step to the left. There was a moment of silence and then a muffled voice.

“Yes.”

“Fax, Mr. Euhler.” Room service could be denied and housekeeping refused, but a fax would almost certainly open the door.

Calling him Euhler was a risk, but a calculated one. Betty Brocklebank had given him the room number, but if she’d called back for some reason asking for a Mr. Euhler and the man wasn’t registered at the hotel under that name, flags might go up.

Saint-Sylvestre heard the chain come off and the lock click. He let the steak knife from breakfast drop down into his right palm as the door opened, and moved forward, concentrating all his attention on the man’s diaphragm.

There was no hesitation; with the knife’s serrated edge turned upward, Saint-Sylvestre drove the steak knife into the man’s body with all his strength, penetrating flesh just below the xiphoid process, where the ribs joined the sternum. The stainless-steel blade plunged into the right ventricle and straight up through the pulmonary artery and the aorta, virtually slicing the organ in half.

The policeman pushed forward into the short hallway, kicking the door shut behind him. Saint-Sylvestre saw the first blood begin to gush from the man’s mouth and nose as five and a half liters of fluid began to flood into his chest cavity, and he pushed forward one last time before taking a step back and simultaneously releasing his grip on the knife.

The man fell backward and Saint-Silvestre moved away quickly, making sure the door was completely closed. He turned the lock and put on the chain before turning back to his victim. There hadn’t been a sound except for the man hitting the beige broadloom carpeting when he dropped dead. A check in the hallway mirror confirmed that Saint-Sylvestre hadn’t gotten a spot of blood on him except for the fingers of the right surgical glove.

He knelt on one knee, wiping the blood off on the carpet but leaving the glove on for the moment.

The body was lying at a slight angle, halfway into the room proper with its legs in the hallway. The man was tall, gray-haired and had what used to be called a military mustache. He was wearing a white shirt, the front of which was now covered in blood, pin-striped suit pants and highly polished, expensive-looking lace-up shoes. He wore a signet ring with a powder horn dangling from a rosette and encircled by the Latin motto Celer et audax-The swift and the bold. If memory served, once upon a time the man he’d just killed had been an officer in the King’s Royal Rifle Corps.

There was nothing else of interest on the corpse and Saint-Sylvestre doubted the man was the type to keep his wallet in his rear pants pocket, so he didn’t bother rolling him over. Instead he stepped over the dead man and entered the hotel room proper.

The room was much smaller than Saint-Sylvestre’s suite at the Hotel Vancouver but with the same beige- and-chocolate color scheme. There was a closed suitcase on a rack at the end of the bed, and an attache sitting open on a small desk under the room’s single window. The suit jacket matching the dead body’s trousers was hanging over the back of the chair that stood in front of the desk.

He checked the inner pockets of the suit jacket. There was a Coach billfold in the left pocket and a BlackBerry Torch smartphone in the right. The wallet was full of British identification in the name of Allen Faulkener, including a driver’s license, a firearms certificate from the Home Office allowing Faulkener to own and carry a Heckler amp; Koch P30 nine-millimeter/.40-caliber semiautomatic pistol, and a Matheson Resource Industries biometric key card.

He kept the wallet, sliding it into his own jacket pocket, and took the smartphone as well; there was no point in making it easier for the inevitable police detectives who would be called in to investigate this Faulkener man’s murder to identify the body.

Saint-Sylvestre turned to the attache case. A fat, blue-backed copy of the proxy agreements for the Brocklebank sisters’ shares in Silver Brand Mining and a maroon European Union/United Kingdom passport for Allen Faulkener. Nothing else. The attache case smelled brand-new. There was no ticket stub or boarding pass, which confirmed Saint-Sylvestre’s assumption that Faulkener had flown into Vancouver on a private jet. The Immigration Canada stamp in Faulkener’s passport was dated yesterday. Somehow he’d found out about Euhler’s death within hours.

It was enough to give the policeman pause. In Kukuanaland he could instill fear with a look and held almost as much sway with Kolingba as Oliver Gash, but this was Matheson’s world, and it occurred to Saint-Sylvestre that perhaps he was biting off more than he could chew. By the same token, at least for the moment Matheson was unaware of his existence, and sometimes invisibility was the most powerful weapon of all.

Saint-Sylvestre dropped the wallet, smartphone and passport into the attache case, then went to the end of the bed and gave the suitcase a quick once-over. There were two things of potential use: one was a silk green- red-and-black Rifles regimental tie and the other was the nine-millimeter H amp;K semiautomatic in a nice, molded leather Bianchi paddle holster. He took the weapon out of the suitcase, checked to see that the magazine was loaded, snapped the magazine back in place. It was certainly a step up from a steak knife, but dangerous if he was caught with it. Canadian gun laws were even tighter and more controlled than those of the Brits, and that was saying something. He went back to the attache case, dumped the gun and the tie into it along with the rest of his booty, then closed it up without locking it by spinning the combination locks.

Taking the case, he went back to the body, knelt down and slipped the signet ring off the index finger of the right hand and then put it on his own finger; a little loose but it wouldn’t fall off. He stood and looked around one last time. Nothing out of place except a body on the floor. He stepped over Allen Faulkener’s corpse and went down the short hallway to the hotel room door.

Saint-Sylvestre set the lock, unhooked the Do Not Disturb sign from the knob, then opened the door and stepped into the main hall. It was empty. He closed the door, listening as the lock clicked, hung the sign and peeled off the surgical gloves, shoving them into the hip pocket of his trousers. Ninety seconds later he stepped into the empty elevator and rode down to the lobby. Thirty seconds after that he stepped through the main door of the hotel and back into the sunlight.

Invisible.

24

They had been marching through the jungle for most of the day, and now the sun was dropping low, the light filtering down on the broad trail going from dappled greens to copper and gold. The monkeys screeched their complaints and every now and again flights of angry egrets flew up squawking from patches of wetland as they passed by.

The trail moved almost due west, roughly following the line of the river, which they could sometimes catch glimpses of in the distance to the south. According to Limbani the trail was all that remained of an elephant walk, a migratory pathway that had not been used for decades or perhaps even longer.

They reached the head of a narrow valley between two low, jungle-shrouded hills and Limbani raised a hand and stopped. Holliday looked back over his shoulder and saw that all of the paler warriors had stopped on his signal as well. Directly behind him Peggy looked as though she were about to speak but Holliday shook his head. He heard a sharp whistle from somewhere well ahead and Limbani visibly relaxed.

“The point men will check out the way ahead,” Limbani said.

Holliday smiled at the exotically dressed man using such a modern military term for his forward scouts. Limbani raised his fist into the air and Holliday watched as the pale warriors stood at ease along the trail behind them.

“We can rest here for a few moments,” Limbani murmured quietly. He squatted down under a high-crowned tree covered with thin, waxy leaves and heavy with a blue, pear-shaped fruit.

“They look like Japanese eggplants,” said Peggy, dropping onto the ground beneath the tree.

“Dacryodes edulis,” said Limbani, smiling. “Sometimes called safou, African pear or the bush butter tree.”

“Edible?” Rafi asked.

“Very. Pick one,” said Limbani. “The bluish color means they’re ripe. They taste like slightly acidic plums, if

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