The Courier: A Ryan Kealey Thriller (25 page)

“My children,” she said. “Want—to see them.”
“You will.” Several people were getting out. He heard two of them calling for the police and an ambulance.
“Is there anything you can tell me about the man who abducted you,” Yazdi asked.
“Muslim—young.”
“Anything else?”
She moaned, shook her head slowly.
“I want to catch him, see that he is punished. When he spoke—”
“My phone,” she said, lurching awkwardly. “He handled it.”
People were beginning to gather. Yazdi felt delicately around her body, as though he were checking for broken bones. He was also touching a woman familiarly—and in public. He looked away to show the others that he was uncomfortable with that; it was the truth. When he found the phone, he palmed it and stepped back.
A doctor announced himself and made his way through the few onlookers. There was an ambulance in the distance.
And then the road erupted ahead of them. Yazdi saw it an instant before he heard it or felt it. A black plume shot straight up, like a crow’s feather, then quickly smeared around the edges. The bang was like a child hitting a Dumpster with a stick. And then the roadway beneath him literally rolled, like the sea.
Yazdi knew who it was, what it was, and who the target had been when he saw the column of smoke flash-form. He was up and running toward it, dodging cars that stopped as other cars, ahead of them, were knocked, pushed, or rolled back. It was about a quarter mile away from him but the heat of the explosion—and the smell of the ingredients—reached him before he had gone more than a few steps. It had the odor of a kitchen where something was burning. It was a home-made explosive, just like the car bomb, made with oatmeal. He knew all of that before he taken a dozen steps yet he didn’t know the most important thing: what he hoped to find. He did not know if he wanted the Americans dead or not. The man was arrogant, the woman was inexperienced, and they had gotten in the way of his mission.
But that man had been seasoned and, because of that, he had been fair. That was a quality lacking even in his own department, especially the younger men who only knew how to hate—even their fellow Iranians.
Yazdi drew a handkerchief from his pocket as he neared the bomb site. The cloud was dissipating in all directions now, with choking, particulate matter from both the bomb and the vehicles that burned around it. The heat came in waves, from hot to hotter, and he ran with his left hand above his brow so he could cover his eyes when the furnace temperatures were their worst.
The police car the American had been driving was not there. Yazdi circled around ground zero, upwind from the heat, saw the vehicle parked on the shoulder. He hurried over and saw the damaged tires, the blasted windshield—and through it he spotted his cell phone on the seat. It wasn’t exactly an act of trust, he knew, but a calculated gamble: the American had put stopping the device above all other considerations—and hoped that Yazdi felt the same.
He did not know if two people could arrive at the same course of action for two very different reasons.
Right now Yazdi needed to get information and the explosion itself might help. Behind, where he had left the woman, he could see the lights of the ambulance through the smoke. Other sirens were approaching from both directions. He would have to act fast before the crime scene was sealed. He made his way as close as he dared, to where the cabin of an overturned motor home had been scorched by the blast. The driver and passenger were dead, charred, their bodies and the seats still ablaze. He had not come to help them. He held his breath and, in the dark, by the light of the burning car, he pinched particles of ash from the ground—burned leather, powdered rubber, human flesh. It didn’t matter. He lay it in the handkerchief and hurried back to the remains of the police car. Spreading the fabric on the seat, he held the injured woman’s phone close to his mouth and exhaled. He quickly put it facedown in the ash and pressed it down lightly. Then he picked it up carefully and lay it faceup. He took his own phone and put it close on top. The built-in camera was equipped with finely engineered optics. He snapped several images, then sent them to Sanjar, in his division, with a text:
URGENT: MOHAMMED’S FINGERPRINTS.
IF LEGIBLE, CHECK CUSTOMS. FIND
DOCUMENTS AND ALIASES.
He considered ordering them to send the D.C. mole to ground—but felt he might still be useful. Yazdi still hoped to obtain the nuclear device and having someone inside was worth the risk of possibly losing him. He did send a second, different, text, however. When he was finished, the Iranian rubbed the phone clean and threw it toward the nearest fire so his own prints would not be found on it. He saw a suitcase lying in the road and, hurrying over, opened it. He found a man’s shirt, roughly his size, and pulled it on. He also took a sweater he found and threw it around his shoulders. Then he went back to the shoulder and pushed down a section of the wire fence—helped by a huge section of tire that had been blown against it. Scampering over it he ran into the field, in the direction the Americans had to have gone.
