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Follett, Ken - On Wings of Eagles.txt

Page 41

by On Wings of Eagles [lit]


  could ever really trust a white man.

  Perot's leased 707 touched down at Six A.M. Boulware went on board. He took

  in the lush decor at a glance and then forgot about it: he was in a hurry.

  He sat down with Perot. "I'm catching a plane at six-thirty so I got to

  make this fast," he said. "You can't buy a helicopter and you can't buy a

  light plane."

  "Why not?"

  306

  ON WINGS OF EAGLES 307

  "It's against the law. You can charter a plane, but it won't take you just

  anywhere you want to go-you charter for a specified trip."

  saysT

  "The law. Also, chartering is so unusual that you'll have the government

  all over you asking questions, and you might not want that. Now-"

  "Just a minute, Ralph, not so fast," said Perot. He had that I'm-the-boss

  look in his eye. "What if we get a helicopter from another country and

  bring it in?"

  "I have been here a month and I have looked into all this thoroughly, and

  you can't rent a helicopter and you can't rent a plane, and I have to leave

  now to meet Simons at the border."

  Perot backed off. "Okay. How are you going to get there?"

  "Mr. Fish got us a bus to go to the border. It's on its way already-1 was

  going with it, then I had to stay behind to brief you. I'm going to fly to

  Adan"at's about halfway--and catch up with the bus there. I got lisman with

  me, he's the secret service guy, and another guy to translate. What time do

  the fellows expect to reach the border?"

  "Two o'clock tomorrow afternoon," said Perot.

  "It's going to be tight. I'll see you guys later."

  He ran back to the terminal building and just made his flight.

  Ilsman, the fat secret policeman, and the interpreter-Boulware did not know

  his name so he called him Charlie Brown-were on board. They took off at

  six-thirty.

  They flew east to Ankara, where they waited several hours for their

  connection. At midday they reached Adana, near the biblical city of Tarsus

  in south central Turkey.

  The bus was not there.

  They waited an hour.

  Boulware decided the bus was not going to come.

  With Dsman and Charlie Brown, he went to the information desk and asked

  about flights from Adana to Van, a town about a hundred miles from the

  border crossing.

  There were no flights to Van from anywhere.

  "Ask where we can charter a plane," Boulware told Charlie.

  Charlie asked.

  "There are no planes for charter here."

  "Can we buy a car?"

  "Cars are very scarce in this part of the country."

  "Are there no car dealers in town?"

  308 Ken Folleu

  "If there are, they won't have any cars to sell."

  "Is there any way to get to Van from here?"

  "No. "

  It was like the joke about the tourist who asks a fanner for directions to

  London, and the fanner replies: "if I was going to London, I wouldn't start

  from here."

  They wandered out of the terminal and stood beside the dusty road. There

  was no sidewalk: this was really the sticks. Boulware was frustrated. So

  far he had had it easier than most of the rescue tearn-he had not even been

  to Tehran. Now that it was his turn to achieve something, it looked as

  though he would fad. Boulware hated to fail.

  He saw a car approaching with some kind of markings in Turkish on its side.

  "Hey," he said, "is that a cab?"

  "Yes," said Charlie.

  "Hell, let's get a cab!"

  Charlie hailed the cab and they got in. Boulware said: "Tell him we want to

  go to Van."

  Charlie translated.

  The driver pulled away.

  After a few seconds the dnver asked a question. Charlie translated: "Van,

  where?"

  "Tell him Van, Turkey."

  The driver stopped the car.

  Charlie said: "He says: 'Do you know how far it isT

  Boulware was not sure, but he knew it was halfway across Turkey. "Tell him

  yes."

  After another exchange Charlie said: "He won't take us."

  "Does he know anyone who will?"

  'Me driver shrugged elaborately as he replied. Charlie said: "He's going to

  take us to the cabstand so we can ask around." Good. "

  They drove into the town. The cabstand was just another dusty piece of road

  with a few cars parked, none of them new. Ilsman started talking to the

  drivers. Boulware and Charlie found a little shop and bought a bag of

  hard-boiled eggs.

  When they came out, Ilsman had found a driver and negotiated a price. The

  driver proudly pointed out his car. Boulware looked at it in dismay. It was

  a Chevrolet, around fifteen years old, and it looked as if it still had the

  original tim.

  'He says we'll need some food," Charlie said.

  "I got some eggs."

  ON WINGS OF EAGLES 309

  "Maybe we'll need more."

  Boulware went back into the shop and bought three dozen oranges.

  They got into the Chevrolet and drove to a filling station. The driver

  bought a spare tank of fuel and put it in the trunk. "Where we're going,

  there are no gas stations," Charlie explained.

  Boulware was looking at a map. Their journey was about five hundred miles

  through mountain country. "Listen," he said. "There is no way this car is

  going to get us to the border by two o'clock tomorrow afternoon. -

  "You don't understand," Charlie said. "This man is a Turkish driver. "

  "Oh, boy, " said Boulware; and he sat back in the seat and closed his eyes.

