It was the first piece of good news this morning. “Then she’s corroborated my story.”
“That she was the target of an assassination attempt in which an innocent bystander was killed instead. And that both of you left the scene before the police could arrive.”
“She ran to save her life, and I ran to catch the killer.”
“Neither of you stayed to offer assistance to the man who had been shot.”
“It was a sniper rifle. Little hole in, big hole out. He never had a chance, something I told your people.”
“And the man you confronted by the river — do you think he was the shooter?”
“Yes. Did you recover his body?”
“What there was left of it. But he carried no identification, nor were there any traces of blowback from the Barrett — which we found in the upstairs office across the avenue.”
“Let me guess,” McGarvey said. “You found a pair of rubber gloves.”
“In the gutter around the corner. But we haven’t been able to find any usable prints or DNA; the insides of the gloves had been coated with Vaseline or some substance like it.”
The shooter hadn’t learned that from the IDF. “I need to get out of here before someone else makes another attempt.”
The major shook his head, and McGarvey knew what was coming next.
“I’ve never been an enemy of France.”
“No, but each time you have been here, people have died. This time the death toll is two. So far. How many more will it be if I release you?”
“Did Colonel Bete tell you why we came to France?”
“Something about a serial killer in the CIA. It’s not France’s problem.”
McGarvey leaned forward. “It might be, the next time the DGSE needs some help preventing another terrorist attack. France is crawling with Muslims. Mosques on just about every corner in all the poor districts of Paris and every other city. Breeding grounds for Islamic dissidents.”
Lucien said nothing, but he was steaming.
“The Sûreté has a problem. You have a problem.”
“My job is to deal with current problems. And at this moment you and the woman you followed here are it.”
“She’s committed no crime here.”
“But you have, by carrying an undeclared firearm into France.”
“Check with Colonel Bete.”
Lucien rapped a knuckle on the table. “Salopard. The service is not in charge of internal affairs. That falls to the Sûreté. In Paris, to me.”
McGarvey’s sat phone, which was lying on the table, chimed.
“There can be no signal in this building,” Lucien said, staring at it as if it were a dangerous bug.
The phone chimed again.
Lucien picked it up and answered it. Otto’s voice came over the speaker.
“Major Pierre Lucien of the Sûreté, Paris homicides, if I’m not mistaken.”
“There can be no telephone calls in here,” the Sûreté major said.
“To your switchboard, and then through the building’s wiring,” Otto said. “Easy shit, actually. But we have a problem you need to solve before more bodies start to pile up in Paris. Wouldn’t do much for your nearly spotless record. And with less than eight years until retirement, you wouldn’t want to be dismissed. What would your wife, Pauline, say?”
“You son of a bitch,” Lucien said, and reached to turn off the phone.
“Technically, you’re right, but let’s leave my mother out of this. The point is, we have a serial killer on the loose in Langley, and in order to find out who it is, we followed Ms. Wheeler to Paris so she could attempt to make contact with someone she thought could help with the investigation. Instead someone tried to kill her. You can’t take her into custody, because she’s broken no laws there. So she should be free to go.”
“That’ll be up to Colonel Bete.”
“Yes. She has a flight to Tel Aviv this afternoon. We think she will be killed when she arrives. We want to prevent that.”
“I don’t care.”
“But you must,” Otto said. “Mr. McGarvey and his partner, Ms. Boylan, must be allowed to leave Paris this afternoon.”
“Monsieur McGarvey will be brought before a magistrate this afternoon, where he will be formally charged with accessory to murder and entering France with an illegal firearm. We have strict laws.”
“But that would be a mistake.”
Lucien tried to switch the phone off.
“Hang in there, Mac,” Otto said. “I’ve recorded everything from the moment you were arrested. Your aircrew has refueled the Gulfstream and is ready to leave as soon as you and Pete get to the airport.”
“Is Pete okay?”
“She’s with Bete right now.”
Lucien tried to switch off the phone again.
“I’ll spring you in about five minutes,” Otto said, and was gone, but the phone would not power off.
“Who was that?” Lucien demanded.
“Otto Rencke. He’s director of special projects for the Company, and he, too, lived here a number of years ago, but you probably won’t find anything in your databases. He’s pretty good with stuff like that.”
“We’re past that point,” Lucien said. “The rest will come out at your trial.” He got up and, not bothering with the sat phone — it was something he couldn’t control — left the room
“You still there?” he asked.
“Yes, but pick up. They’re recording everything,” Otto replied.
The speaker function shut off when McGarvey picked up. “What do you have in mind?”
“Do you know the name Andre Tousseul?”
“He used to be the director general of the Sûreté.”
“Still is. He was listening in on your interview — especially with Lucien. I had Walt explain the situation to him earlier, and he understood perfectly. Mostly because he wants all this to go away. The sooner you and Pete and Alex are out of France, the happier he’ll be, though he promised Walt any assistance he could give to the CIA.”
“Her flight leaves in less than three hours. She takes it, there’s a good chance she’ll be killed when she gets there.”
“I think Pete should go in her stead. You and Alex can fly over in the Gulfstream. I’ll have your clearance to land within the next thirty minutes.”
One of the officers who had conducted their initial interview came in. “If you will come with me, sir, I’ll have you signed out and your belongings returned to you.”
“On my way. Thanks, kemo sabe,” McGarvey said. He switched off the phone, and this time it stayed off.
“Sir.”
“Where is Major Lucien?”
“He’s been called away.”
FIFTY-THREE
Room service had brought up a cheese plate with mousse and pâté de foie gras, along with a good bottle of ice-cold Pinot Grigio. Pete and Alex sat at a small marble-topped table in front of the open window. That she had a minder wasn’t lost on Alex, but she made no bones about it, for which Pete was grateful.
She didn’t like the woman, but she felt sorry for her. Being an NOC had been the only possible profession for her, and yet the years of service in the field, and since Iraq, the constant looking over her shoulder, had taken its toll. She could see it around the corners of her eyes, the sometimes firm set of her mouth, and the tilt of her head, as if she were listening for something gaining on her.
Bete was waiting downstairs for McGarvey to arrive, and when he got there, they would head to de Gaulle, where Pete would take Alex’s place on the Turkish Airlines flight, and Alex would go with Mac on the CIA’s Gulfstream. They would leave as soon as possible in order to get to Tel Aviv before Pete’s flight arrived. He wanted to be at immigration first to see who showed up to meet the flight.