CHAPTER 16
SOUK EL ARBA DU GHARB, MOROCCO
M
ohammed did not stop in Moulay Bouselham.
The Yemeni was not sure whether the backpack bomb Boulif prepared had stopped his pursuers. If the force were as big as the bang it made, he would be surprised if the asphalt hadn’t been reduced to tar. Regardless, the car he was driving had been seen and could be identified. Somehow, something had given him away. That didn’t concern him. He was safe for the moment. It was nighttime now. Only a massive aerial search or blind luck would allow them to find him. Between prayers of thanks to God, Mohammed decided it was worth the risk to keep going—especially if his pursuers had survived. There was a town to the east, Souk el Arba du Gharb. According to the map from the glove compartment, there was a rail line that went all the way to Tangier. That was how he would get there.
He had noted the direction of the setting sun and went away from it, following the signs when they appeared. He was no longer on the highway but on rural roads. He felt he would be safer here, with fewer eyes on him and more places to pull over and hide—even if the trip took longer.
Mohammed was hungry and thirsty and he stopped at a small café that had a coffee cup painted on its white wall just below two satellite dishes. Inside, the place smelled of tobacco and chickpeas. There were big-screen televisions inside—one over the bar and one in a back room where a few men were gaming. He ordered couscous with spicy vegetables and coffee to go. It was not yet crowded for dinner, and his meal came quickly. He left and ate in the car, which sat by a small park well beyond the nearest streetlight.
It was a simple supper but the best he had ever eaten. The exhaustion from earlier began to return. He took several swallows of black coffee, set the cup in a holder on the dashboard, and was about to set off when a jingling sound caused him to start.
He looked around the car, realized it was coming from a cell phone. It was inside the glove compartment—the phone Boulif had given him to detonate the nuclear device. Mohammed retrieved it. The number of the caller was blocked. But who would have this number, though, other than Boulif? He thumbed the lighted screen to answer.
“Yes?”
“I am Abdeliah,” said the caller. “I am a friend of the professor you were to call. But things have changed. Do not speak unless I ask a question. In what building did you receive this telephone?”
“A—a school,” he said. He had to think before answering. He wanted to make sure it was a question.
“The explosion on the A1. What was the number you used?”
“I used 911.”
“Listen to me,” the man said. “You are to stay on the road you are on. It will carry you east, past the industrial quarter. Wait at the cemetery for further instructions. Go now.”
Mohammed wanted to know who the caller really was and how the man knew where
he
was—but stopped himself.
Don’t ask questions, only answer them
. He had been trained in Yemen to do as he was told. Only at the last moment of life would he earn the privilege of being free.
He did not even finish his coffee but set out in the dark, following his shaky headlights along a narrow asphalt road among bicycles and motor scooters, old cars and trucks, most of them coming in his direction. The lingering smell of ocean and fish vanished as he drove toward the more isolated region of the city’s industrial heart.
 
 
Kealey was breathless by the time he reached the outskirts of the village. Rayhan was just a few paces behind him.
The last Kealey had seen of the Renault, it was headed eastward along what looked like a main road. He turned slowly, gathered in the view. They were in an exchange market, closed for the day, where fishermen brought their catch and sold it to middlemen. A few naked bulbs were visible in dirty windows, misty with decades of sea air. He heard a radio playing what sounded like Berber folk tunes somewhere in the distance; he had heard them in a visit to Gitmo, where they were used for sleep deprivation. If the beat didn’t keep you awake, the nasal atonal sound of the vocalists would. Kealey stopped turning when he found what he was looking for. He ran toward an old Ford pickup truck parked along the side of a small warehouse. The door was open.
“Get behind the wheel,” he said.
While Rayhan climbed in—legs weary, still breathing heavily, but uncomplaining—Kealey went around to the front of the truck and raised the hood.
It
complained, loudly.
