07 the kobra manifesto, p.24

  07 The Kobra Manifesto, p.24

07 The Kobra Manifesto
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  ‘-And if you think you’re going to get me to take this goddam bird up again on three engines you’re crazy!’

  I now noticed that Kuznetski was slowly going pale.

  ‘Satynovich,’ he murmured, ‘is a wild man. He makes me afraid.’

  ‘You should choose your friends more carefully,’ I said, and went back along the aisle, hitting a seat-squab as the Boeing swung again and slowed under the brakes.

  Then we stopped, and the long wait began, as it had to, This was at 10:41.

  Zade stood with one booted foot on the navigator’s seat, staring through the windscreen.

  In the last few minutes a nervous tic had started to jerk at the corner of his mouth. His physical control was adequate but he lacked the nerves to back it up and when he spoke mere was a tremor of rage in his voice.

  He was listening now to the distorted tones from the radio.

  ‘I repeat my offer to replace your hostage personally’ James K. Burdick, US Secretary of Defense.

  He had arrived by military helicopter ten minutes ago and was speaking direct from the control tower. When Zade replied his voice was hoarse and the sibilants were accentuated.

  ‘The hostage remains with us.’

  His psychology was sound: he knew that Burdick would do more for his daughter’s safety than he’d do for his own.

  Half an hour ago at 11.04 the FBI had opened up communications via the tower and two-way radio: they were headed by a small group of men standing on the tarmac below the tower and I could see the glint of the chrome aerials as they moved about. The man in charge had announced himself as Dwight Sorenson and he had opened the exchange with an immediate demand for surrender and this had provoked Zade into expressing his anxiety in the form of rage.

  At 11.09 he had ordered me pilot and navigator off the aircraft, probably because he thought they might become dangerous. They had been told to confirm mat Patricia Burdick was indeed a hostage on board and that she was indeed in a worsening condition of fever.

  As Zade began speaking again I heard an aircraft landing but couldn’t see it because the main runway was at right angles behind the tail of the Boeing. Zade interrupted himself and ordered all air traffic to cease and got an undertaking from fee base commander that only emergency movements would be permitted.

  The Defense Secretary broke in again.

  The material for exchange has been sent for. In the meantime 1 would welcome a personal meeting with you. and would present myself at the aircraft, unaccompanied..

  Zade considered this and said no.

  Francisco Ventura was on the flight deck, watching me with his slow moist eyes, a submachine-gun in the crook of his arm. He had followed me here when I’d come forward soon after the Boeing had stopped. He didn’t worry me too much because I believed he would only shoot on orders from Zade and I didn’t intend that Zade should give such orders, because I wanted to avoid a shoot-out.

  But Shadia worried me because she’d been standing in the staff area immediately aft of the flight deck for the last twenty minutes, watching me steadily. On the few occasions when I met her eyes I felt she was ready at any instant to fire the heavy-calibre automatic that she held in her slim tanned hand, and not necessarily on orders from Zade. Her expression would have been hard to describe but I would say that she felt I owed her a death and she wanted to take it.

  I could hear Sassine’s high rapid tones from the first-class compartment, with nobody answering. The aircraft that had just landed was rolling towards the control tower and in a moment I heard its sound die to silence. It didn’t have Ferris on board: the earliest he could get here was 12:30.

  At 12:21 Dr Costa came forward to ask if the air-conditioning could be turned on. Zade said nothing: he was now standing with his back against the bulkhead, watching the group of men at the base of the tower, his dark face shining with sweat. He had spent the last ten minutes releasing a little of his rage over the radio, telling Burdick that he had broken their agreement to make the exchange as soon as the Boeing had landed. Burdick had said that nobody had known where the aircraft was going to land, and that the material for exchange had been ‘difficult to obtain’, for reasons that should be ‘well understood’. This material, he assured Zade, was now on its way.

  Ventura turned his eyes slowly to look at Dr Costa, ‘We don’t know how it works,’ he said.

  Dr Costa went away.

