Read A Line in the Sand Online
Authors: Gerald Seymour
Tehran komiteh.
a south
He had been on the roof of the Alawi Girls'
of the SAVAK was half hanged, cut down,
School when the last chief
aten so that his leg bones splintered, mutilated with knives, lit
be
by
evision lights, killed, and he had felt no pity. He had been
tel
inducted into the pasdars, joined with pride the unit of the
tionary Guard Corps that safeguarded the Imam at his simple
Revolu
home
in Jamaran. He had gone into the embassy of the Great Satan, into the
Den of Spies, into the rooms where the shredders had failed and the collaborators and traitors were to be found, and he had
files on
hunted
The war had come. The military could not be trusted. The
them.
war
Iraq
with
was his transient route from teenager to man. He had become
an elusive, skilled master of the flooded death ground that was the Faw
peninsula and the Haural-Hawizeh marshland. He had come home, his first leave in two years, to find the dried heap of rubble with the 111
small tunnel through which the bodies of his parents had been
extracted. After praying at their grave in the Behesht-e-Zahra
cemetery, he had taken the next bus back to the front line.
The Scuds were fired with American help. American satellite
photography was passed to the Saudis, who forwarded the images to
Baghdad. The hatred grew. When the war was over and the Imam had sued
for peace and had spoken of taking a decision more deadly to him than drinking hemlock, when he had come home, he had been taken under the wing of a brigadier in the Ministry of Information and Security, as if
by a foster-parent. And his talents were let loose, and killings
followed in his footprints. From what he had seen, suffered,
experienced, survived, there was no place in his mind for fear.
"This is the perception which creates the desire for martyrdom among Muslims..."
He began to cover his nakedness. He wriggled into ankle-length
thermal
under-trousers, then a thermal vest. He struggled into the rubber suit. He had worn such suits in the probing fast craft they had used in the swamps of the Faw peninsula, and he had been in such a suit when
he had first gone ashore on the coast of the Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia. He put his watch back on his wrist. Later,
he would synchronize the time on it with the time on the master's
watch. Later, the master would send a radio message of seeming
innocence to his employer, the National Iranian Tanker Corporation, in
Tehran, and his watch would be synchronized with a clock at the NITC, and the clock there with the master clock in the room at the Ministry of Information and Security where the brigadier waited. Later, the ock would be synchronized on a secure voice-link with the
master cl
embassy in London. Finally, the intelligence officer at the embassy would synchronize his watch with that of the courier on the shore..
.
Everything was planned to the smallest detail, as always. He waited for the master to come to take him to the stern deck. On his bare feet, below where the wet suit sealed his ankles, he slipped a pair of
casual trainer shoes. He waited for the master and thought of his wife,
in,
Barz
and their small home, and he wondered whether she missed
him. They had no children perhaps it was his fault and perhaps it 112
was
hers but the doctors they visited would not tell them. She asked
nothing f
o
him except that he should serve the revolution of the Imam.
The tanker churned its way north up the Channel. He took comfort
again
from the words of the ayatollah from the college at Qom. He was Vahid Hossein. He was the Anvil.
pretext, but the first and there would be more.
It was a
The rain, as promised, had come on harder. Davies sat in the car.
He
didn't need to wind down the window and let in the damp air. He had senger seat,
the monitor screen on the floor in front of the empty pas
d the headset over his ears.
an
Two cables led from the car to a small
junction box screwed to a side wall of the house. He was parked right the wall, filling the alley.
up against
He could see, in black and
white, on his screen, the neighbour on the front doorstep, and hear ted speech from the button microphone secreted in the porch.
distor
t seemed innocent enough.
The pretex
orry, Frank, for disturbing you.
"S
You got a Philips screwdriver?
Can't seem to find one anywhere."
"Sure, Jerry, won't take me a minute."
"Everything all right?"
"Everything's fine. Just wait there, I'll get it."
He saw the neighbour's grimace. He'd have expected to be invited
he principal had learned fast and left him at the door.
inside, but t
The neighbour's eye line roved over the front of the house and checked bles, the broken plants where the ladder had been, and looked
the ca
into the camera. He wouldn't have seen the button microphone because the
n
me
from London were skilled in positioning them had to be because
not even the principal knew about the audio surveillance. People
nd outside cameras but they were generally difficult about
didn't mi
microphones. He could hear, adequately, anything said in the front of
the house, ground floor, and on the stairs; it was good technology and
necessary.
"There we go, one Philips screwdriver."
113
"Brilliant."
"No hurry for it back."
"Great. Frank, Mary said you had a new alarm system fitted today."
"Yes."
"Something I don't know?"
"I doubt it, Jerry."
"Don't think me inquisitive, Frank, not me, but there hasn't been a
burglary this end of the village in four years, not since the Doves'
place. Mary said you'd put in the full works, chaps like chimps
running up ladders. Friend to friend, what do you know that I don't, eh?"
"Just taking sensible precautions, Jerry. You're getting soaked."
pissing, who's that joker in the car?"
"Frank, no
"I'm right in the middle of a bit of work. Bring it back when you've finished with it, no hurry."
The door closed and the neighbour retreated. He'd have been sent
by
his wife, neighbours always were. He'd report that he hadn't really learned nything. That
a
wouldn't satisfy the wife, and she'd be round
in the morning to beg a half-pint of milk or borrow a half-pound of flour. And they'd fret through the evening, the neighbour and his t the cables and the camera, and whether a wave of thieving
wife, abou
was about to strike their small corner of heaven.
