Read Bride of a Bygone War Online
Authors: Preston Fleming
Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Thrillers & Suspense, #Spies & Politics, #Espionage, #Thrillers
The couple renewed their questioning while Harry gestured for Prosser to approach. Despite the vice consul’s gay smile and apparent bonhomie, Prosser detected a note of exasperation in his voice.
Recalling the numerous favors Harry had done him recently, and thinking ahead to those he intended to extract from the visa officer in the future, Prosser stepped through the open French doors onto the balcony. As he did, a gentle breeze stirred from offshore and brought the smell of sea salt to his nose.
“Connie, I’d like you to meet somebody you’re going to be seeing much more of. This is Claudette Hammouche and her husband, Victor. Claudette used to teach Arabic at the embassy before the Events. For the last few years they’ve been living in Kuwait, but now they’ve moved back to Beirut and Claudette has been hired again to give Arabic and French lessons under the post language program. You take Arabic lessons, don’t you, Connie?”
“Three days a week, until Ghada quit last month,” Prosser replied. He turned to Claudette with a friendly smile. “I hope we can start soon. I’ve been slipping back into bad habits, and I have a feeling that my Arabic vocabulary is getting smaller every day instead of larger.”
“Then come to my office on Monday morning. Bad habits are my specialty.”
“Don’t fall for that false humility act of his, Claudette,” Harry said. “Connie is the best Arabist in the embassy. What he considers bad habits would raise my test scores a full grade.”
“And will Mr. Prosser work with you in the consular section, Harry?” Victor Hammouche inquired with the ingratiating sort of smile that Prosser recognized as portending a visa referral for some friend or relative.
“I’m afraid not, Victor. Connie works in the political section. So I doubt if he’ll be in a position to help you with your particular question.”
“I was a consular officer in my last posting, if that means anything. What sort of question do you have, Victor?”
Harry frowned and Prosser knew why. Harry knew him well enough by now to realize that Prosser had no scruples about recommending an ineligible visa applicant or promising some other consular favor if it would help him cultivate a relationship or acquire a piece of information he coveted. To Prosser, U.S. visas represented a sort of fiat currency that could be dispensed in nearly unlimited amounts to gain advantage with the locals.
“Actually, it’s not visa advice that Victor needs,” Harry broke in. “What he wants is for somebody to look up a name for him in our card file of American citizens registered in Lebanon. Unfortunately, the card file is covered by the Privacy Act, so neither I nor anybody else in the embassy will be able to help him.”
“My dear Harry,” Victor pressed, “I understand your position perfectly. I would not think of asking you to violate one of your American laws. I ask only that if you meet such a person in the future, or if you hear his name, you should inform me. Surely there can be no American law against doing such a small favor for a friend, eh?”
“But you still haven’t told me why you want to know about this person, Victor,” Harry protested. “For all I know, he may be an old beau of Claudette who makes you insanely jealous.”
At this, Claudette chuckled and Victor appeared to soften.
“Who is it you want to know about? Maybe I’ve already run across him on the cocktail circuit,” Prosser offered.
Harry’s smile vanished. “I rather doubt it, Con,” he interjected. “Victor says the fellow left Beirut in 1975. That’s well before your time.”
“Yes, but I am certain it was he whom I saw last night at L’Olivier,” Victor insisted doggedly. “He is here in Beirut. I know it.”
“His name?” Prosser asked.
“William Conklin,” Claudette answered. “He was once a student of mine.” She glanced uneasily at Victor. “And the husband of my niece, Muna.”
“Then can’t you find out from your niece where he is?” Prosser suggested.
“She has not seen him since he disappeared on his way to the airport five years ago,” Claudette replied. “We do not wish to speak to her until we know more, but at the same time, we cannot leave it alone.”
“Her father must be told, Claudette,” Victor insisted. “If you will not tell your brother, I will call on César myself tomorrow.”
* * *
“Campari with a twist, on the rocks,” Prosser told the Filipino waiter, after having made his way back to the sideboard that served as a bar in Muriel Benson’s spacious apartment.
