The League of Night and Fog (15 page)

BOOK: The League of Night and Fog
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“For the second time in two days,” Arlene added.

Father Sebastian straightened in his chair.

“That’s right. For the
second
time,” Drew said. “While Arlene and I were crossing the desert …”

He told the priest about the two Arab gunmen in the pass. Arlene elaborated.

“You don’t think they were simply marauders?” Father Sebastian glanced toward Arlene. “You mentioned an earlier attack by two would-be rapists. In that same pass. Possibly the second pair … They could have been relatives out to avenge …”

“The first two were amateurs,” Arlene insisted. “But the second pair …”

“If not for the grace of God and a cobra, we’d have been killed,” Drew said. “Those men were fully equipped. They were pros.”

“Someone knew I’d been sent to get Drew. But I told no one,” Arlene said.

“So the leak could have come only from within your organization,” Drew said.

Father Sebastian rubbed his forehead.

“You don’t seem surprised. You mean you’d already suspected—?”

“That the order had been compromised, that someone in the Fraternity was using his position to gain his own ends?” Father Sebastian nodded.

“How long have you—?”

“Merely
suspected? Almost a year. Became virtually certain? Two months. Too many of our missions have ended badly. Twice, members of the order have been killed. If not for our backup teams, the bodies of our fallen brethren would have been found by the authorities.”

“And their rings,” Drew said.

“Yes. And their rings. Other missions were aborted before such disasters could occur. Our enemies had been warned they were in danger and changed their schedules, increased their security. All of us in the Fraternity fear we’re in danger of being exposed.”

Arlene’s eyes blazed with resentment. “So that’s why you sent me to bring back Drew. You wanted an outside operative, someone not associated with you but nonetheless
controlled
by you.”

Father Sebastian shrugged. “What’s the gambler’s expression? An ace in the hole. And indeed,” he told Drew, “apart from your skills and reputation, you do seem to have a gambler’s luck.”

“We all do,” Drew said. “For sure, we didn’t survive that blast because of skill, but only because the bomb was placed in the only likely hiding spot, away from us, behind the counter in back.”

“Two customers and a waiter died in the explosion,” Arlene said. “If you hadn’t sent us there …”

Father Sebastian sighed. “Their deaths were regrettable—but unimportant compared to protecting the Fraternity.”

“What’s important to me is survival,” Drew said, “the chance for Arlene and me to live in peace, someplace where you and your colleagues can’t get to us.”

“Are you certain there
is
such a place? Your cave wasn’t it.”

“I want the chance to keep looking. I asked you yesterday. What do I have to do to stop being threatened by you? You mentioned a priest. You wanted me to—”

“Find him. His name is Krunoslav Pavelic. He’s not just a priest. He’s a cardinal. Extremely influential. A member of the Vatican’s Curia. Seventy-two years old. On the twenty-third of February, a Sunday evening, after celebrating a private mass in the Papal city, he disappeared. Given his important position within the Curia, we consider his abduction to be a serious assault upon the Church. If Cardinal Pavelic wasn’t safe, no other member of the Curia is. We believe it’s the start of an ultimate attack. But because the Fraternity seems threatened from within, we need your help. An outsider, an independent but motivated operative.”

“What if he can’t be found? What if he’s dead?” Drew asked.

“Then punish those who took him.”

Drew flinched inwardly. He’d vowed to himself—
and to God
—that he’d never kill again. He concealed his abhorrence. Though determined to keep his vow, he negotiated.

“What do I get in exchange?”

“You and Ms. Hardesty are relieved of your obligation to us,
your need to atone for your part in the death of one of our members. I consider this condition to be generous.”

“That’s not the word I’d have used.” Drew glanced toward Arlene, who nodded. With a silent crucial qualification, he continued. “But you’ve got a deal.”

Father Sebastian leaned back. “Good.”

“There’s just one thing. Break your word, and you’d better keep praying an Act of Contrition. Because, believe me, Father, when you least expect it, I’ll come for you.”

“If I broke my word, you’d have every right. But as far as an Act of Contrition is concerned, my soul is always prepared.”

“Then we understand each other.” Drew stood. “Arlene and I could use some breakfast. A fresh change of clothes. Travel money.”

“You’ll both be given an adequate amount to start with. In addition, a numbered bank account will be opened for you in Zurich, along with a safe-deposit box. The Fraternity will have a key for it. We’ll use the box as a way to send messages between us.”

“What about travel documents? Since the enemy knows we’re involved, it isn’t smart for us to use our own.”

“To leave Egypt, you’ll be given Vatican passports, under different names, for a nun and a priest.”

“We’ll attract attention in an airport filled with Arabs.”

“Not if you leave with other nuns and priests who’ve been in Egypt on a tour. You’ll fly to Rome, where a priest and a nun will attract no attention at all. If you choose to switch to lay identities, other passports, American, several, under various names, will be placed in the Zurich safe-deposit box.”

“Weapons?”

“Before you leave Egypt, you’ll give me the ones you have. When you reach Rome, others will be supplied to you. Weapons will also be left in the Zurich safe-deposit box.”

“Fair enough. As an added precaution …”

Father Sebastian waited.

“I don’t want to test my luck a third time. Our weapons, our
passports—make sure they’re supplied by an outside contractor, not someone in your network. Open our Zurich bank account yourself.”

