Authors: Ken Follett
Tags: #Fiction, #Historical, #Thrillers, #General, #Espionage, #Unknown
Ken Falloff
tional force, not a bunch of ragged refugees. Hassan hoped desperately
that Malimoud would accept it.
Yasif Hassan had come to propose that the Fedayeen should hijack a
holocaust
They embraced like brothers, kissing cheeks, then stood back to look at
one another.
'Tou smell like a whore," said Mahmoud.
"You smell like a goatherd," said Hassan. They laughed and embraced
again.
Mahmoud was a big man, a fraction taller than Hassan and much broader;
and he looked big, the way he held his head and walked and spoke. He did
smell, too: a sour familiar smell that came from living very close to
many people in a place that lacked the modern inventions of hot baths and
sanitation and garbage disposal. It was three days since Hassan had used
after-shave and talcum powder, but he still smelled like a scented woman
to Mahmoud.
The house had two rooms: the one Hassan had entered, and behind that
another, where Mahrfioud slept on the floor with two other men. There was
no upper story. Cooking was done in a yard at the back, and the nearest
water supply was one hundred yards away. The woman lit a fire and began
to make a porridge of crushed beans. While they waited for it, Hassan
told Mahmoud his story.
"Mee months ago in Luxembourg r met a man I bad known at Oxford, a Jew
called Dickstein. It turns out he is a big Mossad operative. Since then
I have been watching him, with the help of the Russians, in particular
a KGB man named Rostov. We have discovered that Dickstein plans to steal
a shipload of uranium so the Zionists will be able to make atom bombs."
At first Mahmoud refused to believe this. He cross-questioned Hassan: how
good was the information, what exactly was the evidence, who might be
lying, what mistakes might have been made? Then, as Hassan's answers made
more and more sense, the truth began to sink in, and Mahmoud became very
grave-
"This is not only a threat to the Palestinian cause. These bombs could
ravage the whole of the Middle East."
It was like him, Hassan thought, to see the big picture.
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"What do you and this Russian propose to dor' Mabmoud asked.
"Ihe plan is to stop Dickstein and expose the Israeli plot, showing the
Zionists to be lawless adventurers. We haven't worked out the details yet
But I have an alternative proposal." He paused, trying to form the right
phrases, then blurted it out. "I think the Fedayeen should hijack the
ship before Dickstein gets there."
Mahmoud stared blankly at him for a long moment.
Hassan thought: Say something, for God's sake! Mahmoud began to shake his
head from side to side slowly, then his mouth widened in a smile, and at
last he began to laugh, beginning with a small chuckle and finishing up
giving a huge, body-shaking bellow that brought the rest of the household
around to see what was happening.
Hassan ventured, "But what do you think?"
Mahmoud sighed. "It's wonderful," he said. "I don't see how we can do it,
but it's a wonderful idea."
Ilen he started asking questions.
He asked questions all through breakfast and for most of the morning: the
quantity of uranium, the names of the ships involved, how the yellowcake
was converted into nuclear explosive, places and dates and people. They
talked in the back room, just the two of them for most of the time, but
occasionally Mahmoud would call someone in and tell him to listen while
Hassan repeated some particular point.
About midday he summoned two men who seemed to be his lieutenants. With
them listening, he again went over the points he thought crucial.
"rhe Coparelli is an ordinary merchant ship with a regular crew?P9
"Yes."
"She will be sailing through the Mediterranean to Genoa."
"Yes."
"What does this yellowcake weigh?"
"Two hundred tons."
"And it is packed in drums."
"Five hundred sixty of them."
"Its market pricer'
'Two million American dollars."
"And it is used to make nuclear bombs."
"Yes. Well, it is the raw material."
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"Is the conversion to the explosive form an expensive or difficult
process?"
"Not if you've got a nuclear reactor. Otherwise, yes."
Mahmpud nodded to the two lieutenants. "Go and tell this to the others."
In the afternoon, when the sun was past its zenith and it was cool enough
to go out, Mahmoud and Yasif walked over the hills outside the town.
Yasif was desperate to know what Mahmoud really thought of his plan, but
Mahmoud refused to talk about uranium. So Yasif spoke about David Rostov
and said that he admired the Russian's professionalism despite the
difficulties he had made for him.
"It is well to admire the Russians," Mahmoud said, "so long as we do not
trust them. Their heart is not in our cause. There are three reasons why
they take our side. ne least important is that we cause trouble for the
West, and anything that is bad for the West is good for the Russians.
Then there is their image. The underdeveloped nations identify with us
rather than with the Zionists, so by supporting us the Russians gain
credit with the Third World-and remember, in the contest between the
United States and the Soviet Union the Third World has all the floating
voters. But the most important reason-the only really important reason-is
oil. The Arabs have oil."
