they learnt I was leaving to join the Army.'

'Everybody's down on your dad,' Harry said. 'The union too. Since them Wogs blew up the Underground, the whole bluddy population has got a new attitude toward things. It seems there's a couple o' Arab blokes down at that warehouse that's come under suspicion. It was thought your dad might be involved with 'em.'

Sikes reached over and picked up another bottle of beer from the bunch on the floor. After opening it, he settled back in the camp chair, glancing at his older friend. 'I know things might look bad, Harry. I went from good to bad soldier after that commissioning thing, y'know?'

Harry shook his head. 'I never understood that, Archie. Don't get upset with me, but it seems you 'ad a good chance for a commission, but in a different regiment. You shoulda took it, lad.'

'There's such a thing as pride, Harry,' Sikes said testily. 'The fact they said I wasn't good enough for 'em just set me off, hey? Maybe it wasn't logical, but that's the way I felt, and I ain't sorry about it. I ain't sorry about nothing.'

Harry eyed him carefully. 'Ain't you even sorry about deserting from the Army?'

'Hell, no!' Archie exclaimed loudly, then quickly quieted. 'They was gonna kick me out when we got back to Blighty anyhow. They ruined me life, Harry. There I was doing fine in the Army, a sergeant and all, and then they turn around and treat me like shit. It wasn't my fault!'

'I can see yer point, lad,' Harry said. 'I ain't putting no blame on you.'

'It's gonna turn out alright, don't you worry none about that,' Sikes assured him. 'I got a good command for this invasion, and when we finish up in Afghanistan and take over Pakistan, I'll be sitting pretty in the Iranian Army. I'm a major now and expect to be at least a brigadier when we start our operations over on the other side o' the Persian Gulf. I got real glory ahead o' me, Harry. I'll be able to make up for all that trouble and bother I caused me mum and dad.'

Harry smiled. 'O' course you will. No problem with that, 'ey?'

'I'll have a lot o' money,' Sikes said. 'I can send 'em enough to buy a nice house, and my dad won't have to worry about his job. If I'm a gen'ral, the British government and Army have got to forgive me past sins, hey? Maybe I'll even be able to go home for a visit. I mean, they got to show respect to a bluddy gen'ral, ain't they?'

'I would think so,' Harry said. He lowered his voice and leaned closer to the younger man. ''Ere, Archie. I notice there ain't no birds around 'ere. When's the last time you got yourself a bit o' tail, 'ey?'

Sikes grinned and shrugged. 'I had one of them temporary marriages when I was with the Pashtuns. A thirteen-year-old. But she was mature for her age, Harry. It ain't like I was having it on with a little kid.'

'Sure,' Harry said. 'Them Pashtun girls grow up fast.' He winked at Sikes. 'I know a place up near Tehran called Khoshi. It's a special place for foreigners. Lots o' liquor and women. We could go up there, you and me, and 'ave us a bit o' fun. Know what I mean?'

'Oh, yeah!' Sikes said. 'I feel bluddy deprived, I do. But ain't that risky what with Islamic law and all that?'

Harry shook his head. 'The government knows about the place. Them Muslims ain't all stupid. They know they need a place where special guests from the West can get away and ease up a bit.'

'I bet a lot them Iranians go there too, hey?'

'They'd be in deep shit,' Harry said seriously. 'There's times when them mad followers of Islam are 'arder on their own kind than on us infidels.'

'I switched to Islam,' Sikes reminded him.

'Nobody over there is gonna know about it,' Harry said. 'You'll just be another soul damned by Allah as far as they'll know.'

'The invasion is set for the twentieth,' Sikes said.

'That's a week away,' Harry said. 'We could go up there tomorrow morning and be back in a couple o' days. There's plenty o' time.'

'Yeah!' Sikes said. 'I'll turn the comp'ny over to Hashiri.' He raised the beer bottle. 'Let's do it, Harry!'

