Read A Line in the Sand Online
Authors: Gerald Seymour
strikes he creates further government repression which, night
201
llowing
fo
day, creates further destabilization. He organized the bombing of the
National Guard barracks at Riyadh, five Americans dead, and the
attack
the Kobar Tower barracks, nineteen Americans dead. Three
on
Americans
lled on the road between Dhahran and Riyadh. A Saudi general
ki
working
Americans was targeted and killed last year.
with
We had a chance
to
month, and we missed him. Missing him hurt, because
take him last
we
tegorize him as the principal terror criminal confronting us.
ca
He
was
ome from Saudi Arabia, and sent here."
called h
ham thought him masterful.
Geoff Mark
Littelbaum's voice was never
pushed, he used his hands only rarely and then for the supreme moment mphasis.
of e
cannot hide, cannot escape.
"It bleats,
It cries out, attracts the
predator, is stalked by the predator. It is watched, dragging at
its
rope, by the marksmen in the hide. It is the tethered goat..."
Fenton's breath whistled in his teeth. The red-haired woman gazed at
the American in fascination.
"If you go with your rifle into the bush or the jungle or the desert very little chance, the slimmest of possibilities, of
then you have
searching out your predator. But the predator has to be killed. So ind a goat. You put a stake in the ground and a rope around
you f
its
neck.
will attract the predator.
It
You tie the rope to the stake
and
in your hide with your rifle, and you watch your tethered
you sit
goat."
thought,
They sat in hushed quiet around the table as if, Markham
ne
no
sal.
of them dared to interrupt the bravado of the propo
e the
"Afterwards, when you have shot the predator, you will receiv anks of the community and you will walk with pride.
th
You don't have
202
to put the body on show.
s won't come, predators learn quickly,
Other
others will stay away. Forget your lunch, wine and photographs.
Leave
Frank Perry in place, where the predator knows he can find him. Make the hide, put good men in it.. . You are lucky, so lucky, that you have a bait available."
Fenton and Cox spoke at once.
"That is fraught with danger."
"It's brilliant."
The Branch superintendent said there would be minimal risk to his
e because the beast would have eyes only for the goat.
peopl
ed woman chuckled, said nothing, but she patted the
The red-hair
American's hand lightly.
sequences of such action, they
Cox murmured nervously, "But the con
could be dire..."
"Not if the matter is handled with discretion. With the necessary discretion there are no consequences. But, believe me, the
necessary
message will reach the Ministry of Information and Security
-discretion
avoids consequences."
"We'll buy that, if there's discretion," Cox said.
"I'll take responsibility for running it," Fenton rasped.
"At the moment we're drifting. This way we have purpose."
"Our discretion is guaranteed, my word on it." Littelbaum spoke with sincerity.
"It's what we'd do, if we'd had the luck that's given to you."
Geoff Markham wanted to ask, and didn't: how long would the marksmen hey fired?
wait before t
He held his silence. In the interests of
a
shot, would they sacrifice the goat?
better
The American had turned
away from his audience and rubbed his poorly shaven chin. Only
Markham
203
saw the satisfaction of his smile.
He hadn't asked his question because he already knew the answer, had seen it in their eyes. He slipped out of the room and left behind him
the clinking glasses and the pop of a drawn cork.
Jerry and Mary Wroughton had lived in the next house with their
five-year-old twins, Bethany and Clive, before Frank and Meryl had arrived in the village.
They were able to buy the house of pink stucco, four bedrooms,
overlooking the green, with upstairs views out across the sea because the bank offered favourable mortgage terms to employees. Without
that
they wouldn't have had a sniff at it and with it Jerry had to be
everybody's friend at work while Mary had to have a full-time job
as a
receptionist in a local surgery. In truth, they lived behind their front door as semi-paupers. Appearances, for Jerry and Mary
Wroughton,
were deceptive and their poverty was hidden. To the outside world, they presented an aspect of cheerful, friendly affluence. Jerry
Wroughton liked to be thought of as a bank manager, dropping 'deputy'; Mary gave her job description as a practice manager, not mentioning the
word 'receptionist'.
Just as Jerry, at work, acquired customers, and Mary, at work,
acquired
patients, so both, in the village, acquired friends. Friends went with
the territory.
And they were, of course, careful in the acquisition of their
friends.
Friendships, as with everything else in their lives, were planned.
Friendships were useful, important, should not create stress.
Friendships should not provide unpleasant or jarring surprises.
Both
hated surprises. They were close to the Carstairs, on good terms
with
the vicar, relaxed with the Fairbrothers, but their best friends were xt house. There were never any surprises from Frank and
in the ne
Meryl
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Perry... not until that evening.
What Jerry and Mary liked about Frank and Meryl was that they
listened.
Jerry could talk all night round the kitchen table and Frank always seemed to find what he said interesting. Meryl was so kind, always ready to help out in a crisis, having the twins round if Jerry and Mary
were kept out late, always prepared to shop for them if work were
too
pressing. They had never had any cause for complaint about their
closest neighbours.
Vince, the vulgar little builder, had telephoned. Had they seen
their
guttering? Had they heard about the crane? What about the hut?
Did
they know about the guns? Would they be wanting him cash, if they didn't mind to check their guttering?
