The Exile (36 page)

Read The Exile Online

Authors: Andrew Britton

BOOK: The Exile
6.45Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Kealey got to his feet, swooped in a breath. He could smell White's singed hair and flesh. He looked around, saw a field jacket on a wall hook to his right, tore it down off the hook, and used it to beat out the flames on White's clothes and the floor around him.

“I want this son of a bitch alive,” he said. And then glanced at the doorway at the back of the room, where the hut had been partitioned with a plasterboard wall. Goggles on, Abby was just on the other side of the door in the darkness, holding her weapon across her body, looking down at the floor.

Knowing what to expect, Kealey swore under his breath, raced into the second room, and saw the oriental rug tossed back from the open wooden floor panel. Outside the hut the sound of gunfire had become light and sporadic.

He and Abby exchanged glances through the monocular lenses of their NVGs.

“Did you see Nusairi go down there?” he asked.

She shook her head no. “We can't head in after him…. If he's waiting, he could easily pick us off.”

“He isn't waiting,” Kealey said. “He intends to reach his forces at Suakim or Ed Damer. And he's got enough of a lead so we'd never chase him down on foot. I—”

The heavy tramp of boots now, coming through the hut from out front. Kealey jerked upright, swung his weapon around at the door to the room…and then felt the tension drain from his limbs. It was Tariq, a silhouette against the deeper darkness, squinting down at the tunnel entrance with his unaided eyes.

“We've finished those
ghabanat
in the other hut…. I lost Abdul, a good friend. And another, Mahzin, is badly wounded,” he said, shaking his head. Then he snapped his cell phone from his pocket and looked at Kealey through the gloom. “I left my men at the other end of the tunnel, over by the Gash.”

Kealey's molars ground together. Yes, Tariq had left his men there. But wouldn't Nusairi anticipate it? At any rate this would not be left up to them. Or anyone else.

Spinning toward the door without a word, he ran out to where Mackenzie stood with his gun still pointed down at White. A pair of Tariq's fighters were trussing his arms and legs with strips of rawhide cord.

“The car keys,” he said, holding out his hand.
“Now!”

Mackenzie got the key ring from his pocket and tossed it to him without asking questions…not that Kealey would have lost a moment pausing to answer before he raced from the hut into the night.

 

No longer wearing his goggles, Kealey white-knuckled the Cherokee's steering wheel, its high beams lancing the night, his foot hard to the gas pedal as he roared over the curving, potholed road toward the river. It was two miles to the mountains, just over a quarter that distance to the bridge. Head start or not, Nusairi was on foot. He would not be able to gain much distance on him.

The rail station behind him now, Kealey sped past square patches of farmland to the grove of trees at the river's edge, came to a short stop. Where
had
Tariq positioned his men?

He glanced over his left shoulder, then right at a copse of shrubs and trees. Yes, there.

Leaving the headlights on, he pushed out his door, hastened a yard or two through the screening brush…and then almost stumbled over something underfoot.

He knew what it was before looking down. The body lay sprawled faceup on the ground, a bullet hole in its forehead, the toe of its boot against its outstretched arm. The second of Tariq's men was on his side only inches from the first, blood oozing from what was left of his mouth and chin.

Their old Ford sedan was gone. A few feet away from where its tires had flattened the surrounding vegetation, Kealey saw the hinged trapdoor to the tunnel. It was thrown wide open, the packed sod and twigs that had camouflaged it flapped aside.

He turned back to the Cherokee, keyed it to life, and tore off for the river crossing.

 

Kealey was coming off the east side of the bridge when he spotted the wink of taillights up ahead of him to the right, on the street turning off toward the
souq
at the heart of Kassala. There were no other vehicles on the road, no people around; the town had rolled up whatever damned sidewalks it had…. He would have to take his chances that it was Nusairi.

He swung onto the narrow street, pouring on the gas. The taillights, where were they? The main part of town was a labyrinth of twists and turns, and he'd momentarily lost sight of them….

Mouthing a string of profanities, Kealey whipped his head back and forth, then thankfully picked up the gleaming red lights around another sharp bend to his right. He swung into it, found himself on a relative straightaway, and accelerated, noticing the car ahead had sped up, too. He'd gambled correctly, then—it had to be Nusairi.

