Blancanales's voice came on. "Ironman, you're impatient. Just relax, tough guy. Play tourist. People pay money to come here. Could be mucho worse."
"Like how? We don't know the language. We don't know the city. We don't know who we're after. All we can do is follow Katz and a crew of CIA screw-ups and wait for those ragheads to hit them…"
"Like I say," said Blancanales. "Could be much worse…"
"Like how?" Lyons demanded.
"You want to cruise around in that limo?" Gadgets asked. "Cruise around waiting for an RPG to come through the window?"
"Ah… yeah, you got a point. We're turning on the boulevard. Hey, Abdul, what's the name of this street?" Lyons asked.
"Sharia el-Qasr el-Aini."
"Yeah, the main drag. What did they just say in the limo?"
"Parks is back," Gadgets answered. "They're on their way to the airport."
"Ironman," Blancanales's voice came over the hand radio again. "Keep your distance. Tell your driver to start for the airport."
"Will do. Over."
Behind an old bus, Gadgets watched diesel smoke swirl around the taxi. The bus driver and several passengers crowded around the rear of the stricken vehicle. Two men rolled a wheel through the bumper-to-bumper traffic, weaving between cars, imploring drivers to back up, motioning other drivers to halt. But it was purposeless. The rear axle of the bus had snapped. In front of Schwarz's taxi, the bus driver argued with the passengers, waving his arms, motioning for them to leave the bus. Drivers trapped in traffic screamed at the bus driver and the drivers around them. Horns sounded in an unending cacophony.
"I tell you," Mohammed said in the front seat, "these people, they loco. The bus, it breaks down. They think a horn will make it go. These streets, they crazy place."
"You learn to talk like that on a kibbutz?"
"Oh, yeah, man. Kibbutzy on the Rio Grande."
Gadgets's hand radio buzzed. "Politician here. Cars coming out of the embassy."
"We can't go anywhere."
"We can. Break free when you get the chance."
On the other side of the Sharia Latin America, Cairo police stepped into traffic, blew whistles, held up white-gloved hands. The gates of the American Embassy opened. The tan-uniformed cops held traffic back as a Fiat with Cairo police department markings led two black Lincoln Continental limousines from the compound. The three cars accelerated away and swept around a corner.
Two teenagers on motor scooters darted past the officers holding traffic. One policeman blew a whistle at them. The other officer called to his partner. They hurried to return from the street to their positions at the gate. With clouds of exhaust clouding around the cars, the wall of traffic rushed forward.
As Blancanales passed in his taxi, Gadgets keyed his hand radio. "You see those two on motorbikes?"
"Looked like students."
"Big rush to get to school, too much of a rush."
"I'll watch for them."
"We'll get out of this jam as soon as we can. Later."
Weaving through the traffic, the driver of Blancanales's taxi, a taciturn, methodical young man named Zaki, kept one foot on the accelerator, the other on the brake, speeding to close the distance behind the limousines, touching the brake only when drivers ignored his horn.
Blancanales buzzed Lyons. "This is the Pol. We're going west, staying about a hundred yards behind them."
"Moving. We'll parallel you, stay out of sight. See anyone interesting?"
"Not really. Over." Blancanales watched the vehicles around him. Italian and Japanese compacts zipped in and out of lanes. Buses packed solid with commuters lurched over cracks and potholes in the pavement as men in Levi's and white robes clung to the sides. On one bus, a teenager gripped the front door's handrail while he studied a text with a German title. Faces in the bus windows stared down at Blancanales.
He checked the attache case beside him. Concealed inside was an Uzi with one hundred fifty rounds of 9mm hollowpoints. The silenced Beretta 93-R rode in an oversize holster under his jacket. He kept his hand radio covered with a map of the city. Blancanales looked up at the faces staring at him, grinned. A small boy grinned back and gave him a two-fingered peace sign.
"Motorcycles are still with the limousines," Zaki called back.
Leaning forward, Blancanales saw a teenager behind the Lincolns. Zaki pointed. The other teenager kept his motor scooter behind a Mercedes van, where the limo driver could not spot him in the rearview mirror. The second teenager lifted a walkie-talkie to his lips, spoke a few words, then concealed the radio in a handlebar basket full of books and papers.
Blancanales glanced to both sides, covered his hand radio with his jacket sleeve as he said, "One of the students on the motorbikes has a radio. I think they're running a pattern behind the limos." As Blancanales spoke, a battered and smoking Fiat sedan swerved into the lane. The first motorbike braked, cut across traffic, made a right turn. The motorbike behind the van maintained position.
Two men rode in the front seat of the Fiat. One saw the student on the motorbike, nodded. The student returned the nod.
"They are most definitely running a pattern. Repeat, a pattern. One talked on a radio, a tail car cut in, and the other student dropped out."
"This is the Wizard. I'm finally moving."
"And I'm on some side street," Lyons told them. "Going like crazy."
Traffic slowed as the wide boulevard veered to the northeast. As his taxi pulled up to the bumper of the battered Fiat, Blancanales slid low in the seat. He looked around, saw the student on the motor scooter one lane to his right. Keeping his hand radio below the window level, Blancanales clicked the transmit key twice, then twice again.
"That close?" Lyons asked. "This could get serious."
A Japanese mini-van hit the back bumper of the taxi. Zaki leaned out the window, delivered a curse in Arabic. No one answered. Blancanales looked back and saw the driver leaning through curtains screening the back of the van, speaking to someone.
Visible above the van's dashboard, protruding from a wrapping of newspaper, was a familiar assembly of steeclass="underline" the front sight and muzzle of a Soviet AKM.
Wrapping the map of Cairo around his hand radio, Blancanales keyed the transmit. He leaned forward as if questioning the taxi driver. "This is the Politician. Things are now serious. There's a mini-van behind me. Driver's got an AK. The back's curtained off, and he's talking to someone there. This could be a hit squad."
"Think they've spotted you?" Lyons asked.
"They've seen us. We're parked between their cars. But I'm just one more tourist in a taxi."
"Stay with them."
Blancanales laughed. "Can't get away."
A police siren stopped cross traffic. The Cairo PD car led the two Lincoln limousines through the intersection. A wave of buses and trucks and taxis followed. As they accelerated, Blancanales pointed to the right. Zaki saw a gap in the cars and buses and whipped into the space.
The mini-van sped forward. Blancanales watched the driver and windows. The driver kept his eyes on the limousines. The curtained side windows didn't move.
"The van is on our left now. They're closing on the limos."
"I'm buzzing Katz right now," Gadgets answered.
"No!" Lyons broke in. "You'll give us away to the ones that are with him. The CIA and the Egyptian."