He thought of his wife, Catherine. She must know he was missing by now. But even if he was to be rescued, what good is a blind husband? An accountant by trade, there was no way he could work with figures as a blind man. He would be a complete burden on the entire family. The best thing to do is to kill myself, he thought. He had some life insurance, and wondered if it would pay off in the event of his suicide.
***
The time passed, but Ahmed had no way of measuring it. How long have I been like this? Ahmed concentrated on his other senses, but there was no input, save the sound of the pounding of his own heart. His mouth was as dry as a slab of jerky, so he tried to wet his broken lips with his tongue. In despair, he dropped to the floor. Lying there on his back, he rubbed his eyes and, suddenly, he saw tiny stars above him in the blackness. Light! I can see light!
The tiny stars spread out in a geometric pattern, like symbols in a matrix. Those can’t be stars. They’re not random. Ahmed’s accountant’s brain analyzed the patterns of light, but then they turned into eyes, angrily staring at him. Stop! Stop! Please, somebody help me! Then the eyes pulled back to reveal a miniature firing squad, with their rifles trained on Ahmed. He heard the blast of their rifles, almost in slow motion, and felt the bullets ripping through his flesh as his brain switched off.
CHAPTER FOUR
Ahmed opened his eyes to complete darkness again. He was still blind, but the need to urinate affirmed that he was still alive.
His nostrils filled with the sweet smell of food: chicken…thyme…rosemary…potatoes. Soup!
But was it real? On his hands and knees, he crawled the surface of the concrete floor, looking for the soup and for something to pee in, just in case he had to drink his own urine to survive. If worse came to worse, he could eat the soup and then pee in the container.
Gingerly, his hands methodically covered the surface of the floor, until they met resistance. Gripping it with his fingers, he realized it was a Styrofoam cup, about 12 ounces in capacity. He explored inside, the cup with one finger. Water! But Ahmed resisted the impulse to drain the cup. Instead he smelled it, and, sensing no foul odor, tasted just a bit on his tongue. It was fresh and cooling, which immediately gave rise to the instinctual urge to gulp it down. Not wanting to throw it up, Ahmed took a mouthful and swirled it around with his tongue before swallowing. The taste of minerals and the cool wetness was the most pleasing thing he had experienced in such a long time. Ahmed slowly savored every drop of the precious water, and then continued on his quest refreshed.
***
The soup was still lukewarm when Ahmed found it. He grasped the small bowl with both hands as the aroma filled his lungs, and sipped on the broth, then reached in and pulled out a piece of potato. It was the best thing he had ever tasted.
There was no telling how long his stomach had been empty. The pangs of hunger had subsided long ago and, since he had no way of tracking time, that concept had fallen away from his consciousness, as the hunger had. Ahmed knew that this first taste of food in who knows how long may be his last for a while, so he saved half the bowl for later, knowing that the hunger would return as soon as his body realized it had been nourished once again.
He had only spent a few days with Sabeen before the military police took them away and separated them. Sabeen was a grocer! Why would they think he was a terrorist? Since then, Ahmed had lived the nightmare of his new life in captivity, first aboard a military transport, then on a huge jet, all the while with bound hands and feet and a hood over his head, until he was dumped on the ground, naked, in this new prison, wherever it was. He couldn’t remember the last time he had eaten before such delicious chicken soup.
CHAPTER FIVE
Angela put on her sweater and looked at herself in her pocket mirror. She wiped off a bit of the stray mascara around her green eyes and put a brush through her hair. Just as she was about to lock up the office, the phone rang.
“Agent Wollard,” she answered.
“Angie, it’s Bill. I’ve got some info on your Mr. Khury, but it’s not something you want to get involved in.”
“I’ll decide that Bill, what’ve you got?”
“Khury shows up in Baghdad about three weeks ago. His brother, Sabeen, is a suspected money launderer for al Qaeda.”
“I see. CIA talk.” The CIA was always looking to tie every kind of criminal activity in the Middle East to al Qaeda.
“You got that right.”
“Since when does the CIA tell the Bureau what to do?”
“Since we have no jurisdiction. Khury’s in Guantanamo.”
“That shit hole is still open?”
“Damn right it is. Please, don’t tell anyone I told you, and for God’s sake, don’t get involved. This is classified stuff.”
“Who says?”
“It comes from high up.”
“How high?”
“Lose your job high, get it?”
“I do Bill, thanks.”
“We’re square now, Angie, this was a big one.”
***
“You’re late again.” Rick Penn stood up and smiled, his six foot six inch frame towering over the small table as Angela nervously paced into the restaurant. Rick was a retired FBI agent, now a private investigator, and had been Angela’s mentor during her first days in the bureau. At 54, he had served out his last days with the Bureau in Santa Barbara, and then retired there. Now he could take it easy and be his own boss. For years, Rick had worn the same type of G-man suit, but now he was free of those chains and could wear whatever he pleased. But, for his meeting with Angela today, he dressed up in a white shirt, tie and baggy pants: The Columbo look.
“I’m sorry, it’s my job.”
“I know. All is forgiven. They saved us the best table.”
