Read On Wings of Eagles Online
Authors: Ken Follett
Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #Military, #Espionage, #General, #History, #Special Forces, #Biography & Autobiography
Ticketing and baggage check-in would be done at the Embassy overnight, and
they could leave on a Pan Am evacuation flight on Saturday morning.
John Howell was nervous. He knew, from Abolhasan, that Dadgar was still
active. He did not know what had happened to the Dirty Team. If Dadgar were
to find out that Paul and Bill had gone, or if he were simply to give up on
them and take a couple more hostages, the Clean Team would be arrested. And
where better to make the arrests than at the anport, where everyone had to
identify himself by showing his passport?
He wondered whether it was wise for them to take the first -available
flight: there would be a series of flights, according to Goelz. Maybe they
should wait, and see what happened to the first batch of evacuees, whether
there was any kind of search for EDS personnel. At least then they would
know in advance what the procedures were.
But so would the Iranians. The advantage of taking the first flight was
that everything would probably be confused, and the confusion might help
Howell and the Clean Team slip out unnoticed.
In the end he decided the first flight was best, but he remained uneasy.
Bob Young felt the same way. Although Young no longer worked for EDS in
Iran---he was based in Kuwait-he had been here when the Ministry contract
was first negotiated, he had met Dadgar face-to-face, and his name might be
on some list in Dadgar's files.
Joe Poch6 also favored the first flight, although he did not say
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382 Ken Folku
much about it--he did not say much at all: Howell found him uncommunicative.
Rich and Cathy Gallagher were not sum they wanted to leave Iran. They told
Poch6 quite firmly that, regardless of what Colonel Simons had said, Pochf
was not "in charge" of them, and they had the right to make their own
decision. Poch6 agreed, but pointed out that if they decided to take their
chances here with the Iranians, they should not rely on Perot sending
another rescue team in for them if they got thrown in jail. In the end the
Gallaghers also decided to go on the first flight.
That aftemoon they all went through their documents and destroyed
everything that referred to Paul and Bill.
PocM gave each of them two thousand dollars, put five hundred dollars in
his own pocket, and hid the rest of the money in his shoes, ten thousand
dollars in each. He was wearing shoes borrowed from Gayden, a size too
large, to accommodate the money. He also had in his pocket a million rials,
which he planned to give to Lou Goelz for Abolhasan, who would use the
money to pay the remaining lx~aman EDS employees their last wages.
A few minutes before five, they were saying goodbye to Goelz's houseman
when the phone rang.
Poch6 took the call. It was Tom Walter. He said: "We have the people. Do
you understand? We have the people.
"I understand," Pochi said.
They all got into the car, Cathy carrying her poodle, Buffy. Pochd drove.
He did not tell the others about his cryptic message from Tom Walter.
They parked in a side street near the Embassy, and left the car: it would
stay them until somebody decided to steal it. -
There was no relief of tension for Howell as he walked into the Embassy
compound. There were at least a thousand Americans milling about, but there
were also scores of armed revolutionary guards. The Embassy was supposed to
be American soil, inviolate; but clearly the Iranian revolutionaries did
not take any notice of such diplomatic niceties.
The Clem Tearn was herded into a queue.
Tliey spent most of the night waiting in line.
They queued to fill in forms, they queued to hand in their passports, and
they queued for baggage checks. All the bags were put in a huge hall, then
the evacuees had to find their own bags and put the claim checks on. Then
they queued to open
ON WINGS OF EAGLES 383
their bags so the revolutionaries could search them: every single piece was
opened.
Howell learned that there would be two planes, both Pan Am 747s. One would
go to Frankfurt, the other to Athens. The evacuees were organized by
company, but the EDS people were included with Embassy personnel who were
leaving. They would be on the Frankfurt flight.
At seven o'clock on Saturday morning they were boarded on buses to go to
the airport.
It was a hell of a ride.
Two or three armed revolutionaries got on each bus. As they drove out of
the Embassy gates, they saw a crowd of reporters and television crews: the
hugans had decided that the flight of the humiliated Americans would be a
world television event.
The bus bumped along the road to the airport. Close to Pochd was a guard
about fifteen years old. He stood in the aisle, swaying with the motion of
the bus, his finger on the trigger of his rifle. Pochd noticed that the
safety catch was off.
If he stumbled ...
The streets were full of people and traffic. Everyone seemed to kriow that
these buses contained Americans, and their hafted was palpable. They yelled
and shook their fists. A truck pulled alongside, and the driver leaned out
of his window and spat on the bus.
The convoy was stopped several times. Different areas of the city seemed to
be under the control of different revolutionary groups, and each group had
to demonstrate its authority by stopping the buses and then giving them
permission to proceed.
It took two hours to drive the six miles to the airport.
Ile scene there was chaotic. There were more television cameras and
reporters, plus hundreds of armed men running around, some wearing scraps
of uniform, some directing traffic, all of them in charge, all having a
different opinion on where the buses should go.
The Americans finally got inside the terminal at nine-thirty.
Embassy personnel started distributing the passports they had collected
during the night. Five were missing: those of Howell, Poch6, Young, and the
Gallaghers.
After Paul and Bill had given their passports to the Embassy for
safekeeping back in November, the Embassy had refused to return them
without informing the police. Would they pull the same trick now?
