Garreth got back in. They turned, onto the blacktop, and Garreth drove, picking up speed. “No more helicopters today, Tito,” he said.
“Good,” Tito said.
“Strictly fixed-wing, this next leg.”
Tito, who had been looking at the bananas in the basket between them, thought better of it.
“Leg?” asked Tito.
“A Cessna Golden Eagle,” said the old man, “1985. One of the last they manufactured. Very comfortable. Quiet. We’ll be able to sleep.”
Tito’s body wanted to press itself further back into the seat. He saw buildings ahead. “Where are we going?”
“Right now,” said Garreth, “East Hampton Airport.”
“A private plane,” said the old man, “no security checks, no identification. We’ll be getting you something more viable than a New Jersey driver’s license, but you won’t be needing anything today.”
“Thank you,” Tito said, unable to think of anything else to say. They passed a small building with a painted sign, LUNCH, cars parked in front of it. Tito looked down at the banana. He hadn’t eaten since the night before, with Vianca and Brotherman, and the Guerreros were no longer with him. He picked up the banana and began resolutely to peel it. If I have to learn to fly, he told his stomach, I refuse to starve while doing it. His stomach seemed unconvinced, but he ate the banana anyway.
Garreth drove on, and the old man said nothing.
49. ROTCH
Odile sat in the white armchair with the white robot on its back in her lap, poking a white Mondrian pencil into its mechanism of plastic gears and black rubber bands. “They break, these thing.”
“Who made it?” Hollis asked, from her own chair. Legs folded beneath her bathrobe. They were drinking room-service coffee. Nine in the morning, after what for Hollis had been a surprisingly undisturbed night.
“Sylvia Rotch,” Odile said, levering with her pencil. Something clicked. “Bon,” said Odile.
“Rotch? How do you spell that?” Hollis’s own white pencil, poised.
“R-O-I-G,” managed Odile, who struggled with the letters’ English pronunciation.
“Are you sure?”
“Catalan,” said Odile, bending to put the robot right side up on the carpet. “Is difficult.”
Hollis wrote it down. Roig. “The poppies, are they characteristic of her work?”
“She only does the poppies,” said Odile, eyes huge beneath her smooth, serious brow. “She fills the entire Mercat des Flores with the poppies. The old flower market.”
“Yes,” said Hollis, putting down her pencil and pouring herself fresh coffee. “When you left your message, you mentioned that you wanted to talk about Bobby Chombo.”
“Fer-gus-son,” said Odile, making it three distinct syllables.
“Ferguson?”
“His name is Robert Fer-gus-son. He is Canadian. Shombo, it is his art name.”
Hollis took that in over a sip of coffee. “I didn’t know that. Do you think Alberto knows that?”
Odile shrugged, in that complexly French way that seemed to require a slightly different skeletal structure. “I doubt it. I know because my boyfriend worked in a gallery in Vancouver. Do you know it?”
“The gallery?”
“Vancouver! It is beautiful.”
“Yes,” Hollis agreed, though actually the most she’d seen of the place had been their rooms at the Four Seasons and the inside of their rather too-small venue, a repurposed second-story Deco taxi-dance hall on a weirdly traffic-free midtown artery full of theaters. Jimmy had been having a rough time. She’d stayed with him constantly. Not a good time.
“My boyfriend, he knew Bobby as a DJ.”
“He’s Canadian?”
“My boyfriend is French.”
“I mean Bobby.”
“Of course he is Canadian. Fer-gus-son.”
“He knew him well? Your boyfriend, I mean?”
“He buy E from him,” said Odile.
“Was that before he went to Oregon to work on GPSW projects?”
“I don’t know. Yes, I think. Three years? In Paris, my boyfriend sees Bobby’s photo, an opening in New York, Dale Cusak, his memories of Natalie, do you know it?”
“No,” said Hollis.
“Bobby does the geohacking for Cusak. My boyfriend tells me this is Robert Fer-gus-son.”
“Can you be sure, though?”