The maître d’ led them to a nice table in front of a crackling fireplace. Santa Barbara had many cozy restaurants like Cava. Nestled on Coast Village Road in Montecito, having a meal there was comfy, like being in your own living room.
“Rick, I know somebody who needs your help, but I could lose my job for telling you about it.”
“You could always join my PI firm, retire early like me,” Rick smiled, “Now tell me about this potential client?”
“He’s a naturalized citizen, being held at Guantanamo.”
“Guano-mo, huh? The neo-Nazi concentration camp.”
“Yes. His wife came to me to file a missing person’s case. I think you should talk to her.”
Rick brushed his graying hair out of his eyes. “You’re a few weeks shy of a haircut, aren’t you Rick?”
Rick chuckled. “At least I have some hair left. Just email me her contact info and I’ll give her a call.”
“Thanks Rick.”
Rick had read a lot about the suspected terrorists being held at Guantanamo Bay indefinitely. It was the kind of case that Rick’s best friend, lawyer Brent Marks, had always dreamed about: Going against the grain to fight for an individual’s rights. After 18 years of slugging it out as a “poor man’s lawyer” Brent had gained plenty of experience righting wrongs, but there was only so much you could do with a drunk driving or spousal abuse case. This case sounded like fertile Constitutional Law ground for Brent, and Rick would keep the investigation gig on the case.
The military prison at Guantanamo was the equivalent of any concentration camp in Nazi Germany, the most shameful example of the cruel and complete abolition of all human rights by the Government, all in the name of the war on terrorism. Two days after the September 11th attacks, the Congress gave authority to the president to use military force, and, since then, the military, not the U.S. courts, had jurisdiction over anyone suspected as an “enemy combatant,” And could do with them as they pleased, without the constraints of the U.S. Constitution.
CHAPTER SIX
Rick called Brent and arranged to meet later that day after work. That could be a somewhat vague term for Brent, who was quite the workaholic when he was on a case. They had met about eig
ht years earlier, when Rick had walked into Brent’s office and scared the crap out of him by flashing his FBI badge. It turned out Rick was just looking for some legal advice for a case he was working on. The two stayed in contact and became close over the years.
Brent was wrapping up an interview with a potential client, an Indian guy who had been accused of a hit and run, not the type of a case he had been dreaming of, but the kind he had been known to take to keep the doors open. The client was trying to explain his case to Brent, but it seemed he didn’t have much of a defense.
“I’m having a little trouble following your story, Mr. Babu. You’re telling me that you hit the car, and you didn’t stop, right?”
“No, no, that’s not it at all. I hit the guy, and then I look around, and I don’t see him. Then I drive around and around and around, and I still do not see the guy, so I go home.”
“So you didn’t stop?”
“How could I stop when I did not see the guy?”
“Mr. Babu, if I take your case, I’m going to require a retainer up front.”
“But I don’t have any cash. Look, look, my cousin is a tailor in Hong Kong. He makes the best suits in the world. Do you need a suit?”
“You want to pay me in suits?”
“Yes, please, look, look, I have the swatches right here.” Babu pulled some material samples from his bag, and held them out to Brent. “Feel the material. It is the finest material in the world!”
“I don’t know, Mr. Babu.”
“Please, Mr. Marks. You must take my case. I will pay you in suits now, and then, when I get some money, I will give you money. You must help me. I cannot sleep, I cannot make love with my wife. It is like a death in the family!”
It was almost a comedy. Brent felt the urge to look around the room for the hidden camera. He suppressed a grin.
“It’s late, Mr. Babu. Can I call you tomorrow with my decision?”
“Yes, yes, thank you Mr. Marks, thank you!”
***
Brent closed up the office and left. With 18 years of practice under his belt, he was close to being able to decline the Mr. Babu's and focus on more important cases. He thought of the comical interview and laughed to himself. Brent was the first American of his generation, so he had a soft spot for the immigrants.
His father, Jose, had emigrated from Spain and completely assimilated into American pop culture, even changed the family name from Marquez to Marks. Thankfully, his father spoke Spanish at home to Brent and his brother John. It was an advantage that came in handy in the practice of his profession.
At about seven, Brent walked into the Press Room on Ortega Street to find his friend Rick waiting at the bar.
“There he is! What’s up, Big Dog?”
“Hey, Rick.”
Rick rose from the bar stool, so tall a man that it seemed he would hit the ceiling, and swung into a power handshake with Brent.
“Good to see you, buddy,” said Rick.
“You too. It’s been a long time.” Brent slid into the chair next to Rick at the sticky bar counter.
“Dude, you’re supposed to be a bachelor. Only married men have your dead boring social life.”
“Yeah, well I’ve kind of been seeing somebody.”
“Do tell. Come on, give me all the details, and don’t leave out the measurements. 36-24-36, D cup?”
“Come on, man!”
“No, dude, I’m happy for you whenever you have a relationship that lasts more than three weeks. It’s not that piece of ass secretary of yours – Melinda – is it?”
“No, no, her name is Debbie.”
“Debbie? As in dumb blonde Debbie Does Dallas, something like that?”
“Dude! It’s not like that. I’m really enjoying her company.”
