had been told to wait each day until six; and wait he had, and would, until the Emissary came or Kali told him otherwise.
From the age of three, Ashraf Majid had shared everything in life, whether mundane or significant, frivolous or serious, with Bashir Kali. Their lives were forever entwined in love and trust, blood and honour. Soon, when they married each other’s sisters, their families - their sons - would also be bonded in heart, spirit and blood.
It was Kali who had first met the Emissary while training in Morocco, and on his return home had introduced his beloved friend to the new way. For six months now they had both been following Rashmana, the Words of Kúrus, and now Majid too was to meet the Emissary. If the introduction went well, the friends would be given the go ahead for their first Trust.
The Emissary, by Kali’s account a most inspirational man, had in his turn been personally inspired by the greatest of teachers: Dárayavaus himself.
Majid was confident. He felt in his bones that he and Kali would rise together through the ranks to stand with the Emissary before the great Dárayavaus. They would strive for the highest of honours that could be bestowed on a man: the right to sup at the table of his Inner Circle.
Room 55, Grand Hotel Cravat, Luxembourg
Tuesday 2.15 pm
‘You are such a beautiful boy.’
‘Not any more, Ilia. I believe I’m quite the man, now.’
‘So you are, sweet one. And you are my man. Yes?’
‘Oh yes forever, if you’ll have me.’
Ilia Dushenka smiled at the reflection of her latest conquest in the gilt-framed mirror. He was sprawled naked and unashamed on the huge bed he’d paid so handsomely for and in which they’d been making love for two days.
Conquest? She tried not to laugh out loud at the word she’d used for such an easy victory. Justin West, like all the visiting American college boys, was so like a puppy, so like the lap dogs her crazy mother used to pamper.
Ilia had chosen Justin because he was pretty, because he had money, and because she knew who his father and great-uncle were. She could just as easily have seduced either of his friends though, or even his sexy young stepmother. Now she would have been an interesting diversion. But this time Justin was the one; the latest in a succession of fresh virginal toy boys. They were not meant to last; which was just as well, as it was not good to get too attached.
‘Do not be too eager with your promises,’ she said. ‘You will soon grow tired of me.’
‘Never. And I am already growing eager again, Ilia,’ he announced, fingering his penis as an offering. ‘Come back to bed and I will show you.’
‘You will miss your train, Justin.’
‘I’ve got hours yet,’ he said, with a delicious pout.
Ilia smiled. ‘Your stepmother and friends will not like it if you keep them waiting.’
‘Do I look like I care?’ he asked, already doe-eyed as he stroked himself and got to his knees.
Ilia laughed and joined him on the bed, turning her back to him and spreading her legs so he could enter her from behind. His thumbs stroked the intriguing tattoos of stone-carved Greek statues that graced her lower back, on each side of her spine. ‘To keep her body strong’, she had told him.
‘You will come with me then?’ he asked, thrusting into her.
‘Yes,’ she breathed, gripping the sheets.
‘I meant to Paris,’ his right hand squeezed her nipple, ‘on the train,’ he said, finding a rhythm that was perfect for them both at this angle.
‘Yes. I will catch it from near my place. And we will go to Paris together.’
‘Excellent,’ he said, slapping his groin into her arse and discovering again what heaven really was. ‘Fu…fucking, excellent.’
Khyber Hotel, Peshawar, Pakistan
Tuesday 5.25 pm
‘Pass me a cola Bamm-Bamm,’ Mudge requested.
‘Why do you call me that? It’s really irritating.’
‘Gawd, you don’t like being called anything today. What’s up your clacker?’
‘Nothing, Mudge. And it’s the not knowing that’s irritating; not the name.’
‘Well you only had to ask, you didn’t need to be irritated all this time.’
‘Well?’
Brody, out on the balcony, took a break from scoping the narrow street, pinched the bridge of his nose and squinted at his companions. They’re both fuckwits, he thought, at a loss as to how he came to be stuck here with them. Granted Mudge was his best friend, but that was only half a good reason.
‘Okay,’ Mudge began, using the edge of his bed to whack the top off the drink bottle. ‘Your name’s Dwayne, right? Same as The Rock, you know, the actor. Only he’s a Johnson not a Kennedy.’
