The Icarus Agenda by Robert Ludlum

‘All of you!’ yelled the policeman, kneeling to the right of the fugitive, addressing the mesmerized crowd. ‘Leave! Get away! This pig may have protectors—he is the infamous Bahrudi, the Eastern European terrorist! We have radioed for soldiers from the sultan’s garrison—get away, don’t be killed!’

The witnesses fled, a disjointed stampede racing south on the Al Kabir. They had summoned up courage but the prospect of a gun battle panicked them. All was uncertainty, punctuated by death; the only thing the crowd was certain of was that a notorious international terrorist named Amal Bahrudi had been captured.

‘The word will spread quickly in our small city,’ said the sergeant-of-police in fluent English, helping the ‘prisoner’ to his feet. ‘We will help, of course, if it is necessary.’

‘I’ve got a question or two—maybe three!’ Evan untied the headdress, removing it over his head and stared at the police officer. ‘What the hell was all that stuff about “the trusted one”, the “Islamic leader” of East European whatever-it-was?’

‘Apparently the truth, sir.’

I’m way behind you.’

‘In the car, please. Time is vital. We must leave here.’

‘I want answers!’ The two other policemen walked up beside the congressman from Colorado, gripped his arms and escorted him to the back door of the patrol car. ‘I played that little charade the way I was told to play it,’ continued Evan climbing into the green police car, ‘but someone forgot to mention that this real person whose name I’m assuming is some killer who’s throwing bombs around Europe!’

‘I can only tell you what I’ve been told to tell you, which, truthfully, is all I know,’ replied the sergeant, settling his uniformed figure beside Kendrick. ‘Everything will be explained to you at the laboratory in the compound headquarters.’

‘I know about the laboratory. I don’t know about this Bahrudi.’

‘He exists, sir.’

‘I know that but not the rest of it—’

‘Hurry, driver!’ said the police officer. ‘The other two will remain here.’ The green car lurched in reverse, made a U-turn and sped back towards the Wadi Al Uwar.

‘All right, he’s real, I understand that,’ pressed Kendrick rapidly, breathlessly. ‘But I repeat. No one said anything about his being a terrorist!’

‘At the headquarters laboratory, sir.’ The police sergeant lit a brown Arabian cigarette, inhaled deeply and expunged the smoke through his nostrils in relief. His part of the strange assignment was over.

‘There was a great deal that El-Baz’s computer did not print out for your eyes,’ said the Omani doctor, studying Evan’s bare shoulder. They were alone in the laboratory-examining room, Kendrick sitting on the elongated hard-cushioned table, his feet resting on a footstool, his money belt beside him. ‘As Ahmat’s—forgive me—the great sultan’s personal physician—which I have been since he was eight years old, I am now your only contact to him in the event you cannot for whatever reason reach him yourself. Is that understood?’

‘How do I reach you?

‘The hospital or my private number, which I will give you when we are finished. You must remove your trousers and undergarment and apply the dye, ya Shaikh. Strip searches are a daily, often hourly, occurrence in that compound. You must be all one flesh colour, and certainly no canvas belt filled with money.’

‘You’ll hold it for me?’

‘Certainly.’

‘Back to this Bahrudi, please,’ said Kendrick, applying the skin-darkening gel to his thighs and lower regions as the Omani physician did the same to his arms, chest and back. ‘Why didn’t El-Baz tell me?’

‘Ahmat’s instructions. He thought you might object so he wished to explain it to you himself.’

‘I spoke to him less than an hour ago. He didn’t say anything except he wanted to talk about this Bahrudi, that’s all.’

‘You were also in a great hurry and he had much to organize in order to bring about your so-called capture.

Therefore he left the explanation to me. Lift your arm up higher, please.’

‘What’s the explanation?’ asked Evan, less angry now.

‘Quite simply, if you were taken by the terrorists you’d have a fall-back position, at least for a while, with luck providing enough time to help you—if help was at all possible.’

‘What fall-back position?’

‘You’d be considered one of them. Until they learned otherwise.’

‘Bahrudi’s dead—’

‘His corpse is in the hands of the KGB,’ added the doctor instantly, overriding Kendrick’s words. ‘The Komitet is notoriously indecisive, afraid of embarrassment.’

‘El-Baz mentioned something about that.’

