His brow furrowed in puzzlement, Hamid watched him go on the camera screen. Watched Harry walk about ten yards back and pull the TACSAT from the pocket of his jacket…
“What do you need me to do?” Carol asked, still absorbing the news of Hamid’s betrayal. It seemed like a bad dream. That the Service could have been infiltrated…
“It is possible to remotely deactivate an Agency TACSAT, isn’t it?”
She nodded reflexively. “Yes-yes it is. It’s just a matter of accessing the servers and restricting user-”
“Just do it,” Harry interrupted, his voice flat, eerily emotionless. “As soon as you can. Let me know when it’s accomplished.”
The phone
The first inkling he had of danger was when bullets whined past his covert, impacting and glancing off the centuries-old limestone walls. Hamid’s fingers tightened around the grip of his MP-5 as fluorescent bulbs exploded and shattered down the length of the hall, glass tinkling against the stone. In seconds, the corridor was plunged into subterranean darkness.
He smiled grimly. The opening move, yet despite his danger he felt more alive than he had for years.
All deception past, it felt as though a weight had fallen from his shoulders. All those years, the times he had belittled his own faith to maintain his cover. Little deaths of the soul.
Gone now, at long last.
Truly, God
A glance at his TACSAT’s luminescent screen confirmed his antagonists were still in their places. As though they were waiting for something.
The canister still lay by his side, nineteen minutes remaining on the invisible clock. He couldn’t wait forever. But neither could they.
A whining
Hamid swore angrily, tossing the phone away from him. He had worked long enough with Harry-he should have known. Never underestimate the man.
Harry slammed a fresh 25-round magazine of.45 ACP into the mag well of the UMP-45, pulling back the charging handle. Fourteen minutes left.
At that moment, the phone in his pocket vibrated and he flipped it open, expecting to hear Carol’s voice.
“Harry, Zakiri’s TACSAT is off-line,” Kranemeyer announced gruffly. “Carol is working to restore the camera network to administrator control.”
“Tell her thanks,” Harry replied. “Is there anything else?”
“One more thing, Harry. This has been an unprecedented breach of security. Understanding how this was accomplished is of primary importance. If at all possible, we need Hamid Zakiri alive. Do you understand?”
“Yes,” Harry replied, gazing ahead into the darkness, understanding all too well. He had seen it all before. “Now, if you’ll excuse me. I have a canister to recover.”
Rising to his feet, he motioned to his companions, his stride steady as he moved down the corridor, the muzzle of his submachine gun sweeping from side to side. On point. In days past, that had been Hamid’s role.
The traitor.
Harry knew the answer, knew and it angered him that he had never seen the signs. Hamid, the genial king of the office NFL pool-Hamid, the guy who had given up his pilgrimage to Mecca to watch the Ravens win the Super Bowl-yeah,
There would be no deals at the end of this road, no pay-offs, no trading freedom for information.
The brotherhood had been betrayed, and this road ended in the grave. The oldest law of mankind.
He reached the corner and hesitated before going on, nervously checking the sling of his H amp;K once more. Everything was silent, a silence as cold as the grave.
Abdul Ali and Hossein fanned out behind him, pistols drawn, and Harry rounded the corner wide, the cold, suppressed muzzle of the UMP-45 tracking left to right.
Hamid was gone, the discarded TACSAT lying broken half-way across the adjoining corridor the only proof that he had ever been there. Harry motioned for a halt, his ears straining to pick up the slightest sound.
“Where does the corridor go from here?” he asked quietly, glancing back at Ali.
“To the left, on into the Masjid al-Musalla al-Marwani, the prayer hall of the Stables of Solomon,” the Jordanian replied. “To the right, it continues for about five yards, ending in a dead-end and a platform surmounted by displayed copies of the Quran.”
“Take left, I’ll take right,” Harry instructed. “He may be laying an ambush.”
It’s what they both would have done. Back in the day. In better times, odd as that seemed now.