Authors: Deon Meyer
two South African individuals, Farhad
Ahmed Dockrat and
Junaid Ismail Dockrat, and a related
entity for financing and
facilitating al-Qaeda, pursuant to
Executive Order 13224.
This action freezes any assets the
designees have under US
jurisdiction and prohibits
transactions between US persons
and the designees.
Press
release, US Department of Treasury, 26 January 2007
(Verbatim)
31 July 2009. Friday.
Ismail Mohammed runs down the steep slope of Heiliger Lane.
The coat-tails of his white jalabiya robe with its trendy open mandarin collar
flick up high with every stride. His arms wave wildly, in mortal fear, and for
balance. The crocheted kufi falls off his head onto the cobbles at the
crossroad, as he fixes his eyes on the relative safety of the city below.
Behind him the door of the one-storey building next to the
Bo-Kaap's Schotschekloof mosque bursts open for the second time. Six men, also
in traditional Islamic garb, rush out onto the street all looking immediately,
instinctively downhill. One has a pistol in his hand. Hurriedly, he takes aim
at the figure of Ismail Mohammed, already sixty metres away, and fires off two
wild shots, before the last, older man knocks his arm up, bellowing: 'No! Go.
Catch him.'
The three younger men set off after Ismail. The grizzled
heads stand watching, eyes anxious at the lead they have to make up. 'You
should have let him shoot, Sheikh,' says one. 'No, Shaheed. He was
eavesdropping.' 'Exactly. And then he ran. That says enough.' 'It doesn't tell
us who he's working for.' 'Him? Ismail? You surely don't think ...' 'You never
can tell.'
'No. He's too ... clumsy. For the locals maybe. NIA.' 'I hope
you are right.' The Sheikh watches the pursuers sprinting across the Chiappini
Street crossing, weighing up the implications. A siren sounds up from below in
Buitengracht.
'Come,' he says calmly. 'Everything
has changed.'
He walks ahead, quickly, to the
Volvo.
From the belly of the city another
siren begins to wail.
She knew the significance of the footsteps, five o' clock on
a Friday afternoon, so hurried and purposeful. She felt the paralysis of prescience,
the burden. With great effort she raised up her defences against it.
Barend came in, a whirlwind of shampoo and too much deodorant.
She didn't look at him, knowing he would be freshly turned out for the evening,
his hair a new, dubious experiment. He sat down at the breakfast counter. 'So,
how are you, Ma? What's cooking?' So jovial.
'Dinner,' said Milla, resigned.
'Oh. I'm not eating here.'
She knew that. Christo probably wouldn't either.
'Ma, you're not going to use your car tonight, are you.' In
the tone of voice he had perfected, that astonishing blend of pre-emptive hurt
and barely disguised blame.
'Where do you want to go?'
'To the city. Jacques is coming. He's got his licence.'
'Where in the city?'
'We haven't decided yet.'
'Barend, I have to know.' As gently as possible.
'
Ja,
Ma, I'll let you know
later.' The first hint of annoyance breaking through.
'What time will you be home?'
'Ma, I'm eighteen. Pa was in the army when he was this old.'
'The army had rules.'
He sighed, irritated. 'OK, OK. So ... we'll leave at twelve.'
'That's what you said last week. You only got in after two.
You're in Matric, the final exams ...'
'Jissis
, Ma, why do you always go on about
it? You don't want me to have any fun.'
'I want you to have fun. But within certain limits.'
He gave a derisory laugh, the one that meant he was a fool to
put up with this. She forced herself not to react.
'I told you. We will leave at twelve.'
'Please don't drink.'
'Why do you worry about that?'
She wanted to say, I worry about the half-bottle of brandy I
found in your cupboard, clumsily hidden behind your underpants, along with the
pack of Marlboro's. 'It's my job to worry. You're my child.'
Silence, as if he accepted that. Relief washed over her. That
was all he wanted. They had got this far without a skirmish. Then she heard the
tap-tap of his jerking leg against the counter, saw how he lifted the lid off
the sugar bowl and rolled it between his fingers. She knew he wasn't finished.
He wanted money too.
'Ma, I can't let Jacques and them pay for me.'
He was so clever with his choice of words, with the sequence
of favours asked, with his strategy and onslaught of accusation and blame. He
spun his web with adult skill, she thought. He set his snares, and she stepped
into them so easily in her eternal urge to avoid conflict. The humiliation
could be heard in her voice. 'Is your pocket money finished?'
'Do you want me to be a parasite?'
The
you
and the aggression were
the trigger, she saw the familiar battlefield ahead. Just give him the money,
give him the purse and say take it. Everything. Just what he wanted.
She took a deep breath. 'I want you to manage on your pocket
money. Eight hundred rand a month is ...'
'Do you know how much Jacques gets?'
'It doesn't matter, Barend. If you want more you should ...'
'Do you want me to lose all my friends? You don't want me to
be fucking happy.' The swearword shook her, along with the clatter of the sugar
bowl lid that he threw against the cupboard.
