by Jon Land
“Listen,” the Libyan responded, “I am not arguing intentions, only procedure. Comrades, together we have at our disposal millions of troops who can enter Israel from all sides and avoid the mistakes of ’67 and ’73. We can have them prepared within two weeks and leave words behind.”
“You would have them die for their cause?” Hassani asked.
“Of course I would! Any Arab would!”
“To die in pursuit of a dream instead of seeing that dream come to fruition? I think not. Our peoples need no more martyrs. I am not advocating denying Arabs the chance to fight for what they so richly deserve. But let them fight for certain victory instead of almost certain death at the hands of the cursed Jewish state.”
“Certain death to the Israelis as well,” the PLO delegate added.
“And they will use their bombs to obliterate all of us in a last desperate attack. What have we gained? Nothing, gentlemen, nothing at all. Overrunning Israel isn’t an end, it’s a means for all of you to come to power in your individual countries and unite the Mideast as it has never been united before. We have been mistaken in the past to be so narrow and shortsighted in our goals.”
“You continue to ignore the obvious,” the Saudi protested. “Israel may never have faced as strong an enemy as we are, but neither have we faced as strong an Israel. Nuclear weapons aside, her conventional arsenal, including jet fighters, is terrifying.”
“Granted, Mr. Ambassador. And to combat that force we now have in our possession a weapon that will render Israel helpless.”
“Why have we not been told of this weapon before?”
“There was no reason. Just as there is no reason to be any more specific today.”
“When then?” the Syrian asked.
“At our next meeting; Sunday, May fourteenth,” the general returned. “Israeli Independence Day. Three days before our invasion begins.”
On a street set back from the square in front of the royal palace, a van with traditional Islamic markings was parked. Such vans were a fixture in the streets of Tehran, though most couldn’t have said what they were, other than some version of public works.
In the back of this particular van sat a pair of men working amidst the most sophisticated recording equipment available in the world. Months before, the Mossad had managed to plant bugs throughout the royal palace, a new kind of bug with a built-in jamming device that made finding it by any kind of electronic sweep impossible.
In spite of all this, extraordinarily few dividends had been paid, as General Hassani spent little time speaking of anything they could truly make use of. The men in the van had not seen the delegates enter, so the meeting itself came as a complete shock. The man wearing headphones had started scribbling notes as was his routine, but quickly his hand began shaking too much to keep it up.
The bastards were going to destroy Israel!
The man wearing the headphones knew all the procedures and precautions. He knew he should have continued to listen patiently, even with the meeting winding down. But time had become the crucial factor in his mind, hours the issue now instead of days.
“Get us out of here!” he ordered the agent working the recording meters and levels.
“What?”
“Get behind the wheel and drive!”
“But we’re supposed to—”
“I don’t care! Do you hear me? I don’t care! Get me to the relay point. Get me there fast.”
Evira was regaining her strength. Monday had marked her third morning in the small room, and each had seen her awaken able to do more. She was exercising regularly on the dusty floor now, working flexibility back into her wounded side and neck.
Kourosh had been there with her breakfast each morning when she awoke, some bakery goods stolen from the first batch placed out in a store window six blocks away. Two mornings back he had also managed to find coffee, but it had cooled by the time he brought it up to her. She found herself following his flight through the cracks in the boards over the window, amazed at how he took to the streets as if he owned them. He bounded gracefully about with each gutter and sidewalk crack stored in his memory, long hair flapping about to the whims of the wind.
Kourosh had made a world for himself in the streets, but all the same he had become as dependent on her as she had on him. She knew he had failed to answer all her questions at once out of fear he might return from one of his jaunts to find her gone, no longer in need of him. Evira would have told him not to worry, except she knew it wouldn’t have changed anything. Trust was something that did not exist in the boy’s life. So their strange relationship was based on needs that were different for each but for the present were strong enough to keep them together.
She watched from the window now in expectation of his bouncy return down the street. Thus far he had provided her with several hastily drawn maps of the royal palace. Different sections were sketched on individual sheets of gray cardboard, drawn elaborately and exaggerated the way drawings in his comic books were. To see the whole of the palace and the sprawling grounds enclosing it, Evira needed only to arrange the cardboard sheets together like a puzzle. It was a huge white stone and marble structure built by the Shah less than twenty years before, surrounded by an outer retaining wall stretching fifteen feet high. Within the grounds, besides the palace there was a school, a guards’ barracks, and an older palace that had been transformed into office space with the construction of the newer one. The main entrance was inside the front wall, accessible only by a drive that circled round a hilly garden to prevent the gates from being rammed. There was a servants’ entrance located near the school on the northern side and a guards’ entrance near the barracks on the south.
The inside of the complex had been constructed with celebrations in mind. The front door opened onto a huge two-story ballroom, complete with skylights. A service entrance on the northern side opened onto the kitchen, with the formal dining room situated between this and the ballroom. The sleeping quarters on the second floor had been divided into separate wings for children and adults, the children’s bedrooms facing the east while the adults’ faced the south.