‘If anyone in Masqat would know, it is El-Baz.’

‘So if Bahrudi is accepted here in Oman, if I’m accepted as this Bahrudi, I might have some leverage. If the Soviets don’t blow the whistle and tell what they know.’

‘They will exhaustively examine the whistle before bringing it near their lips. They can’t be certain; they will fear a trap, a trap of embarrassment, of course, and wait for developments. Your other arm, please. Lift it straight up, please.’

‘Question,’ said Evan, firmly. ‘If Amal Bahrudi supposedly went through your immigration, why wasn’t he picked up? You’ve got one hell of a security force out there these days.’

‘How many John Smiths are there in your country, ya Shaikh’

‘So?’

‘Bahrudi is a fairly common Arabic name, more so perhaps in Cairo than Riyadh but nevertheless not unusual. Amal is the equivalent of your “Joe” or “Bill” or, of course, “John”.’

‘Still, El-Baz entered him in the immigration computers. Flags would leap up—’

‘And rapidly return to their recesses,’ broke in the Omani, ‘the officials satisfied by observation and harsh, if routine, questioning.’

‘Because there’s no scar on my neck?’ asked Evan quickly.

‘One of the police in the Al Kabir made a point of a scar across my neck—Bahrudi’s neck.’

‘That is information I know nothing about, but I suppose it’s possible; you have no such scar. But there are more fundamental reasons.’

‘Such as?’

‘A terrorist does not announce his arrival in a foreign land, much less a troubled one. He uses false papers. That’s what the authorities look for, not the coincidence of one John W. Booth, a pharmacist from Philadelphia, who was cursed with the same name as the assassin from Ford’s theatre.’

‘You’re pretty well versed in things American, aren’t you?’

‘Johns Hopkins Medical School, Mr. Bahrudi. Courtesy of our sultan’s father who found a Bedouin child eager for more than a wandering tribal existence.’

‘How did that happen?’

‘It is another story. You may lower your arm now.’

Evan looked at the doctor. ‘You’re very fond of the sultan, I gather.’

The Omani physician returned Kendrick’s gaze. ‘I would kill for the family, ya Shaikh,’ he said softly. ‘Of course the method would be nonviolent. Perhaps poison or a misdiagnosed medical crisis or a reckless scalpel—something to repay my debt in kind—but I would do it.’

‘I’m sure you would. And by extension then, you’re on my side.’

‘Obviously. The proof I am to give you and which was previously unknown to me comes numerically. Five, five, five—zero, zero, zero, five.’

‘That’s good enough. What’s your name?’

‘Faisal. Dr Amal Faisal.’

‘I see what you mean—”John Smith”.’ Kendrick got off the examining table and walked naked to a small sink across the room. He washed his hands, kneading them with strong soap to remove the excess stains from his fingers, and studied his body in the mirror above the basin. The undarkened white flesh was turning brown; in moments it would be dark enough for the terrorist compound. He looked at the doctor reflected in the glass. ‘How is it in there?’ he said.

‘It is no place for you.’

‘That’s not what I asked. I want to know what it’s like. Are there rites of passage, any rituals they go through with new prisoners? You must have the place wired—you’d be fools if you don’t.’

‘It’s wired and we have to assume they know it; they crowd around the door where the main taps are and make a great deal of noise. The ceiling is too high for audible transmission and the remaining taps are in the flushing mechanisms of the toilets—a civilizing reform instituted by Ahmat several years ago, replacing the floor holes. Those microphones have been useless, as if the inmates had discovered them also—we don’t know this, of course. However, what little we hear is not pleasant. The prisoners, like all extremists, continuously vie for who is the most zealous, and as there are constant newcomers, many do not know each other. As a result, the questions are severe and pointed, the methods of interrogation often brutal. They’re fanatics, but not fools in the accepted sense, ya Shaikh. Vigilance is their credo, infiltration a constant threat to them.’

Then it’ll be my credo.’ Kendrick crossed back to the examining table and the neat pile of prison clothes provided for him. ‘My vigilance,’ he continued. ‘As fanatical as anyone’s in there.’ He turned to the Omani. ‘I need the names of the leaders inside the embassy. I wasn’t permitted to make any notes from the briefing papers, but I memorized two because they were repeated several times. One was Abu Nassir; the other, Abbas Zaher. Do you have any more?’

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