Coming home from work, Jerry Wroughton had seen the police car parked close to the junction on the main road at which the lane branched
off
to the village. He'd thought it was good to see them there, watching for thieves and speedsters, and yobs without tax discs or insurance.
He'd driven down Main Street, had seen a second police car coming
slowly towards him and thought that it was high time decent,
hard-working, law-abiding folk had proper protection. An empty car had
been parked outside the neighbours'. He'd been tired, he'd wanted his
tea, and he'd been sitting in front of the television when Vince had telephoned. He'd gone upstairs. From the back-bedroom window he
could
see down into the neighbours' rear garden. He saw the hut and the policeman walking slowly round their lawn. The sight of the
machine-gun in the policeman's hands had sent Jerry Wroughton into the
bathroom where he had vomited into the lavatory. The killing zone was
separated from his own property by a low fence of light palings. He rang Barry Carstairs, and then the fear was worse.
For the next hour, his wife doggedly insisted that it was his right to
protest and told him what to do.
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It was the worst surprise that had ever confronted Jerry Wroughton.
Her car had provided the lead they required.
It was a two-room flat, one room for the bed and the wash-basin, one room for the easy chair, the television and the cooker. The lavatory and the bath were shared with others on the floor below. The
detectives had taken apart every drawer and cupboard, exposed every possession of Farida Yasmin Jones and found nothing.
The Rainbow Gold file had carried an old address with neither a number not a street for forwarding mail. The university records had failed them. The father had cursed and the mother had sulked, but they could not produce a current domicile for their daughter. The detectives hadn't a workplace and so had no national insurance number to feed into
the computers. The driving-licence address had not been updated.
But they had the car's registration from the vehicle-licensing files at
Swansea. Four men, with the registration, had foot-slogged round
the
back-street garages of Nottingham.
ne of the possessions in the flat, scattered from the drawers and
No
cupboard on to the floor, had produced what they searched for.
The
detectives had been told to look for evidence of commitment to an
ndamentalist Islamic sect, but the possessions were those
extreme fu
of
ry young woman, one of thousands, working for an insurance
an ordina
company. They had her pay slips on the table.
A list had been drawn up of every motor-repair yard qualified to issue an MOT certificate of road worthiness All they had was the
registration of her car. To get into the garages' records, they'd had
to promise that the evidence uncovered of VAT fraud and Revenue scams taken no further.
would be
They'd rolled back the carpet in the living room, torn away the
stuck-down vinyl in the bedroom and prised up the floor boards with ach of the four detectives was familiar with failure, but
jemmies e
it
always hurt. They were sullen, quiet, surrounded by the debris of the
206
fe.
young woman's li
ey had nothing to show that this ordinary young woman had clasped
Th
a
th, or had made a self-justification for a hatred of her own
new fai
society.
The last chance was the entry-hatch into the rafters of the building.
ifted the slightest among them into the space with a torch to
They l
guide him. They could hear his body movements above them. As they made a play t
a
tidying the flat, replacing the young woman's clothing,
they heard his shout of triumph.
A suitcase was passed down through the hatch.
Laid out on the table of the living room was a leather-bound volume of
slin cloth. There were the
the Koran wrapped in spotless white mu
careful notes of a student, handwritten, listing the five Pillars
of
the Faith and their meaning, neatly folded clothes that they
recognized, and the head scarves At the bottom of the case was a
of film negatives. The detective sergeant held them up
packet
towards
ng light.
the ceili
"Well done, lads. That'll do nicely."
e darkness was his friend.
Th
But the quiet was a greater friend than
the darkness.
Vahid Hossein sat cross-legged. He had heard a fox call behind him, in
the trees, and the shriek of an owl. He listened for each shift of the
water-fowl, dippers and waders, in front of him. The bird was close.
need his eyes to see it: his ears had located it, and he
He did not
knew it edged closer. He heard cars but they were a long way off.
The
g in the far distance.
only clear sound was of a dog barkin
When he had come back to the place where the sausage bag was hidden, he
had found that the bird had tried again to tear at the rabbit carcass had the strength. This time, feeling with his fingers,
and not
through
207
ess hours of the evening, he pulled off small pieces of the
the darkn
bloodless flesh, slipped them into his mouth and chewed to soften
them,
then tossed them towards the sounds of the bird.
ch time he threw
Ea
e chewed meat to the bird he drew it closer to him.
th
By the morning,
he would be able to touch it, smooth his fingers on its feathers.
It
was important to Vahid Hossein that he should win the trust of the bird
gh his help.
throu
he marshlands at night and the bird.
He thought of t
Later, when he
was
would plan and think: he would put from his mind the
at peace, he
ite-skinned legs of the girl and the fall of her breasts, and make wh
the plan. It was the same quiet he had found in the desert, in the Empty Quarter. His wife, Barzin, in their small house in the village and
of Jamaran, had a fear of darkness
of silence, and he could not
ange it: she would leave a light on outside the open bedroom door.
ch
It
when he had left the desert and the Bedouin whose loyalty
was harder,
won, and driven on the streets past the barracks of the
he had
ericans, to make the plan and to think.
Am
The best times were when
the
iet and the darkness of the Empty Quarter cloaked him, and he would qu
e plan and site the