“I haven’t the slightest idea. At the moment all I want to do is go home and sleep.”
She drove in silence for half a minute.
“Shall you speak to Colonel Shikla?”
“No.”
I did not elaborate. Colonel Shikla was head of the Internal Security Service and an unpleasant man with a revolting reputation. I had met him socially, and in an effort to conceal my fear of him I had bean too affable. He must have been accustomed to that sort of reaction, for it had clearly amused him. The last thing I wanted was to meet him in his official capacity, even if it had made sense to do so.
But Teresa persisted. “You could talk to him privately, unofficially.”
“Unofficially about Ghaled? Don’t be silly. That sort of thing is Shikla’s business.”
“Officially, then. If someone else were to find out, we’d be covered if you had told Colonel Shikla.”
“We’d more likely end up in one of his interrogation rooms.”
“Why, if we’d told him the truth, everything?”
She was exasperating. “Because,” I said loudly, “that sort of man never believes that you’ve told him everything, even when you have. And let’s assume that for once he does believe. What then? The ISS has to do something about Ghaled. They may not want to. I may have told them something that they would rather not have known officially. But let’s also assume that they decide, reluctantly or not, that they have to act on our information. Where does that leave us?”
“We’ve covered ourselves.”
“With what? Transparent plastic? You don’t think they’re going to move against Ghaled without tipping him off first, do you? He’ll have plenty of time to put our names at the top of the next purification list. You call that covering ourselves? Talk sense, comrade.”
She actually giggled. “It’s a funny feeling, isn’t it, being a member of the PAF?”
“Funny?”
“Creepy, then. I wonder who those other foreign members are, what they’re like. He said they were of both sexes.”
“One of the women is almost certainly Melanie Hammad.”
“She had an article in one of the French fashion magazines this month — about kaftans. Nothing terrible seems to have happened to her.”
“She isn’t in Syria making explosives.”
“It’s Issa who is making them, not us.”
“But an our works.” I suddenly lost all patience. “My God, woman! Don’t you realize how serious this is, how dangerous?”
“Of course I do, Michael, but it’s no use getting upset. You’re tired now, but tomorrow you’ll think of a way of dealing with the situation. You always do.”
I wasn’t flattered by her confidence; I knew that it was misplaced. She thought that because I was usually able to solve business problems, outwit competitors, get around difficulties, bargain shrewdly, and cope with men like Dr. Hawa, I could handle Ghaled and the situation he had created. What she did not understand was that business skills are not always transferable, that when the commodity is violence and the man you are dealing with is an animal, they don’t work.
I have not often been frightened. As a child I used to have nightmares and wake up screaming, but of the nightmares from which there is no escape through waking up I have had little experience. There were some bad moments, of course, during the Cyprus troubles of the fifties, but most of them were shared with the rest of the community, and the dangers, though real enough, usually went away as suddenly and unpredictably as they had arrived. Ghaled, however, was not going to go away. For over twenty years he had dealt in death and violence, and would, presumably, go on doing so until he himself died violently.
Meanwhile, he frightened me. I admit it He would always frighten me. I knew even then that the only way for me to “deal” with Ghaled would be to kill him. I didn’t think, though, that I was going to get a chance to do so; nor did I believe that, given the chance, businessman Howell would ever consider taking it. I am not a man of violence.
A few hours’ sleep helped. When I woke up, my back was sore but no longer very painful. I was able to review the position more or less calmly.
Ghaled had said that he had plans for me and had spoken of exploiting my freedom to come and go as I pleased, which suggested that he meant to use me as a courier or go-between. But he had also talked about utilizing my “knowledge and skills and resources”. Until I knew what that meant there was no point in trying to make plans of my own.
I could, however, survey my defences, such as they were, and take a few obvious precautions.
I had to recognize that a time might come when I would have what Ghaled had described euphemistically as “second thoughts”. In other words, I might one day feel that, murder squads or no murder squads, I had to run for it. To do this I would need a passport, plenty of ready cash, a packed bag, and a place to go to ground.
The cash presented no problem and neither did the place to go to ground, though I would have to be desperate to use it. The doubtful quantity was the passport. If Ghaled could take my passport from me once “to make sure of me”, he was perfectly capable of doing so again. Clearly, Teresa and I would both have to have second passports to put in our packed bags. Western consular officials in the Middle East are generally helpful about providing second passports for business people who need them; those going to Israel, for example. An Israeli visa stamp invalidates a passport in the Arab countries, and although the Israelis are very good about not stamping if asked not to do so, travellers sometimes forget to ask until it’s too late.
I told Teresa to see about getting a second passport from the Italian consul. Getting mine would be more complicated. Although Cyprus has diplomatic relations with Syria, there was no Cypriot consul in Damascus at that time, so I telephoned our Famagusta office and instructed them to take the necessary action.
That done, I ran a security check. What Ghaled had done at the battery works he could also have done at the tile factory and the hardware, furniture, and electronic assembly plants. I could unknowingly be playing host to other PAF cells. If so, I wanted to know the worst. I gave Teresa the job of checking the purchase records for unusual items. I tackled the personnel records myself.
First, I got out Ghaled’s employment file to see who had recommended him to us under the name of Yassin. The recommendation, I found, had come attached to the usual Ministry of Labour and Social Welfare docket and was signed by a staff captain in the office of the Internal Security Service.
So much for Teresa’s bright idea about “covering” ourselves with Colonel Shikla! The Internal Security Service not only knew about Ghaled’s activities but was also giving him assistance and protection.
Next I went through the files on some of the other men we employed to see if this same ISS captain had recommended anyone else. I didn’t bother much with those actually engaged in production, bench workers and craftsmen; there were, in any case, too many of them for a thorough check Instead, I concentrated on the night staff and employees with keys in their charge.
I found two; one a maintenance man, the other a storekeeper. Both had been recommended by the ISS captain. Both worked in the hardware factory. They had been taken on at about the same time as Ghaled.
My first impulse was to get on to the works manager and tell him to fire them, but Teresa quite rightly objected. She must have slept better than I had.
“What reason will you give?”
“I’ll find a reason.”
“If they really are Ghaled’s men he will make you take them back, and then you will look foolish.”
“And your way I only feel foolish. All right. But I mean to know what they’re up to. Has there been much theft of materials there?”
“No, but there is one unusual purchase item. An order came through from hardware for a set of screw taps and dies of a type that doesn’t exist.”