Read A Line in the Sand Online
Authors: Gerald Seymour
"Of course
wn in by Fenton, and Cox was hovering behind.
He was sho
thought the man looked as if he'd just stepped off the Ark.
Markham
Mr.
"It's
Littelbaum, Geoff, from Riyadh. You told him you did the
"donkey's load", so he's come to offer you some oats. You're his ith us," Fenton said.
liaison w
. It was that sort of depressing morning where the
Markham stood
pieces
ate and refused to slot. Nothing to report from SB's
were obstin
erations centre on the target, Juliet Seven.
op
There was no trace
on
from Nottingham.
Yusuf Khan
The associate, the woman thrown up by
Rainbow Gold, had moved from the address listed for her electricity and
telephone bills, but he had, small mercies, registration details for
, about as common a small saloon as any on the road.
her car
an had wild grey hair, which needed cutting.
The Americ
His tie was
stained with food and, from the tight knot, seemed only to be loosened night
each
so that the noose could be pulled over his head. The shirt
was new but already there was grease on it. He wore a brown
three-piece herringbone suit, what a solicitor might have worn thirty years back in north Lancashire, and the creases said he'd travelled in
it. But he had alive, penetrating eyes. Markham glanced down at
his
watch.
"I apologize, but I did tell you, Mr. Fenton, I have to be at an 131
t over the lunch-hour." And he added limply, "A family
appointmen
business appointment. I can't cut it and I can't be late either."
Fenton said, dry, "I hope the family business is important Mr.
has flown three thousand miles so that he can offer us
Littelbaum
the
nefit of his experience. Bring him back to me."
be
Cox were gone.
Fenton and
d, tried to tidy his desk space, merely confused the papers
He shuffle
and his notes.
"Would you like a coffee, Mr. Littelbaum?"
"Only if you can put whiskey in it."
"Can't," he said sheepishly.
"At the donkey level it's not permitted to keep alcohol in the work t a reprimand and it would go on my record."
area. I'd ge
ry.
"Not to wor
Where I come from it's a capital crime, Mr. Markham."
ere I'm Geoff please, feel free."
"In h
ll have to forgive me I'm not familiar with people who
"Then you'
aren't
friends. I take it as a lack of respect and common courtesy. Right now, Mr. Markham, and I'm sure you know it, you're sitting on the big
one."
"Right now it's all ends, frayed and not tying. I don't know what I'm
sitting on."
"OK, OK. The target, Hughes/ Perry
"We've call-signed him as Juliet Seven."
"OK, Juliet Seven. Is he still refusing relocation?"
"Yes."
"What have you done for him?"
132
"We have given him specialist police protection.~ "They got howitzers?"
"They would have machine pistols and handguns."
"How many?"
Markham said, dispirited, "There are two, each doing a twelve-hour shift."
"Fuck."
"It's a matter of resources."
"Are you listening, Mr. Markham? This is the big one. I know him as
the Anvil. I don't have another name for him. I don't have his face.
He was in Alamut. Did you read, like I told you to, about Alamut?
Of
course you didn't. Donkeys don't have time to read, donkeys just
get
the shit piled on them. The Anvil was in Alamut - I hate that name, it's crass and comic-book, but it's the name that's whispered in the souk, in the mosque and in the theological colleges throughout Saudi Arabia, so it's real enough for me. The Anvil goes to Alamut, each time, before he travels for the hit. I know so little of him, but he's
t, and he's dedicated.
the bes
That he goes to Alamut is important
because it is the small window I have into his mentality. Please, Mr.
Markham, when I'm talking to you don't look at your wristwatch. And travelling and his target is your Juliet Seven.
now he is
ou rush away to whatever is important, take time out for
"Before y
a
little history. Alamut is a few kilometres north-west of Quasvin
where
there is a terrorist training camp run by the Iranian Revolutionary ps. At Alamut, nine hundred years ago, Hasan-i-Sabah
Guards Cor
founded
the sect of Assassins. The modern word is from the same root core as
"hashish" Western scholars believed the killers were drugged or they have gone forward against guarded and near impossible
would not
targets. I doubt they were drugged, they just weren't scared. For 133
two
ed years the Assassins, the living cult of political murder,
hundr
created terror from
Syria down through Lebanon and Palestine and into old Persia because fear of death, and worshipped the notion of martyrdom.
they had no
He
re, to what is now a few stones on a mountainside,
goes the
unrecognizable as a fortress, to gain the courage that will push him forward.
etty damn easy to guard against a killer who's looking
Pr
to
ep the skin intact on his back but pretty hard, Mr.
ke
Markham, to
block the killer who has no concern for his own survival and he's
your Juliet Seven.
coming after
Maybe you don't believe me, maybe
you
Alamut case histories to crank up my credibility..."
need the
himself for saying it, but said it anyway.
Markham hated
nk I'm being rude, Mr.
"Don't thi
Littelbaum, but I really do have
to
go."
ed at finding cover.
He was skill
he skill that had dictated his survival in the flood plains
It was t
around the Faw peninsula and the water channels between the reeds
of
ands, and in the mountains of Afghanistan,
the Haur-al-Hawizeh marshl
d in the desert wilderness of the Empty Quarter, and in the forest an
near to the village in southern Austria. He could find cover and
use
it.
