And as a last resort, he would detonate the radioactive canisters in the hold.
Yaqub Nehim grinned down at the struggling woman. "Perhaps you would like it if we tied your hands again?" He let his hand move along her leg, caressing.
"Get your hands off of me, you asshole!" the woman screamed. She tried to slap him, and he blocked the clumsy swing easily.
"You son of a bitch! Leave her alone!" The ship's chief security officer lunged at him, but Nehim whipped the muzzle of his pistol around and caught the man on the side of his face.
"Yaqub!" Ra'id Hijazi called from farther up the theater aisle. "Leave the woman alone! This is not the time!"
"Mind your own business, Ra'id! I've been looking forward to this since we came on board!" Yaqub gave a harsh, bitter laugh. "It's not like any of us will survive this voyage, right?"
"Women are a trap of Satan!" Hijazi said, quoting an ancient hadith, a traditional quote from the sayings of Mohammed.
"'Forbidden are married women,'" Nehim replied, "'except those you own as slaves!' Surah Four-twenty! We can do as we like with these whores!"
It wasn't rape and it wasn't illegal when the woman refused to be properly dressed. These Western bitches paraded around half-naked all the time, putting themselves on display. Often they did not even go out accompanied by a husband or another male relative. They deserved whatever they got. In fact, most fundamentalist Islamic regimes condoned forcing condemned female prisoners to have sex, since the holy Qur'an forbade putting a virgin to death.
He doubted that these women were virgins, but they all were certainly under a sentence of death. It wouldn't hurt to make sure, just with one of them…
Yaqub Nehim cared little for the Sharia or the tenets of his religion, and his knowledge of the Qur'an extended just far enough to provide a rationalization for what he would have done anyway. He'd gotten into trouble with the authorities in his native Saudi Arabia over his attempt to have sex with a foreign woman, an Italian, in Medina five years ago. The ulema hearing Yaqub's case, the religious judge, had offered him a choice — prison or joining a jihadist group dedicated to destroying the enemies of Islam.
He'd accepted recruitment. He knew what Saudi prisons were like.
As for accepting martyrdom… well, there was still time. Perhaps one of the lifeboats…
The door at the back of the theater banged open, and passengers spilled inside. Nehim let go of the struggling woman and stood, raising his AK-47 in case this was the vanguard of a prisoner revolt. Then he saw Aziz and Baqr and others of his mujahideen comrades, funneling the prisoners in through the door.
"What have you brought us, Rashid?" he asked Aziz. There were attractive women in this group as well. One in particular…
"They were in the casino," Aziz replied. He glanced at the woman in the seat next to Nehim, who was trying to straighten her clothing. "None of that, Nehim," he snapped. "We have work to do. Holy work!"
"What work?"
"The enemy has boarded the ship! Three of our brothers are dead! Guard the prisoners well, and keep your pants buckled. There will be time for games later!"
Nehim helped herd the new batch of prisoners down the aisle as Aziz and the others turned and headed back out into the Deck One mall area. Hijazi was giving Nehim a smug, I-told-you-so look, but he wiped his mouth with the back of one hand and ignored him.
That was the problem. There would be no time later, not if the enemy was already coming on board the ship. Nehim had been hungering for one of the half-naked bitches for a week, and in all likelihood the hijacked liner was going to be blown to bits within the next few minutes. Damn Khalid, and damn the sanctimonious Saudi ulema who'd put him here!
He was going to have one of these bitches before he died, no matter what Hijazi or Aziz or the Amir himself might say.
The question was, which one?
"Face the front of the theater," Rubens said, looking closely at the schematic showing the Neptune Theater. Pinpoints of red light representing forty more passengers had just entered the room and were moving down toward the front.
"Okay," Dean's voice came back from an overhead speaker. The dots representing him and Walters were green. Both were carrying ID passkey cards provided by Royal Sky Line before the mission. There were well over a hundred colored pinpoints already within the theater, a mingling of red and blue.
Not counting the blips representing Dean and Walters, there were eighty-eight green, people carrying crew-member IDs. Many of those would be terrorists, but most would be prisoners, crew members brought to the theater. Separating the two was going to be tough.
"We've identified five tangos surrounding your group," Rubens said, "the ones who brought you in. They're at twelve o'clock, two o'clock, five o'clock, six o'clock, and nine o'clock."
"Rog. Got 'em spotted."
"You have four shooters in the Deck Two balcony. Two o'clock, four o'clock, eight o'clock, and ten o'clock."
Again there was a pause. "Okay. I have them. And I saw two outside the Deck One doors. Any more?"
"There may be others mixed in with the prisoners. We can't differentiate here."
see one, yeah. One o'clock, thirty feet away. He's hassling a couple of women. Damn it… one of them is CJ! Our GCHQ contact!"
Rubens checked the indicated area. Two green blips overlapped, close beside several blues. "We see them."
"Ten targets. That'll take some shooting."
"Charlie, I recommend that you wait. The tangos who brought you down here will probably be leaving soon. And Brisard and three men are on their way on Deck Two. They'll be there in a few minutes."
"Rog. We'll wait." Almost a minute later, Dean spoke again. "Listen… that son of a bitch mixed in with the hostages. He's just grabbed a woman… no, two women! CJ and someone else! He's leading them up the other aisle!"
Ruben saw the dots, one blue, two green, moving closely together toward the door. "I see them."
"We need to take him now."
"You need to sit tight, Dean. Brisard's's almost there."
"Damn it, Bill!"
"By the book, Dean. By the book."
The three points of light moved through the door and into the passageway.
"They're gone," Dean said.
"You'll have your chance in a moment."
Brisard and the other three operators were nearly at the theater's Deck Two entrance
Chapter 26
Dean and Walters walked all the way down the aisle, to a point where they could see all four of the terrorist shooters in the second-floor balcony The five who'd brought them here were all leaving, at the top of the aisle and filing through the doors.
"Brisard's at the door on the second deck," Rubens' voice warned.
"Right. Walters? Get ready!"
Together the two men reached behind their backs and drew their pistols, sitting down in theater seats on opposite sides of the aisle as they did so, keeping the weapons carefully hidden.
The theater was a gaudy, glitzy explosion of Baroque architecture, heavy on the gold paint and curlicues, filled with Nereids and dolphins, seashells and seahorses, nets and tridents. An enormous figure of Neptune — the Roman Poseidon, the god who'd supposedly founded Atlantis —: emerged from the bulkhead directly above the stage.
Their guards were leaning on the balcony railings, looking down into the auditorium, but they seemed to just be watching, not preparing to massacre the hostages. If any of them took aim, Dean was ready to pull out his weapon and begin firing, Brisard or no Brisard.