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It, me, whats it matter? Her arms around him again. Oh, come on, Turner Come on

And as she lay back, pulling him with her, he noticed something, a boat, reduced by distance to a white hyphen, where the water met the sky.

When he sat up, pulling on his cut-off jeans, he saw the yacht It was much closer now, a graceful sweep of white riding low in the water. Deep water. The beach must fall away almost vertically, here, judging by the strength of the surf. That would be why the line of hotels ended where it did, back a long the beach, and why the ruin hadnt survived. The waves had licked away its foundation.

Give me the basket

She was buttoning her blouse. Hed bought it for her in one of the tired little shops along the Avenida Electric blue Mexican cotton, badly made. The clothing they bought in the shops seldom lasted more than a day or two. I said give me the basket.

She did. He dug through the remains of their afternoon, finding his binoculars beneath a plastic bag of pineapple slices drenched in lime and dusted with cayenne. He pulled them out, a compact pair of 6 X 30 combat glasses. He snapped the integral covers from the objectives and the pad-ded eyepieces, and studied the streamlined ideograms of the Hosaka logo. A yellow inflatable rounded the stern and swung toward the beach.

Turner, I -

Get up. Bundling the blanket and her towel into the basket. He took a last warm can of Carta Blanca from the basket and put it beside the binoculars. He stood, pulling her quickly to her feet, and forced the basket into her hands.

Maybe Im wrong, he said. If I am, get out of here. Cut for that second stand of palms. He pointed. Dont go back to the hotel. Get on a bus, Manzanillo or Vallarta. Go home -

He could hear the purr of the outboard now.

He saw the tears start, but she made no sound at all as she turned and ran, up past the ruin, clutching the basket, stumbling in a drift of sand. She didnt look back.

He turned, then, and looked toward the yacht. The inflatable was bouncing through the surf. The yacht was named Tsushima, and hed last seen her in Hiroshima Bay. Hed seen the red Shinto gate at ltsukushima from her deck.

He didnt need the glasses to know that the inflatables passenger would be Conroy, the pilot one of Hosakas ninjas. He sat down cross-legged in the cooling sand and opened his last can of Mexican beer.

He looked back at the line of white hotels, his hands inert on one of Tsushimas teak railings Behind the hotels, the little towns three holograms glowed: Banamex, Aeronaves, and the cathedrals six-meter Virgin.

Conroy stood beside him. Crash job, Conroy said. You know how it is. Conroys voice was flat and uninflected, as though hed modeled it after a cheap voice chip. His face was broad and white, dead white. His eyes were dark-ringed and hooded, beneath a peroxide thatch combed back from a wide forehead. He wore a black polo shirt and black slacks. In-side, he said, turning. Turner followed, ducking to enter the cabin door. White screens, pale flawless pine; Tokyos austere corporate chic.

Conroy settled himself on a low, rectangular cushion of slate-gray ultrasuede. Turner stood, his hands slack at his sides. Conroy took a knurled silver inhaler from the low enamel table between them. Choline enhancer?

No.

Conroy jammed the inhaler into one nostril and snorted.

You want some sushi? He put the inhaler back on the table. We caught a couple of red snapper about an hour ago

Turner stood where he was, staring at Conroy.

Christopher Mitchell, Conroy said. Maas Biolabs. Their head hybridoma man. Hes coming over to Hosaka.

Never heard of him.

Bullshit. How about a drink?

Turner shook his head. Silicons on the way out, Turner. Mitchells the man who made biochips work, and Maas is sitting on the major patents. You know that. Hes the man for monoclonals. He wants out YOU and me, Turner, were going to shift him.

I think Im retired, Conroy. I was having a good time, back there.

Thats what the psych team in Tokyo say. I mean, its not exactly your first time out of the box, is it? Shes a field psychologist, on retainer to Hosaka.

A muscle in Turners thigh began to jump.

They say youre ready, Turner. They were a little worried, after New Delhi, so they wanted to check it out. Little therapy on the side. Never hurts, does it?

2 MARLY

SHED WORN HER BEST for the interview, but it was raining in Brussels and she had no money for a cab. She walked from the Eurotrans station.

Her hand, in the pocket of her good jacket, a Sally Stanley but almost a year old, was a white knot around the crumpled telefax. She no longer needed it, having memorized the address, but it seemed she could no more release it than break the trance that held her here now, staring into the window of an expensive shop that sold menswear, her focus phasing between sedate flannel dress shirts and the reflection of her own dark eyes.

Surely the eyes alone would be enough to cost her the job. No need for the wet hair she now wished shed let Andrea cut. The eyes displayed a pain and an inertia that anyone could read, and most certainly these things would soon be revealed to Herr Josef Virek, least likely of potential employers.

When the telefax had been delivered, shed insisted on regarding it as some cruel prank, another nuisance call. Shed had enough of those, thanks to the media, so many that Andrea had ordered a special program for the apartments phone, one that filtered out incoming calls from any number that wasnt listed in her permanent directory. But that, Andrea had insisted, must have been the reason for the telefax. How else could anyone reach her?

But Marly had shaken her head and huddled deeper into Andreas old terry robe. Why would Virek, enormously weal-thy, collector and patron, wish to hire the disgraced former operator of a tiny Paris gallery?

Then it had been Andreas time for head-shaking, in her impatience with the new, the disgraced Marly Krushkhova, who spent entire days in the apartment now, who sometimes didnt bother to dress. The attempted sale, in Paris, of a single forgery, was hardly the novelty Marly imagined it to have been, she said. If the press hadnt been quite so anxious to show up the disgusting Gnass for the fool he most assuredly was, she continued, the business would hardly have been news. Gnass was wealthy enough, gross enough, to make for a weekends scandal. Andrea smiled. If you had been less attractive, you would have gotten far less attention.

Marly shook her head. And the forgery was Alains. You were innocent. Have you forgotten that?

Marly went into the bathroom, still huddled in the thread-bare robe, without answering.

Beneath her friends wish to comfort, to help, Marly could already sense the impatience of someone forced to share a very small space with an unhappy, nonpaying guest.

And Andrea had had to loan her the fare for the Eurotrans.

With a conscious, painful effort of will, she broke from the circle of her thoughts and merged with the dense but sedate flow of serious Belgian shoppers.

A girl in bright tights and a boyfriends oversized loden jacket brushed past, scrubbed and smiling. At the next inter-section, Marly noticed an outlet for a fashion line shed favored in her own student days. The clothes looked impossibly young.

In her white and secret fist, the telefax.

Galerie Duperey, 14 Rue au Beurre, Bruxelles.

Josef Virek.

The receptionist in the cool gray anteroom of the Galerie Duperey might well have grown there, a lovely and likely poisonous plant, rooted behind a slab of polished marble inlaid with an enameled keyboard. She raised lustrous eyes as Marly approached. Marly imagined the click and whirr of shutters, her bedraggled image whisked away to some far corner of Josef Vireks empire.