“Agreed. The leak in my network makes me as nervous as it does you.”

“One thing you haven’t told us.”

Father Sebastian anticipated. “Where do you start to look? The same place your predecessor narrowed his search and failed.”

“Predecessor?”

“The priest who contacted Ms. Hardesty in New York and sent her to find you. Father Victor. I said he’d been called away on an urgent assignment. He was. To his Maker. He was killed in Rome, two days ago. Take up the hunt where he left off. He must have been very close.”

7

I
n the room where they’d slept in the rectory, Drew and Arlene put on the religious costumes the priest had supplied. Except for Drew’s black bib and white collar, he looked as natural as if he’d put on a dark business suit. But he’d been concerned that Arlene, with her athletic grace, would seem awkward in a nun’s robe. Quite the contrary. The black garment flowed in rhythm with her figure. The white cowl that hid her auburn hair and framed her green eyes turned worldly beauty into innocent loveliness.

“Astonishing,” Drew said. “You look like you’ve found your vocation.”

“And
you
could be a confessor.”

“Well, let’s just hope no one asks us for religious counseling.”

“The best advice is ‘go in peace and sin no more.’”

“But what about us?” Drew asked. “What
we’re
about to do—for the second time I’d hoped I wouldn’t have to face the decision—will
we
sin no more?”

She kissed him.

“Just one more assignment,” she said. “We’ll watch over each other and do our best.”

“And if our best is good enough …” he said.

“We’ll be free.”

They held each other.

BOOK THREE

PINCER MOVEMENT
DEATH’S HEAD

1

H
alloway stood on the granite steps before his mansion, watching Icicle and Seth get into the Cadillac. The three of them had spent the night and morning making plans. Now at last, in midafternoon, the plans were ready to be activated. Seth would drive Icicle to the rented car he’d hidden down the road the night before. Icicle would follow Seth to Toronto’s international airport. This evening, the two assassins would fly from Canada to Europe. Soon—yes,
soon
, Halloway thought—normality would be reestablished.

But as he squinted from the bright June sunlight, watching Icicle and Seth drive away, Halloway wondered if his life could in fact ever again be normal. His father had disappeared seven weeks ago, abducted while sketching a river gorge at a nearby painters’ community called Elora. The assailants had left his father’s materials—sketch pad, charcoal, and equipment case—on a picnic table a hundred yards from his father’s car. With no word about him since then, Halloway was forced to suspect, with grim reluctance, that his father was dead.

He watched from the steps of his mansion till the Cadillac disappeared among the trees on the road below him. Turning toward the large double doors of the mansion, he reconsidered
the thought. His father dead? He paused, exhaled, then continued morosely up the steps. All he could do was hope. At least he’d done what he could to protect his family and himself, to stop the madness. If his father indeed had been killed, this much consoled him—Icicle and Seth were perfect weapons. The enemy would pay.

He entered the mansion, proceeded along the shadowy hallway, and reached the telephone in his study. Though he didn’t want to think about it, other decisions, other arrangements had to be made. Four months ago, before the Night and Fog had been reinstituted, he’d made a business commitment that no amount of personal pressure could allow him to ignore. He’d demanded a fortune, guaranteeing delivery of merchandise the deadly nature of which was exceeded only by the homicidal tendencies of his clients. To fail to abide by his agreement would be fatal. With no alternative, Halloway drew on resources ingrained in him by his father and picked up the phone.

2

M
exico City. For the third time since he’d started making love to his wife, Aaron Rosenberg’s erection failed him. He attempted to arouse himself, but his wife restrained his hand. At first, he suspected she’d become impatient with his repeated failure and intended to ask him to give up. Instead she kissed his chest, then his stomach, murmured “Let me do the driving,” and shifted lower.

Sunlight gleamed through the parted drapes of the bedroom windows. A breeze cooled the sweat on his body. Closing his eyes, feeling his wife’s hair dangle over his groin, he barely heard the roar of traffic outside on the Paseo de la Reforma.

His inability to perform had many causes: concern about his missing father, fears for his family and himself. Despite bodyguards, he felt apprehensive every time he went out and as a consequence left the house less often than was good for his business.
Ironically, he’d stayed home today precisely
because of
business. Since early this morning, he’d been waiting for a phone call about such sensitive information he didn’t dare receive it at his office. For that matter, even the phone in his house and indeed the house itself, both of which were tested daily for eavesdropping devices, couldn’t be fully trusted.

As his wife continued, his penis responded. He made a determined effort to ignore yet another reason for his earlier impotence. For the past two months, he was certain, she’d been having an affair with her bodyguard, Esteban. Glances between them couldn’t be ignored, nor could her newly expanded catalogue of sexual techniques, one of which was her sudden fondness for “doing the driving.” At least he had one thing to be thankful for—the affair was discreet. Otherwise, to maintain respect among the police and his business contacts in this city of Spanish values, Rosenberg would never have been able to pretend to be unaware of his wife’s infidelity.

He admitted he was partly to blame for her actions. Since his recent troubles, his sex drive had virtually disappeared, and even before then, his business had kept him away from home so much that she spent more time with Esteban than she did with him. All the same, he thought with a brief flare of anger, if his business required her to be lonely, didn’t she have the compensating reward of luxury? Her solid-gold watch, her imported French-designed clothes, her $100,000 Italian sports car.

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