Brown, Dale - Patrick McLanahan 10 Page 37
“I... I cannot go in front of Zuwayy.... I mean, His Highness, and ask him to throw all his support behind the person who attacked his holy city.”
“You will do it, or Libya does not get its partnership in Salimah, your workers stay in your country and fester in their poverty, and the Muslim Brotherhood starts to look on you and your king as a gutless failure while Egyptian warplanes cruise their skies.”
“This ... this will be most difficult...
“Then we have a deal, Minister?”
He hesitated once more—but there was no reason to do so. “We have a deal, Madame,” he said. “If His Highness agrees, our forces will pull back immediately.”
Juma Mahmud Hijazi walked into Zuwayy’s office several minutes later, his face completely expressionless. “Where the hell have you been, Juma?” Tahir Fazani asked irritably. It appeared as if Jadallah Zuwayy was even more morose and depressed than before.
Hijazi ignored Fazani. “Listen, Jadallah, I think we have a solution to the problem,” he said. Fazani looked quizzically at his longtime friend and coconspirator, but wisely kept silent.
“What are you talking about, Juma?” Zuwayy asked.
“A... a back-channel contact I’ve been developing in the Egyptian government,” Hijazi replied carefully. “I just got a call from them. They’re willing to talk. The government wants to negotiate a cease-fire.”
“I will only accept a surrender,” Zuwayy said. “The Egyptians surrender to me, and they allow us to occupy the Salimah oil fields as reparations for the death and destruction they’ve caused in Libya.” Both Hijazi and Fazani both rolled their eyes in complete exasperation—now, they realized, Zuwayy had gone completely over the edge. He wasn’t thinking clearly at all anymore.
“Don’t worry about anything, Jadallah,” Hijazi said. “The Egyptians will agree to all our demands. They will cease attacking our bases, they will lay down their weapons, and they will withdraw from the frontier.”
“I want Salimah too. They will cede Salimah to me immediately.”
“Jadallah, they’re not going to just cede Salimah to us or anyone—we have to pay to become part of this cartel.”
“Pay? I’m not going to pay them to belong to something that is already ours!”
“Jadallah, we will become equal partners with the consortium of Western oil companies that built the pipeline and are drilling the wells—and we don’t have to lift one shovel or get our hands messy,” Hijazi said. “Our investment could be returned to us a hundredfold per year. They will also allow Libyan workers in to work there.”
“What good is that?”
“We need to show that we won something from this battle,” Hijazi said. “We can say we forced them to give us a stake in that oil project, but they can’t say we forced them into giving it to us. We also take care of our workers by giving them access and jobs in the world’s largest and richest oil project. They look weak because they handed over part of their project to us, and we look like a partner because we paid for our percentage.”
Zuwayy shook his head in confusion. “I don’t know what you’re talking about, Juma,” he said. “I want to just go in and take that oil field. Tahir says our troops are in place—”
“Then we risk getting bombed again by the Egyptians and whoever else they have working for them,” Hijazi said. “We haven’t been able to touch the forces that attacked Samah or Jaghbub—we certainly won’t be able to get them over Egypt.” He glared at Fazani, silently ordering him to start arguing on his side, or else.
“We need time and money to regroup, rearm, and reorganize our forces,” Fazani said tenuously. Hijazi nodded. “This deal will give us the time and the money to do that.” Zuwayy looked at both his friends and advisers, and seemed to be relenting.
“And all we have to do is endorse Susan Bailey Salaam as president of Egypt,” Hijazi added quickly.
“What?” both Fazani and Zuwayy asked in unison.
“We need to do this, or this whole thing unravels,” Hijazi explained. “Salaam is seen as the hero in all this, even though she did nothing but screw some American commander into bombing targets in Libya for her. She is inexperienced, naive, and idealistic. She will allow Muslim Brotherhood representatives into Egypt to argue before the People’s Assembly for membership—that alone is worth the price. If Egypt becomes a full member of the Brotherhood, all African and Middle East nations will soon follow suit. But in order for this to happen, Salaam must become president of Egypt. If you endorse her, and get all the other Brotherhood leaders to do the same....”