“That sounds delicious. May I have a taste of yours?” asked a woman’s voice directly behind him. Prosser turned around to find Lorraine Ellis. She kissed him on both cheeks, but for an instant looked as if she was unsure what sort of response to expect.
“Make that two Camparis,” he told the waiter.
“Is it very strong?” she asked.
“Only the taste. Try it. If you don’t like it, you can pour it into mine and I’ll get you something else.”
She held the tumbler up to her lips and drank the bitter red infusion. “Does it mix with anything? I like the flavor but perhaps not as much as you do.”
“Then how about a Campari Tonic?” he asked, adding the contents of her glass to his.
“Smashing,” she replied. But there was still an odd chill in her voice, a hesitancy that suggested a change of heart from the night before.
“Listen, I’m sorry I didn’t call you yesterday,” he volunteered in an effort to break the ice. “Something urgent came up shortly after lunch, and it didn’t give me a moment’s rest until after dinner.”
“To be perfectly frank, Conrad, I was quite prepared to strike your name from my list at five minutes after three when you didn’t call as you had promised. I held pen in hand, poised to strike, when the messenger came to the rescue with your note. It was a damned near thing, I should say. I was crushed that you were standing me up but delighted at finding Walter’s new phone number at the end of your note. Thank you.”
“Were you able to reach him?”
“We had dinner.” She looked Prosser carefully in the eye, as if to measure his reaction. Then the bartender held out her Campari Tonic and she took a cautious first sip. “Much improved,” she declared.
“And Walter? Also improved? Or the same as always?”
“Mmmm. Do you really want me to answer that?” she teased.
“I suppose it serves me right, leaving you alone for an evening. Will you let me make it up to you by taking you out for a nightcap after the party?”
“So late? Muriel tells me that after eight o’clock only gunmen and dope addicts venture out onto the streets.”
“Muriel has never been out after eight; that’s one of her problems,” Prosser replied dismissively. “So how about it? Are you game?”
“Thanks, Conrad, but really, I can’t. I promised Muriel I would help her tidy up after the guests leave; it’s what a well-mannered houseguest does, you know.”
“How about tomorrow?” he pressed.
“Muriel and I are going to the Casino du Liban with a group from the consular section and spending the night in Jounié.”
“Sunday, then?”
“Why don’t you call me sometime Sunday afternoon? I’m not sure yet if Muriel has anything planned.”
“Your being so busy wouldn’t have anything to do with Walt being back in touch, would it? No, you don’t have to answer that one. After all, Walt was there first.”
“At times I could hardly say he’s there at all,” she replied wearily. “Walter hasn’t yet made up his mind about what it is he wants. I believe he’s still reeling from the shock of finding out he’s expected to stay here for two years instead of two months. It has quite upset his calculations.”
Suddenly Prosser spotted Ed Pirelli sidling up to them with a blissful smile on his face. Pirelli was the kind of drinker who reached mellowness after the first double scotch and remained a friend of all the world for the rest of the evening until his eyes glazed over and his knees buckled beneath him.
Prosser turned his back to Pirelli and told Lorraine not to move. “Just smile sweetly and don’t say a thing.”
“Say, Ed,” Prosser began affably as soon as the station chief pulled up beside them. “Have they finished setting up the buffet?”
“Muriel sent the rice back for further fluffing,” he replied, taking pains to bring off the alliteration successfully. “She says it won’t be long.” He sipped his scotch and stared intently at Lorraine.
“Aren’t you going to introduce me to your lovely friend, Connie?” he asked with boozy familiarity.
“Oh, excuse me, Ed. I thought you had met. Lorraine, allow me to introduce Ed Pirelli. Ed works in the economic section, in case you ever need the latest numbers on the Lebanese national debt in a hurry. Now, if you’ll excuse us, Ed, I was about to show Lorraine where Muriel keeps the telephone.” He took her by the elbow and began nudging her forward, but, to his surprise, she would not budge.
“You wouldn’t be the Ed Pirelli who served in Delhi, would you?” she asked boldly.
