The Death Trade. Jack Higgins
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He was part of the action at all times, heard Farouk’s howl of dismay as he went off the end of Butler’s Wharf and a great deal of what transpired in the courtyard of the warehouse between Abu, Dillon, and Sara.
To him, the most shocking thing of all was Abu telling Dillon that there was one God and Osama was his Prophet, making it clear to Dillon, and through him Ferguson, that the real enemy in this affair was Al Qaeda. Very stupid of Abu to do that, but to be charitable, one should not speak ill of the dead.
But the arrival of Teague and the disposal team and what he heard of them, until they bagged Abu, really shocked him. The sheer ruthlessness of these people showed Ferguson’s organization in a new light to him. He had never cared for the Iranian, a loudmouthed bully who preferred to get bad news sooner rather than later, so Ali Saif decided to give it to him in spite of the time.
In his bedroom at Park Lane, Emza Khan, rudely awakened, snarled into the phone, ‘Who in the hell is it at this hour?’
‘It’s Ali Saif. You said you’d like to be kept informed. I’m afraid we’ve had problems.’
‘Of what kind?’ Khan said.
So Ali Saif told him.
When he was finished, Khan exploded with rage. ‘This is not acceptable. What Ferguson and his people are doing is appalling, and what’s more, they seem to get away with it on a regular basis. Can’t Al Qaeda do something to stop them?’
‘I’m sure we can, given time. All this new information gives us insight on the way they operate. We’ll come up with a plan of action while you’re away in Paris.’
‘Along with Ferguson, the woman Gideon, and Dillon. Are you telling me you can’t deal with them in Paris? Is not Al Qaeda as powerful there as here?’
‘Oh yes,’ Ali Saif told him. ‘Very much so.’
‘Then speak to the right people, do something about it. Paris is full of narrow alleys and dark corners. Try and damage the woman, I should like to see her suffer, at the very least.’
‘At your command,’ Ali told him. ‘We will see what can be done.’
‘See that you do. Another woman, perhaps, who could get close to her. Do you have such a person?’
‘Yes, if she’s available.’
‘Who is she, what’s her name?’
Saif was trapped, afraid to argue. ‘Fatima Le Bon.’
‘Excellent, I like the sound of that. So she lives in Paris? What’s her address, phone number? Be quick, you idiot. I want to go back to sleep.’
With great reluctance but a certain amount of fear, Saif told him. ‘She’s true to the Cause.’
‘She’d better be. It would be a pity to have to send Rasoul to visit her and have a quiet word. Goodnight,’ and Khan slammed down the phone.
Ali Saif poured coffee, then produced a bottle of cognac from a drawer and poured a generous measure into a cut-glass tumbler. What fools these mortals be. That was Shakespeare, a man who had words to cover every situation, and Khan was a fool in spite of his wealth. Ali Saif was not a religious man, but Al Qaeda had supplied him with the right kind of action, a battle of wits, a great and wonderful game, and he had enjoyed every minute of it.
He produced a coded mobile and dialled a number in Paris. It was answered quite quickly. ‘Osama,’ he said.
‘Is risen’ was the reply in French, and it was a woman’s voice. ‘Who are you seeking?’
‘Fatima Le Bon, for Ali Saif,’ he replied in English.
She answered in the same language. ‘You’ve got a nerve, you Egyptian pig. I ended up in police hands again after that last drug bust. I thought I was going down for five years.’
‘Which you didn’t,’ he said. ‘Discharged with a clean bill of health. Now, who do you think made that possible?’
‘Okay,’ she said. ‘So AQ had a hand in it.’
‘Exactly, because we have sympathizers everywhere. I notice you’ve still held on to that special mobile phone I gave you last time when I was over. That’s good, and it proves you’re a good Muslim girl who believes in Osama.’
‘A bad Muslim girl who’s French Algerian, didn’t understand what Osama was talking about, and was bewildered when you turned up at that night court with a lawyer when I was charged with slashing that disgusting pimp Louis Le Croix’s cheek.’
‘A charge which was thrown out of court when your lawyer presented evidence that the knife was Le Croix’s, who was sentenced to five years, which he richly deserved for a litany of foul deeds, particularly where women were concerned.’
‘The evidence against him was false, and I’ve been paying you off ever since.’
‘Nonsense, you enjoy the game, just like me, especially when it’s filth like Le Croix who meet a bad end.’
‘Screw you, Saif. So what is it this time?’
‘There’s a lady in London giving us a problem.’
‘By us, you mean Al Qaeda?’
‘Of course. She’s staying at the Ritz.’
‘And you’d like her damaged? Does this mean permanently?’
‘Fatima, we are at war with the world. She is a soldier on the other side, which makes her fair game because she is our enemy. Her name is Captain Sara Gideon.’
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