Kranemeyer managed a worn grin. “Make sure we expedite his departure. We can’t re-route that number forever.”
There were no guards in sight, but the barbed wire and security cameras surmounting the high wall around the compound spoke of a man who took his security seriously. As well Husayni might, following the car bomb that had paralyzed his lower body.
Harry took a deep breath and made his way across the street. “I’m going in,” he announced into his TACSAT.
“Roger that,” Hamid responded. “We’ve got eyes on your position.”
Keeping his eyes down as he crossed the street, Harry didn’t look around for his back-up. He had been in the field for too many years to make such a mistake. “Give me thirty minutes. If I’ve not made contact by then, things have gone south. In that case, you’re in command. Do the best you can and don’t waste time coming after me.”
For a moment, only silence filled the other end of the connection, then his friend cleared his throat. “I understand. See you in thirty.”
Harry closed the phone and tucked it back in his shirt pocket, moving up the street toward the gate of the compound.
Despite the ancient look of the structure, there was a call button and microphone mounted in the gate. Harry pressed the button and stood there waiting. Waiting…
From behind the tinted windows of an off — white Toyota Corolla parked a hundred yards away, Davood watched as the gate opened, as Harry disappeared inside.
“Mark the time,” Hamid announced gruffly. “0633 hours.”
“Thirty minutes?” Davood asked, looking over at the older agent.
Hamid nodded.
“You’d leave him?”
Another nod. “Just pray it doesn’t come to that.”
Prayer. Even as they spoke, the call of the muezzin rang out again over Jerusalem, calling the faithful to morning prayer. Allahu akbar. La ilaha illa Allah. Muhammad rasul Allah…
Davood ignored it, as he had once already. He would have to make up the salah later in the day, if he lived. And if not…
Husayni’s bodyguards were reputedly Jordanian spec-ops, on indefinite loan from King Hussein. Whether that rumor was true or not, Harry could not say. At any rate, they were competent. And thorough.
He surrendered his TACSAT and .45 at the gate, but the two guards took him aside into a small outbuilding. The room was lit with a single bulb, dangling by bare wire from the ceiling.
The older man took the only chair in the room while the other bodyguard rummaged in the closet, finally pulling out an orange jumpsuit, similar to those used in the U.S. for convicts.
His eyes locked with Harry’s and he tossed the garment in his direction, uttering a single word in English. “Strip.”
A second passed, and then Harry nodded. It wasn’t unexpected. His gaze still fixed on the young bodyguard’s face, his hands moved to his belt and he started taking off his clothes…
The physical arrival of David Lay on the op-center floor was rare enough to be worrisome. It typically signaled trouble.
“What’s going on, David?” Kranemeyer asked, leaning in the doorway of his office. Lay brushed past him without a greeting. “Get Ron and Carol in here at once.”
Five minutes later, Lay was seated at Kranemeyer’s desk, with Carter, Carol, and the DCS standing in a loose half-circle before him.
“What’s going on?” Kranemeyer repeated.
The DCIA looked drained. “The last forty minutes have been just lovely. Simply put, people, the Israelis know we have a team on the ground. An hour ago, they filed a formal complaint with our embassy in Tel Aviv.”
Carter leaned forward until his hands rested on the front of the desk. “How?”
“Shapiro’s still working on that. My best guess would be that cameras picked him up as he crossed back in from the West Bank earlier tonight. The Israelis use a great deal of facial-recognition software and he’s hardly an unknown entity over there.”
“Do they have any idea where he is now?” This from Kranemeyer.
“If they do, they’re not telling.”
The DCS snorted. “If they had that card, they’d be sure to play it. I’d say we’re in the clear for the moment.”
“That’s not the official stance of the White House,” Lay replied with a shake of the head. “The politicos have made their position plain.”
“What’s the word from on high?”
“We’re to conduct a circumspect withdrawal.”
“And they’ve informed Israeli intelligence of the impending attack?”
“No — apparently they feel it would damage U.S.-Israeli relations if it were known that we had withheld this information up until this point.”
An oath escaped Kranemeyer’s lips. “Do they now? Then what’s the story supposed to be?”
Lay shrugged. “The Israelis handed it to us. They also know about Farshid Hossein, and the official line is that it was a prisoner snatch. The State Department has agreed to let Israeli interrogators have a go at him, starting next week.”
“This is madness.”
Lay pursed his lips. “I know. But their ways are ever higher than our ways. Get the word out to the field team.”
“So, your name is Floyd Craig?” Tahir Husayni asked, passing the identification back to his bodyguard.
“That’s right. US State Department.”
“It’s a pleasure to meet you, Mr. Craig, though I doubt that is your real name. I trust my bodyguards weren’t unduly rough.”
“No worries,” Harry shook his head with a smile. “I was due for a prostate examination anyway.”
A laugh escaped Husayni’s lips. “I have been told that you need something from me?”
Harry nodded. “Your cooperation, primarily. We need covert access to the Haram al-Sharif.”
The cleric seemed to consider the question for a moment, then he cleared his throat. “You know there are people in this city who would kill us both for merely talking together.”
“ ‘I am for peace: but when I speak, they are for war’”, quoted Harry, his eyes fixed on Husayni’s face.
A quiet smile crossed the older man’s lips. “From the songs of Davood, the shepherd king. See, we are not as different as some would have us believe, are we?”
“Men of principle can always find common ground,” Harry replied glibly. “Or, in our case, a common enemy.”
“Ah, yes. The common enemy. You and I both know it is an ancient ploy. You would ask that I trust you?”
Harry shook his head. “No, I would not. We both know that suspicion, not trust, is the coin of our realm. In this case, it’s a simple exchange. Give us the access we need, and we’ll make your problem go away.”
“The problem you say exists.”
“I understand your skepticism,” Harry nodded. “In the end it’s your choice. A few hours and we’ll know. Do you want to risk your people and your city on us being wrong?”
“Or lying?”
“Or lying.”
A silence fell over the room as Husayni regarded him with a coolly appraising glance. Assessment. Decision. A minute passed, then two — a high-stakes game of chicken playing out between the two men.
Finally the cleric smiled, propelling his wheelchair forward from behind the desk until he sat directly in front of Harry. “My men will escort you and your team to the Haram al-Sharif. We have a security center located beneath the prayer room of Omar. You will be able to review security footage and I would insist that your non-Muslim team members remain there for the course of the operation.”