The official gunman sat in the front row of the tourist seats. Inside his suede jacket which he had bought in London he carried a Beretta. Just inside the flight deck was an Uzi submachine gun.
Ya’acov Krivine, who was twenty-two years old with bandit good looks, officially hoped that there would be no trouble when the Boeing landed at Amsterdam. Unofficially he envied the guard who had shot the Arab terrorists in Switzerland and hoped that a similar attempt would be made in Holland.
He glanced round at the rest of the passengers. All had been checked. All were clean with the possible exception of the young Polish Jew sitting beside the button-down-collar American diplomat. That, he had been told, was the trouble with Jews who were allowed out of Russia and its satellites: you couldn’t always be sure whether the young ones really considered themselves to be Jews or Communists. But Ya’acov was sure that all of them would be Jews once they had lived in Israel.
Behind the Pole and the American sat the Englishman Bartlett whose movements he had been told to keep under observation. He didn’t know why. Geologist, fortyish, vaguish. Perhaps he was a British agent; that would explain some of Britain’s more spectacular security blunders.
Ya’acov Krivine turned his attention to the Pole and the American sitting next to him. The Pole was pale and damp and wore unassertive gold-rimmed spectacles and a black suit with broad lapels. The American was just as Ya’acov expected all Americans to be: athletic, crewcut, excessively polite, probably ex-Army and Vietnam. Ya’acov wondered about the scrubbing-brush hairstyles which so many Americans wore and patted self-consciously: he knew from experience that girls preferred longer hair.
The tall, gentle-faced stewardess in the blue uniform just beginning to shine said in Hebrew: ‘Coffee, sir?’ Her voice was sarcastic. This annoyed Ya’acov because he was accustomed to girls who became instantly available on perceiving his looks and wholeheartedly acquiescent on seeing the scar of his Six Day War wound.
‘Yes, please.’ He looked up at her gentle face and recalled that she was a Judo expert as well as a stewardess. ‘Why are you so hostile to me?’
The stewardess glanced around and leaned towards him. ‘Because I am tired of tough guys,’ she said. ‘Every man in Israel who puts on a uniform thinks he’s Steve McQueen.’
Ya’acov favoured her with his brigand smile. ‘I think the Arabs must think so too.’
The stewardess who had been attached to the same Army unit as Ya’acov in the Sinai said: ‘I prefer other qualities in a man.’
‘You prefer someone like that Englishman who looks like a schoolmaster?’
Ya’acov noticed with surprise and irritation that her expression softened. ‘Yes,’ she said. ‘Someone like that. He’s rather sweet.’ She straightened up.
Ya’acov said: ‘There’s just one thing.’
‘Really? What’s that?’
‘Your black belt’s showing,’ Ya’acov said.
He leaned back in his seat, quite pleased with himself, and lit a Savyon cigarette. Below the English Channel was blue and molten. In ten minutes’ time they would be landing at Amsterdam. His hand strayed inside his jacket and fingered the barrel of the Beretta. Then he went into the flight deck to check the Israeli-made Uzi. Just in case, he thought hopefully and unofficially.
Five rows behind the official gunman Tom Bartlett obediently fastened his safety belt, extinguished his cigarette and picked up the fawn pamphlet called Flying Kosher. The tall stewardess leaned over the girl sitting beside him and checked his belt. She was, he thought, unusually solicitous. He smiled at her and went on reading. ‘Kosher is knadles, knishes, gefilte fish – all the traditional treats of the Jewish Kitchen.’
The girl beside him said: ‘Don’t worry too much. It just means you can’t have cream in your coffee after lunch.’
‘I only drink it black,’ Bartlett said. There was a pause. He smelled her perfume: Chanel No.5, he decided, because that was the only perfume he knew. He noted her shiny buckled shoes and her neat knees and became aware of the body warmth they shared between them. Again he was reassured by the virility of his observation.
The girl said: ‘Are you going to Israel on vacation?’
Bartlett half-turned so that he could see her face. Tanned, a little sad, greenish-eyed, finely textured hair worn in a fringe, inquisitive features. Not the sort of face you expected an Israeli girl to have after all those newspaper pictures of women soldiers toting rifles. If, in fact, she was an Israeli. He asked her.
‘Yes,’ she said. ‘I hope you didn’t mind me talking to you. But we are like that in Israel. I know that in the States and Britain it is different.’
