The men walked between two stands of olive groves and up onto the naked flinty mound itself. A large area of the site had been excavated between 1969 and 1976, revealing the remains of several settlements, including various fortified towns of the early monarchic rule of Judah, covered by remnants of smaller fortresses dating back to the Persian and Roman periods. The earliest remains were a number of rock-hewn dwellings and a twenty-meter well supplying fresh water to the first permanent unfortified settlement of the Tribe of Simon.
In the mid-tenth century BCE, the first large fortified city was established, serving as the administrative center of the southern region of the kingdom. It extended some ten dunams across the summit of the tel. This had been covered by an eighth century town, in the uppermost layer, a remarkable example of provincial city planning and indicative of the importance of Beersheba for the defense of the southern border. A sophisticated drainage system had been built beneath the streets to collect rainwater into a central channel, assuring the citizens a regular supply of water even during times of siege.
“There,” said Mashish. “You see?” He pointed toward a large depression in the ground, lined with hewn stones.
Al-Hakim looked down into the circular opening. It must have been at least seven meters wide and twenty meters deep, with a narrow staircase spiraling down along the inside of the well. He started down the steps. As he descended, Al-Hakim noticed an opening at the bottom of the depression which Mashish said led into the cisterns. Moments later, they ducked into the darkened passageway.
They traveled through the tunnel for almost twenty meters before they came upon the first of the stone cisterns. Despite the flashlight Mashish carried, it was difficult to see. Al-Hakim stopped. “This is it,” he said.
The cistern was exactly as Gulzhan Baqrah had described. Al-Hakim opened his aluminum case and knapsack and began to set up the equipment. After a few minutes, he turned toward Mashish and asked him for a pair of pliers. As the young man searched his satchel, Al-Hakim reached his hand into his shirt. Then, without pausing, he grabbed Mashish by the hair, pulled his head back with a sudden jerk, and slashed his throat with one quick stroke. The boy tried to scream but the sound was trapped like a bubble in his severed voice box. He coughed and sputtered. Then, finally, he lay still. Al-Hakim felt the body wither in his grasp. Soon, he thought, Mashish would be reclining with his brother in the Gardens of Bliss. Surrounded by virgins. Anointed with oils. Free.
Chapter 18
The El Affroun pitched and yawed in choppy waters as the deep blue Mediterranean met the inky currents of the cold Atlantic. Leaning over the starboard rail, in the shadow of Gibraltar, the Algerian mule Hammel studied the shoreline with interest. This is where the Libyans had bought their clothes, the garments they had packed inside that suitcase bomb, which had vaporized Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie in Scotland. And because of that one simple oversight, that one mistake, over a billion dollars had been handed over to the families of the infidel survivors. The Colonel had capitulated. And Abu Nidal, who had authorized the bombing, who had confessed to it at a meeting of his Fatah-Revolutionary Council, was dead — assassinated by the CIA and left to rot, to the indifferent buzzing of flies, in some Iraqi hotel room.
Ali Hammel shook his head. One little mistake; that’s all it took. One loose thread and the entire tapestry unraveled. He visualized the silver briefcase in the closet of his fo’c’s’le. I must gird myself with care, he thought. I must check and re-check every move, the smallest of my decisions. I must be… perfect.
He looked astern at the fading Mediterranean. It had been a largely uneventful journey, by fishing trawler, from Syria to Algiers. There, he had hopped this freighter bound for South America. They would put ashore at the Canary and Cape Verde Islands before landfall at Recife and Rio in Brazil. He sighed. He did not like the sea. Water was foreign to him. He had grown up in the town of Tamanrasset in Algeria, in the heart of the Sahara, and the thought of being out of sight of land, aboard this hulk of rotting wood and rusted steel, filled him with dread.
The son of a minor government official, Hammel was the descendent of Tuareg warriors of the Kel Rela, Berber tribesmen who had ruled the Sahara since the time of Herodotus. Ironically, despite the frequent tension between the indigenous Berbers and the Arabs, Hammel — like his father — became a member of the regional government, albeit as a gendarme. By the age of thirteen, he was a police informant, then a policeman at seventeen, and finally the Tam Chief of Police at twenty-six. Indeed, it had been the friction between the Arabs in the north and the Tuareg Berbers of the south that had precipitated his advancement. The officials in Algiers believed a Tuareg Chief of Police would engender greater… and this was usually where they stumbled… “self-control amongst the local Berber population.” To this day, the Tuareg called the Arabs Les Chinois — the Chinese — because they came from somewhere far away, and to the east. The fact that the Arab Almoravids had conquered what would eventually become Algeria back in the eleventh century didn’t mean much to the Tuareg. The Berbers bore the water bag of memory. The Arabs would always be outsiders in their minds. And even though the Berber tribes were nominally Islamic, most practiced the religion with a primitive simplicity. They were animists at heart. If a spider bit, or a scorpion stung a Targui, he was made to drink a potion laced with words from the Qur’an, scribbled earnestly on a tiny scrap of paper, as if the symbols themselves would assuage the poison in his blood.
Hammel would have still been Chief of Police, to this day, if he hadn’t met Fadimata — in all probability. But he had fallen in love, that most pernicious of weaknesses, ensnared by her unnatural beauty, her family and friends, seduced into a coup attempt against Abdeliza Boutenflika, the Algerian President. Fadimata’s family had been the most devout of Muslims. And, despite his agnosticism at the time, Hammel had joined their fundamentalist cause with zeal. He was in love, after all, a vassal Amerid, a Harratin or slave to his own heart, more than willing to parade his loyalty and passion for the sumptuous Fadimata.
The coup failed, of course. Nearly every member of Fadimata’s family had been executed, or assassinated, and Hammel had only managed to escape by venturing forth on camelback across the great erg on the track to Mali. For a time, at least, he remained in south Algeria. As an ex-gendarme, he knew the habits of the smuggler with a lover’s intimacy. He knew the secret byways of the brigand, the least watched caravan routes and khans, and — most importantly — how policemen thought. For almost two years he survived as an outlaw in the desert. He became what he had hunted all his life. And, ironically, he became a true believer. Hammel found Allah in the wastes of the Sahara.
It was only when a fellow outlaw was captured and revealed Hammel’s most treasured hiding places that he was forced to flee the country. If he’d had a heart to break still — after Fadimata, after watching her gunned down like that inside her tent that night as she slept — it would have shattered into a hundred million pieces as fine and weightless as the sand grains of In Salah. But he had had no choice. It was death or exile, and — to his surprise — Hammel preferred to live. After all, he had a purpose now, a raison d’être. The coup may have failed but, like Bin Laden and al-Khalayilah, like El Aqrab himself, he was committed now to something larger than his own vainglorious existence.