“Yes. Some other artists, here, they know he is Canadian. It is not so much of a secret, perhaps.”
“But Alberto doesn’t know?”
“Not everyone does. Everyone need Bobby. To work in this new medium. He is the best, for this. But a recluse. Those who know him before, they become very careful. They don’t say what Bobby does not want.”
“Odile, do you know anything about Bobby’s having…moved, recently.”
“Yes,” said Odile, gravely. “His e-mail bounce. Servers aren’t there. Artists cannot contact him for works in progress. They are concern.”
“Alberto told me. Do you know where he might have gone?”
“He is Shombo.” She picked up her coffee. “He may be anywhere. Ollis, will you come to Silverlake with me? To visit Beth Barker?”
Hollis considered it. Odile was an underutilized asset. Definitely, if her boyfriend (ex?) actually knew Bobby Chombo-Ferguson. “She’s the one with the virtually annotated apartment?”
“Eeparespatial tagging,” corrected Odile.
God help me, thought Hollis.
Her cell rang. “Yes?”
“Pamela. Mainwaring. Hubertus asked me to tell you that it looks as though they’re going to Vancouver.”
Hollis looked across at Odile. “Does he know that Bobby is Canadian?”
“Actually,” said Pamela Mainwaring, “yes.”
“I’ve only just learned.”
“Had you discussed his background with Hubertus?”
Hollis thought about it. “No.”
“There you are, then. He suggests you go. To Vancouver.”
“When?”
“If you left immediately, you might make Air Canada’s one o’clock.”
“When’s the latest?”
“Eight tonight.”
“Book for two, then,” she said. “Henry and Richard. I’ll call you back.”
“Done,” said Pamela, and was gone.
“Ollis,” said Odile, “what is that?”
“Can you come to Vancouver for a few days, Odile? Tonight. Entirely onNode ’s ticket. Your flights, hotel, any expenses.”
Odile’s eyebrows went up. “Really?”
“Yes.”
“You know, Ollis,Node pays to bring me here, pays for le Standard…”
“There you go, then. How about it?”
“Certainly,” said Odile, “but why?”
“I want you to help me find Bobby.”
“I will try, but…” Odile demonstrated her French shrugging anatomy.
“Excellent,” said Hollis.
50. WHISPERING GALLERY
Milgrim woke in a narrow bed, beneath a single flannel sheet printed with trout flies, partial riverscapes, and the repeated image of an angler, casting. The pillowcase was made of matching material. On the wall opposite the foot of the bed was a large poster of an American eagle’s head, depicted against the billowing folds of Old Glory. He seemed to have gotten undressed for bed, although he didn’t remember doing it.
He looked at the poster, behind glass in a plain gold plastic frame. He’d never seen anything quite like it. It had a soft, worryingly pornographic quality, as though a Vaselined lens had been involved, though he supposed they no longer really did that, Vaselining lenses. Likely the whole thing had been executed on a monitor. The eagle’s eye, though, was hyperrealist bright and beady, as if rendered to fix on the viewer’s forehead. He thought a slogan would have helped, somehow, some nudge in a specific patriotic direction. Just these sinuous waves of stripes, though, a few stars up in one corner, and the raked and ang
ular head of this really rather murderous-looking bird of prey, was too much, on its own, too purely iconic.
He thought of the peculiar, phoenix-like creature on the front door, downstairs.
But then he remembered eating pizza that Brown had ordered, in the kitchen, downstairs. Pepperoni and three cheeses. And the fridge, which had contained a six-pack of very cold Pepsi and nothing else. He remembered feeling the smooth white circles of the heating elements on the range, something he’d not seen before. Brown had taken his pizza into a sort of study, along with a glass and a bottle of whiskey. Milgrim had never seen Brown drink before. Then he’d heard Brown on the phone, through the closed door, but hadn’t been able to make anything of it. And then, he guessed, he’d treated himself to another Rize.
