“The e-mail’s encrypted, so there’s no way to trace it, but if I keep talking to her, if I can keep it up, we’ll find them. You know Harry, he’ll keep moving, moving, moving. I think he’s very worried. I think you can expect to hear from him pretty soon.”
Schrade waited.
“Song is completely lost to us as an agent. Despite her communication she has no intention of leaving him, she has no angst or ambivalence. This is Strand. He’s using her to keep the FIS on hold. He doesn’t want to be cut off from us. He’s up to something.”
“Washington knows of Song’s desertion?”
“Of course.”
“And this theory of yours?”
“Yeah.”
Schrade was thinking.
“Look,” Howard said, “you’ve waited this long. Let me play this out. I’ll concede your goddamn siege technique against Strand is probably working. He’s not going to want to lose this woman. You can’t kill her, Wolf,” he added quickly. “Okay? You’ve applied just the right amount of mayhem, just the right amount of madness. Don’t overplay it. He’s got nothing left he cares about except her. So, we stop. Right here. He’ll come around. He’ll negotiate. You’re going to hear from him.”
“When?”
“Goddamn, I don’t know when. But Strand’s running. Running’s exhausting. Covering your ass all the time’s exhausting. You’re after him. We’re after him. He’s afraid for her. Pressure. Pressure.” Howard paused. “Soon. The running, the constant moving’s going to wear him out.”
“How much time? Days? Weeks?…”
“No, no. Days.”
Schrade regarded Howard with opaque dispassion. Really, the only thing that seriously bothered Howard about the man, despite his shitload of psychopathologies, was his clear eyes. Sometimes Howard found himself wondering-irrationally, he knew, but wondering anyway-whether Schrade could see things other people couldn’t see because of those damn eyes.
“I want to find Claude Corsier,” Schrade said.
Done. They would do the Strand thing Howard’s way. Schrade was moving on to other things.
“We don’t have a clue,” Howard said. “We’ve tried to find him. The thing is, we’re dealing here with very well-trained operatives. They know the tricks of the trade…”
“I found Clymer. I found Kiriasis.”
Howard noted that he left out Marie, the sick son of a bitch. He couldn’t resist asking, “How the hell did that happen, anyway? The thing with Claude?”
Schrade ignored him. “Just be aware that I would make it financially worthwhile for the man who finds him.”
Schrade was going to get them all, sooner or later.
“You are returning to Vienna tomorrow, then?”
“That’s right.”
Schrade turned to one side and selected one of the red leather folders from the stacks of them at his elbow. He placed the folder in front of him, untied its crimson ribbon, and opened it. He looked at some of the documents, perusing them carefully. Howard guessed that they were about to move on to another subject. Schrade sat in the pool of pale light like a medieval alchemist, dealing in mysteries and arcana, comfortable with secrets and fog and the realm of mottled shadows. It was true that Howard himself and Harry Strand and all of them in this quickly moving story were creatures in that realm of shifting realities, too. That was true. But Schrade was different from them in that he was not simply a sojourner in the mist; he was not merely passing through. Rather, he was a part of it. It was his milieu, yes, but more than that, he was of its very nature and substance.
Schrade laid down the piece of paper from which he was reading and again folded his hands on top of the desk, covering the opened red folder.
Looking at Bill Howard, he began to talk, his voice modulated, his manner quiet, his wretched limpid eyes holding Howard’s attention despite their unnerving effect. For ten minutes, then fifteen, then twenty, he outlined intelligence he wanted Howard to glean from the records available to him in the FIS computers.
It was always this way. Schrade provided him with no documents of any kind, and Howard took no notes. Neither of them ever forgot even the smallest detail of what was said at these sessions, even if the intelligence was difficult to come by and months passed before Howard made another secret trip to Schwanenwerder to deliver what Schrade had requested. Within twenty-four hours of his report, Howard’s numbered account in Liechtenstein received another deposit.
“So, that is the sum of it,” Schrade concluded, regarding Howard from across the surface of his desk. “Do you have any questions?”
“None.”
Schrade gave a single nod. Done. He closed the red leather folder and tied the ribbon. He set it aside. He picked up his reading glasses and put them on and opened the red leather folder from which he had been reading when Howard arrived. He began to read.
Howard watched him. This was always an intriguing moment. He often wondered what would happen if he just sat there and didn’t leave. How long would it take before Schrade looked up? When he did, how would he react? What would happen if someone actually called this man’s inflexible hand? Howard’s imagination answered his own question. He saw the face of Marie Bienert. Of Dennis Clymer. Of Ariana Kiriasis. Of Claude Corsier. Mara Song. Harry Strand. He saw the faceless silhouettes of dozens, of countless, unknown others.
Howard had managed thus far to work with this one-man pestilence and not succumb to his indiscriminate fever. He wanted to keep it that way, and no amount of idle curiosity would make him risk losing what he had managed to extract from the very heart of the plague.
He rose from his chair, turned away from the massive desk, and started to the door at the other end of the salon. As he passed through pools of dusty light hanging over the cabinets, he thought he could feel the intermittent shadows brushing at his clothes like spiders’ webs, each web stronger, each dragging at him with more resistance than the previous one. The very fact that he was imagining this gave him the creeps, and it took all the nerve he had not to quicken his pace. He did not look back.
CHAPTER 39
By midafternoon of the next day they had rented a new car and were on the road again. Picking up Autoroute A1 outside Paris, they drove three hours to Calais, where they caught one of the numerous Sealink ferries to Dover.
They could have taken the Channel tunnel train from Paris and been in London in just over three hours, but Strand had grown increasingly edgy about evading Schrade’s intelligence. Now that he knew Schrade had probably had continuous access to their whereabouts through Howard, via Mara’s signal pen, up until they left Bellagio, his determination to remain hidden from all of them was reinvigorated, and his anxiety at the absence of any signs of surveillance whatsoever was heightened. The Channel tunnel train was too popular and its traffic too easy to monitor, whereas the multiplicity of ferry routes and timetables was more in their favor.
The drive from Paris had been quiet. Once they had driven onto the ferry and started across the Channel, Strand decided to broach with Mara the subject of his plans.
They made their way up the interior stairs of the ferry and walked out on the second-level observation deck on the stern. The coast of Calais was already drifting away, and the seagulls that would follow the ferry most of the way across the Channel were shrilling and hovering above them, diving now and then into the foam and the wake created by the huge propellers. The breeze was warm and salty, but there was a feel of hopefulness in it, too.
They leaned their forearms on the railing and stood there a moment, feeling the throb of the powerful engines and the gentle buoyancy of the ferry.
“I’m going to have to talk to Schrade,” he said. Out of the corner of his eye he saw Mara’s head jerk around.