Deadline Yemen (The Elizabeth Darcy Series). Peggy Hanson

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Deadline Yemen (The Elizabeth Darcy Series) - Peggy Hanson

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of doing.

      From the window came the call to prayer, and Halima performed her ritual wash and spread her prayer rug. Placing her forehead on the carpet over and over, she prayed with all her heart that Ali would come to his senses. That he would do so in time. That he would come home.

      CHAPTER 25

      Curious soldiers with Kalashnikovs slung casually from their shoulders came to gaze at me. One of them smiled coyly and muttered to himself, “Dressed just like a tribesman!”

      Steven C. Caton, Yemen Chronicle

      The new Arab-style U.S. Embassy, so unlike its beautiful, culturally-correct predecessor set in gardens, was on a hill leading up to Jebel Nuqum and buttressed like Fort Knox. Yemeni security men stood around it like toy soldiers, some of them in machine gun bunkers. It took a virtual body search by an impassive woman guard before I was allowed in, past the stern-faced Marine guard in his glass box. The box was full of buttons he could have pushed at any moment to call in reinforcements. The famed and feared Delta Force trains these Marines for Embassy duty.

      The Embassy smell was that of an office. Coffee brewing somewhere. Papers. Books. I had entered a different world.

      My hastily-made appointment was with Jason Roberts, a political officer. “Political Officer” is often, not always, code for CIA, known as “the Company” in intelligence circles. When he came down the hall to escort me up, I assumed the good-looking African American kid was a new Company recruit. He wore khaki pants with a tucked-in shirt and exuded youth, vigor, and self-confidence. I hoped to shake him into telling me more than he intended.

      He, on the other hand, seemed to hope I’d help solve the problem of too few females in his life. Frankly, while it was flattering to see the interested look in his eye as we exchanged cards, he made me feel like Mrs. Robinson. That’s not a role in my repertoire, and never has been.

      “Hello,” I said, professionally.

      “Hello, yourself.” By acting cocky, he was trying to call the shots. An amateurish mistake.

      I seated myself in the chair in front of his desk and turned on the schoolmarm manner. “I’m writing a story about the murder of an American last night. What can you tell me about Michael Petrovich?” I carefully removed any personal knowledge of Michael or the murder from my voice.

      Roberts’s face lost its youthful leer and acquired that noncommittal expression taught in Diplomacy 101. “Well, he’s a businessman. Was. Russian-born, with an American passport. He comes to Yemen on and off. The Embassy is facilitating getting the body back to the States and is supportive of the Yemeni police investigation of circumstances of his death.”

      My God. People really talk like that. Maybe Roberts wasn’t as green as I thought.

      “So you have no idea whether there was some special reason why Petrovich died as he did?” I ventured. “I am staying at the Dar al-Hamd and saw the body. I was wondering about the jambiya. Do you assume the jambiya points to Yemeni involvement? Did Petrovich have many Yemeni friends here?”

      Roberts shifted uneasily in his chair. “I don’t have any more information right now. The Embassy is cooperating, of course, but is not in the business of checking out Americans’ friends.” He tugged at his collar.

      By now, I didn’t believe a word he said. I decided to take advantage of his youth and discomfort. “He seemed to know a young woman here. What can you tell me of Christine Helmund?”

      A pregnant pause ensued. He looked taken aback by the quick change of subject. “Christine has been here in Sana’a awhile. We at the Embassy know her socially.”

      I’ll bet. Christine was the type to get around socially. How many embassy males had been involved with her, one way or the other? But that wasn’t my concern right now. “What was her relationship to Petrovich?”

      “I have no idea.” The flirtatiousness was fading. Good. He seemed uptight about Petrovich. About Michael. I’d warm him up with some typical journalist questions.

      “Okay, on to politics,” I said. “How stable is Yemen these days? One hears rumors.”

      Roberts took on a warmer, conspiratorial look. A relieved look. “Want to know the truth? The worldwide net of anti-American terrorists might be centered right here.” He seemed to relish gossiping with an American woman, even if she was that perilous property known as a reporter. “Aden was the big Soviet training ground for guerrillas of all stripes before reunification, and the latest big gun, Bin Laden, was originally from Yemen—at least, his father and grandfather came from here.”

      So far I knew it all, but still I nodded and took notes.

      “What do we do? We work with the Yemenis. They’re not bad on security, and they see it mostly in their own interest to cooperate. Of course, who knows about the sheikhs of the North and the South? They do what they want, always have. And Bin Laden isn’t our friend anymore. He has a lot of allies up around Sa’da as well as in the Hadhramaut, where his family came from. I absolutely do not recommend any American going north—kidnapping, you know. That’s where the action is.” Roberts rustled around in a drawer.

      Warnings about kidnappings in Yemen were both true and blown out of proportion. Until recent years, when serious fundamentalists got involved a couple of times, foreigners traveling on remote roads were often detained as involuntary guests of various tribes. They were treated as guests while their hosts negotiated with the government for a new well, a road, whatever. Maybe it was a good way for foreigners to get an inside view of life in Yemeni villages—though I doubt they appreciated it.

      “Official warning duly noted.” That’s what one needs to say.

      “There is one thing you probably know already,” ventured Jason Roberts. “A U.S. Congressional Delegation is coming to Yemen.”

      “I didn’t know that! Who are they?” Gray-suited men and women from Washington trying to make what they could of this exotic country. For that matter, Yemenis trying to make what they could of the Congresspeople.

      “Members of the Armed Services Committee. Three of them.” He looked at his calendar. “They arrive day after tomorrow. The President has invited them to visit the Wadi Hadhramaut, so it’ll be quite the production.”

      “I didn’t get to visit the Hadhramaut when I was here before. Beautiful, I hear.”

      “Oh, yes. Shibam is a UNESCO-protected city, you know. They call it the ‘Manhattan of the Desert,’ all mudbrick towers standing in a cube in the middle of the wadi. I guess it has about five hundred residents.”

      My heart leaped. All of South Yemen, including the Hadhramaut, had been off-limits during the civil war, so I’d never been there. Since reading Freya Stark’s books, I’d always wanted to visit that remote area out near the edge of the unending sand of the Empty Quarter. If I played my cards right, maybe I’d be lucky enough to interview the Congressional Delegation there!

      Of course, it all depended on Halima’s crisis. I had to try to help her deal with that first. My debt and duty to Halima was deeper than any travel lust.

      “I’m not sure of my schedule just yet, but I would love to interview the delegation. May I request that through you?”

      “No, you have to go through the Ambassador’s secretary, Julia

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