“What? Have all of the other members endorse an American to be president of Egypt! Are you insane?”
“Jadallah, the Muslim Brotherhood can step out of the shadows and take its place in the center of the world stage if this happens,” Hijazi argued. “Salaam is that powerful, that well known—and after this offensive against us, she looks more and more like a defender of Egypt. We need to tap into that power—and the best way for that is to embrace her as an equal, not as a victor. Only you can make this happen. She needs this from us as much as we need Salimah, Jadallah. Do it.”
Fazani was still looking quizzically at Hijazi, still trying to figure out what his game was, but he nodded as he turned to Zuwayy. “Let’s do this, Jadallah,” he said. “Once we have our people in Egypt and get our cut of the oil revenues, then we can set about destroying Salaam and taking over. We’ll put our spies in place all over Egypt, and we’ll keep an eye on every move her military forces make. We’ll play her game for a while, let her think she’s won—and then, when she’s gotten a little fatter off the oil money, we’ll stomp her once and for all.”
Zuwayy still didn’t look pleased. He looked warily at both Hijazi and Fazani. “I will not wait long for all this to happen,” he said. “A month or two, no more. We get our concessions from Egypt, and then we move in—and Salaam dies, this time for good.”
ALEXANDRIA, EGYPT
THE NEXT NIGHT
At Amina Shafik’s urging, Susan left the balcony of her Alexandria home late at night, got undressed, showered, then stood in the steamy bathroom for several minutes, staring at the hazy reflection in the mirror. She had plenty of questions for that person in the mirror, but no answers were forthcoming.
Her eyes roamed over her wet, naked body, pausing on the still-unhealed scars from the blast that took her husband’s life. Her breasts were spared, but the blast had chewed and scorched large segments of her left shoulder, arm, and hand—a few more feet closer, the doctors said, and the blast would’ve taken her arm. Her left eye was still intact and would require several more surgeries to get any vision at all, but the doctors warned that if the vision in her right eye started to get worse, they would have to enucleate the left eye to keep it from sympathetically damaging the right.
She was lucky to be alive, she thought. Somebody up there still likes me. It also meant that if she was still alive, her mission here on Earth was still not yet finished. But what was her mission? Was it to avenge her husband—or was it something else? It was too late, and she was too tired, to think about it any more.
Susan shook her head at the sad, scarred reflection in the mirror, mercifully shut off the bathroom light, and stepped into...
... a dark figure standing directly in front of her.
“Major! Ilha’uni!” she shouted. She swung with her right fist, but her blow was effortlessly turned away.
Behind the figure, the bedroom door burst open. Amina Shafik, crouching low behind the doorjamb with her side arm pointed inside, shouted, “Wa’if! Yiden ala tul! Imshi! Stop! Hands up! Move away!” But Susan felt a crackling of electricity, like stiff cellophane being crunched inside her skull, and Shafik collapsed to the floor.
“Amina!” Susan cried. She tried to rush to her bodyguard’s side, thinking she was dead, but the dark figure roughly pushed her away onto the bed. “Who are you?” Susan shouted. She hoped one of the outside guards might hear her, but they were all proba
bly dead too. “What do you want?”
The figure reached out and flipped on the bedroom light. To Susan’s immense surprise, it was one of the American commandos, dressed for full combat in the electronic battle armor and strength-enhancing microhydraulic exoskeleton. “Patrick? Is that you?”
Patrick McLanahan turned, lifted Shafik in his hydraulically augmented arms, carried her into her bedroom next to Susan’s, and gently laid her on the bed. Susan felt the breeze blowing in off Abu Qir Bay through the bedroom patio doors and realized that Patrick had to have climbed up seventeen floors, or jumped at least a hundred feet from the nearest building, to get over to her bedroom balcony. He returned to the bedroom moments later and removed his helmet, rage blazing in his eyes.
“I thought you were dead,” Susan said, pulling on a thin, silky dressing gown.
“I thought we were going to go after the ones who killed your husband,” Patrick said. “I thought you were going to help me find my wife and my men.”
