These guys were Novem Soles? These guys were… nothing. What had they done that ranked a Company file before the London bombing?
Freddy gave me a long, funny look. Piet started to kick the wall. Freddy’s bicep looked like it was hewn from marble. He probably didn’t keep a gun at hand because he could kill you with one blow.
The woman said, “Freddy. Let’s hear what Piet’s come to say.”
Freddy dropped Piet, who coughed and rolled on the dirty floor. I helped him to his feet. I couldn’t get my hands close to his gun, though. And Freddy had a gun out now and had it very close to my temple.
He steered us into a den at the end of the hallway and I thought: here we go, moment of truth.
But it was empty. No Edward. No scarred man. He wasn’t here.
“Edward wanted to talk to us,” Piet said.
“Edward doesn’t talk to people he doesn’t know,” the woman said. She had an odd tone, as though English and Dutch accents had been pureed in a linguistic blender. She was pretty, in a technical sense that proportion and balance were in her features, but she was ugly at the same time. Like the rot in her soul had inched its way to the surface. I disliked her immediately, and intensely.
“That must make his social circle very tiny,” I said.
“Yes.” The woman seemed to be in charge. Freddy wasn’t contributing to class discussion.
“My name is Samson,” I said. “And you are?”
“Demi.” She gestured at chairs. I sat.
“Like the actress?”
“Like the actress. Did you know her name is very popular with Dutch parents?”
“I did not,” I said.
This wasn’t right. They looked like low-level crooks, nothing that could pull off multiple bombings to rid themselves of enemies, or blackmail a corporate titan like Bahjat Zaid. But as my mind flashed across the video images from the Turk’s execution, I felt sure that Freddy and Demi and Piet and the other guy had been among the masked crowd on the tape. I could recognize Freddy’s bulk, the Dutch kid’s slouch, Demi’s crossed-arm stance.
The house was old, and it smelled, and they looked like youngsters playing at gangsters rather than being real criminals. On the TV a SpongeBob cartoon played, muted. I could smell burned popcorn wafting from the kitchen. A disassembled gun lay on the table. Sloppy.
“When’s Edward going to be here?” I said.
“He’s not,” Demi answered. She watched Piet slide into the chair next to me. The blue tint in his face had been replaced by a flushed red. He was pissed.
“What the hell is this?” he yelled.
“Edward said he’s making sure the shipment reaches us okay. He’ll see you when you’ve got the American side of the trip ready. Not before.”
I could hardly ask if Yasmin Zaid was here. “Is this all I have to work with?”
“What do you mean?”
“There are four of you, including Piet. I need more people to grab a shipment.”
“Piet was hired to arrange the shipment. We’re not helping you at all.”
“But we need more people.” I gained nothing by taking down this group; it wasn’t all of them, and Yasmin and Edward weren’t here.
“You don’t get to talk to Edward, or anyone else, until you’ve fixed the cargo problem.”
I glanced around the den; it wasn’t the room where they’d shown Yasmin shooting the Turk. This wasn’t their base of operations. This dump was a backup safe house for them.
I was going to have get Edward’s operation back on track. That was the only way to get him and the whole gang within reach, close enough to kill, close enough to get answers.
No choice. Starting tomorrow, I was going to have to steal a shipment of cigarettes from gun-toting Chinese smugglers to give me the man I was hunting.
Lucky me.
59
Gregor said, “I don’t do a lot of business with the Chinese.” He looked at me and then at Piet. He swallowed. “Seriously, guys, I don’t think I can help you.”
“I just need someone in the counterfeiting chain,” I said. “You must know someone. No way are all these Rolexes entirely real.”
“I beg your pardon, Sam, but they are.” Gregor managed a moment’s outrage. He turned to Piet. “I honestly can’t think of anyone to aim you at.”
I was going to owe Gregor big-time. But killing Piet and removing all danger to him would probably be a good settling of the accounts. “I need to know, Gregor. You must have a contact among the Chinese.”
Gregor looked gaunt and frightened and once again like he was fending off a cold. He shook out a garlic lozenge from a package and slipped it between his lips, sniffling.
“I have one or two. But I’m not sure they’d appreciate me giving you a name. The Chinese counterfeiters are very, very careful about their associates.”
“They are also very, very entrepreneurial,” I said, “and I’m sure that we can make them an appealing offer.”
“What do you want them for?”
“We want to hire them to smuggle goods for us,” Piet lied.
Gregor clicked the garlic lozenge against his teeth. “Ask your friend Nic. Wouldn’t he know?”
“Nic is dead,” I said.
Gregor dragged a tissue across his nostrils with a wide swipe. “Really?” He looked at me as if to say: Well done.
“Yes. So. We need a name with the Chinese. We’ll pay, Gregor.”
He pulled a piece of paper close to him, wrote down a name and a phone number. “You want Mrs. Ling. She handles a lot of trade coming into Holland. I’ve gotten watches from her before. She has a legit export company, but she uses it as a front. I take fake Swatch watches from her, sell them online.” He finished his cigarette. “I would not cross Mrs. Ling.”
“I’m supposed to be afraid of a woman?” Piet snorted.
I had no intention of playing the fool. “Tell me about her.”
“She goes nowhere without her three sons. I suspect their father is the devil and Mrs. Ling won custody. These are vicious people. I do not deal with them unless I have to.”
“Where are the Lings?” My impatience showed. Fine. I’d face the badass Lings. I just wanted to get close to Edward. I’d thought of my child in that moment when I thought I might die, and now I couldn’t shake the thought of my baby.
“You can call them,” Gregor said. “Don’t involve me. Tell her you would like to propose a business deal to your mutual advantage.”
“He sounds like a Dickens novel,” Piet muttered. I hadn’t expected literary knowledge from Piet. I reminded myself not to underestimate him.
“Thank you, Gregor,” I said. It occurred to me that Gregor could solve a couple of problems for himself as soon as we left by calling the Lings and telling them we intended trouble. Or that we were trouble. “C’mon, Piet.” The plan on how to use the Lings to get rid of a chunk of the gang was already forming in my head but Piet said, “Wait.”
I turned back. Piet stared at Gregor, who stared back.
“What?” Gregor said. “What’s the matter?”
“He’s real nervous today. He’s afraid you’ll warn the Lings about us and so he’s thinking about killing you,” I said. I believe in honesty in all dealings with people like Gregor. He was a crook, but he was not a vicious killer and rapist like Piet. Garbage has different levels.
Piet shot a look at me.
“But if he kills you, I’ll kill him,” I said.
Piet shot out his arm and grabbed Gregor by the throat. Gregor tried to wrench away, his thin, delicate fingers plucking at the sausages that made up Piet’s hand.
“Listen,” Piet said. “You keep your goddamned mouth shut and you’ll get a cut.”
“All right, all right,” Gregor choked. Piet pulled out the short sword and ran it along Gregor’s jaw with a frightening tenderness.
“Let him go,” I said. “Now.”
Piet pushed Gregor away. Gregor gagged and fell to the floor. He spat out the garlic lozenge, huffing for breath.
“We’re all cool. All cool.”
Piet stormed out of the watch shop.