I would have called Thorpe’s office, but since it is the weekend, and with a twelve-hour time difference between Bangkok and Washington, all I would get was his voice mail.
When I finish with the laptop, Joselyn takes it back and treats us to the mysteries of Earth Google and Google Maps. Within less than a minute she shows us the street view of the Hotel Saint-Jacques in Paris using Google Maps. Moving the camera’s perspective she is able to glide in front of the place, adjust the angle of view to look at the hotel from the ground level to the roof, and move down the side streets as if we were there. Cars on the road and pedestrians on the sidewalk are all stopped in freeze-frames as if frozen in time.
“How did you do that?” Harry is mesmerized.
“I’m sure you’ve seen this before,” she tells him.
“I’ve seen maps,” says Harry. “But not like that.”
“Watch.” She does it again, zooms in from the satellite view to the bubble that appears on the street and from there to the sidewalk view. “It’s easy,” she says.
“Maybe for you.” Harry is leaning over her shoulder looking at the screen. “How often do they update the pictures?”
“I’m not sure,” she says.
“Maybe if we watch long enough, we can catch Liquida coming out of the building,” says Harry.
Joselyn stops moving her finger over the tracker and looks back at him with big round eyes. The smile spreads across her face as she laughs. “You have a good poker face.” She turns back toward the screen. “For a second I thought you were serious.”
Harry shoots me a dense look.
“Even the village idiot knows the satellite overhead and ground photos are not in real time,” says Joselyn. “And, in answer to your question, they probably upgrade the photos every few years.”
“Wouldn’t want you to think I’m some techno-bozo with a bone through my nose,” says Harry. “But are there any programs out there that give you pictures in real time?”
“Not unless you have an office at Langley with the CIA,” she tells him. “I wanted to take a look at the area around the Hotel Saint-Jacques so we can see the lay of the land. Maybe we can scout out a place to stay. Somewhere safe.”
She has a point.
Joselyn moves back to the map page and starts typing in a search for other hotels in the area.
There is no one from the FBI to meet us at the airport in Paris when we arrive. I suspect Thorpe may not have received the message.
By the time we approach the Hotel Claude Bernard, it is dark. The street outside looks nothing like the daytime pictures we saw on Joselyn’s computer nearly twelve hours earlier.
The incandescent lights in the restaurants and bistros combine with the eerie glow from the brighter lights of central Paris to give the neighborhood a fairy-tale-like appearance. Based on the map, the Bernard is about three hundred yards west of the Hotel Saint-Jacques and on the same side of the street, the rue des Ecoles.
According to the computerized map, there are two other hotels that are closer, but the Bernard appears, to us at least, to be safer because of the distance. There is not much chance of running into Liquida by accident unless we get careless; that is, assuming he is booked at the Saint-Jacques. It is at times like this I miss Herman and his streetwise instincts for knowing how heavily, and where, to tread. The fact that Herman, who lives in the dark crevices of tracking and surveillance, was ambushed by Liquida in a dim garage in Washington is not lost on any of us.
Businesses crowd the sidewalks on both sides down the rue des Ecoles, mostly small shops, restaurants, and other boutique hotels. Our taxi pulls up and stops at the sidewalk in front of the hotel. Harry, who is up front with the driver, speaks pidgin English and does sign language gesturing for him to get our bags. The guy sits there with a cigarette dangling from his lip. He seems not to understand a word of English other than the name of our hotel.
The Claude Bernard has a redbrick facade on the ground level with five stories above, including the penthouse. Wrought-iron-railed balconies reminiscent of those in New Orleans wrap the building on three of the upper floors.
Harry spies a boulangerie behind us and just across the street, kitty-corner to the hotel. He has his taste buds set for coffee and a pastry. It has been a while since our last meal on the plane. Riding in coach, we didn’t get much.
“Later,” I tell him. “We need to get off the street and up into the rooms.” Though we are a good block away from the Saint-Jacques, it wouldn’t do to have Liquida cruise by and see us.
