David Lindsey - The Color of Night v5
Page 32
Corsier wished he had tried to get in touch with Harry Strand. He would like Strand to know what he had done and how he had done it. After his close call in Schrade’s private launch in Venice, Corsier had been convinced that his only hope for salvation lay in cutting himself off from everyone he knew, making it impossible for Schrade to use anyone to find him. With the exception of Edie Vernon, and Carrington Knight just two days ago, Corsier had not spoken to a single soul he knew since the Venetian nightmare. He had diminished into a shadow and floated unnoticed from country to country. Strand had done something like that four years ago, and as far as Corsier knew, the transformation had served him very well.
Corsier’s niece, who ran his gallery in Geneva, had eventually reported him missing to the police. He had seen it in the papers and once on the television news. He was sorry he’d had to put her through that, but if he had sent her any note of reassurance, she would never have been convincing to the police or, more important, to Schrade’s intelligence creatures.
He had not found it especially difficult to disappear. Of course, he was highly motivated. As had been often observed, nothing was so galvanizing as brushing against the cold shoulder of one’s own mortality. Even now just the mere thought of Venice accelerated his heartbeat.
The incident had wrenched a new crease in the folds of Corsier’s brain and was now a permanent feature of his psyche. His escape had been born of blind chance, which haunted him. As Schrade’s launch pounded the waves and Corsier swore to himself over and over and over in prayerful chant that if he ever got away from this situation he would become as invisible as a breath, the driver of the launch changed course abruptly, leaving the lane to Marco Polo Airport and angling in a traverse course. Corsier was horrified. This was it.
In the quick maneuver of changing course, their launch cut across the wake of one of the public vaporettos filled with tourists heading for the airport. The hull of the launch slapped roughly against the large wake at the precise instant that the second of the two men in the launch was turning to reach for something on the dash. Thrown off balance by the sudden slam of the hull, he flailed out reflexively for something to save himself from falling. It was the steering wheel. The launch pitched violently as it turned against the second part of the vaporetto’s V-shaped wake, flinging the off-balance man against the side of the launch.
Corsier grabbed a heavy black flashlight from a bin in the hull beside him, leaped at the man, and in a frenzy of panic bashed his head repeatedly. An automatic pistol skittered across the fiberglass floor from the man’s jacket. Corsier grabbed it without thinking and fired repeatedly at the driver, who was fighting to regain the steering wheel as he pushed down the throttle to cut the power. The pistol was equipped with a silencer, and the lethal hush of each shot gave an even more surreal character to the frantic sequence. The launch spun around, dead in the water, as the driver was hammered to the floor with each quiet burst from the pistol. Then Corsier shot the second man as well.
He had never fired a gun in his life.
He dragged both men into the cabin, then managed to muddle about with the launch engine until he got the boat started again and followed the distant and diminishing wake of the vaporetto to the docks surrounding the airport. There he maneuvered the launch to an isolated branch of the public dock, pulled into a slip, cut the motor, and climbed out of the launch onto the dock, not even thinking to tie it.
He walked away in a daze.
For nearly three weeks he had a nightmare about it every night. More than a few times it drove sleep away altogether, and he lay awake in the dark, hearing imminent death in the creaking walls of old hotels or in the opening or closing of a distant door.
Then one night in a cramped monk’s cell at the Great Lavra monastery on Mount Athos, where he had fled to hide and gather his thoughts and nerves among ornate religious art and quiet men, he stared at the blue moonlight on the stone of the deep windowsill and realized Schrade’s demonic audacity: ursurping God’s role, he took it upon himself to grant life or death. If he turned his eyes this way, a man was made to die; with a subtle nod of his head, another was allowed to live. Allowed to live! The magisterial insolence of it hit Corsier like a thunderbolt.
At that moment a sudden and powerful resentment was ignited in Corsier’s heart, and even before he could swing his feet off the cot to sit up and look out of his window to the Aegean Sea, a fierce conviction to liberate himself from Schrade began to wrestle with his paralyzing fear and would soon overcome it.
