Read On Wings of Eagles Online
Authors: Ken Follett
Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #Military, #Espionage, #General, #History, #Special Forces, #Biography & Autobiography
college and found his contemporaries getting an excited about gambling,
drinking, and going with women. He knew all about gamblers, drunks, and
whores already: he dropped out of college and joined the air force.
In nine years in the air force he had never seen action, and while he was
on the whole glad about that, it had left him wondering whether he had what
it took to fight in a shooting war. The rescue of Paul and Bill might give
him the chance to find out, he had thought; but Simons had sent him from
Paris back to Dallas. It looked as though he was going to be ground crew
again. Then new orders came.
They came via Merv Stauffer, Perot's right-hand man, who was now Simons's
link with the scattered rescue team. Stauffer went to Radio Shack and
bought six five-channel two-way radios, ten rechargers, a supply of
batteries, and a device for running the radios off a dashboard cigar
lighter. He gave the equipment to Boulware and told him to meet Sculley and
Schwebach in London before going on to Istanbul.
Stauffer also gave him forty thousand dollars in cash, for expenses,
bribes, and general purposes.
The night before Boulware left, his wife started giving him a hard time
about money. He had taken a thousand dollars out of the bank, without
telling her, before he went to Pan"e believed in carrying cash money--and
she had subsequently discovered how little was left in their account.
Boulware did not want to explain to her why he had taken the money and how
he had spent it. Mary insisted that she needed money. Boulware was not too
concerned about that: she was staying with good friends and he knew she
would be looked after. But she didn't buy his
ON WINGS OF EAGLES 229
brush-off, and-as often happened when she was really determined-he decided
to make her happy. He went into the bedroom, where he had left the box
containing the radios and the forty thousand dollars, and counted out five
hundred. Mary came in while he was doing it, and saw what was in the box.
Boulware gave her the five hundred and said: "Will that hold YOUT'
"Yes," she said.
She looked at the box, then at her husband. "I'm not even going to ask,"
she said; and she went out.
Boulware left the next day. He met Schwebach and Sculley in London, gave
them five of the six radio sets, kept one for himself, and flew on to
Istanbul.
He went from the airport straight to the office of Mr. Fish, the travel
agent.
Mr. Fish met him in an open-plan office with three or four other people
sitting around.
"My name is Ralph Boulware, and I work for EDS," Boulware began. "I think
you know my daughters, Stacy Elaine and Kecia Nicole." The girls had played
with Mr. Fish's daughters during the evacuees' stopover in Istanbul.
Mr. Fish was not very warm.
"I need to talk to you," Boulware said.
"Fine, talk to me."
Boulware looked around the room. "I want to talk to you in private. "
"Why?99
"You'll understand when I talk to you."
"These are all my partners. There are no secrets here."
Mr. Fish was giving Boulware a hard time. Boulware could guess why. There
were two reasons. First, after all that Mr. Fish had done during the
evacuation, Don Norsworthy had tipped him $150, which was derisory, in
Boulware's opinion.'(1 didn't know what to do!" Norsworthy had said. "The
man's bill was twenty-six thousand dollars. What should I have tipped
him---ten percent?")
Secondly, Pat Sculley had approached Mr. Fish with a transparent tale about
smuggling computer tapes into Iran. Mr. Fish was neither a fool nor a
criminal, Boulware guessed; and of course he had refused to have anything
to do with Sculley's scheme.
230 Ken Follett
Now Mr. Fish thought EDS people were (a) cheapskates and (b) dangerously
amateurish lawbreakers.
But Mr. Fish was a small businessman. Boulware understood small
businessme"is father had been one. They spoke two languages: straight talk,
and cash money. Cash money would solve problem (a), and straight talk,
problem (b).
"Okay, let's start again," Boulware said. "When EDS was here you really
helped those people, treated the children nice, and did a great deal for
us. When they left there was a mix-up about showing you our appreciation.
We're embarrassed that this was not handled properly and I need to settle
that score."
-It's no big deal-"
"We're sorry," Boulware said, and he gave Mr. Fish a thousand dollars in
hundred-dollar bills.
The room went very quiet.
"Well, I'm going to check in to the Sheraton," Boulware said. "Maybe we can
talk later."
"I'll come with you," said Mr. Fish.
He personally checked Boulware into the hotel, and ensured that he got a
good room, then agreed to meet turn for dinner that night in the hotel
coffee shop.
Mr. Fish was a high-class hustler, Boulware thought as he unpacked. The man
had to be smart to have what appeared to be a very prosperous business in
this dirt-poor country. The evacuees' experience showed that he had the
enterprise to do more than issue plane tickets and make hotel bookings. He
had the right contacts to oil the wheels of bureaucracy, judging by the way
he had got everyone's baggage through customs. He had also helped solve the
problem of the adopted Iranian baby with no passport. EDS's mistake had
been to see that he was a hustler and overlook the fact that he was high
clas"eceived, perhaps, by his unimpressive appearance: he was rather fat
and dressed in drab clothes. Boulware, learning from past mistakes, thought
he could handle Mr. Fish.
That night over dinner Boulware told him he wanted to go to the Iran-Turkey
border to meet some people coming out.
Mr. Fish was horrified. "You don't understand," he said. "That is a
terrible place. The people are Kurds and Azerbaij*aiu*s-wild mountain men,
they don't obey any government. You know how they live up there? By
smuggling, robbery, and murder. I personally would not dam to go there. If
you, an American, go there, you will never come back. Never."
