Read A Line in the Sand Online
Authors: Gerald Seymour
might be a week, before his patient could be interrogated.
He walked on down the empty corridors. The Branch men were with him, 166
said they were looking for a coffee machine. His footfall stamped to
the stairs.
There was a fight in Casualty reception. A drunk with blood
streaming
from a forehead wound swung a fist at the security people. He didn't care and threaded his way past them.
He went to the parking area and his car.
He wished he smoked. He wished he had a hip flask. He wished he
was
warm and wet-sweaty with Vicky. He wished he worked for a fucking bank.
He sat in the car.
The wail of a siren approached, and he watched the staff gather at the
door to meet it, the flurry as the stretcher was hurried inside. He waited. He was cold, tired. He had seen how the bastard had watched them, listened to them, fooled them, and the first day of the week was
ten minutes off its end. And he couldn't imagine why Littelbaum had found it important to stay behind.
He was slumped in self-pity, and wondered whether the bank would turn him down by letter or by telephone. Damn sure they wouldn't accept him.
God, or
He wouldn't tell Vicky what he'd said, about playing
tell
her how her buzz phrases had been sneered at... The American eased the
car door open and lowered himself into the seat.
"First, thanks for being so on the ball and giving me space. You did
well. God, what depressing places hospitals are... You see, Mr.
Markham, it's all about Alamut.. . the sort of places we'll all end in, not able to do a lot about it... Alamut is the key... Markham
began
to drive away, and had to swerve out of the path of another
ambulance.
"I'd need convincing I did anything well. Right, Mr. Littelbaurn, tell me why Alamut is relevant."
167
e had known Alamut, been there, then he wouldn't have talked
"If h
to
me."
Markham gasped, then laughed out loud.
"Why, Mr. Littelbaum, did he talk to you?"
"The policemen were very co-operative, heard what you said, about blood
and murder. One needed to piss so the other took his place in the or."
corrid
"Why?"
e talked to me because I poked the tip of my pen into the
"I fancy h
middle of the three femur fractures."
"Didn't he scream?"
"He probably did, but I had my handkerchief and my fist over his mouth.
d to talk more than he wanted the poke of my pen if he'd been
He wante
to Alamut then he wouldn't have cared about the pain."
"What did he say?"
ad.
Markham drove recklessly fast on the open ro
"Heh, Mr. Markham, would you slow down, please? I don't want to be
going back to that place on my back ease it off, please. He said
the
guy came off a boat, and I told him we knew that. I hadn't a name, and
is
neither had he. I hadn't a face, but he had. The face
interesting,
oured, it's what I imagine to be the edge of Caucasian,
it's pale-col
and there's no facial hair. English, English accent, not American.
Tall but not exceptional, hair not black matt, didn't get the eyes...
d be late thirties.
Age woul
He crashed the car because the guy sort
of
frightened him."
"Weapons?"
168
"He started to tell me I think he was trying to talk about a launcher.
Yes, he wanted to tell me the lot, I had the pen right in front of his
he didn't.
face, but
I think he wanted to tell me, but he fainted."
"Associates?"
"The faint wasn't acted. He got another poke, but he was gone cold, like Smoky Joe had hit him and the law came back from its piss."
"So what do we have, Mr. Littelbaum?"
"Enough to think on. May I, first, educate you on Alamut? With education, you get to understand the Anvil, what he'll do, the sense of
the danger he poses, the dedication to his orders. In
sacrifice,
the
year 1152, Mr. Markham, two of the fida'is were sent from Alamut
to
d the Second of Tripoli, that's the port city in
kill Raymon
present-day
rthern Lebanon. Raymond the Second was the Christian crusader
no
king.
hose the most public place in his city to kill him, where he
They c
would be surrounded by the maximum security. The place they chose was
the main gate of the city. Imagine it, crowds, traders, travellers, s, the greatest audience in front of which to demonstrate their
guard
power and their commitment. They stabbed
mond
Ray
the Second to death
the gate of his own city,
at
and they would have known that within
moments they would be chopped into small pieces by his guards.
That's
hat's what you're up against."
Alamut for you, Mr. Markham, t
attern of his breathing.
He pretended to sleep and made a p
and his buttocks.
Her breasts and stomach were against his back
They
re naked in the bed, but for comfort's sake not for loving.
we
Sometimes
he heard the engine of the car parked beside the house, as if Blake boosted the heater. Sometimes he heard a car coming slowly by and stopping; then there were quiet voices and chuckled laughter.
Sometimes
the empty whistling of the wind, and the distant ripple
there was
surge
of the sea on the beach.
169
If he pretended to sleep and his breathing was regular then he hoped it
would be easier for her to sleep.
He lay on his side with her warmth against him and he played the
television's quiz game in his mind. The grinning show host asked
the
questions, and bright-eyed Frankie answered them.
Where was Iran?
"Iran, with a territory of 1.68 million square kilometres and a population estimated in excess of sixty million, is at a pivotal
geopolitical position between the Middle East and the Asian
subcontinent where it cannot be ignored and is unlikely to be
humoured."
What was the government of Iran?
"Iran is ruled by Islamic clerics categorized as fundamentalist and conservative in the extreme, but the government has loose
relationships
rganizations of the Revolutionary Guard Corps and the
with the o
autonomous private armies of clerics boasting vengeful actions
against
Western cultures."
