54

RIYADH, SAUDI ARABIA

Pearce heard voices in the distance.

The ache in his shoulders was finally pulling his mind out of the dark abyss of the tranquilizer and into the dim fog of semiconsciousness. He was suddenly self-aware. Aware enough to know that his eyes felt taped shut, but they weren’t. He struggled to pry them open, finally managing to lift the half-ton weights holding down his eyelids. A hazy film blurred his vision. He blinked a few more times. Clearer now.

Pearce focused on his lap. He was sitting. Bound to a chair. He was wearing an orange jumpsuit. He was screwed.

Pain shot through his neck and shoulders and his skull throbbed with a pounding headache. The room was nearly dark except for a bright flickering light outside his peripheral vision, coming from the same direction as the voices.

He squirmed and stretched as best he could, trying to work out the kinks in his aching back, but he couldn’t move much. His arms were cuffed behind him. The thick plastic strips cut deeply into his wrists. He tried to twist them but they wouldn’t budge. He began opening and closing his tingling hands, partly to keep the blood flowing. His ankles were cuffed tightly to the legs of the chair as well.

Christ, Pearce thought, where am I?

The voices came from the wide-screen television on the wall in front of him. Arabic. He caught most of it, but the images told the story: ISIS fighters, flags, guns, Raqqa. Then more reporting about impending American airstrikes and stock video images of infrared targets, reticles, smart bombs, exploding buildings. “B-52 bombers are already in the air from bases in the United States,” a reporter said, then cut away to a Saudi official. “Yes, thousands of civilians will die, but that is the fault of Daesh, and Daesh will finally be destroyed.”

Pearce’s heart sank. How long had he been out?

He wiggled his fingers and thumbs as much as he could. In his mind he wondered if Ian knew where he was.

He glanced over at the plate-glass window. Outside he saw lush green grass in gently rolling mounds lit by buzzing sodium lamps. Long, arcing plumes of water swept back and forth over the turf bounded by palm trees. “A damn golf course,” he muttered to himself. “Ian, you’re a Scot, and you don’t even play golf.”

What was going on? Where was he? If he didn’t know any better, he would have guessed by the expensive furnishings he was in a five-star hotel or condo on a golf course in Vegas or West Palm. If they were going to torture him, why would they do it here? If they weren’t going to work him over, what did they want with him?

His nose twitched. An acrid smell. Urine. His own. He looked down. He could feel his cold crotch. He rocked in the chair. Heard the adult diaper crinkle beneath his jumpsuit. He tried to swallow but his throat ached. He was parched. Probably dehydrated from the booze. Stupid.

The door pushed open.

A barrel-chested monster in desert camo and a bushy beard burst into the room. His dark eyes first scowled at Pearce, then scanned the room swiftly. He left as quickly as he arrived, slamming the door shut behind him.

Was that the goon who would torture him? Cut off his head? Pearce’s mind was still clouded. Nothing was making sense.

The door swung open again. The fanatical goon stormed over to Pearce. Ran his thick hands over the PlastiCuffs to make sure they were secure. He turned around and nodded toward the door.

Al-Saud stepped in. He wasn’t dressed like a Westerner now. He wore flowing robes and a white keffiyeh, the traditional headdress of Saudi men. He dismissed the uniformed killer with a wave of his hand. The man sneered at Pearce one last time and left the room, gently shutting the door behind him.

Al-Saud stepped closer to Pearce, leaned down. A smile creased his face. “How are you feeling, Mr. Pearce?”

“Sitting in my dirty diaper, strapped to a chair?” Pearce’s voice croaked. “How do you think I feel?”

“I apologize for the inconveniences. My security team insisted upon it. You have a formidable reputation.”

“I’m a harmless little fuzzball. You can release me. No worries, I promise.”

Al-Saud stood erect. His smile widened. “I think not.” Al-Saud stepped over to an ornately carved dining table and pulled out a chair identical to the one Pearce was strapped to. He placed the chair next to Pearce, then sat in it.

“Why am I here?” Pearce asked.

“That’s an excellent question. Why do you think you’re here?”

“First of all, where is ‘here’?”

“One of my properties adjacent to the country club my family owns.”

“In the States?”

“Just outside of Riyadh, actually. Do you play golf?”

“I have a Mizuno five-iron I’d like to rack across your skull.”

Al-Saud darkened. “I can see the murder in your kafir eyes. Tell me, how many men have you killed? I mean, personally. In combat. Not from one of your remote drone strikes.”

“Why do pussies like you always want to know how many people men like me have killed?”

“Don’t you know it’s rude to answer a question with a question?”

“Do you think I care?”

Al-Saud laughed. “You think you’re in some kind of a movie, don’t you? Like you’re playing the tough-talking action hero who finds a way to free himself and take out the villain.”

“Something like that.”

Al-Saud’s fist slammed into Pearce’s face with a sickening thud. Pearce tumbled over sideways, his head crashing to the thickly carpeted floor. His cheek was on fire.

“Damn,” Pearce said with a groan.

Al-Saud stood, rubbing his sore fist. “You must pardon my temper.” He pulled off his long headdress and set it on the table. “In my country, manners are expected from guests, even ones that stink of their own filth.”

Pearce opened a swelling eye. Saw the pistol in al-Saud’s shoulder holster.