Sometimes, he observed now, sitting on the edge of the bed in his underwear, a little too much had a way of clearing the air, the morning after. He looked up and encountered the eagle’s gun-muzzle eye. Looking quickly away, he rose, surveyed the room, and began to search it, quietly and with an efficiency born of practice.
It had obviously been decorated to be a boy’s room, and in the style of the rest of the house, though perhaps with a bit less effort. Less Ralph Lauren than some diffusion line. He hadn’t yet seen a single actual antique, aside from the Ur-eagle outside, which might even be original to the house. The furnishings were faux-old, and that rather halfhearted, more likely made in India or China than North Carolina. For that matter, he thought, noting the room’s empty inbuilt bookcase, he hadn’t seen a single book.
He carefully, quietly opened each drawer in the small bureau. All empty, aside from the bottom one, which contained a wire coat hanger clad in tissue, printed with the name and address of a dry cleaner in Bethesda, and two pins. He knelt on the carpet and peered under the bureau. Nothing.
The small, vaguely Colonial desk, finished, like the bureau, in rather robotically distressed blue paint, offered nothing more, other than a dead fly and a black ballpoint pen marked PROPERTY OF U.S. GOVERNMENT in white. Milgrim tucked the pen into the elastic waistband of his underwear, having at that point no pockets, and carefully opened what he took, correctly, to be a closet door. The hinges squeaked with disuse. Empty coat hangers rattled on a hook. The closet proved to contain nothing but more coat hangers, on one of which hung a small navy blazer with an elaborately gold-embroidered crest. Milgrim went through its pockets, finding a wadded Kleenex and a stub of chalk.
The boy’s jacket and the piece of chalk saddened him. He didn’t like thinking of this as a child’s room. Perhaps there had been other things here once, books and toys, but somehow it didn’t seem like it. The room suggested a difficult childhood, perhaps not too different from the one Milgrim himself had had. He left the closet, closing the door, and went to the blue, ladder-backed chair on which his clothes had been draped. Forgetting the U.S. Government pen, he jabbed himself with it as he was putting on his pants.
Dressed, he approached the drawn striped drapes of the room’s single window. Positioning himself so that he could move the outer edge of one drape as minimally as possible, he discovered what he took to be N Street, on what appeared to be an overcast day. But his angle down also revealed the right front fender of a parked car, black and highly polished. A large car, to judge by what he could see of its fender.
He put on the Paul Stuart coat, discovering his book in its pocket, clipped the government pen into the inside pocket, and tried the room’s door, finding it unlocked.
A paneled, carpeted hallway, illuminated now by a skylight. He looked over a banister and down, two flights, to the softly gleaming gray marble of the hallway they’d entered yesterday evening. One of those central but minimal stairwell-shafts encountered in houses of this age, very long and narrow, running back to front. Beside his ear, a spoon rattled against china. He spun, starting violently. “I appreciate that,” an invisible Brown said, with an uncharacteristic note of gratitude.
The hallway was empty.
“I understand what you have to work with,” said a voice Milgrim had never heard before, the speaker equally close, equally invisible. “You’re using the best men available to you, and finding them lacking. We see that all too often. I’m disappointed, of course, that you weren’t able to apprehend him. In the light of your previous lack of success, I think it would have been wise to arrange to try to photograph him. Don’t you? To be prepared to photograph him in any case, in the event he escaped again.” The man had a lawyer’s cadence, Milgrim thought. He spoke slowly and clearly, and as though he took it for granted that he’d be paid attention to.
“Yes, sir,” said Brown.
“Then we might at least have a chance to learn who he is.”
“Yes.”
Eyes wide, gripping the banister rail as though it were the railing of ship in a storm, Milgrim stared down at the distant, narrow slice of marble floor, tasting his own blood. He’d bitten the inside of his cheek, when that spoon had rattled against that coffee cup. Brown’s breakfast conversation was being reflected off that marble floor, he guessed, or being sucked up this slit of Federal stairwell, or both. Had children stood here a hundred years ago, he wondered, suppressing giggles at some other conversation?
