Read On Wings of Eagles Online
Authors: Ken Follett
Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #Military, #Espionage, #General, #History, #Special Forces, #Biography & Autobiography
"Listen, let's just get another cab, we don't need the cousin."
"It's a very bad place between here and the border," Charlie said. "We're
foreigners, we need protection."
Boulware forced himself to be patient.
At last Ilsman shook hands with Mr. Fish's cousin and Charlie said: "His
sons will take us to the border."
There were two sons and two cars.
They drove up into the mountains. Boulware saw no sign of the dangerous
bandits against whom he was being protected: just snow-covered fields,
scrawny goats, and a few ragged people living in hovels.
They were stopped by the police in the village of Yuksekova, a few miles
from the border, and ordered into the little whitewashed police station.
llsman showed his credentials and they were quickly released. Boulware was
impressed: maybe llsman really was with the Turkish equivalent of the CIA.
They reached the border at four o'clock on Thursday afternoon, having been
on the road for twenty-four hours.
The border station was in the middle of nowhere. The guard post consisted
of two wooden buildings. There was also a post
ON WINGS OF EAGLES 341
office. Boulware wondered who the hell used it. Truck drivers, perhaps. Two
hundred yards away, on the Iranian side, was a bigger cluster of buildings.
There was no sign of the Dirty Team.
Boulware felt angry. He had broken his neck to get here more or less on
time: where the hell was Simons?
A guard came out of one of the huts and approached him, saying: "Are you
looking for the Americans?"
Boulware was surprised. The whole thing was supposed to be top secret. It
looked like security had gone all to hell. "Yes," he said. "I'm looking for
the Americans."
I 'There's a phone call for you."
Boulware was even more surprised. "No kidding!" The timing was phenomenal.
Who the hell knew he was here?
He followed the guard into the hut and picked up the phone.
Yes?"
"This is the American Consulate," said the voice. "What's your name?"
"Uh, what is this about?" Boulware said warily.
"Look, would you just tell me what you're doing there?"
"I don't know who you are and I'm not going to tell you what I'm doing."
"Okay, listen, I know who you are and I know what you're doing. If you have
any problems, call me. Got a pencil?"
Boulware took down the number, thanked the man, and hung up, mystified. An
hour ago I didn't know I was going to be here, he thought, so how could
anyone else? Least of all the American Consulate. He thought again about
Ilsman. Maybe Ilsman was in touch with his bosses, the Turkish MIT, who
were in touch with the CIA, who were in touch with the Consulate. 11sman
could have asked somebody to make a call for him in Van, or even at the
police station in Yuksekova.
He wondered whether it was good or bad that the Consulate knew what was
happening. He recalled the "help" Paul and Bill had got from the U.S.
Embassy in Tehran: with friends in the State Department a man had no need
of enemies.
He pushed the Consulate to the back of his mind. The main problem now was,
where was the Dirty Team?
'He went back outside and looked across no-man's-land. He decided to stroll
across and talk to the Iranians. He called to Ilsman and Charlie Brown to
come with him.
As he approached the Iranian side he could see that the
342 Ken Folku
frontier guards were not in uniform. Presumably they were revolutionaries
who had taken over when the government fell.
He said to Charlie: "Ask them if they've heard anything about some American
businessmen coming out in two jeeps."
Charlie did not need to translate the reply: the Iranians shook their heads
vigorously.
An inquisitive tribesman, with a ragged headband and an ancient rifle, came
up on the Iranian side. There was an exchange of some length, then Charlie
said: "This man says he knows where the Americans are and he will take you
to them if you pay."
Boulware wanted to know how much, but Ilsman did not want him to accept the
offer at any price. Usman spoke forcefully to Charlie, and Charlie
translated. "You're wearing a leather coat and leather gloves and a fine
wristwatch."
Boulware, who was into watches, was wearing one Mary had given him when
they got married. "So?"
"With clothes like that they think you're SAVAK. They hate SAVAK over
there."
"I'll change my clothes. I have another coat in the car."
"No," Charlie said. "You have to understand, they just want to get you over
there and blow your head off."
"AD right," Boulware said.
They walked back to the Turkish side. Since there was a post office so
conveniently nearby, he decided to call Istanbul and check in with Ross
Perot. He went into the post office. He had to sign his name. The call
would take some time to place, the clerk told him.
Boulware went back outside. The Turkish border guards were now getting
edgy, Charlie told him. Some of the Iranians had wandered back with them,
and the guards did not like people milling around in no-man's-land: it was
disorderly.
Boulware thought: Well, I'm doing no good here.
He said: "Would these guys call us, if the team comes across while we're
back in Yuksekova?"
Charlie asked them. The guards agreed. There was a hotel in the village,
they said; they would call there.
Boulware, Usman, Charlie, and the two sons of Mr. Fish's cousin got into
the two cars and drove back to Yuksekova.
There they checked into the worst hotel in the whole world. It had dirt
floors. The bathroom was a hole in the ground under the
ON WINGS OF EAGLES 343
stain. All the beds were in one room. Charlie Brown ordered food, and it
came wrapped in newspaper.
Boulware was not sure he had made the right decision in leaving the border
station. So many things could go wrong: the guards might not phone as they
had promised. He decided to accept the offer of help from the American
Consulate, and ask them to seek permission for him to stay at the border
station. He called the number he had been given on the hotel's single
ancient wind-up telephone. He got through, but the line was bad, and both
parties had trouble making themselves understood. Eventually the man at the
other end said something about calling back, and hung up.
