Read On Wings of Eagles Online
Authors: Ken Follett
Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #Military, #Espionage, #General, #History, #Special Forces, #Biography & Autobiography
As the plane taxied and took off, Paul felt as elated as if it were his
first plane trip. He recalled how, in jail in Tehran, he had longed to do
that most ordinary thing, get on a plane and fly away. Soaring up into the
clouds now gave him a feeling he had not experienced for a long time: the
feeling of freedom.
ON WINGS OF EAGLES 375
3
According to the peculiar rules of Turkish air travel, the charter plane
could not go where a scheduled flight was available; so they could not fly
directly to Istanbul where Perot was waiting, but had to change planes in
Ankara.
While they were waiting for their connection, they solved a couple of
problems.
Simons, Sculley, Paul, and Bill got into a taxi and asked for the American
Embassy.
It was a long drive through the city. The air was brownish and had a strong
smell. "The air's bad here," said Bill.
"High-sulfur coal," said Simons, who had lived in Turkey in the fifties.
"They've never heard of pollution controls."
The cab pulled up at the U.S. Embassy. Bill looked out the window and his
heart leaped: there stood a young, handsome marine guard in an immaculate
uniform.
This was the U.S.A.
They paid off the cab.
As they went in, Simons said to the marine: "Is there a motor pool here,
soldier?"
"Yes, sir," said the marine, and gave him directions.
Paul and Bill went into the passport office. In their pockets they had
passport-sized photographs of themselves that Boulware had brought from the
States. They went up to the desk, and Paul said: "We've lost our passports.
We left Tehran in kind of a hurry. "
"Oh, yes," said the clerk, as if he had been expecting diem.
They had to fill in forms. One of the officials took them into a private
office and told them he wanted some advice. The U.S. Consulate in Tabriz,
Iran, was under attack by revolutionaries, and the staff there might have
to escape as Paul and Bin had. They told him the route they had taken and
what problems they had encountered.
A few minutes later they walked out of there, each holding a sixty-day U.S.
passport. Paul looked at his and said: "Did you ever see anything so
beautiful in your whole damn life?"
376 Ken Folleu
Simons emptied the oil from the can and shook out the money in the weighted
plastic bags. There was a hell of a mess: some of the bags had broken and
there was oil all over the banknotes. Sculley started cleaning off the oil
and piling the money up in ten-thousand-dollar stacks: there was sixty-five
thousand dollars plus about the same again in Iranian rials.
While he was doing this, a marine walked in. Seeing two disheveled,
unshaven men kneeling on the floor counting out a small fortune in
hundred-dollar bills, he did a double take.
Sculley said to Simons: "Do you think I ought to tell him, Colonel?"
Simons growled: "Your buddy at the gate knows about this, soldier. "
The marine saluted and went out.
it was eleven P.m. when they were called to board their flight to Istanbul.
Ilwy went through the final security check one by one. Sculley was just
ahead of Simons. Looking back, he saw that the guard had asked to see
inside the envelope Simons was carrying.
The envelope contained all the money from the fuel can.
Sculley said: "Oh, shit."
The soldier looked in the envelope and saw the sixty-five thousand dollars
and four million rials; and all hell broke loose.
Several soldiers drew their guns, one of them called out, and officers came
running.
Sculley saw Taylor, who had fifty thousand dollars in a little black bag,
pushing his way through the crowd around Simons, saying: "Excuse me ,
excuse me please, excuse me . "
Ahead of Sculley, Paul had already been cleared ti~ough the checkpoint.
Sculley thrust his thirty thousand dollars into Paul's hands, then turned
and went back through the checkpoint.
The soldiers were taking Simons away to be interrogated. Sculley followed
with Mr. Fish, Ilsman, Boulware, and Jim Schwebach. Simons was led into a
little room. One of the officers turned, saw five people following, and
said in English: -%rho are you?"
"We're all together," Sculley said.
They sat down and Mr. Fish talked to the officers. After a while he said:
"They want to see the papers that prove you brought this money into the
country."
`VVhat papers?"
ON WINGS OF EAGLES 377
"You have to declare all the foreign currency you bring in."
"Hell, nobody asked us!"
Boulware said: "Mr. Fish, explain to these clowns that we entered Turkey at
a tiny little border station where the guards probably don't know enough to
read forms and they didn't ask us to fill in any forms but we're happy to
do it now."
Mr. Fish argued some more with the officers. Eventually Simons was allowed
to leave, with the money; but the soldiers took down his name, passport
number, and description, and the moment they landed in Istanbul, Simons was
arrested.
At th1W A.M. on Saturday, February 17, 1979, Paul and Bill walked into Ross
Perot's suite at the Istanbul Sheraton.
It was the greatest moment in Perot's life.
Emotion welled up inside him as he embraced them both. Here they were,
alive and well, after all this time, all those weeks of waiting, the
impossible decisions and the awful risks. He looked at their beaming faces.
The nightmare was over.
The rest of the team crowded in after them. Ron Davis was clowning, as
usual. He had borrowed Perot's cold-weather clothes, and Perot had
pretended to be anxious to get them back: now Davis stripped off his hat,
coat, and gloves, and threw them on the floor dramatically, saying: "Here
you are, Perot, here's your damned stuff!"
Then Sculley walked in and said: "Simons got arrested at the airport. "
Perot's jubilation evaporated. "Why?" he exclaimed in dismay.
"He was carrying a lot of money in a paper envelope and they just happened
to search him. "
Perot said angrily: "Dam it, Pat, why was he carrying money?"
