Read A Line in the Sand Online
Authors: Gerald Seymour
without fear had stepped forward and Nizam al-Mulk was
young man
stabbed to death as he was carried in a litter to his wives' tent.
Hasan-i-Sabah had inscribed, "The killing of this devil is the beginning of bliss."
The words had been written 906 years before, in the place where the man
now sat. Every wall of the mountain fortress constructed by
Hasan-i-Sabah was now broken. It was the eighth time he had climbed the mountain, taken the narrow path used only by the sheep, wild goats ging wolves over the scree slope.
and fora
The drop beneath him did
not
frighten him, but if he had slipped on any of those climbs he would ed.
have di
He was two thousand metres above sea level, perched on
a
small rock high over the valley. It was where he found strength.
the fallen stones of the fortress, it was difficult for him
Among
to
imagine it as it had been. In the valley had been the Garden of
Paradise. In the fortress had been the discipline of self-sacrifice and obedience. The young men who gazed down on the garden and learned skills in the fortress were the Fida'is. Their trade was
their
killing. They understood their duty, and the personal sacrifice it ed.
requir
They yearned for their reward, a place in the Garden of
Paradise, where there were groves of sweet fruit trees, clear
tumbling
streams and women of great beauty. He had slept in a tent by a small fire, and at dawn had packed up and started his climb on the path
over
the scree. Whether in sunshine, or in the winter's mists, whether the
snow had fallen and the path was treacherous, he made that pilgrimage to the destroyed fortress. He would reach it and sit for hours with the silence of the valley below him and consider the mission he had been given, the requirement for obedience and self-sacrifice, and
the
sun lowered or the clouds
reward of a martyr's glory. When the
33
rkened, he would make the call on the digital phone given him by
da
the
was like a father to him
man who
, like Hasan-i-Sabah had been to the
each the
Fida'is, and he would start the descent. He would r
ur-wheel-drive vehicle as darkness fell and drive back to the camp fo
at
asvin, he would start on his journey as, long ago,
Qasvin. From Q
the
had started theirs.
Fida'is
atter with it?"
"What's the m
down his fork noisily.
He put
t it good enough for you?"
"Isn'
away the plate. Now he looked down at the table mat.
He pushed
t's not much it's what Stephen likes. A bit late to start
"I
complaining, you've had it before."
He'd cut through half a sausage and eaten it. He'd forked a few
ips,
ch
and hardly any of the beans.
hat's the problem, Frank?"
"W
ad cleared his plate.
Her boy h
He had a muted fear in his eyes, a
ild's loathing of adults' argument.
ch
t's not much, but I had a long day.
"All right, i
I did that typing...
Come on, Frank, what's it about?"
d it from side to side.
He shook his head, jerke
?"
"Are you ill? Do you want an aspirin
Again he shook his head, more slowly.
"For God's sake, Frank, what is going on?"
There was the violent scrape of Stephen's chair as the boy fled the he clatter of his feet on the stairs. Then his bedroom
kitchen, t
door
slammed.
34
w what?
"You kno
He did really well in his English assessment, better
than he's done before. He was bubbling to tell you but he didn't
have
the chance, did he? Come on, Frank, you're always so good with him."
His head was sunk in his hands.
They hadn't spoken, not properly, since she had come home and had
zed the lie.
recogni
She had been in the kitchen, doing the typing
for
Peggy before cooking supper, and he had been in the living room.
He still hadn't put a light on. He had turned his chair away from the
unit fire and the television so that he could sit and stare out of the
ndow.
wi
Dusk had come early and he hadn't drawn the curtains. He
he far side.
gazed out on to the green and the street-light on t
He
d
ha
did, or opened the
not listened to the news bulletin, as he usually
per she had brought him.
pa
ryl
Me
had never known him lie, and she felt a desperate anxiety. When
she had met Frank Perry, four years before, she had been a single
r
mothe
without a name for her son's father, working in a small company
in east London, pushing paper, when he had come to advise on the
ng required for the heating system in the old factory floor.
engineeri
He'd made her laugh, and, God, it had been a long time since anyone had. Next week, when Donna came to babysit, they were going
else
out
ate the fourth anniversary, 3 April, since she and Stephen
to celebr
had
village with their cases, all that they owned, and moved
come to the
into the house that she and Frank had found. Living here, with him, e said, had given her and Stephen the best years of their
she would hav
lives.
She touched and tugged at her fair hair nervously.
"Is it about me?"
"No."
She took Stephen's plate, stacked it under hers.
"Is it about him? Has he said something done something?"
35
"No."
"It's about you?"
"My problem," he said. His words were muffled through his hands.
"Aren't you going to tell me?"
"When I'm ready."
She was up from the table, carrying away the plates.
"Of course, we're not husband and wife. We're only man and woman with
?"
a bastard child. Makes a difference, doesn't it
bish, don't hurt yourself."
"Don't talk such rub
t talk about? Is it that
"Frank, look at me. Is it what we don'
forbidden area, the past? Two men came, and you lied. Did they come out of the past?"
He pushed back his chair, took the plates from her and put them in the
sink. He held her close against him and his hands were gentle on
her
hair. He kissed her eyes as tears welled.
"Just give me time, please .. . I have to have time." He gave her his
handkerchief, then went upstairs to Stephen's room to ask about his assessment.
