Authors: Brian Freemantle
Zenin closed the bag and arranged the harness more tidily over the rifle, like a dust cover. He carefully pulled the already concealing curtains and looked briefly around the apartment, ensuring he had forgotten nothing, before removing the wedges from beneath the door. He stared uncertainly at them for a moment, realizing that by not using them he could reduce by at least thirty seconds â maybe a whole minute â the time it would take him to leave the apartment, after the shooting. Something else to be decided on the day, he thought, putting them neatly side by side on the table.
Zenin was customarily early at the café on the Rue de Coutance he had given Sulafeh as a meeting place, wanting his usual satisfaction that it was safe, not approaching it until he saw her arrive without any pursuit â and unflustered like she had been the previous day â and settle herself at a window table.
She smiled up eagerly when she saw him approach, reaching out for his hand to pull him down into the chair opposite.
âIt worked!' she announced at once.
âTell me.'
âAll hell was breaking loose when I got back to the hotel last night,' said the woman. âSome passer-by had found Dajani in the alley. His accreditation, too, so it didn't take long for the police to notify the delegation. They even interviewed me!'
âThe police!' said Zenin.
âThere was no problem,' she said, reassuringly. âThey just asked me what the arrangement was and I said we were going to dine as colleagues but that he did not turn up. Zeidan sat in on the interview and confirmed that I had called, asking about Dajani â¦' She smiled. âI agreed last night that having me call him was clever, didn't I?'
Her coquettishness irritated him. âWas it only the police!' he demanded.
Sulafeh retreated, as she always did. She said: âOf course, darling! It was just routine!'
âHow routine!' he persisted.
âJust like I said it was. Zeidan confirmed that I had called: said â like he told me â that he thought it had been a misunderstanding and didn't bother to do anything. That he hadn't worried about it until they, the police, arrived.'
âHow much questioning was there about what you were doing?'
âNone,' insisted Sulafeh. âI said that after telephoning I went to another café, had a meal, walked around Geneva and then went back to the hotel. Where I found the police waiting for me.'
âDid they ask which café?' said Zenin, realizing another possible oversight.
âNo.'
âOr for any proof of your eating there?'
âThey don't suspect me!' insisted Sulafeh, in weak defiance. âThey're putting it down to a street mugging: embarrassing in the circumstances, maybe, but just a mugging.'
Why hadn't he thought of the need to identify a café other than the bistro! Because he'd become sexually involved and failed to be as objective to the degree of removed sterility to which he had been trained. No more, Zenin determined. And never again.
âWhat else?' he asked.
Sulafeh sniggered, coquettish again. âGuess what Zeidan said, afterwards?'
âWhat?' responded Zenin, forcing the patience.
âHe said there was no possibility of bringing anyone else in to replace Dajani,' recounted Sulafeh. âThat he was sorry if there had been any misunderstanding between us and that he had the greatest admiration for me as a linguist. And that he was sure I could take over the sole responsibility, demanding though it might be!'
Zenin forced his cynical laugh. âSo it worked,' he said.
âI am back where I should be, for the picture session,' she announced, almost proudly. âIt's all right now.'
Zenin relaxed, just slightly. âGood,' he said, distantly. âVery good.' Now everything could work as it was designed to work: it would be all right, like she said.
âThe police told me something, during the interview,' announced Sulafeh.
âWhat!' said Zenin again, feeling his tension rise.
âAbout Dajani,' she said. âDo you know what you did to him? You broke his pelvis.'
âDid I?' said the Russian, in apparent innocence.
âHe really won't need those condoms again for a long time, will he!'
Zenin realized the direction of her conversation and did not want to follow it. He said: âDoes the translator change involve anyone at the conference?'
She shook her head. âIt was made public today at the Palais des Nations, on an adjustment of representation order: there was no reaction whatsoever, apart from a few ridiculous expressions of sympathy for the randy bastard.'
It seemed he had got away with it, thought Zenin. He said: âWe'll need to meet tomorrow, for you to tell me of any last minute changes.'
âWhen do I get the gun?' she demanded, eagerly.
âThen.'
âWhy not today?'
âToo dangerous,' he refused. âThere could be a spot check, even though you've made friends with the security people. Someone could go through your room. Better to leave it until the very last moment.'
âI have to be at the Palais des Nations by eight-thirty.'
âIt will have to be before.'
âShall I come to the apartment?'
âNo!' said Zenin, too anxiously. He'd taken his last chance with the woman: from this moment on it was distancing time. Less forcefully, not wanting to upset her, he said: âI told you yesterday we've got to protect the mission: nothing else matters now until that is all over.'
âWe've still got to make arrangements for afterwards,' she said.
âOne step at a time,' Zenin insisted, thinking. The railway terminal was an obvious meeting place but they had used that almost too much; and it was the route he had chosen for his escape, so it would be definitely wrong to be seen there with her. A hotel then. He said: âDo you have a list of the delegation hotels?'
âYes,' she said, bending to the large briefcase and handing it to him.
Zenin ran through the list, from the Beau-Rivage and the Des Bergues and the President and the Bristol and then smiled up: âOn the Quai Terretini there's the Du Rhône: it's on the way you will take, from your hotel to the conference. I will be in the foyer at seven.'
âWhat do I do?'
âIf there are any changes to the schedule just hand me the sheets.'
âThe gun!'
âAnd I'll give you the gun,' promised Zenin, patiently.
âAnd afterwards?'
âYou've got a city map?'
âI bought one the first day.'
âMemorize where the Rue de Vermont connects with the Rue de Montbrilliant,' instructed Zenin. âThere will be immediate panic, when the shooting starts. Get away from the garden and out of the international area at once and go to that connecting point.'
âI understand,' said Sulafeh, intently.
