Выбрать главу

the Allies, but an intelligence network already inside the Soviet Union would be

invaluable. He keenly understood how antithetical communism was to capitalism, that the

Americans and the Soviets were allies out of necessity. He felt it inevitable that after the war was over these uncomfortable allies would become bitter enemies.

Ibrahim had no recourse but to agree with his friend’s thesis, and indeed this was how

it turned out. At every step, Farid and Ibrahim brilliantly outmaneuvered the postwar

German agencies in keeping control of their people. As a result, the Eastern Legions not

only survived but in fact prospered in postwar Germany.

Farid, however, fairly quickly uncovered a pattern of violence that made him

suspicious. German officials who disagreed with his eloquent arguments for continued

control were replaced by ones who did. That was odd enough, but then he discovered that

those original officials no longer existed. To a one, they had dropped out of sight, never

to be seen or heard from again.

Farid bypassed the weakling German bureaucracy and went straight to the Americans

with his concerns, but he was unprepared for their response, which was one big shrug. No

one, it seemed, cared the least bit about disappeared Germans. They were all too busy

defending their slice of Berlin to be bothered.

It was about this time that Ibrahim came to him with the idea of moving the Eastern

Legions’ headquarters to Munich, out of the way of the increasing antagonism between

the Americans and the Soviets. Fed up with the American’s disinterest, Farid readily

agreed.

They found postwar Munich a bombed-out wreck, seething with immigrant Muslims.

Ibrahim wasted no time in recruiting these people into the organization, which by this

time had changed its name to the Eastern Brotherhood. For his part, Farid found the

American intelligence community in Munich far more receptive to his arguments. Indeed,

they were desperate for him and his network. Emboldened, he told them that if they

wanted to make a formal arrangement with the Eastern Brotherhood for intelligence from

behind the Iron Curtain, they had to look into the disappearances of the list of former

German officials he handed them.

It took three months, but at the end of that time he was asked to appear before a man

named Brian Folks, whose official title was American attachй of something-or-other. In

fact, he was OSS chief of station in Munich, the man who received the intel Farid’s

network provided him from inside the Soviet Union.

Folks told him that the unofficial investigation Farid asked him to undertake had now

been completed. Without another word, he handed over a slim file, sat without comment

as Farid read it. The folder contained the photos of each of the German officials on the

list Farid had provided. Following each photo was a sheet detailing the findings. All the

men were dead. All had been shot in the back of the head. Farid read through this meager

material with an increasing sense of frustration. Then he looked up at Folks and said, “Is

this it? Is this all there is?”

Folks watched Farid from behind steel-rimmed glasses. “It’s all that appears in the

report,” he said. “But those aren’t all the findings.” He held out his hand, took the file

back. Then he turned, put the sheets one by one through a shredder. When he was

finished, he threw the empty folder into the wastebasket, the contents of which were

burned every evening at precisely 5 PM.

Following this solemn ritual, he placed his hands on his desk, said to Farid, “The

finding of most interest to you is this: Evidence collected indicates conclusively that the murders of these men were committed by Ibrahim Sever.”

Tyrone shifted on the bare concrete floor. It was so slippery with his own fluids that

one knee went out from under him, splaying him so painfully that he cried out. Of course,

no one came to help him; he was alone in the interrogation cell in the basement of the

NSA safe house deep in the Virginia countryside. He had to quite literally locate himself

in his mind, had to trace the route he and Soraya had taken when they’d driven to the safe

house. When? Three days ago? Ten hours? What? The rendition he’d been subjected to

had erased any sense of time. The hood over his head threatened to erase his sense of

place, so that periodically he had to say to himself: “I’m in an interrogation cell in the

basement of the NSA safe house in”-and here he would recite the name of the last town

he and Soraya had passed… when?

That was the problem, really. His sense of disorientation was so complete, there were

periods when he couldn’t distinguish up from down. Worse, those periods were becoming

both longer and more frequent.

The pain was hardly an issue because he was used to pain, though never this intense or

prolonged. It was the disorientation that was worming its way into his brain like a

surgeon’s drill. It seemed that with each bout he was losing more of himself, as if he were made up of grains of salt or sand trickling away from him. And what would happen when

they were all gone? What would he become?

He thought of DJ Tank and the rest of his former crew. He thought of Deron, of Kiki,

but none of those tricks worked. They’d slip away like mist and he’d be left to the void

into which, he was increasingly sure, he’d disappear. Then he thought of Soraya,

conjured her piece by piece, as if he were a sculptor, molding her out of a lump of clay.

And he found that as his mind lovingly re-created each minute bit of her, he miraculously

stayed intact.

As he struggled back to a position that was tolerably painful, he heard a metallic

scrape, and his head came up. Before anything else could transpire, the scents of freshly

cooked eggs and bacon came to him, making his mouth water. He’d been fed nothing but

plain oatmeal since he was brought here. And at inconsistent times-sometimes one meal

right after the other-in order to keep his disorientation absolute.

He heard the scuff of leather soles-two men, his ears told him.

Then General Kendall’s voice, saying imperiously, “Set the food on the table, Willard.

Right there, thank you. That will be all.”

One set of shoe soles clacked across the floor, the sound of the door closing. Silence.

Then the screech of a chair being hitched across the concrete. Kendall was sitting down,

Tyrone surmised.

“What have we here?” Kendall said, clearly to himself. “Ah, my favorite: eggs over

easy, bacon, buttered grits, hot biscuits and gravy.” The sound of cutlery being taken up.

“You like grits, Tyrone? You like biscuits and gravy?”

Tyrone wasn’t too far gone to be incensed. “On’y ting I like betta is watermelon, sah.”

“That’s a damn fine imitation of one of your brethren, Tyrone.” He was obviously

talking while eating. “This is damn fine chow. Would you like some?”

Tyrone’s stomach growled so loudly he was sure Kendall heard it.

“All you gotta do is tell me everything you and the Moore woman were up to.”

“I don’t rat anyone out,” Tyrone said bitterly.

“Um.” The sounds of Kendall swallowing. “That’s what they all say in the beginning.”

He chewed some more. “You do know this is just the beginning, don’t you, Tyrone? Sure

you do. Just like you know the Moore woman isn’t going to save you. She’s going to

hang you out to dry, sure as I’m sitting here eating the most mouthwatering biscuits I

ever had. You know why? Because LaValle gave her a choice: you or Jason Bourne. You

know her history with Bourne. She might claim she didn’t fuck him but you and I know