Read The Killing Ground Online

Authors: Jack Higgins

Tags: #Intelligence Officers, #Dillon, #Fiction, #Suspense, #Sean (Fictitious character), #Thrillers, #Espionage, #Secret service, #Dillon; Sean (Fictitious character)

The Killing Ground (20 page)

BOOK: The Killing Ground
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“You’ve seen the press releases in the newspapers on Hussein Rashid?”

“I could hardly miss them.”

“How about the full story on the other Rashid—the English wife, the thirteen-year-old daughter kidnapped by Army of God fanatics for the grandfather in Iraq? It’s Hussein who’s supposed to marry her when she comes of age.”

“I’ve heard certain whispers.”

“Well, Hussein took the girl down to Hazar, and Dillon and Billy and the child’s father swooped down and stole her from right under his nose and flew off to good old Blighty, leaving two of his best men dead.”

“Oh, dear. Let me put my supposedly stupid mind to this. These photos in the newspapers? They are supposed to keep him out of Britain?”

“Something like that, just for the moment and to make the family feel secure.”

“I’m not so sure it will work.”

“Why not?”

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“Because he’s the Hammer of God. He won’t want to let his audience down.”

“That’s what I think, too,” Roper said.

“Do you mind if I share all this with Volkov?”

“That’s why I told you.” At that moment, Greta came in. “Greta sends her best. She’s thriving.”

“My God, how I miss that girl. Such a beauty.”

Roper switched off and Greta said, “Who was that?”

“Lhuzkov.” Roper smiled. “I was feeling lonely.”

T H E C I T A T I O N C R O S S E D Saudi Arabia, Egypt, then northern Libya, following the coast at enormous speed and most of the time at fifty thousand feet. Selim invited Hussein to take the controls when they were over Libya, and, changing his mind, Hussein did for a while, reveling in it.

Later, much later as they approached their destination, Selim came back to consult him. “I’m worried about fuel. Oran is only a couple of hundred miles away from Khufra. I think we should stop and refuel there.”

Hussein thought about it. Private planes like the Citation were used only by the rich and always received preferential treatment. They should be safe enough.

“All right.”

So Oran it was. He used the British passport and Khazid a French one in the name of Henri Duval. They got out to stretch their legs. Ahmadi took their passports to the office for them, but he was waved away.

“So simple,” Khazid said.

“Yes, but not to be taken for granted,” Hussein said. “There could be a time when they’re all over us.”

“As Allah wills.”

“Perhaps, but what if it’s all actually in our own hands?”

“I am a simple man, my friend. I accept what I know and do what I’m told.”

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J A C K H I G G I N S

“And I prefer you that way.” Hussein climbed back in the plane, Khazid followed, then they soared again into an evening sky, climbing to no more than ten thousand feet. Later, they saw the marshes of the Khufra sprawled on the desert below, the creeks stretching out to the sea, here and there a dhow, sails bulging in the wind, and sometimes, motorboats and the odd freighter.

They descended to not more than a thousand feet, and Selim saw the runway to the left of them, the control tower and two hangars, but oddly there was no contact from the control tower. Selim circled again and passed over the town and small harbor. There was a jetty at one point, an old Eagle floatplane tied up beside it.

Selim said, “An Eagle Amphibian. You can lower the wheels beneath the floats and taxi out of the water onto a shore. Years old, but sturdy.

They were built for bush flying in places like Canada.”

He slowed right down and they almost seemed to hang there suspended. “Strange, still no response from the tower.” Hussein pondered, every sense alert. “This is what you do. Land, go to the far end of the runway and turn for your takeoff. We’ll get out. Ahmadi closes the hatch and we wait. If the right people are here, they’ll come for us. If there is a problem, I fire a shot and you get the hell out of here.”

Selim immediately protested. “We can’t leave you. It would be a great shame.”

“I order it, my friend. This is our business.” He put an arm around Khazid. “We’re very good at it.”

“Then I obey you with deep regret,” Selim said.

They circled the runway but nothing moved. It was strange, great reeds piling in higher than a man and getting darker by the minute, the two hangars with doors open but no sign of life.

“Down we go,” Hussein said. “You take both flight bags.”

