Read A Line in the Sand Online
Authors: Gerald Seymour
As the guards shouted their farewells, the barrier at the gate was lifted and the car powered away on the straight road through the
dunes.
It would be half an hour to the airport and then the feeder flight without formalities to the capital.
If .. . if he made it through the security check, another car, another driver, would be waiting the next morning for him when he came off 6
the
flight at Heathrow, to ferry him to another briefing. If they knew the
depth of his betrayal and were waiting for him at the final security hen they would hang Gavin Hughes, as his controller had told
check t
him, from the highest crane... He didn't know what would happen at this
place in the next few hours or days, and hadn't an idea what his own ld.
future he
apter One.
Ch
contorted to clean the clammy mud from underneath its
The harrier
wing
feathers.
worked hard at the clinging dirt as if its primitive,
It
wild mind demanded cleanliness before the start of the day's long
north. The dawn sunshine glossed the rusted gold of the
flight
feathers. The bird worked at them with its vicious curved, sharpened pecked at the mud, spat and coughed it down into the marsh water
beak,
below the perch on a dead, stark tree. At first light it had hunted.
ed on a brightly crested duck, the bone-stripped carcass
It had div
of
which was now wedged in a fork of the dead tree. The mud had speckled the underneath of the wings when it had fallen, stone fast, on to
the
unsuspecting prey.
Abruptly, without warning, it flapped with a slow wing-beat away from the perch and abandoned its kill. It headed north, away from the
hot
tering grounds of west Africa.
wet win
fly all day, without rest, on an unerring course that
It would
retraced
migratory route. As a killing bird, a predator, the
its first
harrier
ense of threat or hazard.
had no s
had been right over the tent camp, bucking in the strength of
They
the
before they had seen it. They had searched all morning for
gale,
it,
er by the lessening visibility from the whipped-up sand.
forced low
The
of the lead helicopter had been sweating, and he was supposed
pilot
to
7
e best with many hours of desert flying experience, good enough
be th
in
rm to have flown behind the lines into Iraq to supply the
Desert Sto
Special Forces. They had been down to a hundred feet where the wind herous and the wipers in front of him were clogged by
was most treac
grains of sand. Only a minute after he had rapped his gloved fist on
the fuel gauge and muttered into their earphones that they had little time left, the Marine Corps major had spotted the camp, tapped the t's shoulder, and pointed down. The colonel of the National
pilo
Guard
d softly mouthed his thanks to his God.
ha
ttelbaum had heard the excited voices on his headset and
Duane Li
thought this might be a good game for kids, reckoning himself too
old
for this sort of serious shit. They had put down beside the tents.
The
two following helicopters, which were also flown by Americans, were in and disgorged the local National Guardsmen. The rotors
talked
fted
li
away two of the camp's seven tents, but the pilots had refused,
no argument accepted, to cut their engines. They wanted out and
st.
soone
hirty National Guardsmen corralled the camp, the rotors and
As the t
the
ew the fine grains in stinging clouds into their faces.
wind thr
The
of low scrub thorn a hundred
two tents had come to rest in bushes
yards
from the camp, but the bedding that had been with them, and the
were still in loose flight, scudding over the sand. The
clothes,
pilots broke their huddle. They shouted into the ear of the Marine or: the storm was not lifting, the gusting sand would
Corps maj
infiltrate every aperture in the helicopters' engines, they should get
the fuck out not negotiable -now. It was already clear to them, to the
Saudi colonel, to the men of the Saudi Arabian National Guard and
to
Duane Littelbaum that the raid had failed.
The man they sought had evaded them.
t it keenest. He stood in the centre of the camp,
Littelbaum fel
ddled against the wind and the blast of the rotors, the sand
hu
crusting
8
on his face, and gazed around him. The information had been good.
It
had come from the interception of the signal of a digital mobile
telephone. The antennae on the eastern coast had identified the
position across the Gulf from which the call had been initiated, and the position in the Empty Quarter where it had been received. It
should have led them to the man Duane Littelbauifl hunted.
There was one prisoner. The man was heavy-set, jowled, and he lay on
his stomach with his arms bound behind him at the wrist and his ankles tied sharply. He wore the clothes of a Bedouin tribesman, but his physique and stomach were too gross for him to have been from this camel herdsmen.
group of
Littelbaum knew the face of the prisoner
from
the files, knew he came from Riyadh, was a courier for the man he
tracked.
The tribesmen huddled on their haunches around a dead fire surrounded hed stones.
by scorc
The colonel yelled at them, kicked them and they
.
keeled away from him
Twice he whipped them with the barrel of his
stol, but none cried out even when they bled.
pi
They were small men
with twig-thin bodies, impassive in the face of his anger. They
could
be shown the blade of a sword or the barrel of a gun but they never talked.
e camels were hobbled to pegs and kept their heads away from the
Th
force of the wind. Littelbaum thought the nameless, faceless man
would
have ridden on a camel into the blast of the driven sand. There would cks and no chance of pursuit from the air. He knew only
be no tra
the
n's reputation, which was why he sought him as if he were the
ma
Grail.
