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Authors: David Hagberg

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Her lips compressed, but she didn’t look away. “More than one,” she said. “I didn’t care for it each time.”

“Most people usually don’t,” McGarvey said.

They had switched positions at the stop; McGarvey now riding shotgun in the front seat with Miriam and her son in the back, watching for trouble on either side of the road and to the rear.

The night was pitch black here, except for the Range Rover’s headlights. And it was beginning to cool down.

Miram said something to her husband in Persian, and Hadid looked in his rearview mirror. “Someone back there seems interested in us, I think.”

McGarvey looked back and he could see that the headlights were moving up on them very fast. “I don’t think it’s the convoy.”

“No, it’s only one maybe two pairs of lights,” Hadid said. He was searching for something on either side of the road.

Miriam said something else, her tone urgent.

“This will do,” Hadid said. “Hold on, it’s time to give them a little surprise.”

He jammed on the brakes suddenly, doused the lights and swerved off the road to the right, across a shallow ditch, and headed for a small concrete block structure, just reaching it as a Toyota heavy-duty pickup truck roared up and without slowing down careened off the road.

“Shoot now,” McGarvey shouted, and he opened fire with the AK-47 at two figures dressed in black braced in the bed of the pickup truck with what looked like an M249 squad automatic weapon, which was a Belgian-made 5.66mm light machine gun mounted on a pedestal. One of the guys was a shooter the other the loader.

Miriam and Saddam began firing at the pickup truck at the same moment the M249 began banging away, several rounds slamming into the rear of the Range Rover before Hadid hauled the car behind the building, and there was no target for several beats.

“I’m going to try to get behind them,” Hadid shouted, as they reached the far end of the building and he hauled the big SUV around the corner.

The Toyota was right on their tail, but didn’t have as tight a turning radius, so the rounds from the M249 went wild out into the desert night.

Two seconds later, Hadid shouted something in Arabic as they came back to the front of the building, where another Toyota heavy-duty pickup truck was waiting in ambush just off the side of the road, and he swerved hard to the right.

“Stay on our rear,” McGarvey shouted to Miriam and the boy at the same moment they started taking incoming fire from the second pickup truck. McGarvey opened fire with his AK-47, walking the rounds across the field as Hadid jinked left and right, in an attempt to keep out of the line of fire.

For just an instant the Range Rover and second pickup truck were in perfect alignment, and McGarvey hit the shooter and loader and walked his rounds forward to the driver and passenger, taking them out, running dry in the next instant.

The first pickup truck had careened around the corner from behind the building and opened fire as McGarvey reloaded, and swung around to fire toward the rear.

Miriam and the boy were both down, blood everywhere, and once again Hadid swung hard right putting the Toyota in a perfect firing position. McGarvey took out the shooter and loader in the bed, and emptied the remainder of the AK-47s thirty-round magazine into the cabin.

The pickup truck suddenly swerved sharply to the left, its front left fender slamming into the side of the building, slewed away and rose up on its right side flipping over, its engine screaming up the scale
until something loud popped and the Toyota ended up rocking on its roof.

Hadid jammed on the brakes and pulled to a stop, the night suddenly very quiet.

He pulled out a pistol, jumped out of the Range Rover, and started toward the upside-down pickup truck.

McGarvey put down his weapon and reached over the back of the seat, making a quick check of the woman and boy. They were both dead. Miriam’s chest was blown half away by the machine gun’s rounds, and Saddam’s face had been destroyed, the back of his head completely gone.

“Khalid,” McGarvey called, a great sadness coming over him, along with a deep, deep bitterness. All such a terrible waste.

McGarvey turned around as Hadid fired once into the cab of the pickup truck, then reached inside and dragged out a body. He said something, and then spat on the body.

McGarvey got out of the Range Rover and walked over, as Hadid went around to the other side of the Toyota.

“Sunnis,” Hadid said, looking up. “The bastards will do anything to break the peace. They have no morals, Mr. Tony. No real religion.”

“Your wife and son are dead,” McGarvey said. There was no way of softening the blow. The situation was what it was.

Hadid shook his head, his mouth open, but then he went back to the Range Rover and stood at the rear passenger door. He dropped his pistol on the ground and began to beat his chest with his right hand, a high-pitched keening wail coming from the back of his throat.

McGarvey walked back to him. “We’ll return to Kuwait now so you can attend to your family.”

After a long time Hadid looked at him, shook his head, then gazed at the bodies of his wife and son. “They were Sunnis and they have no morals,” he said. “They cannot be allowed to win this war.”

The Sunnis felt the same about the Shi’ites, but McGarvey said nothing. The deep division between the two Muslim sects was something a westerner could not really understand. The rift was even deeper
than between the Catholics and Protestants in Northern Ireland in the sixties and seventies.

“I will take them to the home of Miriam’s uncle in Baghdad. They will receive a proper burial before the sun goes down,” Hadid said. “If you will help me we will place them in the secret compartment in the back. Hopefully there will be no further trouble for us tonight.”

FORTY-TWO

Sandberger, having drinks with a couple friends from a rival contractor service, Decision Infinity, looked up as Harry Weiss came into the barroom of the new Ritz-Carlton Baghdad in what had been the Green Zone. It was around ten in the evening and he’d been expecting his point man on the McGarvey issue about now, but he didn’t much care for the look on Weiss’s face.

