The Faithful Spy

The Faithful Spy Read Online Free PDF Page B

Book: The Faithful Spy Read Online Free PDF
Author: Alex Berenson
Tags: Fiction, General, Thrillers, Espionage
renaissance. Bin Laden was the mujaddid.
    “Of course.” A battered Toyota Crown sedan was parked behind the men. It was the only car in the village that Wells didn’t recognize, so it must be theirs. He stepped toward it. Bassim steered him away.
    “He asks that you pack a bag. With everything you own that you wish to keep.”
    The request was unexpected, but Wells merely nodded. “Shouldn’t take long,” he said. They walked down an alley to the brick hut where Wells lived with three other jihadis.
    Inside, Naji, a young Jordanian who had become Wells’s best friend in the mountains, thumbed through a tattered magazine whose cover featured Imran Khan, a famous Pakistani cricketeer-turned-politician. In the corner a coffeepot boiled on a little steel stove.
    “Jalal,” Naji said, “have you found us any sponsors yet?” For months, Naji and Wells had joked to each other about starting a cricket team for Qaeda, maybe getting corporate sponsorship: “The Jihadis will blow you away.” Wells wouldn’t have made those jokes to anyone else. But Naji was more sophisticated than most jihadis. He had grown up in Amman, Jordan’s capital, paradise compared to this village. And Wells had saved Naji’s life the previous summer, stitching the Jordanian up after Afghan police shot him at a border checkpoint. Since then the two men had been able to talk openly about the frustrations of living in the North-West Frontier.
    “Soon,” Wells said.
    Hamra, Wells’s cat, rubbed against his leg and jumped on the thin gray blanket that covered his narrow cot. She was a stray Wells had found two years before, skinny, red—which explained her name;
hamra
means “red” in Arabic—and a great leaper. She had chosen him. One winter morning she had followed him around the village, mewing pathetically, refusing to go away even when he shouted at her. He couldn’t bear watching her starve, so despite warnings from his fellow villagers that one cat would soon turn into ten, he’d taken her in.
    “Hello, Hamra,” he said, petting her quickly as Bassim walked into the hut. Shihab followed, murmuring something to Bassim that Wells couldn’t hear.
    “Bassim and Shihab—Naji,” Wells said.
    “Marhaba,”
Naji said. Hello. Shihab and Bassim ignored him.
    “Please, have coffee,” Wells said.
    “We must leave soon,” Bassim said.
    “Naji,” Wells said. “Can you leave us for a moment?”
    Naji looked at Bassim and Shihab. “Are you sure?”
    “Nam.”
    As Naji walked out, Wells stopped him. “Naji,” Wells said. He ran his fingers over Hamra’s head. “Take care of her while I’m gone.”
    “When will you be back, Jalal?”
    Wells merely shook his head.
    “
Hamdulillah,
then,” Naji said. Praise be to God, a traditional Arabic blessing.
“Masalaama.”
Good-bye.
    “Hamdulillah.”
They hugged, briefly, and Naji walked out.
     
    BASSIM AND SHIHAB looked on as Wells grabbed a canvas bag from under his cot. He threw in the few ragged clothes he wanted: his spare robe, a pair of beaten sneakers, a faded green wool sweater, its threads loose. A world-band radio he’d bought in Akora Khatak a year before, and a couple of spare batteries. The twelve thousand rupees—about two hundred dollars—he had saved. He didn’t have much else. No photographs, no television, no books except the Koran and a couple of Islamic philosophy texts. He slipped those gently into the bag. And his guns, of course. He lay on the dirt floor and pulled his AK and his Makarov from under the bed.
    “Those you can leave, Jalal,” Bassim said.
    Wells could not remember the last time he had slept without a rifle. He would rather have left his clothes. “I’d rather not.”
    “You won’t need them where you’re going.”
    Wells decided not to argue. Not that he had much choice. In any case, he always had his knife. He slid the guns back under the bed.
    “The dagger as well,” Bassim said. “It will be safer for all of us.”
    Without a
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