“Good thing we travel light.” Khazid smiled.

“You need a suit, you buy a suit, that’s my motto. Here we go again, little brother.”

The Citation dropped in and rolled along the runway, and it started

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to turn at the far end, the reeds turbulent in the jet stream. Ahmadi came and turned the handle, thrusting the hatch out as the steps fell.

Khazid went down, crouching in the blast. Hussein followed, turned to glance up at Ahmadi, and there was a roaring and two Land Rovers emerged from one of the hangars at full speed and turned onto the runway.

“Close it!” Hussein called, and Ahmadi did as he was told, slamming the hatch shut. Hussein pulled out his Walther, firing into the air, and Selim boosted power and roared down the runway and the Land Rovers swerved to each side. The Citation rose, lifted at the end of the runway, and Khazid was already turning.

“Into the reeds—go now. Keep in touch with your mobile. I’ll hold them off.”

Hussein turned, took careful aim and shot the front offside tire of the leading vehicle. It swerved violently, throwing the man next to the driver out. The other swerved past and came on, four men in some kind of khaki police uniform.

Hussein fired again, this time at the second Land Rover, splintering the windshield, and he turned and plunged into the reeds and immediately fell foul of a rusting cable, hidden in the undergrowth. He went headlong and they were all over him, boot and fist everywhere. He was pulled to his feet, and someone found his Walther but not the Colt. He had left that in his flight bag with Khazid.

An overweight, bearded captain appeared to be in charge. One of the men gave him the Walther. “Nice one. I appreciate your gift.”

“Think nothing of it.”

“Ah, a cool customer. You are here to see Major Hakim Mahmoud of the Algerian Secret Police?”

“If he’s available.”

“Oh, yes. You must be an important man. That was a wonderful plane.” One of his men emerged from the reeds. “Any sign of him?”

“No, he’s gone, Captain.”

“Never mind.” The three men in the other Land Rover were fitting 166

J A C K H I G G I N S

the spare tire. “I’ll be in the office, but hurry up, I want to get back to the fort. They say it’s going to rain.” He turned to Hussein, “I am Captain Ali. I’m sure we’ll get along.” He patted his face. “You are a handsome young man.” Hussein got in the Land Rover between two policemen and they drove away.

B E H I N D T H E M , well hidden in the reeds, Khazid had heard everything and watched them go, leaving the three men wrestling with the damaged tire. One of them was a sergeant, the one who had been thrown out of the vehicle. Khazid got his Walther out, unzipped his case and found a Carswell silencer. Quickly he screwed it in place just as the two men on the tire had it fixed.

“Good,” the sergeant said. “Let’s go.”

Khazid put down the flight bags and stepped out of the reeds, Walther in hand. He whistled, they all turned, and he shot the sergeant between the eyes. The other two were completely shocked.

“The captain said he was going to the office. Where is that?”

“The bottom of the control tower,” one man said.

“Excellent. Now this fort he mentioned?”

The second man was shaking with fear, so it was left to the other again. “The old Foreign Legion fort a half a mile down the road to the left.”

“Thank you.”

Khazid shot both of them dead, not because of any conscious cru-elty, but because he had no choice in the matter if he was to rescue his friend in one piece. He put the flight bags in the passenger seat, pausing only to pull up the canvas roof of the Land Rover because it would give him some sort of cover. He drove away along the runway toward the control tower, taking his time, but when he got there, the other Land Rover had gone.

It was dark now, with no need for caution. The door was unlocked.

He opened it and found a light switch. It was a reception area. He went

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behind a counter, opened the door marked OFFICE and turned on the light.

The man behind the desk was seated in a swivel chair, and from the state of him had obviously had a bad time of it, his hands handcuffed behind his back. His final end had been a bullet in the head. He was presumably Major Hakim Mahmoud. Khazid looked around him. There was a large flashlight on the table, which worked when he tried it. He left it on, switched off the light and went out to the Land Rover. Now for the fort.

I T W A S C O L D , surprisingly cold, and Hussein shivered as three of the policemen manhandled him out of the Land Rover. There was a fort, he could see that. The green and white flag with the red crescent and star, the flag of Algeria, flared in the lights from the battlements over his head, and there were two lighted braziers on either side of the gate they passed through, a sentry with a rifle beside each brazier.

