Authors: Richard North Patterson
However quiet, the last statement was imperative, a warning. Nodding, Al Zaroor said, “Then let's discuss the details.”
Zia folded his hands in his lap, his manner businesslike. “Our men will conceal your cargo in the usual Pakistani crate, assembled with scrap
wood. Then they'll put it in a van driven by Muhaiddin and start toward the coast.
“This van will meet two others carrying teams of men with automatic weapons. Each van will have stolen Punjab license plates.” Zia's tone became pointed. “Given your fear of bandits, three land rovers holding men armed with AK-47s will travel a mile or so behind. That should be safeguard enough.”
Al Zaroor hesitated. “There is, perhaps, one more precaution.”
“Which is?”
“An identical convoy one hour before. Carrying an identical crate.”
A glint of displeasure preceded Zia's measured smile. “You're a careful man, brother.”
“And a grateful one. We pay well for extra services.”
Zia looked down, fingering his cup of tea without drinking from it. “What package will this new convoy carry?”
“Heroin. To be placed in a dhow and shipped to Dubai, just as the second crate will be.”
Once again, Zia seem to examine the sky. “They say you're a survivor,” he remarked at last. “It's a skill I respect.”
“It's one we share.”
Zia turned back to him, his expression grave. “Then for both our sakes, you will have your second convoy.”
Now Al Zaroor watched Zia's men dig deeper into the earth. Softly, he warned, “Soon there will be a stench.”
The men looked up, silent, and kept digging. Arms folded, Muhaiddin stood beside Al Zaroor. “Was he yours?” he asked.
“Yes.”
Muhaiddin's eyes narrowed to slits. He said nothing more.
Al Zaroor knew at once when they had found the body; one of the diggers put his shovel down and buried his nose in the crook of his arm. “Hurry,” Muhaiddin ordered curtly. “There's not much time.”
The men kept digging. Moments later the clang of a shovel hitting metal echoed from the ditch.
* * *
An hour later, Muhaiddin drove the van into the trackless night, headlights off, Al Zaroor beside him. The crate rode in the wheel well beneath the van. Behind them, Al Zaroor knew, the remaining vans and land rovers were moving into place.
Ahead was a vast ungoverned spaceâmountainous, rocky, and stark, a moonscape with more stunted bushes than trees. Soon they would reach the back roads traversing the Kirthar Range, dirt scars in the earth hacked from rocks. Few used them. There would be more dust than water; the rivers dried up in summer, leaving only a few springs fed by underground water. Little wonder, Al Zaroor reflected, that Alexander the Great, becoming lost here on his return from India, had left several thousand soldiers rotting in the sun, dead from hunger and dehydration.
There were hours of darkness yet. Any danger would not come from the army or police; at night, the countryside reverted to the Baluch. Most were Pashtun: bearded men in white cloth robes, conservative Sunni who lived by a rigid social structure, a weave of tribes and clans in which Zia's family was intertwined. They would pose no problem. But the chaos in Afghanistan had driven desperate Afghans into a region where too many men already faced poverty. These could be a threat.
Al Zaroor closed his eyes, still thinking of the bomb beneath them.
When a pothole jolted him awake, dawn had broken, and Muhaiddin was talking into a radio. The convoy had fallen into place.
To the side, Al Zaroor saw the jagged mountains of the Kirthar Range, the highest still snowcapped. The road ahead was barely wider than the van and skirted a hillside with a precipitous drop. Al Zaroor wished he had not opened his eyes.
Muhaiddin smiled, still watching the road. “There are reasons we take this route,” he said.
“Of course. Who else would?”
They took a hairpin turn without braking. Abruptly, Muhaiddin became taut. Ahead Al Zaroor saw a barricade manned by uniformed police. Softly, Muhaiddin said, “This is new here.”
He glided to a stop. Counting four policemen, Al Zaroor wondered what they made of this caravan appearing from nowhere. Perhaps Zia
had paid the men; if not, they would die. The danger was that one might use a radio first.
Muhaiddin rolled down the window. “What is it?”
The policeman wore sunglasses, two black circles obscuring a skeletal face. “We wish to know your business.”
Muhaiddin stared at him. “You know us, brother. Our business is the same.”
