Authors: Craig Parshall
“On the other hand,” the captain continued, “you don't come out of the desert into the city like most of the prophetsâyou come from America to Cairo. Tell meâ¦what did you do in America?”
“I was an assistant pastor in a Christian church. In West Virginia⦔
“Tell me about this West Virginiaâwhat kind of place is it?”
“It was a small church. In a very remote, rural part of West Virginia.”
“Wilderness? Would you say that it was wilderness?”
“You could say that,” Gilead said cautiously.
“So, perhaps you
do
think you are a prophet. Out of the wilderness of West Virginia and into Cairoâpreaching like an infidelâor maybe you're just an agitator. Are you an agitator?”
Gilead was silent.
“Tell me right now. Who were you meeting with here in Cairo?”
“I am not meeting with anyone. I came alone.”
“What are the names of your groups? What terrorist network are you part of?”
“I am not a terrorist. I don't know what you're talking about.”
The Egyptian police captain slowly rolled his chair back and stood up. He took a few more puffs on his cigarette and then threw it to the ground, crushing it with his boot.
“I know all about you. Surely you know that. All about the death of your mother. Jadeah. Obviously not an Arabic name. It was not her given name. Excuse me for saying it, but she was a very misguided woman. I know about your father taking you to the United States. And many other thingsâ¦are you going to be truthful with me now?”
“I told you the truth. And you've rejected the truthâ”
“So. You want to play the part of a prophet. But you know how they all end up. I'm sure you've visited the tombs of the pharoahs in Giza. You will end up like them. You know the old Egyptian saying? You're Egyptian tooâsurely you remember it. âThe sun rises in the east so that it may die in the west.' But you've turned things around⦔
Gilead looked at his captor with curiosity.
“The sun may rise in the east so that it can die in the westâbut you've come from the west, apparently, with the desire to die in the east.”
And with that the Egyptian police captain chuckled to himself, which turned into a coughing spell.
When the coughing stopped, he walked up to the American, stepping again with the heels of his boots on his toes.
“Tell me, do you know Muhammad Wafa?”
Gilead shook his head no.
“How about Tarek Dahab?”
“No,” Gilead said, wincing with pain.
“How about Hisham Ghani or Tarek al-Ashkar?”
“I know none of these men,” Gilead said through gritted teeth.
The Egyptian police captain studied his face and then, after a few more moments of twisting his heels back and forth, grinding down, he took a step backward.
“Just wonderingâ¦because these four menâthe human-rights agitators talk all the time about these four men. Most unfortunate. Some people say they were tortured after they were arrested and then killed while in our custody. I, of course, know nothing about this. Truly a shameâ¦just wondering if you knew them⦔
Then the captain lowered his face down close to Gilead's. And with breath that stank of cigarette smoke, he gave his last warning.
“Mr. Amahn, I would suggest that you answer all of our questions. And give us as much information as you know. Because, if you do notâthings could be very uncomfortable for you.”
With that, the police captain turned, buttoned his jacket, and strode out of the room. After a few moments a jailer entered the
room and escorted Gilead to his cell. On the way Gilead asked whether he could make a phone call.
The man laughed but did not answer.
“How much for a phone call?” Gilead asked.
The jailer stopped, looked down to both ends of the corridor, and then whispered, “One hundred pounds. Egyptian.”
Gilead rolled back the cuff of his pants, opened the seam, and pulled out a one-hundred-pound note.
The jailer smiled through his bushy moustache and stained teeth.
“You get a bargain today,” the guard said, laughing. Then he added, “Tomorrow, the price goes upâto two hundred pounds.”
W
ILL HAD BEEN IN HIS OFFICE
for only half an hour that morning when Hilda, his secretary, buzzed him on the intercom.
“Will, you've got a call. Overseas. It's from Egypt. And it's collect.”
“Who is it?”
“Gilead Amahn,” she said. “He said he has only a few moments to talk.”
Will had the call immediately transferred to his desk.
“Gilead, what are you doing in Egypt?”
“It would take too long to explain,” the young man said in a rushed whisper. “I've been arrested. I'm in the Egyptian police department. In the station nearest the Citadel. Just remember that it's the Egyptian police building over in the Islamic quarterâ”
“What did they arrest you for?”
“I think they call it âcontempt of religion.' Something like that⦔
This is déjà vu all over again
, Will thought to himself.
“Have you been formally charged?”
“That's not the issue hereâit's not a matter of a formal trial. The point is, if you don't intervene, I think it will probably be too late.”
“I'll make some phone calls immediately,” Will assured him. “You're still an American citizenâ¦we may have to use diplomatic channels.”
“Have to go,” Gilead said hurriedly and then the phone hung up.
Will burst out his door and into the office of Jacki Johnson, his senior legal associate. She was knee-deep in research for a motions hearing scheduled for the next day.
Will sat down in the chair opposite Jacki's desk. Jacki was an attractive black woman in her late thirties. She had been married to her husband, Howard, for a number of years and was now four months pregnant with their first child. As she eyed Will, she knew the frenzied, obsessed look. She had seen it beforeâduring all the years she had worked with him in and out of courtrooms around the country and the world.
“So it's not a matter of
whether
it's an emergency,” Jacki observed sardonically. “It's a matter of whether Jacki is going to jump into the fray alongside Will Chambers, hero of the oppressed and the underdog. Do I have it about right?”
