“And who is the gentleman? Do you have a photograph?”
“He is the man who brought you to this office,” the man said. “The shorter of the two who greeted you at the elevator. Do you remember him well enough, or do you still want a photograph?”
“I remember him very well,” M-T replied.
“He lives six blocks north of the embassy,” the man said, “and he always walks home after work, leaving at around five-thirty. He walks up the east side of Park Avenue, where the sidewalks are wide and not crowded, even at rush hour.”
“Will today be soon enough?” M-T asked.
“Today will be very satisfactory. What assistance do you require?”
“I will need an untraceable escape vehicle—a motorcycle, preferably—and someone to drive it. Can you do that in the time available?”
“We can manage that.”
She looked at her watch. “I have a little over an hour. I’ll reconnoiter and phone you with a location.”
He wrote a number on a piece of paper and showed it to her. “Memorize it,” he said.
She did so, then put the weapon into her handbag and stood up. “If there’s nothing else?”
He took an envelope from his desk and handed it to her. “Some walking-around money, as the Americans say.”
“I assume that, since the ballistics will identify the bullet as CIA, you will not need me to dump the weapon where it can be found?”
“Please keep it, with my compliments,” he replied, standing up.
They shook hands, in spite of the latex gloves, and she left.
Downstairs, she walked to Park Avenue, then uptown. Four blocks along, she found a recessed, wrought-iron gate leading to a narrow alleyway beside a large apartment building. She stood in the recess and looked up and down Park. This would do nicely. She used her cell phone to call the number.
“Yes?”
She gave him the address of the building she stood next to. “Please have the vehicle follow your friend from a little distance. When the driver sees him fall, he is to pull up near the body. I will hop on, and he can drop me a few blocks away.”
“It will be done.”
“I won’t shoot unless I see the motorcycle there. If the driver tries to go past me, I’ll shoot him, so please instruct him carefully.”
“I understand.”
“Goodbye.”
“You may call this number if you ever need assistance. I am called Ali.”
“Thank you.” She punched off. She walked over to Madison Avenue and window-shopped for half an hour, then walked back to her chosen spot. She stood in the little recess, leaning against the building, and looked downtown, from whence her quarry would be coming. Ten minutes passed before she saw him, a block away. She did not see the motorcycle.
“Right on time,” she said aloud to herself. “Let’s hope my transportation arrives as promptly.” She watched the man approach, now half a block away, waiting to cross the street. As he stepped off the curb, she saw the motorcycle. She knelt beside her handbag and checked the weapon, then she stood up and slung the bag over her shoulder and put her hand inside. She turned to look uptown, then down again. He was walking quickly, and the nearest pedestrian was half a block from him. The motorcycle stopped at the corner, idling.
She pressed her back against the downtown side of the recess, so that he couldn’t see her. Then he appeared. She stepped out of the alcove with a last look around, took the weapon from the bag, and fired once at the back of his head from a distance of six feet. He fell like a butchered animal. She stepped closer and fired two more rounds into his head, then returned the pistol to her bag.
The motorcycle came to a stop a few feet away. She hopped onto the pillion seat, sidesaddle. “Drive to Seventy-second Street and turn left,” she said.
The driver followed instructions.
“Now, straight ahead, and into the park.”
He drove into the park.
“Stop here,” she said, “and thank you.”
He stopped, she hopped off, and he drove away without a word. From his size, and in spite of the helmet, she thought he was Ali, the man who had given her the pistol.
She strolled south in Central Park, found a bench, and waited, her hand in her bag, on the pistol, to see if anyone pursued her. No one did.
28
Stone left the interstate north of Danbury and turned onto narrower country roads.
“It’s beautiful up here,” Carpenter said as they crossed a bridge over a long lake. “Like England, but with a great many more trees.”
“It’s not called New England for nothing,” Stone said.
“England would have looked like this in the eighteenth century,” she said, “before we denuded the country of forests.”
They drove alongside a creek and passed an old mill. “Now that’s my idea of New England,” she said, “taken mostly from picture postcards.”
They drove through Bridgewater. “Another twenty minutes,” he said.
“Take as long as you like,” she replied. “I’m enjoying it.”
They came to Washington, and Stone turned left, then, after a short distance, left again. A couple of hundred yards along, he turned into his driveway.
“Oh, it’s lovely!” They got out of the car, and Stone took their luggage from the trunk.
“It was originally the gatehouse for the big place next door,” he said.
“Who lives there?” she asked, looking over at the large Shingle-style house.
“A writer, until recently, but he moved to the city. A movie producer bought it, but he hasn’t moved in yet.”
“Still, you have a lot of privacy,” she said, “with the trees and the hedge. And I love the turret.”
Stone unlocked the door, entered the alarm code, and adjusted the thermostat. “Can I get you a drink?”
“I’d love one of your bourbon whiskies,” she replied, walking around the house, inspecting the new kitchen, the mahogany floors, and the comfortable furniture. She chose a sofa and sat down.
Stone brought in their drinks and sat down beside her. “We’ll need to go to the grocery store soon. It closes at six-thirty.”
Dino was clearing his desk, getting ready to go home for the day, still tired from lack of sleep the night before, when a message generated by a 911 call popped onto his computer screen. A shooting on Park Avenue? That hardly ever happened. Through the glass wall of his office, he saw two detectives rise from their desks. They were next on the rotation, and they would take the call. He would tag along, just to see what people were doing to each other on Park Avenue these days. Anyway, it was on his way home.
The block had been closed off, creating a huge, rush-hour traffic jam. Dino got out of his car, ducked under the crime-scene tape, and found a uniformed officer. “What happened?” he asked.
The officer pointed at the body of a man, lying facedown on the sidewalk, leaking blood. Two EMTs were just turning him over.
“As soon as they pronounce him, throw a sheet over the body and open the street,” Dino said to a sergeant as he approached the body. “Whataya got?” he asked an EMT.
“Looks like two, maybe three, to the back of the head,” the EMT replied.
“You calling it?”
The EMT nodded.
“Okay,” he said to the sergeant. “Run it down for me.” His two detectives had arrived and were ready to take notes.
“The building doorman saw the guy fall,” the sergeant said, “but he didn’t hear anything. A woman—a blonde, medium height and weight, thirties—walked away from him, hopped onto the back of a light motorcycle, and was driven north on Park. That’s about it.”