The man hesitated, glancing at the vans behind them. “These are different times.”
Without changing his demeanor, Muhaiddin reached for the handgun on the console. “Not for us. And not for you. Unless you wish it.”
The man's neck muscles tightened. Al Zaroor tensed, waiting. Then the policeman turned and signaled the others to raise the barrier. “Be watchful,” he told Muhaiddin. “More eyes may see you than before.”
Including from the sky, Al Zaroor suspected.
In late afternoon the path, sloping downward, neared the road just below Basima.
The young man beside Al Zaroor drove so that Muhaiddin could sleep. They neither spoke nor stopped; the men in the convoy pissed and shat at night. Instead they shared fruit and warm fetid water from a battered canteen.
The van's radio crackled, then a woman spoke in Pashto. “There are men approaching.”
Surprised, Al Zaroor wondered at the source of the voice. The convoy contained no women. “Baluchs?” the driver asked.
“Afghans.”
“How many?”
“I count six.”
As the van turned another corner, there was the pop of gunfire. On the stretch of road ahead, several men on foot were shooting the tires of a Mercedes sedan. The car settled slowly on its wheel rims. From inside emerged two couples, men and women, hands raised in the air.
More of Zia's people, Al Zaroor thought.
He heard the crunch of brakes behind them, the other vans stopping.
Three men in Afghan robes and turbans approached, AK-47s held at hip level. One signaled for Al Zaroor to roll down his window.
Though young, the man had few teeth, and sun had graven lines like cracks at the corners of his eyes. “You are not Baluch,” he said in accusation.
Al Zaroor felt his heartbeat accelerate. “Nor are you.”
Spitting, the man said, “Show me what's inside the van.”
“Open it yourself.”
Glancing at his companions, this man and another sauntered to the back of the van.
Al Zaroor inhaled. The Afghan on the other side held a gun to his driver's head. Watching him, Al Zaroor envisioned the handgun on the console.
He heard the rear door open with a thud. The crack of gunfire sounded. Startled, the man holding the gun to the driver's head fired, a twitch of the finger.
The spray of blood and brains spattered Al Zaroor. With a swift movement of his left hand he grasped the handgun and fired, obliterating the Afghan's face. The rest of him slid down the side of the van.
Staring at the murdered driver, Al Zaroor felt queasy. He took another deep breath, wiping speckles of blood from his face, then slid out the passenger side.
At the rear of the van, two robbers lay in the dirt, bodies stained with red. The Afghans beside the Mercedes had frozen, as though hypnotized by the six armed men who faced them. The only movement was the two couples drifting to the side of the road.
Muhaiddin jumped from inside the van, following the gunmen who had killed the Afghans. Stepping across a dead man, he glanced at Al Zaroor. “You all right?”
Nodding, Al Zaroor gazed at the surviving Afghans. “Kill them.”
Muhaiddin spoke a word.
Zia's men fired. The three Afghans twitched with the bullets like sheets fluttering on a clothesline. Then they fell to the ground, still.
Walking to the first van, Muhaiddin rolled the murdered driver onto the ground. Looking at the man's shattered skull, he closed his eyes.
“A friend?” Al Zaroor asked him.
“A cousin.”
Al Zaroor felt the heat sapping his energy by the moment. “We must go,” he said. “What do we do with the dead?”
“Our men will have to share two vans. We'll stack the bodies in the third, and leave them at night for the vultures.” Looking down at his cousin, he murmured, “But not you, Daoud.”
“And the Mercedes?”
“Push it into the ravine. Someone will retrieve the passengers.”
Laboring in the blazing sun, Zia's men carried the bodies to the third truck. Then they got back into their vans and land rovers and began moving toward the coast.
Just before sunset, they reached the port of Jiwani.
The place was a womanless pesthole, three rusted fishing boats moored beside corrugated shacks electrified by a groaning generator. The sole person in sight was an old wizened man who seemed to have shriveled in place. Al Zaroor wanted to laughâthe grandeur of his plans could end at this miserable flyspeck.
Muhaiddin approached the old man and exchanged brief words. Then he returned to the van and Al Zaroor. “Your dhow will arrive soon.”
“And the first?”
“Left two hours ago with its shipment, headed for Dubai.”
