eyes and send her north to Petr. If they’re not, cut up Najoud slowly and keep them close-confined here, until the pilot’s dead by whatever means, then send her north. And Pahmudi! Now I’m putting a price on his head that would tempt even Satan. Ahmed, offer it first to Fazir and tell him I want vengeance, I want Pahmudi racked, poisoned, cut up, mutilated, castrated…
His heart began creaking, palpitating, and he lifted his hand to rub his chest but his hand did not move. Not an inch. Even now as he looked down at it lying on the bedspread, willing it to move, there was no motion. Nothing. Nor feeling. Neither in his hand nor in his arm. Fear gushed through him. Don’t be afraid, the nurse said, he reminded himself desperately, sound of waves roaring in his ears. You’ve had a stroke, that’s all, not a bad one the doctor said and he said many people have strokes. Old Komargi had one a year or so ago and he’s still alive and active and claims he can still bed his young wife. With modern treatment… you’re a good Muslim and you’ll go to Paradise so there’s nothing to fear, nothing to fear, nothing to fear… nothing to fear, if I die I go to Paradise…
I don’t want to die, he shrieked. I don’t want to die, he shrieked again, but it was only in his head and no sound came out.
“What is it, Highness?”
He saw Ahmed’s anxiety and that calmed him a little. God be thanked for Ahmed. I can trust Ahmed, he thought, sweat pouring out of him. Now what do I want him to do? “Fam’ly, all he’re later. First Az’deh, H’kim, Naj’oud - under’s’d?”
“Yes, Highness. To confirm the succession?”
“Y’es.”
“I have your permission to question Her Highness?”
He nodded, his eyelids leaden, waiting for the pain in his chest to lessen. While he waited he moved his legs, feeling pins and needles in his feet. But nothing moved, not the first time, only the second, and only then with an effort. Terror rushed back into him. In panic he changed his mind: “Pay ran’som quick’ly, get pil’ot here, Erikki here, me to Teh’ran. Under’stand?” He saw Ahmed nod. “Quickly,” he mouthed and motioned him to go but his left hand still did not move. Terrified he tried his right hand and it worked, not easily, but it moved. Part of his panic subsided. “Pay ran’som no’w - kee’p secr’t. Get nur’se.”
*
AT THE JULFA TURNOFF: 6:25 P.M. Hashemi Fazir and Armstrong were once more in ambush under the snow-laden trees. Below the Chevy waited, lights off, windows open, two men in the front seat, just as before. Down the slope behind them both sides of the Julfa-Tabriz road were primed for the intercept with half a hundred paramilitary poised. The sun had vanished over the mountains and now the sky was blackening perceptibly. “He’s not got much more time,” Hashemi muttered again.
“He arrived at dusk last time. It’s not dusk yet.”
“Piss on him and his ancestors - I’m chilled to the bone.” “Not long now, Hashemi, old chap!” If it was up to him, Armstrong knew he would wait forever to catch Mzytryk, alias Suslev, alias Brodnin. He had offered to wait in Tabriz after the debacle on Saturday: “Leave me the men, Hashemi, I’ll lead the ambush Tuesday. You go back to Tehran, I’ll wait here and get him and bring him to you.”
“No, I’ll leave at once and be back early Tuesday. You can stay here.” “Here” was a safe house, an apartment overlooking the Blue Mosque, warm and stocked with whisky. “You really meant what you said to Abdollah Khan, Hashemi, that now you’re the law here and SAVAMA and Pahmudi are powerless without your support?”
“Yes, oh, yes.”
“Pahmudi really got under Abdollah’s skin. What’s that all about?” “Pahmudi had Abdollah banned from Tehran.”
“Christ! Why?”
“Old enmity, goes back years. Ever since Abdollah became Khan in ‘53, he truculently advised various prime ministers and court officials to be cautious over political reforms and so-called modernizations. Pahmudi, the well- bred, European-trained intellectual, despised him, was always against him, always blocking him from private access to the Shah. Unfortunately for the Shah, Pahmudi had the Shah’s ear.”
