The Kill Artist
U.S. Diplomatic Security Service. They moved down the corridor, Arafat in the center of the party, and stepped into a private elevator, which whisked them downward to the garage. There Arafat slipped into the back of a limousine. A moment later his motorcade was speeding south on Fifteenth Street toward the White House.
Arafat looked out his window. A bit like the old days, this late-night dash through wet streets-like the days when he never spent two nights in a row in the same bed. Sometimes he even switched residences in the middle of the night when his well-tuned instincts sensed trouble. He avoided public places-never ate in restaurants, never went to the cinema or the theater. His skin turned blotchy from lack of sun. His survival skills had thwarted hundreds of attempts on his life by the Israelis and his enemies within the movement. Some had not been so lucky. He thought of his old friend and second in command, Abu Jihad. He had led the war effort in the Occupied Territories; helped to organize the intifada. And for that the Israelis had murdered him in his villa in Tunis. Arafat knew that without Abu Jihad he would not be where he was today: driving across Washington for a secret meeting with the American president. It was a shame his old friend was not here to see this.
The motorcade passed through the barricade on Pennsylvania Avenue and entered the White House grounds. A moment later Arafat's car stopped beneath the shelter of the North Portico.
A Marine guard stepped forward and opened the door. "Good evening, Mr. Arafat. Right this way, please."
President James Beckwith was waiting in the drawing room of the residence in the Executive Mansion. He looked as though he had just stepped off the deck of his sailboat. He wore a pair of wrinkled khaki trousers and a crewneck pullover sweater. He was a tall man with a full head of silver hair and a genteel manner. His permanently tanned face projected youth and exuberance, despite the fact that he was nearly seventy years old.
They sat in front of the fire, Beckwith nursing a glass of whiskey, Arafat sipping tea sweetened with honey. When Beckwith had been in the Senate he had been one of Israel's staunchest allies and led the opposition to U.S. recognition of the PLO-indeed, he had regularly referred to Arafat and the PLO as "bloodthirsty terrorists." Now the two men were close allies in the quest for peace in the Middle East. Each needed the help of the other to succeed. Arafat needed Beckwith to press the Israelis to make concessions at the negotiating table. Beckwith needed Arafat to keep the radicals and fundamentalists in line so the talks could continue.
After an hour Beckwith raised the murders of Ambassador Eliyahu and David Morgenthau. "My CIA director tells me your old friend Tariq was probably behind both attacks, but they have no proof."
Arafat smiled. "I've never doubted for a moment that it was Tariq. But if your CIA thinks they're going to find proof of this, I'm afraid they're sadly mistaken. Tariq doesn't operate that way."
"If he continues to kill Jews, it's going to make it more difficult to keep moving toward a final settlement."
"Forgive my bluntness, Mr. President, but Tariq is only a factor if you and the Israelis allow him to be a factor. He does not act on my behalf. He does not operate from territory controlled by the Palestinian Authority. He does not speak for those Palestinians who want peace."
"All true, but isn't there anything you can do to dissuade him?"
"Tariq?" Arafat shook his head slowly. "We were close friends once. He was one of my finest intelligence officers. But he left me over the decision to renounce terrorism and begin peace talks. We haven't spoken in years."
"Perhaps he might listen to you now."
"I'm afraid Tariq listens to no voice but his own. He's a man haunted by demons."
"All of us are, especially when you reach my age."
"And mine," said Arafat. "But I'm afraid Tariq is haunted by a different kind of demon. You see, he's a young man who's dying, and he wants to settle accounts before he leaves."
Beckwith raised his eyebrows in surprise. "Dying?"
"According to my sources he has a severe brain tumor."
"Do the Israelis know this?"
"Yes," Arafat said. "I've told them myself."
"Who?"
"Their chief of intelligence, Ari Shamron."
"I wonder why their chief of intelligence neglected to share this piece of information with the Central Intelligence Agency."
Arafat laughed. "I suppose you've never
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