EIGHTEEN

The Russian pilot spun her around. He'd figured her out, and she knew she could not play dumb with him like she could with the NSS.

It was time for a counterpunch.

When she was a kid her father had a saying, and she had turned it into her mantra. "Go big or go home." All her life she'd pushed herself to the limits of her abilities, did not accept second best or half measures. And now, clearly she'd found evidence of illegal weapons transfers between Russia and Sudan, exactly what she knew had been going on, and exactly what she wanted to prevent by moving to Holland and joining the International Criminal Court.

This was not a time to be demure, to be compliant, to run and hide. She would use the weight of her position, the power of her organization, the strength of the international community to get herself away from here, away from these thugs, and back to her office, so she could reveal what she'd discovered. Back in Khartoum, she had stared down Sudanese government officials a half dozen rungs higher up the ladder than these two little black-suited buffoons, and she was not going to let these men intimidate her. And the Russian pilot was an arrogant bastard who needed to see that women were not placed in front of him just to bow to his will.

Go big or go home?

Ellen wasn't going home until this dark secret, the secret that many had suspected, had been revealed to the world.

She was about to go big.


Say something lady, Court said to himself. She just stood there, staring at the tall Russian. Court needed to get this over with, to get this woman tossed into the little cell here at the airport until he and his waste-of-time flight could get wheels up and out of here.

Say something! Anything, Court silently implored the woman, but when she did break the silence, he immediately regretted her opening her mouth.

"Very well, gentlemen. My name is Ellen Walsh. I am not an employee of UNAMID. I am, in fact, an inspector with the International Criminal Court, here in the Sudan to investigate sanctions violations concerning weapons sales from abroad."

Oh, shit, woman, you just got yourself killed, Court thought, near disbelief at what he was hearing. How could she be so stupid?

The NSS men's eyes grew impossibly wide, and Gennady looked away from Walsh and towards Gentry, an expression on his face like he'd just been poleaxed.

Walsh continued. "We've known about this flight for a long time. I was sent here to see it for myself. I can assure you my entire agency, both in Khartoum and in the Netherlands, is well aware that I am here. If I am not immediately allowed to communicate with my staff, there will be-"

Gennady shouted at her, "You lie! We were not supposed to come to Al Fashir. We were only diverted at the last moment. No one sent you here to spy on us!"

The secret policemen recovered from their surprise and stormed around the table, heading straight for Ellen Walsh.

"ICC!" Gennady began shouting outside the room to the rest of the flight crew, who were standing out in the terminal. Court couldn't stop him from doing so. The two NSS men immediately confronted her, spun her around, and put her arms behind her back. These guys did not possess more than two speeds-off and on-and she had just flipped their switch. No doubt they were concerned about their own careers, their own lives even, allowing this woman to wander the airport while the Rosoboronexport flight was parked on the tarmac.

"You fucking Canadian whore!" shouted Gennady, turning back to the woman.

The big Russian slapped her face with his powerful hand. Court started to move forward with the objective of breaking Gennady's jaw and pushing the NSS officers back, but he stayed himself. He was in two forms of cover at the same time, and neither of these alter egos would have any incentive to stop the secret police from detaining this woman. He could not show the Sudanese that he was anything more than a Russian cargo aircraft crewman, and he could not show the Russians that he was anything more than some dispassionate agent they were bringing into the country.

So he just stood there, watching, as the NSS men handcuffed her, and she kicked out at Gennady as he stood in front of her shouting in Russian. Soon four armed GOS soldiers stormed in, alerted no doubt by the shouting and wrestling in the interrogation room. Gentry's Russian cohort scooted back out the door, and a couple of the other Russians peered in, with gawking stares of fascination and even amusement.

The older secret policeman grabbed her by her chin and turned her face towards his. "There is a place we take unwanted guests. I promise you that within minutes of arriving at the Ghost House, you will regret your espionage against the Republic of Sudan."