“To betray him in the end.”
“Oh, yes, Robert, perhaps even from the beginning. The first time Abdollah Khan and Pahmudi clashed openly was in ‘63 over the Shah’s proposed reforms, giving the women the vote, giving the voting franchise to non-Muslims and allowing non-Muslims to be elected to the Majlis. Of course. Abdollah, along with every thinking Iranian, knew this would bring an immediate outcry from all religious leaders, particularly Khomeini who was just getting into his stride then.”
“Almost unbelievable that no one could get to the Shah,” Armstrong had said, “to warn him.”
“Many did, but no one with enough influence. Most of us agreed with Khomeini, openly or secretly. I did. Abdollah lost round after round with Pahmudi - against all our advice the Shah changed the calendar from the Islamic one as sacred to Muslims as B.C. and A.D. are to Christians and tried to force a phony counting back to Cyrus the Great… of course that blew the minds of all Muslims, and after near revolution it was withdrawn …” Hashemi finished his drink and poured another. “Then, publicly, Pahmudi told Abdollah to piss off, literally - I have it all documented - taunted him that he was stupid, behind the times, living in the Dark Ages, ‘Is it any wonder coming from Azerbaijan,’ and to stay out of Tehran until he was summoned or he would be arrested. Worse he jeered at him, at a major function, and had thinly veiled cartoons published in the press.” “I never took Pahmudi for that much of a fool,” Armstrong said to encourage him to continue, wondering if he would make a slip and reveal something of value.
“Thank God he is - and why his days are numbered.”
Armstrong remembered the strange confidence that had pervaded Hashemi and how unsettled he had been. The feeling had stayed with him all during the waiting for Hashemi to return to Tabriz, unwise to wander the streets that were still filled with rival mobs trying to possess them. During the day the police and loyalist army maintained the peace in the name of the Ayatollah - at night, it was difficult if not impossible to stop small groups of fanatics bent on violence from terrorizing parts of the city: “We can still stamp them out, easily, if that old devil Abdollah will help us,” Hashemi had said angrily.
“Abdollah Khan still has so much power, even like that, half dead?” “Oh, yes, he’s still hereditary chief of a vast tribe - his wealth, hidden and real, would rival a shah’s, not Mohammed Reza Shah’s but certainly his father’s.”
“He’s going to die soon. What then?”
“His heir’ll have the same power - presuming that poor sonofabitch Hakim stays alive to use it. Did I tell you he’s made him heir?” “No. What’s strange about that?”
“Hakim is his eldest son who’s been banished to Khoi for years in disgrace. He’s been brought back and reinstated.”
“Why? Why was he banished?”
“The usual - he was caught plotting to send his father on - as Abdollah did his father.”
“You’re sure?”
“No, but curiously Abdollah’s father died at your Mzytryk’s dacha in Tbilisi.” Hashemi smiled sardonically at the effect of his information. “Of apoplexy.”
“How long have you known?”
“Long enough. We’ll ask your Mzytryk if it’s true when we catch him. We will catch him, though it’d certainly be easier with Abdollah alive.” Hashemi became grimmer. “I hope he stays alive long enough to order support for us to stop the war. Then he can rot. I hate that vile old man for double-dealing and double-crossing and using us all for his own purposes, that’s why I taunted him with Pahmudi. Sure I hate him, even so I’d never deliver him to Pahmudi, he’s too much of a patriot in his own vile way. Well I’m off to Tehran, Robert, you know where to find me. You’d like company for your bed?”
“Just hot and cold running water.”
“You should experiment a little, try a boy for a change. Oh, for the love of God don’t be so embarrassed. There’re so many times you disappoint me, I don’t know why I’m so patient with you.”
“Thanks.”
“You English’re all so depraved and twisted about sex, too many of you overt or covert homosexuals which the rest of you find disgusting and sinful and vile in the extreme, against the laws of God - which it isn’t. And yet in Arabia where connection between men is historically normal and ordinary - because by law it’s hands off a woman