The driver is out, getting the bags from the trunk. Joselyn and I collect our belongings from the backseat of the taxi. “Seeing as none of us speak French, how do we pay the guy?” says Harry.
“Hold out money,” says Joselyn.
“What, and let him take what he wants?” says Harry.
“The price of cultural ignorance,” she tells him.
“So we shouldn’t come to France unless we speak French, is that it?” he says.
“In a word, yes.”
“It’s that kind of attitude that’s gotten American tourists speaking English in Paris turned into spittoons,” says Harry. “Why don’t you and I get the luggage?” He looks at me. “I’ll deal with the driver. Que quantos euros?” says Harry.
“Your Spanish is as bad as your French,” says Joselyn.
“Tell you what, why don’t you get the rooms?” he tells her. “The desk clerk will be less likely to spit on a woman.” Harry hands Joselyn his credit card and smiles at her. “You might want to wear a raincoat.”
“Fine.” She grabs the credit card from his hand. “No problem. Should we put both rooms on this one or do you have a card you’d like to give me as well?” She looks at me, all pissed off.
“What did I say?”
“Do you have a credit card or not?”
“It all comes out of the same pot,” I tell her. Harry and I are using business credit cards, and the business is very nearly drained.
Joselyn gets out of the car and slams the door like she is trying to break the window.
“Here,” Harry hands me some euros. “You deal with the driver. I’ll get the bellman to get the bags.”
Before I can say anything, Harry is out of the car, following Joselyn toward the entrance.
I get out on the driver’s side and stand pressed against the side of the car as traffic passes by.
The driver tosses the last bag onto the sidewalk. It’s a good thing we aren’t carrying glass. He closes the trunk and comes around to the driver’s side.
“How much?” I hold up the euros.
He gives me a face. I get the sense that he understands every word, but he’s not going to say it, not in English anyway. He flashes five fingers with his right hand and one more with his left, cigarette ash dripping down the front of his tweed coat. He wants sixty euros. I don’t know if this is correct or not, but I pay him. When the last ten-euro note hits his hand, he takes it with the other and stands there with his hand still out waiting for more. He wants a tip. I give him five euros. He looks at it as if it’s shriveling in his palm and turns his nose up. For a moment I think perhaps he is going to give it back to me. Instead he pockets it, looks at me with disgust, and flips what is left of his cigarette. It hits my shoe. He does this with such accuracy that I suspect it is well practiced. He gets into the taxi, slams the door, and pulls away. He nearly runs over my toes as I stand in the street.
Harry is out on the sidewalk with the bellman. They have the bags stacked on a cart. I follow them into the hotel. By the time we get there, Joselyn is engaged in animated conversation with the desk clerk, a young man she seems to have charmed.
“What did I tell you?” says Harry. “Send a pretty woman to deal with a Frenchman, you get smiles and French bullshit. You and me, we just get the bullshit.”
As we approach, Joselyn turns and says: “Hi, guys. I’d like you to meet Michel.”
“Bonjour!” says the guy behind the desk. “
Comment vous appelez-vous?” He looks at me, waiting for a reply.
I stand there like a potted plant.
He looks at Joselyn, then back at me. “Parlez-vous francais?”
I shake my head. “No.”
“No parlez-vous?”
“No.”
The clerk rips up the registration card he had already started and throws it at me.
“Now you’ve done it,” says Joselyn.
The clerk sprays us with a stream of French I suspect is laced with profanities. Then he points toward the door. “Sortez! Get out!” He motions for us to take our bags and leave.
I stand there like a jackass, foot in my mouth.
“All he wanted was your name,” says Joselyn. “Tell him your name, stupid!” Joselyn is staring at me, hands on her hips.
“Enough of this shit,” says Harry. “Let’s get out of here.”
“PAUL, my name is Paul. Paul Madriani.” I’m ready to genuflect, crawl on my hands and knees. All I want is a room.