384 Ken Folleu
Suddenly Pochd came pushing through the crowd with five passports in his
hand. "I found them on a shelf behind a counter," he said. "I guess they
got put there by accident."
Bob Young saw two Americans holding photographs and scanning the crowd. To
his horror, they started to approach the EDS people. They walked up to Rich
and Cathy Gallagher.
Surely Dadgar would not take Cathy hostage?
The people smiled and said they had some of the Gallaghers' luggage.
Young relaxed.
Friends of the Gallaghers had salvaged some of the bags from the Hyatt, and
had asked these two Americans to bring them to the airport and try to give
them to the Gallaghers. The people had agreed, but they did not know the
Gallaghers--hence, the photographs-
It had been a false alarm, but if anything, it increased their anxiety.
Joe Pochi decided to see what he could find out. He went off and located a
Pan Am ticket agent. "I work for EDS,- Pochd told the agent. "Are the
Manians looking for anyone?"
"Yes, they're looking pretty hard for two people," said the agent.
Anybody else?"
"No. And the stop list is several weeks old."
Tbanks. "
Poch6 went back and told the others.
The evacuees were starting to go from the check-in concourse through to the
departure lounge.
PocM said: "I suggest we split up. That way we won't look like a group, and
if one or two of you get into trouble, the others may still get through.
I'll be last, so if anyone has to stay behind, IT stay, too."
Bob Young looked at his suitcase and saw that it bore a luggage tag saying:
"William D. Gaylord."
He suffered a moment of panic. If the Iranians saw that, they would think
he was Bill and arrest him.
He knew how it had happened. His own suitcases had been destroyed at the
Hyatt by the revolutionaries who had shot up the rooms. However, one or two
cases had been left more or less undamaged, and Young had borrowed one.
This was it.
He tore the luggage tag off and stuffed it into his pocket, intending to
get rid of it at the firv opportunity.
ON WINGS OF EAGLES 385
They all went through the "Passengers Only" gate.
Next they had to pay the airport tax. This amused Poch6: the
revolutionaries must have decided that airport tax was the one good thing
the Shah introduced, he thought.
The next queue was for passport control.
Howell reached the desk at noon.
The guard checked his exit documentation thoroughly, and stamped it. Next
he looked at the picture in the passport, then looked hard at Howell's
face. Finally he checked the name in the passport against a list he had on
his desk.
Howell held his breath.
The guard handed him his passport and waved him through.
Joe Pochd went through passport control last. The guard looked extra hard
at him, comparing the face with the photograph, for Poch6 now had a red
beard. But eventually he, too, was allowed through-
The Clean Team was in a jovial mood in the departure lounge: it was all
over, Howell thought, now that they had come through passport control.
At two in the afternoon they began to pass through the gates. At this point
there was normally a security check. This time, as well as searching for
weapons, the guards were confiscating maps, photographs of Tehran, and
large sums of money. None of the Clean Team lost their money, however; the
guards did not look in Pocht's shoes.
Outside the gates, some of the baggage was lined up on the tarmac.
Passengers had to check whether any of theirs was there, and if so to open
it for searching before it was loaded onto the plane. None of the Clean
Team's bags had been picked out for this special treatment.
They boarded buses and were driven across the runway to where two 747s were
waiting. Once again, the television cameras were there.
At the foot of the ladder there was yet another passport check. Howell
joined the queue of five hundred people waiting to board the Frankfurt
plane. He was less worried than he had been: nobody was looking for him, it
seemed.
He got on the plane and found a seat. There were several armed
revolutionaries on board, both in the passenger cabin and on the flight
deck. The scene became confused as people who were supposed to go to Athens
realized they were on the Frank-
386 Ken Folteu
furt plane, and vice versa. All the seats filled up, then the crew seats,
and still there were people without seats.
The captain turned on the public-address system and asked for everyone's
attention. The plane became quieter. "Would passengers Paul John and
William Deming please identify themselves," he said,
Howell went cold.
John was the middle name of Paul Chiapparone.
Deming was the middle name of Bill Gaylord.
Tley were still searching for Paul and Bill.
Clearly it was not merely a question of names on a list at the airport.
Dadgar was firmly in control here, and his people were relentlessly
determined to find Paul and Bill.
Ten minutes later the captain came on the loudspeakers again. "Ladies and
gentlemen, we still have not located Paul John or William Deming. We have
been informed that we cannot take off until these two people have been
located. If anyone on board knows their whereabouts, will you please let us
know.
Will I hell, thought Howell.
Bob Young suddenly remembered the luggage tag in his pocket marked "William
D. Gaylord." He went to the bathroom and threw it into the toilet.
The revolutionaries came down the aisle again, asking for
passports. They checked each one carefully, comparing the photograph with
the face of the owner.
John Howell took out a paperback book he had brought from the Dvoranchik
place and tried to read it, in an effort to look unconcerned. It was Dubai,
Robin Moore's thriller about intrigue in the Middle East. He could not
concentrate on a paperback thriller: he was living a real one. Soon, he
thought, Dadgar must realize that Paul and Bill are not on this plane.
And what will he do then?
He's so determined.
Clever, too. What a perfect way to do a passport check--on the plane, when
all the passengers are in their seats and no one can hide!