“Wondered if you were going to figure it out,” said Elroy as Rakkim sat down in the chair, put his feet up. Elroy pulled brushes and polish out of his kit, still grumbling. “I told Spider he’d have to give you more hints.”
Sarah sat beside Elroy. “Where is she?”
“Nice to meet you too.” Elroy smeared black polish on Rakkim’s boots, worked it in. “Okay, I give up, you clouded my mind with your beauty. She’s in the parlor with Professor Plum.”
“Clue?” Sarah laughed. “How do you know about Clue?”
“Clue, Scrabble, Risk, Big Business, Candyland-we play all the old games in my family.” A brush in each hand, Elroy smacked Rakkim’s boots in a steady rhythm. “I could bankrupt your ass in Monopoly in less than an hour. Guaranteed. I’ll play you for a hundred dollars, real money, and spot you both utilities.”
Rakkim had no idea what they were talking about.
Sarah sat back and let Elroy continue.
Rakkim watched the brushes fly. “Your family’s all right?”
“I’m sharing a room with four brothers instead of two. Refrigerator keeps cutting out. The computers are up and running, that’s all that matters. That…and we’re together. We’re safe.” Elroy leaned back, examined his work. The boots were obsidian bright.
Rakkim gave him a twenty. “They look great.”
“Twenty bucks? Sucker.” Elroy tucked the bill away. “There’s a fix-it store around the corner,” he said quietly. “It’s closed, but if you go down the alley, Spider will let you in. She’s there too.” He eyed Sarah. “You look like her. Some people get all the luck.”
“Thank you.” Sarah kissed Elroy on the cheek. “The utilities? Worst properties on the board. I’ll spot you the utilities, if you give me the three light blues. I’ll even let you land there rent-free twice.”
“No deal, lady.” Elroy nodded at Rakkim. “Thanks for letting me meet the brains of the outfit, tough guy.”
Rakkim and Sarah went out the back of the barbershop and started down the alley. A few abandoned cars, windows broken out. Boarded-up buildings. Dog shit and graffiti and soggy cardboard boxes. Typical rundown Catholic neighborhood.
“I like him,” said Sarah.
“He likes you too.” Rakkim heard a faint tapping and turned around. Looking. As though he had dropped something. They weren’t being followed. A door at the rear of the fix-it shop opened and Sarah stepped inside. Rakkim backed in, taking one more look outside, and the door closed behind him.
Spider shook his hand. A gnome in the dimness of the shop, his curly hair under a watch cap, his smile nearly hidden by his full beard. Nearly.
“I want to see my mother,” said Sarah.
Spider opened another door, a door to a small workroom. She was standing inside, waiting. Katherine Dougan. Older than the pictures of her that Rakkim had seen, and she had clearly spent a lot of time outdoors, but definitely her.
For all her prior eagerness, Sarah just stood there, staring back at her mother. Neither of them moved. Finally Sarah took a small step and her mother rushed toward her, held her, the two of them crying now, hanging on to each other, tears streaming down their faces.
Rakkim turned to Spider, who shrugged, embarrassed.
Katherine held Sarah back, taking a good look at her, staring at her hair, her face, her body, taking in her height, her skin, drinking her up.
Sarah laughed. Did a slow pirouette.
Katherine hugged her again, the two of them sobbing. They still hadn’t said a word.
Rakkim looked around the workroom. It was grimy, but a new Chinese laptop with a couple of satellite nodules was poking out of a case. Straight-off-the-shelf legal in Las Vegas, but a major felony in the Islamic Republic. Ten years minimum. If you gave up your source. A whisker-thin monitor taped to the wall showed eight camera views. Two of the alley in both directions, two of the street the same way. The other four views were from high up, showing a panoramic view of the whole sector. If anyone was coming that didn’t belong, Spider would have plenty of time to get them all out of here.
“How did you find her?” Rakkim asked Spider.
Spider’s right eye twitched. “How long has Redbeard been looking for her? And that other one…how long has he been looking for her? Twenty years?” Spider’s mouth jerked with pleasure. “It took me three weeks. Not that I didn’t have some advantages.” He glanced over at Katherine and Sarah. They were talking quietly now, their hands still on each other, as though if they broke contact, one of them would disappear.
“Was she in Seattle the whole time?” said Rakkim. “I can’t believe-”
“Don’t be an idiot.” Spider checked the surveillance monitor every six seconds as if he had a chronograph inside his head. “She was in a safe spot. I have to give her credit. If she hadn’t communicated with Sarah, I doubt that she would have ever been found.”
“You tracked her through her uplink? You told me she was bouncing all over the world.”
Spider smiled. Way too many teeth. “It was impossible to track the call she made to Sarah at the Mecca Café, but I did some backtracking. I pulled the accounts of every business in the vicinity of the café, spreading out in concentric rings. It took a while, but I got a pattern of contacts between them going back over a year. I did some logarithmic analysis…” He looked pained. “I’ll try to keep it simple. The signals were bouncing all over the globe, but they all started at a certain satellite. Except there was no satellite at the point of origin. What I finally realized is that the satellite used for the original uplink was an old regime satellite in a highly degraded orbit. No one uses that satellite anymore. Once I figured that out…well, it was just a matter of research and triangulation.”
“You did all this while you were escaping from the Black Robes?”
“I intimidate you, don’t I?” said Spider.
“A little.”
“Shall I make you feel worse?” Spider shifted his eyes, checked his screens. Rakkim barely noticed anymore. “Elroy is smarter than I am. I can barely keep up with him. I’ve got a seven-year-old daughter…in a few years, she’s going to put Elroy in his place.”
“Benjamin?”
“Yes, Katherine,” said Spider.
Rakkim stared at Spider. He had never heard the man’s given name used before.
“Show them, please,” said Katherine.
Spider touched a key on the laptop. They huddled around him.
On-screen there was a flicker of gray, then the image of a man sitting in a chair. “My name is Richard Aaron Goldberg.” One of the most recognized faces in the world, the Zionist team leader who had planted the nuclear bomb that had devastated New York City. His digital confession familiar to every schoolchild, a digital played endlessly on the anniversary of the attack. “Eleven days ago, my team-”
“No, no, no. Your body language is wrong. How many times must we go over this? You have to maintain a back arch. And jiggle your leg slightly. You’re under duress, remember? Try it again.”
“That voice…is that Macmillan?” said Rakkim.
“My name is Richard Aaron Goldberg. Eleven days ago-”
“You’re not maintaining pupil consistency. It doesn’t matter if they’re slightly dilated or not, what matters is consistency. It’s the change in size that denotes a lie.” A spindly man with thick glasses stepped into the frame, placed a hand on Goldberg’s diaphragm. “Use the breathing techniques I taught you.” He backed out of view.
“Oh my God,” said Sarah.
Goldberg cleared his throat. “My name is Richard Aaron Goldberg. Eleven days ago my team simultaneously detonated three nuclear weapons. One destroyed New York City. Another destroyed Washington, D.C., and the third left the city of Mecca a radioactive death trap. Our intention…” He placed a hand on his shaking knee. “The plan was for radical Islamists to be blamed. To drive a wedge between the West and Muslims, and to create chaos within the Muslim world itself.” A trickle of sweat rolled down the side of his face. “I think…I believe we would have succeeded had it not been for some bad luck.” He lifted his chin slightly. “My name is Richard Aaron Goldberg. My team and I are part of a secret unit of the Mossad.”
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