"It was the money from the fuel can. See--
Perot interrupted: "After all Simons has done, why in the world did you let
him take a completely unnecessary risk? Now see here. I'm taking off at
noon, and if Simons isn't out of jail by then, you are going to stay in
frigging Istanbul until he is!"
Sculley and Boulware sat down with Mr. Fish. Boulware said: "We need to get
Colonel Simons out of jail."
"Well," said Mr. Fish, "it will take around ten days-"
"Bullshit," said Boulware. "Perot will not buy that. I want him out of jail
now. "
"It's five o'clock in the morning!" Mr. Fish protested.
378 Ken Folleu
"How much?" said Boulware.
"I don't know. Too many people know about this, in Ankara as well as
Istanbul. "
"How about five thousand dollars?"
::For that, they would sell their mothers.
Fine," said Boulware. I-Let,s get it on.-
Mr. Fish made a phone call, then said: "My lawyer will meet us at the jail
near the airport.-
Boulware and Mr. Fish got into Mr. Fish's battered old car, leaving Sculley
to pay the hotel bill.
They drove to the jail and met the lawyer. The lawyer got into Mr. Fish's
car and said: "I have a judge on the way. I've already talked to the
police. Where's the money?"
Boulware said: "The prisoner has it."
"What do you mean?"
Boulware said: "You go in there and bring the prisoner out, and he will
give you the five thousand dollars."
It was crazy, but the lawyer did it. He went into the jail and came out a
few minutes later with Simons. They got into the car.
-we I re n going to pay these clowns," said Simons. "I'll wait it out.
ey'll just talk themselves to death and let me go in a few days."
Boulware said: "Bull, please don't fight the program. Give me the
envelope."
Simons handed over the envelope. Boulware took out five thousand dollars
and gave it to the lawyer, saying: "Here's the money. Make it happen. -
The lawyer made it happen.
Half an hour later, Boulware, Simons, and Mr. Fish were driven to the
airport in a police car. A policeman took their passports and walked them
through passport control and customs. When they came out on the tarmac, the
police car was there to take them to the Boeing 707 waiting on the runway.
They bearded the plane. Simons looked around at the velvet curtains, the
plush upholstery, the TV sets, and the bars, and said: "What the fuck is
this?"
The crew were on board, waiting. A stewardess came up to Boulware and said:
"Would you like a chink?"
Boulware smiled.
The phone rang in Perot's hotel suite, and Paul happened to answer it.
ON WINGS OF EAGLES 379
A voice said: "Hello?"
Paul said: "Hello?"
The voice said: "Who is this?"
Paul, suspicious, said: "N"o is this?"
"Hey, Paul?"
Paul recognized the voice of Merv Stauffer. "Hello, Merv!"
"Paul, I got somebody here wants to talk to you."
There was a pause, then a woman's voice said: "Paul?"
It was Ruthie.
"Hello, Ruthie!"
"Oh, Paul!"
"Hi! What are you doing?"
"What do you mean, what am I doing?" Ruthie said tearfully. "I'm waiting
for you!"
The phone rang. Before Emily got to it, someone picked up the extension in
the children's room.
A moment later she heard a little girl scream: "It's Dad! It's IDW! I I
She rushed into the room.
All the children were jumping up and down and fighting over the phone.
Emily restrained herself for a couple of minutes, then took the phone away
from them.
"Bill?"
"Hello, Emily."
"Gee you sound good. I didn't expect you to sound ... Oh, Bill, you sound
so good."
In Dallas, Merv began to take down a message from Perot in code.
Take ... the ...
He was now so familiar with the code that he could transcribe as he went
along.
... code ... and ...
He was puzzled, because for the last three days Perot had been giving him
a hard time about the code. Perot did not have the patience to use it, and
Stauffer had had to insist, saying: "Ross, this is the way Simons wants it.
- Now that the danger was past, why had Perot suddenly started to use the
code?
... stick ... it ... where ...
Stauffer guessed what was coming, and burst out laughing.
380 Ken Folleu
Ron Davis called room service and ordered bacon and eggs for everyone.
While they were eating, Dallas called again. It was Stauffer. He asked for
Perot.
"Ross, we just got the Dallas Times-Herald."
Was this to be another joke?
Stauffer went on: "The headline on the front page says: 'Perot men
reportedly on way out. Overland exit route from Iran indicated. ' "
Perot felt his blood start to boil. "I thought we were getting that story
killed!"
"Boy, Ross, we tried! The people who own or manage the paperjust don't seem
to be able to control the editor."
Tom Luce came on the line, mad as hell. "Ross, those bastards are willing
to get the rescue team killed and destroy EDS and see you jailed just to be
the first to print the story, We've explained the consequences to them and
it just doesn't matter. Boy, when this is over we should sue them, no
matter how long it takes or how much it costs---
"Maybe," said Perot. "Be careful about picking a fight with people who buy
ink by the barrel and paper by the ton. Now, wdit are the chances of this
news reaching Tehran?"
"We don't know. There are plenty of Iranians in Texas, and most of them
will hear about this. It's still very hard to get a phone line to Tehran,
but we've managed it a couple of times, so they could, too."
"And if they do .
"Then, of course, Dadgar finds out that Paul and Bill have slipped through
his grasp--
"And he could decide to take alternative hostages," Perot said coldly. He
was disgusted with the State Department for leaking the story, furious with
the Dallas Times-Herald for printing it, and maddened that there was
nothing he could do about it. "And the Clean Team is still in Tehran," he
said.
The nightmare was not over yet.
FoURTEEN
At midday on Friday, February 16, Lou Goelz called Joe PocW and told him to
bring the EDS people to the U.S. Embassy that afternoon at five o'clock.