Authors: Bill Evans
“I can’t tell you that. It’s under investigation. But don’t make yourself a target. That’s what I’m saying.”
Forensia nodded.
“We have a church service in about half an hour,” Sheriff Walker said, “so we have to get going, but please, everybody, please be careful.”
Forensia watched him gather up his family, turn on a flashlight, and leave. She looked at Sang-mi, took her hand, and glanced around for Richtor. Hard to see in the dark, but she guessed he must have left. Richtor disliked police on principle, and she figured he’d scooted away earlier to avoid Sheriff Walker. She and Sang-mi headed back.
“I can tell you now,” the Korean witch said softly.
“Not a good idea,” Forensia replied. People were crowding close as they funneled onto the trail. Familiar faces appeared in the light of candles and headlamps, but not many whom Forensia knew well. She wondered if any of the younger guys had been here with Jason two nights earlier, urging him on. Maybe they would report back to him now, or maybe Jason had been skulking somewhere near the back of the crowd. “When we get home,” she said to Sang-mi, “we can talk.”
* * *
The more she talked, the more he loathed her. Before, he’d noticed her tits and those awful witch tattoos, but he could have lived with that.
She
could have lived with that. But every word told him that
he
can’t live with
her.
Even when she stopped speaking, his ears were stuffed with her nonsense.
Look at them, crawling back to their holes like they’re filled with “inspiration.” That tall one, she could talk the stink out of a skunk. She talks too damn much for her own damn good.
He knows they live together, her and the Korean. Not many secrets in a town this size. He wonders what they do to each other, the sex they get up to once they lock up. As if that could keep him out.
If there’s one thing he knows, it’s how to go through a door.
CHAPTER 13
Adnan and the other jihadists slept in the fisherman’s house in Malé. Maybe their last night on Earth. Paradise beckoned.
The fisherman told his wife to feed them breakfast. The attractive, dark-haired woman never smiled, and seemed nervous, as she had when he returned early from his trip—even before she’d seen the heavily armed men. She certainly never questioned that he’d brought home no fish.
Her name remained unspoken until they started packing their weapons into the trunk of an old Renault, whose backseat had been ripped out to make room for rifles, ammunition belts, and the RPG with the rockets shaped like minarets.
The fisherman told his wife sharply, “You will stay and speak to no one, Senada.”
As he turned to leave, a cell phone rang, filling the immediate silence with a silly pop tune from the West, where godless men made videos of their wives having naked sex with strangers and showed them on the Internet.
Everyone stared at everyone else. None of the jihadists carried a phone, not on a mission where electronic records could destroy many others joined in the holy war against infidels. The fisherman’s cell was in his pocket, silent. He looked down, shaking his head.
The ring tone played over and over: “I love you baby, in
every
way. I love you baby, let’s go play…”
The fisherman followed the trail of pop love to a shelf above the single-burner stove.
“I love you baby, in
every
way…”
He smacked aside three brightly painted tin canisters, revealing the device. They crashed to the floor, spilling salt, sugar, flour. A silty fog whitened the fisherman’s feet as he grabbed the pretty purple cell phone. He shook it in rage and reared back to throw it at the wall where it had nestled and sung. A hollow-cheeked jihadist pulled the phone from the fisherman’s hand. Flipped it open. Handed it back to him.
The fisherman put it to his ear and shouted, “Who is this?” turning his furious gaze on his wife. His enraged voice drew no response.
Senada backed into the arms of one of the strangers. Her husband rushed over, shouting, “Who was that? Who?” When she shouted back, “I don’t know,” he punched her in the stomach. She doubled over, spittle hanging from her lips. He grabbed her long black hair, yanked up her head, and waved the phone in her face, demanding, “Who gave you this?” He shook her head, yelling, “Tell me!” When she glared at him, he backhanded her face, bloodying her lips. “This is why I have no sons,” he screamed.
The Waziristanis didn’t speak his language, but they understood a husband’s fury and what had been exposed in the syrupy strains of an infidel’s song.
They pushed Senada to the floor and stared at her husband expectantly. He kicked her once, then again, waving the phone above his head. He began to stomp her.
Adnan stared. He had never seen such violence. He thought of his mother. No woman should be beaten like this.
No matter what.
