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A compact man wearing fresh olive drab utilities walked briskly across the foyer. He did not speak until he stood at attention four feet from his master.

"Good evening, Al-Mevlevi," said Joseph, giving a crisp salute. "I am grateful for the opportunity to debrief you on the day's activities."

Mevlevi pulled the uniformed man to his chest and kissed him on each cheek. "You are my eyes and ears. You know how I depend on you. Please begin."

Joseph began his recitation with a summary of ongoing security measures. Three-man patrols had been sent out at fifteen-minute intervals throughout the day to survey the compound's perimeter. A scout followed each. No activity was reported. The height of the fences on the northernmost boundary of the compound was to be increased. However, the work crew did not arrive as scheduled. Christians, no doubt.

Ali Mevlevi listened attentively while appraising his chief of internal security. He admired the stiff cast of his shoulders and his formal posture. How well they matched the man's stern appearance: his black hair shorn in a crew cut, his dark face covered with an even darker stubble, and his sad eyes. The eyes of his people.

He had found Joseph in Mieh-Mieh, as he found all his men.

Joseph had been in charge of the labor pool for the southern division of the refugee camp that lay twenty miles southeast of Beirut, a bloody stain on Israel's northern doormat. Fifteen years after the Jews' invasion, the camp still stood, even thrived. Thousands of Palestinians crowded the camp's narrow alleyways, fighting daily over meager rations and squalid quarters. A job that creased a man's hands and crooked his back was the camp's most valued commodity. Cutting slabs of concrete under a merciless sun for ten hours brought two American dollars, enough to purchase a loaf of bread, three strips of lamb, and two cigarettes. Filling craters dug by countless mortars and car bombs, a twelve-hour shift spent under constant threat of hostile fire, brought the princely sum of four dollars. Two men were killed each week while repairing the city's roads. Two hundred clamored to take their places.

Joseph had been brought to Mevlevi's attention by a godless man, a thorny Syrian, Abu Abu by name, slaver by trade. Abu Abu had a sharp and discerning eye for the ruthless and cunning among the camp's inhabitants. Most refugees were arrogant; many were strong. Few were intelligent. Fewer still, clever. At the top of this pile of refuse sat Joseph.

"He is mean as a cobra, yet wise as an owl," said Abu Abu, before telling with glee of the last aspirant to Joseph's position. Eyes gouged out, thumbs severed, and tongue spit into a neighbor's cooking pot, the interloper spent his every day seated on an immaculate Syrian quilt, ten steps from the entrance to Joseph's tent.

"This one is special," whispered Abu Abu. "He has pride."

Joseph had been polite in his refusal to leave, but Mevlevi had convinced him. It had taken time, and, in truth, he had revealed more of his plans than he had thought prudent. He spoke of a new praetorian guard; this time they, not the Romans, would be conquerors. He spoke of a new Jerusalem returned to its sole and rightful possessors, and of a world where devotion to God came first, and to man, second.

Finally, Joseph agreed to join him.

"Were our esteemed instructors able to keep to their course plan?" Mevlevi demanded, after Joseph had completed his summary. "We cannot afford to lose any more days."

"Yes, Al-Mevlevi. All instruction specified for day fifty-seven was carried out. Sergeant Rodenko instructed the men on the proper use of Katyusha rockets in the morning. Emphasis was placed on rapid setup, firing, and deconstruction of the base firing units. So far we have received twenty-one firing platforms. Each assault squadron was able to have a go at it. Unfortunately we were unable to fire live ammunition. Rodenko insisted the heat signature of the rockets would be visible to satellites overhead."

Mevlevi said he understood. Heat signatures, satellite overflies, microwave fences- they were all part of his new vocabulary. The lexicon of Khamsin.

Joseph continued. "In the afternoon, Lieutenant Ivlov delivered a lecture on target selection and the arming of the laser proximity fuses. The men grew bored quickly. They are more comfortable with their Kalashnikovs. They are all anxious to know what use they will put their training to. Ivlov demanded to know once more whether our target would be civilian or military."

"Did he?" asked Mevlevi. Lieutenant Boris Ivlov and Sergeant Mikhail Rodenko had arrived along with the equipment two months ago. Both were burned-out veterans of the Afghan war. Trainers for hire supplied in a package deal brokered by General Dimitri Marchenko, late of the Kazakhstani Armed Forces, now president of the quasi-governmental Surplus Arms Warehouse. One of the new breed of post-cold war entrepreneurs. Like many of his country's wares, Marchenko's trainers were second-rate, prone to breaking down at inconvenient moments. A vodka-induced stupor had already cost two days of training. And now they were asking questions. Not good.

"Your target will be made known to you in due time," Mevlevi said coldly. "We will not be firing blanks much longer. You can be certain of that."

Joseph nodded his head respectfully.

"I am reluctant to inquire about the final matter," said Mevlevi.

"Unfortunately, true. Another hornet buzzing in our nest."

"It's been seven months since Mong's raid. Will the oriental bastard never let up? Not a month has passed when a traitor hasn't been uncloaked, not a week when we haven't had to tighten security." Mevlevi sighed. And not a night when the promise of restful sleep wasn't dashed by the recollection of the Asian's aggressive gambit.

During the predawn still of a July morning, a band of warriors had infiltrated the compound. Fifteen men in all. Their task: Assassinate Ali Mevlevi. Their patron: General Buddy Mong, long Mevlevi's most trusted business partner, commander of some fifteen thousand irregulars massed along the Thai-Burmese border. Or so Mevlevi had guessed. To this day, he did not know what had prompted the attack and so, in the tortured etiquette of the international narcotics trade, had continued to transact business with Mong on a regular basis. Truth be told he could not afford to stop. Not now.

Not with Khamsin so close to fruition.

"Let us give thanks to Allah that we have sufficient strength to guard against further incursions," said Joseph.

"Thanks be to Allah." Mevlevi found it difficult to avoid staring at the terrible scar that ran an unsteady course from the corner of Joseph's right eye to the base of his jaw. The last wish of Mong's assassins. Alone among his aides, Joseph could not be questioned as to his loyalty. The scar would not allow it.

"No mercy can be shown Mong, nor any of his minions. Bring the young Judas to me."

Joseph spun on his heel, and walked from the room, bowing slightly before Lina, who lingered in the doorway awaiting Mevlevi's acknowledgment.

"Lina," Mevlevi commanded. "You will join us. Now."

He wanted his mistress to witness this demonstration of his authority, crude as it might be. The educational powers of punishment were vastly underrated. Though, in retrospect, he had erred in the case of an old acquaintance, Cerruti the banker, who had visited him on New Year's Day. Mevlevi had felt it necessary to extinguish an unwelcome streak of independence the banker had recently exhibited. He could not allow an underling, no matter how far removed, to believe himself capable of issuing his master unilateral instructions. The Swiss had not responded well to a brief course of negative reinforcement, unthreatening as it might have been.

And now there were more developments from the Swiss front. He scoffed at the news that the nation's banks had entered into a secret agreement to cooperate with the DEA. Such cooperation would prove a minor headache, nothing more. But the smugness with which the American authorities had emasculated Switzerland's banks begged defiance. And defy them he would. He would pass before the enemy's eyes unseen, unmolested, and unscathed. The challenge invigorated him.