The clerk looks me up and down, weighing whether to toss us into the street or try again. Slowly he pulls another card as he looks at me with contempt. He writes something on it. I’m guessing it’s my name.
“You better answer the next question correctly or we’re going to have to start all over again looking for another hotel,” says Joselyn. “I don’t know about you, but I’m tired.”
“You didn’t tell me you spoke French.”
“I don’t. Mike here is from Colorado. He attends the university in Boulder.”
I look at her.
She starts to laugh.
The clerk starts to break up.
A few seconds later the two of them are belly laughing all over the counter.
“Very funny!” I tell them.
“You catch the look on his face?” She is pointing at me, talking to the clerk, tears running down her cheeks, she is laughing so hard. “I thought he was going to pee in his pants.”
The clerk nods. “Sorry, mister, she made me do it.” He speaks in perfect American English. He is still laughing.
“OK, so I’ve been had.” I start to join them.
“Mike is touring Europe, working for a stint to earn money.” Joselyn is wiping her eyes; looking at me, she starts to crack up again. “Consider yourself spit on,” she says.
“I was ready to walk out,” says Harry.
“You can if you want, but I’m staying the night,” says Joselyn.
“Sorry,” says the kid. “She put me up to it. I couldn’t resist.” He laughs.
“She would.” I smile at him and shake his hand. “How long have you been working here?”
“Two months. I took a year off school to travel. Studied French in high school and college. Actually my French is not that good.”
“Could have fooled me.”
“He did,” says Joselyn. She looks at Harry and slaps him on the shoulder. “See, not everybody in Paris spits on you.”
“Easy for you to say. You still have your toes,” I tell her.
“What’s that supposed to mean?”
“I’ll tell you later. What do we have for rooms, Mike?”
“He’s upgrading us, third floor, street view with balconies,” says Joselyn.
“Excellent!”
“Let him piss on us again, maybe we can get the penthouse,” says Harry.
“Sorry, but it’s already booked,” says the kid.
“Is it possible to get two adjoining rooms?” I ask.
“Let me see. I think I can do that.” He checks the computer. “Yes.”
“Good. You get a bigger tip than the taxi driver,” I tell him. “Even so, I doubt if it will probably take you far in this town.”
“If you mean it’s expensive, you’re right. But then I don’t live in the Latin Quarter.”
“Where do you live?” I ask.
“I’ve got a small flat out in the suburbs. Place called Rosny-sous-Bois. And a roommate to share the cost.”
“Another American?” says Joselyn.
He nods. “A friend from Colorado.”
“How long you gonna be here?”
“Another few weeks, then we’re off to Italy. How about you guys, on holiday? Vacation?”
“Not exactly,” I tell him.
“Here on business, then.”
“You could say that. Do you work the desk every day?” I change the subject.
“I’m on nights this week. But you won’t have any trouble with the language if that’s what you’re worried about. The house operator speaks perfect English, as does much of the staff. Just tell them Mike sent you. That you’re friends of mine. They’ll treat you very well. Parisians are actually quite friendly once you break through the veneer.”
“I know. It’s just getting through that diamond veneer that worries me,” says Harry. “Guy could die on the street looking for directions.”
“It’s not that bad,” says the clerk.
“Not if you speak French,” says Harry.
The clerk hands one key to me and the other to Harry, then slaps the bell on the counter for the bellman with the luggage cart to take us to our rooms.
“Any chance of renting a car for a few hours tomorrow?” I ask.
“It can be arranged. Just call down to the desk. Phillippe is on tomorrow. He will take care of you.”
A car could be handy. It provides a place to hide out if we want to watch the front of Liquida’s hotel, especially at night, and a fast way to escape in a pinch if we need it.
I hand the kid behind the counter a fifty-euro note and watch his face as it lights up. “Oh! Merci beaucoup!” he says. “That means thank you.”
“The show was worth it,” I tell him.
“Thank you for everything,” Joselyn says to Mike as she takes my arm. “Now I am afraid to go up to the room with them.”
