and Hopper and his team.'
'A slight change in your plan to frighten off any future inspections by World Health scientists,' said Bordeaux. 'The plane crashed all right, but the bodies on board were not those of Dr. Hopper and the rest.'
'They're still alive?'
'They're as good as dead. Kazim sent them to Tebezza.'
Yerli nodded. 'Better they should have died quickly than in the mines of Tebezza as overworked and starved slaves.' Yerli paused thoughtfully, then said, 'I think Kazim has made a mistake.'
'The secret of their true situation is safe,' said Bordeaux indifferently. 'No one escapes from Tebezza. They go into the mines and never come out.'
Yerli took a Kleenex out of his coat pocket and began wiping the lenses of his binoculars. 'Did Hopper discover any evidence that might prove damaging to Fort Foureau?'
'Enough to cause renewed interest and promote a deeper investigation if his report had been made public.'
'What is known about the NUMA agent who escaped?'
'His name is Gunn, and he's the Deputy Director of the National Underwater and Marine Agency.'
'An influential man.'
'Indeed.'
'Where is he now?'
'We traced the aircraft that evacuated him to Paris, where he boarded a Concorde for Washington. From there, he was taken directly to NUMA headquarters. My sources say he was still inside the building as of forty minutes ago.'
'Is it known if he smuggled vital information out of Mali?'
'Whatever information he obtained, if any, from the Niger River is a mystery to us. But Mr. Massarde feels confident nothing was discovered that could jeopardize the Fort Foureau operation.'
'Kazim should have an easy time making the other two Americans talk.'
'I received word just as I left to meet you. Unfortunately, they escaped too.'
Yerli stared at Bordeaux in sudden irritation. 'Who bungled?'
Bordeaux shrugged. 'Makes no difference, who's to blame. Frankly, it's not our concern. What's important is that they are still inside the country. There is little hope of them escaping over the border. It's only a matter of hours before Kazim's search operation hunts them down.'
'I should fly down to Washington and penetrate NUMA. With the right moves I might discover if there was more behind this than a cut-and-dried pollution investigation.'
'Let that go for now,' said Bordeaux coolly. 'Mr. Massarde has other work for you.'
'Did he clear it with my superiors at the National Defense Staff?'
'Your official release for outside duty will be conveyed to you within the hour.'
Yerli said nothing but resumed peering through his glasses at the little nuthatch that was still perched bottom-side-up, pecking away at the bark of the tree trunk. 'What does Massarde have in mind?'
'He wants you in Mali to act as liaison to General Kazim.'
Yerli showed no reaction. He kept the glasses trained on the bird as he spoke. 'I was assigned for eight months in the Sudan some years ago. A dreadful place. The people were quite friendly though.'
'One of Massarde Enterprises' jets will be waiting at La Guardia Airport. You're to board at six o'clock this evening.'
'So I'm to play nursemaid to Kazim to prevent him from making any further blunders.'
Bordeaux nodded. 'The stakes are too high to allow the madman to run amok.'
Yerli reinserted his binoculars in their case and slung it over his shoulder. 'I once dreamed I died in the desert,' he said quietly. 'I pray to Allah that it was just that. . . a dream.'
In a typical windowless room somewhere in a little traveled part of the Pentagon building, Air Force Major Tom Greenwald put down the phone after notifying his wife he would be late for dinner. He relaxed for a long minute as he turned his thoughts from the satellite photo analysis of the fighting going on between Chinese army units and democratic rebel forces to the job at hand.
The film from the GeoSat cameras sent by courier from Chip Webster at NUMA was processed and loaded in the military's sophisticated display and enhancing equipment. When all was ready, Greenwald settled himself in a comfortable chair with a console installed in one arm. He opened a can of Diet Pepsi and began turning the dials and knobs on the console as he stared up at a television monitor the size of a small movie theater screen.
The GeoSat photos reminded him of the old spy-in-the-sky images of thirty years ago. Granted, the GeoSat was designed purely for space geological and water current survey, but it came nowhere close to the incredible imagery detail received by the latest intelligence-gathering Pyramider and Houdini satellites sent up by the space shuttles. Yet it was a vast improvement over the old LandSat that mapped the earth for over twenty years. The new model had cameras that could penetrate darkness and cloud cover, and even smoke.
Greenwald made adjustments and corrections with his console as each photo, showing different sections of the Malian northern desert, crossed the viewing screen and was computer-enhanced. He soon began to pick out tiny specks that were flying aircraft and a camel train winding across the desert floor from the salt mines of Taoudenni south to Timbuktu.
As the photo trail moved north from the Niger into the Azaouad, a barren region of dunes and nothingness that made up but one of the many areas of the Sahara, Greenwald found fewer and fewer signs of human presence. He could discern bones of animals, camels most likely, scattered around isolated wells, but a standing human was very difficult to detect, even for his exotic electronics systems.
After nearly an hour, Greenwald rubbed his tired eyes and massaged his temples. He had found nothing that indicated the slightest trace of the two men he had been asked to look for. The photos of the extreme northerly search grid that Webster thought they might have reached on foot were examined unsuccessfully and set aside.
Greenwald had done his bit for the cause and was about to call it a day and go home to his wife, but he decided to give it one final try. Years of experience had taught him that a target was never where he expected to find it. He sifted out the satellite photos revealing the deeper regions of the desolate Azaouad and gave them a fast scan.
The stark void appeared as empty as the Dead Sea.
He almost missed it, he would have missed it but for an indescribable feeling that a tiny object on the landscape did not fit its surroundings. It might have passed as a rock or a small dune, but the shape was not irregular like geology produced by nature. The lines were straight and well defined. His hand moved over a row of knobs, magnifying and enhancing the object.
Greenwald knew he was on to something. He was too much the expert to be fooled. During the war with Iraq, he became something of a legend for his uncanny knack at detecting the Iraqi army's hidden bunkers, tank and artillery emplacements.
'A car,' he muttered aloud to himself. 'A car covered over with sand to hide its presence.'
After tighter study, he could distinguish two tiny specks alongside the car. Greenwald wished he was looking at images received from a military satellite. He could have read the time on the target's wristwatches. But the GeoSat was not built for fine detail. Even with careful tuning he could just make them out as two humans.
Greenwald took a moment to sit back and savor his discovery. Then he walked over to a nearby desk and dialed a phone. He waited patiently, hoping that a taped voice wouldn't come on with an announcement to leave a message. On the fifth ring, a man answered who sounded as if he was out of breath.
'Hello.'
'Chip?'
'Yes. This Tom?'
'You been jogging?'
'The wife and I were out in the backyard talking to neighbors,' explained Webster. 'I ran like hell when I heard the phone ringing.'
'I found something I think you'll be interested in.'
'My two men, you pulled them from the GeoSat photos?'
'They're over 100 kilometers further north than you reckoned,' said Greenwald.