Cairo or take the overnight train. But instead he proceeded to drive north along the Nile Valley, presumably intending to make it to Cairo by road. This was understandable – the further he took the jeep away from the western valley, the less likely Mansoor and the others were to be found. And this made Sarit more convinced that they were still alive.
Sarit calculated that she had two options – either to press on and try to catch Goliath, or to turn back to save the people she was supposed to protect. The drive back would take several hours and it was already dark. On the other hand, she had had to stop for petrol and was not sure if she was still in with a chance of catching up with Goliath. He might be driving fast, in excess of the speed limit. Of course she could do the same, but what if she was stopped by the police? The last thing she wanted to do was come to the attention of the authorities.
Finally, she made a decision. She pulled over by the roadside and logged on to the Internet via her mobile phone. Lacking the time for the usual photograph and steganography routine, she put a message on the wall of her social network page that said: I’m looking for big man. She just hoped that Dovi or someone at the Mossad would get it and give her a real-time update on his whereabouts.
Right now she didn’t have time to wait for an answer. Instead, she restarted the car and drove on, keeping to the main road north. After a while she got a message on her phone that a friend had commented on her wall. She pulled over again, logged on and saw a message that said: You’re only two kilometres away from the man of your dreams. Maybe you’ll have to chase him faster, but keep going the way you are and you’ll meet him.
She smiled and realized that Mossad were tracking both her and Goliath via the GPS on their mobile phones. The message implied that a slight acceleration would be all that she needed to catch up with him.
Looking at the terrain, she realized that she might find a quiet spot without witnesses where she could deal with Goliath once and for all. Then she remembered that this was a petrol car, not diesel and that meant she could nip this problem in the bud. Instead of restarting the car immediately, she got out, opened the tank and siphoned off some petrol into the soft drink bottle she had retained from the gas station. Using a rag from the boot of the car, which she soaked in petrol, she created a Molotov cocktail. She got back into the car and shoved it into the door compartment.
Now all she had to do was drive fast, without attracting the attention of the police. She realized that the way others were driving, she might just get away with it.
Chapter 39
Ignoring the blood and struggling desperately not to let the key slip from his fingers, Mansoor made another turn of his hand and just about managed to find the insert point of the padlock. But he still had to twist the key with his fingers to rotate it to the right angle to get it in. For a minute he thought it was going to slip from his sweaty grasp, but then he felt something catch and he realized that the key was in.
Now it was just a matter of turning it… turning it some more… and some more…
Yes!
The padlock was open. He pulled on the heavy lower part to disengage it, then he turned the bottom away ninety degrees. Finally he removed the whole thing and let it drop to the floor.
‘Quick! Let’s get him out!’ Daniel yelled to Gabrielle. Mansoor was hardly able to speak.
They pushed the door open and Daniel rushed round to the other side to help free Mansoor’s hand, gently guiding it through so that the sharp metal didn’t tear into the flesh any further.
But it was already clear from the blood pouring out that an artery had been opened. Mansoor sat down and lifted his arm above the level of his heart while Daniel applied arterial pressure using his belt to stem the flow of blood.
‘I still can’t get a signal,’ said Gabrielle, frantically moving her mobile phone this way and that in the hope of getting it to work. She tried the same with Daniel’s phone, and Mansoor’s, but she was unable to get a signal.
‘What are we going to do?’ she asked.
‘You’ll have to walk. Go that way,’ said Mansoor, pointing west towards the Nile Valley. ‘Leave me here and get help.’
‘We have to take you with us,’ said Daniel, brushing off Mansoor’s selflessness.
‘We haven’t got a stretcher.’
‘You can still walk, can’t you?’
‘I can still walk, but I’d only slow you down.’
Daniel looked at Gabrielle. She had been panicking before when she thought that they were going to spend their last few days dying of starvation in the unused tomb of an ancient pharaoh, but now that her own life was no longer under threat, her concern turned to her former teacher.
‘Are you sure you won’t be in any danger here?’
He looked around and pointed this way and that contemptuously. ‘My dear girl, do you see any predators around here? Any lions or tigers, perhaps? Or maybe a wild camel?’
It was true that male camels could become violent to the point of killing during the mating season, if anything got between them and the fertile females, but aside from that, there was no danger out here in the desert.
‘I’m sorry. I was just concerned.’
She was none too bothered by his irascible response. She knew his character very well after all these years.
‘I’ll be all right, just as long as you get help. Make sure you tell them my exact location.’
‘Should we ask them to use a helicopter?’ asked Daniel, suddenly feeling unsure.
‘They’ll know what to do!’ snapped Mansoor. ‘Just tell them my circumstances. Now go!’
For a split second, Daniel and Gabrielle hesitated, meeting each other’s eyes, as if seeking the other’s approval for what might seem like a callous act. Then Daniel took the initiative, nodded and set off, followed a second or two later by Gabrielle.
‘Wait!’ Mansoor cried out.
They froze and turned to see the Egyptian holding out his mobile phone.
‘Take my phone. Keep checking it. As soon as you get a signal, call the number I’ve keyed into it. It’s the nearest hospital.’
‘We can do that on our phones,’ said Daniel. ‘Just give us the number.’
‘My phone is better in these conditions. Also the pair of you kept checking your e-mail, like little Western nerds. You’re probably low on juice.’
‘But we can’t leave you without a phone,’ said Gabrielle, her voice weak with guilt.
‘A phone doesn’t do me any good without a signal.’ He held out the mobile to Daniel. ‘Now, get going! And make it quick.’
And with that, they were off. It was one of those walks that seemed to become less tiring as it continued. After the first couple of hundred yards, they already felt sore, perhaps because of muscle cramps. They had spent several hours immobile in the tomb and when they came out into the open, the night air was cooler than they had expected now the sun had gone in. But as they continued and their muscles warmed up, it became easier.
But it was the psychological exhaustion that made it truly tiring – the thought of how much depended on them getting help in time. Also Daniel felt worn-out at the thought of how long they would have to walk even to get to the edge of the Nile Valley. It was a five-mile walk, but the terrain was rough and Daniel knew that even at their current brisk pace it would take them at least an hour. It wasn’t so much the prospect of an hour’s walk that worried him: it was concern for what would happen to Mansoor in the meantime.
How long did he have? How rapidly was he losing blood?
Daniel looked over at Gabrielle and saw from the look on her face that she too was concerned. Without any exchange of words, she seemed to pick up on his suggestion and whipped out her phone. The look in her eyes said it all even before she put it away again. He tried to get a signal with his, but had no more luck, and Mansoor’s proved no better, despite his confidence.
They carried on more in desperation than hope, Gabrielle taking the lead.
‘I wish I’d followed my nephews’ advice and got into shape sooner,’ said Daniel, trying to make light of the situation.