Belfast hills. The sky was cloudless and the sun glinted on the cars driving through the city streets below.
There was a small shower room off the bedroom, and a bathroom off the landing. The two other rooms overlooked the back garden.
Shepherd went downstairs. There was no furniture in the house, but most rooms were carpeted. He went into the kitchen. Cheap wooden units, a twenty-year-old fridge and a gas cooker that didn’t appear to have been cleaned for a few years. Worn lino with a tile effect covered the floor and there was a table with a Formica top in one corner. He opened the fridge. Inside, he found a plastic-wrapped piece of mouldy cheese and a can of beer. He flicked on the switch at the socket and the fridge buzzed.
Shepherd sat at the table. He looked at his wristwatch, a Casio with a miniature calculator keyboard under the digital display. It was the watch of a computer nerd, part of his cover. The removal van was due that afternoon and he had to stay in the house until then. He rested his head against the wall. ‘Home, sweet home,’ he muttered to himself.
Othman bin Mahmuud al-Ahmed sipped his sweet tea and consulted his diamond-encrusted gold Rolex. He had a full thirty minutes before he was due downstairs. He had taken a suite at the Al Faisaliah, one of Riyadh’s top five-star hotels, even though his palatial villa was only an hour’s drive away. The hotel was hosting a three-day defence exhibition and conference, and although he was semi-retired he liked to maintain the contacts he had built up over the years. All the major defence companies had set up shop, showcasing the latest communications and surveillance technologies. The British were there, of course, the Americans and the French, wearing fake smiles and five-thousand-dollar suits. The Russians were still trying to sell their post-Cold War junk, shamed by the Japanese and their state-of-the-art electronics. Othman was especially interested in meeting the Chinese. They had come a long way in recent years, and had moved from copying Western technologies to developing their own cutting-edge equipment. They already had a fighter jet on the market and Othman was sure that within the next twenty years they would be rivalling the Americans in arms sales. Othman planned to bring a few Chinese up to his suite for drinks, then to the lounge above the restaurant at the top of the hotel to sample his private stock of Havana cigars. A telephone rang and his lips thinned in annoyance.
His manservant picked up the receiver, listened, then placed his hand over the mouthpiece. ‘It is Muhammad Aslam,’ he said.
Othman put his teacup on to the silver tray in front of him, then stood up slowly, his knees cracking like dry twigs as they always did when he stayed in one position for too long. Stiff joints were one of the many penalties of age. He went to his manservant and took the phone from him. Masood padded discreetly away as Othman put the receiver to his ear. ‘What you asked has been arranged,’ said Aslam.
‘He is a Muslim?’
‘From Palestine. He is a professional.’
‘How long will it take?’ asked Othman.
‘I have told him we would like matters expedited as quickly as possible, but the nature of the targets is the limiting factor.’
‘And the cost?’
‘There will be expenses, of course,’ said Aslam. ‘I have agreed four hundred thousand dollars in advance. And the fee is five million dollars. He will require half once he has made his preparations. That will be non-refundable.’
‘That is standard practice?’
‘At this level, yes,’ said Aslam. ‘Once he is in play the only thing that will stop him is his own death or capture.’
‘And he was clear on the details? The manner in which it is to happen? And what must be said?’
‘I explained everything.’
‘I shall transfer the funds to your account tomorrow,’ said Othman. He replaced the receiver and went back to his chair. He doubted that the assassin had
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