  At 12:51 James Burdick came on the air again.

  The material for exchange will shortly arrive and we need your permission for the aircraft to land.

  Zade gave it.

  He had been leaning ‘his head against the panelling behind him for the past few minutes, but was still watching the group on the tarmac. I could see something like fifteen unmarked vehicles in the immediate area, most of them carrying antennae.

  We listened to the radio exchange between the tower and the pilot of the USAF interceptor aircraft as it lowered into its approach path and touched down on the main runway with the roar of its jets slamming back in echoes from the line of hangars.

  So Ferris wouldn’t be here. The base commander had reserved his right to receive emergency traffic but I didn’t think Zade would allow it: the effort he was making to keep control of himself was increasing his tension, paradoxically, and I didn’t think it would take a lot to drive him over the edge. I was now certain that this was his first experience of running a hostage operation and he was having to do it in the presence of massive armament that could blow his entire cell to shreds if he made a mistake.

  The Secretary of Defense came in again. ‘We have the exchange material.’

  Zade leaned away from the panelling, his face loosening slightly as he looked through the windscreen to the group below the tower. Perhaps he’d been preparing himself for difficulties, for a series of deliberate delaying actions that might take away his initiative and force him on to the defensive. I don’t think he’d believed he would be so successful.

  Sassine and Ramirez had come into the staff area to listen.

  Burdick was speaking again.

  No problem is now envisaged. You have Paul Wexford on board with you, and he has my permission to fetch the material and deliver it to you personally.

  Sassine had heard the message and came on to the flight deck.

  ‘Let me go and get it,’ he said. His eyes were shining.

  Zade knocked him down and I noticed how fast Sassine went for his gun: it was in his hand as he crashed to the floor. He wouldn’t have used it against Zade: it was just his instinctive reaction to attack. I noted ‘this point because when the time came to do something it’d be dangerous to underestimate anyone.

  ‘Get the flight steps,’ Zade said over the radio.

  He was looking calmer: the tension had been mounting in him over the last hours and Sassine’s behaviour had been getting on his nerves.

  We heard the motorized trolley nearing the aircraft on the port side, bringing the steps.

  ‘Get the girl up here,’ Zade said.

  Ventura moved past me.

  ‘Wexford.’ Drops of sweat fell from Zade’s chin and his breathing sounded painful. ‘You’re alive because you offered to be the go-between. You’d better do everything right.’

  On his way to the main door he stopped, listening to the faint whimpering noise from the toilet. The tap was running into the basin and I suppose Sassine had lost some teeth and was to some extent shocked back to normal cerebration. Zade moved again and swung the door open and pushed me on to the steps and for an instant I remember hoping that none of the FBI men out there was working himself up into a state of target-attraction: from the movements on the tarmac I estimated there were twenty or thirty marksmen with the main doorway of the Boeing in their sights.

  ‘Hold her upright,’ I ‘heard Zade say behind me.

  At the bottom of the steps I looked up and saw Pat Burdick in the doorway, supported by Dr Costa. She had a hand to her eyes because of the bright light but Zade pulled it away so that she could be recognized. Behind her was Ventura and the snout of the submachine-gun was pressed into her back.

  I walked across the tarmac.

  The main group of security people was a hundred yards from Boeing and as I neared it a big man with a two-way radio slung at toe shoulder came forward to meet me.

  ‘Wexford?' ‘Yes.’

  ‘I’m Dwight Sorenson, heading the FBI team.’

  ‘Good afternoon.’

  Ferris was here and I was going to ask him how he’d managed it but it wasn’t important: they must have flown him from Manaus into the nearest airfield from the base and used a helicopter, since they couldn’t rely on Zade’s allowing an emergency landing.

  The man talking to Ferris was grey-faced with sleepless eyes.

  ‘I’m James Burdick,’ he said.

  ‘Wexford, sir.’

  ‘How is she?’

  He was looking beyond me to the aircraft.

  ‘Dr Costa would like her in a hospital as soon as it can be arranged. She’s fully conscious and not under drugs.’

