Authors: James Patterson
Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Romance, #Suspense, #Thriller, #Anthologies (multiple authors), #Fiction - Espionage, #Short Story, #Anthologies, #Thrillers, #Suspense fiction; English, #Suspense fiction; American
far. He jumped out as if impatient to get to some important task,
strode rapidly to the entrance. Two majors reached the entrance a
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hair before he did—which he had arranged by slowing his pace.
The majors both stopped and deferred to him. He waved them
ahead with an impatient gesture of his swagger stick: asserting his
rank, showing democratic largesse and distracting the guard at the
front door.
The two majors hurried on into the building so as to not keep
the colonel waiting. Not much more than an inch behind them,
Hareet merely flashed his credentials to the guard. The guard,
hurried by three credentials almost together, and the need to
give three fast salutes, barely glanced at the tall colonel’s identification.
Hareet was inside the building.
The long corridors were dim, cool and high-vaulted. Hareet
strode loudly along the corridors until he located the office of
the chief of supply. There was light under the door and the low
sound of steady activity inside. As the peddler had predicted, the
office of the chief of supply was working long and late this night.
Hareet walked into a lounge for officers only. He entered, went
into the lavatory, and then into a booth. Inside the booth, he removed all his makeup. He changed his rank to major. He changed
his insignia to that of an artillery unit stationed far to the south.
He tore all the credentials of Colonel Aziz Ramdi into small
pieces and flushed them down the toilet, removed the credentials for a major of a tank unit in the south from a thin pouch
under his clothes. He flushed the pieces of the pouch. He remained in the lounge for an hour, absorbed in reading some important report.
Each hour, he walked back to check the office of the chief of
supply. Twice, he went into the officers’ dayroom and read a
magazine. He drank the thick Turkish coffee the orderly served.
In his normal appearance, there would be no one who could
know him, as far as the peddler knew there were no officers from
the distant artillery unit in the capital at this time, all field units
being on twenty-four-hour alert.
At midnight, the office of the chief of supply was as dark and
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silent as all the other offices. As Hareet had been sure they would,
all the officers from the chief of staff on down had gone to rest
or party. Tomorrow would be a great day, tonight the building
was quiet. Only the guards moved in the corridors of the headquarters.
Hareet waited until a guard had made his rounds of the corridor outside the office of the chief of supply. The corridor silent
and empty, Hareet opened the door of the office with a picklock,
slipped inside, his knife ready on the remote chance someone
had been left behind, perhaps asleep.
No one had.
The door into the windowless file room was open. Hareet fitted a small light to his head and crouched to inspect the vault.
It was a simple key-locked vault from British days such as the
peddler had reported. Hareet picked the lock with no trouble,
swung the door open.
The documents he needed were neatly filed in their proper
places. The folders were sealed with a wire-and-plastic seal that
had to be broken to open the folder. Hareet broke the seal and
removed the documents. They felt faintly slippery to his touch.
Tomorrow, ultraviolet light would reveal Hareet’s prints, but that
would not matter.
He photographed the documents with the miniature camera
that had been hidden in the built-up heel of his boot. There were
ten lists with maps and dated overlays. The overlays were all new
and dated that day. Hareet photographed each document. They
became faintly darker under the heat of his intense light. He unloaded the roll of microfilm and placed it in its container in his
breast pocket.
He took a second roll of film from his other heel, reloaded the
camera and took a second set of photographs.
He returned the documents to their files, resealed the folders
as best he could, replaced the folders in the vault and relocked
the vault.
He left the file room.
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Behind the door of the dark office he sat at the general’s desk,
smoked a slow cigarette, looked around this high-level office of
the enemy and waited for the guard to make his next round. It
took a second and a third cigarette. He smoked deeply, enjoying
the relaxation.
When the guard had passed, he slipped out of the office of the
chief of supply, relocked the office door and walked openly again
to the lounge for officers. Inside a booth once more, he sat and
went to sleep with his head against the wall.
Dawn arrived soon after five o’clock that morning.
The building came slowly to life. Vehicles drove up and parked
outside. Orders were shouted all through the courtyard and at
the gates. The corridors echoed with the smart clicking of heels,
and the morning greetings of the elite officers. Heavy-booted
footsteps rang all through the building. Office doors opened and
closed like the ragged sound of small artillery.
Hareet waited until just after six o’clock when the initial chaos
had slowed to a steady sound of routine.
Inside the booth he took a large piece of wrapped halvah from
his pocket, unwrapped it, and embedded the second roll of microfilm inside until it was completely covered with the soft confection.
He left the booth, went out into the lounge that was still empty
at the early hour and returned to the corridor.
Hareet walked calmly toward the front door. Visiting officers
were being checked in by the sleepy night-shift guards. Excitement and confusion were high at the door—the fever of impending war in any army. The day-shift guards were forming in
the courtyard. The ragged fellahin servants were sweeping the
courtyard, watering it down in preparation for the heat of the day
to come.
Already the sun was up. It was going to be a dazzling day. Far
across the courtyard at the front gate, Hareet could see the night-
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shift guards stretching the weariness from their bones, waiting
for their relief. Vehicles coughed and sputtered in the morning
air. The officers continued to pour in. No one was going out.
Hareet waited until the day-shift guards forming outside began
to march to the posts to make the official transfer with the nightshift guards. He placed his pistol in his pocket, checked the film
in his breast pocket, and when a large group of officers came
across the courtyard and approached the front entrance, strode
out and walked straight up to the door.
