The Key to Rebecca

The Key to Rebecca by Ken Follett Page B

Book: The Key to Rebecca by Ken Follett Read Free Book Online
Authors: Ken Follett
Tags: Fiction, thriller
night.
    When the aides came out, Wolff followed the pair that went to the barracks.
    A minute later Abdullah emerged from a café and fell into step beside him.
    “Those two?” Abdullah said. “Those two.”
    Abdullah was a fat man with a steel tooth. He was one of the richest men in Cairo, but unlike most rich Arabs he did not ape the Europeans. He wore sandals, a dirty robe and a fez. His greasy hair curled around his ears and his fingernails were black. His wealth came not from land, like the pashas‘, nor from trade, like the Greeks’. It came from crime.
    Abdullah was a thief.
    Wolff liked him. He was sly, deceitful, cruel, generous, and always laughing: for Wolff he embodied the age-old vices and virtues of the Middle East. His army of children, grandchildren, nephews, nieces and second cousins had been burgling houses and picking pockets in Cairo for thirty years. He had tentacles everywhere: he was a hashish wholesaler, he had influence with politicians, and he owned half the houses in the Birka, including Madame Fahmy’s. He lived in a large crumbling house in the Old City with his four wives.
    They followed the two officers into the modem city center. Abdullah said: “Do you want one briefcase, or both?”
    Wolff considered. One was a casual theft; two looked organized. “One,” he said.
    “Which?”
    “It doesn’t matter.”
    Wolff had considered going to Abdullah for help after the discovery that the Villa les Oliviers was no longer safe. He had decided not to. Abdullah could certainly have hidden Wolff away somewhere—probably in a brothel—more or less indefinitely. But as soon as he had Wolff concealed, he would have opened negotiations to sell him to the British. Abdullah divided the world in two: his family and the rest. He was utterly loyal to his family and trusted them completely; he would cheat everyone else and expected them to try to cheat him. All business was done on the basis of mutual suspicion. Wolff found this worked surprisingly well.
    They came to a busy comer. The two officers crossed the road, dodging the traffic. Wolff was about to follow when Abdullah put a hand on his arm to stop him.
    “We’ll do it here,” Abdullah said.
    Wolff looked around, observing the buildings, the pavement, the road junction and the street vendors. He smiled slowly, and nodded. “It’s perfect,” he said.
     
    They did it the next day.
    Abdullah had indeed chosen the perfect spot for the snatch. It was where a busy side street joined a main road. On the comer was a café with tables outside, reducing the pavement to half its width. Outside the café, on the side of the main road, was a bus stop. The idea of queuing for the bus had never really caught on in Cairo despite sixty years of British domination, so those waiting simply milled about on the already crowded pavement. On the side street it was a little clearer, for although the café had tables out here too, there was no bus stop. Abdullah had observed this little shortcoming, and had put it right by detailing two acrobats to perform on the street there.
    Wolff sat at the corner table, from where he could see along both the main road and the side street, and worried about the things that might go wrong.
    The officers might not go back to the barracks today.
    They might go a different way.
    They might not be carrying their briefcases.
    The police might arrive too early and arrest everyone on the scene.
    The boy might be grabbed by the officers and questioned.
    Wolff might be grabbed by the officers and questioned.
    Abdullah might decide he could earn his money with less trouble simply by contacting Major Vandam and telling him he could arrest Alex Wolff at the Café Nasif at twelve noon today.
    Wolff was afraid of going to prison. He was more than afraid, he was terrified. The thought of it brought him out in a cold sweat under the noonday sun. He could live without good food and wine and girls, if he had the vast wild emptiness of the desert

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