  He looked down, then at Ferris.

  What’s the situation in there?’ Ferris asked me.

  Sorenson stood close, listening.

  ‘I can only give you my opinion,’ I said in a moment. ‘I’d say they’re prepared to kill their hostage out of hand, if we could show them we had the initiative.’ I looked at Sorenson. ‘If you kill them, you’ll kill her. There are six of them in there so they can take turns to sleep.’

  A voice sounded on Sorenson’s radio and he listened for a second and then shut it down. ‘You mean that so long as we feel obliged to supply food and water they’re ready to hold out for just as long as they want?’

  ‘For days, yes. Or weeks. Of course there’s a breakoff point’

  I didn’t look at Burdick.

  He was watching me.

  That doctor hasn’t indicated my daughter is in any immediate danger?’

  ‘No. But if she’s to remain in there much longer we’d have to set up what would amount to field medical facilities and in my opinion they wouldn’t allow that.’

  ‘There’s no way,’ the FBI man asked heavily, ‘you can go back hi there and drive those people out under our guns? I have fifty marksmen deployed.’

  The Defense Secretary turned away slightly and I had the feeling they’d discussed this idea and couldn’t agree on it.

  There’d be no point,’ I said. They’d bring the girl with them and even if you picked off the six of them simultaneously without touching her, one of them at least would live long enough to shoot her at close range.’

  Burdick was moving away from the group and Ferris gave me a signal and I followed both of them across the tarmac until we were out of earshot. The briefcase under the Defense Secretary’s arm was a security model with four straps and a centre lock and provision for a wrist chain. This was the form I’d assumed the exchange material would take and that was why I’d talked to Kuznetski, Burdick stopped, ‘Are you willing to go back into the airplane, Mr Wexford?’

  ‘Yes, sir.’

  He held out the briefcase.

  ‘This is the material they asked for.’

  It was difficult to tell him.

  They’ve got a man there with a degree in atomic physics.’

  His tired eyes went dead.

  ‘Kuznetski?’ Ferris asked.

  ‘Yes.’

  None of us spoke for a while.

  From here I could see some of the marksmen ranged along the roof of the main building. Others were deployed in unmarked cars at regular intervals, their dark barrels poking towards the Boeing: these would fire last of all and only then if the situation became fluid and mobile. A dozen Air Force vehicles stood near the end of the main hangar and a group of uniformed officers were talking together, some of them with field glasses raised to watch the aircraft.

  A Sheriff’s Department helicopter stood just beyond the emergency bay with a pilot leaning against its door and an Air Force man talking to him, and I could see two DPS vehicles over by the tower, their lights still rotating.

  There was very little noise. The sun was fitful behind high cloud patches and the ground wind sometimes whipped the lanyard of the flag against its pole, over the main building, making a ringing sound because the pole was metal.

  Mentally I wasn’t too occupied. I’d done all the thinking there was to be done and the situation hadn’t changed because the Defense Secretary was carrying the material I’d expected him to be carrying: Zade had come here for nuclear arms and they were in this briefcase in the form of blueprints and equations. It was known that the PLO had the technical capability of producing medium-yield weapons and all they needed were the designs and that was what Zade had asked for and wasn’t going to get: because Burdick couldn’t let him have them.

  They should have known that All Burdick had been able to do was to bring his daughter back on the soil of her homeland and close to him, and then hope for a miracle.

  I didn’t have one for him.

  Nobody had.

  ‘I was in signals,’ Ferris told me, ‘with London.’ They’d taken their bloody time, I thought, finding out about Kuznetski. Not that it mattered; a man like Zade would know his operation depended on the expert evaluation of the material for exchange, and if he hadn’t brought Kuznetski he’d have brought someone else.

  ‘So what does London say?’

  Ferris looked at his feet ‘It’s over to you.’

