__ * “The komiteh will judge him and sentence him in God’s name.” Zataki glanced at Rudi. “Captain,” he said, his lips a thin line, “I asked you to fetch your Very pistols.”
“They’re in the safe, and quite safe,” Rudi said, just as toughly, not feeling brave inside. “You may have them whenever you want. They’re only in the airplane during a mission. I… I want that man released!” Without warning, Zataki reversed his machine gun and slammed the butt at Rudi’s head but Rudi caught it with one hand, deflecting it, tore it out of the man’s grasp, his reflexes perfect, and before the gun crashed to the ground, the hardened edge of his other, open hand was axing into Zataki’s unprotected throat. But he stopped the death blow, barely touching the man’s skin. Then he stepped back, at bay now. All guns were trained on him. The silence grew. His men watched, appalled. Zataki was staring at Rudi enraged. The shadows were long, and a slight wind toyed with the wind sock, crackling it slightly.
“Pick up the gun!”
In the bigger silence, Rudi heard the threat and the promise and he knew that his life - all of theirs - was in balance. “Fowler, do it!” he ordered and prayed that he had chosen correctly.
Reluctantly Fowler came forward. “Yessir, coming right up!” It seemed to take a long time for him to cover the twenty yards, but no one stopped him and one of the guards moved out of his way. He picked the gun up, automatically put the safety on, carefully handed it back to Zataki, butt first. “It’s not bent and, er, good as new, me son.”
The leader took the gun and slipped the safety off and everyone heard the click as though it were a thunderclap. “You know guns?”
“Yes … oh, yes. We … all mechanics were … we all had to have a course in the RAF… Royal Air Force,” Fowler said, keeping his eyes on the man’s eyes and he thought, What the fuck am I doing here, standing up to this smelly son of a whore’s left tit? “Can we dismiss? We’re civilians, me son, we’re noncombatants, begging your pardon. Neutral.”
Zataki jerked a thumb at the line. “Go back there.” Then he turned to Rudi. “Where did you learn karate?”
“In the army - the German army.”
“Ah, German. You’re German? Germans have been good to Iran. Not like the British, or Americans. Which are your pilots, their names and their nationalities?”
Rudi hesitated, then pointed. “Captain Dubois, French, Captains Tyrer, Block, and Forsyth, English.”
“No Americans?”
Rudi had another great sinking in his stomach. Jon Tyrer was American and had false identity cards. Then his ears heard the sound of the approaching chopper, recognized the thrunk-thrunk of a 206, and automatically he searched the skies, along with all of them. Then one of the Green Bands let out a cry and pointed as others rushed into defensive positions, everyone scattering except the expats. They had recognized the markings. “Everyone into the hangar,” Zataki ordered. The chopper came over the airfield at a thousand feet and began to circle. “It’s one of yours?” “Yes. But not from this base.” Rudi squinted into the sun. His heart picked up when he read the markings. “It’s EP-HXT, from Kowiss, from our base in Kowiss.”
“What’s he want?”
“Obviously to land.”
“Find out who’s aboard. And don’t try any tricks.”
Together they went to the UHF in his office. “HXT, do you read?” “HXT, loud and clear. This is Captain Starke of Kowiss.” A pause, then, “Captain Lutz?”
“Yes, it’s Captain Lutz, Captain Starke,” he said, knowing by the formality that there must be hostiles aboard, as Starke would know something was wrong here.
“Request permission to land. I’m low on gas and require refueling. I’m cleared by Abadan radar.”
Rudi glanced at Zataki. “Ask who’s in that airplane?” the man said. “Who’ve you got aboard?”
There was a pause. “Four passengers. What’s the problem?” Rudi waited. Zataki did not know what to do. Any of the military bases might be listening in. “Let him land… near the hangar.”
“Permission to land, HXT. Set her down near the east hangar.” “HXT.”
Zataki leaned over and switched off the set. “In future you will only use the radio with permission.”
“There are routine reports to give to Abadan and Kharg radar. My radio op’s been with us f - ”
Blood soared into Zataki’s face and he shouted, “Until further orders your radio’s only to be used with one of us listening in. Nor will any planes take off, nor land here without permission. You are responsible.” Then the rage evaporated as quickly as it had arrived. He lifted his gun. The safety was still off. “If you’d continued the blow you would have broken my neck, my throat, and I would have died. Yes?”
After a pause, Rudi nodded. “Yes.”
“Why did you stop?”
“I’ve…I’ve never killed anyone. I did not want to start.” “I’ve killed many - doing God’s work. Many - thanks be to God. Many. And will kill many more enemies of Islam, with God’s help.” Zataki clicked on the safety. “It was the Will of God the blow was stopped, nothing more. I cannot give you that man. He is Iranian, this is Iran, he is an enemy of Iran and Islam.”
They watched from the hangar as the 206 came in. There were four passengers aboard, all civilians, all armed with submachine guns. In the front seat was a mullah and some of Zataki’s tension left him, but not his anger. The moment the chopper touched down his revolutionaries swarmed out of hiding, guns leveled, and surrounded her.
The mullah Hussain got out. His face tightened seeing Zataki’s hostility. “Peace be with you. I am Hussain Kowissi of the Kowiss komiteh.” “Welcome to my area in the Name of God, mullah,” Zataki said, his face even grimmer. “I am Colonel Zataki of the Abadan komiteh. We rule this area and do not approve of men putting themselves between us and God.” “Sunnis and Shi’as are brothers, Islam is Islam,” Hussain said. “We thank our Sunni brethren of the Abadan oil fields for their support. Let us go and talk, our Islamic revolution is not yet won.”
Tautly Zataki nodded and called his men off and beckoned the mullah to follow him out of earshot.
At once Rudi hurried under the rotors.
“What the hell’s going on, Rudi?” Starke said from the cockpit, his shoulders aching, finishing shutdown procedures.
Rudi told him. “What about you?”
As rapidly Starke told him what had happened during the night and in Colonel Peshadi’s office. “The mullah and these thugs came back at midday and they near bust a gut when I refused to fly armed men. Man, I liked to die, but I’m not flying armed men, that makes us accessories to revolution, and the revolution’s nowhere near settled yet - we saw hundreds of troops and roadblocks coming here.” His hard eyes went over the base and the pockets of Green Bands here and there, the rest of the crew still standing near their barracks under guard, and the fitter still senseless. “Bastards,” he said and got out. He stretched against the ache in his back and felt better. “Eventually we compromised. They kept their weapons but I kept their magazines and stowed them in the baggage compart - ” He stopped. The tall mullah, Hussain, was approaching them, the blade above circling leisurely now.
“The baggage key please, Captain,” Hussain said.
Starke gave it to him. “There’s no time to get back to Kowiss and no time to get to Abadan.”
“Can’t you night fly?”
“I can but it’s against your regulations. You had a headset, you heard how radar is here. You’ll have military choppers and airplanes buzzing us like hornets before we’re halfway airborne. I’ll refuel and we’ll overnight here - least I will. You can always grab some transport from your buddies here if you need to go into town.”