Presently, she was moving like she had somewhere to go. The drinks had clearly had their effect, but sudden exposure to the elements had a way of sobering people up. From the hotel, she'd headed straight for the old harbor. The ancient cradle of Marseille's seafaring heritage, the harbor had succumbed to the contemporary, woefully reinvented as a mooring station for a thousand pleasure boats of all sizes and varieties. A few token older ships were lashed to the docks, barquentine relics that had been restored to well-lacquered semblances of their original glory for the sake of the tourists. On any summer evening, the sidewalks would have been shoulder-to-shoulder with pleasure seekers and bored teens and counterfeit mariners. But tonight, both the season and weather were against it.
Which gave Whittemore little crowd to work with.
Fatima ignored the waterfront as she pressed onward along the quai du Port, passing rows of souvenir shops that were shut down tight. She eventually paused at a corner, near an espresso shop. An outdoor seating area was completely deserted, empty chairs and tables looking cold and lifeless. Inside, however, there was still a warm glow, and a narrow ray of light sprayed out over the sidewalk like sunshine through a broken cloud. Even at this late hour, caffeine was being served.
Fatima stood immovable. She looked obviously over her shoulder. Lousy tradecraft? Whittemore wondered. Or was she lost? He slowed his closure and coasted into a shadow.
Fatima pulled out a pack of cigarettes. She turned to put her face leeward to the wind and fired one up. It might be a signal, a message to Caliph. More likely, it was just another bad habit. Whittemore knew smoking was endemic in the Middle East — Phillip Morris and Lorillard had probably killed more bad guys than the United States Army and Marine Corps combined.
Fatima began to move again. She fell in behind two nuns whose robes flowed and fluttered in the wind, giving the appearance that she was following two black ghosts. The whole curious entourage went out of sight, onto the side street. Whittemore hurried to the corner. As he closed in, he had yet another nagging thought about calling in his spot on Fatima. If he lost her now — and anyone ever found out — he'd be in deep trouble.
He reached the espresso shop and slowed to a crawl, looked in the window as if considering a stop. Down the side street, he spotted the nuns as they turned into the first building on the right. Fatima was nowhere in sight.
"Dammit!" he cursed under his breath.
He trotted ahead, discarding any illusion of stealth. Whittemore couldn't lose her now. He was sure Fatima hadn't gone into the espresso bar — the entrance had been in clear view. It only took a few steps to discern that the big building the nuns had disappeared into was a church, a big stone statement that looked like it had been there a thousand years. It was set back from the road, its placement slightly out of line with the rest of the buildings along the street.
Whittemore passed an alley that was also askew, a fitting separation of church and capitalism. He paused for a good look. On one side of the passageway were piles of empty boxes. They all looked the same from where Whittemore stood, but he reckoned you could probably tell which shops were in front by the smells — stale tobacco, old coffee grounds, rotten vegetables. On the other side of the alley he saw overflowing trash cans, spent building materials, and a shattered old lectern with the sign of the cross. Even God had his refuse.
Amid it all, Whittemore saw no movement. No sign of Fatima. A pair of undersized bulbs cast twin shafts of light into the alley, spilling as if from doors in a dark hallway. There were any number of alcoves and obstructions. Fatima could be there — somewhere. Or she could be in the church. Whittemore flipped a mental coin.
He headed for the church.
He walked quickly and climbed an ancient set of stone steps. At the crest was a massive door, the wood scarred and bent. The door swung open freely, belying its size and aged appearance. Soft light bathed the space inside, and when Whittemore closed the door behind him the biting wind was cut off. He instantly felt warmer. Stretching out before him was a church like any other, a long central aisle that delivered the faithful to rows of wooden pews. An ornate runner covered the cold stone aisle all the way to the front, and at the head a series of steps gave rise to the place of holy issuances. Above it all was Jesus on the cross, his enduring figure mounted over stained glass that sat muted for lack of light.
Whittemore spotted the two nuns for an instant as they disappeared into a vestibule at one side of the stage. A line of candles were arrayed at the steps in front, and two people kneeled in prayer — women probably, though it was hard to tell in their layered coverings. Neither could have been Fatima Adara. Whittemore eyed the path the nuns had taken and cursed under his breath.
He went back outside.
Chapter TWENTY-FOUR
Whittemore heard it first, even before he had reached the mouth of the alley. Sound traveled well in cold air, and the hard, scraping noise was clear, undeniable. It reminded him of two smooth stones being rubbed together. Whittemore edged closer to the alley, peered around the corner and spotted Fatima. She was a hundred feet back, bent at the waist and leaning into the church wall. His view was blocked by the old lectern, but Fatima was definitely busy, her hands working on — something.
While she was distracted, Whittemore crossed the opening and set up watch from a better angle near the espresso shop. A tree of street signs — warnings to not trespass, drive through, or dump trash — gave good cover. Fatima seemed to finish whatever she was doing, and she pulled a wobbly chair from a pile of rubble and sat down.
What the hell?
Then Whittemore heard a new sound. Retching. Coughing. He couldn't see her face, but she was doubled over on the chair. Fatima Adara was puking her guts out. Jesus, he thought, this woman is a piece of work.
It went on for ten minutes. She would blow and hack, sit slumped on the chair for a time, then do it all over again. Whittemore considered his options. Fatima had definitely been busy, digging into the wall. He figured it for a dead drop, a makeshift post office box for messages either to or from Caliph. With this realization, Whittemore s spirits soared. He had just hit sevens. As soon as Fatima got her legs back, she'd come up the alley, walk to the hotel, and pass out.
Which made everything simple. When Fatima emerged, he would duck into the espresso bar, wait for her to pass, then head down the alley fast and find the dead drop. If there was a message, he'd read it, maybe take a picture with his phone. Or even call it in if he thought Caliph's arrival was imminent — Whittemore was ambitious, but he wasn't a fool. If the drop was empty, he'd catch back up with the lumbering Fatima. Then he'd have more decisions to make. But so far, Whittemore was sure he'd made all the right calls.
He took a look around the corner. Fatima was still saddled miserably in the chair. Whittemore eased out of sight and his attention drifted to the church. A woman, tall and slim, was making her way up the sidewalk. She wore a long jacket, but the sway in her hips told Whittemore she was wearing heels, while the jaunty angle of her head and flow of dark hair in the breeze told him she was young. A streetlight cast over her face at the alley entrance. She was a goddess — fiery eyes, high cheekbones, pouty lips. He looked at her openly, and as she passed her eyes flicked to his for just a moment. She entered the espresso shop. Whittemore turned back to the alley with a smile.
A smile that evaporated instantly when he saw the empty chair. Fatima was nowhere in sight.
Dammit! Not again!
Whittemore took in everything. He saw no movement, heard no sound to indicate where she'd gone. He eased to his left, hoping to find her leaning against the wall behind an obstruction. Nothing. Squinting, he tried to make out the other end of the alley. Did it open to a different street? Or was it a dead end? He couldn't tell.