The next day he began growing his mustache and goatee, and the day after that he departed the monastery.
He never wavered. For him there was no moral struggle. Wolfram Schrade wanted to kill him and sought to kill him. And Schrade’s life was a brutal witness to the man’s appalling turpitude. As far as Corsier was concerned, the sum of that simple equation was quite evident. He never looked back.
He checked into his rooms on the third floor of the Connaught Hotel late in the afternoon. The suite had three rooms: a reception area and two bedrooms, one on either side, each with its own bath. The reception had the largest windows and the best view of Knight’s second-floor library. Corsier chose the bedroom on the right.
He had bought a piece of ordinary luggage in which to transport the paintings so that he did not attract attention to himself. In another piece of luggage he brought in two pairs of powerful binoculars and two tripods, which he set up in the reception in front of the windows. He attached the binoculars to the tripods and looked across Carlos Place into the second floor of Knight’s library. No one was in the room, in which only a few lamps were lighted against the gray day. Good enough, though. He hoped he wouldn’t have to rely on Skerlic’s microphones alone to identify Schrade’s positioning. It was good, too, that the day would be overcast and rainy—he monitored the television weather forecasts religiously to make sure. The gloomy day would enable them to sit in their rooms with the lights out and the curtains open and not be observed from Knight’s library.
Putting the binoculars into the suitcase, he made a mental note always to lock them up before he left the suite. The maids would take note of binoculars on a tripod.
He sat on the smaller of the two sofas and stared out the windows. He would spend the night here. Tomarrow would be difficult because the only thing left to do was wait. He would install Skerlic here tomorrow night, in plenty of time for them to be ready for Schrade’s arrival the next morning.
After a final conversation with Skerlic about the order of things to come, he would deliver the drawings around eight o’clock. Knight had wanted them sooner, of course, but Corsier had presented him with creative excuses, abundant reasons. Now, at least, from his post across the street, he could see and hear whether Knight was tempted to cheat in the two hours he had between the time Corsier dropped off the drawings and Schrade’s arrival.
With only the swishing sound of the polite Mayfair traffic on the wet streets to interrupt the silence of his room, Corsier stroked his mustache and goatee and sighed heavily. It was a bittersweet time for him. Though he was about to rid himself of Meister Death, he was going to have to go into exile to do it. The ensuing investigation, by the British and German governments, would quickly identify him as the major suspect. Flight was his only alternative.
Much of the past month had been taken up with arranging his second disappearance, the passports, the shuffled bank accounts, the well-thought-out routes of escape, the detailed study of certain neighborhoods in places like Buenos Aires, Singapore, Bogotá. He thought of his exile as a temporary placement. Perhaps after three years, or five, or seven, he could quietly return. Both governments would make a great flourish of looking for the assassin for a year or two, but in reality, once the media lost interest in the case, so would Scotland Yard and the Bundeskriminalamt. After all, these agencies were not ignorant. As long as the media was not urging them on, why would they go out of their way to pursue the killer of a man like Wolfram Schrade? Afte
r a time other urgent criminal matters would demand their attention, and the “Schrade task force” would be reduced to a perfunctory little office with one or two officers assigned to plod through the mounds of paper that would have been generated by the initial inquiry.
That was the way he saw it, anyway. It was not the best of situations in which to find oneself, but he would rather flee the searches of two governments, whose budgetary patience for wild goose chases was limited, than try to hide from an obsessed Schrade’s well-financed assassins.
God, but he would miss London and Geneva and Paris and Rome. He loved all these wonderful cities in all the wonderful seasons of their years. To have to say good-bye to their galleries and museums and symphony halls and operas grieved him far more than he ever would have imagined. How long might it be before he would again be able to dine at the quiet little Vecchia Roma in Piazza Campitelli or at the sublime La Tour d’Argent on Quai de la Tournelle or have a late morning coffee mélange with his newspaper at the Café Central in Vienna?
