Read A Line in the Sand Online
Authors: Gerald Seymour
he table as he unlocked the window.
round t
He crawled out through
it,
the one fast step across the narrow concrete path, climbed Jerry
took
and Mary Wroughton's fence and dropped into their garden. He had
433
to be
alone.
Chapter Nineteen.
He'd hoped, on the way out from London, that there wouldn't be
ything
an
sentimental. Littelbaum climbed out of her car and hoisted his bag the rear seat.
from
Gruffly, he wished her well. She told him it
was
a drop-down zone, asked him to check that he'd his ticket, and
only
said that she couldn't stop. Cathy Parker didn't offer her cheek
to
him, or her hand. He watched her drive away and she didn't wave or look back.
the time he was inside the turmoil of the terminal,
By
she
ar from his thoughts.
was f
y for the flight back to
He was earl
Riyadh and he would have a decent
time to search among the air side shops for chocolates for Mary-Ellen and something, maybe a scarf, to post to his wife. He always took chocolates back to Mary-Ellen, and Esther had a drawer filled with the
tokens he'd sent her.
He queued at the check-in.
"Morning, Duane."
He turned. Alfonso Dominguez took the chore of administration work at
s in the London embassy.
the Bureau's office
"Hi, Fonsie, didn't think you'd make it."
"Apologies for not being able to drive you down here, but the good e gotten you an upgrade.
news, I'v
It's the least you deserve. Have
you been in con tad the last hour?"
"No, wasn't able to thanks for swinging the upgrade."
The embassy man shouldered forward to lift the bag on to the scales and
was smarming the girl at the ticket desk. He liked to think he had a
on as a fixer, and eased the formalities.
reputati
His arm was round
434
Littelbaum's shoulder as they walked together across the concourse, and
his voice had the hushed whisper of confidentiality.
hear you done really well, Duane, that's why I bust my gut to get
"I
ews? I just got
you the upgrade. You're not up to speed on the n
.
it
State Department's lining up, trumpets and drums, the briefings.
thing'll come out of Washington. It's gonna be our show.
Every
There's
eing cleared.
decks b
I reckon you'll have a personal call from the
rector tonight, that's what Mary was saying, could even be a call
di
It's our shout, and we're going to milk it."
from the secretary.
"Do the Brits know?" Littelbaum grinned.
"They'll be told, when they need to be."
ally, than I thought."
"I did well better, actu
"You're too modest, Duane."
He enjoyed the admiration.
"Good of you to say that, Fonsie. I said at the start it would take a
week, and this is the seventh day, and it's pretty much all wrapped n as the State Department get the word he's in chains or
up.~ "Soo
a
body bag it'll be the big blast, coast to coast, round the world,
live
TV..."
Littelbaum said gently, "I've been working for this for so long.
What
I've finally achieved, Fonsie, what nobody else has achieved to the ee, is the fracturing of the code of deniability.
same degr
Tehran's
deniability is crucial in their operations, and it's broken. It's been
the screen they've hidden behind and we're taking the screen down."
"And going public."
"And hold on to your seat, Fonsie, hold on tight, because the ssions
repercu
can be ferocious. What I'm saying, we have the mullahs
435
by the balls."
"Too right, Duane."
it's resolutions and sanctions
"Whether the Tomahawks fly, whether
at
the Security Council backed by teeth, it's going to be a hell of a rough
de
ri
but we've the evidence of state-sponsored terrorism, we've
ve
gotten the smoking gun. But you know what? The massi
repercussions
ng of deniability have turned on events in some shitty
of the breaki
ie, you wouldn't believe that place.
backwater Fons
It's been played
t among folk with clay on their feet, Nowheresville."
ou
think I have your meaning, Duane.
"I
Shame about the casualties...
"Irrelevant, you got to look at the big picture. You don't have ies, you don't win.
casualt
I kicked the Brits in the right direction
-what surprised me, they bought the crap I gave them, ate it out of my
hand. What I say, for what was at stake, the casualties came cheap."
"You'll be top of the pile, Duane."
"I think I will be do we have time for a drink?"
The slick in the water lapping against him was an ochre mix from the mud he disturbed and the blood he dripped.
Vahid Hossein had gone to the limit of his strength to reach his
hiding-place. A filthy handkerchief from his pocket had been used as a
field dressing to staunch the wound when he had left her.
After the woman had screamed and her dogs had snarled, when the beam of
her torch had found him then bounced away as she had fled, he had
pushed himself up from her body. He had not realized he had bled
on
her until the torch showed him the blood.
He had gone away into the
night and pressed the handkerchief into the wound but it had pumped blood on
to his vest, his shirt, his sweater and his camouflage tunic.
He had known that he must absorb it, not permit it to fall on the
ground he crossed, because there would be a trail for dogs to follow.
In the darkness, he had gone though the pig-fields, skirted between their half-moon huts, smelt the disgusting odour of the creatures.
of water
Guiding him was the call of the sea-birds and the soft motion
436
ead.
ah
It was as he reached the water, went down into it, that the
numbness of the 4 wound gave way to the pain in his chest, and with the
pain came the exhaustion.
There had once been a track leading through the heart of the marsh, an
old pathway long since flooded. Under the pathway, in dense reeds, a
culvert drain had been built of brick. Lying on his side, Vahid
n kept the wound above the level of the water.