“I’ll admit to that,” he answered, drawing himself up to his full five feet, nine inches. And you must be the Lorraine—”
“Lorraine Ellis. I believe we have a mutual friend, Walter Lukash. Before Walter left Amman, he must have told me a hundred times how he looked forward to working with you again.”
Prosser watched Lorraine switch on her Irish charm and turn up the dial.
Upon hearing Lukash’s name, Pirelli suddenly seemed to recover his sobriety, then just as quickly retreated behind a protective mask of drunken affability.
“Lorraine has a training contract with Middle East Airlines for the next few weeks and is going to be a houseguest of Muriel Benson’s,” Prosser said. “Now, Lorraine, wasn’t there an important phone call you had to put through?”
She ignored him.
“Then you’ve seen Walt recently, Miss Ellis?” Pirelli probed.
“Yesterday at dinner. Walt has a marvelous flat in East Beirut, by the way. Have you seen it?”
“I’m afraid I haven’t. To be honest, I haven’t seen very much of Walt since Delhi,” he said, lying without a trace of self-consciousness. “You wouldn’t happen to have his new phone number, would you?”
“It’s in my purse in the next room, but I would be happy to copy it for you after dinner if you’d like. I just got it myself.”
Prosser winced and Pirelli sent a malevolent glare in his direction. “I would be very grateful if you could do that for me,” he answered. “If we miss each other after dinner, just give it to Conrad here. He’ll make sure it gets to me. Again, it was a pleasure meeting you, Miss Ellis.”
* * *
The Filipino bartender laid out a dozen empty brandy snifters in two rows on the sideboard between the coffee service and a silver tray piled high with baklava and a dozen varieties of treacly Arab pastries.
“Cognac, sir?”
“A small one, please.”
He poured a little more than a centimeter of Remy Martin into the glass closest to Prosser.
“Is the brandy any good?” Muriel Benson asked with the air of satisfaction that comes to a hostess when dinner, dessert, and coffee have all been served and the kitchen help has begun to tackle the dirty dishes.
Although Muriel was well into her forties, she was an energetic woman who regularly played tennis, swam, and walked twenty minutes to and from the embassy every day. One day at the Coral Beach Hotel Prosser had seen her in a bathing suit and had been surprised that such a shapely figure had been kept so well concealed beneath her baggy cotton print dresses. Tonight she wore a knit cocktail dress that clung to her hips and rode high over her knees as she sat cross-legged on the sofa. Suddenly he realized that he had not heard anything Muriel had said and quickly tried to piece together what he had missed.
“The PPS liquor kiosk wanted a hundred lira per bottle, the thieves,” Muriel continued. The Parti Populaire Syrien, a leftist militia espousing union between Lebanon and Syria, ran a sidewalk liquor stand on rue Sidani to help finance its activities. It was generally able to offer rock-bottom prices because its merchandise consisted of stolen and smuggled goods on which no duty had been paid.
“That’s not bad,” Prosser replied. “I’ve paid as much as two hundred, when I could find it.”
“I thought as much. I recognized the label from your dinner party last week and bought it. It was such a pleasant surprise to be invited, Connie,” she added, blushing faintly. “You always bring together the most fascinating collections of people at your parties. The only disappointment was that the two of us didn’t get more of an opportunity to talk.”
“That’s something we can easily correct. Why don’t you grab yourself one of those glasses and come sit. Let the staff do the work.”
“I’d be delighted,” she replied, reaching out to touch Prosser’s hand. “But first, please do me a favor and take off that jacket and tie of yours. And in case I get called away in a few minutes when the guests start leaving, please don’t think you have to go too.”
As if on cue, a half dozen guests appeared from the living room to thank their hostess and bid her a good night. Prosser carried his cognac onto the balcony and watched the espresso sellers on the Corniche below dismantling their equipment for the night. Far to the east, he saw flashes of light from mortar and artillery shells falling in the former commercial district, but he heard none of the roar or rumble that signified heavy fighting. Occasionally a burst of automatic rifle fire disturbed the calm but failed to draw answering fire. When at last he finished the cognac and returned to the sideboard for more, no other guest was in sight.