“Well, sure. But it’s not…” Marc waved it away.
Hamid and the others chuckled, then Hamid said, “Already you argue like Arab man. You speak the words, but you know you have already lost the quarrel.”
Marc felt his face grow warm. “Nothing is happening with Bisan’s mother.”
They were all laughing now. Hamid said, “My friend, Leyla is busy now with the tape, how you say?” He held his hands to either side of Marc’s shoulders.
“She’s taking my measure?”
“Yes. Is so. There is Iraqi saying. The woman measures her man for his wedding garment. Then the man discovers he being married. And the woman, she lets him think it was all his idea.”
“Not a chance.”
Hamid’s second-in-command spoke around a broad grin. Hamid translated, “Bisan, she speaks the words her mother cannot say.”
“It’s not like that.”
The table had become very Arab now, the soft laughter and the gentle speech, no hurry to the afternoon. They had all day to poke fun at Marc and make friends in the process. Hamid said, “No, of course not. You are American. You know everything. Especially what the Arab woman does to your mind.”
“We’re talking about a child.”
“Who makes your heart weep and sing, all at same time, yes?”
When Marc did not reply, Yussuf grabbed his chest and said, “ Habibi, habibi.”
Hamid said, “So you speak to the woman-child. And the mother, she is there saying nothing. And everything you say to the child is spoken to the mother also.”
“What was the word Yussuf said?”
“ Habibi. My darling. My dearest one.”
“You’re all nuts, you know that?”
“And you, my friend, are already gone.” Hamid brushed off his hands. “ Halas. Finished for you. Good-bye, my American friend. All done. Your goat, it is roasting nicely.”
Marc pushed his chair back from the table and rose to his feet. “I think I’ll go have a look around.”
“Wait, wait, Habibi, we come with you.” The men were still laughing as they rose from the table. They left the cafe in a cluster as Arab as the market and the square and the day, four men tightly compacted with shared humor. Hamid settled his arm across Marc’s shoulder and said, “You must let us teach you the wedding dances. They take much time. Bisan, she will be so disappointed if you cannot dance with her mother.”
Marc wanted to object. He wanted to argue, push away. But he remained where he was, at the center of this group. The distance between him and Hamid and his team had been evaporated by humor. Marc was an accepted member of this group of Arab men, weaving through the market, approaching the traffic and the dusty square. No amount of embarrassed discomfort could erase how good this felt.
Josh Reames drifted over. Marc had no idea where he had come from, which shadow he had used for camouflage. Even Hamid was surprised. Josh said, “Everything looks good. I’m thinking this was a waste of a hot afternoon.”
Hamid shook his head. “Nothing is wasted. Please thank your contact who brought us together. And please tell your men…”
Hamid stopped and squinted into the distance.
Josh asked, “You see something?”
Then Marc spotted it too. “The truck.”
“So?”
“It’s almost empty,” Marc said, noting how high the tires ran. “Why does it need a tarp over the back?”
Josh lifted his cap and rubbed short-cropped hair. Instantly two more of his men appeared. He said, “How do you want to handle it?”
“This is your source,” Hamid said. “Your play.”
“It’s your country,” Josh replied. “Make the call.”
“Then I and my men, we take point,” Hamid said. “We approach from the rear.”
“I’ll come with you,” Marc said.
Hamid reached behind his back and came up with a pistol, a Glock nine millimeter. It was a sweet gun, small enough to serve perfectly as a backup weapon. Hamid handed it to Marc and said, “Follow my lead.”
Marc slipped the Glock into his belt and flipped out his shirt to cover it. “Will do.”
Hamid barked an order. His men fanned out. Marc put ten feet between himself and Hamid. Just four more men sauntering past the last of the market stalls and entering the traffic. The sun glinted off most windscreens, making the interiors invisible. Marc felt eyes on him, as tight as a sniper’s aim. He resisted the urge to scratch the spot between his shoulder blades. He did not run. He merely drifted.
Hamid skirted wide around the truck. He did not seem to accelerate, but even so his pace increased enough that Marc was trotting by the time they slid behind a heavily loaded donkey cart. The drover’s eyes widened, but Hamid was ready for that and lifted a flat palm that now held his badge. He barked an order and the drover froze.
Hamid shot a quick glance around the cart, then slipped back and hissed, “Two men inside the truck. Another in back. The one in back, he has wires.”
“Go for the men in the cab. I’ll take the one in back.”
Hamid moved, directing his men with silent finger jabs. Marc jogged forward on Hamid’s heels. The need for subterfuge was gone.
It was just another truck. The flatbed was almost empty. The tarp was spread out wide, like a blanket. The traffic opened and the truck trundled forward. Its right rear tire wobbled terribly. Under the tarp was something the size of a footlocker.
But it was the first empty truck Marc had seen. All the other trucks had been packed.
A young man sat on the footlocker. His head-kerchief was spilled loose around his head, his face streaked with sweat and grime. He held something in his left hand. Wires rose up and became plastered to his chest.
Marc flew across the distance. He did not shout. What was there to yell about? The young man saw him and rose to a crouch. It seemed to take Marc years to cover the final five feet.
Marc leaped onto the flatbed just as Hamid reached the driver’s door. Marc grabbed the man’s two hands, his hold strong enough to crack bones.
Hamid did not bother with the door. He pulled the driver out through the open window.
Hamid’s men pulled the passenger out of the cab and flattened him onto the pavement.
Marc bent the man’s thumbs back so he could not press the trigger Marc imagined this suicide bomber held.
The young man was yelling now. Marc flipped him over and ripped away the device in his hand, pulling the wires free as he did so.
And then he realized it was a portable music player, whose earphones had been removed so they dangled from the young man’s shoulders.
The truck ambled forward, driverless, until its front bumper came to rest on the next car.
All three men from the truck were screaming. As were the people fleeing from cars all around them. On the square’s other side, police raced past the checkpoint toward them. One of Hamid’s men bounced up onto the roof of the car between the truck and the approaching police, flashed his badge, and shouted something. From the way the police froze, Marc assumed Hamid’s man had shouted something like bomb.
The square emptied with the speed of pure panic. Car doors gaped outward like astonished tongues. The market was silent for the first time that day.
Hamid Lahm had his badge out again. He shouted to the police emerging from the station and pointed with his other hand. Directing them to clear the area.
Marc yelled that his man was clean, but Lahm could not hear him.
The young man Marc kept pinned to the truck’s bed was screaming in full-throated rage, as were the two older men from the cab of the truck. Hamid Lahm gave no sign he heard them at all. He walked around to the back and checked the man Marc still held down. Then he flipped back the tarp. He said something. All three men yelled in reply. Gingerly Lahm opened the footlocker.
Inside were a set of carpenter’s tools.
Marc released the man and backed away. The young man bounded to his feet and started waving his arms in Marc’s face.