Read Layover in Dubai Online

Authors: Dan Fesperman

Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #General, #antique

Layover in Dubai (39 page)

The girl sounded flustered, as if she hadn’t counted on this twist. Nanette wondered if she had been trying to consult with someone else in the room with her.
Assad: This is how it must be done, Basma. Understand? Seven o’clock at your location, that is fine, I agree. But no one arriving a second earlier, so that we will both be able to feel secure. Okay?
Basma: I guess
.
Assad: You guess?
Basma: Okay
.
Assad: Very good, then. I will speak with you again at six thirty
.
Correct?
Basma: Correct
.
Assad: At this number?
Basma: Yes
.
Assad: I will be waiting. And do not worry. You will be in safe hands from now on. I give you my personal assurance as an officer of the law
.
Basma: Thank you
.
Assad: Of course
.
“Don’t you find it suspicious that she phoned you?” Nanette asked.
“If she had requested me by name, yes. But I checked afterward with the switchboard. All she asked for was the man in charge of vice, so they connected her to me. And now she will be playing right into our hands.”
“You’re the one that’s being played, Assad, don’t you see? That’s why she didn’t tell you the meeting place. Waiting until the last minute is part of the setup.”
He waved a hand dismissively.
“She’s scared. She’s only being careful, just as you’d expect.”
“Well, I’m not going to your damn meeting, I can tell you that.”
“I arranged that for you! You said it was what you wanted!”
“Only on my terms, not hers. Set foot in the door of whatever place she chooses and we’ll be history, all of us.”
“You are being unreasonable, a silly and stubborn woman who only wants things her way!”
“I am being prudent, Assad, but don’t fret. Not yet. You can still take charge of this situation, you know, in a way that will please everyone and will still take her off the board.”
Assad snorted. He seemed in no mood to listen further. But at this point Nanette crossed her legs and turned slightly in her chair, offering a view in profile that she knew Assad liked best, for the tightness of her blouse and the way her long skirt hugged her hips, and, never to be discounted, for its sidelong view of the fullness of her auburn hair.
It instantly made him receptive enough to at least hear out her idea, which, with Liffey’s persuasive assistance, he eventually accepted as their plan of action.
And now, here she was, down to her finishing touches of eyeliner, mascara, and lipstick. In an hour they would set things in motion, and then she would convince the others to follow her remaining plans to the letter.
Would women be hurt as a result? She loathed how that question kept popping up in her mind, because the answer, of course, was yes. But women were always hurt, weren’t they? Especially the ones without the brains or the guts to fend for themselves. Besides, what would really be more hurtful to a bunch of starving young rustics in Iraq—leaving them mired in the turmoil of war or removing them to the relative safety of steady hours and a steady income, even if they earned it on their backs? To her the answer was obvious. At least in Dubai they might have a future, a buyout, even advancement.
She stood, popping her lips and appraising herself in the mirror from several angles. She saw competence, seduction, a hint of menace, and even a touch of Yankee common sense. A woman most any man would believe he could rely on, even as he angled for a quick fuck.
Bring them on. Nanette Weaver was ready.

 

