Pharaoh (45 page)

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Authors: Valerio Massimo Manfredi

BOOK: Pharaoh
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Hooker glanced at the radar screen. ‘Can you tell where they are?’

‘We redirected them to the military airport at Fort Riggs,’ said another officer. ‘In any case, I’ve sent them a helicopter with a couple of military doctors.’

‘Wait a minute,’ said Hooker. ‘What guarantee do we have that this program itself doesn’t constitute a danger to us? Or even the aeroplane, for that matter?’

‘I’ve had some checks run, General,’ said McBain, ‘and I can categorically and absolutely exclude that possibility, sir. Just step over this way, if you don’t mind. ‘

He brought him in front of a monitor connected to a VCR and a computer. ‘I had the FBI send me the cassettes they confiscated from the security camera installed at the lobby of the
Chicago Tribune
. This footage relates to the day the video with the nuclear threat was delivered. Watch.’

He had them start the video and then stop it at the point where the front of a FedEx delivery van appeared just outside the lobby of the
Tribune
. You could see a delivery man getting out with a package.

‘That package contains the video cassette,’ McBain explained. ‘Now, watch carefully.’ He typed in a stop-image command on the computer and then went on to enlarge a detail in the background, focusing on a car parked at the kerb and a man fussing around with a jack and spare tyre. The zoom lens further enlarged the man and then his face, obtaining a very blurry but still quite recognizable image. McBain typed in a few more commands and right next to the blurry face there appeared another, clear picture of a face. ‘This, gentlemen, is a photo of Professor Omar al Husseini which we had sent to us by the faculty office of the Oriental Institute. As you can see, there’s no doubt about it. It’s one and the same person. The only question is, could Husseini have just happened to be passing by the
Tribune
at that precise moment? I doubt it seriously.’

‘Gentlemen,’ one of the computer technicians interrupted, ‘we have just decoded the program.’

Hooker followed him to the central screen, at the top of which, in giant letters, was written:

The
ARMAGEDDON
program

 

‘It is designed to make three objects called “donkeys” rotate in six successive twenty-four-hour cycles,’ explained the technician, ‘trained on three objectives that are always different. After the sixth cycle, the final procedure is activated. If there is any interference, the final procedure is instantly activated, or perhaps a reserve circuit is activated. We have decoded the symbols for the objectives: they represent major American cities. The sixth cycle settles on New York, Los Angeles and Chicago. I don’t think it’s necessary to mention that the objects in motion are the mobile nuclear bombs we are looking for. Constantly moving them around makes it very difficult for us to get a fix on them.’

‘Strange,’ muttered Hooker, staring at the screen, ‘why haven’t they targeted Washington?’

‘It’s a question of the Middle-Eastern mentality,’ said McBain. ‘For them it’s much more painful for a man to have his honour wounded, the things he holds dear, than simply to be destroyed physically. Their plan calls for the President to survive unharmed so he can witness the destruction of the nation.’

‘Sir,’ chimed in one of the communications sergeants, ‘we have an answer from Jerusalem.’

‘We sent the photos of Husseini to Mossad,’ explained McBain, moving up to the monitor of the computer that was just starting to display a series of mug shots showing a young man with a thick moustache wearing a keffiyeh on his head.

Putting on his glasses, Hooker approached the screen, observing the images intently as a technician ran them through a morphing program. He removed the moustache and keffiyeh, thinned the hair, coloured it grey and deepened the wrinkles.

‘My God,’ he exclaimed. ‘Husseini is . . . Abu Ghaj!’

‘At this point, I don’t think there’s any doubt about it,’ said McBain. ‘Husseini is the key to it all. We need to get our hands on him and we don’t have much more than sixteen hours to do it in.’