“You say the information intended for him indicates that he still has no tracking ability, hence no knowledge of whereabouts or ability to predict destination.”
“Whoever he has working on it,” Brown said, “doesn’t seem to be getting the job done.”
“And our friends,” the other said, “are they able to determine, when they go over this material, what it is, exactly, that’s being so unsuccessfully searched for?”
“The assessment’s handled by someone who has no knowledge of any of this. It’s just information, to him, and he analyzes classified data constantly.”
“Government?”
“Telco,” Brown said. “You know who handles the decryption. They never look at the product. And our analyst has every reason to pay as little attention as possible to what this might actually be about. I’ve made sure of that.”
“Good. That was my understanding.”
Cutlery rattled loudly on a plate, so seemingly close that Milgrim winced. “So,” the other man said, “are we in a position to bring things home?”
“I believe we are.”
“So the shipment finally comes to port. After all this time.”
“But not in conus,” Brown said.
Conus? Milgrim blinked, terrified for an instant that this entire conversation might all be some unprecedented aural hallucination.
“No,” agreed the other, “not yet on American soil.”
CONUS, thought Milgrim, in Fourth of July capitals. Continental United States.
“And what are the current odds of it being opened for inspection?” the man asked.
“Extremely unlikely,” Brown said. “Slightly more likely to have a gamma scan, but the contents and packing look fine, that way. We actually had it gamma’d ourselves, in a previous port of call, to see how it reads.”
“Yes,” said the other, “I saw those.”
“You agree, then?” asked Brown.
“I do,” said the other. “What steps are being taken in your absence, in New York?”
Brown took a moment to answer. “I sent a team to the IF’s room, for fingerprints and to recover the surveillance device. They found the door open and everything under a coat of fresh latex paint. Even the lightbulb. No fingerprints. And there were none on the iPod, of course. The unit was where I left it, under a coatrack, but they’d dumped that outside.”
“They didn’t find it?”
“If they did find it, they might avoid doing anything to indicate that.”
“Are you any closer to understanding who they are?”
“They’re one of the smallest organized crime families operating in the United States. Maybe literally a family. Illegal facilitators, mainly smuggling. But a kind of boutique operation, very pricey. Mara Salvatru
cha look like UPS in comparison. They’re Cuban-Chinese and they’re probably all illegals.”
“Can’t you get ICE to roll them up for you?”
“You have to find them first. We found the kid and followed him home, in the course of trying to find the subject. We found him, to the extent that we ever did, from what you told us about the subject. The rest of them are like ghosts.” Milgrim found that he knew Brown well enough, now, to hear the edge of a certain craziness in his voice. He wondered if the other man did.
“Ghosts?” The other man’s tone was absolutely neutral.
“The problem,” Brown said, “is that they’ve been trained. Really trained. Some kind of intelligence background, in Cuba. I’d need that professional a team, and it hasn’t happened, has it?”
“No,” said the other, “but as you yourself once said, they aren’t really our problem. He is our problem. But if he knows what we’re doing, we now know that he doesn’t know when, or where. Perhaps, later, we can steer adequate professionalism in the direction of your facilitators. When it has nothing to do with us, of course. And we’ll certainly have to find out who our man is, and do something about him.”
China rattled on a table, as someone stood. Milgrim released the banister and made it back into his room in two long, agonized, exaggeratedly careful steps. He closed the door with utmost care, took off his coat, draped it over the chair, removed his shoes, and got under the angling-themed sheet, pulling it up beneath his chin. He closed his eyes and lay perfectly still. He heard the front door close. A moment later he heard an engine start, and a car pull away.
After an indeterminate period of time, he heard Brown open his door. “Wake up,” Brown said. Milgrim opened his eyes. Brown stepped to the bed and tore the sheet away. “How the fuck can you sleep in your clothes that way?”
“I fell asleep,” Milgrim said.
“Bathroom’s down the hall. There’s a robe there, and a garbage bag. Put everything you’re wearing in the garbage bag. Shower, shave, put on the robe, and come down to the kitchen for a haircut.”
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