10.42.

So I broke cover and the skin begancrawling again because it was reasonably certain that on the balcony of the seventh room on the third floor the hooded lenses were now swinging down on the tripod swivel and steadying.

Ignore.

Range sixty yards, angle of fire thirty-five degrees low, target centred.

Ignore and keep on walking and think of other things.

Chirac was rather good material: he'd got the point. After all, he was only helping us out: he wasn't a professional spook and he didn't possess the bruised lopsided sense of loyalty to the Bureau that's always there like a scarecrow wherever we go. Kaifra tonight was a red sector and he was in it and if they gota fix on him and managed to take him and grill him I'd be walking straight into an ambush when I kept the rendezvous at the Mosque Hamouda Pasha.

They knew how to conduct interrogation: they'd operated on O'Brien and got enough out of him to blow a five-star field-executive like Fyson as soon as he'd arrived in Sidi Ben Ali and they'd finished him off in Tunis and got the name of Kaifra out of him or theywouldn't be here now because Loman and I had got here clean. If they did it to Chirac we wouldn't expect him to protect me or the Bureau or his own mother because they were experts, so I'd thrown him the alert and told him to phone me at the Royal Sahara at exactly 10.40 and use four words and those four words precisely unless he was under duress and then he could use any variation he liked: I am on my way orIam starting now, so forth.

It would give him total protection because it allowed him to keep to the truth: I have arranged to rendezvous with him at the Mosque Hamouda Pasha but he won't go there unless I telephone him to say when I am leaving.

They couldn't blame him if I didn't turn up: I could have caught a cold or something.

Fiat 850, Volkswagen, Peugeot 504, Toyota Land Cruiser with spades strapped on, Citroen DS, nobody in them and nothing else in sight of the 220 so they must have put him round a corner or somewhere in total shadow. He'd moved off when I did but this insistence on concealment at the beginning of our run seemed a bit pointless because he couldn't get on my tail without spreading himself all over the mirror and they knew that. It was another nasty little inconsistency and I didn't like it.

Oleanders, tamarisk, deep cover ten feet from the Mercedes on the other side and I slowed as I walked towards it because they might not like using a rifle in the hotel building — it would make a lot of noise and people would get inquisitive — so the best thing would be for the man up there to have signalled my arrival so they could put someone in cover here where the noise wouldn't be so loud.

I walked towards it.

If they let me get as far as the car I could stop worrying: they hadn't had time to rig a bang because I'd kept it under observation except for the ninety-second period when I'd gone into the hotel through the kitchens. The timing from Room 37 to the swing door I'd used as an exit wasn't much more than half a minute.

Five paces and I reached the 220 and got in and started up, not looking at the hotel but checking the Vauxhall and the hardtop GT-6 that had now come into sight from where I sat, nobody in them, nobody anywhere. No sound of a starter and I was waiting for it and it didn't happen and I thought blast their eyes for not playing it by the book: they'd let me get as far as the car but I still couldn't stop worrying because they wouldn't just put one isolated observer up there to log my arrival and departure times at the Royal Sahara. They knew I was pushing the deadline because they'd already had a mobile tag on me tonight and now they ought to be hooking a new one on to me, or a dozen, and they weren't.

There was the bare possibility they were holding off, letting me run while they could do it without any risk of losing me: the road from the hotel to the town centre and the main intersection was approximately 1.5 k's and it was the only route you could take if you wanted to link up with the major highway north to Garaa Tebout or south to the complex of drilling-camps so they'd be virtually certain I'd be using that stretch. The awkward thing was that I couldn't avoid it. The Mosque Hamoud Pasha was half a kilometre from the oasis road and Chirac was on his way there so I shifted the stick and got rolling because it was the only thing left to do.

The coloured lights of the marquee sent rainbows flowing across the bonnet of the 220 as I swung past the steps and took the east road between the overhanging palms, mirror-check negative.

High degree of cognitive dissonance, most unpleasant. I was expecting lights to come into the mirror and they didn't and it threw me. Something was missing from the equation and I couldn't see what it was unless it could simply be that they were so monumentally disorganized that they didn't know how to operate. It would be nice to think that.

Forty on the clock and I left it there: the road was sandy in places and the crown finished in a ragged edge of macadam within a foot of the palm-trunks. The mirror was hazed over now with the dust I was sending up but if lights moved into it I would see them.

There were buildings at intervals standing back from the road, the small white-domed winter residences of retired merchants and date-farmers, and they vanished as the windscreen went and I smashed the flat of my hand against the crazed glass and broke a hole in it but I'd been driving blind for two seconds and in those forty yards the Mercedes had drifted off-course and the nearside tyres were over the edge of the macadam and I had to let her go another foot and then bring the wheel round to force the front tyre back across the edge before I could get any kind of stability.

I was slumped low by now and the second shot hit the roof and it banged like a tin drum and I knew the trunks of the palms were getting in his way but there were a lot of gaps in them so I kept low and sighted through the wheel and the hole in the granulated screen but it was very awkward and we began swinging wide again and I suddenly felt cold because if the drifting got worse and I hit a tree and finished up stationary he'd take his time and pick me off when I tried to get out and if I stayed where I was he'd come up close and make it a certainty.

The speed had risen a fraction but it didn't affect things very much: it was just a question of how steady the target was when he lined up the next shot and I didn't like this because if I tried to jazz the thing around to spoil his aim I increased the risk of crashing it and giving him a sitter.

Very close and glass flew and I felt the sudden air-rush from the hole in the windscreen so it was the rear side-window he'd smashed. The two windows on the other side were still all right so he was firing from a position well above the horizontal and the explosive shattering of the glass had covered the noise of the secondary impact on the inside panel of the door.

Almost certain the observer at the Royal Sahara had picked up the telephone when he'd seen me getting back into the 220 but this ambush must have been set up before tonight because it carried communications and it wouldn't have been any use without them: this marksman had been installed as soon as they'd established that my travel-pattern included the only road between the hotel and the major intersection in the town centre, but they'd waited for tonight.

I'd used this route six times since I'd arrived in Kaifra and they'd waited for the seventh and given him the signal that I was just leaving the hotel and he'd gone up to the roof and checked his magazine and the 220 was rocking again as the third shot smashed into the door-pillar and pain stabbed into my scalp but there was no concussion: it was a group of metal splinters and not a ricochet of the shell itself.


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