  They drove out of town and headed up into the mountains of central Turkey.

  The road was of dirt and gravel, with enormous potholes, and in places it

  was not much wider than the car. It snaked over the mountainsides, with a

  breathtaking sheer drop at one edge. There was no guardrail to stop an

  incautious driver shooting over the precipice into the abyss. But the

  scenery was spectacular, with stunning views across the sunlit valleys, and

  Boulware made up his mind to go back one day, with Mary and Stacy and

  Kecia, and do the trip again, at leisure.

  Up ahead, a truck was approaching them. The cabby braked to a halt. Two men

  in uniform got out of the truck. "Army patrol," said Charlie Brown.

  The driver wound down his window. Ilsman talked to the soldiers. Boulware

  did not understand what was said, but it seemed to satisfy the patrol. The

  cabby drove on.

  An hour or so later they were stopped by another patrol, and the same thing

  happened.

  At nightfall they spotted a roadside restaurant and pulled in. The place

  was primitive and filthy dirty. "All they have is beans and rice," said

  Charlie apologetically as they sat down.

  Boulware smiled. "I been eating beans and rice all my life."

  He studied the cabdriver. The man was about sixty years old, and looked

  tired. "I guess I'll drive for a while," said Boulware.

  Charlie translated, and the cabby protested vehemently.

  "He says you won't be able to drive that car," Charlie said. "It's an

  American car with a very peculiar gearshift."

  "Look, I am American," Boulware said. "Tell him that lots

  310 Ken Folleu

  of Ame
ricans are black. And I know how to drive a 'sixty-four Chevy with a

  standard shift, for Pete's sake!"

  The three Turks argued about it while they ate. Finally Charlie said: "You

  can drive, so long as you promise to pay for the damage if you wreck the

  car."

  "I promise," said Boulware, thinking: Big deal.

  He paid the bill, and they walked out to the car. It was beginning to rain.

  Boulware found it impossible to make any speed, but the big car was stable,

  and its powerful engine took the gradients without difficulty. They were

  stopped a third time by an army patrol. Boulware showed his American

  passport, and once again Ilsman made them happy somehow. This time,

  Boulware noted, the soldiers were unshaven and wore somewhat ragged

  uniforms.

  As they pulled away, lisman spoke, and Charlie said: "Try not to stop for

  any more patrols."

  'Nfty not?"

  "'Mey might rob us."

  That's great, thought Boulware.

  Near the town of Maras, a hundred miles from Adana and another four hundred

  from Van, the rain became heavy, making the mud-and-gravel road

  treacherous, and Boulware had to slow down even more.

  Soon after Maras , the car died.

  They all got out and lifted the hood. Boulware could see nothing wrong. The

  driver spoke, and Charlie translated: "He can't understand it--he has just

  tuned the engine with his own hands. "

  "Maybe he didn't tune it right," said Boulware. "Let's check a few things.

  "

  The driver got some tools and a flashlight out of the trunk, and the four

  men stood around the engine in the rain, trying to find out what had gone

  wrong.

  Eventually they discovered that the points were incorrectly set. Boulware

  guessed that either the rain, or the thinner mountain air, or both, had

  made the fault critical. It took a while to adjust the points, but finally

  the engine fired. Cold and wet and tired, the four men got back into the

  old car and Boulware drove on.

  The countryside grew more desolate as they traveled east-no towns, no

  houses, no livestock, nothing. The road became even worse: It reminded

  Boulware of a trail in a cowboy movie. Soon the nun turned to snow and the

  road became icy. Boulware kept

  ON WINGS OF EAGLES 311

  glancing over the sheer drop at the side. If you go off this, sucker, he

  said to himself, you ain't going to get hurt-you're going to die.

  Near Bingol, halfway to their destination, they climbed up out of the

  storm. The sky was clear and there was a bright moon, almost like daylight.

  Boulware could see the snow clouds and the flashing lightning in the

  valleys below. The mountainside was frozen white, and the road was like a

  bobsled run.

  Boulware thought: Man, I'm going to die up here, and nobody's even going to

  know it, because they don't know where I am.

  Suddenly the steering wheel bucked in his hands and the car slowed:

  Boulware had a moment of panic, thinking he was losing control, then

  realized he had a flat tire. He brought the car gently to a halt.

  They all got out and the cabdriver opened the ftunk. He hauled out the

  extra fuel tank to get at the spare wheel. Boulware was freezing: the

  temperature had to be way below zero. The cabby refused any help and

  insisted on changing the wheel himself Boulware took off his gloves and

  offered them to the cabby: the man shook his head. Pride, I guess, thought

  Boulware.

  By the time the job was done, it was four A.m. Boulware said: "Ask him if

  he wants to take over the driving-4'm bushed."

  The driver agreed.

  Boulware got into the back. The car pulled away. Boulware closed his eyes

  and tried to ignore the bumps and jerks. He wondered whether he would reach

  the border in time. Shit, he thought, nobody could say we didn't try.

