Sam Baker looked flustered as Kemel watched him pace back and forth in the living room of his apartment. And well he should. He deserved to be more than flustered; he should look dejected and suicidally ashamed. Not only had he been made to look foolish by this nameless stranger, his bloated bonus was in serious jeopardy.
'It's like the guy doesn't fucking exist.'
'Oh, he exists, Mr. Baker. The few remaining survivors of your team can attest to that.'
'Yeah, but a guy with those kind of finely honed chops should have a rep, a name, a signature. People like me, or people I know, should have heard of him. He's obviously a merc, and if he's a merc, I should know him. Guys like that don't appear out of nowhere. They don't pop onto the street full grown. They gotta come up through the ranks. But not this guy. He's like some kinda ghost, coming out of the woodwork, fucking things up, then disappearing.'
'I do not care about his name,' Kemel said, controlling his anger. This man was such a fool. Why hadn't Nazer assigned him someone more competent? 'I merely want you to deal with him.'
'Can't deal with him if I can't find him.'
'Perhaps he will find you.'
He caught a flash of uncertainty before Baker's expression hardened. 'I'm ready for him. I see him, he's dead.'
'Let us hope so,' Kemel said, and turned away.
He had spent an anxiety-ridden day, monitoring the news—a radio or television on in every room—waiting to hear the dreaded announcement of a revolutionary new power source that would change the world. But he had heard nothing. What was the American expression? No news is good news. Yes, in this case, that was most certainly so.
And the longer the span of no news, the better.
Dare I hope? he'd wondered.
If Alicia Clayton had proof of something so awe-inspiring as her father's technology, surely she would be acting on it. Surely she would be trumpeting it to the world.
The longer the silence, the more likely that she and her hireling—her 'merc,' as Baker called him—had found nothing in the house.
Kemel had spent the day fasting, praying that it was so. And then, wonderful news. A call from Gordon Haffner saying he had heard from the Clayton woman's attorney and the sale of the house was proceeding.
Kemel had been jubilant. Now he could return to Riyadh and help extricate Ghali from the criminal charges against him.
But then suspicion had reared its head like a desert rat. What if her desire to proceed with the sale was a ruse, a ploy to dupe him into dropping his guard? Kemel had checked with Baker, who had been busy disposing of the bodies of his men, and instructed him to use the transponder in the Clayton woman's handbag to track her movements. So far she had not left her workplace.
Perhaps she truly meant to sell the house after all. Ten million dollars was, after all, ten mill—
The phone rang. Kemel answered it and recognized Thomas Clayton's voice, although it sounded more nasal than usual.
'They were here!' he said. 'They know!'
Fear sank its cold talons into Kemel's shoulders. 'Who? Who knows?'
'Alicia and her bully boy. He broke my goddamn nose!'
'You said, 'they know.' What do they know?'
'Everything! More than we do!'
The room spun.
'The transmitter?'
'No. I don't think they have that. At least not yet. But I've got a bad feeling they may know a way to find it. What do we do?'
Kemel closed his eyes and reached for calmness, found the hem of its
'I will tell you soon.'
He hung up and gave Baker a quick summary, omitting, as usual, the nature of what they sought.
'Simple enough,' the mercenary said. 'We go get the girl and make her tell us. And believe me—let me at her, and she'll
Kemel closed his eyes again. This man was such an idiot.
'What if she
'Hey, listen. I—'
'No. You will not touch her. But you will use the transponder to track her. If she makes any move to leave the city, you will inform me and together we will follow her.
'Yeah, but—'
'IS… THAT… CLEAR?' Kemel shouted the words.
'Clear,' Baker said.
'Good. Start tracking her immediately. And keep me informed.'
He turned back to the window and stared unseeing at the night. He asked Allah to forgive him for the instant of doubt when he thought his God had deserted him. Now he saw Allah's plan. Alicia Clayton was His instrument, and would guide Kemel to her father's secret. Praise Allah.
THURSDAY
Yoshio shrank back and hurriedly swallowed the last of his sausage-and-egg Croissan'wich as he recognized Jack-san in the blue Taurus pulling into the curb across the street.
After following him and Alicia Clayton back to this elegant town house last night, Yoshio had assumed that this was where Jack-san lived. But then he had seen the
So he had quickly returned to his own car near Thomas Clayton's apartment building and moved it to a position across the street from the town house. He had changed back to his usual attire and had spent the night here.
And now Jack-san was quite obviously taking Alicia Clayton someplace. Yoshio was guessing that no romance existed between them, otherwise Jack-san would have stayed here last night. Therefore they were not meeting merely to share each other's company. They must have a purpose in mind, and that purpose most surely involved the Clayton technology.
And just as surely, that purpose was taking them out of the city. Else, why the car?
How could Yoshio follow them into the suburbs or the countryside without being seen? Jack-san knew him and would be looking for him. And yet he had to risk it. He sensed that after months of waiting and watching, his mission here finally was coming to a head.
He wished he had thought to call and arrange for backup, but he dared not get more people involved at this juncture. The situation was too delicate.
He watched Jack enter the house. Yoshio was desperate. And desperate situations sometimes called for desperate measures…
'I figure we head up the West Side, catch the Saw Mill, cross the Tappan Zee, and continue up the thruway,' Jack said as he put the Taurus in gear. The dashboard clock read 10:33. The morning rush hour would be petering out about now. 'Unless you know a better way.'