"Muchas gracias," Castillo said. "Muy amable de su parte."
It wasn't hard to find room 527. There were two law enforcement officers sitting in folding chairs on either side of the door. One was wearing the motorcyclist's boots and other special uniform items of the Philadelphia Police Department's elite highway patrol. The other was a large and burly man in civilian clothing with the telltale ear speaker of the Secret Service in his ear.
As Castillo got close to the room, both of them stood.
Castillo glanced to his left and saw a glass-walled waiting room. There were more than a half dozen people in it. Castillo recognized three of them as Philadelphia police officers: Chief Inspector Fritz Kramer, the commander of the counterterrorism bureau; Captain Frank O'Brien, who headed the intelligence and organized crime unit and for whom Betty Schneider had worked as a sergeant; and Lieutenant Frank Schneider of the highway patrol, who was Betty's big and, it could be reasonably argued, somewhat overprotective brother.
There were also a couple who Castillo decided were Betty's parents, a clergyman, and several other people.
Well, what the hell did you expect? That it would be just the two of you?
He had what he realized was the vain hope that no one in the waiting room would see him.
The Secret Service agent at the door said, "Special Agent Schneider is in X-ray, Mr. Castillo. She should be back any moment. There's a waiting room…" He pointed.
"Any reason we can't wait in there?"
"No, sir."
Castillo and Fernando entered the room. The bed was mussed, but Castillo could see no other sign that Betty had been in the room.
And I didn't see Jack Britton in that waiting room. Where the hell is he?
He walked to the window and looked out into an interior courtyard, and turned only when he sensed the door to the room was opening.
Betty was wheeled in on a gurney. She didn't see Castillo until the technicians had moved her from the gurney onto the bed and moved out of the way.
Then she raised her hand and almost moaned, "Oh, Charley!" through her wired-shut jaws.
Castillo went to the bed and took her raised hand, and kissed it, and then bent over and kissed her very gently on the forehead. Then they just looked at each other.
Thirty seconds or so later, he took a chance that his voice would work.
"Wiener schnitzel, baby," he said.
Betty smiled at him.
"If you don't mind, Costello, our mother wants to see her!" Lieutenant Frank Schneider said behind him.
Castillo turned.
Standing behind Betty's brother was the couple Charley presumed were the parents. Behind them were the clergyman and another man.
"What's the matter with you, Francis?" Betty's mother snapped. "Can't you see the way she's looking at him?"
"I'm sorry," Castillo said.
Reluctantly, Betty let go of his hand.
Betty's mother touched Castillo's cheek, and stepped around him to the bed.
Betty's father eyed him icily.
Castillo walked out of the room, followed by Fernando, and a moment later by Lieutenant Schneider.
Did he leave because he wanted his mother and father and the minister to be alone with Betty? Or did his mother tell him to get out?
"Costello!" Lieutenant Schneider said.
Castillo turned. Schneider walked very close to him and asked, "You remember one time I promised to break both your legs?"
Both the highway patrolman and the Secret Service agent guarding Betty's door were now on their feet.
"The name is Castillo," Charley said evenly. "And, yes, I seem to remember something like that."
"I knew you were bad news the minute I laid eyes on you," Schneider said. "She's in there because of you."
Castillo nodded slightly. "Guilty."
"If you ever show your face around her again, I swear I'll break both your legs and then tear off your arms and shove them up your ass!"
Castillo didn't reply.
Fernando took a couple of steps closer. "Let me tell you something, Shorty," he said, aware that "Shorty" was relative. Lieutenant Schneider, at six-feet-one, was at least two inches shorter-and maybe forty pounds lighter-than Fernando Lopez.
"Butt out, lardass!" Lieutenant Schneider said.
"That's enough, Lieutenant!" Chief Inspector Kramer barked. "Back off! Now!"
"What I was about to tell the lieutenant," Fernando said, matter-of-factly, "is that the way it is in our family, anyone wanting to get at Charley has to get past me first."
"Don't pour gas on a fire," Chief Inspector Kramer said. "Ask any fireman. Both of you shut up."