  A few seconds later he was asleep.

  2

  'Me Dirty Team blew out of Tehran like a breeze.

  The city looked like a battlefield from which everyone had gone home.

  Statues had been pulled down, cars burned, and trees felled to make

  roadblocks; then the roadblocks had been cleared-the cars pushed to the

  curb, the statues smashed, the trees burned. Some of those trees had been

  hand-watered every day for fifty years.

  But there was no fighting. They saw very few people and little

  312 Ken FoUeu

  ftffic. Perhaps the revolution was over. Or perhaps the revolutionaries were

  having tea.

  They drove past the airport and took the highway north, following the route

  Coburn and Simons had taken on their reconnaissance trip. Some of Simons's

  plans had come to nothing, but not this one. Still, Coburn was

  apprehensive. What was ahead of them? Did armies rage and storm in towns

  and handets still? Or was the revolution done? Perhaps the villagers had

  returned to their sheep and their plows.

  Soon the two Range Rovers were bowling along at seventy miles an hour at

  the foot of a mountain range. On their left was a flat plain; on their

  right, steep green hillsides topped by snowy mountain peaks against the

  blue sky. Coburn looked at the car in front and saw Taylor taking

  photographs through the tailgate window with his Instarnatic. "Look at

  Taylor," he said.

  "What does he think this is?" said Gayden. "A package tour?"

  Coburn began to feel optimistic. There had been no trouble so far: maybe

  the whole country was calming down. Anyway, why should the Iranians give

  them a hard time? What was wrong with foreigners leaving the country?

  Paul and Bill had false passports and were being hunted by the authorities,

  that was what was wrong.

  Thirty miles from Tehran, just outside the town of Karaj, they came to

  their first roadblock. It was manned, as they usually were, by

  machine-gun-toting men and boys in ragged clothes.

  The lead car stopped, and Rashid jumped out even before Paul had brought

  the second car to a halt, making sure that he, rather than the Americans,

  would do the talking. He immediately began speaking loud and rapid Farsi,

  with many gestures. Paul wound down the window. From what they could

  understand, it seemed Rashid was not giving the agreed story: he was saying

  something about journalists.

  After a while Rashid told them all to get out of the cars. "They want to

  search us for weapons."

  Coburn, remembering how many times he had been frisked on the

  reconnaissance trip, had concealed his little Gerber knife in the Range

  Rover.

  The Iranians patted them down, then perfunctorily searched the cars: they

  did not find Coburn's knife, nor did they come across the money.

  A few minutes later Rashid said: "We can go.

  ON WINGS OF EAGLES 313

  A hundred yards down the road was a filling station. They pulled in: Simons

  wanted to keep the fuel tanks as full as possible.

  While the cars were being fueled Taylor produced a bottle of Cognac, and

  they all took a swig except Simons, who disapproved, and Rashid, whose

  beliefs forbade him to take alcohol. Simons was mad at Rashid. Instead of

  saying the group were businessmen trying t
o go home, Rashid had said they

  were journalists going to cover the fighting in Tabriz. "Stick to the

  goddam story," Simons said.

  "Sure," said Rashid.

  Coburn thought Rashid would probably continue to say the first thing that

  came into his head at the time. That was how he operated-

  A small crowd gathered at the filling station, watching the foreigners.

  Coburn looked at the bystanders nervously. They were not exactly hostile,

  but there was something vaguely menacing about their quiet surveillance.

  Rashid bought a can of oil.

  What now?

  He took the fuel can, which contained most of the money in weighted plastic

  bags, out of the back of the car, and poured oil into it to conceal the

  money. It's not a bad idea, Coburn thought, but I would have mentioned it

  to Simons before doing it.

  He tried to read the expressions on the faces in the crowd. Were they idly

  curious? Resentftil? Suspicious? Malevolent? He could not tell, but he

  wanted to get away.

  Rashid paid the bill and the two cars pulled slowly out of the filling

  station.

  They had a clear run for the next seventy miles. The road, the new Iranian

  State Highway, was in good condition. It ran through a valley, alongside a

  single-track railroad, with snowcapped mountains above. The sun was

  shining.

  The second roadblock was outside Qazvin.

  It was an unofficial one-the guards were not in uniform-but it was bigger

  and more organized dim the last. There were two checkpoints, one after

  another, and a line of cars waiting.

  The two Range Rovers joined the queue.

  The car in front of them was searched methodically. A guard opened the

  trunk and took out what looked like a rolled-up sheet. He unrolled it and

  found a rifle. He shouted something and waved the rifle in the air.

  314 Ken Follett

  Other guards came running. A crowd gathered. 'Me driver of the car was

  questioned. One of the guards knocked him to the ground.

  Rashid pulled his car out of the line.

  Coburn told Paul to follow.

  "What's he doing?" Gayden said.

  Rashid inched through the crowd. The people made way as the Range Rover

  nudged them--4hey were interested in the man with the rifle. Paul kept the

  second Range Rover right on the tail of the first. They passed the first

  checkpoint.

 

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