At some point he had fallen asleep or lost consciousness and woken back in the cell. He can hear people outside now… a key rattling in the lock… the hinges groan. The same guards pull him upright, pushing him along the passageway. He needs to pee. The desire borders on torment.
Another room. A table. Two chairs. A single light bulb. A window. A familiar figure. General al-Uzri takes off his jacket. His forearms bulge below the short sleeves of a cotton shirt. His jacket is folded and placed neatly on a spare chair.
“I am sorry to have kept you waiting,” he says. “I trust you have been treated well.”
“No.”
“Perhaps our prisons aren’t quite up to American standards.”
He uses the word “American” like it belongs to a lesser life form.
“Why am I here?”
“You have been accused of killing two unarmed civilians in a village near Mosul.”
“We were fired upon by insurgents.”
“Not according to our witnesses.”
“What witnesses?”
“The men you murdered had wives and families.”
“They were insurgents.”
“You targeted the pickup. You shot out the nearside tires causing the vehicle to roll. Then you stopped and poured petrol over the occupants and set them alight.”
“That’s bullshit! We were fired upon. I can show you the bullet holes.”
“Your driver has given us a statement.”
Luca struggles to breathe. He’s talking about Jamal.
“I don’t have a driver.”
The general laughs. “Such loyalty is commendable, but you have left it rather late to be so protective of your accomplices.”
Luca half rises from his seat, but strong hands shove him down.
Al-Uzri takes a matchstick from a box on the table and chews the end to a fibrous tail, painting spit across his teeth.
“What were you doing in the village?”
“Researching a story.”
“What story?”
“The murder of four bank guards.”
“A falling out among thieves.”
“No, it was more than that.”
Al-Uzri touches his chin with his index finger.
“Vigilante justice. Innocent people dying. Nobody ever held to account. Do you think that Iraqi law doesn’t apply to you because you carry a foreign passport?”
“No.”
“Do you think you’re better than we are?”
Luca shakes his head. The general has taken a knife from the scabbard on his belt. It has one serrated edge and the other one smooth, sharp, tapering to a point. He splays one hand on the table and places the tip of the blade between his thumb and forefinger, holding the knife vertically.
“This country is old. My ancestors created writing and philosophy and religion when yours were painting drawings on rock walls. This was the cradle of civilization, but still you treat us like savages and barbarians.”
In a blur of speed, the knife rises and falls, spearing the table between each of his fingers, back and forth, tracing his hand. He stops and raises his fingers. Not a scratch.
He signals a young officer to come closer. “Would you die for me?”
“Yes, General.”
“Put your hand on the table. Spread your fingers. Would you lose a finger for me?”
He hesitates. Al-Uzri laughs.
“What is the more realistic fear-dying or losing a finger, eh? Perhaps you would like to try it, Mr. Terracini?”
“I’m not a fan of party tricks.”
“No? I saw the result of your party near Mosul. Your visa has been canceled. You have two days to leave Iraq.”
“On what grounds?”
“Undesirable activities.”
“Bogus grounds.”
The general chuckles wetly. “Complain to your embassy. See if anyone listens. You are not the most popular journalist in Iraq, Mr. Terracini. Messengers are not valued when they bring nothing but bad news.”
Al-Uzri has a thin trickle of blood dripping from the end of his index finger. A nick. He slides the knife into a scabbard and adjusts his beret. Luca is dragged to his feet and pushed against the wall. Handcuffed and hooded, he is taken up the stairs, into the daylight. A gust of wind brings the familiar stink of the city beneath the fabric.
The car journey has none of the menace and uncertainty as when he was arrested. The police officers are talking about football and their favorite pastry shops. Anger replaces the fear. He’s alive. Resentful. Worried about Jamal.
The hood is lifted. Brightness stabs at his eyes. They’re moving through a checkpoint into the International Zone. A policeman leans across the seat and gives him a plastic bag containing his mobile phone, his wallet, but not his pistol.
He is handed over to a military attache at the US Embassy. Two uniformed guards escort him along marbled corridors, past triumphant arches and iron busts of Saddam Hussein. He is taken to a waiting room with a view across the sluggish brown river. Downstream, two bridges, bombed and rebuilt, are bowing under the weight of traffic. Beyond them, flat-bottomed skiffs ferry passengers between the banks.
On a table there are copies of the Wall Street Journal and Newsweek, fanned in a perfect circle. A TV monitor is playing Bloomberg, with market quotes streaming under a woman who is speaking from half a world away.
Moments later an inner door opens and a man in his mid-forties ushers Luca inside, pointing to a chair. His eyes seem to radiate earnestness and goodwill.
His name is Jennings. He doesn’t give a first one. The State Department seems to have dispensed with given names. He looks like a former college football star or a future politician, with one of those preppy hair partings that have been fashionable since John Kennedy was in the White House. Dressed in casual trousers, a shirt and tie, he has ink smudges on his fingers. He opens a briefcase and takes out a file, a stapler and a selection of pens. Props.
In a cracked-sounding voice, like he’s hoarse from shouting, he begins listing charges.
“The Iraqis have withdrawn your visa. You have forty-eight hours in which to leave the country.”
“I want to appeal.”
“There is no process of appeal.”
“You can make a request-government to government.”
Jennings laughs. “This country doesn’t have a government.”
“I was drugged by the Iraqi police.”
“So you say.”
“I’m a journalist.”
Jennings shrugs dismissively. “What do you think that means? Special privileges? The law doesn’t apply? You think you understand this place, Mr. Terracini, just because you speak the language, but you’re no different to the other hacks and glory hounds who turn up here wanting to put gloss on a new career or resurrect a fading one. You look at this country and think you’re going to sum it up in a thousand crisp words, but you wind up in the bar of the al-Hamra trying to make sense of the horror. Nobody understands this place.”
“They can’t just kick me out.”
“Yes they can.”
Jennings forces himself to relax, pulling his neck from side to side until the vertebrae pop.