Hossei
e pain came in rivers now. If the marshes had been at the Faw
Th
gues,
peninsula or on the Jasmin Canal, if he had been with collea
th
wi
friends, the pain would have been lessened by morphine injections.
lleagues, he was far from the Faw and the Jasmin,
There were no co
there
morphine. The pain sucked the strength from his body.
was no
consciousness, he would sink lower in the drain's water
If he lost
and
hed into his pocket for the muddied, soaked
drown. He reac
photograph,
in his hand and gazed at the small, distorted face of his
held it
target.
The sun shone on the water at the entrance of the drain, dappling
among
the reed stems. If he drifted to sleep, if he sank into
unconsciousness, he would drown; if he drowned he would never look into
the face. But, sleep unconsciousness would kill the pain. The
bullet
had been from a handgun. One low-velocity bullet, fired at the
extreme
ge was still, misshapen and splintered, somewhere inside the
of ran
cavity of his chest. The entry wound was low under his armpit and he
had not found an exit wound. The bullet had struck the bones of his d been diverted deeper into the chest space.
ribcage an
He coughed. He could not help himself. It came from far down in
his
lungs. He writhed in the confines of the drain. He needed space, air,
437
and couldn't find it. He held his sleeve against his mouth to muffle the sound of his cough and he crawled towards the segment of bright light at the mouth of the drain. He saw the blood on his sleeve and it
eddied from the coarse, soaked material into the flow of the water.
Vahid Hossein did not know how he would survive through the sunlit hours. He prayed for the darkness and prayed to his God for strength.
arkness, with strength, he would go for the last time to the
With d
and over the
house. The blood and the mucus ran from his hand
otograph he clutched, and into the water... They would be waiting
ph
to
hear of him, and learn of what he had achieved. He thought of Barzin, and her body in darkness, the awkwardness with which she held him, d
an
he wondered if she would weep.
f the brigadier with the
He thought o
ar-hug arms, and the laughter that was between them, the trust,
be
and
the tears would come to the cheeks of his friend.
he wondered if
He
thought of Hasan-iSabah and the young men who had gone down on the narrow,
ath from the fortress at Alamut and who would never
steep rock p
return.
thought of them and they all, each of them, succoured his
He
strength.
dead, was never on his mind.
The image of the young woman, living or
e was past.
Sh
The sun was on his face. Protected from sight by the
waving reed-banks, he eased his head, and the shoulder above the
,
wound
out into the light. He was so tired. He wanted so desperately to It was not an option. He recognized the delirium that
sleep.
snatched
ncentration, but could not resist the call for him to show
at his co
strength and courage. They were all around him, the people he knew in
his heart and in his mind. He heard their words, and they cried to him
from close by. He reached above the drain, his fingers groping in soft
mud against the reed-stems, for the launcher. The voices, near to him
and shrill, told him he must hold the launcher through the sunlight hours, and never sleep, hold it until night came... It was blurred, small.
438
ried out above him and flew its search over him.
The bird c
The pain
was back, the dream was over. He saw the bird searching for him and s cry in the silence.
heard it
It was the same silence he had felt
before, when he had believed a man watched for him. He struggled
to
get back into the recess of the mouth of the drain, but he did not have
the strength, and his fear was the same as hers had been when she
was
under him and choked and scratched at his face. The bird hunted him.
Chalmers saw the bird dive.
The man, Markham, slept beside him, lying on his back with the sun m, sheltered from the wind, and the dogs were close to him.
bathing hi
Andy Chalmers had heard the bird call and it had not been answered.
He
saw it tuck its wings against its body and plummet, a stone in freef all, bright light shimmering on its wings.
He watched it, for the briefest moment, pull out from its dive and to cushion the impact of the fall. He heard its
spread its wings
cry.
few seconds, it hovered over the reeds, then dropped. As a
For a
marker, he took an old, withered tree that rose bove
a
the flood marsh,
ad
de
branches with a crow perched on it. The bird came up, sky danced
over the reeds, then dropped again. A faraway tree draped in ivy, alone among the willow saplings on the distant extreme of
which was
the
rsh, was his second point. His mind made the line between the
ma
ee. The bird stayed down, and he knew
perched crow and the ivy tr
s
it
search was over.
Chalmers leaned across he
t
sleeping man, ruffled the hair of his dogs'
cks, murmured his order to them, and slipped into the water.
ne
He
moved away from the shore-line, where Markham slept and the dogs
ithout sound.
watched, w
He had the line to guide him. He half swam,
as icy against his body he was
half walked and although the water w
t
no
nger, no
aware of it. He kept the line in his mind. He felt no a
ssion, no hatred. The shore was behind him, hidden from him by
pa
the
banks. He went quietly, slowly, along the line his mind had
reed-
made.
439
Cathy Parker said to Fenton and Cox, "He's complacent and conceited.
It's not what he said but it's his body language. Littelbaum thinks he's walked all over us like we're the hired help."
Twice he had flapped his arm at the bird, the second time more feebly than the first. He could not drive the bird away from him. If Vahid Hossein could have reached it, the bird he loved, he would have caught it, held it while it clawed his hand and gouged at his wrist, and
he
would have throttled the life out of it, but he could not. When his hand came close, the bird fluttered further away, eyeing him, and