Hooker called in the entire staff. ‘Listen up, gentlemen, this is what we’ve got to do. First of all, find a damned computer genius who can stop that program without blowing us all to smithereens. And second, run a thorough check on this Husseini guy, find out everything there is to know about him, anything that can identify him and trace his movements: his automobile licence plates, credit cards, social security number, ATM cards, everything. Then all he has to do is buy gas, get a prescription for sleeping pills or buy a pair of damn boxer shorts in a department store and we’ll nail him. Third, find the three commandos who have the bombs and eliminate them on the spot, before proceeding to defuse the bombs if you can. Now get hopping, men!’

The non-commissioned officer in charge of communications came up to the general with an anxious expression. ‘Bad news, sir. General Yehudai’s offensive in Israel is failing. They are getting ready to start the launch procedure for the nuclear warheads at Beersheba.’

Hooker fell into a chair, covering his face with his hands. McBain walked over to him.

‘I’ve got the aeroplane back on the line, sir. Do you want to say something?’

‘Yes,’ answered Hooker, ‘let me speak to them.’

He moved up to the microphone. ‘This is General Hooker at the Pentagon calling the unidentified aircraft, do you read me?’

‘I read you, General, loud and clear.’

‘You were right. Everything turned out just like you said. The three “donkeys” that appear in the file are actually three mobile nuclear warheads that could explode in exactly fifteen hours and . . . fourteen minutes in three major American cities.

‘Professor Husseini was a notorious terrorist active around the middle of the 1980s, operating under the name of Abu Ghaj. So now, if you wish, you can identify yourselves. We are no longer concerned that you might pose a security threat.’

There was silence for an interminable minute in the operations room, then the voice of the man in the aeroplane said, ‘My name is William Blake and I’m a colleague of Professor Husseini’s at the Oriental Institute of Chicago. I’m on board a Falcon 900EX. It is being flown by Sarah Forrestall of the Warren Mining Corporation, but she has been seriously injured. We are the only survivors of the incident at the Ras Udash camp in the Negev desert.’

Hooker leaned his back up against the wall, as if struck by a bolt of lightning.

‘Hello, come in? Do you read me, General?’

‘I’m reading you, Mr Blake. Loud and clear.’

‘Listen, General. I don’t believe that Professor Husseini wants those bombs to explode. He may very well have been a terrorist in the past, but you have to look at the time and place he was operating in. I’m sure he’s no longer one and he’d never willingly massacre innocent civilians. That program was probably operating without him even being aware of it. Didn’t you notice how it resembles a computer virus? Perhaps he’s just a victim as well. Perhaps he’s being blackmailed himself. Do you understand what I’m driving at?’

‘I do, Mr Blake.’

‘Don’t kill him, General.’

‘We have no intentions of killing anyone. We are trying to save lives, those of millions of innocent human beings. Now I’m going to hand you over to the control tower.’

‘We’re just about out of fuel. Tell them to let us land as soon as possible. And good luck to you guys too.’

Hooker turned to McBain. ‘I want to talk to Jerusalem. Get me Code Absalom.’

‘Code Absalom is on the line, sir,’ reported McBain, just a moment later. ‘Go ahead and speak.’

Hooker moved up to the microphone. ‘This is Hooker.’

‘This is Avner. What’s on your mind, General?’

‘Is it true that you have started the nuclear launch procedure?’

‘We have no choice.’

‘Just give me six hours, Avner. There’ve been some new developments.’

‘That was what you said last time. Where did waiting get us then?’

‘Avner, we’ve cracked the control code for the explosives and our technicians are working on arresting it.’

‘How did you manage that?’

‘We received a message.’

‘From whom?’

‘I’d rather tell you all about it when this whole thing is over.’

‘That’s a risk you’ve already taken and, let me remind you, the results were hardly inspiring.’

Hooker managed to hold back his anger, mulling things over for a few moments.

‘William Blake and Sarah Forrestall are still alive and about to arrive here aboard a Warren Mining Corporation Falcon. They were the ones who sent us the message.’

‘It’s just a pretext for getting onto American territory. Shoot them down. It’s a trick and you’re falling for it.’

Hooker thought about how Blake had said ‘He may very well have been a terrorist in the past, but you have to look at the time and place he was operating in . . .’ Was Blake justifying the actions of a terrorist?

