“Well, I’m glad you can joke about it!” Moreau cried, rolling the dial on his voice up from 2 to 10. “I’m glad you can joke about how Sam Fisher got your goddamned OPSAT and relieved you of your weapon!”
Ames shrugged, ever the haughty bastard. “These are trivial facts we’re all familiar with. I thought we were focusing on Fisher’s next move.”
“Shut up. I’ve switched all the frequencies and cut off your old OPSAT so Fisher can’t use it anymore. He knows how we play. He may or may not still have your weapon. But we suspect he’ll try to better arm himself now.”
“Why do you expect that?” asked Gillespie.
“Well, he knows about you, for one thing.”
“But there’s something else,” said Hansen.
“Don’t get ahead of me. Fisher needs to resupply—”
“The caches,” said Hansen.
Moreau pointed at him. “Exactly. We’ve got three in Luxembourg and another four in Germany, Belgium, and northern France. Closest one to our location is in Bavigne.”
While the weapons caches were small and had been in place for years (and assumedly contained outdated weaponry), they could be life savers for operatives on the run. Third Echelon had such caches stashed all over the world. Sam Fisher was either well aware of their locations, or he knew who was.
“Sir, any idea why Fisher’s here and where he’s headed?” asked Ames.
“You think asking politely will get you a straight answer?”
“I could ask you like this: All right, fool, what’s up with this BS wild-goose chase? Tell us where Fisher is!”
Moreau chuckled till he winced. “That’s more honest. Well, obviously Fisher’s been hiding out in Europe. He’s still got more contacts and resources he can tap here. It’s anyone’s guess what his master plan is, but we’ve got a lot of work to do today.”
“Why don’t you make an educated guess?” asked Hansen.
Moreau grinned crookedly. “All right, cowboy. Fisher’s here in Europe on a beer-tasting tour. How’s that?”
Hansen shook his head in disgust.
“So what are we waiting for?” asked Valentina. “Let’s get going.”
Hansen and Ames were en route to Bavigne, which is about sixty to seventy kilometers northwest of the city, deep in the countryside. The place is about as European small town as you can get, with only about 125 residents living within a community whose architecture seemed torn from the pages of a children’s fairy tale. It was Old World Mayberry, and when Hansen tried to make that comparison to Ames, the guy didn’t get it. He’d never seen any of the old reruns of the Andy Griffith Show. Ames was an uncultured swine.
While Moreau remained behind at the hotel, Gillespie, Valentina, and Noboru went off to check out several of the youth hostels. Fisher wouldn’t play the credit card game now, unless he wanted to be caught, so he’d probably stay in one of the hostels, where he could pay cash, no questions asked. Then again, the people at those hostels tend to be very discreet and not at all forthcoming with information. The others would have to play their hand just right if they wanted to learn anything.
Hansen checked his watch. It was nearly 1:00 P.M. They were heading up E411, near another small town, Thibessart, when the Zafira’s engine sputtered and stalled. Hansen glided to the side of the road, stopped, and for the next few minutes tried to get the engine to turn over. They had a full tank of gas.
Groaning through four-letter words, they got out, raised the hood, and attempted to diagnose the problem.
“You know anything about cars?” asked Hansen.
Ames rolled his eyes. “What do you think?”
Between the tow truck, and the drive out to deliver their replacement rental car, this one an upgraded Audi A8 like the one the others had rented, Hansen and Ames did not reach Bavigne until nearly three in the afternoon.
During the two hours they’d spent waiting, they’d coordinated with the rest of the team, who’d been scouring the hostels around Luxembourg and come up dry. There was another weapons cache in Birkenfeld, Germany, about eighty-seven kilometers away from the hotel, so Valentina said they would go check it out.
Hansen and Ames stopped at a restaurant, the Auberge du Lac, and ordered some sandwiches to go. The woman at the counter suggested they have some lobster soup, and Hansen agreed. Ames went off to use the restroom and returned in time to help carry the bags out to the car.
“So we’re in the middle of a mission, and we’re stopping for lunch,” quipped Ames.
“Yeah, but we’re eating in the car, if this one doesn’t break down.”
“Where’s our sense of urgency?” asked Ames.
Hansen shrugged. “I left mine back at the hotel.”
They ate quickly, though Hansen wished he’d had more time to savor the heavenly soup. They drove northeast, then turned south again, according to the map, weaving between farmers’ fields and the banks of a narrow river. They passed through a covered bridge and into a clearing where rose a log cabin that might have been built a century before.
“This is it,” said Ames, as they climbed out of the car.
Hansen nodded, started forward, then crouched down. “Footprints.”
“And they look recent. He’s sloppy, all right. He was here.”
“You keep calling him sloppy. I find that hilarious. If he’s sloppy, then what are you? Fisher didn’t bother to clean up these tracks because he’s confident we can’t use them. He’s deliberate. Always. Come on.”
They mounted the porch, knocked, waited. No one was home. They crossed to the back of the house and found a locked door leading down into a basement. Ames picked the lock and they eased themselves into a damp, dark root cellar, the musty stench making Hansen crinkle his nose. Back in one corner lay some fruit boxes, and Hansen flicked on his penlight to reveal a small wooden hatch set into the dirt floor. The hatch had been recently uncovered. Hansen flipped open the lid and found the hole below empty.
If Fisher had not been there, Hansen and Ames would be staring at a DARPA-modified model 1650 Pelican case with an encrypted-keypad lock and a C-4 tampering system that went boom! Larger than a suitcase, the pack held a standard equipment loadout: SVT; OPSAT; Trident goggles equipped with night-vision, infrared, and electromagnetic settings; SC pistol; SC-20K modular assault rifle with all the accoutrements; Mark V tactical operations RhinoPlate suit; and six grenades, three flashbang, two fragmentation, and one White Smoke. Fisher, it seemed, had now gone from the old school of jury-rigged cell phones to the newer Splinter Cell school, though the equipment now in his possession was still from the previous generation. Delta Sly had the latest and greatest toys, and they sure as hell would need them against Fisher.
“All right, everyone, this is Hansen. We’re at the cache, and Fisher’s definitely been here. He’s got the weapons, the suit, the Tridents, the whole nine.”
Ames drew in a long breath. “I think I liked him better in that goofy red shirt.”
With Fisher’s projected path into Luxembourg and up to Bavigne clearly evident, the team was now able to narrow the search for him, focusing on a grid northwest of Luxembourg and reaching up past Bavigne. Moreau kept close tabs on all the rental-car agencies in the area via Third Echelon’s help, though it now seemed probable that Fisher had clean cards and ID (having secured them from Emmanuel Chenevier). Fisher had rented a car with impunity. He would be found on his terms. The other weapons cache in Germany had not been touched, and the rest of the team returned to the hotel, worn-out from the long drive and frustrated by the continued string of unknowns.
Hansen met alone with Moreau and asked what they were supposed to do now. The trail had ended at the weapons cache.