“I can’t promise you that.” MacIntyre took a pen and held it up to his jacket. “Bada-bing!” he exclaimed, and the pen appeared to penetrate the jacket, half of it coming out the other side.
“You nut. Why put a hole in your coat?” Kate laughed. He handed her the coat. There was no hole in it. She kept laughing.
“I just thought we needed something to cheer us up, and magic tricks almost always do,” he said, digging in his coat pocket for the vibrating BlackBerry. “Who the hell is calling me?” MacIntyre put the device to his ear and clicked to answer. “Hello?…Well, yes, it’s great to hear from you, but have you been listening to the news?… How?…Here, in Dubai? Lunch at the Four Seasons?…I look forward to meeting you, too.” He put the BlackBerry down and looked blankly at Kate, shaking his head.
“What’s the matter? What was that?” she asked.
MacIntyre didn’t answer right away, still stunned by the call. Then he picked up her notepad and handed it to her. “Well, I guess you would say that was an exclusive for the New York Journal. How ’bout something like ‘Admiral Bradley Adams, Commander of the Fifth Fleet, arrived this morning at Dubai International Airport on a commercial flight from Turkey. It was earlier thought that Adams was on board a Navy aircraft that crashed off Kuwait, but it has now been learned that Adams sent the aircraft on without him when he received a last-minute invitation to visit the Turkish navy. The admiral learned of his reported demise upon landing in Dubai.’ ”
“Wow!” Kate yelled. “And we’re going to meet him for lunch?”
“No. I am. You are going to get ready to go back to the States tonight, remember?” He looked up at the eight channels of news on the screens above. “We have a helluva lot of work to do if we’re going to stop Conrad from doing something that could set the whole Arabian peninsula alight.”
We get so many people from Monash University at this time of the year, Professor,” the ticket agent said. “Here we go. Seat 4B. It’s a window, as requested. We try to accommodate all the requests from the Melbourne travel agency, since we do so much business with them now. Any luggage?”
“Well, we have quite the exchange program with Kish University. No, the luggage was shipped ahead, since I will be there the entire semester. Quite a lot to carry. May I say that your English is most excellent. Thank you so much,” Professor Sam Wallingford said, taking the ticket for the Kish Air flight from the little airport outside of Tehran to the resort island in the Gulf.
They were boarding when he got to the gate, the only gate. It was an ancient thirty-seat Fokker 50, gaily decked out in the colorful Kish Air livery. Since it was an internal flight to the island of Kish, the security man had barely looked at the Australian passport with Iranian visa and entry stamp before waving him along. If he even had a “wanted” list of passports, he didn’t check it. It was nothing like what would have happened at Imam Khomeini International, but in a nod to capitalism, Kish Air had moved its flights to the less crowded, less expensive Tappeh. Tappeh had been an air force base and then closed altogether for a year before reopening for internal flights by smaller airlines.
Sitting in the Fokker waiting to take off, Brian Douglas as Sam Wallingford replayed the tapes of the morning in his head. What had happened to Soheil? Despite his assurance that he was not under suspicion, he must have known that he was. The unplugged phone, the radio, the drapes, the rifle. And he had met with Douglas anyway. Given him the gold. It was Soheil’s own ministry security people who suspected something. Maybe they had caught on to the fact that he had downloaded the documents off the ministry intranet. They had sent only two officers to question Soheil. And Soheil had been ready for them, with the hunting rifle. After shooting both, he had taken one of their pistols and killed himself. And now the other officer’s pistol was at the bottom of a storm drain, not at Soheil’s. He hadn’t really needed it; he should have left it at the house. If he had used his hand to hit the Mercedes man, rather than the gun, the man might be unconscious instead of dead in the boot of his own car in a yard down the road from the little airport. He had never killed an innocent man before. He had struck too hard, from the heartpumping rush of fleeing. It was a rookie move. He hated himself for it.
The Fokker began to taxi. It would be over two hours to Kish Island. Two hours in which the police might be notified of the missing man with the Mercedes. Might find the Mercedes, despite where it was parked, despite the mud on the tag number. Might realize that the little airport down the road now had flights to the Kish Island resort in the Gulf. Might call ahead to the Customs or VEVAK at Kish.
He looked down at the slight tear in the lining of the old suit jacket. He had thought it had been a risk to put the Australian identity in the lining, silly to have alternative ways to get out of the country. But Pamela had been right, as always. He hoped she was right about the next bit, too.
As the plane lifted off, he thought of what Bowers would be doing: taking Simon Manley’s things out of the hotel room. Paying for Manley as well as himself at the checkout. Flying out on the Joburg run about now. Would their database at Khomeini Airport Customs link Bowers’s visa to Manley’s? Where is Mr. Manley? Traveling up to Shiraz for a day.
Brian Douglas closed his eyes, but could not sleep on the bumpy flight over the mountains. His heart was still pumping. His mind was still racing. Poor man in the Mercedes. Nothing justified it. But what he had on the flash drive in his sock was at least worth Douglas’s risking his own life by running about in the field, solo, overage, undercover. No one else could have gotten it. Soheil and his father would not have trusted anyone else. What if the father had not been at the newsstand? Douglas would have come home empty-handed and looked the fool. But the father had been there, and so far it was working. Very messy, but working. Thank God Pamela had insisted on an emergency egress plan being in place.
The jolt of the landing woke him. So he had gotten some rest. His bones ached. The terminal was bigger than he would have expected and far more modern. He tried to remember the diagram from Pamela’s briefings. There was the men’s room. His watch said 11:40. They were ten minutes early. Would the Omani be there yet?
He went to the last stall and pushed on the door. “Oh, so sorry, it wasn’t locked, you see, I…” The Omani, with his pants around his ankles, jabbered back at him in Arabic. The Omani had been there early and had the papers in his hand. The exchange of papers had taken place in three seconds. Brian Douglas went in to the next stall. The papers looked good. A New Zealand passport, with a Kish exit stamp. Ticket on Hormuz Airlines, boarding in a few minutes for Sharjah. Someone had taken some baksheesh along the way, but that was never a problem in Iran.
Nor would you have found another airport in Iran where international arriving passengers could mix with those about to leave the country, but this was Kish. Tehran had allowed it to be a free trade zone, an international tourist destination. The new high-rise hotels on the beach made it look like Dubai. Everything was a little bit more lax here. China had Hong Kong. Iran had Kish, a permeable membrane, a place where needed commerce was permitted, a place where people looked the other way.
He got in line to board. It was some sort of Ilyushin that looked as though it might have been sold off from Aeroflot. He was two people away from going through the gate when he heard the public address system in Farsi: “Valnford, Professor Valnford. Please see a police or customs officer.” His stomach contracted. Had the Omani bungled? But he was not Samuel Wallingford. Not now. He was the New Zealander Avery Dalton. Smile at the ticket taker. Climb the stair up into the old Ilyushin.