Sameh spent the ride relating to Marc all the Palestinian had told them, and filling in details from his own experience. “The Palestinians have been in Iraq for some time now. At the height of Saddam’s power, before the Gulf War, Saddam used his oil revenue to foment rebellion throughout the Arab world. Any regime that opposed Saddam came under threat.”
Over his shoulder Major Lahm added, “Do not forget the role that Saddam’s Baath Party has played.”
“Saddam Hussein’s political arm was known as the Baath Party. The Baathists had three primary aims,” Sameh explained. “A secular dictatorship, free of all religious influences. Arab socialism. And military expansion.”
Major Lahm said, “Which means Saddam’s aims brought us a very special friend to the north.”
Marc supplied, “The Soviets.”
The policeman nodded. “Believe me when I tell you, if you have the Soviets for friends, you need no enemy.”
Sameh went on, “When the Palestinians’ first Intifada failed and their soldiers were forced to flee the West Bank, Saddam made them welcome. They were given passports and jobs to which they never needed to show up, except to receive their paychecks.”
“But now their easy life is over,” Major Lahm said, sounding very satisfied. “Thanks to the Americans.”
“And they have become Iraq’s most enterprising criminals,” Sameh said.
The Land Cruiser bounced over a ragged ledge, and the driver announced, “We have arrived.”
– – One minute they had been surrounded by the poorest hovels and desert scrub. The next, they were back in a semblance of civilization. The street was paved in segments, which was what caused the bump. No warning sign, just a sudden end to the gravel and a ragged rise up to fresh asphalt. The same was true for the development they entered. Large houses loomed behind concrete walls topped with broken glass and barbed wire. Between the houses were stretches of rubble, refuse, and stubborn desert scrub.
They halted in a borderland of night shadows. Ahead of them rose a line of shops, little street-side storefronts with flashing neon and music drifting through open doors. A couple of groceries, three cafes, a clothing store, a more dignified restaurant, electronics, and a hardware store. Guards patrolled the sidewalk and street in front of the shops. More guards patrolled around the neighboring homes.
Lahm said, “It is a perfect situation. Big houses, guards, and neighbors who want to know nothing. Many Westerners working the oil fields live here. They come and they go at all hours. The fields work night and day. Perfect.”
Marc asked, “Which one is it?”
“Beyond the stores and the lights. Five houses past. It stands by itself.”
“There’s a guard outside the gates.”
“Look around you,” Lahm said. “There are guards everywhere.”
“But this is a good sign, right? They wouldn’t keep a guard if they already had moved.”
Sameh realized Marc was grinning. “You find this humorous?”
“No. Sorry. It’s adrenaline.” He hesitated, then added, “And yes. It is funny. Two days ago I thought I was trapped forever in a life that fitted me about as well as a straitjacket.”
“You could die out here and be buried in a dusty grave.”
“Right. But I trust you both to watch my back.”
Sameh found himself flooded with a fear so intense it almost choked him. “You Americans talk of trust like it is something you can pull from your wallet.”
“Back when I worked in Washington, some of my superiors liked to take a new subordinate out and get them roaring drunk. They felt that was the best way to test a person’s core. The staffer’s inhibitions fell away, showing who he was inside. Angry, hurt, depressed, aggressive, problems at home, whatever. The problem was, I don’t drink. Which meant a lot of these guys would never trust me. But my boss, the man who sent me over, had a different idea. He said the best way to test a person was by studying how they faced fear. Both of you face fear honestly. I like that.”
The major said in Arabic, “I thought you said he was a bookkeeper.”
“He used to be an intelligence agent.”
“Why the change?”
“Perhaps you should ask him.”
Instead, the major studied the American with an unblinking gaze.
Finally Sameh asked Marc, “Are you afraid now?”
“I’ve been scared since the jet’s wheels touched Iraqi soil.”
Major Lahm nodded, then said, “There is a problem. We cannot attack in force without risking the lives of the children.”
That was another item the Palestinian had mentioned. How there were other children. Which Sameh and Lahm had suspected all along. Marc stared out the front windshield at the street and the house and the night. “I have an idea.”
As the American described his plan, Sameh realized an invisible line had been crossed. Somehow the young man seated beside him had done the impossible. A Shia police officer and a Christian attorney, two men who had survived by distrusting all strangers, had come to treat Marc as an ally.
And something more.
They considered him an equal.
When Marc was finished, Major Lahm said, “I can send one of my own men to do this thing.”
“You and your men are trained to attack. I’m trained to be invisible.”
“But you are the newcomer. This is my world.”
“Maybe so.” Marc shrugged. “But the night is the same everywhere.”
– – Sameh returned from his errand feeling thoroughly ashamed. His face burned from the look the storekeeper had given him while handing over Sameh’s second package. He stepped into the alley where the vehicles were parked and handed Marc the paper sack the storekeeper had drawn from a locked closet. “I have never bought alcohol before.”
Marc drew the pint bottle from the sack. “Did you get the other thing?”
“This is the largest they had.” Sameh gave him a dark jacket.
“It doesn’t have to fit perfectly,” Marc replied.
One of Major Lahm’s men stood sentry at the alley’s entrance. The other eight men watched as Marc dropped the jacket into the dirty roadway. He used both feet to walk the jacket around. He then reached down, took a double handful of grime, and rubbed it all over his trousers and his shirt. Two more handfuls were applied to his face and hair. “Now the booze.”
Marc opened the bottle and splashed it liberally over his jacket. More on his face and neck, some into his hair. The men watched him in openmouthed astonishment.
Marc pointed to Major Lahm’s second-in-command. “Ask him if I can borrow his headgear.”
Lahm ordered, “Give him your koufia.”
The officer looked at Lahm, but did not object. He handed it over, then helped Marc tie the kerchief properly. Marc made careful adjustments so it appeared only barely in place, yet covered most of his face. The man stepped back and said, “My wife will smell this and accuse me of drinking during Ramadan.”
Four of Lahm’s men slipped away. Two were instructed to halt any approach made by guards from neighboring houses. The other two, led by Major Lahm’s second-in-command, made their way toward the target house’s rear. The rest followed the major, Sameh, and Marc as they circled back several blocks to approach the house through a darkened lane. Lahm and his men were dressed in midnight blue trousers and T-shirts and Kevlar vests. Marc stank of booze. Sameh had never felt so out of place in his entire life.
When the house came back into view, Lahm opened his cellphone and punched numbers. He whispered, listened, then said, “They are in place and awaiting my signal.”
Marc said, “Tell them to hang tight. Let’s watch the guards for a while.”