Avner continued to plead his case. ‘What do you have to lose, Hooker? If the system they gave you works, then you’ll have sacrificed two lives to save a million. If it’s a trick, and it obviously is, you’re risking an even larger-scale disaster. Those two renegades had everyone at the Ras Udash camp murdered by Taksoun’s helicopters, including ten of your Marines. Don’t forget that. And how do you know what’s onboard that aircraft? Believe me, Hooker, when this is all over, you’ll realize just how right I am. Shoot them down, before it’s too late! It’s clear to me that the program you think is going to solve all your problems was given to them by Taksoun’s agents to throw you off track and waste time, if not worse. Just think for a minute, Hooker. How could they have got out of Egypt in the middle of a war, and in an aeroplane of all things?’

Hooker wiped his forehead, which was drenched in sweat.

‘Just do it,’ urged Avner, ‘and I promise that I’ll stop the nuclear launch procedure at Beersheba. I’ll convince General Yehudai, I promise, but for only five hours, not a minute longer. After that, regardless of what happens, we’re going to let all hell break loose. Do you remember that passage in the Book of Judges, Hooker? Where Samson says, “Let me die, together with all the Philistines!”’

Hooker closed his eyes in an effort to calm his inner turmoil, trying desperately to evaluate all the evidence he had been presented with in a cool, logical manner. Finally, he announced, All right, Avner. You’ve convinced me.’

He then turned to McBain. ‘I want my jet on the runway in five minutes. I’m going to Chicago.’

B
LAKE WENT
into the cockpit with some gauze and alcohol, changed the dressing on Sarah’s arm and tried to medicate the wound, as she stiffened with pain.

‘I’m a lousy medic and I’d make an even worse pilot,’ he joked, ‘but you’re in no shape to be flying. Let me take over the controls and you can give me instructions. We can still do this.’

Sarah interrupted him. ‘Shit. Look, we’ve got company.’

What’s going on?’

‘A fighter at ten o’clock, twelve miles away. They’re going to shoot us down, Will. It looks like they didn’t buy our story.’

Blake watched the outline of the aircraft that was approaching them. ‘Damn it!’ he swore. ‘He talked me into identifying myself. He seemed so sincere . . .’

Sarah was studying the expanse of partly snow-covered countryside stretching out below, interrupted by the red roofs of a small town. ‘We’ve got only one chance,’ she informed Blake. ‘I’m going to drop this thing down over that town where they won’t dare shoot at me and then I want you to jump out with a parachute. I’ll lead the fighter a merry dance. Will, let me do this. I know I can.’ She pushed the control stick forward and the nose of the plane descended sharply. ‘Quick, put on the parachute. We’ve got less than two minutes.’

‘Not on your life,’ Blake began protesting, but he didn’t have time to finish, because a voice coming in over the radio interrupted their altercation.

‘This is Captain Campbell of the United States Air Force. Welcome home. I have instructions to escort you to a place where you can land. Please follow me.’

‘We’re right behind you, Captain,’ replied Sarah, ‘and quite honoured, to say the least, by the reception.’

Running on fumes alone, they landed ten minutes later at a military base near Fort Riggs, where a helicopter was waiting for them on the runway. Two stretcher bearers immediately began attending to Sarah’s wound, but when they started getting her ready to be loaded into an ambulance, the still-feisty girl wouldn’t hear of it.

‘I’m going with you,’ she said to Blake. ‘I want to see this thing through to the end.’

There was no chance of changing her mind and so the attendants handed her over to the doctors on board the helicopter. One of them put her arm in a sling and the other started giving her a transfusion. She was then given a sedative so she could get some precious sleep.

Two hours later they landed at Meigs Field in Chicago in the driving rain. An ambulance was waiting for them at the side of the runway with the motor running. General Hooker was standing next to it, wrapped in a raincoat.

Sarah was loaded right away into the ambulance. Blake kissed her goodbye. ‘Forgive me,’ he said. ‘It was all my fault.’

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