They paused at the bottom of some steps leading up to the battlements and got Hussein out. Captain Ali was seated on a stone bench drinking whiskey. He was obviously that kind of Muslim. Hussein felt only contempt. The man resembled a disease you wanted to stamp out.

“Major Hakim Mahmoud was a bad man—an evil man. He traded with drug dealers, all things evil, always his hand out for money. So, if you dealt with him, you must be both very wicked and very rich.”

“Not really.”

“I want to know who
you
are and your companions.”

“It’s against the rules.”

“Rules? So you want to play games? You think you must now brace yourself to bear some physical force, don’t you? Well, it’s not necessary.

In the old days, they trained Foreign Legionnaires here, hard men who needed to be controlled, but the French were very practical people. They had the Hole over by the wall there. Very uncomfortable.”

“I’m sure it is.”

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J A C K H I G G I N S

“I mean, rats—you either like them or you don’t.”

“Very intelligent creatures, rats,” Hussein told him.

Above the Hole was a windlass coiled with rope, a turning handle.

“Two of you up here and bring a light and we’ll let you see what you’re up against.” One of the policemen was already holding a robe.

They made Hussein put his foot in a kind of stirrup and lowered him.

It was cold and damp, rain drifting down, and he landed in two feet of water. They tossed the robe down to him and he put it on. There was a scurrying sound. The rope was pulled back up.

He sat on a stone shelf, switched on the light and found two rats, eyes glinting in the beam. They seemed curiously friendly.

“Now behave yourselves,” he said in Arabic.

The rain increased its force and he shook his head. “Khazid, where are you?” he said softly.

K H A Z I D D R O V E down the road in the heavy rain, grateful for the canvas roof. He could see the fort up ahead, the flag hanging limply in the rain.

There wasn’t a sentry box, just a stone alcove from the old days, a sentry sitting smoking a cigarette, another one standing beside him. They stopped and looked at Khazid curiously. The one who was standing came forward. “Who are you? What do you want?”

“Secret police. Where would I find Captain Ali and the prisoner he just brought in from the airfield?”

The policeman raised his rifle a little. “Secret police? I don’t know you.”

The Walther with the silencer was on the seat beside him. Khazid picked it up and shot the policeman between the eyes. The other man cried out and leaped to his feet.

Khazid said, “Stand still, I don’t want to miss you.” The man was terrified and dropped his rifle. “So tell me.”

“He put the prisoner in the Hole. It’s on the battlements. I don’t know where he is himself. He may be in the fort.”

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169

Khazid got out and left the Land Rover where it was. “This place, the Hole,” he said to the sentry. “Lead the way.”

Which the man did, mounting the stairs to the battlements. There was no sign of Captain Ali, but there were lights down in the barracks and laughter. The Hole was self-evident, with its windlass.

“Are you in one piece, brother?” Khazid called.

“Other than the rats trying for the odd nibble, I’m fine,” Hussein called. “I’ve missed you, little brother.”

“I’m sure you did,” Khazid nodded to the policeman. “Lower the stirrup.”

The man exerted himself on the creaking ancient handle, the rope went down and Hussein called, “That’s fine,” and said to the rats,

“Good-bye, my friends.” The windlass creaked again, the man pushing against the weight, and Hussein emerged.

“I stink like an old sow.”

“But you’re in one piece, which is more than I can say for the late Major Hakim Mahmoud.”

“May he rest in peace. Remind me to let the Broker know.”

“He should have known.”

A door banged; a moment later there were footsteps at the other end of the battlements and Captain Ali appeared, looking rather incongruous, an umbrella over his head. He was humming to himself and looking down, but not for long.

“It’s you,” he said stupidly.

“Yes, it is.” Hussein patted his pockets and found the Walther.

But strangely enough, fat Ali didn’t show fear, although that could have been because of the bottle of whiskey in his left hand.

“I knew you were somebody special, just from that plane. If you’re going to shoot me, at least tell me who you are.”

BOOK: The Killing Ground
13.43Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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