Prologue
Islamabad, Pakistan
2010
Asif Kardar crushed the brake when he heard the hiss of the tire through the open window of the
bread truck. The pads were old, and they squealed as the squat white vehicle lurched to a halt. The
hard stop caused the peppermint air freshener to swing in long arcs from the rearview mirror and a
marble in the ashtray to smack violently front to back.
The young man sighed as he looked out the mud-splashed windshield, stared at the wide dirt street
awash with the red of the rising sun. He had only a half dozen or so blocks to go before he reached
the market. Why now?
Because Allah willed it, thought the devout Sunni. Why else does anything happen?
A boy on a badly dented bicycle passed him. Then another. And a third. They waved as they passed.
Asif knew them. They shared breakfast at the coffeehouse some mornings—though they
didn’t today.
Why?
He couldn’t remember. It didn’t matter.
The young men were workers who lived near Asif, in cinder-block shacks in the katchi abadi, the slum
off Service Road West 110. They were commuting along Seventh Avenue, past the doctors’
offices, banks, and parcel companies, and then on to Kashmir Highway, near the universities, post
offices, and the always popular Sunday market, on their way to the richer sections of the capital,
where they were employed as street cleaners. All of them saw the irony in that, yet all of them were
happy to have jobs. It was either this or the military.
Asif found himself grinning. In the year he had been driving this route, he had never suffered a
blowout. He supposed he was due. And it was no one’s fault, he knew. Metal shards were
everywhere in the streets of the slum: pieces of discarded appliances, rusted tools, even belt
buckles and pocket watches.
And the remnants of car bombs. There had been three in the last year, all of them accidents. They
were meant to blow up after leaving here and arriving at their destinations—some government
building or military installation. Except for the loud bangs, the children liked it when vehicles
blew up. They quickly came and collected the fenders and fan blades to dig in the rubble for
treasure. To a child, anything free was a treasure.
Asif ’s smile drooped as he considered his situation. He looked at his watch.
Drive on, he thought. He could probably make it, even with a rim that was clanking and
sparking.
The morning sun was rising higher, clearing the clay tile roofs of the structures that lay ahead.
This was the “better” section of the slum. Where he lived, the roofs were all corrugated
metal. The daily sun-scorched metal created such intense heat within the homes that being outside in
direct sunlight was preferable to being slow cooked alive inside. And while the temperature on the
roof of the buildings was occasionally more comfortable for sleeping, the distorted, grooved surface
was no place to remain grilling for too long. He peered at the buildings. There was something he was
supposed to do. . . .
He shifted gears, started the truck ahead slowly. What was it?
Clanking and growling, the truck rounded a sharp curve. Two hundred or so meters to the east he
noticed soldiers standing watch outside a Humvee. It was the end of the slum. They were parked in
front of a one-story building that was used by South Korean Christians to feed hungry children. At
one time it was a police recruiting station. It was firebombed, but the missionaries had plastered
it over. That was what outsiders did. They covered things with paint and activity and believed that
they had begun to heal what was wrong underneath. The soldiers were looking at him.
Asif stared back. He had a spare tire. He should stop and replace the blown-out one. If he continued
driving, the men would wonder why he was willing to do permanent damage to his truck. Spare parts
were not plentiful, unless one were willing to hammer out the bent and broken pieces found in scrap
yards, and what he was doing was not just odd. It was suspicious.
So why are you doing it?
He had no good answer to that.
He slowed, but he did not stop. Something told him to drive on.
The early morning air was already warm, and the driver was perspiring. He was wearing a white silk
kurta, a hand-me-down from his elder brother who was in the army. He dragged a sleeve across his
forehead and looked anxiously ahead. There was a Shiite mosque across the street. Men were beginning
to arrive for prayer. Something about it seemed familiar—not just because he had seen it
before as he drove by. It was something else.
The street was suddenly paved beneath him. The truck chugged over the lip, the naked rim cutting the
asphalt, the glove compartment snapping open, the marble rolling, the air freshener smacking the
windshield. Three of the eight soldiers started in his direction. The one in front had his arms
raised, motioning for him to stop.
You mustn’t, Asif told himself.
If he stopped, they would examine his truck. That was what the soldiers did at checkpoints. The
sweat was no longer only on Asif ’s brow; it was everywhere. They would surely see that; the
sun had just cleared the low rooftops and, shining redly, was striking him directly. He felt as
though he were naked, exposed, and starting to melt. One of the soldiers talked into a radio. Asif
couldn’t make out what he was saying, but he knew that tone, flat and low. They were assuming
that his intentions were hostile.
They weren’t, were they?