Al-Saud touched his weapon and shook his head. “Not yet, my friend. We have a few things to discuss. Then I should like to sit here and observe you as you watch the destruction of Raqqa and the beginning of the war that will finally cleanse my land of the filthy Daesh.” He checked his Rolex. “My sources tell me that the bombing will begin in just three minutes. We haven’t much time.”

Al-Saud lifted up Pearce in his chair and set him upright again.

Pearce shook his head to clear it. “So what are we discussing?”

“You were an analyst with the CIA before you became a SOG operative. Tell me, why do you think you are here?”

“I guess I pissed somebody off. And I’m guessing it’s you.”

“Excellent. You are quite correct.”

“What I can’t figure out is how I’ve managed to do that. My friend Ian might know.”

“Ian? Who’s that?”

“The head of my IT department. Smart guy. Knows a lot.”

“This Ian fellow might know, but I doubt it. But you do.”

Pearce shook his head and shrugged slightly. “Sorry, drawing a blank.”

“Why do people become angry with other people?”

“Listen, buddy—”

Another fist cracked into Pearce’s jaw. The chair started to tip but al-Saud caught Pearce by the scruff of his neck and stabilized it.

“There’s my temper again. I apologize. I come from a proud family. I should advise you, I’m not your ‘buddy.’ I am His Royal Highness Faisal bin Salman al-Saud, fifth in line in the succession. However, that’s quite the long title. Your Highness or Mr. Ambassador will suffice. Understood?”

Pearce nodded through clenched eyes, his face wincing with pain. “Yeah. Understood.”

“I’ve just given you the answer to my own question.”

Pearce tried to clear his mind. I wish you were here, Ian, he thought. I really do. Pearce opened his eyes, glared at al-Saud. “I guess I did something to offend you.”

“Offend? Outrage is more like it.”

“How?”

“How do you think?”

Pearce’s mind raced. What had al-Saud just been saying? Something about a proud family. “I must have done something against your family or your country.”

“My family is this country. But, yes, my family is the issue. Blood is, indeed, thicker than water, especially in the desert.”

“Are you saying I killed someone in your family?”

“Very good.”

“Who? I don’t know of any Saudis I’ve killed. At least not knowingly.”

“Not knowingly? Interesting phrase.”

Pearce suddenly understood. “A drone strike.”

Al-Saud nodded. “You must have been quite the analyst. I’m sure the CIA regrets having lost you.”

“When?”

“Earlier this year. You struck a group of Daesh fighters in the Kurdistan region. Fifteen were killed outright. Several others who were horribly burned and wounded died later.”

Daesh? What does your family have to do with them?”

“Unfortunately, my nephew had been seduced by the devil’s own doctrine. He was a Daesh unit commander in the region. He died that day.”

“Those sons of bitches were using captured women as sex slaves, then selling them on the open market after they were through with them. They butchered an entire village of Christians. You expect me to weep over that kind of garbage?”

Al-Saud pulled out his pistol and raised it high to slam it into Pearce’s skull, but halted in midair. He lowered the chromed weapon. He grinned. “You see? My temper. You shouldn’t provoke me. Yes, the Daesh behave like barbarians. But my nephew was still my blood, however misguided he may have been. When you killed my nephew, my family demanded retribution. One of my sources in the Turkish army informed me you were the mastermind of the operation. Honor demanded I seek vengeance. Surely you understand the concept of vengeance.”

All too well, Pearce thought. “So why am I still alive?”

Al-Saud pointed at the HD television with his pistol. “We’re going to watch a little television together first, then I’m going to blow your brains out.”

“You don’t think kidnapping and murdering an American government official is a problem for you? Your government won’t be happy with that.”

“No one in my government knows anything.”

“You want me to believe your government isn’t behind the entire operation?”

“The leadership of my government is as feeble and weak-willed as yours. I was forced to act on my own initiative.”

“You don’t know President Lane. He won’t stand by when an American citizen is captured and killed.”

Al-Saud sat back down in his chair, holstering his weapon. “Ansar al-Sharia butchered Ambassador Stevens and the whole world saw it. Your government didn’t seem to care at all. But you? No one even knows I’ve kidnapped you, and no one will know I’m the one who killed you. By this time tomorrow your corpse will be scattered in the desert in small piles of jackal dung.”

“When my team finds out where I am, they’ll track you down.” Pearce kept flexing his hands.

Al-Saud shook his head. “My men stripped you naked when you were unconscious and destroyed your watch. They even neutralized the transponder unit you and your employees have implanted inside your bodies.”

Pearce couldn’t hide his surprise. He’d used those trackers for years to protect his people. Dr. Rao warned him the technology was becoming vulnerable.

Al-Saud laughed. “Nobody knows you’re here, Pearce. Nobody will rescue you.”

“Something still doesn’t add up. Why bring me here? Why wait to kill me until after the war begins?”

“Because I know how much you hate the idea of this war. I wanted you to see it begin. And I want to watch your face when you realize your worst fears will come to pass. Your country will be committed to occupying the Middle East for decades. Thousands of your people will be killed or wounded, and you will spend trillions defending my kingdom from Daesh and the Persian heretics. And it’s all your fault.”

“You want this war.”

Al-Saud laughed again. “Want it? You still don’t get it, do you? I made this war, thanks to you.”

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