“Oh, I suppose so,” Will replied. “Here's the deal. You remember Gilead Amahn. He's the disorderly conduct guy who was arrested for preaching at the Islamic Center and sparking a riot⦔
Jacki was already nodding that she remembered the case.
“He's over in Egypt,” Will explained. “Arrested by the Cairo police. Apparently he has offended the Muslims over there as well. I don't know the detailsâ¦what I've explained to you is about as much as I know. But I need your help. I think that we both have to start working the system together. I'm going to start making calls to the State Department. Amahn is an American citizen. He was naturalized a number of years after he came here as a young boy. I'll do what I can to get the State Department to intercede and ensure that we can get him legal representationâ¦or maybe I need to make arrangements to go over there. Or get local counsel for him. I'll figure that out later. Meanwhile, I'd like you to call the Egyptian embassy here and start making a fuss about the conditions of his arrest. Tell them we want a full investigationâyou know that Egypt has a bad record with some of their
detainees. They have a habit of disappearing, or being tortured, or ending up dead.”
Jacki nodded solemnly. But after a moment's reflection she felt compelled to add something.
“Didn't that kid learn anything in that trial that you had in district court here in Virginia? Did he really think that he could go over there to Cairo and pull the same thing?”
“Well, with all due respect, I don't agree with your characterization. I think it's more complicated than that.”
“Look, Will, I'm just being a pragmatist,” Jacki added. “You can't go into a Muslim country and start preaching the Christian religion and then act surprised when you end up being roughed upâ”
Will was back on his feet and halfway to the door when he turned around. He was about to say something, but stopped.
Jacki studied Will's face.
“All right, counselor, what are you thinking right now?”
“Something Gilead told me before he left the United States. At the end of his case. I didn't know where he was heading. But he kept acting as if he had some kind of divinely orchestrated appointment. Next thing I know he calls me from Egypt. I wonder what's going on.”
Jacki took it in, and then remembered something.
“Wasn't Gilead Amahn the one,” she said, thinking back, “who was detained by the feds for a while? The idea was that maybe he was a suspected terrorist. And then suddenly they dissolved the detainer and let him go. That was before his trial, right?”
Will nodded.
“Yeah. And I never got to the bottom of that. I made a fuss, made some demands for information. But I ended up getting stonewalled by the Justice Department.”
Will lingered in the doorway for a moment.
“And don't think that the federal detainer, and the terrorist suspicions, haven't weighed on my mind.”
“You think there's something to it?” Jacki asked.
“I guess it's really easy for me to say no. The kid has great parents. And he's a straight shooter. He told me point-blank he had no terrorist associations or affiliations. I see nothing in his background to indicate anything different. But there's something that I can't put my finger onâ¦I don't know what it is.”
Will changed mental gears and added, “So contact the Egyptian embassy ASAP. And let's put our heads together within the hour and compare notes. Okay?”
Jacki nodded, and Will stepped down the hall, waving off several messages from Hilda, and disappeared into his office.
He put a phone call through to the State Department, scrolling through his electronic memo pad until he came up with the direct line for Deputy Secretary of State Bob Fuller. He had contact with Fuller a number of years previous because of a civil suit that Will had brought against the Sudanese government. The State Department had cooperated with him, and Will and Fuller had developed a cordial, though limited, acquaintance.
But Will was able to contact only Fuller's secretary, who assured him she would have him return the call at his earliest convenience.
Next, Will placed a call to his old friend Len Redgrove. He had wanted an excuse to get in touch with his friend and mentor, and this was the perfect opportunity.
But when Will called Redgrove's cabin in the Blue Ridge Mountains, he received only his voice mail.
Will decided to leave a lengthy message. It ended with a few of the basic facts surrounding the case.
“â¦so I do need to talk to you, Len. This Gilead Amahn is the same one I represented who was charged with starting a riot at the Islamic Center. Next thing I know he shows up in Cairo, Egypt. Apparently he's caused an uproar over thereâI presume by doing some more preaching. Because he told me he was being held by the Egyptian police in Cairo on a charge of contempt of religion. So that's all I knowâ¦obviously, I need your help on this. I'd love your insights into the Egyptian court system. And also,
old friend, I sure would like to catch up with you. We haven't talked since the banquetâ¦so, give me a call as soon as you can. Fiona sends her love.”
But Will Chambers could not have known that Len Redgrove was seated in his living room, staring at the answering machine and listening to the message, word for word, as Will spoke it. The professor had his hands folded in a posture of intense contemplation as he sat as immovable as a stone sphinx.
F
ORTY-EIGHT HOURS INTO HIS INCARCERATION
in the Cairo police building, a jailer appeared in Gilead's cell.
“You must have big friends. Very big friends⦔
“What do you mean?”
“Somebody called from the American embassy. Very concerned about you. Soâyou're out todayâ¦isn't that good?”
Gilead stood up from his cot and stretched.
“Are you sure? I'm being released today?”
The guard nodded and smiled a wide grin, showing his stained teeth.
“You have been well-treated, yes? We have not caused you any problemâ¦you have not been hurt at all, right?”
“No. You haven't hurt me.”
The guard led Gilead to a clerk at a desk. His bag was sitting there, and next to it was a clipboard with a document attached.
“Look through the bag. Everything is there. Sign this piece of paper.”