ON WINGS OF EAGLES 231
Boulware thought he was probably exaggerating. "I have to go there, even if
it's dangerous," he said. "Now, can I buy a light plane?"
Mr. Fish shook his head. "It is illegal in Turkey for individuals to own
airplanes."
"A helicopter?"
"Same thing."
"AD right, can I charter a plane?"
"It is possible. Where there is no scheduled flight, you can charter. It
"Are there scheduled flights to the border area?" No."
"All right."
"However, chartering is so unusual that you will surely attract the
attention of the authorities . . ."
"We have no plans to do anything illegal. AD the same, we don't need the
hassle of being investigated. So let's set up the option of chartering.
Find out about price and availability, but hold off from making any kind of
booking. Meanwhile, I want to know more about getting there by land. If you
don't want to escort me, fine; but maybe you can find somebody who will.
"I'll see what I can do."
They met several times over the next few days. Mr. Fish's initial coolness
totally disappeared, and Boulware felt they were becoming friends. Mr. Fish
was alert and articulate. Although he was no criminal, he would break the
law if the risks and rewards were proportionate, Boulware guessed. Boulware
had some sympathy with that attitude-he, too, would break the law under the
right circumstances. Mr. Fish was also a shrewd interrogator, and bit by
bit Boulware told him the full story. Paul and Bill would probably have no
passports, he admitted; but once in Turkey they would get new ones at the
nearest American Consulate. Paul and Bill might have some trouble getting
out of Iran, he said, and he wanted to be prepared to cross the border
himself, perhaps in a light airrraft, to bring them out. None of this fazed
Mr. Fish as much as the idea of traveling in bandit country.
However, a few days later he introduced Boulware to a who had relatives
among the mountain bandits. Mr. Fish whispered that the man was a criminal,
and he certainly looked the part: he had a scar on his face and little
beady eyes. He said he could guarantee Boulware safe passage to the border
and back,
232 Ken Follett
and his relatives could even take Boulware across the border into Iran, if
necessary.
Boulware called Dallas and told Merv Stauffer about the plan. Stauffer
relayed the news to Coburn, in code; and Coburn told Simons. Simons vetoed
it. If the man is a criminal, Simons pointed out, we can't trust him.
Boulware was annoyed. He had gone to some trouble to set it up--did Simons
imagine it was easy to get these people? And if you wanted to travel in
bandit country, who else but a bandit would escort you? But Simons was the
boss, and Boulware had no option but to ask Mr. Fish to start all over
again.
Meanwhile, Sculley and Schwebach flew into Istanbul.
The deadly duo had been on a flight from London to Tehran via Copenhagen
when the Iranians had closed their airport again, so Sculley and Schwebach
joined Boulware in Istanbul. Cooped up in the hotel, waiting for something
to happen, the three of them got cabin fever. Schwebach reverted to his
Green Beret role and tried to make them all keep fit by running up and down
the hotel stairs. Boulware did it once and then gave up. They became
impatient with Simons. Coburn, and Poch6, who seemed to be sitting in
Tehran doing nothing: why didn't those guys make it happen? Then Simons
sent Sculley and Schwebach back to the States. They left the radios with
Boulware.
When Mr. Fish saw the radios he had a fit. It was highly illegal to own a
radio transmitter in Turkey, he told Boulware. Even ordinary transistor
radios had to be registered with the government, for fear their parts would
be used to make transmitters for terrorists. "Don't you understand how
conspicuous you are?" he said to Boulware. "You're running up a phone bill
of a couple of thousand dollars a week, and you're paying cash. You don't
appear to be doing business here. The maids are sure to have seen the
radios and talked about it. By now you must be under surveillance. Forget
your friends in Iran--you are going to end up in jail."
Boulware agreed to get rid of the radios. The snag about Simons's
apparently endless patience was that further delay caused new problems. Now
Sculley and Schwebach could not get back into Iran, yet still nobody had
any radios. Meanwhile, Simons kept saying no to things. Mr. Fish pointed
out that there were two border crossings from Iran to Turkey, one at Sero
and the other at Barzagan. Simons had picked Sero. Barzagan was a
ON WINGS OF EAGLES 233
bigger and more civilized place, Mr. Fish pointed out; everyone would be a
little safer there. Simons said no.
A new escort was found to take Boulware to the border. Mr. Fish had a
business colleague whose brother-in-law was in the Milli Istihbarat
Teskilati, or MIT, the Turkish equivalent of the CIA. The name of this
secret policeman was Ilsman. His credentials would secure for Boulware army
protection in bandit country. Without such credentials, Mr. Fish said, the
ordinary citizen was in danger not only from bandits but also from the
Turkish Army.
Mr. Fish was very jumpy. On the way to meet lisman, he took Boulware
through a whole cloak-and-dagger routine, changing cars and switching to a
bus for part of the journey, as if he were trying to shake off a tail.
Boulware could not see the need for all that if they were really going to
visit a perfectly upright citizen who just happened to work in the
intelligence community. But Boulware was a foreigner in a strange country,
and he just had to go along with Mr. Fish and trust the man.
They ended up at a big, run-down apartment building in an unfamiliar
section of the city. The power was off-just like Tehran!--so it took Mr.
Fish a while to find the right apartment in the dark. At first he could get
no answer. His attempt to be secretive fell apart at this point, for he had
to hammer on the door for what seemed like half an hour, and every other
inhabitant of the building got a good look at the visitors in the meantime.
Boulware just stood there feeling like a white man in Harlem. At last a
woman opened up, and they went in.