Nothing in the drawings gave her a notion as to how the palace might be penetrated. For this she would have to rely again on Kourosh, as she would for finding a time when the general was inside.
No longer requiring as much sleep to heal herself during these long hours, Evira found herself bored. She picked up one of Kourosh’s comic books and skimmed through it, amazed at how the same things appealed to children of all cultures. She had finished one and closed it when something caught her eye: a stamp of the bookstore where it had been purchased—Steimatzky, the largest chain in Israel. Strange. The anomaly seemed small, but Evira had learned long before that nothing was small. She inspected his horde of comics and found the same was true for all of them. It was no fluke. Every issue had been purchased at the Steimatzky chain.
Kourosh bounded into the room while she was still inspecting the comics, and she looked up at him embarrassed, as if she had violated his privacy.
“Superman’s my favorite,” he told her, and she noticed he had a tightly wrapped package beneath his arm. “I got a surprise for you.”
“A good one, I hope.”
“Wait until you see it!” He placed it atop a pair of crates and started to undo the string.
“Kourosh,” Evira called to him. “Who was it who taught you how to speak English?’
He turned to her and raised his eyebrows. “The students, like I told you.”
“Were they the same students who gave you the comic books?”
“Yes. Does it matter?”
“No. It’s just that, well, I know English, too. I can pick up where they left off.”
He turned excitedly from his chore of unwrapping her surprise. “Could you really?”
“It would be my pleasure. It’s the least I can do for you after all you’ve done for me.”
He looked suddenly sad. “I miss them.”
&
nbsp; “Miss who?”
“The students.”
“The ones who were killed back at the plastics factory?”
“No, the ones who gave me the comic books, who taught me English. They haven’t been around in a while.”
“Say something in English for me,” Evira requested, even more intrigued.
Kourosh’s expression turned suddenly playful. “What do you want to hear?” he said in better English than she would have thought possible.
“Anything.”
The first few lines he spoke were enough to confirm what she suspected but could make no sense of. She was good with languages. Learning them, recognizing tone and intonation, came naturally for her. Which was why she was sure that Kourosh had learned his English from Israelis!
“How many students?” she broke in suddenly.
“Oh, plenty. All haters of injustice and poverty.”
“And you didn’t meet them until …”
“I don’t know. Six months ago, maybe nine. I met them through the others in the plastics factory.”
“But you don’t see them anymore.”
“I go but they are no longer there. They used to meet in a building not far from here, but it’s deserted now. It looks like no one was ever there.”
Evira was barely hearing him. A classic strategem was being employed. The insurgent cells in Teheran had been infiltrated by Israelis.
What have I stumbled upon here? Israelis posing as students in Tehran?
A large group that had settled in the area and then departed, possibly leaving some of their number in place.
“Do you want to see your surprise?” Kourosh was asking.
She nodded, and he went back to tearing the brown bag apart until he could gently lift the contents from inside and hold them out for her to see.
“What do you think?”
She looked at him speechless, for her means of access to the royal palace and Hassani were before her.
Kourosh was holding the uniform of a palace servant.
The two women approached the heavy front door of the stone house in Falmouth, England, unconcerned about being seen. Clearly the house was too isolated for neighbors to be a problem, and if someone had unexpectedly been in the vicinity one of them would have felt their presence earlier.
The smaller of the two led the way, the larger one bringing up the rear with the graceful menace of a jungle cat. She was exceedingly tall for a woman, six inches over six feet not counting the boots she was never without. She moved soundlessly, except for the slight creaking of her skin-tight leather pants and matching waist-length jacket. Her hair was cut close and sharply edged in punk style, with wisps jutting in every direction. The smaller woman had a tomboy haircut but was dressed like a schoolgirl in plaid skirt and green sweater. Her persistent smile seemed as false as the larger one’s ever-present scowl looked natural.
The door opened just as the two women began ascending the steps.
“What are you two doing here?” It was the puzzled voice of the Arab power broker Mohammed Fett.
“We have come for the boy,” the smaller one said.
“Ah, Tilly,” Fett said, “you are too late. He was moved to the other location two days ago.”
“Other location,” the taller one echoed.
“On whose orders?” Tilly asked.
“Rasin’s, of course.”
Tilly turned behind her to the large figure in black leather. “Lace, did you hear what he said?”
“Regrettable,” Lace said. She stepped forward until she was next to Tilly.
“What’s wrong?” Fett asked.
“Rasin sent us to kill the boy,” Lace told him.
“What?” the flabbergasted Fett exclaimed, and then he realized what had happened. “Evira! It must have been Evira’s doing. Of course! She must have—But I know where he was taken. I can send you there.”
Lace shook her head. “He won’t be there any longer.”
“You shouldn’t have been so careless,” Tilly added immediately.
“It’s all right,” Fett assured them, stepping out onto the porch. “I’ll alert my people. The boy will be found, I assure you.”