‘I certainly don’t mind,’ Bartlett said. And meant it. ‘No, I’m not going on vacation – it’s a business trip.’
‘I see.’ She stuffed a copy of Maariv into the seat pocket. ‘Did you know that we Israeli girls are also very nosey?’ She spoke with a slight American accent.
‘There’s nothing wrong with curiosity,’ Bartlett said. ‘It’s the foundation of my profession. Which, incidentally, is geology.’
‘That,’ said the girl, ‘is quite remarkable, Mr …’
‘Bartlett,’ he said. ‘Tom Bartlett. Why is it so remarkable?’
‘Because I too have been studying the soil. Advanced methods of irrigation which have been perfected in the States.’
It was, Bartlett thought, quite remarkable. But it had been a remarkable day.
‘How long will you be in Israel?’ she said.
‘About three days in Tel Aviv,’ he said. ‘Then two or three days in Jerusalem for the actual conference.’
They were interrupted by the voice of the stewardess, first in Hebrew, then in English. ‘We hope you have enjoyed your flight from London to Amsterdam. We regret that, owing to the short duration of our stay in Amsterdam, passengers in transit will not he allowed to disembark from the aircraft.’
‘Why on earth not?’ Bartlett said. ‘They’ll take at least half an hour to refuel the aircraft.’
‘You sound like an experienced traveller,’ the girl said.
‘I’ve flown a bit.’
‘Perhaps there are other reasons for the precaution.’
The aircraft bounced gently on the runway, settled, taxied, stopped. The disembarking passengers departed and with them went the gangsterish young man in the suede jacket.
‘Why’s he been allowed out?’ Bartlett said.
‘Perhaps he’s disembarking,’ the girl said.
‘But he’s Israeli, surely.’
‘Just because he looks like a Mafia bodyguard doesn’t necessarily mean he’s an Israeli.’
‘Look.’ Bartlett pointed at the tarmac. ‘He’s got into that Volkswagen.’ The blue Volkswagen began to circle the aircraft.
The girl shrugged.
Bartlett realised then and said: ‘He’s the guard, isn’t he? In case the Arabs try anything.’
The girl shrugged again. Bartlett watched the tankers refuelling the jet, the patrolling Volkswagen, the officer in El Al uniform scanning the perimeter of the airport with field glasses. He shivered, because someone had pulled the strings of the marionette headlines.
The embarking passengers arrived through the hooded gangway that led straight on to the aircraft. Outside the Volkswagen continued to circle like a lost insect. Then the Israeli in the suede jacket climbed out and returned to the aircraft looking rather sulky. The Boeing taxied to the end of the runway, climbed the bright sky and headed towards Tel Aviv, the Hill of the Spring.
Over the Greek islands, pumice stones in the flat water, Raquel Rabinovitz said to Tom Bartlett: ‘Are you married, Mr Bartlett?’
Bartlett finished the little bottle of red Avdat wine that he had ordered with his meal and smiled. ‘You would make an excellent geologist, Miss Rabinovitz.’
The girl sipped her black coffee. ‘You are trying to evade the point already.’
Bartlett said: ‘Your curiosity is formidable. Yes, I am married.’ He lit a cigarette with the gold Dunhill his wife had given him a decade ago and considered his marriage.
‘Could you not have brought your wife with you?’
‘She didn’t want to come,’ he said. ‘She had other things to do.’
Like drinking and eating and sleeping with a fur-headed Arab from the Jordanian Embassy. And discussing dear old Tom, poor old Tom, with him. No, Israel was decidedly not the country for Helen.
‘Is she English?’ the girl said.
‘No, American.’
‘And very beautiful?’
‘Very.’
With a sigh Raquel Rabinovitz changed the subject. ‘I too come from the States. My parents were Russian but they escaped after the last war because they knew what Communism was all about. They settled in New York. I was born there. Then one day my father said, “What for should we stay here when we are about to be given our own country?” And my mother said, “Wherever you go, Doron, then I go with you.” And so we came to Israel just in time for the first war against the Arabs.’
There didn’t seem any point in asking her questions because all information was supplied unsolicited. He said politely: ‘So you are not a Sabra, then?’
‘Not a true Sabra. But I am one at heart, I promise you.’
‘I believe you. How old are you?’
‘Twenty-three.’
‘And you served in the Army?’
‘Of course – all Israeli girls do.’
‘What did you do?’
Raquel Rabinovitz looked confused. As confusion seemed out of character Bartlett repeated the question.
