Minutes earlier, Fatima had taken a call from Mosul. She now knew that the mystery of Caliph had been solved, though this had been inevitable. Today it no longer mattered. Fatima had no further use for her brother, and his captors would find only a shattered mind. Caliph could give them nothing. Her plan was working more smoothly than she had hoped. Events were running — she tried to remember the American phrase — "on autopilot" now. Fatima Adara, nee Fatima Taim, had to smile. She cared little if this insane plot succeeded. Deep in the vaults of a half-dozen banks across the globe, Fatima had what she wanted. What she deserved.
She edged to the window and looked out. There were still no lights in the flat across the street. Fatima trundled across the room and ended up in front of a full-length mirror that was mounted on the bathroom door. The lights were set low, a condition she had always preferred. But soon this would change. She had seen the doctor's results, seen his work on Caliph. He was good. Fatima put a hand to her gut, then let it run up over her breasts, shoulder, neck, and finally to her face. She stroked her flabby jawline, pulled a trestle of coarse black hair behind one ear. She fantasized briefly about buying designer clothing, custom-tailored garments of the highest quality. Perhaps she would have her hair done properly by a high-end coiffeur. So many possibilities.
She had been thinking about it more and more, ever since visiting the Geneva office where her transformation would take place.
Dreaming about what the surgeon could do. He had emphasized the magnitude of change possible, told her how different everything might be. And even if things were not perfect this time, there were other doctors. All Fatima had ever needed was the means, and now she would have it, enough to begin life anew. As if reborn. In the tall mirror she stared deeply into her own eyes, black pools in the dim light, and tried to divine if she really believed it.
Fatima turned away from her reflection and went again to the window. The room across the street was still dark. Her gaze dropped and she searched the street for her target. She saw only late night revelers, men and women heading for the nightclub district two blocks away. She spotted a skinny young woman in a thin dress strutting along. Without a coat, she must have been freezing. But the men looked at her openly. This Fatima had never known. She had never been one of the pretty girls. When Fatima turned heads on the sidewalk there were never leers or brazen invitations — instead, she took snickers and filthy comments.
She moved to the middle of the room where a pile of furniture sat neatly stacked. A solid desk would serve as her seat, and next to it she had placed the heavy closet shelf between two big chairs. It was a sturdy arrangement, but she checked again for stability. There could be no movement, no wobbling of a leg when she distributed the weight of her arms and the weapon. The rifle was her preferred Dragunov SVDSN, a compact variant of the base Russian weapon with a ten-round magazine, night sight, and custom sound suppressor. The load was a standard 7.62mm steel jacket projectile, lead core for maximum effect. At a range of ninety meters, the target would be unusually close. But Fatima never took chances.
In Iraq, Caliph had always been at her shoulder, though he wasn't any better a spotter than he was a marksman. Still, he had always been there — watching, preparing his firsthand account so that he could later take credit for her work. In spite of being good at the shooting, Fatima had never particularly liked it. Her first kill was from a mosque tower in Mosul, an American soldier. She'd taken the young man as he stood in the street talking to a child. It was in her thoughts for a time — what the child must have seen — but in the end Fatima decided this was the nature of things. With each new kill her thoughts drifted less. And with each new kill her brother's legend had grown.
" Caliph the marksman," she spat under her breath.
That her brother was now damaged gave Fatima no grief. In the end, he had become insufferable, awash in his own legend as a sniper, even if he could not hit the broadside of a camel from twenty paces. For all his ineptitude behind the trigger, however, the great Caliph was not without strengths. He was handsome, and exuded power and authority. It was, of course, all a swashbuckling facade. At base, he was a coward. It had been that way since they were children, Caliph taking credit for Fatima's accomplishments. There was really no other way in a society where women were granted so little respect — and even more so for women who were physically unattractive. Caliph was seen as the leader, while she was simply not seen.
Fatima the Invisible.
It was a terrible way to go through life. But a distinct advantage for certain applications. She looked out the window and saw night coming full. It was then that she first noticed a single, very faint light coming from the flat across the street. Fatima picked up the gun and trained it on the source. What she saw through the scope was dim and rectangular.
A computer screen.
Chapter THIRTY-EIGHT
Davis and Sorensen approached the address carefully.
Thick, broad snowflakes drifted overhead through the spray of streetlights, their reflections telltale indicators of otherwise unseen currents and eddies. The street was like a hundred others in Lyon, a muddled mix of businesses, homes, and apartments. Near the place des Terreaux, many of the buildings had been in place for centuries, while others were newer, or at least updated. It all blended to afford the district a patchwork, almost cluttered appearance.
Number 27, rue d'Algerie, was five levels, a burnt-brick facade that was in need of some work. There was little to distinguish it from the surrounding structures. Maybe a lack of anything ornate — no columns or arches, no carved lions heads or coils of rope. It was just there, plain and square.
And somewhere inside was Dr. Ibrahim Jaber.
"What was the apartment number?" Sorensen asked as they weighed the place from across the street.
"Nineteen," Davis replied.
"I see twelve windows in front. There must be more on the backside. Third floor?" she guessed.
"Maybe." Of the three windows on that floor, only one was lit. "Let s go have a look."
They crossed the street to the building entrance and found twenty mail boxes in an alcove. Some had names. Number 19 did not.
Davis said, "Jaber was supposed to be staying with a relative, an older woman."
After a silence, Sorensen said, "Okay. So lets go meet her."
At the building entrance there was no indicator of which rooms were on which floor. To the positive, the entryway wasn't locked — just an old door that opened freely against a tired spring, and behind that a stairwell. Davis and Sorensen headed up. The door labeled "19" turned out to be on the fourth floor, higher than predicted. There was no light coming from the crack at the base of the door. Davis checked his watch. 10:52.
"Do you think he's in bed?" he whispered.
"I wouldn't be surprised — you know, with the way he looks and all."
"Great. So now what?"
Sorensen stepped up to the door and knocked, the sound echoing down the long hallway. Davis sensed nothing from inside the apartment, no stirring sounds, no change to the bland darkness at the bottom of the door. He gave the second knock, quick and sharp like a chain gun. More insistent. Still nothing.
"What now?" she said. "We don't have any authority for a search. I wonder how hard it would be to get approval from the French."
"Are you kidding? At this time of night? We took the word 'bureaucracy' from French, Honeywell."
"Okay. Any other ideas?"
Davis smiled.
Sorensen frowned.
"All right," she said. "But let me do it." She moved back a step and took a firm stance.