Authors: Geoffrey Archer
Shenassi fell silent as if fear had petrified him. But it wasn't fear of the UN, Burgess realised suddenly. What Shenassi was scared of were the two officials from his
own country's security service whose faces had darkened alarmingly.
Abruptly, Mustafa ordered a stop to the filming by his own cameraman and they hustled the doctor outside.
âNow hold it there,' Burgess protested vainly, trying to follow.
Mustafa pushed him back with the flat of his hand, his dark eyes angry and confused.
âNow look, I got questions to ask this guy,' Burgess snapped. âYou got no right to take him away.'
Shenassi was being hustled over to Mustafa's Landcruiser. He put a hand up to his mouth as if holding back vomit.
âSoon,' Mustafa told Burgess tensely. âSoon maybe you can talk with him. Wait here please.'
As Mustafa hurried away, Hardcastle came bustling over from the UN vehicles.
âNobbled him, have they?' the Englishman panted. âNot bloody surprised. We've cracked it Dean! Bloody cracked it! One of those papers he was carrying â you won't believe it. A complete list of what they would need to produce ten kilos of anthrax!'
âMy God!'
âIt's all there. Growth medium, nutrient, pharmaceutical grade distilled water, sodium hypochlorite for cleaning up afterwards.'
âAll that was written down?' Burgess asked incredulously. âThe guy's crazy.'
âNo. Not crazy. Just a meticulous scientist who can't break a lifetime's habit of making records of his work. And the sooner we talk to him the better.'
They turned towards the Iraqi Landcruiser.
âJesus!' Hardcastle exploded. âWhat are they doing to the bugger?'
Dr Shenassi lay slumped across the hood of the vehicle
as if he'd been beaten senseless. The two minders were trying to lift him to his feet but he buckled in their arms.
âThey've hit him, the bastards,' hissed Hardcastle. âCome on!'
They strode across the tarmac.
âOr maybe he was so shit scared he had a heart attack,' Burgess croaked.
Mustafa saw their approach.
âNo!' he yelled, holding up a hand.
The two Iraqis lowered Dr Shenassi to the ground and crouched beside him.
âHe's having convulsions,' Hardcastle whispered. âBloody hell! Do we have a medic on the team?'
They quickly thought through the list of those with them.
âNo we don't,' said Burgess, sadly. âMartha would be the one but she's back at the monitoring centre.'
Mustafa stood up and hurled himself inside the Landcruiser to get on the radio. He began shouting in Arabic. Shenassi was lying absolutely still now. The second minder who'd been crouched beside him stood up, hands on hips as if totally perplexed by the situation.
âThis looks bad,' Burgess warned. âReal bad.'
âDo you think they could be pretending?' suggested Hardcastle. âWouldn't put it past them. They'll try any trick when they're cornered.'
âDoesn't look to me like they're faking it,' murmured Burgess, âbut maybe we ought to take a closer look.'
As they moved in, the security man standing over Shenassi swung round, his face puffy with shock and anger.
âLet me see him,' Hardcastle said forcefully, crouching down and grabbing Shenassi's wrist. âI've had medical training.'
A first-aid course twenty years ago. He felt for a pulse and couldn't find one, but he was out of practice.
âHe's turning blue for God's sake,' Hardcastle exclaimed. âIs somebody calling an ambulance?'
Shenassi was breathing, but feebly and erratically.
âWhat happened exactly?' Burgess asked the security minder.
âHe sick,' the Iraqi answered stonily.
âYeah I can see that. But pretty sudden, huh?'
âYes. He just go sick.'
Hardcastle turned his face up towards them. âIt
could
be a heart attack, you know.' He'd flattened his fingers against Shenassi's neck and found the carotid artery. âPulse is all over the place.' He stood up again. There was nothing he could do.
âDoctor coming,' the minder explained, pointing towards Mustafa shouting into the radio in the Landcruiser.
Burgess dropped to his knees and bent his head over Shenassi's face, realising the statistical chances of this being heart failure were remote in the extreme.
âDoctor Shenassi? Can you hear me?'