He bumped on over the cobbled street, his foot to the pedal, gaining on the Ford. It would be no match for his Cherokee, but Nusairi probably knew the city's layout better than he did, giving him that far from negligible advantage. Kealey was afraid he might yet reach another twisty section of town and shake him loose.

Reaching the next corner, the Ford took a sudden left, Kealey almost on its bumper now, able to see Nusairi hunched over the wheel. He swerved after him, realized they'd gotten to the wide-open central market—there were stalls and wagons all around,
everywhere,
some emptied out for the night, others with their wares covered with tarpaulins.

Kealey poured it on now, getting closer, closer, and then cutting his wheel to the left so he pulled directly alongside the Ford. He looked out his passenger window, briefly met Nusairi's gaze through double panes of glass, and swung the wheel hard to his right.

He felt the collision of their doors jar his back, heard the tortured, scraping grind of metal on metal. Then Nusairi's lighter vehicle half bounced, half skidded to the right and went plowing into a cart of woven textiles, knocking off its wheel so it spun wildly over the cobbles, the cart toppling onto its side, blankets and sheets of fabric spilling everywhere over the street.

Somehow, though, Nusairi managed to hang on to control of the Ford. Kealey swung hard into his flank again, this time almost lifting Nusairi's wheels off the ground to send him careening through a high stack of packing crates. The crates broke apart over his hood and windshield, wood flying, the burlap sacks of millet and corn inside them breaking open to disgorge their contents. Nusairi tailspun across the square into a vendor's stall and smashed into a long wooden table, upending it before he hit the back of the stall and brought its bare plank walls crashing down on him, demolishing the Ford's windshield.

Kealey stopped the Cherokee and exited it in a heartbeat, rushing across the square to the Ford as Nusairi pushed himself out of its scraped and beaten driver's door. Blood trickling from under his eye, cuts on his cheeks and forehead, Nusairi looked at him, turned away, and started to make a break for the shadows.

On him now, right
behind
him, Kealey took a running leap at Nusairi that almost knocked both men to the cobblestones, wrapping his arms around his back to try and catch hold of him. But Nusairi, staggering, managed to stay on his feet. He twisted around to face Kealey, locking eyes with him, his features distorted with rage and malice—the rage showing above all else, completely overtaking him, his eyes flaring, his lips peeled back from his tightly clenched teeth in an almost bestial grimace.

And then he dove at Kealey, literally dove, giving Kealey little time to realize that the bottom of his shirt had pulled out from the waistband of his cargo pants and bunched up to reveal the handle of his combat knife.

Nusairi snatched hold of the knife, pulling it from its sheath, the blade flashing in his right hand as it came up. He took a vicious swipe at Kealey, barely missed carving a deep gash across his abdomen, and might have done so if Kealey hadn't feinted backward at the last instant. As Nusairi came charging at him with the blade again, Kealey recovered his balance, pivoted on the forward part of his left foot, and shot both hands out in front of him, his right clenching Nusairi's knife hand, his left grabbing the same elbow, twisting it around, yanking it up and back toward Nusairi.

They grappled like that for an endless minute, strength against strength, their faces inches apart. Kealey could feel Nusairi's breath, see his cheeks puffing with exertion, the blade suspended between them.

And then he felt something in Nusairi's grip give way, just for a split second. He moved forward into him, knowing it might be his one opportunity, bending the knife back toward Nusairi's chest, back so its point was directly under his rib cage…and, mustering everything he had, gave it a hard upward shove to bury it inside him to the handle.

Still on his feet, Nusairi produced a feral sound that was something between a grunt and a moan, his hands going to his chest, his blood pouring over them in crimson sheets. At last, after what seemed another long while, his legs began to sag.

Kealey pulled out the knife before Nusairi could fall, stepped back, and stood looking at him, looking into his eyes….

Looking into his eyes, his gaze calm and unwavering as the life faded out of them.

“That was for Lily Durant,” he said before the last spark was extinguished. Then, waiting for Nusairi's body to finally hit the ground, he bent over him to add something that had struck him almost as an afterthought. “And by the way, all your tanks and choppers are about to get blown to kingdom come.”