Castillo chuckled.
"You open your mouth once more, Schneider, and I'll order you out of here. Capische?"
Schneider nodded.
"Say 'Yes, sir,' Lieutenant!"
"Yes, sir," Schneider said, reluctantly.
"Charley, I need to talk to you," Kramer said. "And O'Brien wants to know what's going on, too. If I order our gorilla to wait at that end of the corridor"-he pointed-"can you get your gorilla to wait down there?" He pointed in the other direction.
Castillo looked at Frank Schneider. "I think you have a right to hear what I'm going to tell the chief," he said. "Can you behave?"
Lieutenant Schneider nodded curtly.
"Say 'yes' or 'no,' goddammit, Schneider," Kramer snapped.
"Okay, okay," Lieutenant Schneider said.
"We can use the waiting room," Kramer said, and pushed the door open. "Well, Frank, what do you think?" Chief Inspector Kramer inquired of Captain O'Brien when Castillo had finished.
"A lot of cocaine comes here from Argentina," O'Brien said.
"I didn't know that," Fernando said.
"They fly it from Colombia to Bolivia or Paraguay- sometimes direct to Paraguay-and then get it into Argentina," O'Brien explained. "And then they mule it to Miami from Buenos Aires. The Argentine drug cops- they call them SIDE-are smart. Instead of arresting the critters, they let them get on a plane, and then call our DEA guys down there. The DEA in Miami meets the airplane. That way the cocaine gets stopped, and we have to pay to try the critters and the cost of keeping them in the slam for fifteen to twenty."
"SIDE does more than drugs, Captain," Castillo said. "It's the Argentine FBI, CIA, and DEA under one roof."
"I didn't know that," O'Brien said. "What I'm thinking is that the drug guys-here, there, everywhere-do this kind of casual whacking. Anybody they think might be in the way of anything, anybody they think may have seen or heard something, gets whacked. Including members of their family."
"I'm not saying you're wrong," Castillo said. "But that didn't come up down there, either from a DEA guy I know, who would have told me, or from the head of SIDE." "What did they think was going on?"
"They had no idea," Castillo said. "All we know-and I didn't know this in Argentina-is that somebody wants to get their hands on Jean-Paul Lorimer, and is perfectly willing to kill anybody to do that."
"We had a job here in Philadelphia a couple of years ago," Kramer said. "Drugs shipped from… where, Frank?"
"Senegal," O'Brien furnished.
"From Senegal to their UN Mission in New York. With diplomatic immunity. What happened was… out of school?"
Castillo nodded.
"Our dogs-not K-9, but the drug sniffers, those little spaniels or whatever-sniffed the cocaine in freight handling. We couldn't get a warrant to open the boxes, of course, but I happened to be down there looking for explosives and one of the boxes happened to get knocked over. Not much damage, but put enough of a crack in the box for me to be able to stick one of those meat-basting hypodermic needles… You know what I mean? They have great big needles?"
Castillo nodded again.
"… into the box and come out with a white powder that tested to be really high-grade coke. So we called in the DEA. Who called in the FBI and customs and the State Department. It got to be a real Chinese fire drill. Th
e State Department didn't believe the white power had just dribbled out of the box; they as much as accused us of violating diplomatic immunity. They were afraid the Senegalese ambassador would be pissed and give an anti-American speech to the general assembly.
"What finally happened was that the shipment was passed through customs. Then the FBI brought in the New York City cops, told them what we knew, and the New York cops put some heavy surveillance on the Senegalese mission, and they finally caught one of their diplomats… he was number two, right, Frank?"
"Number three. Deputy chief of mission," O'Brien corrected him.
"… in the midst of a five-kilo sale to a guy in the Plaza Hotel. All they could do was charge the buyer with conspiracy to traffic. They couldn't even hold the Senegalese. He had diplomatic immunity. The State Department wouldn't even ask for the UN to send him home. They said they couldn't because they 'had knowledge of the legally highly questionable manner in which the alleged facts triggering the investigation had been conducted.'