"Espionage? I am not a spy! I have every right as a member of the international community to-"

"Don't say another word, lady!" Court shouted aloud, no attempt now to hide his American accent and stay in cover. This fool was making her own situation direr by the second. "Just shut up and do what you're told. You don't know anything. Get out of here and do what you have to do, but don't let on that you know any-"

"You speak English?" She looked at Gentry, confusion replacing her fury.

Court tried to reason with the woman in short bursts so the others would not understand. He switched to French. He hoped like hell that, as a Canadian, she understood it and hoped, also like hell, that the Sudanese did not. "You are not ICC! Do not say you are ICC, or they will kill you! Tell them you were lying. Tell them you are nobody. UN, that's all." One of the NSS men looked up at him in surprise but was too busy trying to pull the strong woman over to a chair to stop what he was doing.

Ellen began crying, screaming at the same time, "I don't speak French, asshole! Do you speak English or not? Help me!"


After she was led to the chair, her small hands still cuffed behind her back, some of the soldiers cleared out, and one of the NSS men left the room to use the phone. The Russians had all returned to the concourse, sensing that the show was over.

Court remained in the room with the girl, pacing back and forth. He stepped in front of her and leaned close. Her lip bled where Gennady had slapped her, and her rust-colored blouse was torn at the shoulder from the soldiers' rough treatment.

He spoke to her softly, quickly, so the NSS would not pick up all of it. "Listen carefully. Don't fight with them, but be firm. Demand to speak to someone from UNAMID. Don't say anything else. You are not in the ICC. You saw nothing. You know nothing." Gentry looked down at the floor. Not up at her eyes. "You'll be okay." He turned away and headed back out the door slowly. "You'll be fine."

"Who are you?" she called out to him.

He slowed but did not turn back and look at her. "Nobody."


Gentry and the rest of the Ilyushin's crew walked together across the darkened tarmac towards the huge aircraft.

Court was mad and worried, and he felt like shit about the Canadian woman. His shoulders sagged as he walked in the rear of the group, his head slumped down. He tried to tell himself that her outburst condemned her, and that was her fault, not his, and he could not do anything about it.

He'd told her she'd be fine, but from pretty much everything he could see and guess about the situation, he was certain she would be killed. It would be just too easy to make her disappear right here and now, and too damaging to let her walk away to reveal what she knew. Court also knew that if he could come to this conclusion, it made absolutely no sense for the NSS or the GOS to come to any other conclusion.

Miss Ellen Walsh was dead.

"Your fault, Gentry." He said it aloud, softly, as he walked through the night with the flight crew.

They were still a couple hundred yards from the aircraft. Court began to slow. He looked up and saw the others were ahead of him by several yards now. He slowed some more. Then his slumped shoulders raised and stiffened. He looked up from his sulk and said, "Gennady. Don't leave me."

The pilot turned, continued walking backwards. "What? Leave you where?"

"Just wait for me. I have to-"

"We are going now. Fifteen minutes for preflight, and then we are in the air. I don't know what you are talking about, but I'm not waiting for you. Come on."

Court stood firm in the dark; insects chirped and buzzed and trilled and clicked in the scrub around him. He looked back over his shoulder towards the dark terminal. A black four-door sedan pulled up to the employee access door.

"Dammit!" he shouted into the night.

"Let's go!" barked Gennady, angrier this time.

Court looked ahead at the aircraft still two hundred yards ahead. He thought about his fifty pounds of gear. He wished he had some of it with him now.

Gennady asked, "What is the matter with-"

Court interrupted him. He pointed a threatening finger in his face. "Don't leave me! I'll be right back. Do not take off until I get back!" He knew if he invoked the name of Gregor Sidorenko this pilot would do exactly as he said, but he was not about to violate operational security to that level just yet. Instead he just threw out a "Please!" He did not wait for a response. Instead, he turned on his heel and began running back to the terminal. "Dammit!"

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