They passed a boy tending a small flock of bony sheep. The boy was
playing a flute. Yasif remembered that Mahmoud had once been a shepherd
boy who could neither read nor write,
"Do you understand how important oil is?" Mahmoud said. "Hitler lost the
European war because of off.
46NO.99
"Listen. The Russians defeated Hitler. They were bound to. Hitler knew
this: he knew about Napoleon, he knew nobody could conquer Russia. So why
did he try? He was running out of oil. There is oil in Georgia, in the
Caucasian oilfields. Hitler had to have the Caucasus. But you cannot hold
the Caucasus secure unless you have Volgograd, which was then called
Stalingrad, the place where the tide turned against Hitler. Oil. That's
what our struggle is about, whether we like it or not, do you realize
that? If it were not for oil, nobody but
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us would care about a few Arabs and lews fighting over a dusty little
country like ours."
MArnoud was magnetic when he talked. lEs strong, clear voice rolled out
short phrases, simple explanations, statements that sounded like
devastating basic truths: Hassan suspected he said these same things often
to his troops. In the back of his mind he remembered the sophisticated ways
in which politics were discussed in places like Luxembourg and Oxford, and
it seemed to him now that for all their mountains of information those
people knew less than Mahmoud. He knew, too, that international politics
were complicated: that there was more than oil behind these things, yet at
bottom he believed Mahmoud was right.
They sat in the shade of a fig tree. The smooth, duncolored landscape
stretched all around them, empty. The sky glared hot and blue, cloudless
from one horizon to the other. Mahmoud uncorked a water bottle and gave it
to Hassan, who drank the tepid liquid and handed it back. Then he asked
Mahmoud whether he wanted to rule Palestine after the Zionists wen beaten
back.
"I have killed many people," Mahmoud said. "At first I did it with my own
hands, with a knife or a gun or a bomb. Now I kill by devising plan's and
giving orders, but I kill them still. We know this is a sin, but I cannot
repent. I have no remorse, Yasif. Even ff we make a mistake, and we kill
children and Arabs in#ead of soldiers and Zionists, still I think only,
This is bad for our reputation,' not, 'Mis is bad for my soul.' There Is
blood on my hands, and I win not wash it off. I will not try. There is a
story called The Picture of Dorian Gray. It is about a man who leads an
evil and debilitating life, the kind of life that should make him look old,
give him fines on his face and bags under his eyes, a destroyed liver and
venereal disease. Still, he does not suffer Indeed, as the years go by he
seems to stay young, as if he had found the elixir of life. But in a locked
room In his house there is a painting of him, and it is the picture that
ages, and takea on the ravages of evil living and terrible disease. Do you
know the story? It is English."
"I saw the movie," said Yasif.
"I read it when I was in Moscow. I would like to see that film. Do you
remember how it ended?"
"Oh, yes. Dorian Gray destroyed the painting, and then all 225
Ken Folleff
the disease and damage fell on him in an instant, and he died."
"Yes." Mahmoud put the stopper back in thebottle, and looked out over the
brown hillsides with unseeing eyes. Then he said, "When Palestine is
free, my picture will be destroyed.
After that they sat in silence for a while. Eventually, without speaking,
they stood up and began to walk back to the town.
Several men came to the little house in Nablus that evening at dusk, just
before curfew. Hassan did not know who they were exactly; they might have
been the local leaders of the movement, or an assorted group of people
whose judgment Mahmoud respected, or a permanent council of war that
stayed close to Mahmoud but did not actually live with him. Hassan could
see the logic in the last alternative, for if they all lived together,
they could all be destroyed together.
The woman gave them bread and fish and watery wine, and Mahmoud told them
of Hassan's scheme. Mahmoud had thought it through more thoroughly than
Hassan. He proposed that they hijack the Coparelli before Dickstein got
there, then ambush the Israelis as they came aboard. Expecting only an
ordinary crew and halfhearted resistance, Dickstein's group would be
wiped out. Then the Fedayeen would take the Coparelli to a North African
port and invite the world to come aboard and see the bodies of the
Zionist criminals. The cargo would be offered to its owners for a ransom
of half its market price one million U.S. dollars.
There was a long debate. Clearly a faction of the movement was already
nervous about Mahmoud's policy of taking the war into Europe, and saw the
proposed hijack as a further extension of the same strategy. They
suggested that the Fedayeen could achieve most of what they wanted simply
by calling a press conference in Beirut or Damascus and revealing the
Israeli plot to the international press. Hassan was convinced that was
not enough: accusations were cheap, and it was not the lawlessness of
Israel that had to be demonstrated, it was the power-of the Fedayeen.
They spoke as equals, and Mahmoud seemed to listen to each with the same
attention. Hassan sat quietly, hearing the low, calm voices of these
people who looked like peasants 226