"This really pissed off the New York cops, so wherever, wherever the Senegalese diplomat went for the next couple of months he had at least two cops sitting on him. And then one day, he had enough, went out to Kennedy, and got on an airplane and went home."
"Jesus Christ!" Fernando exploded.
"So when you find this guy you're looking for, Charley, maybe you better keep the drug angle in mind," Kramer said.
"I will," Castillo said.
"How do you rate the threat against Sergeant… sorry, Special Agent Schneider?" Kramer asked.
"I don't think these bastards were after her; they were either after me or anybody-like a Secret Service agent- to make their point to Mrs. Masterson. So I don't think there's much of a threat here. Having said-"
"You sonofabitch!" Lieutenant Schneider interrupted. "You really don't-"
"Out!" Chief Kramer exploded. "Out of here, Schneider! Right goddamn now!"
"Let him stay until I finish," Castillo said evenly.
Kramer raised an eyebrow, stared at Schneider, then sighed and nodded.
"Having said that," Castillo went on, "I'm going to keep Secret Service protection on her until I get the bastards that shot her. The agents are pretty good at protecting people."
"So are we," Chief Kramer said. "And as far as you're concerned, Schneider, when you come to visit your sister and you see detectives from Dignitary Protection sitting on her beside the Secret Service, instead of Highway, you think long and hard about why I decided to do that. Now get out of here. Wait by the elevator. I'm not through with you."
"How about keeping him in here while I go say goodbye to her?" Castillo asked. "I really have to get out of here right now."
Kramer nodded. "Sit there, Lieutenant Schneider," he ordered, pointing to a vinyl-upholstered couch. "And if you get off that couch before I tell you you can, I'll have you up on charges."
Kramer waited until Lieutenant Schneider angrily threw himself onto the couch and then put out his hand to Castillo.
"Let me know what I can do to help."
"Thanks, Fritz," Castillo said, and walked out of the waiting room.
Special Agent Jack Britton was standing by Betty's door.
"I only heard you were coming here forty-five minutes ago, Charley. I called Miller and-"
"I'm glad you're here, Jack," Castillo said. "I'm headed for Paris and what I'd like you-"
"Miller told me," Britton interrupted. "Everything. Thanks for keeping me on this."
"I need you, Jack."
"I'm on an American Airlines flight from Miami to Buenos Aires at eleven something tonight."
"Go to the Four Seasons, and then get in touch with Tony Santini."
"I'll do it."
Castillo pushed open the door to Betty's room. Her mother and father were standing on either side of the bed. Her father gave him another icy look, and when he did, her mother looked over her shoulder and saw Castillo.
"Charley's here, honey," her mother said. "Dad and I will be right outside."
"Thank you, Mrs. Schneider," Castillo said softly. He offered his hand. "We haven't been formally introduced, and I'm very sorry it had to be under such conditions."
Betty's mother took his hand in both of hers, made a soft smile, then turned for the door.
Her father shook his head, walked wordlessly to the door, and held it open for his wife, then followed her through it.
Castillo went to the bed and took Betty's hand.
With great difficulty, Betty asked, "The Mastersons? Okay?"
"They've got twenty-four Delta shooters and half of the Mississippi state police sitting on them."
"Delta?"
"Special Forces guys."
She was surprised to hear that and asked with her eyes for an explanation.
"Long story, baby. Not important. But the Mastersons are safe. The key to this is her brother. Right after we landed in Mississippi, she told me the bad guys really want her brother. She doesn't know where he is. So I'm on my way to Paris to find him. He should know who these bastards are."
"Can you do that?"
"Find him, you mean? I'm going to try hard."
"Just go to Paris?"
Jesus Christ, I have to go through the classified business, even with her!
"Baby, this is Top Secret-Presidential, which means you can't tell anybody, even your family."
Especially your goddamn brother.
She nodded, but her eyes asked for an explanation.
"The President, in what they call a finding, set up a covert unit to find the people who did this. He gave it to me, together with all the authority I need to do whatever has to be done."
Her eyebrows showed that she was impressed.