The answer was, eventually. As opposed to never, if Schrade was left unchecked. Corsier was French enough to be capable of sentimentality, but he was also a native Genevan and had a strong sense of practicality. It would be Wolf Schrade’s great misfortune that Claude Corsier had been a lucky man that day in Venice.
CHAPTER 53
The next morning they walked to Shepherd Market huddled together under an umbrella and ate breakfast at da Corradi, where the bacon and eggs were done to Strand’s liking. Afterward they both ordered cappuccinos before going back out into the rain.
“About Carrington,” he said, leaning toward Mara slightly on his forearms. “There’s a timing concern.”
She didn’t look at him. She concentrated on her coffee.
“You’ll need to retrieve the drawings. We don’t want them left there. It doesn’t take much imagination to know that there’s going to be a hell of an investigation. We need a smokescreen, something to create confusion, obscure the inquiry. I’m going to use my Geneva files.”
Mara looked up. “Harry…”
“I can do it without making the source an obvious intelligence leak. It can be done. When that stuff gets out, the potential suspects for the killing will be so enormous it’ll swamp the investigation. It’ll get murky with spies and criminal organizations. There’ll be a frenzy of denials and finger-pointing. They’ll never sort it out. It’ll go unsolved.”
Mara allowed a small smile. She had to; she saw the genius of it, too. It offered a glimmer of hope that this might work after all.
“There’s a problem,” Strand went on. “When that stuff hits the media it’ll be sensational. Schrade’s going to be yanked out of obscurity and thrust into the headlines.” He paused. “The problem is, it’ll heat up the investigation.” He paused again. “You know how it works. Where was he going? Why was he going there? Was he being lured? How was it set up? You’re going to be caught in the net, Mara. Carrington and his security man are going to bring you right into the middle of it.”
The look on Mara’s face was not fear. It was calculation.
“The FIS isn’t going to acknowledge me,” she said. “They’re not going to identify any photographs.”
Strand agreed.
“I’m not in any police files. But they can trace me through the drawings. I own them legitimately, apart from any work for the FIS.”
“That’s right. So you’ve got to get them out of there before Schrade’s death is understood to be what it actually is.”
She hadn’t drunk a drop of the cappuccino, and she was no longer interested in it.
“Let me think,” she said, her voice dying away as her imagination shuttled in another direction.
“This is Lenor Paille.”
“Oh… Ms. Paille. Lenor. I don’t think you told me your first name.” Carrington Knight paused, his voice inquisitive. “Are you on a speakerphone, Ms. Paille? It sounds like it.”
“Yes,” she said, “I’m sorting papers.” She and Strand were sitting on the paint buckets, cups of coffee in front of them on the scaffolding table. “Listen, I need to ask you if you’ve got any news on a possible time for showing the drawings to the first client.”
“Oh, indeed. You’re in luck, Ms. Paille. You’re in luck.”
“Really? What do you mean?”
“Mr. Schrade will be here tomorrow.”
Mara flashed her eyes at Strand.
“The fact is, your suggestion that I contact Mr. Schrade was overlapping another item that I had in the works for him.”
“You already knew he was coming tomorrow when I spoke with you?”
“No, no, no. Well, I had contacted him about coming to see another set of drawings, but I had not yet heard from him. I had no idea when he was coming. That’s why I really couldn’t say anything to you yesterday. He called after you left.”
“Did you tell him about the Cao drawings?”
“No, I didn’t.”
“Why?”
“Well, he had called about the other pieces, and since you had just left, I didn’t want to be overeager. Besides, I hadn’t yet actually examined your drawings. I do have a responsibility, Ms. Paille. I have to be judicious.”
“Of course, I understand.”
“Nevertheless,” Knight said, “I have, since then, examined your collection, and they are stunning. Mr. Cao is either a very knowledgeable man or a very lucky one—not being a collector—to have come upon these beauties.”