But he didn’t dare try to stop her husband. These men scared him.
Senada curled into a ball but could not escape her husband’s kicks. She cried out at each hammering blow from his bare heels.
The gaunt jihadist who’d ordered the fisherman to answer the phone now threw out his arms and stopped the beating. He shouted at his men and one of them dragged Senada to her knees. When she started to collapse, the minion jerked her upright by her thick hair. He leaned over her shoulder, his long black beard pressing against her back, and spoke rapidly. Adnan didn’t understand what the jihadist was saying, and from her lack of response, neither did Senada. The jihadist who was holding her hair forced her to face the man who’d barked the commands.
The leader snapped out more foreign words and his other two men shoved the fisherman to his knees beside his wife. The man’s head hung to his chest, moving slightly side to side. He still held the phone. The head jihadist took it from him.
The Waziristani leader grabbed the Mauser pistol from under Adnan’s shirt and thrust it into the seaman’s hand. He dragged Adnan over to the kneeling couple and forced the barrel of the gun to the back of Senada’s head. The jihadist shouted again and pantomimed shooting. Adnan did not move. The other man shouted three more times, spittle landing on Adnan’s face.
Adnan shook his head: He was a martyr, not a murderer.
The jihadist jammed the gun into the base of the fisherman’s skull, squeezing Adnan’s hand painfully. His commands grew piercing.
“No,” Adnan said, so softly that he might have been whispering. He slipped his finger from the trigger. The others’ eyes grew large. He snatched the gun away and stuck the barrel into Adnan’s face, bruising his cheekbone.
Suddenly the room was so quiet that Adnan could hear Senada’s quick gasps.
Adnan closed his eyes and accepted his fate, knowing that his regrets would span eternity. What would Parvez think—that his friend had been a coward? That he’d lost his nerve and been shot like a dog?
The fisherman yelled “whore” at his wife. She shouted that she’d never loved him. “Do you understand? Never.” Blood dripped down her chin and spilled to the floor. “You’re a pig. My father forced me to marry you.”
Her defiance needed no translation. The jihadist smacked her head sharply with the steel butt of the gun. The blow made her weep, but she directed her outrage at her husband, spitting in his face and screaming, “I love Rafan. Do you hear me? Only Rafan. Not you.”
The fisherman lunged for her. She pulled back. A short jihadist stopped him.
A gunshot made Adnan’s ears ring. Senada’s body crumpled to the floor, eyes open, empty. The fisherman looked at his wife’s body, then at her killer, who met his gaze with a flat stare. The jihadist placed the barrel of the gun between the fisherman’s eyes and mumbled something. Adnan thought it might be a prayer, since the man raised his eyes to the ceiling as he spoke. Then the Waziristani fired again.
The fisherman’s head jerked like a line when the bait has been struck, and his body lay beside that of his slain wife.
Adnan and the four jihadists left the house and squeezed into the Renault. As they neared the harbor, the leader handed the Mauser to Adnan, who stuck it in his pants and carefully arranged his shirt to conceal it.
Adnan felt dizzy and sick to his stomach, but relieved: Martyrdom would still be his.
He prayed to Muhammad …
peace be upon Him.
* * *
Crack, crack, crack …
Goddamn AK-47s.
Rick Birk knew he would never outlive his fear of that rifle. He hadn’t heard one since Vietnam, yet he’d identified the weapon the instant the first shot had sounded. The North Vietnamese Army had loved them; back in the day the Russkies gave them away like stuffed cabbages.
Birk ducked behind a pallet of crates stamped with inky Chinese characters, moving so fast that his media laminates, hanging from his neck on a beaded chain, swung up and smacked him in the face. Least of his worries. There were brown buggers in headscarves down the dock to his left, and brown buggers in uniforms down the dock to his right; the ones in uniform were guarding the gangplank to Senator Gayle Higgens’s supertanker, the
Dick
fucking
Cheney.
All
the brown buggers had Kalashnikovs. The guys in headscarves looked like Al Qaeda wannabes and were trying to shoot their way onto the tanker. The soldier boys had been searching bags by the gangplank. Duffels had been left open and unattended; Birk assumed their owners had fled. The uniforms had behaved like smart soldiers everywhere and taken cover. Who wants to die for iron oxide? Helluva legacy. But why would anyone kill for it?