28
On a quiet residential street in Al Manara, Charlie Hatcher’s hour of reckoning was nigh.
Mansour’s surveillance teams were in place—two men in front, two in back. Inside the empty villa, recorders were ready to roll. Dusk approached like a veil of sand.
Two blocks away, Sharaf and Keller sat in Laleh’s BMW, taking turns with a pair of borrowed binoculars. Sharaf, cell phone open in his lap, checked the display for any last-minute messages. None. From a few streets over, the muezzin of a neighborhood mosque began droning the sundown call to prayer—a few minutes late, truth be told. It felt as if God was signaling that the drama was about to commence.
“Shouldn’t you be praying?” Keller asked.
“Now? I’d need to wash myself first. I’d have to get out of the car and put down a rug, kneeling and mumbling while Assad and his people came and went. Don’t you think that might be a little conspicuous?”
“Sorry. Stupid question. I was just hoping for any kind of edge.”
“You believe that God takes a hand in police matters?”
“Not really. I guess I figured it might make you feel more confident.”
“Do I not seem confident already?”
“Not really. You haven’t all day. It’s like you know the whole thing is doomed.”
“It is not a sense of doom, Mr. Keller. Just an abeyance of hope. My way of holding my breath until it is time to make our move. Then I will exhale.”
Actually, he
had
been feeling doomed. The plan was a throw-together, a hasty improvisation. And what was worse, all of them knew it. But no one had come up with an alternative, and so momentum had carried the day. Ready or not, something was about to happen.
So far, at least, there was reason for cautious optimism, especially after Laleh’s success in convincing Basma to participate. They had all listened together to the girl’s phone call, which Laleh had taped on Patel’s digital recorder.
“She did well,” Sharaf remarked afterward. “Obviously you handled her perfectly.”
Laleh seemed affronted by the idea she’d been manipulative. She frowned and folded her arms.
“I don’t much like Assad’s idea for simultaneous arrival,” Sharaf said, “but I suppose there is no way around it. It will be best if Basma arrives by taxi.”
“I’ll need to be with her when she departs, of course,” Laleh said.
“Not necessary. You can just phone her with the information.”
“The phone there isn’t secure. She was using my cell, and she will need it again to call Assad at six thirty. Then I will arrange the taxi and make sure she is safely on her way.”
Sharaf didn’t like this wrinkle, but there seemed to be little choice. His daughter was the only one of them who knew Basma’s location. She had again painted him into a corner, which meant that her further involvement was indispensable.
Laleh left the room without another word. She didn’t even glance at Sam, and the young man seemed crestfallen. Once she was gone, Sharaf was more candid about his concerns.
“Stop worrying, Anwar,” Ali said. “Assad was planning this completely on the fly, even more than we are. We’ll have every advantage.”
“Maybe so. But I’ve made a career of being underestimated. And I worry that now we are underestimating them.”
“Relax. Mansour and I have every possibility covered.”
Ali placed a reassuring hand on Sharaf’s back, then returned to the kitchen to continue preparations by telephone.
“Mr. Keller,” Sharaf said, “I am afraid we will need your presence at our little affair.”
“I wouldn’t miss it.”
“My preference would be to keep you out of harm’s way. Killing you by proxy is bad enough. But it may be up to you and me to ensure that nothing happens to this poor girl, Basma. Laleh would never forgive me. Worse, she would never forgive herself.”
“Won’t Mansour’s men be looking out for her?”
“They will be preoccupied with springing the trap. The death of a young Iraqi with no passport, I am sorry to say, would be of little official consequence. So that will be our job, to move her to safety as quickly as possible. Do you know how to use a gun?”
The question seemed to floor him.
“I, uh, took a class once. Courtesy of Nanette, in fact. She ran a bunch of us through an executive survival course, with lessons on escape and evasion, that kind of thing. Part of it was firearms instruction.”
“Ali has procured these for our use.”
Sharaf took a bag off the kitchen table. No kebabs, this time. Just a pair of Beretta handguns. He handed one to Sam. Sturdy and compact. But heavy—that’s what never failed to surprise him about guns, no matter how often he handled them.
“Careful, it’s loaded.”
“I wasn’t a very good shot.”
“But you will at least have the element of surprise. To them you will be a ghost. Sam Keller, risen from the dead.”
“An avenging angel. Sounds good.”
It made them smile, until Sam again hefted the gun and nearly dropped it in the process. And now they were in place, watching the street from Laleh’s BMW, waiting for the arrival of the last key players.
The phone rang.
“Sharaf.”