 

True to Brynn Fitzgerald's “chirping birdie,” the Israelis did indeed launch the Hermes “Ziq” 450s out of Navatim for their strikes at Sudan. Although the unmanned aerial vehicles were indeed a component of the 166th Squadron at Palmachim Air Base near Tel Aviv, moving them to the base outside Be'er Sheva in the southeastern part of the country—and closer to the Red Sea route to the Sudanese border—extended their tactical range both in terms of fuel usage and data communications.

Another tactical advantage to having the drones take off from Navatim, alternately known as Air Base 28, was that it put them at the same spot as the 116th “Defenders of the South” Squadron and the 140th “Golden Eagle” Squadron, both of which were home to the F-16 fighter jets that would be essential to destroying tanks and helicopters. The UAVs, with their respective payloads of two Rafael missiles, were formidable weapons against convoys bearing arms and missile launchers. But when it came to destroying thirty-three tanks and over a dozen choppers, they were best used in a support role, sending the Israelis real-time pictures, taking out a secondary target or two, and perhaps doing some cleanup.

Having Sudanese air space unrestricted to them, however, the F-16s left little to be cleaned up. Their massive array of air-to-ground missiles and laser-guided bombs took care of the convoy quite neatly in just three runs—the third precautionary.

It was not always the size of the strike force, but how it was used, that counted. Simon Nusairi's purchase barely got out of the box, however, rendering even that observation moot.

CHAPTER 22
SUDAN
•
WASHINGTON, D.C.

A
s the Cairo-bound Gulfstream 550 charter jet taxied left onto the runway at Khartoum International, Ryan Kealey looked out his window and saw the Sudan People's Armed Forces troops that had escorted his group through the airport break into spontaneous applause, standing there ranked alongside the tarmac.

Abby Liu sat beside him, Mackenzie in the seat facing her. Cullen White, in wrist and ankle cuffs, was next to Mackenzie and opposite Kealey. The rest of the charter jet's cabin was occupied by a contingent of 6 dark-suited Agency men who had flown in from Egypt the day before.

“Well, Kealey, it seems you're a local hero,” White said in a quiet voice. His eyes had fixed on him through his wire-frame glasses. “The man who saved the compassionate and lawful regime of Omar al-Bashir from scheming rebels…and their infidel coconspirator.”

Stone-faced, Kealey ignored him and stared out at the clapping soldiers in their dress regalia. He was glad when the plane angled off so they were out of sight.

“You should be proud,” White said. “You even bagged the Western devil alive. Here I sit, flying back to America in shackles. Shame on me, right?”

“Shut up,” Mackenzie said.

White glanced over at him. “What?”

“You heard me.” Mackenzie met White's gaze with his own. “I don't want to hear your fucking mouth.”

“Are you going to gag me?” White said with a small acid smile. “Or maybe just shoot me in my seat. If you're careful, there's very little risk of puncturing the side of the cabin. Though I know you all want me back in Washington so I can sing from my cage.”

Mackenzie just looked at him for a long moment, then slowly turned his head away.

“You'd might as well have killed me back in Kassala,” White said, facing Kealey again. “It's what you wanted, isn't it?”

Kealey stared out at the runway without response.

“I've no stories to share,” White said. “Nothing to tell anyone. I was just a freelancer for Simon Nusairi. Hired help. Kind of like you were for a while, Kealey. Was it Blackwater…or Xe, as it calls itself now? I hear the company wanted to clean up its gunslinger image after your little exploit in South Africa.”

Kealey turned from the window without speaking a word, not so much looking at White as past him. Abby, meanwhile, had shifted around in her seat.

“We have more than one bird in hand,” she said. “I think you know that, Mr. White.”

“Hassan Saduq? An arms peddler? Who'd tell you anything to save his neck? Is he going to be believed?” White said.

“Don't pretend to be naïve,” she said. “There is a money trail.”

“You might want to mention Walter Reynolds, the senior diplomat at the U.S. embassy in Khartoum,” Mackenzie said. “Plus embassy staffers confirming this guy's visits there, security videos…”

“Thank you, Mac.” Her almond-shaped brown eyes had settled on White again. “You see, no one needs to hear your song. There are others, enough for an opus. And your name and Nusairi's will be in every refrain.”

“Your personal savior's too,” Kealey said, breakng his silence. “We wouldn't want to forget the man who's as responsible for Lily Durant's death as Nusairi.”

