The Jerusalem Puzzle

The Jerusalem Puzzle Read Online Free PDF Page A

Book: The Jerusalem Puzzle Read Online Free PDF
Author: Laurence O’Bryan
Tags: cookie429, Extratorrents, Kat
would have satisfied anyone.
    One of the waiters, a black-haired, smiling man, came to our table with a wireless telephone handset as we were finishing.
    ‘Dr Ryan?’ he said.
    I nodded. I never used my title in public, but Talli might have used it when she rang the reception. I took the phone.
    ‘Hello.’
    ‘I’ll be at your hotel in one hour. Be ready.’ The voice was Talli’s, but the friendliness was gone. In its place was a distinct hardness, the sort of attitude she probably reserved for her most disrespectful students, the ones who insulted her in a lecture.
    The line went dead.
    ‘She’s on her way,’ I said.
    An hour later we were in the hotel lobby. I went outside to see if she was coming. It was cool, but my suede jacket was enough to keep me warm. After a while I went back inside.
    An hour and a half later we were still waiting.
    By then it was nearly eleven. I called the Hebrew University. A receptionist answered. She checked, then came back and told me that Dr Talli Miller was not available.
    By 11.30 a.m. I was properly pissed off. We took turns
going back up to the room. God only knew what had happened to Talli. Had I misheard her about the time? No, I couldn’t have. I even tried asking the hotel if they could bring up the number of the person who’d called me. They couldn’t.
    For something to do I looked up the main hospitals in Jerusalem and went to their websites on my phone using the hotel lobby Wi-Fi. I was thinking about calling them, asking them if a Dr Susan Hunter had been admitted. We might just get lucky. I took a note of their telephone numbers. I was about to start calling when Talli appeared through the revolving main door of the hotel. Her hair was a mess.
    She came towards us, looking solemn. She wasn’t the person I’d remembered from the last time we’d met. That had been someone who’d laughed a lot, poked at you, filled any room she was in with her energy. All that was gone.
    After brief hellos, she said, ‘Let’s go.’ She motioned for us to go with her.
    ‘What happened to being here in an hour?’ I said. I tried not to sound too irritated. I don’t think I succeeded.
    ‘Do you want my help or not?’ Her cheeks were puffed up and bright pink, as if she’d been running.
    ‘Where are we going?’ Isabel was playing the part of the unruffled partner. She was smiling sweetly.
    ‘To the Hebrew University. Simon Marcus is expecting you. He’s waiting.’
    ‘Let’s go then,’ I said.
    It took only twenty minutes to reach the Edmund J. Safra Campus of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. It was located on the spine of a hill a little to the west of the city centre. The buildings were modern concrete lecture and administration blocks. In between them was dry-looking grass, tall thin cypress trees, short pine trees, and the occasional palm tree.
    Talli said Simon Marcus was holding a symposium that lunchtime in one of the teaching labs for his graduate students.
    She drove us there in a pale blue beaten-up old Mercedes. She excused its appearance by telling us how badly academics were paid in Israel, and how high their taxes were these days.
    We passed a sign for the Manchester teaching lab. Groups of students were hanging around outside the next building. Talli went straight up to the nearest person in one of the little groups and began talking. We waited a few feet away by a concrete bench. She was back with us in a minute.
    She threw her hands up in the air. ‘Simon’s not here. It’s not like him, they say. He hasn’t even texted anyone.’ Her eyes rolled.
    ‘I spoke to him just before I met you. He told me he’d be here.’ She sighed. ‘Something must have happened.’ She looked at me accusingly.
    I stared back at her. If something had happened to him she couldn’t blame it on me. On the way here I’d told her about Max Kaiser being burnt to death and about Susan Hunter disappearing. I was starting to regret having said anything.
    ‘One of the
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