“If they give you any trouble, just call the front desk,” says the kid. “I’ll send up our chef, Marcel, with a butcher knife.”
“I’ll keep it in mind,” she tells him.
We turn and follow the bellman toward the elevator.
“Maybe you could call down later and get Marcel’s phone number,” I tell Joselyn.
“Or we could just lead Liquida to the kitchen,” she says.
“I’d rather do takeout,” says Harry. “Call Thorpe and tell him his man’s in the frappe.”
Chapter Twenty-Nine
The shadow moving across her Nook reader caused Sarah to glance upward. She found herself looking into angel eyes staring down at her.
“Hello,” he said.
“What are you doing here?”
“Seems that we are now neighbors.” Adin Hirst was standing there with a cup of coffee in one hand, a bagel in the other, and a smile on his face. “Mind if I sit?”
“No. Help yourself.” Sarah closed the cover on her reader. She had taken to spending a few minutes each afternoon in the small coffee shop on the ground level of the FBI’s condo complex.
“What are you reading?” Adin set the plate with the bagel and his coffee cup on the table, and then sat down across from her.
“Oh, just rereading some of the things I had to read in college. Doing it for enjoyment this time.” Sarah was going nuts up in the apartment, she and the dog climbing the walls. She had an hour every other day in the company of one of the FBI agents to walk the dog. That was it, her only foray out of the building.
“Can I look?” Adin gestured toward the reader.
She handed it to him.
“I’ve seen these, but I’ve never held one.” He hefted it in his hand. “It’s very light, isn’t it?”
“Yes.”
He opened the cover. She hadn’t turned it off. “Gatsby. You’re a Fitzgerald fan,” said Hirst.
“You’ve read it?”
He nodded. “Wonderfully written, not a word wasted. Cuts to the soul of his characters like a knife. How many books will this thing hold?”
“They say fi
fteen hundred, but I’m not sure. It probably depends on the length of the books.”
“That’s amazing. So what do you do, download the books through your computer?”
“No, it’s 3G. Has its own chip. You just go online into their library and order what you want, pay with a credit card, and it downloads in about sixty seconds. I have a Kindle upstairs, same thing, but a different library. That way I get a broader selection of books.”
“Incredible,” said Hirst. “What will the Americans think of next? I’m going to have to look into it.” He smiles and hands it back to her.
“What’s this about being neighbors?” said Sarah.
“I’m now living in the building.” Adin took a sip of coffee. “Whew, that’s hot!”
“Since when?”
“Since yesterday.” He wiped his lips with a napkin. “The lease on my apartment was up. I tried to renew for a short time and couldn’t, so the bureau offered to put me up here until the program is over.”
“I see. What floor?”
“Eight. Same as yours.”
“You are close.”
“Just around the corner.” He smiled at her and nibbled around the edges of the bagel. “How is your dog?”
“He’s fine. But he needs more exercise. He’s starting to give off gas in the evenings. Lies on the carpet and issues forth with silent clouds of death, if you know what I mean.”
He laughed. “If you like, I can take him out and give him a run.”
“That would be good. The only problem is, I need exercise too.”
“I’m not sure they’d let me do that,” said Adin. “I mean, take you for a run.”
“I knew what you meant.” Sarah smiled. “They let us out every other day. Just for an hour, under the gaze of a friendly agent. It’s like being in prison.”
“Actually most prisoners get more yard time than that,” said Adin.
“I don’t mean to complain, but I can’t wait to get home, back to a normal life.”
“And when’s that going to be?”
“I don’t know. Hopefully when my father gets back, I’ll know more.”
“Where are they?”
Sarah almost told him, then hesitated. “Right now I’m not sure. They should be back in a few days.” Sarah knew they were in Paris, for how long she wasn’t sure. She had received a printout of an e-mail message from her father. It was delivered to her by the FBI, but there were few details. “I should have some company in a day or so. Herman, my dad’s PI, is going to be staying with me in the condo…”
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