“Well, that’s just wonderful-”
“Yes, it is!”
“OK,” he said, trying to bring down the temperature just a little. “Let me make a suggestion. Maybe this is nothing, Emily. Maybe not.”
He waited. She had to ask.
“Well?” The blue eyes wouldn’t let go.
“It’s just this. We’ve been on a kind of alert over attacks on Americans since October. A man called Henry Anderton was attacked in the ghetto. Badly beaten up. Anderton lived, but he was lucky. There were a couple of uniform cops in the area who got involved. Whoever the guy was ran off. If our men hadn’t been there…”
“I didn’t know that.” She was interested. He’d caught her attention. “What did Anderton do?”
Costa pulled out his notebook and rifled through the pages. “I checked during the night. He was some kind of academic working over here on a project. A military historian. Does his name mean anything?”
She shook her head. “Should it?”
“I don’t know. I made a few more inquiries. I can’t find an academic anywhere called Henry Anderton. He was out of hospital after two days, gone to some private clinic, no one knows where.”
“Keeps on happening.”
“Quite.”
He didn’t want to come right out and ask it. He wasn’t sure he was close enough to her yet. All the same…
“Someone in there will know, Emily. It could help. Both of us.”
She sighed, folded her arms. “This isn’t about my father, Nic. Don’t try and use that. I want this guy caught for all of them. More than anything I want him caught because that’s my job now. It’s what I’m supposed to do, like it or not.”
He shrugged. “Sorry.”
She didn’t move.
“Will you at least think about it?” he asked.
A flash of fury again. “What? Smuggling information out of the confidential files of the US embassy? They fire you for that, I believe.”
“Would that be so bad?”
“You mean because I’m lousy at this anyway?”
Delicate territory. “I meant because… I don’t think you enjoy this kind of work.”
“Perhaps I don’t. But they also send you to jail. I don’t imagine I’d enjoy that either.”
He couldn’t stifle a brief laugh.
“What’s so funny?” she demanded.
“I had that kind of conflict myself once. Did all the wrong things. Which were, in my view, all the right things.”
“What happened?”
“Long story. You can hear it sometime if you want. Anyway I’m still here, aren’t I?”
“Oh yes,” she murmured. “You’re here. You and that partner of yours. But no one’s going to miss either of you.”
It hung on a knife edge. He could so easily ruin things.
“Henry Anderton,” she repeated.
“I can write it down,” he said, reaching for the pad.
She snatched it away. “That would be really smart. Are you at home this evening? Six or seven onwards?”
“Could be.”
“Do me a favour too.” She started scribbling something on the notepad. “Look up this name. Everywhere you can find. Tonight we can compare notes. And… Damn!”
There was a shape by the car. Costa felt his spine stiffen, saw images from the previous two nights flash through his head and reached for his gun.
The jeep door opened. Agent Leapman stood there, staring in at them, looking even more pissed off than usual.
“What is this? The kindergarten run?” Leapman demanded. “You should’ve been at your desk an hour ago, Deacon.”
Behind her back, Emily’s hand, small, firm and warm, thrust itself briefly into Costa’s, pushing the screwed-up page from the pad into his palm. Their fingers entwined, just briefly.
Leapman didn’t see a thing. He was too busy making an impression.
“Go sit in there and look busy, will you, Deacon?” the FBI man snarled. “I got things to do.”
She pulled her hand free, reclaimed her bag and started to get out of the car.
“Can’t I come along?”
“What’s the point?” Leapman’s back was turned to her already; he wasn’t even bothering to watch. “Go write a report. File something. Defrag a hard drive. Whatever…”
Costa watched them go their separate ways. She didn’t look back. A part of him resented that. Another knew better. Falcone had said it. Perhaps he’d seen this coming all along.
“Dangerous games,” Nic Costa murmured to himself, then opened the piece of paper and read the name: Bill Kaspar.
From across the road, seated on a hard wooden chair in a tiny cafe, someone else watched them too, watched Emily Deacon flash a card at the gate, then walk past the security guard, straight through the door, into a sea of bright, unintelligible noise.
Gianni Peroni was good with the girl. No, Teresa Lupo corrected herself, he was amazing. He built a bond with her in a way Teresa couldn’t hope to comprehend, able to communicate an emotion-sympathy, disappointment, expectation-with just a look, able to see too that Laila had a need for what he could provide. Reassurance. And sometimes just attention. It wasn’t easy. It wasn’t all plain sailing. Each time Laila got tired, Peroni backed off. He knew just when to stop pushing.
And the kid wanted to be on her own a lot. Or at least that’s what she pretended. It was an act, though. After a while-ten, fifteen minutes-she’d drift back to Peroni, nudge him with an elbow, ask some pointless question. Her Italian was heavily accented but much better than they’d first thought. She was quick-witted too. Teresa could see a glint of keen intelligence in her dark eyes, though much of the time it was marred by the stain of suspicion every street kid seemed to own. They were never quite happy, even in their own company. Something, some cataclysm, hunger, disaster, an encounter with the cops, was always waiting around the corner.
Laila couldn’t stop stealing either, even in the house. Peroni had patiently removed all manner of stuff-cutlery, food, family photographs, even an old, stained ashtray-from the multitude of pockets in the grubby black jacket the girl wore all the time. God knows what she’d stashed in the room Nic had given her upstairs, where she retreated from time to time.
The three of them now sat in front of the bigger of the two fires, Laila sprawled out teenage-fashion on an old sofa, trying to read a comic book Nic had dug up from somewhere. Peroni was slumped in the chair next to her, eyes closed, snoring lightly. It was getting on for noon. Teresa had already called the office and checked with Silvio Di Capua. The autopsy on Mauro Sandri was done, the report filed safely in the cabinet marked “boring,” the one that said people who die from gunshot wounds and knives were rarely deserving of further attention. Agent Leapman and his friends had made sure she couldn’t get her hands on the one body that did interest her, that of the so-called Margaret Kearney.
Silvio sounded as if he was coping. He needed to be left on his own more, Teresa thought, needed to understand he was capable of this.
Then the sequence of events of the previous day raced through her mind.
“Shit,” she hissed abruptly to herself and reached again for the phone. Gianni Peroni didn’t even stir. He was sound asleep.
When she phoned, Teresa had meant to tell Silvio to take the dead American woman’s belongings round to the embassy. It had slipped her memory. You’re getting old, she thought. This is Alzheimer’s kicking in.
And it doubtless meant another argument soon, maybe more trouble for Leo Falcone from those faceless men above him. She’d heard whispers going round the Questura the previous night. Falcone was in trouble. His career escalator was stuck. Maybe soon it would start to go the other way.