'Not against 'human wave' attacks by nearly two million Arabs,' warned Vyhousky. 'Assad's forces will drive south while Yazid's Egyptians attack north across the Sinai, as they did in 'sixty-seven and
'seventy-three. Only this time h-an's army will sweep over Saudi Arabia and Jordan, crossing the River Jordan from the West. Despite their fighting skills and superior technology, the Israelis will be overwhelmed.'
'And when the slaughter finally ends,' added Korolenko ominously, 'the West will be thrown into a state of economic depression when the united Muslim governments, with total control of fifty-five percent of the world's oil reserves, drive prices to astronomical heights. As they surely will.'
'Your bet,' Nichols said to Schiller.
'Two bucks.'
'Raise you two,' came Korolenko.
Vyhousky threw his cards on the table. 'I fold.'
The Senator contemplated his hand a moment. 'I'll match the four and raise another four.'
'The sharks are circling,' said Nichols with a tight smile. 'Count me out.'
'Let's not kid ourselves,' said the Senator. 'It's no secret the Israelis have a small arsenal of nuclear weapons, and they won't hesitate to use them if they're down to the last roll of the dice.'
Schiller sighed deeply. 'I don't even like to think about the consequences.' He looked up as his boat's skipper knocked on the door and hesitantly stepped in.
'Excuse me for interrupting, Mr. Schiller, but there's an important call for you.'
Schiller pushed his cards toward Nichols. 'No sense in prolonging the agony with this hand. Would you excuse me?'
One of the cardinal niles of the weekly get-together was no phone calls unless it was a matter of urgency that in some way concerned everyone at the table. The game continued, but the four men played automatically, their curiosity mounting.
'Your bet, Aleksey,' said the Senator.
'Raise you another four dollars.'
'I call.'
Korolenko shrugged resignedly and laid down his cards face up. All he had was a pair of fours.
The Senator smiled wryly and turned over his cards. He won with a pair of sixes.
'Oh, good lord,' moaned Nichols. 'I dropped out with a pair of kings.'
'There goes your lunch money, Aleksey.' Vyhousky laughed.
'So we bluffed each other,' said Korolenko. 'Now I know why I won't buy a used car from an American politician.'
The Senator leaned back in his chair and ran a hand through a thick mane of silver hair. 'As a matter of fact I worked my way through law school selling cars. Best training I ever had for running for the Senate.'
Schiller reentered the room and sat down at the table. 'Sorry to leave, but I've just been notified that a chartered United Nations plane crashed on the coast of northern Greenland. Over fifty known dead. No word on survivors.'
'any Soviet representatives on board?' asked Vyhousky. ... The passenger list hasn't come through yet.'
'A terrorist bombing?'
'Too early to tell, but first sketchy reports say it was no accident.'
'What flight was it?' Nichols asked.
'London to New York.'
'Northern Greenland?' Nichols repeated thoughtfully. 'They must have strayed over a thousand miles off course.'
'Smells of a hijacking,' suggested Vyhousky.
'Rescue units are on the site,' explained Schiller. 'We should know more within the hour.'
The expression on Senator Pitts face darkened. 'I have a dire suspicion that Hala Kamil was on that flight. She was due back at United Nations headquarters from Europe for next week's session of the General Assembly.'
'I believe George is right,' said Vyhousky. 'Two of our Soviet delegates were traveling in her party.'
'Madness,' said Schiller, wearily shaking his head. 'Utter madness. Who would gain by murdering a planeload of U.N. people?'
No one answered immediately. There was a long moment's silence.
Korolenko stared, expressionless, at the center of the table. Then he spoke in a quiet voice.
The Senator stared the Russian straight in the eye. 'You knew.'
'I guessed.'
'You think Yazid ordered Kamil's death?'
'I can only say our intelligence sources discovered there was an Islamic faction in Cairo that was planning an attempt.'
'And you stood by and said nothing while fifty innocent people died-'
'A miscalculation,' admitted Korolenko. 'We did not know how or when the assassination was to take place. It was assumed Kmfl's LIFE would be in danger only if she went to Egypt-not from Yazid lf, but rather his fanatical followers. Yazid has never been tied to any terrorist acts.
Your profile of him reads the same as ours: a brilliant man who thinkqs of himself as a Muslim Gandhi.'