This has got to be a first.
Birk figured this skirmish—they were still firing at one another, mostly blindly—would last about two more minutes, until army reinforcements arrived and picked off the headscarves from behind. The wannabes had no plan, apparently, beyond playing shoot ’em up. Amateurs. They should take some lessons from their brothers-in-arms in Pakistan and Afghanistan. Those guys were ferocious kick-ass fighters. Birk hated their guts but they knew war. Not this piddly shit.
He
could take on these bozos.
One of them had an RPG, and Birk wondered why. If they used rockets, they risked blowing up the gangplank and damaging the boat, which they appeared to want to hijack.
Bring it on,
Birk thought. Rockets made for terrific bang-bang, and show producers adored them.
Where’s my cameraman?
Birk and his photographer had come to the docks to catch the water taxi to Dhiggaru, where Birk intended to flush out Jenna Withers’s old boyfriend. Then the shooting had started and the cameraman had bolted. Birk hoped that the chickenshit had holed up somewhere to shoot the entire scene, especially since he was in the middle of it. The “veteran correspondent,” the anchors at all the networks would call him. A dashing figure, a stalwart observer caught between opposing forces of evil. Might even save him from the next round of layoffs.
Come on, come on,
Birk mumbled impatiently, sweating through his fine Egyptian cotton shirt.
Can we have some sirens? The cavalry? Give me “bang-bang” for the viewers at home. Something, for God’s sake.
He took out his cell and grabbed video of the five jihadists, assuming they had the shortest lease on life. Once the reinforcements arrived, he’d have to try to capture the bloodletting with the phone’s crappy little lens. No telling what chickenshit was doing.
He’d no sooner settled back behind the pallet when a fusillade riddled the sweltering air. Birk peeked out in time to see a headscarf rise up dramatically from behind the covering fire and lob a grenade.
Holy fucking shit.
The grenade exploded. Shrapnel tore into soldiers, the gangplank, and the shipping crates. Birk glanced out and saw all five jihadists racing toward the ramp, which appeared intact. The same could not be said for three bodies that, until seconds earlier, had worn the unshredded uniform of this beleaguered nation. The surviving soldiers, seeing themselves about to be overrun, fled right toward Birk
,
who registered this development with dismay and more profanity. He also noticed that one of the jihadists heading toward the gangplank was armed with only a pistol.
Christ, he’s fat.
You didn’t see many fatties in the Maldives. But then a suspicion seized Birk and sent waves of fear washing through him: that the fat guy was wearing a suicide belt, or vest. Birk wanted to run, too, but didn’t risk any exposure, not with armed men racing toward the crates that he hoped would hide him.
* * *
In seconds, Adnan was glad he was lagging behind the other four Islamists: The one with the long beard was mowed down by automatic weapons fire and went sprawling on the pier. Adnan, thirty feet behind him, froze and watched the wiry leader of the Waziristanis open fire on the enemy, who was trying to take cover behind the leg of a massive red crane. The jihadist cut him down, leaving his dead eyes fixed on the steel structure that towered above him.
Adnan ran to the jihadist with the long beard, shaking him. No life. He stuffed the Mauser into his pants and grabbed the other man’s Kalashnikov. He’d never shot one of these rifles, but the trigger worked as he imagined. Too well: He shot up one of the jihadists before he realized what he was doing, ripping open his back and head, spraying blood, brains, and headscarf into the air. The man collapsed, facedown. Adnan felt nothing.
Four soldiers ran away, chased by a lone Waziristani.
Adnan sprinted as hard as he could for the ramp. “Nothing else matters,” Parvez had told him. “
You
must get on board.”
The short jihadist who’d tackled the fisherman raced into view, shooting at the soldiers who’d already been hit by the grenade. The attack appeared unnecessary; the bodies looked barely intact.
Adnan slipped on the blood seeping across the dock. When he dragged himself to his feet, shirt and pants smeared red, he saw the short jihadist stumble; a bullet had ripped through his neck, fired by a wounded soldier who had seemed dead a moment earlier. Blood arced from the jihadist’s neck, like water from a garden hose. He clutched his wound, staring wildly at Adnan; then he fell, dropping his rifle.