'There is the desert road, but it will add another four hours to the journey. There are still checkpoints, but fewer. And the guards are more likely to accept baksheesh. The road, however, is still dangerous.'
'How so?'
'There are potholes – deep ones; deep enough to shatter an axle. And after a storm, the sand can bury several kilometres of tarmac, forcing you off-road. You would need a four-by-four, at the very least.'
Mansour must have realized, the second he'd opened his mouth, that he'd walked straight into that one. He added almost immediately: 'Of course, Al-Inn, you are at liberty to take my car. In fact, it would be an honour . . .'
I turned to Lynn. 'Grab whatever you think might help us on the road: a map, even if Mansour's Q7 has sat nav; water – lots of it; and food – as much as you can find, so we can eat on the move.'
I packed the revolver in my day sack and pocketed the Makarov along with Mansour's mobile phone.
Mansour told me where in his study he kept his spare mags and ammo. I went and took all I could fit into the day sack.
It was there that I also found his money – just as Lynn had predicted: a briefcase full of dollars – roughly ten grand's worth. Ten grand would go a long way in the
Lynn was still emptying the fridge of water bottles when I got back. I ripped at the clingfilm to release Mansour.
He rubbed his wrists. 'What are you going to do with me?'
I tapped my watch. 'You've got five minutes to get dressed. Then you're coming with us.'
PART EIGHT
95
We drove out of Tripoli into the rising sun.
I was at the wheel. Lynn was in the back, and Mansour was beside me, ready to take on any checkpoints. Nobody spoke much. Nobody needed to. All I'd had to do was reset the sat nav's voice commands from Arabic to English and load in Ajdabiya. According to Mansour, the house we wanted was located on the beach. His memory wasn't great. He'd have to point out the actual building once we got there.
We got past the city limits. I'd given Lynn the .38 and told him to keep behind Mansour's seat. On the coast road, with the sea on our left, the desert stretching away on our right, there weren't many opportunities for the Libyan to cut and run, but there was no telling what he might try.
I glanced across at him. 'What's with the Russian?'
'Excuse me?'
'You started to talk to me first in Arabic, then in Russian. Why?'
'I didn't know who you were. I
Lynn leant forward. 'Why would the Russians be after you?'
Mansour kept his eyes on the road. 'I have always been a survivor, Al-Inn. But how could a man like me, with my background, survive in the new Libya? Our Great Leader had publicly renounced terrorism. He'd informed the world that Libya was ridding itself of its ballistic missiles, its weapons of mass destruction. I had emerged from prison with nothing. Nobody was interested in a disgraced former spy. What was I to do?'
'What did you do?' Lynn asked.
'All I had were my connections – contacts built up over many years – and my interests . . .
'Now, many people come to Libya to look for these artefacts. I know what is out there, Al-Inn. I have spent years in the desert. The desert is my home. There are places I know that nobody else does. Why should some archaeology student from an American, Italian, British or French university be allowed to make these discoveries – to take these antiquities back home with them, supposedly for study? They are Libya's heritage and they should stay here.'
I couldn't see the problem. If some geek with a metal-detector discovered Septimus Severus's money box, he should be allowed to hang on to it. Finders, keepers.
But Mansour was getting sparked up. 'It is we who should decide what is to be bought and sold, what is to stay or leave my country.'
I loved how this guy twisted and spun. Now he'd recast himself as some kind of custodian of national treasures. It was fucking obvious he wasn't just squirrelling these objects away for posterity; he was trading them as well, and not on eBay.
I kept my eyes glued to the potholes that peppered the lumpy tarmac. 'And that's where the Russians fit