“I am helping you.”
“By making a deal with Zuwayy to take the prisoners to Mersa Matruh and lock us up in the bunker so he could wipe us—and your political rival Khan—out with a nuclear weapon?”
“You think I had something to do with that awful attack? I’m as horrified as you are,” Susan said. “I’ve been under house arrest here in Alexandria. I never heard from Zuwayy or anyone from Libya. As for Khan—I’m glad he’s dead, the murderous bastard, but I had nothing to do with it. He was double-crossed by his buddy Zuwayy—why, I don’t know. It’s all part of Zuwayy’s twisted scheme for power.”
“And you didn’t bother telling me about this? We thought you had turned us all in—we got out as soon as we could.”
“You didn’t bother telling me you were going after Zuwayy.”
“I told you I was going to try to recover Wendy and my men, or go after Zuwayy to force him to give them up— that was the best way I thought of doing it,” Patrick said. “I didn’t tell you because I didn’t know if I could trust you. Apparently I was right.”
“So what are you doing here now?” Susan asked. “Why risk climbing a seventeen-story building and confronting a dozen armed guards? You won’t find your wife here.” Patrick clenched his fists in anger, the flexible electronic armor in his gauntlets and exoskeleton making little humming noises. “I’m going to go home, Susan. I’ve already attacked Zillah and Al-Jawf. I’m tired, and my men are tired.”
Susan’s mouth dropped open in surprise. “How can you do this? You and your men alone couldn’t possibly have the power to do this.”
“It’s done.” He paused, looking at her with a strange, faraway expression. “What will you do?”
“I’m going to fight—what else do you think I’d do?” Susan replied hotly. “I don’t care if Zuwayy attacks my country and blows up my bases—I’m going to stay and fight! While my name and my dead husband’s name still mean something in this country, I’m going to use them to bring peace and justice to Egypt.”
“So you can become president?”
“I want to see General Ahmad Baris made president of Egypt. He has the experience, and he is completely loyal to Egypt.” She saw Patrick imperceptibly nod his approval. She moved off the bed and stepped toward him. “Patrick, I need your help.”
“What am I supposed to do?”
“Be my instrument of war,” Susan said. “I can’t trust anyone: not the military, not even my personal guards—Khan had them all on his payroll, and I think they’re just looking for an opportunity to strike again without revealing their treason. The Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt will certainly move to assassinate me and make Egypt a theocracy. They mean to create a strong union between Egypt, Libya, and the other Muslim Brotherhood states—with Zuwayy pulling the strings. If I can uncover the plot or conspiracy to undermine the law in Egypt in favor of Libya, I can pave the way to elevate General Baris to the presidency.”
“What kind of conspiracy?”
“The conspiracy to kill my husband, for starters,” Susan said bitterly. “I know Khan and Zuwayy were both involved. I also suspect there was some kind of conspiracy to force withdrawal of foreign oil companies from Egypt.” Susan stepped closer to him and placed her hands on his chest, looking deeply into his eyes. “Will you help me? As the wife of a martyred president, I can offer much assistance to you.” He hesitated, his eyes staring at a spot beyond her shoulders. “Is your mission complete? The reason you came here, the reason you attacked Libya—is it over?”
For a moment, it looked as if Patrick might crumble. His shoulders slumped, his eyes drooped, and his Adam’s apple bobbed. “Yes,” he finally responded woodenly.
“Then take on a different mission—help me uncover and remove the traitors from Egypt,” Susan said. “Egypt is in danger of becoming another theocratic dictatorship—or, worse, a stooge of Jadallah Zuwayy. Help me stop this. Use your power for real justice, not just for a few dollars.”
He looked down at her, and she could see his eyes roam from her eyes to the wounds on her shoulder and arm, the anger in his eyes turning to empathy. She turned her eyes away from his and backed away from him. “What’s the matter?” Patrick asked.
“Don’t look at my wounds, dammit,” she said. “Don’t take pity on me.” She pulled her gown down off her shoulders—purposely a bit farther down her chest than necessary to show the majority of her wounds. “You want to take a look? Take a good look.” He did—including the parts of her naked body that were not damaged, she noticed. Maybe this guy didn’t have quite the stone heart she once thought. Now was the time to drive the message home... .