Boulware stood by the fire, fretting. After a while he lost patience, and
decided to return to the border without permission.
On the way they had a flat tire.
They all stood in the road while the sons changed the wheel. llsman
appeared nervous. Charlie explained: "He says this is a very dangerous
place, the people are all murderers and bandits."
Boulware was skeptical. lisman had agreed to do all this for a flat fee of
eight thousand dollars, and Boulware now suspected the fat man was getting
ready to up his price. "Ask him how many people were killed on this road
last month," Boulware told Charlie.
He watched Ilsman's face as he replied. Charlie translated: "Thirty-nine.
' I
Ilsman looked serious. Boulware thought: Shit, this guy9s telling the
goddam truth. He looked around. Mountains, snow . . . He shivered.
3
In Rezaiyeh, Rashid took one of the Range Rovers and drove from the hotel
back to the school that had been turned into revolutionary headquarters.
He wondered whether the deputy leader had called Tehran. Coburn had been
unable to get a line the-previous night: would the revolutionary leadership
have the same problem? Rashid thought they probably would. Now, if the
deputy could not get through, what would he want to do? He had only two
options:
344 Ken Folleu
hold the Americans, or let them go without checking. The man might feel
foolish about letting them go without checking: he might not want Rashid to
know that things were so loosely organized here. Rashid decided to act as if
he assumed the call had been made and verification completed.
He went into the courtyard. The deputy leader was there, leaning against a
Mercedes. Rashid started talking to him about the problem of bringing six
thousand Americans through the town on the way to the border. How many
people could be accommodated overnight in Rezaiyeh? What facilities were
there at the Sero border station for processing them? He emphasized that
the Ayatollah Khomeini had given instructions for Americans to be well
treated as they left Iran, for the new government did not want to quarrel
with the U.S.A. He got onto the subject of documentation: perhaps the
Rezaiyeh committee should issue passes to the Americans authorizing them to
go through Sero. He, Rashid, would certainly need such a pass today, to
take these six Americans through. He suggested the deputy and he should go
into the school and draft a pass.
The deputy agreed.
1hey went into the library.
Rashid found paper and pen and gave them to the deputy.
"What should we write?" said Rashid. "Probably we should say, the person
who carries this letter can take six Americans through Sero. No, say
Barzagan or Sero, in case Sero is closed.
The deputy wrote.
"Maybe we should say, um, It is expected that all guards will give their
best cooperation and assistance, they aft fully inspected and identified,
and if necessary escort them."
IMe deputy wrote it down.
Then he signed his name.
Rashid said: "Maybe we should put, Islamic Revolution Commandant
Committee."
IMe deputy did so.
Rashid looked at the document. It seemed somehow inadequate, improvised. It
needed something to make it look official. He found a rubber stamp and an
inking pad, and stamped the letter. Then he read what the stamp said:
"Library of the School of Religion, Rezaiyeh. Founded 1344."
Rashid put the document in his pocket.
"We should probably print six thousand of these, so they can just be
signed," he said.
ON wINGS OF EAGLES 345
The deputy nodded.
"We can talk some more about these arrangements tomorrow,
Rashid went on. "I'd like to go to Sero now, to discuss the problem with the
border officials there."
"Okay. "
Rashid walked away.
Nothing was impossible.
He got into the Range Rover. It was a good idea to go to the border, he
decided: he could find out what the problems might be before making the
trip with the Americans.
On the outskirts of Rezaiyeh was a roadblock manned by teenage boys with
rifles. They gave Rashid no trouble, but he worried about how they might
react to six Americans: the kids were evidently itching to use their guns.
After that the road was clear. It was a dirt road, but smooth enough, and
he made good speed. He picked up a hitchhiker and asked him about crossing
the border on horseback. No problem, said the hitchhiker. It could be done,
and as it happened, his brother had horses ...
Rashid did the forty-mile journey in a little over an hour. He pulled up at
the border station in his Range Rover. The guards were suspicious of him.
He showed them the pass written by the deputy leader. The guards called
Rezaiyeh and-they said--spoke to the deputy, who vouched for Rashid.
He stood looking across to Turkey. It was a pleasant sight. They had all
been through a lot of anguish just to walk across there. For Paul and Bill
it would mean freedom, home, and family. For all the EDS men it would be
the end of a nightmare. For Rashid it meant something else: America.
He understood the psychology of EDS executives. They had a strong sense of
obligation. If you helped them, they liked to show their appreciation, to
keep the books balanced . He knew he only had to ask, and they would take
him with them to the land of his dreams.
The border station was under the control of the village of Sero, just half
a mile away down a mountain track. Rashid decided he would go and see the
village chief, to establish a friendly relationship and smooth the way for
later.
He was about to turn away when two cars drove up on the Turldsh side. A
tall black man in a leather coat got out of the first car and came to the
chain on the edge of no-man's-land.
Rashid's heart leaped. He knew that man! He started waving and yelled:
"Ralph! Ralph Boulware! Hey, Ralph!"
346 Ken Follett
4
Thursday morning found Glenn Jackson-hunter, Baptist, and Rocket Man-in the