  I was listening carefully. The final directive Ferris had given me from Manaus was to go out for the Kobra cell: the life of Patricia Burdick was an incidental factor. So the mission had ended here. Kobra had to be eliminated and that could now be done, as soon as someone gave the signal. It didn’t have to be me. It would have, finally and perhaps after days of bitter and useless negotiation, to be James Burdick. He would be given the exclusive right, presumably, of condemning his daughter to death.

  I glanced at him. For the moment he seemed to have forgotten us: he was just looking at the ground, his tired eyes narrowed, the wind moving a lock of his greying hair. I didn’t think he had any constructive thoughts in his mind: he’d lived with this thing for days on end, and nights on end, and he must have considered every possible solution, and drawn blank.

  I looked away from him to Ferris.

  ‘London says I’ve got discretion?’

  ‘Yes.’

  Total?’

  ‘Yes.’

  I turned back to Burdick.

  This man Kuznetski,’ I said, ‘is probably quite good. How good are those designs?’

  His head had ‘come up and he hadn’t immediately understood what was being said to him: he’d caught it about halfway.

  ‘Oh.’ He looked at the briefcase. ‘Not good enough for an expert to read.’ He raised his head to watch the Boeing. ‘These people are terrorists, and terrorists aren’t normally very intelligent. So I thought maybe they’d just-‘ he gave a slight shrug - ‘accept this stuff without looking at it too hard. There wasn’t anything else I could do, was there?’

  ‘No,’ I said.

  ‘But we have to try. Don’t we?.’

  ‘Of course.’

  He was looking at me steadily now. ‘I’d like it right on the line, Mr Wexford. You’ve been in there with them and you know them better than we do. And you don’t think there’s a chance, do you?’

  ‘No.’

  He looked away.

  The silence came in again.

  A few ideas had occurred to me during the flight from Belem and I’d had enough time to treble-check them for feasibility and none of them had stood up, not one. The only thing left was a technical last-ditch action, with the odds so steep that I’d got it out of my mind.

  But I thought about it now because there wasn’t any choice.

  ‘Ferris,’ I said quietly, ‘I want to talk.’

  He looked up at me quickly.

  ‘Mr Secretary,’ he said, ‘will you excuse us for a moment?’

  ‘Of course.’

  I walked with Ferris across the tarmac, halfway to the emergency bay. Burdick wouldn’t like the proposal and I was going to leave Ferris to persuade him to give me a completely free hand.

  ‘Look,’ I said, ‘if I’m going back in there I’ll need something a bit more useful than that ersatz stuff in the briefcase. I want something I can argue with - something they can understand.’

  He was looking towards the Boeing.

  ‘What do you need?’ he asked me, ‘I need to break their nerve,’

  Chapter Seventeen: ZERO-ZERO

  I went aboard the Boeing at 14:55.

  Zade was unarmed, waiting at the top of the flight steps.

  Ventura and Ramirez were on each side of him with a submachine-gun trained on me as I came up.

  Zade took the briefcase from me and went into the aircraft.

  The other two lowered their weapons and I followed Zade aboard, telescoping the antenna of the walkie-talkie.

  I saw Patricia Burdick at the rear of the main passenger compartment with Dr Costa, and went along the aisle to talk to them.

  At this point I had the urge to turn back and get out of the Boeing and stay out, stay alive. But then I would have to live with myself afterwards.

  ‘Your father sends his love,’ I said to the girl. ‘He wants you to know you’ll be home again soon now.’

  She stared up at me without saying anything for a moment, as if she were repeating what I’d said to herself a few times to find out if it were true, whether she could trust me.

  ‘How’s he taking this?’ she asked.

  ‘Very calmly. He knows you’ll soon be home.’

  Quietly she murmured, ‘Sure,’ and closed her eyes.

  I wondered how much she’d be able to do for herself, if she had the chance; her skin was waxen and wet with perspiration. Dr Costa looked at me with his mournful eyes but said nothing; I thought that inside he was praying, and to the most powerful of his gods.

  I moved across the aisle and pulled down the table for the end seat and opened the zip of the walkie-talkie case and took out the bomb and put it on the table.

  ‘Zade,’ I called.

 
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