The officers thronged in the entrance.
A guard turned around to check Hareet’s credentials.
There was a faint click somewhere in the wall, and an alarm
began to sound, echoing through the building and out across the
courtyard. The guard at the door stared at Hareet.
Hareet stabbed him in the heart, held the man’s body close
against him, and walked out into the courtyard through the confused group of incoming officers.
For a long moment, as the alarm continued to sound through
the headquarters and over the courtyard in the bright morning,
the officers and guards milled around and shouted and no one
noticed Hareet walking across the courtyard away from both the
building and the front gate still carrying the dead guard upright
against him as if they were hurrying together toward some important official duty.
Then the officer of the guard saw them out there all alone and
going in the odd direction, saw that one man was holding up the
other. He ran after them, shouting, “You out there! You, Major!
Stop where you are! Stop—”
Hareet dropped the dead guard, drew his pistol and shot the
running officer of the guard. Then he turned and ran on across
the courtyard toward the small barred side gate where he knew
there was only one guard.
Pandemonium flowed through the building and the courtyard
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as the guards and officers all grabbed for their weapons. Quickly
the day-shift and night-shift guards all spotted Hareet and began
to converge on him. The guard at the side gate fired and missed.
Hareet shot the guard down.
He leaped for the wall. A bullet hit him in the leg, buckled it.
He collapsed, rolled, and struggled up again. He grasped the
bars of the gate and hauled himself up toward the top of the wall.
Outside the wall, the two armored cars on patrol both careened
into the street. Hareet reached the top of the wall.
A burst of fire struck him in the back. The machine guns on
the armored cars cut him in two. Two rifle bullets exploded in
his head. His body, at the very top of the wall, fell back to the
stones of the courtyard.
The night-shift and day-shift guards stood all around Captain
Hareet’s body, uncertain what to do, perhaps awed by the daring
escape that had failed.
A colonel of military police pushed through the guards and
shot Hareet in the head again.
The colonel bent down, searched, and found the microfilm in
Hareet’s breast pocket. The colonel laughed and kicked the dead
body. Some soldiers laughed now, spat on Hareet’s lifeless eyes.
“Cut his head off,” the colonel of military police ordered.
“Hang it on the gate with a sign: Pig of a Spy!”
A general of the staff walked slowly up, and the soldiers and other
officers gave way. The general looked down at Hareet’s body. The
colonel of military police handed the general the roll of microfilm.
“Take his body and identify it, Colonel, before you cut off any
heads,” the general said. “A very stupid attempt, but well done.
He very nearly escaped.”
“A desperate attempt,” the colonel sneered. “A hopeless attempt. They are afraid of us, General.”
“Of course they are afraid of us, as we are afraid of them,” the
general said almost wearily. “Find out what it was they wanted,
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Colonel, what he has on that microfilm. Not that it matters now,
but they might try again.”
“They will always fail,” the colonel insisted. He did not like
to be told he was afraid of the enemy. That was weak, defeatist
talk. He would watch the general. But now he looked down
again at the dead body. “The fool never knew it would have done
him no good to succeed. We would locate what he took even if
he had escaped, and instantly change our plans.”
The colonel laughed. Hareet’s body was taken away. The chief
of supply quickly identified the enormity of the theft and posted a
twenty-four-hour guard at his door. Even though, he explained to
the army commander, there was no way anyone could get that data
without the chief of supply knowing it instantly and changing it.
In any event, the chief of supply assured the army commander, the
data was still secret and safe, there was no need to change the vital
plans with so little time left. The army commander was relieved,
such a change could have delayed them for days.
Captain Hareet was soon identified, and his head cut off and
hung on the gates for the fellahin to jeer at.
The headquarters returned to its routine. Officers came and
went in a steady stream. The fellahin servants cleaned the courtyard while the officers prepared for war. The hardworking, important and excited officers ignored the ragged peasants. One of
the fellahin swept up a large piece of discarded halvah. He
dropped the halvah into his trash sack. Eventually he took the
sack to a trash box near the small barred gate in the side wall
where Hareet had died.
Soon, a truck picked up the trash boxes and drove them to the
city waste dump. Out at the dump, a ragged peddler scraped
among the boxes. Later, the same peddler hawked wares in front
of a hotel near the eastern edge of the city.
A pretty Italian tourist woman bought a small urn from the
peddler.
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* * *
That evening, the pretty Italian tourist checked out of her
small hotel and drove from the city to a deserted beach. On the
beach, she stripped down and swam out to sea.
Thirty-six hours later, the attack was launched. Ten hours
after that, the war was essentially over. All the supply depots, ammunition dumps and fuel centers of the attacking army were destroyed within ten hours of the initial attack.
Some weeks later, Lieutenant Greta Frank sat alone on a hill
in the north of her country and looked out toward the border
beyond the orange trees and olive groves. The border was quiet.
It was not yet safe, but it was becoming safer.
Greta cried.
The minister came up the hill and squatted down in the dry
dust. His hard gray eyes looked out toward the border.
“There was no other way,” the minister said. “They had to be
convinced that he had tried and failed. They had to catch him—
and not alive. He knew it was the only plan that would work.”
“And you knew,” Greta said.
“I knew.”
“You knew before we went.”
The minister drew patterns in the dust with his walking stick.
“Why didn’t you go there and do it yourself?” Greta asked.