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“Not unless I wanted to. I was using the sight to see if I could see you inside your bedroom. Then I thought maybe the sight might wake you up.”

“You some kind of psycho?”

“I want to ask you some questions.”

“Why can’t you ask me at the Agency, later? Why the big, dramatic thing?”

“I don’t have much time. I must use every minute.”

“Until what?”

“A mission.”

“What mission?”

“Can’t say.”

“What a surprise.”

“It has to do with our friend.”

Sami stared at Ricketts, suddenly realizing that the man had been speaking the best Arabic Sami had heard in a very long time; as good as Sami’s father. Very learned, very articulate. Not a hint of an accent, except perhaps Arabian, as in Saudi Arabian. “What do you need to know?”

“Absolutely everything you know about him, everything you have thought or suspected. A long, rambling, illogical, speculative talk, that will give me as much help as you can give.”

“When?” Sami asked, still tired.

“Now.”

Sami sighed and then pulled himself together. “Coffee?”

* * *

“It sure didn’t take us very long to get here,” Woods said as he picked up the phone book.

“That’s because it wasn’t very far,” Big replied, scrutinizing the Nahariya train station from the chair he was sitting in.

“You’re hilarious,” Woods replied.

“You still don’t remember her name? Didn’t Vialli tell you?”

Woods refused to look at Big. “Yeah, he told me. I just can’t remember.”

“How do you know she wasn’t lying about that too?”

“I guess I don’t.”

“Come on. Let’s go back to the ship. This is a waste of time.”

“Hirschman. That’s it!”

“How do you know?”

“I just know,” he said, opening the phone book. He turned the pages quickly and then slowed. “This is in Hebrew. I figured the names would be in English.” He put the book down.

“You are dumber than a post sometimes, Trey. Why in the world would there be an English phone book in Israel?”

“Excuse me,” Woods said to a passing soldier, one of the many in the train station, each carrying an M-16 or an Uzi. The soldier stopped.

“Yes?” he said.

“Do you speak English?”

“Yes, a little.”

“Could you find the Hirschman residence for me in the phone book?”

The soldier was young and sturdy. He stood nearly six feet tall and had short black hair under a beret. He studied Woods as he considered the request. “Sure, of course. Why do you want their phone number?” he asked.

“We just need to talk to them. Their daughter, Irit, was a friend of a friend.”

The soldier slung his M-16 over his shoulder and took the phone book. He looked at the pages as he talked. “Are you off the carrier at Haifa?”

“Yes, we are.”

The soldier’s eyes brightened as he considered the Washington. “I wish we had just one ship like that. You Americans have twelve of them and don’t know what to do with them.” He glanced at them. “Is it nuclear?”

“Yes.”

“What is that like?”

Big shrugged. “Just like not being nuclear-powered,” Big answered. “You can’t tell at all, except there’s no stack.”

The soldier studied Woods’s face. “Was your friend the Navy officer on the bus?” he asked.

“Yes.”

He closed the book, holding a finger in it to keep his place. “We all knew her. She was two years older than me.” He grew somber. “She was one of the jewels of Nahariya. Wonderful girl, very strong spirit; I don’t know the words in English. She was special.”

“Tony thought so. He was my roommate. He came here to visit her and was murdered with her.”

“Here is the number,” he said, indicating it. “You want me to call? I don’t know if her father speaks English.”

“Would you?” Woods said.

The soldier dialed the phone and waited for an answer. He spoke rapidly into the receiver in Hebrew, then he stopped, and held the receiver out. “He would like for you to come to their house. Would you like to go?”

“That would be great.”

The soldier spoke into the receiver again, then hung up.

“What did he say?”

“He said he would be honored if you would come to his house. He would come to get you, but I told him I would show you where they live. It is not far from here.”

“Thanks. We really appreciate it. This was kind of a spur of the moment thing.”

“Follow me… Oh, I’m sorry, I haven’t introduced myself. My name is Jesse Sabin.”

“Sean Woods, and this is Big McMack.”

“You named after a sandwich?” Jesse said, smiling as they left the train station coming out into the bright sunlight.

“Exactly. My parents named me Big so I could take crap from people all the time. Actually it’s a nickname. My real name is Joseph.”

“Ah, the favored son,” Jesse said and then added, “I should warn you, Irit’s father did not take her death very well.” He unslung his M-16 and carried it at his side by the handle on the top of the rifle. Woods could see that the rifle’s ammunition clip was in place. Jesse continued, “The family hasn’t really gotten over it. Use wisdom. When you think it is time to go—”

“We won’t stay too long. Thanks for the advice.”

They walked for several more blocks through neighborhoods and streets filled with pedestrians and children playing, many of whom stopped what they were doing to stare at Woods and Big in their white uniforms.

The Americans and their Israeli escort entered a narrow street and stopped at a gate in a low wall.

“This is it,” Jesse said. “You can go knock on the door. I have to go.”

Woods and Big both extended their hands and Jesse shook them.

“Shalom,” Jesse said, smiling. He turned and headed in the direction of the water.

Woods and Big went through the gate. The building was unremarkable, a slab-sided, sand-colored condominium. They knocked and waited. The door opened slowly, and a little man in his sixties appeared. He had bushy eyebrows and sad eyes, thinning gray hair, and stooped shoulders.

“Hello,” Woods said cautiously. He wasn’t even sure why he had come. His enthusiasm and impulsiveness had gotten the better of him. Now, here he was, about to remind this poor old man of the death of his daughter. Woods suddenly felt deeply sorry for her father. “I’m Lieutenant Sean Woods. This is Bi… Joseph McMack…”

“Come in,” the man said, leaving the door open and moving toward the inside of the house. They followed him into a small living room off the kitchen. There was an unusual smell to the place that Woods couldn’t identify. He glanced into the kitchen as they passed it to see if food was being prepared, but he saw no food at all. A square patio surrounded by a fence was on the other side of a sliding glass door at the far end of the living room.

The old man motioned them to the couch and sat down in a dilapidated leather chair. He breathed deeply as he studied them.

Woods didn’t know how to start. He formed a few sentences in his mind, but none of them worked.

“So,” the man said. “You knew my daughter.”

“I spent a little time with her, but Tony Vialli — you met him?”

“Yes.”

“He was my roommate on the Washington. I spent some time with Tony and Irit in Italy.”

“Tony,” he replied. “Good boy. Handsome, but not one of us…”

Woods looked at Big for help but got back only a blank stare. “He was a great guy. I’m glad you got to meet him. Was he here long?”

“Only couple of days. He and Irit were together the whole time.” He stared at the tile floor. A woman walked into the room from the front of the house. Woods and Big stood up. “Hello,” she said in a friendly voice with an English accent. “I’m Miriam Hirschman.”