“Don’t you dare pity me, McLanahan,” Susan went on. “I don’t wear a suit of armor like you—I’m fighting this battle with all the weapons I have, which is just about what you see here. I don’t need your pity.” She took his armored hands into hers, squeezed them, then placed her right hand on his chest. “I need these fighting hands, Patrick, and I need this heart. Be my champion, Patrick. Help me. If you’ve had enough of fighting for money, then try fighting for justice. Fight for me instead.”
He didn’t say anything—but his eyes replied for him. The pity had turned to something else—not quite trust, not quite friendship. But he would be back.
“You’re going to leave me, aren’t you?” she asked sullenly.
“I have to.”
“To bury your brother. I know.” She lowered her eyes. “And to mourn your wife. I know all about mourning—I’ve done a lot of that lately.” She pulled up her robe over her shoulders, but did it in such a way that covering up was even more seductive than exposing herself. Patrick picked up his helmet, fastened it in place, and then stepped to the bedroom patio. “Patrick.” He turned, the helmet’s bug-eyes looking sinister and comical at the same time. “You will always have an ally here in Egypt. I will always be here for you.”
He nodded, once, slowly, and then turned. In a blink of an eye and a loud hiss of compressed air, he was gone. Susan thought she heard a clunk of boots on the rooftop across the street, but she couldn’t see anything.
McLanahan was an emotional wreck right now—his brother dead, his wife blown to atoms, his men decimated, his mission failed and shattered. Did she actually expect him to be able to fight?
The quicker he was out of the country, she decided, the better.
CHAPTER 8
CORONADO, CALIFORNIA
DAYS LATER
The answering machine picked up for the sixth or seventh time that evening; again, Patrick ignored it.
It was an exceptionally warm evening, so Patrick was out on the big bayview balcony, sipping a Grand Marnier and watching the activity in San Diego Bay. He could see all the way from the Thirty-second Street Naval Base to the south to North Island Naval Air Station and Point Loma Naval Base to the north. North Island, the home of the Navy’s Anti-Submarine Warfare Center, was a buzz of activity—it usually was, with aircraft of all sizes buzzing down the Pacific beaches of Coronado, r
ight behind the Del Coronado Hotel, coming in for a landing. To the south on Coronado was the Navy Basic Underwater Demolition Service Training Center, the home of the Navy SEALs; one could usually see inflatable boats going up and down the coast all year long, day and night.
It was hard to tell from the level of activity in the harbor what was happening in the world. North Island had two carriers in port right now—that was unusual. Thirty- second Street Naval Base was busier than Patrick had ever seen it before—every pier looked occupied. Would it be busier if war was imminent as ships prepared for deployment, or would it be quieter because all available warships were heading into battle? Patrick didn’t know. A trained spy might be able to deduce the answer to that, but Patrick wasn’t a spy.
He wasn’t anything right now—not a military man, not a Night Stalker. Just a man with a young son, a missing wife, a dead brother, and not much else—not even a future.
After the last strikes against Libya by the Night Stalkers and the Sky Masters Inc.’s EB-52 Megafortress, Patrick finally got his men out of Egypt. They first flew by CV-22 Pave Hammer tilt-rotor aircraft to an isolated base in southern Israel, where they sanitized their gear and received civilian travel documents. They drove to Tel Aviv, flew via commercial airlines to London, then to Los Angeles, and finally to San Diego.
Coming home was without question the happiest—and the saddest—day in Patrick’s life. Little Bradley was brought to San Diego-Lindbergh International Airport by Patrick’s mother and sisters; they hugged Patrick warmly, but they wore stony, stem expressions on their faces—they were silently accusing him of killing both Paul and Wendy and nearly orphaning his son. Patrick ignored their anger. He hugged his son long and hard right at the Jetway door, ignoring the aggravated comments of the others who had to maneuver around them. One look at Hal Briggs, Chris Wohl, and David Luger, however, and the complainers fell silent and went about their business.