safe enough. In any case, once I step off, you maneuver to a position from which you can do a quick take off. If they do grab me, just go. Fast.'

That subject, safety, had led to a hell of a row with Phillie. Hope we can make up, he thought. She'd be a hard girl to replace. What am I thinking? At my age she'd be an impossible girl to replace. Fortunately, I do have her example, insisting on getting on one of the medevac birds, to argue for me. I think it will work out.

'I sincerely hope you're right,' McCaverty said, as he circled the plane down to the now nearly vacant harbor. It touched down lightly, with only a minimal amount of splashing. He steered it for the docks where a small party of unarmed men, and a somewhat larger one of armed men, were waiting under a broad, fringed awning.

'I want to murder the filthy bastard,' Gutaale said, quite despite the smile plastered across his face.

'You'll do no such thing,' said Taban, standing beside him. Taban's tone carried the authority that came from speaking for the entire council of elders for the tribe. 'I warned you months ago that the precedent you were setting might come back and bite us all in the ass. That has happened and it is your fault. It is going to take years to undo the damage you have caused us, if it can be undone. If you harm this man, his followers will then execute your entire family-which, I remind you, is also closely related to the rest of us-and then proceed to destroy the rest of us. In short, old friend, no.'

'But he robbed me,' Gutaale pleaded, his smile disappearing in a hate-filled grimace. 'Virtually every cent I had to my, to our, name has been taken. All we have left is a couple of tons of melted gold bars under the ruins of the palace outside Nugaal. We are not only under the gun, we are now poor.'

'There are other NGOs,' Taban said. 'Plenty of Europeans and Americans you can pick the pockets of. Plenty of roads to be badly built. Plenty of food aid and free medicine that can be taken and sold. And we can rebuild our fleet of naval mujahadin, in time. But for all that we must be alive. Harm this man and, based on what his group has done so far, we will no longer be alive. So forget it. And get a smile back on your face.'

Stauer opened the door and was standing on the float even before McCaverty brought the plane to the edge of the dock. He made a little jump, trying hard not wince at the arthritis pains that shot across his knee, and landed well enough for a man in his fifties.

'I'm Wes Stauer,' he introduced himself. 'I am given to understand that you speak English. And I believe you have something that doesn't belong to you.'

'How do I know,' Gutaale asked, 'that you will release my family if I give you the boy?'

Stauer shook his head. 'You don't know. You can't know. But you can know that I've no personal reason for keeping them. And you can know, because I tell you so, that if you do not release the boy they will be turned over to Khalid. Khalid is much too personally involved in all this for you to expect the same kind of evenhanded, gentle treatment your family has received from me.'

'And if I say that I will have the boy put through a wood chipper?'

Stauer sneered, snorted, and then shrugged with practiced indifference. 'Then I say, so what? My contract was an either-or proposition. Either I get you to release the boy or I get Khalid the means of vast revenge. I get paid either way and, frankly, don't really care one way or the other.'

'Speaking of pay, I want my accountant back and I want my money back,' Gutaale said.

'No, and no. The money is now mine,' which Stauer considered the truth. He then lied, diplomatically, 'And your accountant, sadly, died under interrogation. You would be proud of the way he resisted us. Proud of the way he died with a blessing for your name on his lips and a plea for your forgiveness.' The colonel's face grew icy and hard, 'But it didn't stop him from shitting us everything you own. Several other members of his family, even more sadly, died, too.' My obligation to speak truthfully to an enemy is nonexistent until we make peace.

Gutaale shivered. This American bastard is even more vicious than the Arabs say they all are. Torturing to death a harmless accountant? Innocent family members?

'You killed my people!' Gutaale shouted, mostly to cover his own fear.

Stauer smiled again, saying, 'Yes, I did. Lots of them. If you think I regret that, you've been spending too much time surrounded by transnational progressives. What do I care how many I killed, or how, or even why? They stood in my way and they died. In droves.'

I have been spending too much time surrounded by progressives, Gutaale silently agreed.

'I told you you've been spending too much time around the NGOs,' Taban said in the local language, which he assumed, correctly, Stauer would not understand. 'I mean, steal from them? Sure. That's all they're good for. But eventually you lose sight of the fact that they're freaks, off key notes in Allah's great orchestra, and that the world is absolutely nothing like the fantasy they portray and think they live in.'

Stauer understood Taban's tone well enough, even if he didn't know the words. He consulted his watch, neither subtly nor ostentatiously. 'Look,' he said. 'I really don't have a lot of time for this. You've got forty-eight hours to have the boy here, ready for pick up. At that time I'll have our captives in boats standing offshore. A single plane will come for the boy. If he's here, and gets on the plane safely, then the boats holding your people will drop them off somewhere within five miles of here, unharmed. If the boy is not here, however . . . but why go into detail? The boy will be here, won't he?'

'He will be here,' Gutaale conceded, without a trace of good grace. 'Unharmed.'

D+1, Suakin, Sudan

Labaan found Makeda before he found Adam. The girl was washing clothing by hand in a tub. Bent over and concentrating, she didn't see him or hear him until he announced himself. 'Woman, have you seen your man this morning?'

'He went for a walk,' she replied, without bothering to look over her shoulder. 'He does that a lot since he agreed to your ‘parole.'' There was something in the keeper's voice that seemed to her to indicate a terrible upset. That, once she realized what it was, caused her to leave off her washing and turn around.

Yes, Labaan, for all his dark features, had gone pale.

'What is wrong?' she asked, immediately worried for both Adam and herself.

Labaan shook his head. 'Nothing that need concern you.' He shook it again, amending to, 'Nothing that will cause either of you any harm. But finish up your chores as quickly as possible-no, just forget them and go pack. You and he are . . . moving. Today. As soon as possible.'

'Moving?' she asked. 'To where?'

'Bandar Qassim,' he answered. 'From there . . . well . . . to Adam's home, I suppose.'

***

Since being captured, the only thing Makeda had ever been able to associate with automobiles was being carted off to market, or transferred from one owner to another. As such, she found the whole idea of riding in one most distressing. Indeed, it was distressing enough that she shook while standing next to the vehicle that had come for them, Adam's near presence notwithstanding.

'What's wrong, love?' he asked. When she told him, he said, 'I could tell you that I understand. Perhaps in some way I even do. But the deeper part of the thing? No, that I would have to experience myself to tell you I honestly understood it. A captive I have been. A slave, never.'

He grew quiet for a moment, before continuing, 'And neither shall you be, from the moment we leave this place. I don't know how to free you legally, since the whole thing is extralegal everywhere I know of. I can tell you that you are free. You can come with me. You can stay here-'

'Not on your life,' she said.

'I didn't think that was an option. Or you can come with me to my home and then go wherever you wish.'

'What do you want?' she asked.

He sighed. 'Me? I want you to stay with me.'

Labaan, at the wheel of the car, overheard. He is a good boy, he thought. And always was. If I had had a son . . .

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