like a beetle on its hard, shiny back. Then, as if a monstrous fingertip had flicked it, it continued to roll over, but Moira lost track of it as her car struck a streetlight and careened into a parked car, staving in the offside front fender and door. A blizzard of shattered glass covered her as she was jerked forward, hit the deployed air bag then dizzyingly was slammed back against her seat.
Everything went black.
Climbing carefully over the rows of seat backs was like wading into a sea frozen solid with reef-struck bodies. It was the small broken bodies of the children that were hardest to pass by without heartbreak. Soraya murmured a prayer for each of the souls deprived of the full flight of life.
By the time she reached Delias position, she realized that shed been holding her breath. She let it out now with a small hiss, the acrid odors of burned wiring, synthetic fabrics, and plastics invading her nostrils in full force.
She touched her friend on the shoulder and, mindful of her Egyptian observer, said softly, Lets take a walk.
The observer made to follow them, but stopped at a subtle hand sign from Chalthoum. Outside, the desert light was blinding, even with sunglasses, but the heat was clean, the arid spice of the desert, the murderous sun a welcome respite from the death pit into which theyd both sunk. Coming home to the desert, Soraya thought, was like returning to a longed-for lover: The sand whispered against your skin in intimate caress. In the desert you could see things coming at you. Which was why people like Amun lied, because the desert told the truth, always, in the history it covered and uncovered, in the bones of civilization from which the eternal sand had scoured away all lies. Too much truth, people like Amun believed, was a terrible thing, because it left you nothing to believe in, nothing to live for. She knew she understood him far better than he understood her. He believed otherwise, of course, but that was a useful delusion for him to hold close.
Delia, whats really going on? Soraya asked when theyd plodded some distance away from the al Mokhabarat sentries.
Nothing I can substantiate at the moment. She looked around to make sure they were alone. Seeing Chalthoum staring after them, she said, That man is creeping me out.
Soraya moved them farther away from the Egyptians penetrating gaze. Dont worry, he cant overhear what we say. Whats on your mind?
Fucking sun. Squinting behind her sunglasses, Delia used her hands to shadow her face. My lips are going to peel off before the night is over.
Soraya waited while the sun continued to throb in the sky and Delias lips continued to burn.
Fuck it, Delia said at last. Five to two the crash wasnt caused by something inside the aircraft. She was an inveterate poker player; every situation was a matter of odds. She often transformed nouns into verbs, too. I instinct a particular explosive.
So it was no accident. Sorayas blood ran cold. You ruled out a bomb so, what, an air-to-air missile?
Delia shrugged. Could be, but you read the transcript of the flight crews last conversation with the tower at Cairo International. They saw no sign of a jet coming up on them.
What about from underneath or behind?
Sure, but then the radar wouldve picked it up. Besides, according to the copilot, he saw something smaller even than a private jet coming up on them.
But only at the last possible instant. The explosion took place before he had time to describe what it was.
If youre right, that leads us toward a ground-to-air missile.
Delia nodded. If we get lucky the black box will be intact, and its recorder might tell us more.
When?
You saw what a mess it is in there. Its going to take a while to ascertain whether its even retrievable.
Soraya said in the dry, ominous whisper of the hot wind that reshapes the dunes, A ground-to-air missile would bring an entire universe of very nasty possibilities into play.
I know, Delia said. Such as the involvement, either complicit or implicit, of the Egyptian government.
Soraya couldnt help but turn to look at Chalthoum. Or al Mokhabarat.
6
MOIRA AWOKE to the ticking of her mothers heart. It was as loud as a grandfather clock and it terrified her. For a moment she lay in a fury of darkness, reliving the blur of sound and motion as the paramedics came, took her mother off to the hospital, all seen