White's eyes narrowed on him. “I don't know who you mean.”

“Sure, you don't,” Kealey said. “Keep on saying it. But your time's running out and so is your line of bullshit.”

The two men looked at each other a moment, their silence only underscored by the loud whine of turbines as the plane accelerated for takeoff. Kealey felt the usual lurch inside him as it bucked against gravity and went wheels up into the air.

“It was Jonathan Harper who once demanded I leave the CIA,” White finally said. “The
legendary
Harper. Did you know he called me to his office at Langley to request my departure in person?”

Kealey shrugged. “Guess he probably didn't think it was worth the cost of a phone call.”

“Good one. I didn't realize you had a sense of humor.” White chuckled automatically, kept staring at Kealey through his metal rims. “I only bring up his name for one reason. And that's to ask…without Harper, where would you be?”

“What's your point?” said Kealey.

“It's no secret he had faith in you when others didn't. That he's been your guardian angel at the Agency,” White said. “What would you do if he needed, absolutely
required
you for a task he could entrust to no one else? An assignment that had certain vital elements you found…objectionable? Would you refuse? Or do it, anyway, because of everything you owed him?”

Kealey shook his head. “I don't believe in guardian angels,” he said.

“Ah…but there is one who's believed in you,” White replied.

Kealey was quiet for a while before he gave another shrug. “His problem,” he said.

And he returned his eyes to his window as the jet banked to the right, leaving the African coastline behind for the Red Sea, then climbing gradually through a blue haze to cruising altitude and the greater part of its flight north to Egypt.

 

“I've just received word that Cullen White has been placed aboard a direct flight from Cairo to New York,” President Brenneman said. He was at his desk in the Oval Office, talking to Brynn Fitzgerald, his back to the large bay windows looking out on the South Lawn. “He remains in the Agency's custody.”

“And once he lands?” Fitzgerald asked.

“He'll be air-shuttled to D.C. and brought to a safe house for preliminary interrogation,” Brenneman said. “I'm not sure a decision's been made as to where he'll be held after that.”

Fitzgerald nodded. It was gusty outside, and as she sat facing the windows, she could see the breeze rustling the magnolias on the South Lawn. “Have you put in a call to the DIA?”

“Yes.” Brenneman rubbed the bottom of his chin with his index finger. “Joel Stralen requested that his personnel have a role in White's questioning. His preference was that it be active, but he would have settled for having one or more people there as observers.”

“And your response to him was…?”

“Exactly what you would expect.”

“And how did General Stralen react to being refused outright?”

“He's on his way over from the Pentagon right now. I suppose he intends to argue his case.” Brenneman shrugged. “You know, Brynn…as a kind of mental exercise, or way of getting a handle on a person, I try to imagine their thoughts in terms of printed type-styles. Been doing it since my early teens. I've known the general for a long time and have always imagined him thinking in boldface.”

“A large font, I'd guess.”

“Very large,” Brenneman said with a grim smile. “Joel Stralen is a hard-liner, and I wanted that perspective among my core advisors. We've all gotten so used to sticking our thumbs in the wind here in D.C., I felt it important.”

“You weren't mistaken,” Fitzgerald said. “Our error was in letting ourselves be swayed too far by his point of view.” She hesitated. “May I speak personally of something? It's a difficult subject.”

He nodded his head and sat there waiting.

“I've done a lot of soul-searching over the past several days,” Fitzgerald said. “In fact, I've turned my soul inside out and shaken it to see what falls loose. And I realized I wasn't nearly as recovered from the trauma of my kidnapping as I'd believed. As a woman in the capital…in any position of authority, I suppose…you have to present a tough façade. I felt that if I didn't appear to be over what happened to me in Pakistan, my effectiveness as an advisor and negotiator would be comprised. I won't second-guess myself now, not in that regard. But where I erred, and erred terribly, was in buying my own act. I was swayed by Stralen because I identified too closely with your niece. I let emotions throw me off balance, overtake my capacity for making rational decisions—”

Brenneman raised a hand to interrupt. “Don't beat yourself up,” he said. “You and I share the same essential regrets. Our emotions colored how we saw things. The timing was horrific, which does not mitigate our responsibility for what was done. We own the results of our decisions…. We will always own them. But all we can do now is move on and deal with the consequences.” He expanded his chest with air, slowly breathed out, his sober, weary eyes holding on her face. “Brynn…when I say General Stralen views things in terms of absolutes, it is not to imply he's simpleminded. He's a shrewd, calculating military man. A chess player. And what I've wondered, God help us all—”

Brenneman's intercom line flashed, and he pressed the speakerphone button to answer his personal secretary. “Yes?”