“Open the door—I need the interior light,” he said
She cracked the door and Kealey looked around, squinting. He found the truck’s ignition coil. He recognized it from all the copper wire bundled inside. He snatched a piece of wire from what he thought was a headlight but was definitely outside the engine block. He didn’t know everything he should about cars and trucks and he hoped he wouldn’t need whatever he’d just disabled. He connected one end of the wire to the ignition coil, the other end to the red rod of the battery. That was usually the positive side. If it wasn’t, the only sound he’d hear would be the thump of his heart. He needed something to make a connection and remembered the keys he’d taken from Boulif’s body on the off-chance he’d need them. Most times, when he did that, the items ended up being used in ways for which they were not designed. That was just how this business worked. He lay the entire key ring across the two poles of the solenoid near the battery and quickly withdrew his hand. There was a sizzling spark, a cough, and the truck was running with a throaty rumble.
Rayhan went to move over, but Kealey motioned for her to stay. He shut the hood and went to the passenger’s side.
“Anyone stops us, I won’t know what the hell they’re saying,” he told her. “Let’s stay on this road—looks like the side streets all go north. Easier to look for him.”
She started out, relieved that the truck had automatic transmission. “What if we’re stopped by police?”
“Fine with me,” Kealey told her. “We could use the extra eyes.”
The old Ford bounced along the road, its shock absorbers shot, Kealey assuming they’d been made because their target recognized the car. Or the target may have panicked seeing a police car in his wake. Or he may have wanted to get rid of his fellow traveler and then just covered his tracks. It didn’t matter, really. Kealey just needed to keep his mind active. It had been a damned long day and they hadn’t stopped since departing the Baby Herc. Rayhan seemed alert, but she was younger. That really made a difference.
Rayhan looked ahead and Kealey stared down side streets. There were too few streetlights, and those he saw weren’t bright enough to reveal much about the traffic. He was beginning to doubt that the terrorist would have taken any of these roads: his objective would have been to put distance between himself and pursuers—whom he had possibly seen were on foot—and find someplace to get rid of the car. Kealey saw nothing that gave the bomber that option.
“Let’s speed it up,” he said, gesturing ahead.
Rayhan obliged, though there wasn’t much they could do in the rattling truck on a street that needed paving. There were no pedestrians and fewer commuters and they found themselves at the end of the road, just past Avenue Mfadel Cherkaoui. There was a large empty lot ahead with a dirt road cut through it.
“Wait here,” Kealey said. He jumped out, motioned her forward, and studied the ground. Water was pooled in the middle where the lot sloped down. He ran back to the truck. “There are fresh car tracks on this side and muddy tracks ahead,” he said. “Go straight.”
They went through the open lot. There was a shed immediately to the left and an expanse of gravel to the right, somewhat closer. A derrick, bulldozer, and other construction equipment sat still and dark in front of them, silhouetted against distant spotlights. There was a beaten-up white Volvo parked near the bulldozer. The lights surrounded the functional structures of what looked like an industrial park.
Peering ahead, Kealey said, “That would be a good place to lose—”
He was interrupted by a hard cracking sound against the door on the driver’s side of the truck. Rayhan started, wasn’t sure what she heard, but Kealey knew.
“Down!” he yelled, and simultaneously grabbed her arm and pulled her toward him, low on the seat. The truck swerved toward the passenger’s side as a
thud
kicked stuffing from the dashboard and filled the air with cottony, floating fragments.
They were under fire from the direction of the shack. Handguns with silencers, judging from the lack of sound apart from the bullets striking.
Kealey reached across Rayhan and swung the wheel so the back of the truck would take the gunfire. Without her foot on the gas the Ford drifted to a stop. A pair of bullets struck the seat behind them in quick succession.
Kealey drew Boulif’s gun from his belt. He didn’t know who the attackers were or whether they planned to move in. He assumed they would. There was nothing the attackers needed to know. Detention wouldn’t be as efficient as elimination.
Rayhan was breathing quickly, lying as flat as she could make herself, staring into the dark of the seat back.
“They opened fire to pin us down,” he said. “From up ahead we could have seen that industrial park and the rest of the roadway.”