At the edge of a small group of trees was dense, thorned scrub. He had
gone so quietly into the trees that he had not disturbed the roosting and then crawled on his stomach into the depth of the
pheasants,
scrub.
A rat had passed within three metres of him and not seen him. If
a
farmer came into the field he would find no trace of him. The rain ed
dripp
rhythmically down on him from the thorn branches of the scrub.
Beside him was the sausage bag. In it was what he had thought he
could
carry across country and still retain the speed of movement.
134
The cover was well chosen. He had a clear view across a hundred
metres
of grassland field to an open gateway, and through the gateway to
the
signpost at the crossroads. He waited. His stomach rumbled with
hunger, but a few hours without food did not concern him: food was for
sustenance, not for enjoyment. He waited.
He had seen a police car come down the road with a blue light flashing in the dawn, then an ambulance. His driver's pulse had been faint, the
breathing erratic and gasping, the head wound bleeding. It had not been necessary to finish the man's life. He would not regain
consciousness, would be dead by the end of the day. He had thought the
man foolish, and had then corrected himself, because the man had
achieved the state of martyrdom in the service of the Faith. He
should
not think badly of him. The ambulance had come back through the
crossroads with the bell going and the light brilliant against the dark
rain clouds Later he had seen a towing truck pull away the wrecked car.
There were only bruises and small scratches on his own body and he took
that as a sign. His life was in God's hands. His work was God's
work.
God watched for him. There had been setbacks before, however
thorough
the planning, and he had overcome them. He would do so again.
He had waited three hours and fifty-one minutes when the car finally came.
It was small
a
car, old. He could not see the driver at that distance.
It drove past the signpost and disappeared behind the hedgerow, then reversed back into his vision. The car stopped in the field gate.
The
brake-lights flashed twice.
He breathed hard. There were times in the life of Vahid Hossein when his safety, his life and his freedom rested in his own hands only, and
135
d's.
Go
There were times, also, when he must give his trust to the
intelligence officers who controlled him.
It had been written, "Once you engage in battle it is inexcusable to
or hesitation."
display sloth
He crawled from the thorn scrub.
"Take no precautions for your own life."
heasants clattered in flight
He hurried through the trees and the p
ove him.
ab
t is destined to sleep in the grave will never again sleep
"He tha
at
me."
ho
g the hedgerow towards the gate. He reached the small
He ran alon
car.
pen the door and heaved the weight of the bag into the back.
He flung o
The engine was turning. He dived for the seat, slammed the door shut, and the car jerked forward. He swivelled in his seat.
He sat beside a woman.
He sat beside a woman with the skin of her face exposed, and her
d the skin of her thighs above her knees and below her
forearms, an
tight skirt.
He sat beside a woman whose body was scented with soap and lotion.
e said, "It's what they told me to do.
Sh
They told me I should give
up
clothing of decency. I'm sorry to offend you."
the
on the pavement and looked around him. There were no
He stood
concrete
posts outside the building to prevent a car bomb being left under
the
facade. The building was glass-fronted, not heavy stone, with
small,
windows.
laminated
inside and a pleasant young woman directed him to the lift.
He went
She
136
guards beside her and there would not have been hidden guns
had no
within reach under her desk.
He came out of the lift and pushed through an unlocked door. There was
no requirement for a personal security card.
Geoff Markham wanted.
It was what
fter the ambulance had gone, and after the recovery vehicle
Long a
had
k, the two traffic policemen worked with their
towed away the wrec
cameras and tape measures. From what they'd seen it would go to the court and an inquest, and there were a hell of a number
coroner's
of
questions to be answered a young black paying cash for the hire of a
13MW 5-series and not being able to handle it, writing it off and
himself and the technical investigation looked to be the best last chance of finding the answers.
traffic policemen stopped work for a sandwich lunch.
The two
One,
after he'd eaten, the elder one, complained of his bladder and slipped through a hedge hole.
He didn't notice the canvas sack, rammed down into the base of the hedge, until he'd finished and was shaking himself. He would not
have
seen it if he hadn't been standing almost on top of it. He bent and open.
pulled it
ffic policeman shouted to his colleague to come, and bloody
The tra
fast, and showed him a black rubber wet suit, a pair of trainer shoes, quashed sales dockets, before pointing down into the bag
and some s
at
grenades.
the hand
ove well, confidently.
She dr
She was not intimidated by the heavy
lorries. His own wife, Barzin, did not drive. He admired the way she
drove, but he was ashamed that each time she punched her foot on the brake or the accelerator he could not keep his eyes from the smooth whitened skin of her thighs. She would have seen him flinch and
flush.
"They called me when I was asleep, told me it was urgent. I just 137
took
the first clothes that came to hand I didn't find any stockings. I t's what you'd call bad he jab yes?"
suppose i
a mullah, he had heard, who had stayed inside his house
There was
for
thirty years, never gone outside his house, never dared to, for fear that he would see a woman improperly dressed, bad he jab and be
corrupted... She kept in the slow lane of the wide motorway skirting London. Never in his life had he been driven by a woman. The diesel fumes of the lorries came and went, but constant in the car was the soft scent of soap and lotion.
She saw the twitch of his nostrils.
out last night with some girls from work. One of them's
"I went
getting married next weekend. We went out for some drinks
I
no, don't
drink alcohol, but I can't tell them it's for my belief. I have to tell a little lie, I say I don't drink for a medical condition. They've told me to be like everyone else, and that way I can better serve