“Yes,” Lace said as her hands darted up from her hips and closed on Fett’s head. “He will.”
With that she lifted Fett effortlessly off the stone until his head was even with hers and his toes were dangling. He was still trying to speak when she twisted his head violently to the right. There was a snap, and his whole body spasmed. Lace pressed him close against her then to feel his final breath against her face as it fled from his dangling body. He was suddenly quite cold.
“Fool,” she said, and tossed him aside. She felt very hot. “Tilly,” she called.
The smaller woman opened the door and passed through ahead of Lace, who dragged Fett’s body behind her. She placed him in a chair and arranged him so he could watch what transpired with his dead eyes. There were only two things Lace enjoyed doing, and it was nice when they could be done in sequence, for that heightened the pleasure of both. She kissed the corpse once on the lips and turned to find Tilly already on the floor with her skirt and panties torn off and fingers stroking her vagina.
“It was beautiful, Lace,” she said to her friend, who was pulling off her leather jacket. “Beautiful.”
“Like you, Tilly. Like you.”
And then Lace was on top of her. Their mouths met in a hot passion as Lace’s hand replaced Tilly’s over her clitoris. The smaller woman’s fingers raked through the stubbly blond hair of her partner, as the dead eyes of Fett looked on.
“Beautiful,” they said almost in unison.
Chapter 15
MCCRACKEN AND PATTY HUNSECKER spent six miserable hours atop RUSS before the navy search planes out of Guam finally spotted them late Monday afternoon. Blaine greeted their universal drop-wing signal that they’d sighted him with no small degree of relief; he had feared days more would pass before they found him. He also knew that Patty could not go much longer without medical attention. When she failed to come to during their first hours at sea, Blaine feared she had slipped into a coma.
Dusk was fast approaching when a jet-powered helicopter, adorned with navy colors, hovered over them and lowered a line. McCracken sent Patty up ahead of him and found her already being worked on by paramedics when he joined her inside the cabin.
“Guam,” he told the pilot with a healthy smirk. “And step on it.”
Patty Hunsecker regained consciousness in the early hours of Tuesday morning after being hospitalized at the naval base. Blaine was at her side when she awoke, glad for the opportunity to talk before he had to leave the island.
“Managed to save RUSS, though,” he said, after doing his best to apologize for what he had cost her. “Crew on the chopper wasn’t exactly overjoyed.”
“I’m sure you didn’t give them much choice.”
“I was a perfect gentleman about it. Merely threatened to break their fingers one by one.”
“How’d you explain to the Navy what happened?”
“Some double-talk about an explosion. It’ll hold long enough for me to sneak off the island.”
“Probably help if I backed you up.”
“The thought had crossed my mind.”
“Just tell me what you told them.”
When he was finished, Blaine’s tone turned apologetic. “When all this is over I’ll make sure the government picks up the tab to re-outfit you.”
“How do you plan on managing that?” she asked, skeptically.
“Let’s just say they owe me lots of favors. In the meantime, why don’t you rest up at Bel Air? Get reacquainted with your family. They really are concerned.”
“You spoke with them?”
“In your condition I thought next of kin should be advised.”
“You’re a bastard, McCracken.”
“Go home, Patty.”
“Stop running, you mean.”
He took her hand. “I have
to go.”
“But you waited until I regained consciousness.”
“It was the proper thing to do.”
“And if it had taken another day?”
Blaine shrugged.
“You’re a strange man, McCracken.”
“I do my best.”
The Mossad chief, Isser, conferred with the prime minister of Israel at least once a day and often more frequently than that. Seldom, though, did they meet in person because of the security problems posed by Isser’s secret identity. The head of Mossad needed anonymity to perform his duties and never compromised that if it was at all possible.
Today it wasn’t. Isser had requested an in-person meeting and the prime minister was wise enough not to ask why. They met in the older man’s private study in his home. He had feigned illness earlier in the day to establish the ruse, and Isser was waiting for him when he stepped through the door, white hair flung wildly across his scalp and still wearing his bathrobe. The sickness might have been a ruse, but Isser felt saddened by how stooped his shoulders had become, how frail and old he looked.
“You’d better sit down,” the Mossad chief advised.
“I’m not really sick, remember? This is just a costume for the benefit of anyone who might be sneaking a peek.”
“That doesn’t mean you won’t be sick after I’m finished.”
The prime minister settled himself in a leather chair and Isser placed a cassette tape player on the table closest to him. He pushed the play button and spoke as he waited for the voices from Tehran to replace his. “This reached me from our team covering Hassani just hours ago. It speaks for itself.”
As if on cue, the voice of General Amir Hassani came on. He greeted the delegates seated around him, and Isser fast-forwarded to the spot where the discussion got interesting. The prime minister sat transfixed through it all, mouth dropping at the intent of the words. Near the end of General Hassani’s final speech, Isser switched it off.
“The ‘delegates’ were never named but I recognize their voices. I know them, don’t I, Isser?”