The man's eyes were open, but staring blindly into the air. He gave no sign of responding.
âWhat happened, Doctor Shenassi, can you tell us? Do you have a chest pain?'
Again, no response.
Suddenly Burgess sniffed, frowned and pulled back sharply. He stood up and pulled Hardcastle to one side.
âThat's definitely no heart attack,' he whispered when they'd got beyond earshot.
âWhat then?'
âHydrocyanic acid. Cyanide.'
âWhat?'
âMust have had a capsule of the stuff in his pocket and bitten into it a few minutes ago. Inhaled the vapours. The smell on his breath â bitter almonds. Unmistakable.'
âFunny. I didn't smell anything at all.'
âOnly thirty per cent of people can. The ability to smell it is hereditary and I happen to have it.'
Hardcastle blanched. âHe took poison? Because of us? Because we caught him out?'
âLooks that way.'
âHow appalling.'
They looked back at the scene by the Landcruiser. Mustafa was now out of the vehicle, standing beside the driver's door, hands on hips, glaring down at the motionless body of the scientist, his face flushed and baffled. He was totally perplexed, Burgess realised suddenly. Totally and utterly. Mustafa hadn't the slightest idea what Shenassi had been up to here at the Haji factory. Just like the day before in the desert, when the discovery of the human corpse had come as a complete shock to him. The multi-layered Iraqi state security system with Saddam at its top seemed for some reason to be out of the loop.
âNo,' Burgess announced suddenly.
âWhat d'you mean,
no
?'
âIt wasn't because of
us
he took the cyanide.'
Hardcastle's face puckered with puzzlement.
âIt was because of
them
,' Burgess explained, indicating the security men.
âScared what Saddam would do to him for letting the cat out of the bag, you mean?'
âNo. Not even that,' Burgess insisted. âNo, Andrew. What Doctor Shenassi was doing here â my guess is that President Saddam Hussein knew nothing about it. Nothing about it whatsoever.'
âImpossible,' snapped Hardcastle. âYou simply don't know this place, Dean.'
THE BONDED WAREHOUSE
on the outskirts of Limassol hummed with activity. Three large container ships were due into the port that day and the yard had cargoes to be delivered to each of them. Most of the containers in question, both twenty feet and forty feet in length, were piled up in the open. Huge forklifts trundled between the stacks, shifting and shuffling boxes to get at the ones they wanted, then dumping them onto the flatbed trailer trucks which sped out of the yard, belching black exhaust on their way to the port just five minutes away.
Inside the warehouse â used by customers who requested extra security for their transiting consignments â the floor space to one side that had been left empty except for two solitary containers placed side by side was now occupied by just one. The container from Israel with a destination to the west had already been moved from its space earlier that morning, transported to the docks for loading onto a ship sailing for Algeciras at midday. The administrative documents accompanying it said the box contained printing machines.
The container from Ilychevsk in Ukraine, which had arrived here yesterday afternoon via Piraeus and was bound for Haifa, sat waiting for the ship that would take
it on the final part of its journey. The seal on its door clasps marked with the identifying numbers provided by Odessa customs was firmly in place. Anyone reading the paperwork describing its contents as rotting fruit and vegetable juices might have been forgiven for treating it with the respect due to a smoking bomb.
The twenty-two workers at the bonded yard were all Greek-Cypriots. To them this was just another day of not too strenuous work under a pleasantly warm late summer sun. None of them was aware of the frenetic activity that had gone on inside the warehouse during the night while they'd been in their beds, work of great technical skill that had been completed just minutes before their arrival for work this morning, work carried out by a gang of men speaking a different language from their own.
None was aware of that, nor of how pivotal their place of employment was to be in the fulfilment of a plot that was gradually coming together, a plot to commit mass murder.
POINT ROBERT, THE
north-east corner of Sark, was on their starboard beam about a mile distant. As planned, the current had swept
Backgammon
's sleek white hull through the Alderney Race at an exhilarating lick. They'd be at the anchorage for lunch.
