Kranemeyer stared at the bank of screens filling one wall of the op-center. “We should have positioned more assets,” he stated, filled with sudden misgivings.
“How?” the analyst asked rhetorically. “What did you want to do, activate Station Tel Aviv’s strike team? The Israelis don’t miss that much. I think we were lucky to get Richards in the back-door.”
“Maybe so.” Kranemeyer never looked away from the screens in front of him. “It’s important that we emerge from this one on top. This isn’t a game anymore.”
Carter drained his mug and cast a weary look in the direction of the DCS. “I don’t think you need to worry. Nichols doesn’t know how to play games.”
The cleaning cart rumbled down the hall on the fifth floor of the hotel, its wheels creaking ponderously.
Fayood al-Farouk’s eyes roved from left to right as he proceeded along the hallway, scanning for threats.
A door opened behind him and he looked carefully back just in time to see a young couple exit, the man’s arm wrapped around the waist of a dark-haired Sabra girl. Farouk smiled. Such would serve him in paradise.
Five rooms down, he stopped and knocked on the door. The rattle of a chain greeted the knock and the face of a young man stared out.
“Salaam alaikum.”
“Alaikum salaam, my brethren.”
With another judicious glance down the corridor, he pushed the cart inside and closed the door behind them, hearing the lock click into place. Two men occupied the hotel room, both young Palestinians in their early twenties.
The bag on the side of the cart held a pair of stripped-down Kalishnikov assault rifles and loaded magazines for both. With a quick, cat-like movement, Farouk moved to the balcony door of the suite, pulling the blinds aside just long enough to glance out.
It was eighty, maybe a hundred meters to the courtyard where he had been told the meeting would go down.
“Remember,” he instructed, turning back to his men. “Do not fire until our brother has given his life.”
“He’s at your eight o’clock,” the voice in Sarah’s ear observed. The young woman withstood the temptation to turn her head in the direction indicated. Instead, she focused her attention on massaging the sunscreen lotion into the skin of her arms, protection against the sun beating down upon her body through the spotty shade of the palm fronds above.
“He’s coming your way,” Yossi’s voice announced once more through the earbud.
She glanced over to where Gideon reclined on a pool chair a few feet from her own. He looked deceptively relaxed, the sunglasses hiding his eyes.
“Do my back,” she asked, extending the bottle of lotion toward him. Gideon stood and walked over to her, suddenly alert at her use of the prearranged code. She handed him the bottle of lotion and sat up, leaning forward on the lounge chair.
“Where?”Gideon asked, his mouth close to her ear.
“Ten o’clock,” Sarah whispered back. “Moving this way.”
“Coming in early?”
“That’s what it looks like.”
“That would be Nichols,” Gideon admitted with a wry smile. He wiped his hands on the front of his khaki shorts and turned back to his chair, deliberately not looking in Nichols’s direction.
Sarah capped the bottle of lotion and reached down, unzipping the pack beside her chair and dropping the bottle in, right beside her 9mm Glock.
She had no sooner finished zipping up the pack than a shadow fell across her chair and she looked up into the startlingly blue eyes of the American.
“Good morning,” Harry said, flashing a quick smile at the bat leveyha before turning his attention to Gideon. The Israeli commando waved his hand casually and removed his shades. “Early, Harry?”
“As always,” was the reply. “Still looking for the Messiah, Gideon?”
Gideon laughed. “Tell you what, Harry. If He shows up and says ‘This place looks familiar’, put in a good word for me. On the other hand, if He hasn’t been here before, I’ll tell him you’re a mensch.”
A chuckle escaped Harry’s lips as he pulled up a lounge chair and sat down across from the couple. What had started as a joke before their mission into the Bekaa four years previous had become their own personal code. The meeting was cleared to proceed.
“I’m glad you could make it,” Gideon said with a smile, sitting up in the chair. It was only then that he realized he no longer had Harry’s attention.
Sarah looked up to meet the American’s gaze, suddenly aware of just why Nichols was not wearing sunglasses. His eyes were weapons.
She found the expression on his face as difficult to place as it was unsettling. It was not the sort of look a man might typically give a woman. She knew that look all too well. Rather it carried an air of cool, detached confidence. A threat assessment, she realized with a start.
He broke the stare after a long, awkward moment and when he next spoke, it was to address Gideon. “Would you tell your lady friend to get rid of the wire?”
Laner just stared back at him for a moment, a look of disbelief on his face. Then he started laughing. “Take it off, Sarah.”
Harry held out a hand as the woman removed a tiny earbud headset from her right ear. She shot a look at Gideon as though awaiting orders. He nodded, and she placed the small headset in Harry’s palm.
“May I ask how you noticed?” Gideon asked, still chuckling.
“You may,” Harry replied, placing the earbud on the concrete of the courtyard and casually crushing it with a downward thrust of his foot, “but I’m not going to tell you.”
“Fair enough,” Gideon agreed, glancing over at Sarah. Her attention was still focused on Nichols, the expression on her face somewhere between anger and annoyance.
“Now, let’s get down to business,” Harry continued, “why did you ask to meet with me?”
“I think we have something you want. And you have something we need.” Gideon paused for a moment, well aware of the ambiguity of his statement. It was only the opening dance.
“Is that so?”
“Do we have two? I know, I know — but we need two,” Farouk protested, the cellphone tight against his ear as he moved along the promenade.
“Hold off a few more minutes — maybe the other American will show up. Yes, we must get both of them. No, you may not. Move on my command only.”
“And what would be the nature of this exchange you speak of?”
Gideon looked across at Harry, aware that he must answer the question, and quickly. This was poker — sometimes you needed to play it close to the vest, sometimes you needed to bluff — let the other fellow believe you were holding a full house.
Time to bluff. “Five days ago, you took a CIA strike team into the Alborz Mountains of Iran. Your mission: to rescue an international team of archaeologists.”
The American’s expression didn’t change. For a moment Gideon wondered if he had even heard the statement.
“That a fact?” Harry asked, his face slowly breaking into a grin. “It’s always fascinating to hear the stories of what I’ve not done.”
He leaned forward in his chair, staring intently into Gideon’s face. “Listen, you need something, so why don’t you cut the bull and tell me what it is?”
Harry watched the Israeli’s eyes, clearly reading the struggle there. A child ran between their chairs, chasing an over-sized beach ball, and the conversation fell silent for a moment.