The Secret Servant (Gabriel Allon #7)(97)



“Where’s Ishaq?” asked Gabriel as Chiara cut away the last of the packing tape.

“Inside the van.”

“Is he alive?”

“Yes.”

“Is he conscious?”

“Barely,” she said. “You were thrown from the van early. He wasn’t so lucky.”

“Put me on my feet.”

“Just stay down, Gabriel. You’re hurt badly.”

“Do what I say, Chiara. Put me on my feet.”

Gabriel groaned in pain as she lifted him upright. He took a step forward and staggered. Chiara seized hold of his arm and kept him from falling.

“Lie down, Gabriel. Wait for the ambulance.”

“No ambulances. Help me walk.”

Mikhail came over at an awkward trot, gun still in his hand, and together with Chiara helped Gabriel slowly toward the van. The driver hung upside down from his seat belt, blood flowing freely from his burst skull. Ishaq lay in the back, bleeding from his nose and mouth, left leg snapped above the knee like a broken matchstick. Gabriel looked at Mikhail.

“Pull him out by the leg,” he said in Hebrew. “The broken leg.”

“Don’t do this,” Chiara said.

“Walk away.” Gabriel looked at Mikhail. “Do what I tell you or I’ll do it myself.”

Mikhail ducked into the van through the open cargo doors and seized hold of the shattered leg. A moment later Ishaq lay writhing on the ground at Gabriel’s feet. Chiara, unable to bear the sight, walked away across the field. Gabriel looked down at Ishaq and asked, “Where’s my girl?”

“She’s already dead,” Ishaq spat through the blood.

Gabriel held out his hand to Mikhail. “Give me your gun.”

Mikhail handed it over. Gabriel pointed it toward the broken leg and fired once. Ishaq’s screams echoed over the flat landscape and his fingers clawed at the sodden earth. The pheasants took flight and circled above Gabriel’s head.

“Where’s my girl?” Gabriel repeated calmly.

“She’s dead!”

Another shot. Another scream of agony.

“Where’s my girl, Ishaq?”

“She’s already—”

Pop.

“Where’s my girl, Ishaq?”

“Allahu Akbar!”

Pop.

“Where’s Elizabeth?”

“Allahu Akbar!”

Pop. Pop.

“Tell me where she is, Ishaq.”

He leveled the gun and prepared to fire again. This time a hand went up, and Ishaq, between cries of pain, began hurling information at Gabriel like stones. Number 17 Ambler Road. Two martyrs. Westminster Abbey. Ten o’clock. God is Great.





58




FINSBURY PARK, LONDON: 7:30 A.M., SUNDAY



They barged into her cell with a demeanor she had never seen before. Cain spoke to her for the first time in more than two weeks. “You’re going to be released,” he blurted. “You have twenty minutes to prepare yourself. If you are not ready in twenty minutes, you will be killed.” And then he was gone.

Abel appeared next, bearing a plastic bucket of warm water, a bar of soap, a washcloth and towel, a parcel of clean clothing, and a blond wig. He placed the bucket on the floor and the rest of the things on her cot, then removed her handcuffs and shackles. “Wash carefully and take your time dressing,” he explained calmly. “We brought you something nice to wear. We don’t want the world to think we mistreated you.”

He went out and closed the door. She wanted to scream for joy. She wanted to weep with relief. Instead, model prisoner to the end, she did exactly what they told her to do. She used only fifteen minutes of her allotted time and was seated on the edge of her cot, knees together and trembling, when they entered her cell again.

“You are ready?” Cain asked.

“Yes,” she replied in a low, evenly modulated voice.

“Come, then,” he said.

She stood and followed them slowly up a flight of darkened stairs.





Word of Gabriel’s successful extraction arrived at the Israeli embassy in Old Court Place at 7:48 A.M. It was transmitted via ordinary cell phone by Chiara, who was at that moment seated next to Gabriel in the back of a Volkswagen Passat with a smashed headlamp and crumpled fender. The call was taken by Shamron, who, upon hearing the news, covered his face with his hands and wept. So deep was Shamron’s emotion that for several seconds those gathered around were uncertain whether Gabriel was alive or dead. When it became clear that he was indeed alive and back in their hands, a great roar went up in the room. The brief celebration that followed was intercepted and recorded by the British eavesdroppers at GCHQ—which had monitored all Israeli communications that night—as were Shamron’s pleas for quiet as he listened to the next part of Chiara’s report. Shamron immediately placed two calls, the first to Adrian Carter in the American ops center beneath Grosvenor Square and the second to Graham Seymour, who was with the prime minister and the COBRA committee at Downing Street. Seymour quickly arranged for a police escort to bring Gabriel and the remnants of his team safely into London; then he rushed to the American embassy, as did Shamron. The two men were standing next to Adrian Carter as the battered Passat and its police escorts screeched to a stop at the North Gate.

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