The enemy—a ruthless network of rogue operatives known as the Circle—never caught on. They searched for a spy with dead drops, encrypted radios, and safe houses. They never thought to look at a half-blind watchmaker with arthritic fingers and a gentle smile.
It began in the winter of 1987, when a wounded stranger stumbled through his door just before Fajr prayer. The man spoke in a code Laiq hadn’t heard since his brief, disastrous stint in military intelligence as a young officer. A code he had invented himself. The stranger handed him a broken pocket watch—an ordinary-looking piece, except for a hairline seam along its silver casing. Inside, instead of gears, Laiq found a microfilm canister wrapped in oiled silk. laiq hussain
The end came quietly, as all good legends do. Laiq was 67 when he received his final pocket watch—a gold Patek Philippe, delivered by a trembling young man who didn’t know what he carried. Inside the movement, a single jewel was missing. Laiq replaced it with a tiny, hollowed ruby he had prepared twenty years earlier, just in case. Inside the ruby: a single grain of ricin. The enemy—a ruthless network of rogue operatives known