‘And?’ Kennedy said after a few seconds silence. ‘So?’
Mudge rolled his eyes as if his explanation had been enough. ‘Well duh. We couldn’t call you The Rock coz it’s already taken by a Dwayne, Dwayne. And you’d have had your Agency buds send us to Gitmo if we’d chosen Pebbles, right? So, you get Bamm-Bamm.’
‘What’s wrong with calling me Dwayne?’
‘Um,’ Mudge began, ‘nothin mate, if you don’t…’
‘We Aussies never do real names,’ Brody interjected before Mudge could launch into his awful Duh-Wayne limerick; then continued the lie. ‘It’s like friendly code. And in our line of work it’s safer that way.’
‘Yeah?’ Kennedy said, as if Brody had made sense; then he shook his head. ‘Do you have to go to special classes to learn how to think so convoluted though?’
‘No mate,’ Brody laughed. ‘But there is an Aussie slang-gene.’
‘So why did you think we call you Bamm-Bamm?’ Mudge asked.
‘Because I’m all muscle?’ Kennedy suggested. ‘So how do you get to ‘Mudge’ from Jason…’
‘You don’t,’ Mudge snorted, as if that too was bloody obvious. ‘I come from Mudgegonga, mate.’
Kennedy closed his eyes as if he didn’t want to go where that statement had taken him.
‘Bugger me!’ Brody exclaimed looking down at the street. ‘Of all the gin-less joints, ours is getting screwier by the day.’
‘What?’ asked the other two men.
‘We’re sitting in this flea pit waiting - according to your intel Bamm-Bamm - for mid-ranking al-Qaeda stooges to front, but all these other bastards keep turning up instead.’
‘Like who?’ Kennedy slid from his bed onto his knees and stuck his head out the door.
‘Like Jamal Zahkri,’ Brody stated, grinning like he’d won the eighth at Flemington.
‘You’re kidding me?’
‘Nuh. Here, take a look.’ Brody tossed the scope over and picked up his camera instead. ‘He’s about mid-street, on the right. Him and three other blokes are approaching Ashraf’s home away from home.’
Kennedy zeroed in on the relevant ‘blokes’ and focussed on the tallest
one. ‘Christ!’
‘Wrong prophet, I reckon.’ Brody declared, taking photos as they watched the casual progress, down their street, of one of the West’s most wanted men.
Jamal Zahkri al Khudri: American-born, Moroccan-based, arms dealer, drug smuggler, hijacker and international terrorist.
There wasn’t a lot that was known about Jamal Zahkri; but all of what was known was bad. He’d put his mark on a shitload of bloody carnage in the last five years: bombs in Paris and London; plane hijackings in Germany, Australia and Turkey; and hostage-taking all over Europe. The biggest mystery was his lineage. Born in New York he was variously of Iraqi, Saudi, Turkish, Afghan, Chechen and/or Canadian descent. The Yanks really didn’t want to claim any part of him.
Brody smiled. Zahkri’s origins might be unknown, to all bar his long-dead mother, but right now there was one thing for sure: the murdering bastard was within easy, easy sniping range.
Fuck that! The arsehole is practically in spitting distance.
Brody rubbed his head in frustration, as that was about all they could do. None of them had a rifle.
‘It’s too bad spitting would just draw attention to us,’ he said aloud.
‘There was talk Zahkri had been meeting with Osama’s boys,’ Kennedy said. ‘Guess this clinches it.’
Brody looked at the CIA’s official North-West Frontier Rep in astonishment. ‘Where on earth do you guys get your intel, Dwayne? Osama nearly killed Zahkri years ago for mutiny. The guy’s been running with Atarsa Kára for at least 18 months that we know of.’
‘What the hell is he doing here then?’
‘Dunno,’ Brody shrugged. ‘But he’s about to join Ashraf, which would support our intel that al-Qaeda has no part in whatever is really going on here.’
‘Fuck. So what do we do about this?’ Kennedy asked, primed to bolt out and do whatever it was.
‘We watch. We wait. We take pictures,’ said Brody.
‘Oh, that’s crap, man,’ Kennedy complained. ‘This sitting around is aggravating.’
Mudge snorted. ‘Quit whingeing. We’ve been doing it a month longer than you.’
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