“Anwar, I think it’s working.” It was Mansour.
“You see them?”
“Not yet. But the container ship, the
Global Star
, I’m told its arrival has been delayed. Engine trouble is the cover story. Not due until tomorrow now. They must already be resorting to contingency plans.”
“Good. Basma’s phone call spooked them. Keep me posted if you see anything.”
He hung up and told Sam the news.
“If they’re that scared, do you think they’ll shoot her on sight?”
It was the same thought that had occurred to Sharaf far too many times already. But he offered the same answer he had kept giving himself.
“That would violate their own protocol. No, they won’t shoot her on sight, not as long as your Miss Weaver has her way, and she is still in town. Room 408 of the Shangri-La as of this morning. She will insist on a full debriefing, and that is what will make our case.”
“If you say so.”
Sharaf wished Sam hadn’t made that remark. Certainly the operation wasn’t foolproof—no operation was—but with their manpower and positioning it seemed as airtight as possible. Why, then, did the coffee from an hour earlier keep sluicing through his plumbing like acid, bubbling and grumbling? He checked the dashboard clock. 6:50.
“Here comes Assad!” Sam said. “Police van, far end of the block.”
“He’s early, but that’s hardly a surprise. Once Basma called with the location he must have left right away.”
They watched the van slide into a curbside spot directly in front of the villa. Sam still held the binoculars.
“Is anyone with him?” Sharaf asked.
“Yes. There’s a driver and a passenger up front. I’m assuming one of them is Assad. Hard to tell through the smoked glass.”
Sharaf looked back over his shoulder, then again peered down the block toward the villa. No further traffic was in sight.
“Where are the others?” he asked.
“Back of the van, maybe?”
“Hard to imagine the Tsar and Hedayat agreeing to be hauled around like a sack of dates, or even your Miss Weaver.”
“Maybe they’re coming later, after Assad gives the all clear.”
“Maybe.”
Or maybe Sharaf was trying to convince himself that things were still going according to plan. The coffee now felt like it was on the verge of rushing back up his esophagus.
Nothing more happened for the next six minutes. The van simply sat there, while Sharaf watched the digital display of the dashboard clock as closely as if it were linked to the workings of the cosmos. No sooner had it switched to 6:56 than a taxi came up from behind them, headed toward the villa. A woman in a black abaya sat in the back.
“It’s Basma,” Sam said. “Here we go.”
“Give me those,” Sharaf said, fumbling for the binoculars with sweaty palms. The neck strap got caught on Sam’s ears before Sharaf pulled it free. He adjusted the focus and tracked the taxi to the curb. He could make out Basma’s form through the back window as she hunched forward to pay the driver.
“Merciful God. I hope Laleh gave her enough dirhams for the fare.”
The door opened. Basma stepped out. Sharaf watched through the binoculars as she looked around uncertainly. Something was wrong, he thought. Terribly wrong. But he wasn’t sure what until he noticed Basma’s spiked heels. Red. Stylish. The very pair that he hated most. Then he noted the polished gait of her walk as she started off down the sidewalk, like that of a confident young businesswoman.
“It’s Laleh!” he shouted. “My God, the stupid fool! It’s my damned daughter out there!”
“Shit!” Sam gasped. He, too, saw it now.
Sharaf reached for the door handle, then thought better of it, his mind moving in five directions at once. A door opened on the police van, and a cop in a khaki uniform stepped onto the street. Not Assad, but Sergeant Habash, for God’s sake. From around the corner at the far end of the block, an ambulance careened into view, red bubble flashing in time with Sharaf’s heartbeat.
“This isn’t right!” he shouted. “We can’t let this happen!”
Sharaf unlatched the door just as Sergeant Habash grabbed Laleh and shoved her toward the braking ambulance. For a horrifying moment Sharaf was certain Habash was going to throw his daughter beneath the wheels. Instead there was a screech of tires. Habash reached down and punched something into Laleh’s thigh. She went limp almost immediately.
Sharaf ran up the street as fast as he could, too winded to even shout her name. Rear doors swung open on the ambulance and Habash bundled Laleh aboard as arms reached out from the inside. The doors slammed shut. She had been swallowed whole. Sharaf was still in flight, footsteps heavy, head throbbing, like in a nightmare when you can barely move. Was this why he had felt so troubled all day? At some level had he known Laleh was planning this, but refused to acknowledge it? He could even imagine how she would have arranged it with Basma, and he was taunted by the sound of Laleh’s voice in his head.
Let me do this for you, Basma. Just make the phone calls, and I’ll do the rest
.

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