Soul of the Assassin (28 page)

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Authors: Larry Bond,Jim Defelice

BOOK: Soul of the Assassin
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The scientist felt completely out of place. As a young man at university, he’d seen clandestine nudie shows and been turned on by them, but somehow now either his age or the setting had the opposite effect. He felt as if he’d walked in on the middle of an argument between two friends rather than a sex act.

 

The two women were now completely naked.

 

“I’m going to the bathroom,” he told them finally. “And when I come out I hope that you will be gone. Tell Atha that I appreciate— thank him for his generosity.”

 

“Join us,
professore
,” said Francesca, looking up from the bed.

 

Rostislawitch felt a last twinge of temptation, the slightest urge to be caressed. If he closed his eyes, he might be able to convince himself that they were not hookers bought by an Iranian who was trying to make a deal.

 

But who would they be? Not Olga, certainly. And not the girl, Thera, who had been so kind to him.

 

If she were here, he would make love to her. He’d been a fool not to invite her upstairs.

 

“Professore
,” said the woman.

 

Perhaps it was a trap, Rostislawitch thought. Maybe Atha thought he could blackmail him.

 

“When I come out, I hope you will be gone,” said Rostislawitch, going to the bathroom and locking the door.

 

~ * ~

 

15

 

BOLOGNA, ITALY

 

“Hell of a show,” said Rankin, watching.

 

Thera crossed her arms. She felt embarrassed for Rostislawitch, and angry that he had let the girls in in the first place.

 

Ferguson, meanwhile, sat in the overstuffed chair opposite the couch, considering what the girls had said about having been sent by Atha. If the Iranian was behind the botched assassination, why would he now send two whores up to Rostislawitch’s room? To throw him off the trail? To keep him in the room? Clearly the girls weren’t assassins themselves, since they were unarmed. Unless they intended to kill the scientist by giving him a heart attack.

 

Ferguson got up and went into the bedroom, where a small carry-on bag held some of their backup equipment. He took a new SIM card for his local cell phone; after installing it, he dialed the number Hamilton had left and got the British MI6 agent’s voice mail.

 

“So we’re having fun,” Ferguson said. “What are you doing? Call me back at this number.”

 

Ferguson grabbed a new pair of pants to change, but was interrupted when his sat phone began to ring.

 

It was Parnelles.

 

“Hey, General.”

 

“What’s going on, Robert? Corrigan tells me you were with T Rex in a bar. Did you grab her?”

 

“Corrigan’s wrong. I wasn’t with T Rex. I was with Kiska Babev.”

 

“Robert, I’ve seen Corrigan’s report. There’s good evidence there.”

 

“One possible coincidence. Some parallels. We’re still working on it.”

 

“If she’s not T Rex, who is?”

 

“I’m not sure yet. It may be me for all I know.” Ferguson laughed.

 

“This isn’t something to joke about,” said Parnelles sharply. “This is good information about the Iranians,” he continued, softening his tone. “It’s good. You should develop it. But I want you to get T Rex. That has to remain a priority.”

 

“I don’t think Kiska Babev is T Rex. And even if she was, at this point I can’t just haul her back. She’s not going to come easily.”

 

“Don’t let that be a problem. You know how to take care of this.”

 

“You want me to shoot her?”

 

Parnelles cleared his throat. Ferguson could picture him, sitting at his desk, his face tinged slightly red. His brows would be low on his forehead, a look of disappointment on his face.

 

Was that how they did it in the old days? The Deputy Director of Operations, or maybe someone even lower on the chain of command, would call his dad and say,
Take care of this guy?

 

Ferguson didn’t like to think of his father as a killer, though he knew that his father had killed people.

 

Less than Ferg had.

 

“Robert, I’m counting on you to do the right thing,” said Parnelles finally.

 

“I try.”

 

Parnelles hung up. Ferguson turned off the phone and once again grabbed the fresh pair of jeans, but Rankin was calling him from the other room.

 

“They’re going through his stuff,” said Rankin, pointing at the computer screen as he came out.

 

“Turn up the volume,” said Ferguson, squatting down to get a better view of what was going on. One of the girls, naked, was standing by the bathroom, talking softly. The other was going through Rostislawitch ‘s wallet.

 

“She’s got something,” said Rankin.

 

“We don’t need the play-by-play,” said Thera.

 

They watched as Rosa examined a small piece of paper in the wallet. She opened the desk drawer and took out a pad, copying something from it.

 

“Zoom this,” Ferguson told Rankin.

 

Rankin had already started to try. He selected the area of the screen and then the zoom tool, but the girl’s naked back blocked the view.

 

“Has to have something to do with what the Russian wants to sell the Iranian,” said Rankin. “That’s got to be it.”

 

“Yeah. Did you scan that room for bugs when you went in?”

 

“Yeah. It was clean. Why?”

 

“Just wondering who I have to share this with.” Ferguson sat back down, considering what to do.

