Cairo, Egypt
The sun was still a
sizzling torture over the crowded city streets despite the onset of
evening. The Arabs in their long white galabias seemed immune to the hundred plus heat, but
the Westerners in the city suffered. Evad Lurbud bought a cup of
warm date juice from a passing vendor who had a huge pewter urn
strapped to his back. The juice tasted awful, but his body needed
the fluids.
Lurbud stood on Shari al-Muizz Le-din Allah, the
main road in the Khan el-Khalili, a huge sprawling bazaar located
three miles and about a thousand years from modern Tahrir Square at
the center of Cairo. A rabbit warren of twisting alleys choked with
people, the Khan is the true shopping center for the locals.
Harried, red-faced tourists make it an obligatory stop after the
pyramids, the necropolis at Memphis, and the crowded Cairo
Museum.
Founded by Sultan Barquq’s Master of Horse,
Garkas el-Khalili, in 1382 as a way station for camel caravans, the
Khan had grown enormously over time. By the Ottoman conquest of
Egypt in 1517, items from as far away as England were being traded
in the sprawling bazaar. The Ottoman sense of order established a
guild system within the bazaar that is still evident today. Perfume
sellers congregate just south of the Khan’s main crossroads. Gold
and silver are sold in specific areas, while carpet merchants are
found in another. The heady aromas from spice merchants and food
sellers compete throughout the Khan while tourist curio shops cling
to the Khan’s perimeter.
There were no cars in the Khan, but the din of
the pedestrian traffic more than made up for the lack of engine
noises. Hawkers touted their wares and the Arab tradition of
haggling reached a great cacophony. The loudspeakers of the two
mosques just outside the bazaar throbbed with cries of “Allah Akbar” with pious regularity.
Soon, Lurbud knew, the Muslims would close up
their shops and head to the mosques for sundown prayer. He scoffed
at the notion of a God, especially one that demanded prayer five
times a day, yet he respected their fealty. As a veteran of the
Afghani campaign, he knew full well the strength the rebels derived
from their religion. The Mujahedeen called their resistance a “Holy
War,” and whipped the tribes into an amazing, cohesive force that
possessed the power to resist the largest army ever
maintained.
Lurbud had spent his first tour of the war as an
intelligence operative for the KGB, spending weeks and sometimes
months away from the relative security of Kabul on deep cover
insertions. Because of his swarthy complexion and knack for
languages, he could ingratiate himself with a rebel band and act as
one of their own while gathering data on their strengths and
weaknesses, assessing the future plans of other groups of
resistance fighters. When his task was complete, he would call in
the feared helicopter gunships. The craft would thunder into an
encampment where he was a trusted member and kill every man, woman,
and child in sight. Lurbud would conveniently be on patrol during
these massacres. During the two years he spent on this duty,
Lurbud’s Afghani compatriots never once suspected that he was the
cause of the devastation.
His amazing nerve caught the eye of the KGB
hierarchy, especially Ivan Kerikov. After one helicopter attack,
when Lurbud couldn’t extricate himself from a rebel village yet
managed to survive the scathing fire from the Hind-D gunships,
Kerikov pulled him from the ranks of field operatives and seconded
him to his personal staff in Kabul.
There, Lurbud’s chief function was breaking
captured rebels in the dank prisons the Soviets had established.
Lurbud learned that the binding force that held the Mujahedeen
together was also a major weapon in the interrogation rooms. The
Muslim faith forbade the devout from coming into contact with
swine, and even the threat of such contact was enough to break the
hardest rebels Lurbud faced. It amazed him how the most solid
fighter would panic when threatened to be placed inside the decayed
carcass of a pig.
What kind of God made men fear hogs, considering
so many of them lived just like them? Lurbud wondered idly.