“Mr. President, General Stralen is here to see you.”

“Right on cue,” Brenneman observed.

“Excuse me?” asked the secretary.

“Nothing, Fran…sorry.” Brenneman saw his secretary of state look at him, her eyes silently asking whether he preferred she stay or excuse herself from the office. He motioned for her to stay put. “Tell the general to come right in,” he said over the intercom.

 

“Joel, please have a seat.” Brenneman motioned the DIA chief into a chair without rising from behind his desk. “Brynn and I were just wrapping up our conversation about Cullen White.”

In his air force dress blues, his jacket buttoned almost to the collar, Stralen looked surprised to see Fitzgerald in the office. Quick to recover, he took her hand decorously but remained on his feet. “Sir,” he said, facing the president, “White's the reason I'm here as well, and I intend to be brief. If you don't mind, though”—he glanced back at Fitzgerald—“and with no disrespect to Madam Secretary, I'd ask that we speak privately.”

“I think it's best we all stay,” Brenneman said. “There's nothing that needs hiding between the three of us.”

Stralen nodded. “I don't wish to hide anything. But my issue is strictly of concern to the DIA—”

“No,” Brenneman said. “If it relates to Cullen White's activities in Sudan, it's all our concern…mine, yours, and Brynn's. You can forget about trying to compartmentalize.”

“Fine, sir,” Stralen said. “That is fully understood. Indeed, I might agree with it. But then why isn't the DIA a participant in White's interrogation?”

Brenneman looked at him. “Are you serious?”

“Of course.” The skin tightened over the well-defined planes and angles of Stralen's face. “Do I sound like I'm joking?”

“Joking, no,” Brenneman said. “But in frankness, I don't see how you think the DIA
can
participate. Only the CIA has clean hands here. DOD, State, this very office—we've all compromised ourselves.”

“How so? What precisely have we done
wrong?

“If you don't already know, Joel, you are in pronounced denial,” replied Brenneman.

Stralen was shaking his head. “The worst we can be accused of is misappropriation of funds. And even so, the distribution of CINC discretionary resources has its gray areas. As far as seeming to run against our own embargo, we could argue—”

“My God, we shipped arms to the very people who killed my
niece,
” Brenneman said sharply. He inhaled, struggling to control himself. “Enough, Joel. You can save your argument for other ears besides mine. But while you're here, I do have a question for you. A blunt one. And I would appreciate a direct response.”

Stralen did not budge from the middle of the room but simply met the president's gaze. “I'm listening, sir.”

Brenneman felt his whole body tense. Every muscle, every tendon. He had not wanted to ask this of the man standing there in front of him, someone he had called a friend for decades. Had not even wanted to consider it.

“When you funded Simon Nusairi…did you have any inkling he'd been involved in Lily's death? I mean,
any
knowledge he may have been responsible for what happened to her?”

Silence fell over the office. Both Brenneman and Fitzgerald were looking at Stralen now, but he kept his own eyes on the president's face.

“Sir, I am heading to my Virginia retreat for the weekend. It has been a long six months, and my objective is to gather stamina for the political battles to come,” Stralen said. “Should you still want to ask that question on my return, I will answer fully and completely.”

More silence, Brenneman felt its weight press down on his shoulders, felt his very
heart
sinking underneath it.

“Very well,” he said. “Do as you wish.”

And continued to feel his heart sink like a rock as Stralen abruptly turned and left the room.

Other books

Mia's Return by Tracy Cooper-Posey
Killer Couples by Tammy Cohen
It's in His Touch by Shelly Alexander
The Last Picture Show by Larry McMurtry
Down Outback Roads by Alissa Callen
Station Zed by Tom Sleigh
Cut to the Chase by Elle Keating
The Storm Before Atlanta by Karen Schwabach
Bedtime Story by Robert J. Wiersema