Sam wore shorts to let the sun and salt air dry the scabs on his legs. The pleasures of the day had flaked away the stresses of the past weeks like dry onion skins.
Nat was proving perfectly adequate at the tasks of a crew. The white-knuckle ride of the race had even brought a smile to his lips. He'd managed the helm while Sam moved forward to take in a reef when the wind got up a mile south of Alderney.
âBeer, skipper?'
Nat emerged at the head of the companionway steps clutching two cans.
âAbout bloody time,' Sam grinned, reaching for one of them.
He ripped it open and drank a good draught. Then he gave a routine glance all round the horizon to check no other boats were close to them. He felt a pang of guilt suddenly. The foam-flecked sea, the clear azure sky â this was
too
perfect. He felt he hadn't earned it yet. Still that
feeling of unfinished business to attend to and he was neglecting it.
Nat leaned back against the side of the cockpit, watching a couple of small fishing boats work the submerged rocks to their left.
âThat's what I should have been,' he murmured. âA bloody fisherman.'
âHard life,' Sam cautioned.
âNever! Not those fellers. Deep-sea trawlermen yes, but those little boats just pop out when they feel like it. Bloody sight easier than playing God with people's lives like I did.'
âWhat d'you mean?' Sam frowned, wondering if there was a side to Gibbon he didn't know about.
âIt's what a writer does, chum. Creates people then destroys them. I've fathered more human beings than Atatürk.'
Sam smiled. It was a harmless conceit. He knew so little about this man, but that was the way he wanted it to be.
He was beginning to feel hungry. He'd bought a bag of supplies before leaving home yesterday. Bread, cheese and tomatoes. The high cliffs of Sark were drawing closer. They'd be in the bay before long and could drop anchor. He noticed suddenly that Gibbon was scrutinising him.
âYou certainly know your way around on a boat,' Nat conceded grudgingly. âSailed all your life have you?'
A flock of gannets swooped across their bows and dived, profiting from the fishermen's work.
âI was brought up in Portsmouth. My dad was in submarines. They had dinghies at the base at Gosport. When he came home from a patrol he would always take me out. He loved to sail. I think it was being cooped up in metal tubes for so long.'
âStill alive, is he?'
âNo. Died when I was eleven.'
Gibbon puffed out through pursed lips. âNever know how long you're going to get, do you?'
âNo.'
And for Sam, death had come frighteningly close in recent days.
âBut you went on sailing. After?'
âYes. His mates in the Navy, you know â others with kids â they sort of took me on. Because they knew I was keen. And I think they felt sorry for me being stuck at home with a mother who never went out.'
He stopped himself there. He'd revealed enough. Didn't want to encourage more questions.
A short while later they rounded the headland that provided shelter from the northerlies for the cove known as Terrible Bay.
âI think we'll have that jib furled,' Sam announced.
âRight-ho, cap'n.'
Gibbon eased off the sheet and pulled on the furling line while Sam started the engine, tightened the topping lift and turned into wind.
âHappy to gather in the mainsail?' he asked.
âNo probs.'
âSail ties are in the rack behind the chart table.'
Nat slid below to get them, then clambered onto the coach-roof to release the halyard. The sail slid smoothly down the mast and Gibbon gathered it in like an old hand.
âCan you handle the anchor?' Sam shouted when the sail was secure. It was heavy and awkward.
âSo long as you tell me when to drop it.'
He conned the boat round a second headland. Ahead lay a cove guarded by outcrops of rock, where the magically blue water ended some three hundred metres away in a steeply sloping shingle beach.
The chain clanked as Nat lifted the hook onto its
roller. The sea bed was coming up fast as they neared the shore. Eyeing the depth gauge repeater mounted on the cabin bulkhead Sam eased off the power and looked ahead for the paler patches of water which told of a sandy bottom that would be good holding ground. There was one other boat in the bay, a large powerboat made of sleek plastic. On its spacious quarterdeck faces turned from a lunch-table to monitor their approach.
âGetting shallow,' Nat shouted over his shoulder. âThere's rocks here.'
Seven metres of water beneath the keel, the gauge told him. Nothing to worry about.