Walking to the third van, Muhaiddin ordered the men to dump the dead Afghans in the mountains. Al Zaroor watched their taillights vanish in the enveloping dusk.
Darkness fell. Hurriedly, Zia's men removed the crate from the well of the van. Laid beside the truck, it was a haphazard assortment of wood pieces hammered together and stamped as machine parts. The West's future in a Pakistani box.
Someone called out softly, pointing toward the water. Framed in the moonlight, the masts of a dhow were gliding toward the harbor. Muhaiddin and Al Zaroor watched it be moored, a shadow.
“Come,” Muhaiddin said.
Al Zaroor followed him toward an old wooden boat that bobbed in the waves nearest the shore. Beside them, three men carried the crate to the sunbaked mud where water met earth.
Knees bent, they placed it carefully in the boat. Muhaiddin turned to Al Zaroor. “This will take you to the dhow.”
The two men shook hands. Then Al Zaroor got into the boat, hand resting on the crate, and was steered toward the dhow by a man whose face he could not see.
Palms on the conference table, Grey and Brooke stared at the series of photographs Ellen Clair had placed before them. To Brooke most seemed to capture tiny rectangles observed from a great distance. Several showed what might be the outline of a boat against a black pool.
“What is all this?” Grey asked Ellen.
Through her glasses, the analyst gave him a look of owlish caution. “It's Baluchistan, of course. These last images were taken over the port of Jiwani and the waters offshore.” She placed a finger on one photograph, speaking with a librarian's precision. “Collectively, they seem to show an unusually large number of vehicles, six in all, arriving at the port. These specks appear to be men loading something on a boat before it meets a larger craft farther out to sea. A dhow, perhaps.”
Brooke looked up at her. “Can we follow it by satellite?”
“Possibly. It's not easyâthere are hundreds of dhows in the Arabian Gulf. But the latest images suggest that this one may be headed in the direction of Dubai.”
“Jebel Ali Port,” Grey murmured, then turned to Brooke. “Care to go back into the field?”
A
s dawn broke, Dr. Laura Reynolds drove from the Maronite church alone, stopping to admire an exquisite Roman temple in the hills above Anjar.
Gazing around her, she confirmed that her land rover was the only vehicle in sight. Then she pushed a button, raising the antenna, and leaned closer to the car's clock radio. She could never quite shake the absurdity of talking to a clock.
Nonetheless, she spoke, quietly but distinctly. “Morning, Sam. How was Paris?”
Hearing this, her listener would signal if the photographs she had sent, taken with the cameras concealed in her headlights, were sufficient. “This particular trip,” his voice responded, “was a pleasure.”
Instantly, Laura felt relief. Though her broadband bypassed the need for satellite transmission, others could intercept a message. This placed a premium on brevity. “I'm glad,” she said, and terminated the call.
Lowering the antenna, she took a last look at the temple, its marble white-yellow in the first streak of morning sun. Then she drove to the dig site.
Her colleagues were already at work. Seeing Laura amid the ruins, her reluctant coconspirator, Dr. Jan Krupanski, gave a wary smile.
From the beginning, Krupanski had been wary of Laura Reynolds.
At the end of her job interview, he had suggested that they stroll
through Anjar, stopping by the river flowing through its center. Motionless, he pondered its depths, his pleasant young-old face creased with worry.
“So,” he began, “you're the spy UNESCO proposes to plant among us.”
“I prefer the term âretriever of antiques,'” Laura amended. “You must know what's at stake here. Smuggling is a deadly business.”
“But is it my business, I wonder?”
Laura waited for two Shia women in head scarves and long robes to pass them on the way to market. Quietly, she answered, “Tony Abboud and I agree that it should be. At last the United Nations is allowing UNESCO to address this crime. So here I am.” Hands in her pockets, Laura faced him. “It's not just that they're plundering Lebanon's history. Nor is the cast of characters confined to crooked art dealers selling treasures to rich vulgarians from Texas. This traffic finances terrorists.”
Distractedly, Krupanski ran a hand through his graying caramel hair. “Perhaps, Dr. Reynolds. But
my
cast of characters includes the universities who fund me, however badly. For them to know that I was harboring you might interdict this precious flow of parsimony.”