had been passionately kissing—and fired several bullets into her chest.
Shamron licked the tip of his pencil and below the word GIRL he wrote a name:
TARIQ.
Shamron picked up his secure telephone and dialed Uzi Navot, the head of his Paris station. “They had someone inside that reception. Someone who alerted the team outside that the ambassador was leaving. They knew his route. They staged an accident to tie up traffic and leave the driver with no way to escape.”
Navot agreed. Navot made it a habit to agree with Shamron.
“There’s a great deal of very valuable artwork inside that building,” Shamron continued. “I would suspect there’s a rather sophisticated video surveillance system, wouldn’t you, Uzi?”
“Of course, boss.”
“Tell our friends in the French service that we’d like to dispatch a team to Paris immediately to monitor the investigation and provide any support they require. And then get your hands on those videotapes and send them to me in the pouch.”
“Done.”
“What about the bridge? Are there police surveillance cameras covering that bridge? With any luck we may have a recording of the entire attack—and their preparation.”
“I’ll look into it.”
“Anything left of the limousine?”
“Not much. The fuel tank exploded, and the fire consumed just about everything, including the bodies, I’m afraid.”
“How did he get away?”
“He hopped on the back of a motorcycle. Gone in a matter of seconds.”
“Any sign of him?”
“Nothing, boss.”
“Any leads?”
“If there are any, the Paris police aren’t sharing them with me.”
“What about the other members of the team?”
“Gone too. They were good, boss. Damned good.”
“Who’s the dead girl?”
“An American.”
Shamron closed his eyes and swore softly. The last thing he needed now was the involvement of the Americans. “Have the Americans been told yet?”
“Half the embassy staff is on the bridge now.”
“Does this girl have a name?”
“Emily Parker.”
“What was she doing in Paris?”
“Apparently she was taking a few months off after graduation.”
“How wonderful. Where was she living?”
“Montmartre. A team of French detectives is working the neighborhood: poking around, asking questions, trying to pick up anything they can.”
“Have they learned anything interesting?”
“I haven’t heard anything else, boss.”
“Go to Montmartre in the morning. Have a look around for yourself. Ask a few questions. Quietly, Uzi. Maybe someone in her building or in a local café got a look at lover boy.”
“Good idea, boss.”
“And do me one other favor. Take the file photographs of Tariq with you.”
“You think he was behind this?”
“I prefer to keep my options open at this point.”
“Even if they got a look at him, those old photographs won’t be any help. He’s changed his appearance a hundred times since then.”
“Humor me.” Shamron jabbed at the winking green light on the telephone and killed the connection.
It was still dark as Shamron’s Peugeot limousine sped across the coastal plain and rose into the Judean Mountains toward Jerusalem. Shamron removed his spectacles and rubbed the raw red skin beneath his eyes. It had been six months since he had been pulled from retirement and given a simple mission: bring stability to an intelligence service badly damaged by a series of highly publicized operational blunders and personnel scandals. His job was to rebuild morale. Restore the esprit de corps that had characterized the Office in the old days.
He had managed to stem the bleeding—there had been no more humiliations, like the bungled attempt to assassinate a violent Moslem cleric in Amman that had been orchestrated by his predecessor—but there had been no stunning successes either. Shamron knew better than anyone that the Office had not earned its fearsome reputation by playing it safe. In the old days it had stolen MiGs, planted spies
Stephanie Hoffman McManus