 

Were the girls working for the Iranian, as they said? It would be clever of Hamilton to tell them they were, a kind of misdirection play while he had them look for information.

 

Ferguson would have to trail them to find out.

 

“All right, here’s what we’re gonna do,” Ferguson told them. “Thera, you’re going to get some sleep. Use the other room. But go to sleep. We’re going to need you later. Rankin, you watch Rostislawitch. If you need backup, call Imperiati’s people. Here’s his number.”

 

“I got it already.”

 

“What are you going to do?” Thera asked.

 

“Change my pants,” said Ferguson.

 

~ * ~

 

16

 

BOLOGNA, ITALY

 

Hamilton’s phone beeped, telling him he had a message. He waited until the Iranian had parked his car before dialing in to find out who it was.

 

Ferguson finally had gotten back to him, cheeky as ever. He hit the redial.

 

“Well, Mr. Ferguson, I’m told I should cooperate with you fully,” Hamilton said when Ferguson answered.

 

“Always a pleasure to be working with our allies,” said Ferguson. He seemed a bit winded, and there was a clicking sort of mechanical sound in the background, gears moving.

 

“Whatever are you doing?” asked Hamilton. “Working out?”

 

“Riding my bike.”

 

“In this cold?”

 

“It’s not that cold.”

 

Crazy Yanks. All of them.

 

Hamilton watched Atha leave the parking garage and walk in the direction of the Moroccan restaurant. It was no surprise; he’d gone there the night before as well. Yesterday Hamilton had gone in and watched from the bar. Tonight he thought he’d stay in the car; the smell of the food sometimes bothered his stomach.

 

“So do you have anything new?”

 

“Nothing at all.”

 

“Maybe we should get together and trade notes,” said Ferguson.

 

“I don’t really see the point,” said Hamilton, switching off his motor. Maybe he would go in after all. “I am in the middle of something and—”

 

There was a knock on his car window. Startled, Hamilton turned and saw Ferguson grinning at him.

 

“What the hell are you doing?” asked Hamilton, lowering the window.

 

“Following those two women getting out of the cab over there,” Ferguson said. “My bet is they’re going to see Atha.”

 

“Bloody hell.”

 

“You have that place bugged, or should we go inside?”

 

~ * ~

 

A

tha saw the waiter giving the two girls a hard time. He raised his hand. Francesca saw it and pointed. Reluctantly, the waiter let them through.

 

“Here, a receipt, just as you predicted,” said Rosa, unfolding a piece of paper on the table. “Left baggage.”

 

“Excellent.”

 

More than excellent, he thought—better than he could have wished for. But he warned himself not to get too optimistic.

 

“Is it at the bus station?” said Francesca. “We can go and get it if you want?”

 

“No, that’s fine,” said Atha. “How about a drink? Some wine?”

 

“How about our money?” said Francesca. She held out her hand.

 

“Oh, ladies, don’t be so quick. The night is young.”

 

“That’s extra,” said Francesca.

 

Rosa ran her fingers across the back of his neck. “But we are willing to negotiate.”

 

~ * ~

 

Y

es, we have these sorts of things,” said Hamilton, holding up the tiny bug. “Probably made in China.”

 

“I think you can get a better deal out of Thailand,” said Ferguson, taking out a receiving unit disguised as an MP 3 player. “Drop it on the floor as you pass.”

 

“Why should I drop it?”

 

“Because I’m picking up the bar tab.”

 

“In that case, I will be right back.”

 

Hamilton got up and made his way toward the restrooms, choosing a course that would take him near the Iranian. By now the two hookers were hanging all over him. Atha seemed oblivious to the disapproving glare of his neighbors, let alone Hamilton. The MI6 agent let the small bug slip from his fingertips. It bounced on the floor, coming to rest under Atha’s chair. It was tiny, as small as a fly. But the thing that impressed Hamilton—and horrified him, if truth be told—was the fact that Ferguson treated it as a throwaway device. It would be crushed underfoot within an hour, and he didn’t care. It was all very incredibly wasteful. How could you compete with people with those sorts of resources to burn?

 

By the time Hamilton got back to the table, the waiter had deposited a bucket of ice and a bottle of Asti. Ferguson was listening to the conversation at the other end of the room, sipping the wine.

 

“Italian pseudo-Champagne?” asked Hamilton.

 

“What did you want?”

 

“Cognac at the very least.” He held up his hand and tried catching the waiter’s attention. “So?”

 

“He’s telling them about Paradise.”

 

“No doubt.”

 

Ferguson took one of the earphones out and held it toward him.

 

“That’s quite all right,” said Hamilton.

 

“Afraid you’ll get cooties?” Ferguson let the small earphone dangle while he sipped his wine. “So tell me about our friend Atha. How long have you been following him?”

 

“I really did tell you everything earlier, I’m afraid. I wish I could get a bloody drink.”

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