The voice of the Muezzin blared from speakers
high above the streets in the minarets, calling the faithful to
prayer. Lurbud crouched deeper in an alley, shrinking into the
shadows of stacked spice bags as the streets began to empty. The
smell of saffron was nauseating. Glancing at his feet, he saw that
he’d stepped into a pile of dog shit. He muttered in disgust and
smeared the filth against one of the bags.
Looking up, Lurbud recognized his quarry as the
man left his shop across the Khan’s main road. The sign above the
shop’s door stated that Suleiman el-aziz Suleiman was a jeweler,
and the size of his shop indicated that he was prosperous. Evad
Lurbud knew differently.
Suleiman was one of the richest arms merchants
in the Middle East. Not having the notoriety and ostentation of
other death merchants, Suleiman had been able to practice his trade
unmolested by the United States or Western Europe. Although his
arms were used to fight in Beirut, Italy, Ireland, Germany, the
drug-choked cities of America, and countless other places, he had
never once been questioned by the authorities.
The obese Arab waddled down the street to the
Mosque of Sayyada al-Hussein, his body waggling with every step as
huge sacks of extra flesh slid against each other. His face was
round with an almost childlike openness.
According to his KGB dossier, Suleiman was far
from the fool whose image he projected. He had distinguished
himself in two of the wars against Israel and in the subsequent
years had established a relationship with nearly every terrorist
organization on the planet. The KGB figured that Suleiman’s
personal wealth was somewhere in the neighborhood of two hundred
million dollars.
Too nice a neighborhood for a stinking Arab,
thought Lurbud as he crossed the now empty street.
Lurbud paused by the door. The streets were now
eerie. He had been watching Suleiman’s shop since noon from various
vantage points, and during that entire time the streets had been
crowded and loud. There was no one about now; even the countless
cats that skulked through the alleys had vanished. Since crime is
nearly nonexistent in the Khan, there was no need for elaborate
security systems. Lurbud expertly picked the frail lock to
Suleiman’s shop.
He knew from the dossier that the Arab always
returned to his shop for a few minutes after prayer before leaving
the Khan for his home on Shari El Haram, the road which leads to
the Great Pyramids at Giza. Lurbud closed and locked the door after
once again checking the empty street.
Inside the shop, Lurbud passed display cases
that gleamed with gold in the dusty light that streamed in through
the transomed windows. The setting sun cast long shadows across the
room. Lurbud eased a Takarov pistol from its holster under his
jacket and parted the beaded curtain that led to Suleiman’s back
office.
A battered wooden desk, covered with stacks of
books and a gold measuring scale, occupied the center of the small
office. A coffee urn, tarnished and pitted, sat on a low settee
against one wall. The room smelled of dust mingled with the sweet
odor of hashish. Lurbud sat behind the desk, the pistol in his lap.
For twenty minutes, until Suleiman returned from prayer, the only
movement in the room was the occasional blinking of Lurbud’s dark
eyes. He waited with the same patience as the Sphinx just outside
the city.
Lurbud’s entrance had disturbed the room, its
air pattern, its volume, its feel. As he remained, motionless, the
room had calmed, accepting his presence. This was a skill he had
learned at a training camp on the shores of the Black Sea, where
students were put into a completely dark maze. The one who walked
out alive, graduated.
He remained motionless even when he heard the
front door of the shop open and close. An instant later Suleiman’s
immense bulk parted the curtain separating his shop from his
office.
Suleiman had grabbed a demitasse of coffee and
was almost upon Lurbud before he noticed the intruder. The
thimble-sized cup fell from his pudgy finger, shattering on the
stone floor. Behind his beard, Suleiman’s face drained of color and
he staggered back several paces.
“I read in your dossier that you are never
guarded here in the Khan.” Lurbud spoke fluent, unaccented Arabic.
“You believed that your standing in the bazaar would protect you,
yes?”
“Who are you?” Suleiman demanded, recovering
from his initial shock.
“My name means nothing to you, Suleiman
el-aziz,” Lurbud spoke without emotion. “You were hired to supply
and ship nearly a thousand tons of arms, ammunition, and material
to Hawaii. Is this not true?”