"I'll make sure they keep you up to speed on what's happening. But you have to keep it to yourself."
"Will they tell me?"
"Special Agent Schneider, you are now assigned to the Office of Organizational Analysis, which is the cover for this," Castillo said. "I'm the chief. You'll be told."
"I wish I could go with you."
Jesus, she's not thinking of us holding hands as we take the elevator to the top of the Eiffel Tower. Or sitting in the Deux Magots on the Left Bank. She wants to go as a cop.
"Me, too."
"Be careful, Charley."
"Wiener schnitzel, baby. I have to go."
He bent over, kissed her very gently on the lips, and looked into her eyes for a long moment.
Then she shrugged, squeezed his hand, and motioned with her head toward the door.
As he and Fernando got on the elevator, he heard the Latin Secret Service agent talk to her lapel microphone.
"Don Juan coming down." [FIVE] Hotel de Crillon 10 Place de la Concorde Paris, France 0525 27 July 2005 Paris was just starting to wake up when they landed. There had been little traffic on the way in from Le Bourget, and the Place de la Concorde had been nearly empty of vehicles and pedestrians.
"I think the best thing to do is grab some sack time," Castillo announced as they registered. "What about leaving a call for half past ten?"
"Good idea," Torine said.
Castillo knew the problem was going to be jet lag. Their body clocks thought it was midnight, not half past five in the morning.
They weren't really tired, or even particularly sleepy, despite the time they had been up and the distances they had traveled since getting up almost twenty-four hours before at the Masterson plantation in Mississippi. For one thing, that had been only eighteen hours ago in real time. Paris time was six hours ahead of Mississippi.
For another, they'd shared the piloting between them, from Philadelphia to Gander, Newfoundland, and then to Shannon, Ireland, and finally Le Bourget. The "off-duty" pilot-a role each had played-had nothing to do but doze, and the Lear's seats in the main cabin, which folded back to near horizontal, had made dozing easy. It was as if they'd gotten up early and taken several naps before midnight.
The temptation was to take a qu
ick shower, grab a quick breakfast, and then rouse the Paris CIA station chief from his bed and get to work finding Jean-Paul Lorimer. The smart thing to do was to take a quick shower and go to bed, sleeping as long as possible. When sleep proved impossible, with a little bit of luck, the body clock might be fooled, and it would be something like getting up fresh and ready to do a full day's work.
Castillo tipped the bellman and then looked around his suite. The heavy curtain across the windows of his bedroom was permitting a crack of light. He went to it and impulsively pushed it aside far enough to look out. He had a view of the Place de la Concorde and the bridge across the River Seine.
Then he pulled the curtain closed, took fresh linen from his bag, and started to undress. He was down to his Jockey shorts when the telephone rang.
"Hello?"
"Five minutes, in front of the hotel," Howard Kennedy said. "I'm in a black Mercedes."
"I expected no less of you," Castillo replied, even though halfway through the sentence he realized Kennedy had hung up. Ten minutes later-having decided that his need for a shave and a shower was more important than jumping to obey Kennedy's curt orders-Castillo walked across the empty lobby and out onto the Place de la Concorde.
There was no Mercedes in sight.
Not to worry. Kennedy might be pissed, but he wants to see me, and badly. He's not about to drive off, never to return.
Castillo turned right and walked toward the U.S. embassy. He had just reached the fence, where he was able to see the American flag flying in the courtyard, when he heard the squeal of tires.
He turned and saw a black Mercedes S600 sedan in front of the Crillon. The headlights flashed. Castillo walked-purposely slowly-back to it.
The front passenger window was down, but the door remained closed. Castillo leaned down, put his hands on the opening, and looked inside.
"Hello, handsome," he said to Kennedy, who was sitting behind the wheel. "Looking for a little action?"
"Goddamn you, Charley, get in the fucking car!"
Castillo opened the door and got in. Kennedy, with another squeal of tires, took off and then turned right onto the Champs-Elysees.
"Where are we going, Howard?"
"Unless you know someplace we can talk without being overheard, we're just going to drive around."
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