What was WMD?
"Weapons of Mass Destruction, chemical and microbiological and nuclear,
are all the subject of urgent research programmes in Iran."
ixing machines?
What was the requirement for m
"The manufacture of the chemical air droplets to be included in the warhead, and for the lining material of the interior of the missile equire dual-purpose
body that must withstand extreme temperature, r
mixing machines sold on fraudulently prepared export dockets."
What was the fate of a spy in Iran? What did they do with a spy in Iran?
"A spy in Iran is either hanged in secret on the gallows at the Evin gaol, or hanged in public from a crane in a Tehran square and hoisted 170
so high that the crowd can better see his death dance."
A final question. Had to answer correctly to win the holiday for
two
in Barbados and the new fitted kitchen, the food liquidizer and the creen television. He squirmed in the bed.
wide s
were the consequences in Iran of the spy's report on a military
What
factory at Bandar Abbas?
er told, don't want to know, better
"Don't know, can't answer, was nev
t knowing."
no
ck, to the darkness of the
To bla
room, and no prizes to carry away.
point on the shadowed wall, stared at it.
He took a
She was asleep.
If
slept he would dream of the crane.
he
She didn't know of the crane,
and she slept. There was a small gale of laughter, from the side
of
the house, and a car drove away. He was drifting... He had always cied Emma Carstairs, and always thought she rather fancied
rather fan
him.. . drifting, but not sleeping. If he thought of Emma
airs,
Carst
d her wriggling her hips to work off her knickers,
her bold smile an
her
hands taking his to the buttons of her blouse, then he wouldn't sleep, e didn't sleep then he wouldn't see the crane. He stared
and if h
at
wall.
the bare
Eight.
In the last minutes of the night he moved like a wraith.
off Fen Hill and kept inside the tree-line, skirting the end
He came
of
land.
the marsh
The high winter tides, blown by storms, and the heavy
winter rainfall, had made the ground he covered into a swampy bog.
The
water was always above his ankles and sometimes above his knees but he
left no visible track of his advance, and he was hidden by the
e.
tree-lin
He left behind him the carefully concealed sausage bag
and
the weapons because, at this time, he had no need of them.
171
When he came to a small stream feeding the marsh it was necessary
for
ng at his boots and
him to wade up to his waist, the sediment clawi
s
hi
legs. The higher ground of Hoist Covert, the name he had read from his
map, was ahead of him, and the faint outline of the church tower loomed it.
beyond
He moved fast. Once he was out of the bog land and the marsh, he
did
not stop to unfasten the laces of his boots and empty out the stale er and the mud.
dark wat
It was all familiar to him. He crossed the
ground as if he were again in the Haur-al-Hawizeh reeds. It gave
him
d. He did not move as a trained
comfort to be on familiar groun
ldier
so
manuals, but used instead the
would, working from instructions and
nate skills of a predator.
in
He did not have to consider the dangers
of silhouette, of breaking cover, of leaving a scented track behind him. It was natural to Vahid Hossein that he should go as a stalking searching for a prey.
animal
ad kept a steady pace and broke it only once when he had seen
He h
a
n come with binoculars and sit on a bench between Hoist
single ma
Covert
that led back to the church.
and a path
He stopped then and checked
the ground ahead of, behind, and to the side of the man and watched the
traverse of his binoculars. He was only twenty metres from the man ssed him, in scrub cover.
when he pa
He assumed that the man had come
to the bench to watch for birds from the viewpoint that overlooked the
marshes; it was a point squirrel led in his mind for future
n.
attentio
He moved on past high fences and garden hedges and a sign marking
a
narrow worn path towards the village.
He climbed a fence and used garden shrubs to mask his movement He crawled on his stomach through a gap in a hedge, lifted a length of chicken wire to go under it, and replaced it. Twice he was within five
172
metres of a house and could hear voices inside, but he kept from the arc of light thrown from the windows. Once he stopped and retraced his
steps because a back door opened and a dog, bouncing and barking,
was
put out to run on a patch of grass. He needed to know where the dogs were: they were a greater enemy than the people.
The houses he went by were of old brick. Some were the homes of
artisans, with wilderness gardens stacked with rubbish bags and
discarded kids' bicycles, as they would have been in south Tehran.
Some
were the homes of the affluent, with little tended squares of lawn, heaps of raked leaves and the smell of dead bonfires, as there would around the villas on the slopes above Jamaran where the
have been
tagt-ut-tee lived, the idol-worshippers who only pretended to re sped chings of the Imam.
the tea
It was for reconnaissance. It was to find the way in and know the way
out.
heard the noise of cars ahead, slowing and changing down through
He
their gears. He was beside a fence and hidden by ornamental bushes th. It was well timed .. . He had arrived at his
from a small pa
light enough for him to see ahead, and dark
vantage-place when it was
enough to preserve his cover. It was the few minutes of the point between night and day. He could not yet see the vehicles because
were blocking his view. He lay very still. A woman in a
bushes
night-robe came out of her door and he heard the clink of the bottles arried.
she c
The light above her door flooded the path as she went
to
e.
the gat
The empty bottles rattled onto the concrete and she went
back inside, slamming the door behind her. He saw the lights of cars ross the houses ahead of him, and illuminating the open
rolling ac
ground.
He crawled on. The photographs of the house and the target man were o his memory.