'Alright, lad,' Harry Turpin said. 'I'll take care o' everything.'

.

SIKES' QUARTERS

14 SEPTEMBER 0200 HOURS

UNDER normal circumstances, Sikes would have been fast asleep after an evening in which he had consumed a dozen bottles of beer. But he was so excited about getting away to that fleshpot for sex, serious drinking, and celebrating, that the effects of the brew had evaporated.

He was also sobered by thoughts about his parents. He hadn't realized the amount of trouble he had caused them. When he deserted, he figured they would be embarrassed, but that that would blow over after a while. The idea of his father enduring a night of police interrogation pained him deeply. His mother's anguish also bit deep into his spirits of well-being. She was fully devoted to his father, and any suffering he went through would be felt doubly by her.

He lay on his bunk, looking up at the darkness of the canvas above him, turning his thoughts to what he could do to help his parents. He smiled as his mind ran through a scenario in which a telegram arrives at his old home. It comes in the early evening, and his mother answers the door. She takes it into his father, who is watching the telly from his usual easy chair. He opens the telegram, then leaps to his feet. He shouts, 'It's a wire for fifty thousand pounds . . . it's from Archie . . . there's more money to come . . . lots more . . . and Archie is a general in the Iranian Army!'

Sikes smiled sleepily to himself, then eased into a deep slumber.

CHAPTER 22

KHOSHI, IRAN

14 SEPTEMBER

IT had been one hell of a day for Archie Sikes, the wandering lad from Manchester, England.

He and his mate, Harry Turpin, had arrived at the airstrip outside the small but modern and chic town of Khoshi at 0830 hours after a short hop from the city of Sabzevar aboard a Cessna Citation S-11. Harry, always insisting on traveling in style, had chartered the aircraft from a private company in Tehran. The trip from the Special Forces camp to the airport hadn't been particularly luxurious, however. They had to hitch a ride in an army supply transport truck, sitting in the front with the driver while their luggage bounced around in the back.

But the dusty ride was forgotten when the Citation landed at Khoshi and the two revelers disembarked from the aircraft. The pilot would be waiting for them for some twenty-four hours, and the international arms dealer had gotten him a room in the same hotel where he and Sikes would be settling in.

Almost immediately after checking in at the Ritz-Kraus, a German-run hostelry, the two Brits left the place to begin exploring the delights offered in the desert sin city. In comparison to Las Vegas, U. S. A., it was a minor- league resort, but to Sikes, who had spent long months in the hinterlands of the Iran-Afghanistan border as well as an isolated military camp, it was like arriving on the French Riviera. Paved streets! Sidewalks! Restaurants! Theaters! Bars!

And, best of all, women!

Harry knew the place well and served as an expert and considerate guide. The first place they went was to Khoshi's finest bordello, called Le Baron. Although it was early in the morning, the place was in full operation. When they walked in, Sikes noted that the 'parlor' was actually a bar furnished like a living room, with sofas, love seats, and easy chairs. It was plush and heavily decorated with heavy drapes, a deep Persian rug, and scantily clad females. The clientele, all foreigners stationed in Iran, were having the times of their lives, and a couple of them appeared as if they might have been in the brothel two or three days. These were all Europeans and were doing their best to have some fun during a short respite from their places of employment in the midst of Islamic law.

Harry was well known in the place, and a huge African bouncer greeted him like an old friend. The proprietress, a middle-aged, fleshy Algerian woman named Lola, rushed to the Brit, giving him a tight hug around the middle while planting a wet kiss on his cheek. Lola had once worked in a regimental brothel of the French Foreign Legion, and although Harry hadn't known her during his own legion days, he had visited his own unit's mobile military whorehouse countless times between operations against the Algerian rebels.

After enduring the emotional salutation from Lola, Harry laid his hand on Sikes' shoulder. ''Ere now, Lola, this is a mate o' mine from England. 'Is name is Archie.'

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