29 PARIS
“GOOD EVENING, GABRIEL.”
A woman’s voice, shockingly familiar.
“Or should I call you Herr Klemp? That’s the name you used when you came to my club, isn’t it? And the name you used when you ransacked my apartment.”
Mimi Ferrere. The Little Moon.
“Where is she? Where’s Leah?”
“She’s close.”
“Where? I don’t see her.”
“You’ll find out in a minute.”
“You told me if I came, you’d let her live. Now, where is she?”
“Everything will be clear to you in just a few seconds.”
The voice: he latched on to it. It drew him back to Cairo, back to the evening he’d spent at the wine bar in Zamalek. He’d been lured to Cairo for a reason-to plant a bug on Mimi’s telephone, so he could overhear a conversation with a man named Tony and capture the telephone number for an apartment in Marseilles. But had he been brought to Cairo for another reason?
She started to speak again, but the sound of her voice was drowned out by the blare of a station announcement:
He watched them slip through the exit.
He glanced at Palestina. She was looking at the clock. Judging from her expression, she knew now that Gabriel had told her the truth. She was a few seconds away from becoming a
“Are you listening to me, Gabriel?”
Traffic noise: Mimi and Khaled were moving hastily away from the station.
“I’m listening,” he said
“Where is she, Mimi? Tell me what-”
And then he saw him, standing at a newspaper rack at the Relay newsstand at the east end of the station. His suitcase, a rolling rectangular bag of black nylon, identical to Gabriel’s, stood upright next to him. They’d called him Bashir that night in Cairo. Bashir liked Johnnie Walker Red on the rocks and smoked Silk Cut cigarettes. Bashir wore a gold TAG Heuer watch on his right wrist and had a thing for one of Mimi’s waitresses. Bashir was also a
Gabriel looked to his left, toward the opposite side of the platform: another Relay newsstand, another
A few feet away from Gabriel, purchasing a sandwich he would never eat, was Tayyib. Same suitcase, same glassy look of death in his eyes. He was close enough for Gabriel to see the configuration of the bomb. A black wire had been run along the inside of one arm of the pull handle. Gabriel reckoned that the release button on the handle itself was the trigger. Press the button, and it would strike the contact plate. That meant that the three
“Where is she, Mimi?”
The soldiers sauntered past again, chatting casually. Three Arabs had entered the station with suitcases packed with explosives, but the security forces hadn’t seemed to notice. How long would it take the soldiers to get their automatics off their shoulders and into firing position? If they were Israelis? Two seconds at most. But these French boys? Their reaction time would be slower.
He glanced at Palestina. She was growing more anxious. Her eyes were damp and she was pulling on the strap of her shoulder bag. Gabriel’s eyes flickered about the station, calculating angles and lines of fire.
Mimi intruded on his thoughts. “Are you listening to me?”
“I’m listening.”
“As you’ve probably guessed by now, the station is about to explode. By my calculation, you’ll have fifteen seconds. You have two choices. You can warn the people around you and try to save as many lives as possible, or you can selfishly save the life of your wife. But you cannot possibly do both, because if you warn the people, there will be pandemonium, and you’ll never be able to get your wife out of the station before the bombs go off. The only way to save her is to allow hundreds of other people to die-hundreds of deaths in order to save a wreck of a human being. Quite a moral dilemma, wouldn’t you say?”
“Where is she?”
“You tell me.”
“Track D,” Gabriel said. “Track Dalet.”
“Very good.”
“She’s not there. I don’t see her.”
“Look harder. Fifteen seconds, Gabriel. Fifteen seconds.”
And then the line went dead.
TIME SEEMED TO CRAWL to a stop. He saw it all as a streetscape, rendered in the vibrant palette of Renoir- the
His first move was so compact and rapid that no one seemed to notice it-a blow to the left side of Palestina’s skull that landed with such force that Gabriel, when he pulled the handbag off her shoulder, was not sure whether she was still alive. As the girl collapsed at his feet, he reached inside the bag and wrapped his hand around the grip of the Tanfolgio. Tayyib, the
The sound of gunfire in the vast echo chamber of the station had the effect Gabriel had expected. Across the platform, people crouched or dropped to the ground. Twenty feet away, the two soldiers were pulling their submachine guns off their shoulders. And at either end of the platform the last two