about his age. Jane Rogers, deep in conversation with Edward Stone about life in Beirut, couldn’t help overhearing the conversation and admiring the wiles and beauty of her friend Solange. The Director himself seemed ready enough to spend the rest of the evening with the Lebanese beauty. So he was dismayed when, after twenty minutes of conversation, Solange Jezzine excused herself and strolled out toward the garden, where Tom Rogers was talking to Samir Fares.
“Am I interrupting anything?” asked Madame Jezzine.
“Oh no,” said Fares. “I was just telling Mr. Rogers about the village where I was born. He must be very bored hearing about Lebanese villages. Why don’t you rescue him?”
“Happily,” said Solange.
“Would you like another drink, Tom?” asked Fares.
“No thanks,” said Rogers. “We have to be leaving soon.”
Fares walked inside, leaving the two of them alone in the garden.
“Why have you been avoiding me?” asked Solange. She asked the question like a spoiled little girl, her lips pouting.
“I haven’t,” said Rogers.
“Yes you have, and you shouldn’t!” said Solange. She had slipped her arm through Rogers’s and was walking him slowly down a gravel path in the garden, away from the house and the light.
Rogers felt his heart beating. He felt dreamy and light-headed. It was pleasant, for once, to be in the power of someone else’s personality. Solange leaned her head a little closer to his as they walked along the path. He could smell the perfume behind her ear.
Solange stopped. She turned her head up toward Rogers and spoke in a whisper.
“I’m on fire,” she said.
She kissed him on the mouth. Or he kissed her. It was impossible to know which. As they kissed, Solange put her arm around Rogers’s neck and gently stroked the hair at the nape of his neck. Rogers felt himself becoming aroused, which embarrassed him. Solange pressed tighter against him for a moment, as if to say, Yes, I feel it. I want it. Then she pulled away, smiling coyly and regally.
“You must visit me,” she said. She kissed him gently on the cheek and walked alone back toward the house.
Rogers composed himself. When he returned to the drawing room, the party was breaking up. The Director, deprived of Madame Jezzine’s company, had suddenly become tired and was saying his goodbyes to the Wiggs.
Jane Rogers was still rapt in conversation with Stone. It turned out that Stone had known Jane’s father, the Colonel, in London during the war. Jane was explaining, in a low voice, the volunteer work she had been doing with Palestinian women at the Makassed Hospital, which Stone heartily approved. The two of them were hoisting a second glass of brandy when Rogers walked over and mentioned that it was getting late. Jane gave Stone a kiss, said goodnight, and went upstairs to get her coat.
“Marvellous woman,” said Stone to Rogers. “I knew her father in the war.”
What a wonderful evening it was, said Jane as they were driving home. What a fine man Mr. Stone was.
“He saved my job today, I think,” said Rogers. Jane waited for him to explain, and when he didn’t she assumed that it was one of those things that her husband would tell her, if he could.
A week after the Director’s visit, Hoffman left on a trip to Saudi Arabia. The trip had come up suddenly, he said. He would be back in a few days. Rogers felt uneasy. Hoffman had kept to himself since the meeting with the Director and Stone, and whenever Rogers had tried to draw him out, Hoffman had made a crude joke or otherwise evaded Rogers’s queries.
Hoffman looked ebullient when he returned. He stopped by Rogers’s office on his way back from the airport and Rogers thought at first that it was a practical joke. Hoffman was wearing a well-cut silk suit and smoking a fat Cuban cigar.
“How do I look?” asked Hoffman. “Like a million dollars, right?”
“You look great,” said Rogers. “What happened in Riyadh? Did you hit the daily double at the camel races?”
“Better than that,” said Hoffman. “Much better than that.”
“What’s better than money?” asked Rogers.
“Even more money!” said Hoffman. “And that’s what you’re looking at!”
“Maybe you should explain what’s going on,” said Rogers.
“Gladly,” said Hoffman. And with a flourish, he withdrew a business card from his coat pocket and handed it to Rogers.
“Arab-American Security Consultants, Inc.,” read the card. “Frank Hoffman, President.”
“Oh shit!” said Rogers.
“You don’t like the name?” said Hoffman. “I was going to call it ‘AA-Arab-American Security Consultants,’ so it would be first in the telephone book. But then I realized that the Arabs don’t have telephone books, so what would be the use?”
“I’m not talking about the card,” said Rogers. “I’m talking about the fact that you’re quitting the agency. I can’t believe it.”
“Oh that,” said Hoffman. “You’ll get used to it.”
“No I won’t,” said Rogers.
“Have it your way,” said Hoffman. He was relighting his cigar.
“What happened? When did you do it? I thought everything had been settled between you and the Director.”
“Let’s face it,” said Hoffman. “I had to quit. I mean, really, how could I stay after what happened? I had no business talking to the Director like that. In an outfit like ours, you obey orders or you quit. It’s that simple. The Director should have fired me for insubordination. I decided to save him the trouble.”
“Wait a minute,” said Rogers. “Aren’t you being a little easy on the Director?”
“Maybe,” said Hoffman. “But I’ll tell you the truth. The Director may have been out of line the other day. But it isn’t really his fault. The truth is that this is a rotten business. You do terrible things and usually you don’t think about it. And then one day, you just get sick of it. You decide you just don’t want to eat another bite of the shit sandwich.”
“So what are you going to do?”
“Security! Didn’t you read the card?”
“Yeah. But what does it mean?”
“For starters,” said Hoffman, “it means taking very large amounts of money from Saudi princes who are terrified that their Arab brethren are going to cut their throats. I intend to sell these gutless bastards the latest in security technology. Whatever will help them continue whoring and drinking in reasonable safety. Bodyguards, bullet-proof limousines, alarm systems. How the fuck should I know? I’ve only been in this business a few days.”
“So that’s why you went to Saudi Arabia.”
“We call it client development, in my new line of work,” said Hoffman. “And I’ll tell you, the Saudis are ready to be developed. The way I figure things, the richer they get, the more scared they’ll get, which means more money for yours truly. After just one trip, I have already lined up contracts worth nearly a million bucks. How does that grab you, junior?”
“Frank, there is nobody in the world I would rather see get rich than you.”
“Don’t suppose you’d like to join me in this raid on the Saudi treasury? I could use a partner.”
“I don’t think so,” said Rogers. “I’m not quite ready to pack it in here.”
“Go fuck yourself then.”
“Have you told the front office yet?”
“Of course I have,” said Hoffman indignantly. “Just because I’ve become a businessman doesn’t mean I’ve become dishonest. I told the Director and Stone ten days ago, just before they left Beirut.”
“They certainly kept it to themselves,” said Rogers.
“They’re that way, if you hadn’t noticed. They don’t tell the troops any more than they have to.”
Rogers looked at Hoffman, resplendent in his new suit, a silk handkerchief in his pocket, a pair of expensive