CHAPTER ONE
"Wait a minute. How old are you?"
"I eleven," the boy
said beaming, slamming the pedal down and welding the rug merchant to the back
of his seat.
Pakistan's wildest and smallest
cabbie tore off through the summer-hot streets of Karachi swerving to miss
street vendors, goat carts and baskets teetering high on rocking vehicles in a
mad dash to deliver his fare to an airstrip east of the city. Four miles of winding streets and merchants
doing just as they pleased was tough on the nerves, Western nerves anyway, but
the kid's driving was good, really good.
He knew two speeds, fast and faster, as he tried to see over the car's
instrument panels. Tracer usually
avoided the underage taxi maniacs peculiar to the Far East,
but at present, had no choice. Not all
the sweat on his brow was from the insufferable heat.
"Good God, kid! Slow down a little!"
"You want fast?"
"Well, yes, but ... "
"Then I'm drive, you no
talk!"
A shot cracked from behind and a
bullet whacked through the rear window.
Something the kid yelled sounded like "son of bitch" tangled
in thick guttural Arabic.
Trace recoiled in horror when the
spray of flying glass brought a sobering realization that his colorful life
might end before the hour was up. With
hands cupped over his face he peeked out from between his fingers at the
pedestrians beyond the yellow hood of the Chevy Impala and wondered once again
why his business had to be this hazardous.
He glanced lovingly under his shielding fingers at the four-by-six
Pakistani silk rug folded neatly beside him, then looked around to see if the
thugs from hell were still at his backside.
Fortunately they too were having traffic problems.
Amidst the rattle and crash of
this brutal taxi ride, Tracer recalled a phone conversation two years earlier
with Tom Smith, an old high school friend now an attorney, and concluded once
again that the odds of staying alive in this strange pursuit were about the
same as having a prosperous business curve in the late roaring twenties.
"Rugs?" he had said an eternity
ago.
"Yes, Trace. Rugs," Tom had repeated, switching the
receiver to his other ear. "You know, those tapestry-looking things you put on floors?"
"I know what they are,
Tom. But why
rugs?"
"Look, every time you come
down here to D.C. what do you talk about constantly? And when you worked in the Middle
East, what did you always write to me about? And when you visited Greece
what did you bring home? Rugs! You love rugs! Persian, Pakistani, Greek, Indian ... and
you're getting good at spotting quality.
What I'm trying to say is, now that your career has been dumped, do the
thing you've always loved. Go into the
rug business! Find those special rugs
for wealthy clients, y'know the kind no store in the U.S.
can provide. You'll have more business
than you want!"
In the present, Ronald Allen
Tracer remembered thinking about what Tom had said months ago. He'd always worked for others, and it never
occurred to him to do it all himself. "Tom,"
he'd said, "I think you've got a good idea. It sure beats anything else I've tried in the
past year, the most boring year of my life!
Nothing ever happens to me."
"Yes, Trace! I can even help set up everything you'll need
to be legal. And there's a bonus beyond
that. I have a lot of well-placed
friends who'll buy rugs. They all love
the fancy ones, you know, the ones that can't be found just everywhere, and
they've got the bucks. They are not
inclined to go get them in person because, well, the world can be a little
dangerous and they don't have time anyway.
But they still want them very much.
If you were in the business you'd be the logical choice to pick up those
woven beauties. Once it got around you'd
done well for one buyer, well, need I say more?"
"What a cryptic phone
conversation that had been," Trace thought, jogging his thoughts back to
the taxi. "A
little dangerous.
Humph!" He again peered from
the bounding cab with the words "nothing ever happens to me..."
ricocheting ironically between his ears.
"Since then, life has been a series of shock stories that wouldn't
be believed even as fiction."
BANG! A bullet tore into the right front fender of
the battered cab. The dreaded heathens
Trace had been evading for four days appeared suddenly in their black Mercedes
from a connecting street. Quick
expletives emanating from the front seat ended with, "I'm keel
someone!"
Trace knew every effort would be
made to damage this taxicab owned by a driver who could barely see over its
dashboard.