'Barend,' she said, shocked. He had exploded before, thrown
his hands in the air, stormed out. He had used
Jesus
and
God,
he had mumbled the unmentionable,
cowardly and just out of hearing. But not this time. Now his whole torso leaned
over the counter, now his face was filled with disgust for her. 'You make me
sick,' he said.
She cringed, experiencing the attack physically, so that she
had to reach for support, stretch out her hand to the cupboard. She did not
want to cry, but the tears came anyway, there in front of the stove with a
wooden spoon in her hand and the odour of hot olive oil in her nose. She
repeated her son's name, softly and soothingly.
With venom, with disgust, with the intent to cause bodily
harm, with his father's voice and inflection and abuse of power, Barend slumped
back on the stool and said, 'Jesus, you are pathetic. No wonder your husband
fucks around.'
The member of the oversight committee, glass in hand,
beckoned to Janina Mentz. She stood still and waited for him to navigate a path
to her. 'Madam Director,' he greeted her. Then he leaned over conspiratorially,
his mouth close to her ear: 'Did you hear?'
They were in the middle of a banqueting hall, surrounded by
four hundred people. She shook her head, expecting the usual, the latest minor
scandal of the week.
'The Minister is considering an amalgamation.'
'Which Minister?'
' Your
Minister.'
'An amalgamation?'
'A superstructure. You, the National Intelligence Agency, the
Secret Service, everyone. A consolidation, a union. Complete integration.'
She looked at him, at his full-moon face, shiny with the glow
of alcohol, looking for signs of humour. She found none.
'Come on,' she said. How sober was he?
'That's the rumour. The word on the street.'
'How many glasses have you had?' Light-hearted.
'Janina, I am deadly serious.'
She knew he was informed, had always been reliable. She hid
her concern out of habit. 'And does the rumour say when?'
'The announcement will come. Three, four weeks. But that's
not the big news.' 'Oh.'
'The President wants Mo. As chief.'
She frowned at him.
'Mo Shaik,' he said.
She laughed, short and sceptical.
'Word on the street,' he said solemnly.
She smiled, wanted to ask about his source, but her cellphone
rang inside her small black handbag. 'Excuse me,' she said, unclipping the
handbag and taking out her phone. It was the Advocate, she saw.
'Tau?' she answered.
'Ismail Mohammed is in from the cold.'
Milla lay on her side in the dark, knees tucked up to her
chest. Beyond weeping she made reluctant, painful discoveries. It seemed as
though the grey glass, the tinted window between her and reality, was shattered,
so that she saw her existence brilliantly exposed, and she could not look away.
When she could no longer stand it, she took refuge in
questions, in retracing. How had she come to this? How had she lost
consciousness, sunk so deep? When? How had this lie, this fantasy life,
overtaken her? Every answer brought greater fear of the inevitable, the
absolute knowledge of what she must do. And for that she did not have the
courage. Not even the words. She, who had always had words, in her head, in her
diary, for everything.
She lay like that until Christo came home, at half past
twelve that night. He didn't try to be quiet. His unsteady footsteps were
muffled on the carpet, he switched on the bathroom light, then came back and
sat down heavily on the bed.
She lay motionless, with her back to him, her eyes closed,
listening to him pulling off his shoes, tossing them aside, getting up to go to
the bathroom, urinating, farting.
Shower, please. Wash your sins away.
Running water in the basin. Then the light went off, he came
to bed, climbed in. Grunted, tired, content.
Just before he pulled the blankets over himself, she smelled
him. The alcohol. Cigarette smoke, sweat. And the other, more primitive smell.
That's
when she found the courage.
1
August 2009. Saturday.
Transcription:
Debriefing of Ismail Mohammed by A.J. M. Williams. Safe
House,
Gardens, Cape Town
Date and Time:
7
August 2009, 17.52
M: I
want to enter the program,
Williams. Like in now.
W:
I understand, Ismail, but. . .
M:
No 'buts'. Those fuckers wanted to shoot me. They won't stop
at trying.
W:
Relax, Ismail. Once we've debriefed
you ...
M:
How long is that going to take?
W:
The sooner you calm down and talk to me, the sooner it will be done.
M: And then you'll put me in witness protection?
W:
You know we look after our people. Let's start at the beginning, Ismail. How
did it happen?
M:
I heard them talking . . .
W:
No, how did they find out you were working for us?
M:
I don't know.
W:
You must have some sort of idea.
M:
I ...
Maybe they followed me
. . .
W:
To the drop?
M:
Maybe. I was careful. With everything. For the drop I did
three switch backs, got on other trains twice,
but...
W:
But what?
M:
No,
I.. .
you
know ...
After the
drop ... I thought... I dunno ...
Maybe I
saw someone. But afterwards ...
W:
One of them?
M:
Could be. Maybe.
W:
Why
did
they suspect you?
M:
What do you mean?
W:
Let's suppose they followed you. They must have had a reason. You must have done
something. Asked too many questions? Wrong place at the wrong time?
M:
It's your fault. If I could have reported via the cellphone,
I would have been there still.
W:
Cellphones are dangerous, Ismail, you know that.
M:
They can't tap every phone in the Cape.
W:
No, Ismail, only those that matter. What have the cellphones to do with this?