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“And how long has she been missing?”

“Twenty-five days.”

“Has she ever gone missing before?”

“No. Never. She was always a most obedient daughter.”

Obedient. Not a word you heard every day. It was up there with nanotechnology on the rare-word scale, and my own words telling Howell about the Money Czar thundered in my ears.

“You haven’t reported her disappearance to the police,” I said.

“No. I was told not to.”

“A ransom call?”

“Not exactly. Yasmin left work at our Budapest research facility on a Friday evening. As usual, she worked late—she is a devoted employee.” He pushed a printout toward me; it was from a calendar application. Nearly every hour was blocked out, for research or work or, in some cases, self-improvement projects. Learn Chinese. Read up on Puccini operas. Study macro-economics. “You see, her days are highly structured. She works best that way, so I have cultivated this fine habit in her and she agrees.”

“You keep her organized,” I said.

The dryness of my comment went past him. “I didn’t hear from her on the weekend, but that is not unusual. Then on Sunday evening I received this message.” Bahjat Zaid tapped on the laptop and a video unfurled on the screen. Yasmin, fiddling with a key at her apartment building’s entrance. The angle of the camera suggested the video had been shot from across the street, zooming in for detail on the young woman. The doorstep light gave off a feeble glow; there was little ambient street noise, no traffic cutting between lens and woman. Late night. Yasmin dropped her keys, and as she knelt to recover them, two men moved into the picture, seizing her arms, stuffing a cloth over her face. The camera caught her gaze, wide with terror. She struggled and the men rushed her away from the door, into the back of a waiting van. The van peeled away. No license plate in the shot. The cameraman had been very careful.

But not careful enough.

“Could you play that again for me?” I asked. My throat dried and I felt the ache of my near-strangulation in the apartment in Brooklyn. He nodded and did so. I watched it carefully. “Again, please.” He replayed the clip. But this time I studied Bahjat Zaid. His mouth worked as he watched his daughter’s abduction.

“Do you recognize those men?” he asked me. “You look as though you do.”

One of the kidnappers, I felt sure, was the man who’d tried to kill me in my apartment, with the Novem Soles tattoo. “Yes, I do. He’s dead now.”

His gaze met mine.

“My Yasmin, being manhandled by those animals. It makes me sick.” He pinched the tip of his nose with his fingertips. “They have no right. My daughter belongs to me.”

I didn’t like that last comment at all. “What happened next, Mr. Zaid?”

“There was a phone number included with the e-mailed video. I phoned it immediately. A man spoke to me. He had a slight Dutch accent. I was instructed not to call the police or report her kidnapping, otherwise they would kill Yasmin.”

“Was there a ransom demand?”

“Yes. I was asked to transfer five hundred thousand euros to an account in the Caymans. I did so immediately.”

“And all they asked for was money?”

“Yes. I complied and they did not return her.” Pain flashed in his eyes.

“And then. The next e-mail. Another video.” He moused over a window on his laptop; another video began to play. The Centraal train station in Amsterdam; I recognized it from the photos that Mila had shown me. A dark-haired woman entered the train station, a knapsack on her back. The video jumped to her walking out the doors. Without the knapsack, the scarf concealing the bottom half of her face. The scarred man walked four feet or so behind her now.

The clip stopped.

“The train station explosion hit ten minutes later,” Mila said. “Five dead.”

“They have made Yasmin look like a monster.” Exhaustion framed Zaid’s face. He got up and paced the floor, pale with worry. “Her face—it is so blank. Like it has been wiped clean and a nothingness put behind her eyes.”

“You haven’t heard from her or the kidnappers again?”

“No.” Zaid shook his head. “I have heard nothing.” Ice coated his words. “They don’t need to ask me for anything. They have destroyed her, and if this video gets out, they will have destroyed my family, my company, as well.”

27

YOU THINK SHE’S STILL ALIVE,” I said.

“I have to hope—if they wanted her dead, they would have exploded the bomb while she carried it. This video is leverage against me.”

“Why not call the police now? They haven’t returned her.”

“And I would tell them what? That she has been kidnapped, but that she planted a bomb that killed people? If I go to the police, the kidnappers will release that video, and that will be the end of my business.” He wiped a hand across his brow. “I do a great deal of business with NATO governments, with the United States, with Russia. My daughter as a bomber? It would destroy everything I’ve built.”

“People would understand that she was brainwashed. Think of Patty Hearst,” I said.

Zaid’s voice was iron. “Patty Hearst was convicted, Mr. Capra. The world did not see her then as a victim: it saw her as a good girl turned anarchist and bank robber. The world is an even less forgiving place now. There will be enough doubt to undo my entire business. Even the mere suggestion that my daughter could be a bomber would destroy my company.” He closed his eyes. “My company gained billions in contracts when Western governments wanted to show they held no bias against Muslim-run firms. You see the trap they have set for me? I cannot go to the police. I dare not defy their demands.”

“Maybe this isn’t about Yasmin, or the ransoms. Maybe they want to bring you down.”

“Then they would release the video now and destroy Bahjat,” Mila said quietly. “But they haven’t. They’re using Bahjat’s hope against him.”

I glanced at Mila. “So you want me to find and rescue Yasmin.”

Zaid’s stare was steel. “Oh, more than that. I want you to find these people who took her… and kill them.”

“Kill them?”

“Kill her kidnappers. I don’t care if there are only two or two dozen. No one who could tie her to this act can live to indict her name,” Zaid said. “If she is rescued, and any of them survive, they could release the tape in revenge.”

But I needed the scarred man alive to answer my questions. “If I get Yasmin out, surely that is the primary goal.”

“Of course. But all of them must be dead. That is nonnegotiable.”

“You’re afraid once she’s rescued that the kidnappers might come after you?”

“Yasmin has seen their faces. They won’t let her go. Ever.” He looked at me, a long measured stare, and then he looked at Mila. “You said he could rescue Yasmin. I am not sure.”

“I don’t rush in like a fool, Mr. Zaid. This is not a suicide mission, especially since you want to be sure no one escapes your wrath.”

He raised an eyebrow at the dryness of my tone.

“Bahjat,” Mila said quietly. “Let Sam do what Sam does.”

“I would like to ask you both a question. Have you heard the term Novem Soles? Or Nine Suns? Does it mean anything to either of you?”

Both of them shook their heads.

“I would like to know how you propose to take action,” Zaid said.

“You don’t need to know. It’s better you don’t.”

He swallowed. “I want to be sure Yasmin is safe…”

I sighed. “Mr. Zaid. Yasmin may not even be in Amsterdam anymore. In which case I’ve got to find where she’s gone. I have no leads to follow right now. And if her face is on the cameras in the train station, and the Dutch forensics teams figure out she planted the bomb, then the police are going to be looking for her. We’re on a deadline. I am not spending my time asking your approval or permission.”