“So, a meaningful relationship. Dude, have fun, but wear a condom, that’s all I can say.”
“Very funny. What’s this new case that you’ve taken on?”
“Really interesting. And it’s your kind of case. Not one of those nut jobs you take to pay the rent.”
“I’ve still got a few of those.”
“I know, but this one is really juicy. This rag head marries an American girl, right? He’s the gung-ho, I love America kind of immigrant, accountant, two kids, the house, the whole nine yards. Becomes a U.S. citizen…”
“Yeah?”
“Then his brother calls him with some kind of family crisis back in Iraq, and he goes, right? Well, his brother is involved in some kind of money laundering operation back there – he’s got this cash grocery business – and he gets raided by MPs. Our guy gets picked up and shipped to Gitmo.”
Brent almost choked on his beer. “What?”
“That’s right. They’re keeping him there; think he’s some kind of terrorist. No charges, no counsel, no visitors. A virtual Nazi prison camp.”
“Whoa, watch it. I thought you were a flag-waving Republican.”
“Dude, this transcends politics. George W. Bush is wiping his ass with the Constitution.”
“Careful, that’s your ex-boss you’re talking about.”
“Yeah, the same one who said to the Brazilian president, ‘Oh do you have blacks too?’” Rick snorted and took a gulp of beer.
“How about, ‘Africa is a nation that suffers from incredible disease,’” said Brent, wiping away tears he was laughing so hard.
“It would be funny if it wasn’t so tragic.” Rick gargled his beer between laughs.
“My favorite one is, ‘this foreign policy stuff is a little frustrating.’ Like he’s learning it in high school or something.”
“How about, ‘I know what I believe. I will continue to articulate what I believe and what I believe. I believe what I believe is right.’ It’s almost enough to make me turn into a Democrat, like you.”
“Dude, I’m not a Democrat, I’m a Libertarian.”
“A Libertarian’s just a Democrat whose vote doesn’t count. Same thing.”
“How’d you find out about this case anyway?” asked Brent, trying to get back on a serious track.
“Dude, I’m a secret agent man.”
“From someone in the Bureau.”
“Exactly, a confidential source. Look, I’ve talked to his wife and I recommended you for the job.”
Rick was right. Brent was so enthusiastic about the case he had to practically fight him not to go back to the office.
“I can’t wait to take this case, Rick.”
“Dude, chill out. It’ll still be there in the morning. I’m not letting anyone else have it.”
CHAPTER SEVEN
Brent’s secretary Melinda announced Catherine Khury. Brent walked into the office waiting room to greet her and show her in.
Mrs. Khury was not what Brent had expected. She was American, of obvious European descent, about 30 years old, with light brown hair and eyes. She seemed a little shy and more than a bit nervous.
“Brent Marks,” he said, extending his hand.
She took it. Her hand was warm and pleasant, but the handshake was shaky. “Catherine Khury.”
“Please have a seat.”
Catherine sat down in one of the two classic wooden, unpadded chairs across from Brent’s desk. It was designed to encourage a visit of the required length only.
“Mrs. Khury, as I told you on the phone, I am interested in helping you with your husband’s matter,” said Brent.
“I’m so thankful your investigator Mr. Penn found him, but I can’t believe he’s being held as a suspected terrorist. How can I see him?” Katherine asked, fidgeting with her purse on her lap.
“Actually, Mrs. Khury, I didn’t find him; he was located by a confidential source who asked me to reveal the information to you. And, as far as being able to see him, I’m not sure the Government will allow that yet.”
“Why not? Ahmed’s a good man. He never had anything to do with terrorists.”
“I believe you, but they haven’t even acknowledged that they have him.”
/> “What do we do?” Catherine started to cry. “It seems to be impossible.”
“Of course, you have no obligation to hire me, but what you could do is file a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in Federal Court here in the States. If that’s granted, he will have a hearing in a U.S. Court on U.S. soil instead of being held indefinitely in Cuba.”
“Indefinitely?”
“Yes, some suspected terrorists have been there since 2003. If they are accused of being ‘enemy combatants’ they can be held as long as it is deemed fit, without a trial. But they do have a right to challenge whether they are enemy combatants or not.”
“Ahmed is not an enemy of the United States. He loves America. And he’s not a terrorist!”
“The Government thinks he is, and they think that gives them the ability to foreclose all his rights.”
“Is this expensive, this habeas corpus?”
“Yes, it is. I can give you a very good hourly rate, but I can’t work for free. We’ll be fighting the Government, and they’ll throw everything at us to crush our petition. It’s going to take a lot of hours.”
“I’ll do whatever it takes to save Ahmed. I’ve got some savings, and I’ll borrow money if I have to.”
“I’ll see if I can get the Government to admit they have him, and the next step will be to go down there to talk to him.”
“I’ll go with you.”
“Let me see what I can do first, then we’ll try to set up visitation for you, okay?”
“You’re my last hope, Mr. Marks. I’ve tried everything and every door closes in my face. The only ones who even tried to help me were that FBI agent and Mr. Penn.
Brent was accustomed to the way tribal bias and prejudice gave way to mistreatment in his native America, his Hispanic looks being mistaken for Mexican more than once.