âI will already be waiting there. The car is a blue Mercedes, numbered 18â32â4. You got that?' said Zenin. The Peugeot was brown, the number was 19â45â8 and it would anyway be at Carouge, awaiting his arrival off the train.
âBlue Mercedes, licence number 18â32â4,' Sulafeh recited, trustingly.
âWhere would you like to go?' asked the Russian.
âI don't mind,' she said. âAnywhere, as long as it's with you.'
Playing the part, Zenin reached across the table, covering her hand with his. âYou're going to be,' he promised.
âPlease let's go to the apartment now,' she said. âI want you!'
âI thought you wanted the gun, just as much?' said Zenin, the excuse already formulated.
âI don't understand,' said the woman.
âThe weapons aren't here in Geneva,' lied the Russian. âI've got to get them. There isn't time for the apartment today.'
Zenin walked from the café to collect the car from the railway terminal, relieved to be away from the claustrophobia of Sulafeh's attention. He took the south route out of the city, the lake grey and stretched away to his left, picking up the Carouge signpost almost at once. This time tomorrow, he thought, it would all be over. He was beginning to feel excited: excited but not nervous.
David Levy made the demand as soon as he entered the office of Brigadier Blom in the Geneva safe house. Roger Giles was already there and said he thought it was a good idea, as well.
âI've arranged the tour for the security services of the participating countries,' said Blom, stiffly. âThat's all.'
âWhat harm would it do for Charlie Muffin to come along?' asked Levy.
âHe has no cause or reason to be there.'
âOr not to be, by the same token,' pointed out the American. âI'd actually like him along.'
âSo would I,' said Levy. âWe're all convinced it's a false alarm. Let's show him the protection is more than adequate, whatever happens.'
Charlie responded at once to Blom's telephone call, nodding as the man extended the invitation.
âThought you'd never ask,' said Charlie.
Chapter Thirty-three
They swept up to the Palais des Nations in Blom's official car and were gestured straight through the criss-cross barriers and on into the conference complex. The vehicle stopped at the front entrance, where another man in uniform who was never introduced saluted the brigadier smartly and nodded to Levy, Giles and Charlie, all of whom nodded back.
âCentral control first,' announced Blom.
The uniformed man led into the main building and along a wide, sweeping corridor where other uniformed security guards were obvious and very visible: one group were actually looking through a bag being carried by a woman in one of the side offices as they went by. There was an average of two men in each group carrying handheld metal detectors.
The control room was on the second floor, its entrance guarded. The man came smartly to attention, opening the door as they approached for them to enter unhindered. It was a large, circular room, its walls lined in serried rows with television monitors in front of which sat operators manipulating banks of camera adjustments and sound switches. The camera placings inside the huge conference chamber ensured no part of it was unobserved. The corridor along which they had earlier walked was also well covered, as well as the entry area where the delegation leaders would be received. Externally the cameras were clustered over the entrance area, so that every section of the approach was displayed, and further cameras were installed around the building to give practically a complete view of the grounds outside. The special area where the commemorative photographs were to be taken had a separate camera grouping, supplying three different monitors with visibility almost as good as that in the conference room. Blom handed each of them the final, definitive conference schedule.
Charlie accepted it but did not look at it. Instead he said: âIf any of these operators see something suspicious what is the system for them to raise any alarm?'
Blom's unidentified aide indicated telephones in front of each operator and said: âThey are direct lines to security control.'
âDoes security control have a matching monitor system?' demanded Charlie.
âNo.'
âSo a verbal description has to be given of whatever appears suspicious: and where it's happening has also got to be verbally described?' persisted Charlie.
âEach man â the operator here and the security supervisor in their section â work from identical, grid-divided maps,' came in Blom. âThe location is instantaneous: the system has been extensively practised and works very satisfactorily.'
âHow long, from the moment of picking up a telephone in this room, until someone from security gets to the designated spot on the map?' asked Levy.
Blom looked to the assistant, who hesitated. Then he said: âFive minutes.'
A guess if ever he'd witnessed one, thought Charlie. He said: âYou think you'd have five minutes in a real security emergency situation?'
âNo doubt you've got a superior suggestion,' said Blom, sarcastically.
âWhat about a sound alarm, a klaxon?' said Charlie. Was it all a waste of time? he wondered. Or might it just stir some reaction? Whatever, he supposed he had to try, if only for his own satisfaction.
âA klaxon has no other practical benefit beyond making a noise and alarming people without letting them know where the danger is,' rejected Blom.
âMaking a noise has a very practical benefit,' disputed Charlie. âIt makes your villain run.' He nodded to the other two security chiefs next to him. âAnd they don't need initially to know where the danger is, just that there
is
danger and that they'd better throw a cordon around the people they're supposed to be protecting.'
âThis is a system that has been perfected over a number of years and never found to be wanting,' insisted Blom.
âHow many potential security disasters has it averted?' asked Giles.
âThere have been a number of alarms,' said Blom.
âFalse alarms or real alarms?' asked Levy.
âFortunately there has never been a real danger,' conceded Blom.
The American appeared to be coming over like Levy, thought Charlie. How much real pressure were either prepared to exert, though? He said: âSo it's never been properly tested in real circumstances? Just practise and false alarms?'
âI've not the slightest doubt it will work as it is designed to do in any real situation,' said Blom. He paused, looking directly at Charlie. âWhich we've yet to confront,' he added.
Any discussion with Blom was like making rude faces at himself in the mirror, thought Charlie. He said: âIs this it? Just this television surveillance and the physical security checks?'
âAll the bomb checks have been carried out. Every member of every support staff had been vetted,' assured Blom.
âThat wasn't what I was immediately thinking about,' said Charlie. âDo you intend having aerial surveillance, from helicopters, while the conference is on?'