“Well, it’s about their documentation that I’m calling.”
A slight hesitation on Knight’s end of the line indicated startled suspicion. “Yes?”
“I’m afraid I can’t bring them round today. I have other obligations that have come in the way.”
“But you have the documentation?”
“Oh, certainly. It’s right here. I’ll try to get it to you as quickly as possible tomorrow, before Mr. Schrade arrives. What time is your appointment with him?”
“Ten o’clock.”
“Then why don’t I come around at nine o’clock?”
“Oh, yes, yes, indeed. Nine o’clock would be perfect.”
CHAPTER 54
While Mara went to Soho to get the material needed for Strand’s disguise, he began calling the three hotels where Schrade was likely to stay. As it was absolutely essential that Schrade not know of any inquiries about his arrival, Strand tried to think of a pretense for calling innocuous enough that an eager desk clerk would not think it worth mentioning to Schrade upon his arrival. The problem was that Schrade’s generosity at these hotels, a result of his wanting to be treated with an almost sybaritic attentiveness, meant that everyone from the doorman to the manager strained themselves mightily to accommodate, and even anticipate, his every wish. If Strand were to pretend to be a business acquaintance wanting to confirm Schrade’s arrival, the desk clerk, wishing to be of service to Schrade as he was checking in, would very likely mention it. If Strand called anonymously to confirm the arrival, the clerk would likely report that as well. He could think of no reason so trivial that an eager-to-please clerk would not mention it.
So Strand decided to try a completely different direction. He began calling the hotels, introducing himself as Dr. Morris, and asking if Wolfram Schrade had checked in yet. When he finally located a reservation for Schrade, at Claridge’s, the closest of the three hotels to Carlos Place, he explained to the registration clerk that he was a cardiac specialist and his secretary, who was out of the office owing to illness, had apparently confused Mr. Schrade’s appointment. Therefore Dr. Morris himself was calling to confirm whether Mr. Schrade had arrived from Berlin.
Mr. Schrade was not there yet, the clerk said, but he did have reservations, and there was a note about an afternoon arrival. Did Dr. Morris want to leave a message?
No, thank you, that was really all he needed to know to clear up the discrepancy. Oh, by the way, Mr. Schrade’s appointment with him was, of course, a medical matter
and, as such, was of the utmost confidentiality. He would not want it known by the hotel staff that he was consulting Dr. Morris.
The clerk understood perfectly.
Dr. Morris thought he would. Might he have the clerk’s name?
The clerk gave it, the changing tone in his voice making it obvious that he knew he was being put on notice.
Dr. Morris thanked him politely. He very much appreciated the clerk’s understanding.
Locating a restaurant where Schrade might dine posed a different kind of problem. While one tended not to deviate from a long-trusted hotel, a restaurant was another matter. A person at the reservation desk of a restaurant would be unlikely to report an inquiry, but finding the right restaurant was problematic. Schrade might decide to dine at a new restaurant on a whim. He might dine in the hotel. He might dine with someone else at a restaurant of their choice. The possibilities were endless.
In addition to all that, Strand was working from his memory of a dining routine Schrade had kept four years earlier. Things changed, restaurants came in and out of vogue. Happily, middle-aged men had a great fondness for routine, and Schrade had a penchant for allowing himself the very best of everything. It was not unreasonable that Strand might indeed be able to track down Schrade’s dinner reservations.
He was not quickly rewarded. His question to the reservations desk at each of the six restaurants he remembered as Schrade’s favorites—“Just calling to see if Mr. Schrade has made his reservations yet”—was answered in the negative.
He checked with the concierge at the three hotels he had just called and asked them the names of the three restaurants currently considered the finest in the city. All three of them named the same two, and each named one that the other two didn’t. That gave Strand only three more restaurants to call, since of the five named two were on Strand’s original list. He hit on the second call.