“I know not what you talk about.”
“I believe that you do. The order was placed by
Takahiro Ohnishi possibly several weeks or months ago.”
“I am a simple jeweler. I don’t
understand.”
Lurbud continued as if Suleiman had not spoken.
“I represent a group that does not wish to see this order filled.
We don’t want those arms shipped to Hawaii. In fact, we don’t want
you to have any further involvement with Ohnishi at all.”
“Who are you to tell me how to run my business?”
Suleiman retorted with a sneer.
“Ah, so no longer are you a simple jeweler.”
Lurbud’s smile was devoid of amusement.
“I know your type,” Suleiman said, his tone
scornful. “You’re some soldier of fortune who happened on that
piece of information. Do you think you can blackmail Suleiman
el-aziz Suleiman?”
“I am not here to blackmail you. I’m here to
tell you that the order is canceled.”
“You are too late, mercenary. Those arms are on
a freighter halfway to Hawaii.” Sweat had beaded on Suleiman’s
creased forehead.
The Arab was lying. Suleiman hadn’t even
purchased the arms yet. He was currently using Ohnishi’s deposit
money to push up the bond prices of a hydroelectric project in Sri
Lanka. Because of his contacts in the terrorist underworld,
Suleiman knew that Tamil separatists were going to bomb the huge
network of dams within two weeks. By pushing up the bond price and
then selling at a slight discount just prior to the attack,
Suleiman stood to quadruple the money. Only then would he put
together Ohnishi’s order for weapons.
“I believe that you’re lying, Suleiman.” Lurbud
brought the Takarov into view for the first time. “But to be
honest, I don’t really care what the truth is.”
For such a large man, Suleiman’s reaction time
was incredibly fast. He dove across the room, his body sailing
through the air like a giant zeppelin.
Lurbud swung his pistol in an arc matching
Suleiman’s leap, but his first shot amazingly missed the huge
target. Suleiman crashed against the wall near the settee, one arm
sweeping the coffee urn to the floor. Coffee flooded across the
floor in a thick black tide. Suleiman’s hands, made dexterous
through years of precision jewelry making, tore at a pistol which
had been taped to the back of the old urn.
Evad caught a look of murderous rage in the
Arab’s eyes as Suleiman torqued his huge body to bring the gun to
bear. Lurbud fired an instant before the muzzle of Suleiman’s
automatic caught a bead on him. The shot tore into the arms
merchant’s body, the fat rippling in shock waves around the
impact.
Suleiman’s arm was thrown up by the shot, the
tiny Beretta spinning from his hand. Lurbud fired again, and again.
The killing light in Suleiman’s eyes began to fade. Lurbud came
around the desk, his pistol aimed directly at the Arab’s
head.
With his free hand the Russian pulled a flask
from inside his jacket. He unscrewed the lid from the pewter flask
and knelt next to the dying Muslim.
“As a final thought, Suleiman el-aziz Suleiman,”
Lurbud began, pouring the viscous red liquid from the flask onto
Suleiman, “you will meet Allah with your body covered in pig’s
blood.”
Suleiman opened his mouth to scream at this
ultimate desecration, and Lurbud fired one more round down the
gaping throat. The blood of the dead Muslim mingled with that of
the unclean pig on the hard floor of the office.
Lurbud reholstered his gun, noting for the first
time the thick pall of cordite smoke that hung in the air. The room
reeked of smoke, but beneath that odor he detected the smell of
blood and Suleiman’s voided bowels.
At the front door of the shop, he paused. There
were a few people on the street, mostly old men heading back to the
coffeehouses and their hookahs. The thick stone walls of the shop
had muffled any sound from the silenced Takarov. Lurbud eased out
of the shop and mingled with the crowd as best he could. Ten
minutes later he was out of the bazaar, searching for a cab. He had
two hours to dispose of the pistol and get to the airport before
his flight to Hawaii.