English
She tipped the food from his plate into the bin, wiped the table,
then
went back to typing the Institute's minutes and the details of the Wildlife Field Day and the Red Cross bring-and-buy morning.
She heard him talking with her boy. Because two men had come from the
past and he had lied, she thought, somewhere in the darkness outside there was danger.
the window
vious evening, four men and a woman from the
The pre
Mujahiddin-e-Khalq
36
d been brought in a closed lorry to the camp at Qasvin.
ha
Normally
it
was the corpses of executed criminals -rapists, drug-dealers and
murderers that were dumped at the Abyek camp, but because the four men
and one woman were filth and apostates they were alive. He had heard them singing in their cell in the night, low, chanting voices.
They had headed north from the training base in southern Iraq and
crossed the frontier in the mountains between Saqqez and Mahabad,
and
been ambushed by the pasdars. Most of the raiding party had fled, but
five had been captured. After interrogation, trial and sentence,
they
had been brought to the Abyek camp at Qasvin.
Normally the corpses were propped against bare wood chairs or low
walls
of sandbags but once, when an airforce officer had been found guilty of
spying for the Great Satan, he had been offered as live target
practice.
It was not a camp like a military compound but was constructed as
a
small town, on the outskirts of Qasvin. It was a miniature Babel, for
the recruits spoke in many dialects, with a sprawl of concrete houses and shops, a market that sold vegetables, meat and rice, and a mosque.
For many years the Abyek camp had deceived the spy satellites of the Americans, but no longer. Now there was stricter security around
the
perimeter and greater caution on all methods of communication. Only the best, the most determined, of the Palestinians, Lebanese, Turks, Saudis, Algerians and Egyptians were brought to the camp to finish their training.
Many came to watch, marshalled by their instructors into small groups of their own nationality. In front of them, in the sand scape that stretched to the perimeter wire and then the open country, were the low
heaps of sandbags and the chairs. He wore a scarf across his face.
most dedicated and determined of the recruits might be
Even the
captured, interrogated, might not have the resolve of those who had m the mountain at Alamut.
gone fro
He did not cock his Kalashnikov
37
automatic rifle until the terrorists were brought out from their cell and were within hearing range of the metal scrape. They were not
blindfolded.
They were led to the chairs and the sandbags. Their ankles were not tied. The airforce officer who had spied for the Great Satan had
tried
to run, which had made for a better shot. It would be good if some of
them ran. They were between thirty metres and a hundred metres from him. They were denounced by the commander of the camp, who read from a
page of text. There was a silence and the sun caught their bared
faces.
shot two with a short burst and saw them spill over, dead.
He
He fired a long burst into another, a dozen rounds, and watched as the
body kicked in spasm. He used many shots on the fourth man, but his mind was clear enough to reckon when he had one bullet left. She
was
furthest away, the last. She stared back at him. None of the men had
the satisfaction of running, and neither did she.
given him
He shot
her in the forehead, and she fell backwards. There was applause.
He
weapon, and walked away.
cleared his
As the recruits blasted at the corpses it hardened them to fire at real
bodies he made a call on his digital telephone. He was ready to begin rney.
his jou
ashion it out of nothing.
"I cannot f
I can only pass on what I've
been
ven by the Americans, and I've done that.
gi
I've gone to the edge
of
it. If you can't shift him, that's your problem."
my rem
Flowers had cycled over from Vauxhall Bridge Cross to Thames
Penny
House; a rucksack and a mauve helmet sat beside her chair. It was the
end of her day and she was tired, Geoff Markham thought. She wanted out and the ride home. She was older than him, and more senior. She didn't acknowledge his presence. He sat at the far end of the table e minutes of the meeting.
and took th
ust go over the ground once more.
"May I j
Stop me if I'm wrong. We
38
have FBI material.." on a raid into the Saudi deserts, following an
intercepted but scrambled telephone link. They miss their target
but
retrieve sheets of burned paper, which are sent to their laboratories for examination."
Barnaby Cox was a high-flier, and Geoff Markham had heard it said
often
enough that promotion had come too fast for his slender ability. He headed G Branch, with responsibility for the prevention of Islamic terrorism and subversive activity in the United Kingdom. His route to
survival, as Markham had heard it, was a dogged pursuit of detail
and a
fierce avoidance of decision-taking. The weight of responsibility had
prematurely aged his features and greyed his hair.
what I told you yesterday afternoon, Barney. Their
"Which is
forensics
th the name of Frank Perry, in capitals, roman characters,
came up wi
a
time, and a wharf number in the port at Abu Dhabi, in arabic.
date and
sition located as
There was a secondary call the next day from a po
d-Gulf, between Abu Dhabi and Bandar Abbas.
mi
The Americans checked
the name Frank Perry with their own computers, drew blank, tried us.
We
registered, it's what I told you yesterday."
It was not Harry Fenton's style to show deference to the younger man leapfrogged him on the advancement ladder.
who had
Fenton was back
on
d trusted home territory.
tried an
He had private means and didn't
care
pension, but he had failed that day and there was an
about the
exaggerated edge to his voice. Geoff Markham doodled on his pad,
ng for something of value to note.
waiti
I'm given facts from which a threat-level assessment can be
"Unless