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“Fate and destiny.”
“Might I try again?” he asked.
She shook her head. “The oracle warns that an inquirer may not ask two questions on the same day, or ask on the same subject within the same lunar month. Also, questions asked under the light of the moon are more likely to be accurate. It’s what, nearly midnight, as we head east toward the sun?”
“So there’s another day soon coming.”
She smiled.
“I must say, Eliza, that is impressive. There are thirty-two possible answers to my question. Yet I randomly chose the precise one that satisifed my inquiry.”
She slid the pad close and flipped to a clean page. “I haven’t consulted the oracle today. Let me try.”
She pointed to question 28.
Shall I be successful in my current undertaking?
“Does that refer to me?” His tone had clearly softened.
She nodded. “I came to New York specifically to see you.” She leveled her gaze. “You will make an excellent addition to our team. I choose carefully, and I chose you.”
“You are a ruthless woman. More than that, you’re a ruthless woman with a plan.”
She shrugged. “The world is a complicated place. Oil prices go up and down with no reason or predictability. Either inflation or recession runs rampant across the globe. Governments are helpless. They either print more money, which causes more inflation, or regulate the situation into another recession. Stability seems a thing of the past. I have a way to deal with all those problems.”
“Will it work?”
“I believe so.”
His swarthy face seemed as strong as an iron, his eager eyes finally conveying decisiveness. This entrepreneur, affected by the same dilemmas that she and the others faced, understood. The world was indeed changing. Something had to be done. And she might have the solution.
“There is a price of admission,” she said. “Twenty million euros.”
He shrugged. “Not a problem. But surely you have other revenue sources?”
She nodded. “Billions. Untraced and untouched.”
He pointed to the oracle. “Go ahead, make your marks and let’s learn the answer to your question.”
She gripped the pencil and slashed five rows of vertical lines, then counted each row. All even numbers. She consulted the chart and saw that the answer was Q. She turned to the appropriate page and found the message that corresponded.
She resisted the urge to smile, seeing that his passions were now thoroughly aroused. “Would you like me to read it to you?”
He nodded.
“‘Examine strictly the disposition of thy intended partner and, if it is in accord with thine own, fear not but happiness will attend you both.’”
“Seems the oracle knows what I’m to do,” he said.
She sat silent and allowed the drone of jet engines to sweep through the cabin. This skeptical Italian had just learned what she’d known for all of her adult life-what her Corsican mother and grandmother had taught her-that the direct transmission of provenance was the most empowering form of knowledge.
Mastroia
They shook, his grip light and sweaty.
“You may count me a part of whatever you have in mind.”
But she wanted to know, “Still don’t like me?”
“Let’s reserve judgment on that one.”
ELEVEN
MALONE DECIDED A STROLL IN THE PLAZA WOULD CLEAR HIS HEAD. Court had started early and not recessed till well after the noon hour. He wasn’t hungry, but he was thirsty, and he spotted a café on the far side of the expanse. This was an easy assignment. Something different. Observe and make sure the conviction of a drug-smuggler-turned-murderer happened without a hitch. The victim, a DEA supervisor out of Arizona, had been shot execution-style in northern Mexico. The agent had been a personal friend of Da
From some nearby belfry came the fiendish clamor of bells, barely discernible over Mexico City’s daily drone. Around the grassy plaza, people sat in the shade of bushy trees, whose vibrant color tempered the severity of the nearby sooty buildings. A blue marble fountain shot slender columns of foamy water high into the warm air.
He heard a pop. Then another.
A black-skirted nun fifty yards away dropped to the ground.
Two more pops.
Another person, a woman, fell flat.
Screams pierced the air.
People fled in every direction, as if an air-raid warning had been issued.
He noticed little girls in sober, gray uniforms. More nuns. Women in bright-colored skirts. Men in somber business suits.
All fleeing.
His gaze raked the mayhem as bodies kept dropping. Finally, he spotted two men fifty yards away with guns-one kneeling, the other standing, both firing.
Three more people tumbled to the ground.
He reached beneath his suit jacket for his Beretta. The Mexicans had allowed him to keep it while in the country. He leveled the gun and ticked off two rounds, taking down both shooters.
He spotted more bodies. Nobody was helping anyone.
Everybody simply ran.
He lowered the gun.
Another crack rang loud and he felt something pierce his left shoulder. At first there was no sensation, then an electric charge surged through him and exploded into his brain with a painful agony he’d felt before.
He’d been shot.
From a row of hedges a man emerged. Malone noticed little about him save for black hair that curled from under the rakish slant of a battered hat.
The pain intensified. Blood poured from his shoulder, soaking his shirt. This was supposed to be a low-risk courtroom assignment. Anger rushed through him, which steeled his resolve. His attacker’s eyes grew impudent, the mouth chiseled into a sardonic smile, seemingly deciding whether to stay and finish what he started or flee.
The gunman turned to leave.
Malone’s balance was failing, but he summoned all his strength and fired.
He still did not recall actually pulling the trigger. He was told later that he fired three times, and two of the rounds found the target, killing the third assailant.
The final tally? Seven dead, nine injured.
Cai Thorvaldsen, a young diplomat assigned to the Danish mission, and a Mexican prosecutor, Elena Ramirez Rico, were two of the dead. They’d been enjoying their lunch beneath one of the trees.
Ten weeks later a man with a crooked spine came to see him in Atlanta. They’d sat in Malone’s den, and he hadn’t bothered to ask how Henrik Thorvaldsen had found him.
“I came to meet the man who shot my son’s killer,” Thorvaldsen said.
“Why?”
“To thank you.”
“You could have called.”
“I understand you were nearly killed.”
He shrugged.
“And you are quitting your government job. Resigning your commission. Retiring from the military.”
“You know an awful lot.”
“Knowledge is the greatest of luxuries.”
He wasn’t impressed. “Thanks for the pat on the back. I have a hole in my shoulder that’s throbbing. So since you’ve said your peace, could you leave?”
Thorvaldsen never moved from the sofa, he simply stared around at the den and the surrounding rooms visible through an archway. Every wall was sheathed in books. The house seemed nothing but a backdrop for the shelves.