“Then why are we staying here?” she asked.
“Because we don’t know how many shooters there are,” Kealey told her. “From the spread I’d say we’ve got one gunman firing right now. But there could be additional people just out of range, behind the gravel. The lot dips in the middle. They’d be able to fire down on us there.”
“We can’t just sit here. The terrorist is getting away.”
“We’re not going to sit here,” Kealey said as another bullet struck the truck, shattering the front windshield. Glass fragments covered the hood. “That came from behind, like the others. He was firing in twos till now. Six shots. He’s pacing himself to buy time now. After the next one, I’m going to swing us back the way we came. We’ll go around the lot.”
“How could anyone be
waiting
for us?” she asked breathlessly. “There wasn’t anyone with him in Fès.”
Kealey assumed they were associates of the man she’d exterminated. But there was no time to explain and no reason to speculate. They had to get out of here. The Volvo was probably the associate. If they couldn’t find the terrorist, at least they had that.
He had snaked along the forward part of the seat so his left hand was on the gas pedal and his right hand—still gripping the gun—was on the steering wheel. If it were just him, he would have charged the shed with his lights off. But he didn’t know if he could make it before the guy reloaded and he hadn’t been able to spot the muzzle flashes before turning the truck around.
There was a strange hum, then, followed by pops of un-silenced gunfire. It came from the driver’s side but it wasn’t aimed at them. Kealey braved a look. There were flashes from a scooter, a single return shot from the shed, and then silence. He rose a little higher, looked over the backseat at the rear window. A chill breeze was blowing through, carrying the tart, faint smell of gunpowder. He watched as the scooter skidded to a stop. A shadowy figure got off, approached the structure furtively, then went inside. There was a flash—the silencer?—and he emerged a few moments later and, before mounting the motorbike, he shouted ahead: “
Ahlan wa sahlan
!”
“Yazdi?” Rayhan said, brightening.
Kealey’s mouth twisted. “Yeah.” He couldn’t remember the last time he had been glad and humiliated at the same time. But he also felt vindicated; it
was
his decision to leave the phone as a show of trust.
Rayhan squirmed from beneath Kealey and he looked ahead, toward the gravel, as Yazdi approached from the opposite direction. No warning shots: he was guessing it had been a lone gunman. To the right, he did not see movement in the Volvo. He’d keep an eye on it as they approached. Now it was time to go.
“Tell him to get on,” Kealey told Rayhan. “His gunfire may bring the police.”
Yazdi was ahead of him. As Kealey and Rayhan switched places, the Iranian jumped off the bike, loaded it on the back, and followed it up. He came to the broken window, the gunman’s silenced 9mm and another weapon bunched in his left hand.
“Stolen at gunpoint?” Rayhan asked, nodding at the motorbike.
“Bought on a street corner,” he said, “and I overpaid. I was in a hurry.”
Rayhan smiled. Kealey told her to thank him and ask if there was anything on the shooter.
“No identification, no cell phone,” Yazdi said. “Perhaps in the car.”
They drove to the Volvo. It was empty. Kealey ran his palm around the perspiration-damp wheel, smudging his fingerprints. “The man who sold Yazdi the bike,” Kealey said. “Did he get a good look at Yazdi?”
Yazdi said he made all his transactions where he couldn’t be seen—or the other party did not survive. Whichever side Yazdi was on, Kealey could not help but respect a professional.
“Get in the Volvo,” Kealey said suddenly. “We may be able to get closer to them in this. You can check it out while I drive.”
They got in, Yazdi in the back. As Kealey continued along the east-west road, Rayhan searched the car. She went through the glove compartment, felt across the dashboard, checked the door pockets and seat. Yazdi examined the back. He shook his head.
“After what happened in Fès they’re working clean,” Kealey said. It was a relief to be in a quiet car. He could hear himself think
and
talk.
A helicopter flew overhead. Kealey heard another going north-south.
“They’ve interviewed the survivors of the explosion,” Rayhan said. “They know what car to look for.”
Kealey nodded. “If he hasn’t changed it by now, he’s got it hidden.”
“Do you think this was part of the plan from the start, to have him hook up with these people?”

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