“A deal?” Nizar glanced at Rania.
“We can go to my hotel now and I’ll get in touch with him,” Omar Yussef said.
Nizar tapped his thumbnail against the edge of his plate. It sounded loud until Omar Yussef realized he was hearing the bell of a departing train beyond the main concourse. Nizar held Rania’s eyes in his somber gaze. “Where’s your hotel, ustaz?” he said. “Let’s see about that ticket to Pleasantville.”
Chapter 25
Nizar lit one of Khamis Zeydan’s cigarettes and exhaled toward the open window of the hotel room, while Omar Yussef shivered. The police chief watched the young man with the hard confidence of an experienced interrogator. Nizar took that stare, rolled it around in the black depths of his eyes, and let it drift back toward Khamis Zeydan like the smoke on his breath. Omar Yussef wondered if it was only the freezing air that made him shudder.
He shoved the window until it was almost closed. “This room is getting as cold as your blood,” he said.
The two men shifted their jaws slowly and kept their stares firm.
“I don’t believe a word of this,” Khamis Zeydan whispered.
Nizar blew smoke out of his nostrils.
“It’s three in the morning,” Omar Yussef said. “He’s explained his story to you three, no, four times already.”
“The president’s speech is tomorrow at nine A.M. That gives us thirty hours.” Khamis Zeydan rolled his thumb slowly across the wheel of his lighter, watching it spark. “Plenty of time to confirm the truth before I have to panic.”
“I brought Nizar here so you could help him get immunity.” Omar Yussef slapped his thigh. “You’ve heard his story. You know he killed Rashid to prevent the assassination of the president. We have to talk to Sergeant Abayat to get Police Department protection for Nizar.”
“You mean Islamic Jihad will be sitting around now thinking, ‘Well, Nizar’s end of things was a bust. Let’s just forget about assassinating the president.’” Khamis Zeydan opened his eyes wide like a simpleton. “No, I want to hear the backup plan.”
“How could Nizar know? He’s not the assassin. The assassin is dead.”
“By your ancestors, will you shut up and let me talk to him?”
“You weren’t talking to him. You were having a staring contest.”
Nizar’s laugh was warm and smoky. He stubbed out his cigarette. “Is this some kind of comical third-degree? You two old fellows bitch at each other until I get worried one of you’ll die of a heart attack-then I confess to everything, just to calm you down?” He sniggered and lit another smoke.
Omar Yussef scratched his mustache in embarrassment. Khamis Zeydan stared at his prosthetic hand.
“Let me attempt to convince you another way, Abu Adel,” Nizar said.
“Try me.” Khamis Zeydan poured himself a whisky.
Nizar stroked his long hair. “In Palestine, everyone knows what it means to be from Bethlehem. Here, I tell people where I’m from, and they look at me with incomprehension. I explain that I come from the town where Jesus was born, and that’s about all the detail they can handle. Even then they sometimes get confused, because I’m an Arab, and Jesus wasn’t an Arab, was he?”
The boy stared beyond the two older men, as though he were tallying the lighted windows in the UN building at the end of the street.
“At first, I responded to this ignorance by turning my back on Americans,” he said. “I became more religious than I had ever been before. I couldn’t have been more of an Arab if I’d gone on the Hajj to Mecca, shaved my head, and thrown seven pebbles at the Pillar of Aqaba. But I couldn’t keep that up.” He clapped his hands and gestured like a magician who has conjured an object into thin air. “You know the oath from surat al-Waqi’ah? ‘I swear by the shelter of the stars that this is a glorious Koran.’ Well, I could never see the stars in Brooklyn. At night, the sky was illuminated with the orange glow of the city, blotting out the heavens.”
Omar Yussef thought of the clouds and rain, sleet, and snow that had obscured the sky most of the time since he had arrived in New York. “So this city blotted out Allah’s creation and left you an unbeliever?” he said.
“In truth, I left religion because I’m a bad man.” Nizar’s eyes seemed to turn in on themselves, closing around his memories, smothering his emotions. “After I had been in the U.S. for a while, I had sex with an American woman. It made me hate myself, because I had betrayed what I thought I believed in.”
“That doesn’t make you bad, my son,” Omar Yussef said. “It just means you were living outside our culture. At home, sex is possible only with your wife, but here everything is permitted. You did something natural.”
“I didn’t do it with pleasure, ustaz. I screwed her like a frightened rabbit. I was scared of the fact that she welcomed sex, that she wanted to do it. She cooperated because she saw how bad I was-that’s what I thought. She had recognized my wicked character, and so she allowed me to do these disgusting things to her.”
Khamis Zeydan whistled and slugged some whisky.
Nizar slapped a fist into the palm of his hand. “That’s why women are forbidden to us, except in marriage. Because in sex a man sees how weak he is, unless the woman is his possession, his wife. Give me some of that whisky.”
Omar Yussef passed a glass from the minibar and Khamis Zeydan slopped out another large Scotch. Nizar drank it and wiped his mouth with his hand.
“I remember everything about that woman’s disgusting body, ustaz. The dimples in the flesh of her legs and the stretches in the skin around her breasts. The cold trace of sweat between her buttocks. Her paleness. As soon as I had finished, I made my excuses to leave. She lay in bed, staring at me with impatience and contempt while I dressed.” He drained the rest of the whisky. “I tried to be American. I drank Scotch, I ate all the pork they put in front of me, and I fucked a woman whose name I barely knew. But I may as well have trotted down Broadway on a camel. I wasn’t a good Muslim. Still, it was evident that I was no American.”
“Could you see no compromise between the two ways of life?” Omar Yussef said.
Nizar closed his eyes. “I found it in Rania. I thought I could marry her, experience bliss on earth here in America, and then she would come with me to Paradise after our deaths.”
“Why didn’t you do just that?” Khamis Zeydan’s voice was low and suspicious.
“Because of Islamic Jihad. They forced me into the drug trade with Rania’s father. It made me an unacceptable son-in-law for Marwan.”
“But it was his drug ring.”
“He was in jail on drug charges while his own wife died of cancer. He didn’t want Rania ever to experience the same abandonment.”
“So you killed Rania’s father, because he objected to your marriage,” Khamis Zeydan said. “What did Rania think of that?”
The young man hesitated. He grinned weakly and averted his eyes.
Khamis Zeydan tapped the cap of the whisky bottle against his prosthesis. “What’s the fallback plan? What do you do in a case like this where the preparations for the murder have fallen through?”
“We wait for instructions.”
“How do you receive them?”
Nizar wagged his finger at Khamis Zeydan. “Brigadier, you’re a clever fellow.”
“No stalling.”
“The command places an ad in a local newspaper.”
“Haven’t you heard of e-mail?”
Nizar’s smile was condescending. “And I’ve heard it can be traced too. This is simpler. It can’t be connected to us. It’d be meaningless to the police.”
“Which newspaper?” Omar Yussef asked.
“The Metro Muslim. It’s a weekly.”
“What day does it come out?”
“It would’ve been distributed early yesterday evening about the time you spoiled my date. The command has had time to place a message since Rashid’s death, so I expect there’ll be new instructions in the current edition of the paper.”