‘I was a member of the Hiba,’ she said.
‘And what on earth is that?’
‘It is the section of the Army that does street police duty. It is very essential work.’
Bartlett laughed aloud. ‘So I’m having lunch with a policewoman?’
‘Is that so funny?’
‘Not really. Except that it was once my ambition …’
‘Your ambition to what?’
‘Nothing,’ he said. ‘Would you care for some more wine?’
‘No thank you. You will find that in Israel we have little need for artificial stimulants. Now, if you will excuse me, I think I will sleep a little.’
‘Of course. I’m sorry if I offended you.’
‘That’s all right, Mr Bartlett. We Israelis do not mind people laughing at us. It’s when they start shooting at us that we object.’ She closed her eyes and Bartlett thought that she looked surprisingly vulnerable for an ex-policewoman.
The islands disappeared and a few parachutes of cloud appeared between the aircraft and the empty sea. Bartlett picked up the green and gold booklet containing 101 words of Hebrew – ‘the mother tongue of many Israelis whose mothers knew it not’. He discovered that El Al meant upward, which was reassuring. He put the booklet away with Flying Kosher and took his maps out of his old brown leather briefcase.
Ras Abu Radeis, Waddi Firan, St Catherine’s Monastery. Mountains the colour of rusting iron, morning air that smelled of sharp herbs, wadis green with palms that looked like moss from the granite peaks, wells filled with ice that had never frozen. When he had last visited the Sinai – ten or eleven years ago – it had been in the hands of the Egyptians. Not even the Israelis could have changed it very much.
Bartlett replaced the maps, tucked the briefcase under his seat, and relaxed. Then, after making an abortive effort to keep his mouth closed, he slept.
In front of him the Pole loosened his almost transparent grey tie and snored immediately. The American with the thick cropped hair dozed.
Only the official gunman remained completely alert as the Boeing approached the disputed territories of the Levant. And the pilot and the navigator.
Tom Bartlett was annoyed. ‘You must admit,’ he said, ‘that this is hardly an auspicious introduction to Israeli efficiency.’
‘It could happen with any airline,’ Raquel Rabinovitz said. ‘In fact El Al is one of the most efficient airlines in the world. Did you know that since the two Arab attacks they have carried more passengers than ever before?’
‘I didn’t know,’ Bartlett said. ‘Nor do I quite see what it’s got to do with the fact that they’ve lost my suitcase.’
‘Perhaps the London Airport porters forgot to load it. Or perhaps the Dutch unloaded it by mistake at Amsterdam.’
Bartlett smiled. despite his annoyance. ‘But no Israeli is to blame? Even though I personally handed it over to El Al?’ He prodded at the errant wing of his collar. He could feel sweat gathering beneath his tropical suit. He lit a cigarette. ‘It’s not your fault,’ he said. ‘You’ve done as much as you can. But everything I need for my stay here is in that case.’
‘I understand,’ she said. ‘But it could have happened on any airline.’
‘All right,’ he said. ‘But is there anything more you can do?
‘I’ll see.’ She walked away, lithe and smart and aggressive.
Bartlett watched the other passengers pushing trolleys of luggage towards waiting business associates, Jewish mothers and predatory taxi drivers. He would have liked to have been in a receptive mood to assimilate the excitement and confidence he had sensed as he walked from the Boeing to the arrival lounge. But they had spoiled his pleasure by losing his suitcase.
He noticed that both the crewcut American and the Pole with the gold-rimmed spectacles were waiting around although they had picked up their baggage.
Raquel Rabinovitz returned smiling triumphantly with a customs official and the missing suitcase. ‘There,’ she said. ‘It was muddled up with the baggage off another flight. It could have happened anywhere in the world.’
‘Thanks,’ Bartlett said. ‘Thanks very much.’ And with uncharacteristic flippancy he added: ‘What a way to run an airline.’
‘I beg your pardon, sir?’ said the customs official.
‘I’m sorry,’ Bartlett said. ‘I was joking. I’m very grateful to you for finding my luggage.’
‘Perhaps,’ the customs official said, ‘you would be good enough to open your suitcase for me.’
Bartlett said: ‘Very well.’ He found his keys in his trouser pocket and opened the suitcase that was even older than his briefcase. He looked at his shirts and underclothes, his papers and his geologist’s tools. ‘I don’t think you need examine them too closely,’ he said. ‘Someone already has.’