He was confused.
Asif reached for the bottle of water that lay on the seat beside him. He saw a few young families
coming down the street, toward the Christian building. The doors would not open for another hour,
but for many of these impoverished souls—many Afghan orphans who had been taken in by
relatives, families who had come to Islamabad to escape the Taliban or the war—this would be
the only meal of the day, the only food they had enjoyed since the previous morning’s
charity.
Asif looked ahead, past the soldiers and toward the mosque. The Shiites were gathering in larger
numbers.
The murderous fools, he thought. They believed that only the heirs of ‘Ali¯, the fourth
caliph, were the true successors of Muhammad the Prophet. Their idiocy had bred a thousand years of
bloodshed. You hate them, don’t you?
Do you? he wondered.
“Rokna!” the soldier in front shouted in Urdu. “Stop!” He had already
unshouldered the G3A3 assault rifle and was aiming it at the truck.
Yes, Asif decided. He hated the Shias. And the military.
The young Pakistani put the water bottle down and pressed hard on the gas. He reached toward the
sun-faded brown dashboard as gunfire shattered the window. Bullets punched through Asif ’s
shoulders and chest, and he was knocked back hard against the seat as he pressed the cigarette
lighter. Bloody and no longer in control of his dying body, he was unable to reach the marble. . .
.
Thirty pounds of plasticized pentaerythritol tetranitrate explosives wired to the underside of the
dashboard exploded. The truck literally expanded as the concussive force of the PETN hit the inside
walls, splitting them. The vehicle vomited engine parts to the front and sacks full of nails, bolts,
and glass to the rear. It pushed a wall of sound in all directions. The soldiers were simultaneously
knocked back and torn open, rusted chrome, burning canvas, and grotesque body parts flung in all
directions, as the blast rolled toward an empty lot to the south and the mosque to the north. The
twisted chassis of the old truck tumbled toward the ancient structure, stamped forcefully across the
door and lower façade before falling back onto the street. Several men, just arriving, were
crushed by the initial strike, while several inside were injured by falling lanterns and flying
pieces of broken stone. But the structure itself held.
The remaining soldiers and the missionary building were peppered with shrapnel, none very seriously,
save for a young Christian volunteer who had just come to the window to pull open the shade.
Shattered glass razored her face and chest, and she stumbled backward, slipping on a quick-made
slick of her own blood. Rats ran quickly from behind the shattered foundation, waves of them pouring
through the rubble like water. From above, a flaming kestrel dropped to the ground, its wings
slapping furiously and then not at all.
The sound of the explosion faded quickly, the rain of debris stopped, and soon all that remained
were sirens from a few late- model vehicles, the moans of the wounded, and the smoke that obscured
the sun with an ugly charcoal film. Shopkeepers and pedestrians who ran toward the scene were
silent, their ears filled with their own racing blood.
Dr. Ayesha Gillani was sitting at an open-air café near the market when she heard—and
felt—the powerful explosion. It echoed through the crooked streets like faraway thunder. In
the square, people on bicycles stopped, turned, and looked down the street as smoke followed the
sounds, curling lazily from between the low buildings. Vendors ran in fright from their stands and
sought cover in alleys, in shops, behind trees, anything that was far from parked vehicles. These
things often happened in twos and threes.
Not this time, Dr. Gillani thought.
Though she knew that, there were things that had surprised her. The location of the blast, for one.
She looked at her watch. The timing of the blast was off, as well.
It was early, too, she thought. Six thirteen. It wasn’t supposed to happen for another two
minutes.
The changes were unexpected but not unwelcome. There were always variables in even the best-planned
scenario. A rotating checkpoint. A mechanical malfunction. An accident. A distraction.
The important thing is he pulled the trigger, she told herself. That was the most difficult and
time-consuming part of the process.
She took out her cell phone, sent a one-letter text message—S, for success—and resumed
eating her na¯shta¯, a traditional Pakistani breakfast of paratha, a flatbread, as well as
mangoes and Earl Grey. The tea felt much cooler than it had moments before. Or maybe it was her. The
anticipation had passed. The event was history. And her confidence—of which she was the
harshest critic—had been validated.
She watched as people slowly, cautiously returned to their stands. The poor, poor mice, she thought.
Sunni, Shiite, Kurd, Christian, Jew—the religion or sect of the victims did not matter to her.
The tribe or nationality was of absolutely no importance. All that mattered to the
forty-two-year-old was that the trials were completed and the real mission could begin. The task for
which she had been training herself for over twenty years. The only possible response to what she
had endured.
She was about to bring lasting, eternal peace to the world.