“Sorry, gentlemen, but business calls,” he said. He finished his martini and got up.

Jerry London, DI’s CEO grinned. “Trouble, I hope,” he said, and his exec, Ken Brody, glanced over at Weiss standing at the bar and raised his glass.

“Bloody well hope old Harry has brought you shit news, you son of a bitch,” he said, laughing.

“I hope you get syphilis and your dick rots off,” Sandberger replied and the two men laughed.

“The game starts in my suite at midnight,” London said. The CEO and execs of most of the contractors usually got together at least once a week for high-stakes poker, courtesy of Uncle Sam.

“Wouldn’t miss it,” Sandberger said and he walked over to where
Weiss was waiting, and the two of them left the bar, crossed the lobby, and took the first elevator up to the eighth floor.

Neither man spoke until they were safely inside Sandberger’s suite. Contractor firms were under fire again in Washington, and the CIA sill maintained a strong presence in Iraq, and especially here in Baghdad. No public spaces—barrooms, dining rooms, elevators, and even corridors—were ever completely safe from electronic surveillance. Only individual rooms and suites that were swept on a regular basis, as was Sandberger’s, could be considered private.

“They’re here,” Weiss said. “Drunk, as you figured they might be.”

“I don’t care unless they get themselves in trouble tonight,” Sandberger said, but in fact he did care. McGarvey was no one to screw around with. Captain Kabbani had been so self-assured that it had been obvious he had no real idea what the former CIA director was capable of. And there was a very real possibility that his people would have failed tonight, and McGarvey would actually be showing up here sometime in the morning.

“They’re a couple of loose cannons, but I think they understand who they’re up against. They oughta be sober and rested by morning, unless they’re complete idiots.”

“They know their tradecraft, and neither of them has ever been afraid to pull the trigger.”

“Do you think McGarvey will make it this far?” Weiss asked.

“I think it’s a possibility that we have to consider,” Sandberger said.

“What can I do?”

Weiss was Admin’s on-the-ground CO here in Baghdad, and to date he’d done a credible job. Such a good job in fact that Sandberger was torn between bringing him back to Washington to take overall command of operations or leaving him here. He would decide after the McGarvey business was settled and Foster finally got off his back. But Weiss would have to name his own successor, and it would have to be someone good.

“He has reservations at the Baghdad Hotel. Go over there and keep your eyes open. I want to know not only if he shows up, but if he’s alone.”

“If I have the chance I’d like to take him out myself,” Weiss said.

“No,” Sandberger shot back. “Kangas and Mustapha are expendable, you’re not.”

It was a little past two-thirty in the afternoon in Washington when Sandberger used his encrypted sat phone to reach Remington at his home, and he was more than a little angry that his partner wasn’t in the office, and he said so.

“I’ve never punched a clock, and I don’t intend to begin now, old man,” Remington replied. “Is there anything that I’ve mishandled to this point for the company?”

The man’s British sarcasm rankled, but Sandberger held his temper in check. Remington had been a steady if unimaginative hand from the beginning. “Your people are here, and drunk.”

“Not surprising. But they have a twelve-hour head start. And I think they’re smart enough to sober up in the meantime.”

“Don’t you think first class was a little excessive?”

Remington chuckled, his English superiority showing again. “Last banquet for the condemned men,” he said. “They haven’t strayed from their quartermaster have they?”

“Not yet. But I’ve put someone else on the job. Could be McGarvey will never reach Baghdad.”

“That might not have been the best call, Roland,” Remington cautioned. “It’s not our people, I hope.”

“Captain Kabbani is handling it for us.”

“The man’s a buffoon.”

“Yes, and just as expendable as Kangas and Mustapha, and a hell of a lot less expensive. We’re not running a goddamned charity.”

“Don’t lecture me,” Remington shot back. “You’re gone and I covered for you at the Club. That’s what partners are for. And we
are
partners, unless you want to dissolve the arrangement, a move I would not strenuously object to.”

Sandberger realized that once again he’d gone too far, but the Foster
contract had been a constant drain on his nerves from the start nearly two years ago. If he had known then what he knew now, he would have turned it down, no matter how fabulous the money was. But now he and Remington were in it up to their necks, and they would have to see the business through until Foster reached his ultimate goal—something that gave Sandberger nightmares.

“Sorry, Gordon, it’s the pressure,” he said.

“I understand,” Remington said reasonably. “By this time tomorrow the issue will be resolved.”

One way or the other, Sandberger thought but didn’t say. “I’ll call you.”

“Do,” Remington said and he rang off.

Leaving Sandberger to pour a stiff brandy and stare out the window at the river and try to quell his rising concern that this business with McGarvey and the Friday Club was a very long way from any sort of acceptable resolution.

A couple of minutes before midnight, as Sandberger was getting set to go up to the poker game in Jerry London’s suite, Captain Kabbani called on the house phone.

“I’m in the lobby. We need to talk.”

“Is there trouble?” Sandberger asked, a tightness gripping his chest.

“It’s better if you come downstairs.”

“I’m on my way,” Sandberger said. He went to the bureau in the bedroom, and got his SIG-Sauer P226 pistol and shoulder holster. If they were going to talk it would not be in the one of the hotel’s public spaces, nor was he having the captain up here. It meant the streets, and for this business he would go without his bodyguards, as he had when he initially met the cop.

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