The patience of the lead pilot was exhausted. He was gesticulating to
the colonel, pointing at his watch, at his helicopter, and back into he storm. The colonel gave his orders. The prisoner
the eye of t
was
less, towards a fuselage hatch. Above the scream of
dragged, help
the
Littelbaum heard behind him the crash of gunfire then
wind, Duane
the
s screaming. Without their animals the Bedouin would either
camel
9
starve or die of thirst or exposure in the wilderness of the Empty Quarter. It was a shit country, to which he was posted, with a shit little war, and he had failed to find his enemy.
Perhaps it was because one of the emaciated tribesmen ducked to avoid the blow of a rifle butt, but for a brief second the dead embers of the
fire were no longer protected against the wind. Littelbaum saw black shreds of paper lifting in the gusts between the charred wood. He scrambled through the Bedouin and the National Guardsmen, fell to
his
knees, whipping out the little plastic bags that were always in his hip
pocket.
Carefully, as he had been taught at the Academy at Quantico more than two decades ago, he slipped the scraps into the bags. As he squinted down, he fancied that there were still faint traces of arabic
characters on the fragments.
He was the last into the helicopter, holding his bags as if they were the relics of a saint. They lifted, and the camp in which he had
uch hope disappeared in the storm of driven sand.
placed s
"No."
ate that this is a difficult moment for you, but what I
"I appreci
am
telling you is based on information gathered within the last month."
"No."
"Of course, it's a difficult situation for you to absorb."
"No."
"Difficult, but inescapable. It's not a problem that can be
ignored."
"No."
"They're serious people, Mr. Perry. You know it, we know it.
Nothing
ged... For God's sake, you were in Iran as often as I'm in
has chan
the
ket.
supermar
I cannot conceive that you are incredulous to what I'm
10
erce, where you would
saying. But this is not accountancy or comm
ve
ha
ts.
the right to expect definitive statemen
I can't give you detail.
It
is intelligence, the putting together of mosaic scraps of
information,
sing the little that presents itself.
then analy
I am not at liberty
to
detail that provided the analysis.. . You have been
divulge the
there,
you know those people... If they find you then they will seek to kill you."
Geoff Markham stood by the door watching Fenton doing the talking
and
recognizing already that Fenton had made a right maggot of it. The n,
ma
Perry, had his back to them and was gazing out of the front window as the late winter rain lashed the glass panes. As the senior
e, Fenton ought to have made a better fist of it.
operativ
He should
have sat Perry down, gone to the sideboard, routed for a whisky
bottle,
poured generously and put the glass into Perry's hand. He should
have
communicated warmth and commitment and concern; instead, he had
ed with the finesse of a buffalo into Perry's home. Now it
trampl
was
.
fast going sour
And as it went sour, so Fenton's voice rose to a
shrilling bark.
ham stood by the door and remained silent.
Geoff Mark
It was not his
ace to intervene when his superior fouled up.
pl
He could see Perry's
hunched shoulders tighten with each new assault.
Perry's voice was low and muffled, and Markham had to strain to hear rds.
the wo
re not listening to me.. . No."
"You'
nnot see what other option you have."
"I ca
ion is to say what I have said... No."
"My opt
sn't an option.. . Listen, you're in shock. You are also
"That i
being
wilfully obstinate, refusing to face reality-' "No. Not again. I won't run."
11
He heard the hiss of his superior's exasperation. He glanced down at
his watch. Christ, they had not even been in the house for fifteen minutes. They had driven down from London, come unannounced, had
parked the car on the far side of the green on to which the house
faced. Fenton had smiled in satisfaction because there were lights on
inside. They had seen the face at the window upstairs as they had opened the low wicket gate and gone up the path to the door. He had seen Perry's face and he had thought there was already a recognition of
their business before they reached the door. They wore their London suits. Fenton had a martinet's moustache, painstakingly trimmed,
a
brown trilby and a briefcase with the faded gold of the EIW symbol.
There was no porch over the front door, and Perry would have
recognized
them for what they were, a senior and a junior from the Security
Service, before they had even wiped their feet on the door mat. He made them wait and allowed the rain to spatter their backs before
opening the door .. . Fenton was not often out of Thames House: he was
a section head, consumed by the reading of reports and attendance
at
meetings. In Geoff Markham's opinion, Fenton had long ago lost touch with the great mass of people who surged back and forth each day along the Thames embankment under the high walls of the building on
Millbank.
To Fenton, they would have been a damn bloody nuisance, an impediment to the pure world of counter-espionage.. . Markham wondered how he would have reacted if strangers had pitched up at his door, flashed their IDs, muscled into his home, started to talk of life and death.
Fenton snapped, "We have conduits of information, some more reliable than others. I have to tell you, the information we are acting upon is
first class. The threat is a fact-' "I won't run again."
right fist slammed into the palm of his left hand.
Fenton's
"We're not urging this course of action lightly. Look, you did it
-' "No."
before
o it a second time."
"You can d
12
"No."
"I have the impression that you wish to delude yourself on the th
streng
of the threat. Well, let us understand each other. I am not
tomed to leaving my desk for a day, journeying into this sort
accus
of
backwater, for my own amusement-' "I won't run again final."
Fenton brayed, at the back of Perry's head, "There is evidence of a
onsiderable danger.
very c
Got me? Hard evidence, real danger From
where he stood at the door, Geoff Markham thought that Perry's