The boy came home, and the woman who drove him gave Davies a grinding glance before she pulled away. He doubted this little place could thout knowing every soul's business. His lunch-box was
survive wi
finished, except for the apple he always kept till last. It would be
another hour before Leo Blake turned up to do the night shift. He e apple on his sleeve and listened. He'd made his
polished th
suggestion, how they should tell the boy. They might have been at the
bottom of the stairs or just inside the kitchen. His mother did it.
114
There were faint voices.
used to work for the government abroad. He'd made some
Frank
enemies.
He did secret work, and it was still secret, and Mummy's secret and Stephen's. Frank's going to be protected by the police just for a few
days... "Are we going to have to go? Will we have to leave here?"
"No." Her clear voice.
"There's nothing to worry about we aren't leaving our home."
Davies put the apple core in his lunch-box.
The evening had come.
The car was parked in a deep lay-by used in the summer by tourists for
picnics. It was hidden from the road by trees and evergreen bushes.
Yusuf Khan had reclined his seat and dozed. The small bedside alarm in his pocket, synchronized to the watch of the intelligence
clock
officer, would rouse him thirty minutes before it was time to move.
It was the most comfortable car seat he had ever sat in, a BMW 5-series itre injection engine, high power, high technology, high
with a 2.6-l
luxury. His own, left behind in Nottingham, was an eleven-year-old erra, 1.6-litre, under-powered and under-maintained; the
Ford Si
ked on the 150-mile journey to the north-west.
carburettor had cho
They
had needed to call out a mechanic to fix it and had sweated to get to
the hospital in time to see the target, Perry, the car he used, and the
logo of the salesroom that had sold it to Perry. Farida Yasmin's
car
ine-year-old Rover Metro, cramped and with a small engine,
was a n
good
enough to get them to the car salesroom in Norwich where a story had been told and information received, and good enough to get them into the village by the sea where the photographs had been taken
and out of
that had lit up the eyes of the intelligence officer.
Yusuf Khan's car was unreliable, Farida Yasmin Jones's car was too e
small. Th
cash float given him by the intelligence officer included
enough for him to hire a fast, reliable, comfortable vehicle when
115
he
had come off the train. It was fantastic, the BMW, but difficult
to
handle: once, he had been off the road and a tyre width from a ditch because he had underestimated the speed into a corner. There was
caked
mud on the driver's-side doors. He didn't use the radio because all the stations on the pre-tune buttons played degenerate, corrupting music.
He imagined the man he had been sent to meet, who would come out of the
darkness. The sausage bag was behind his reclined seat, on the
oor.
carpeted fl
He felt a sense of pride that he had been shown such
trust, and Yusuf Khan dozed, waiting.
He tried to concentrate but the words mocked his efforts. They
registered then they blurred, their message was lost.
sat on the rug in front of the electric fire in Vicky's
Markham
apartment. She didn't like the word flat, it was an apartment but the
problem with it was the size. Smart but small, as his was dingy and small. Neither's home was big enough for two, so he read the books she'd bought in her lunch-hour and left for him in a neat pile.
about the room was neat, organized, like his Vicky.
Everything
Vicky was with a girlfriend at aerobics, and then they would be going une,
on for a pizza. The books, they'd have cost her a small fort
were
on business management, self-expression, leadership and finance he'd have gone down to a library and borrowed, if he'd had time. He tried to
r
remembe
what she had told him. For the interview he was Geoffrey.
not Geoff, his father was in banking, not a high-street deputy manager out on his neck last year with downsizing, his mother organized one of
the princess's causes, wasn't a two-days-a-week helper in a charity clothes shop; he was ambitious, he carried ambition round in
wheelbarrow loads... But the thoughts strayed back to Frank Perry.
There had been enough of them in Ireland, bloody-minded Presbyterian rs, running beef stock over poor land, doing evenings in
hill farme
the
rt-time military, who were threatened by the Provos' policy of
pa
ethnic
The obstinate old beggars had stayed put and taken a
cleansing.
y went to muck-spread,
sub-machine-gun out in the tractor cab when the
116
uldn't have considered quitting and running.
wo
He'd admired their
courage.
What Vicky had drilled into him... He wanted responsibility. What y Markham wanted more than anything was the responsibility
Geoffre
of
g the investment of clients' savings.
handlin
rash, but the careful placing of their money and the
Nothing
safeguarding of their pension schemes. He was not frightened of
sibility. Nor, if the markets slumped, of crisis.
respon
And Geoff Markham couldn't cling to the interview's strands. Always rightening when a player went missing, and Yusuf Khan
bloody damn f
was
e he had been bloody frightened in Ireland when a Provo
missing lik
player disappeared and they had no word, had to wait for the Semtex to
detonate or the blood to drip on the pavement and they had lost the of the girl who was the only associate thrown up by Rainbow
trail
Gold.
Wavering back with his concentration... And he expected to work hard, hard, had always believed physical fitness went hand in hand
play
with
logical stability weekend hiking, after-work weights and
psycho
tennis... He was to decline the offer of a drink, old trick, with
a
friendly refusal, and he was to be polite but not smarm deference...
And they shouldn't know it was the only shortlist interview in his locker. He was to wear the new tie she'd bought him, and his best suit
but he could take the jacket off if they suggested it, though not