As the driver sped away, Smith surveyed the street again and warily strode across to what had once been the American embassy. The windows were shuttered, and the building and grounds were in disrepair. There was a sense of abandonment about the compound, but Jon pushed on through. He rang the bell.
The United States still had a man in Baghdad, but he was Polish. In 1991, at the end of the Gulf War, Poland assumed control of the imposing American embassy on P Street Northwest. Since then, even when U.S. bombs and missiles fell, Polish diplomats held forth from the embassy, representing not only their nation’s interests in Iraq, but America’s. From the great shuttered embassy, they handled passport questions, reported on local media, and occasionally passed sub-rosa messages between Washington and Baghdad. As in all wars, there were times when even enemies needed to communicate, which was the only reason Saddam Hussein tolerated the Poles. At any moment, the mercurial Hussein could change his mind and imprison them all.
The embassy’s front door swung open to show a big man with a snub nose, thick gray hair, and shaggy eyebrows that were lowered over intelligent brown eyes.
He fit the description Peter had given Jon. “Jerzy Domalewski?”
“The same. You must be Peter’s friend.” The door swung open wider, and the diplomat’s gaze took in the tall American with one savvy glance. In his midforties, he wore a brown suit that sagged as if it had gone too long between cleanings. He spoke in Polish-accented English. “Come in. No point in making ourselves into bigger targets than we already are.” He closed the door behind Jon and led him across a marble foyer into a large office. “You are sure no one followed you?” He liked the level look in the stranger’s dark blue eyes and the sense of physical power he radiated. He would need both attributes in perilous Baghdad.
Instantly Smith caught the whiff of fear. “MI6 knows what it’s doing. I won’t bore you with the circuitous route they used to get me into the country.”
“Good. Do not tell me.” Domalewski nodded as he closed the office door. “There are secrets no one should know. Not even me.” He gave a small, wry smile. “Take a chair. You must be weary. That one with the arms is comfortable. Still has its springs.” As Jon sat, the diplomat continued on to the window where he cracked open the shutter and stared outside at the morning. “We must be so careful.”
Jon crossed his legs. Domalewski was correct: He was tired. But he also felt a pounding need to get on with his investigation. Sophia’s beautiful face and the agony of her death haunted him.
Three days ago, he had arrived at London’s Heathrow airport in the early hours of the morning dressed in new civilian clothes he had bought in San Francisco. It was the beginning of a long, grueling journey. At Heathrow, an MI6 agent sneaked him into a military ambulance that had whisked him to some RAF base in East Anglia. From there he had been flown to a desert airstrip in Saudi Arabia and picked up by a nameless and taciturn British SAS corporal dressed in long Bedouin robes who spoke perfect Arabic.
“Put these on.” He tossed Jon robes identical to his. “We’re going to take advantage of a little-known prewar agreement.” It turned out he was talking about the Iraqi-Saudi Arabian Neutral Zone, which the two nations still maintained so their nomadic Bedouins could continue their historic trade routes.
In the sweltering robes, Jon and the corporal were handed from Bedouin camp to Bedouin camp by the Iraqi underground until on the outskirts of Baghdad the corporal surprised him with fake identity papers. Iraqi dinars, Western clothing, and a badge and armband for a U.N. worker from Belize. Jon’s cover name was Mark Bonnet.
He had shaken his head, amazed at MI6’s thoroughness. “You’ve been holding out.”
“Hell, no,” the corporal said indignantly. “Didn’t know whether you’d make it. No point wasting good ID on a bloody corpse.” He pumped Jon’s hand in farewell. “If you ever see that arse Peter Howell again, tell him he owes us all a whopper.”
Now Jon sat in the former American embassy, dressed like a typical U.N. worker in his brown cotton slacks, short-sleeved shirt, zippered jacket, and the all-important U.N. armband and badge. He had money and additional identification in his pocket.
“Do not take our concern personally,” Domalewski was saying as he continued to study the street. “You cannot blame us for not being especially enthusiastic about helping you.”
“Of course. But be assured— this may be the most crucial risk you’ve ever taken.”
Domalewski nodded his shaggy head. “That was in the message from Peter. He also gave me a list of doctors and hospitals you wished to visit.” The Pole turned from the window, his thick eyebrows raised. Again he considered the American. His old friend Peter Howell had said this man was a medical doctor. But could he handle himself if violence struck? It was true that from his high-planed face to his broad shoulders and trim waist, he looked more like a sniper than a healer. Domalewski considered himself an apt judge of people, and from everything he could see about this undercover American, perhaps Peter had been right.
Jon asked, “You’ve arranged meetings?”
“Of course. I will drive myself to some. Others you must handle yourself.” The diplomat’s voice became a warning: “But remember your U.N. credentials will be useless if you fall into the government’s hands. This is a police state. Many citizens are armed, and anyone can be a spy. Hussein’s private police force— the Republican Guard— is as brutal and powerful as the SS and Gestapo combined. They’re always sniffing for enemies of the state, dissenters, or simply someone whose looks they do not like.”
“I understand they can be random.”
“Ah, so you do know something about Iraq.”
“A bit.” Smith nodded grimly.
Domalewski cocked his head, continuing to appraise the American. He went behind his desk and pulled out a drawer. “Sometimes the greatest danger is the very arbitrariness of it all. Violence here erupts in a heartbeat, often for no logical reason. Peter said you should have this.”
He sat in an armchair next to Jon and held out another U.S. Army Beretta.
Smith took it eagerly. “He thinks of everything.”
“As my father and I both found in our time.”
“Then you’ve worked with him before.”
“More than once. Which is why I am doing him the favor of helping you.
He had wondered why Domalewski had agreed. “Thanks to both of you.”
“I hope you will still thank us tomorrow or the next day. Peter says you are adequate with the Beretta. Do not hesitate to use it if you must. However, remember any foreigner caught with a gun will be arrested.”
“I appreciate the warning. I plan to avoid that.”
“Good. Have you heard about the Justice Detention Center?”
“Sorry, no.”
Domalewski’s voice dropped, and horror infused his words. “The existence of the detention center was confirmed just recently. It is six stories deep into the ground. Imagine that— no windows for the world to look in, no exterior walls for the cries of the tormented to be heard through, and no hope of escape. Iraqi military intelligence built it under the hospital near the al-Rashid military camp south of here. They say Qusai, Saddam’s insane son, supervised the design and construction himself. Military officers and personnel who displease Saddam have an entire floor of torture and execution chambers reserved for them. Other prisoners can be sent to a level where they officially do not exist. They cannot be asked about. Their names cannot even be mentioned. Those sad creatures are disappeared and lost forever. But for me, the worst part of the underground building… the most grisly and somehow savage… is on the bottom floor. There Saddam has not only dungeons but an appalling fifty-two gallows.”
Jon repressed a shudder. “Good God. Fifty-two gallows? Mass executions. He hangs fifty-two at a time? The whole place sounds like a piece of hell. The man’s an animal!”
“Exactly. Remember, it is better to use the gun than to be caught with it. At best, the confusion might give you a chance.” He hesitated. He clasped his hands and looked up at Jon, his eyes dark with concern. “You are undercover, unofficial, and unprotected. Oh, yes, they would arrest you, and, if you were very lucky, they would kill you quickly.”
“I understand.”
“If you still wish to proceed, you have a lot of territory to cover today. We must leave immediately.”
For a brief hallucinogenic moment, in his mind Smith saw Sophia’s tortured face as she fought to live. The glistening sweat on her flushed cheeks… her silky hair matted down… her quivering fingers desperately reaching for her throat as she tried to breathe. Her pain had been excruciating.