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"Neutral? That is for the rich and fortunate. We have no time for neutrality. We are weak and poor."

M. Beret said nothing.

"That's what you think, I know, even if you won't say it. Don't worry. It's alright, we know how the world sees us. But we are not as weak as people think-or hope. What's more, we have no room left to retreat, not a millimeter. Do people want us to starve? Then they will see how desperate we can be. We will not go quietly, let me assure you. We will not starve in the shadows and die quietly out of sight."

"You are hardly in position to threaten anyone, I would think."

"Don't be too sure." That did it. That registered with him. I could see that he was already composing the memo in his head. I added an extra line for him to use. "No one should be too sure about us in this situation."

"There are people who say your country is on the verge of collapse."

"There are people who don't know their backsides from a hole in the ground."

M. Beret took a small appointment calendar from his pocket. He had one. The delegation leader had one. The entire world but me seemed to have a little appointment book. It was some sort of mark of sophistication. If you needed an appointment calendar, it meant you had appointments, which meant you were important, called upon, connected, in charge of your life. I needed to get several, one for each pocket, at least.

"This is my appointment book, Inspector. For the past two weeks or so it has been mostly blank. Do you know why? Because I have been solely focused, obsessively focused, on watching you. No luncheon dates, no dinner invitations, nothing but you. My friends think I am having an affair. Can you believe it? My entire existence is consumed. Not counting our brief stroll in Coppet, the only break I have had was the drive to Cha-monix, and that was at night when there was nothing to see. Nothing! I couldn't even stop for dinner." Ah, M. Beret, I thought, you lying bastard. You had dinner with Jeno that night, whereas I had nothing to eat. "Why don't you take a trip to Montreux tomorrow? It will do us both good. You can visit the castle, ponder the dungeon, maybe. We can have lunch in a nice restaurant, separate tables for the sake of propriety, but it will be pleasant nonetheless."

"Castles? You struck me as someone interested solely in bulldozer parts."

"Of course, that's what this is all about, don't misunderstand. I know it, and so do you." He sighed and put away the notebook. "And so, we can be sure, does our mutual friend Jeno."

"I may be busy and thus difficult to follow for the next several days. I've been making it easy for you, but I do know how to slip a tail. Why don't you take time off? Go have dinner, clear your mind, read a book."

"A tempting proposition, Inspector. But I must decline. Do your best. I'll see you when I see you. Incidentally, if you like jazz, there are some good clubs around. Just ask."

2

On arriving in Geneva, Sohn had gone directly to the mission. Then, when it was still early, he came to see me. He was waiting across the street from my hotel when I stepped outside. I made a mental note to tell M. Beret to put a bench there. I don't like guests having to stand around. As soon as Sohn was sure I'd seen him, he started walking up the street, which according to the simple code we'd agreed on at our last meeting in Pyongyang meant he wanted me to walk in the other direction. The "other direction" in this case was down the hill toward town. If things went according to plan, he would double back and find me, assuming I could remember the prearranged pattern I was supposed to follow. Yesterday had been the third of March; that meant this was a morning for threes. Three blocks, then a right turn. Another three blocks, then a left turn. Three more blocks, then another right. It didn't seem to me to be the best technique for a foreign city, since we could just as easily end up in the lake with the swans, but it would have to do under the circumstances. I didn't know where all the turns would put us exactly; wherever it was, once he was there, it was up to Sohn to decide whether he wanted to go ahead with a meeting. If he saw something he didn't like, he would call it off. At some point, M. Beret would get a report that I had been out walking, but I doubted his people would know for sure who Sohn was for a couple of days at least. The Israelis, who were keeping tabs on me even though I couldn't figure out how, might imagine that I had sent their message and that Sohn had come running. If they wanted to meet with him, it was up to them to arrange the contact. I was through playing messenger boy.

My three-block dance led finally to a street with small shops, a playground, and a bar called Sunflower. The door was propped open with a box, so I went in and waited. The man behind the bar told me in French, then in German, and finally in English that they didn't open until 5:00 P.M. I shrugged. He shrugged back. I sat down on one of the barstools to wait. Five minutes later Sohn popped in. The man behind the bar started to explain again that the bar was not open, but Sohn ignored him and walked to a table in the back.

"Too bad," I said. "You just missed my brother."

"Is that so?" Sohn turned around and pantomimed drinking something to the man behind the bar.

"The place is closed," I said. "We're lucky if he doesn't kick us out."

The man walked over with two glasses of beer and set them down, not very gently, on the table. "That will be all," Sohn said, in French. I kept most of my composure.

"You speak French?" I asked when we were alone again.

"Of course I know French, Inspector, doesn't everyone in the civilized world?" He held up his glass and studied it closely. "This beer is very Swiss, I'm afraid. Don't drink it unless you have to." He took a sip and grimaced. "Now, about your brother. You saw him off?"

"No. He told me he was leaving."

"Well, he didn't go anywhere. He doesn't have tickets, and he doesn't have reservations. I think he still has shirts at the laundry, you know, those blue shirts he likes. Surprised? He lied to you."

"You want me to get his shirts for you?"

"No. Stay away from him and anything he has touched. He has things to do, and apparently he hasn't done them yet. I'm pretty sure he has an appointment to meet someone. That needs to go ahead. You've done your job."

"What job is that?"

"You rattled him. That can be fatal for someone like your brother. He can't afford that sort of emotion. He has too many enemies."

"We argued, if that's what you mean. That's what we usually do when we bump into each other. I don't think it rattled him at all."

"I think it did. I think he's off stride. At this point, it's a question of waiting to see how much. I'm almost sure he's operating on his own right now. When things are still small like this, I might be able to stop them. After that, the decisions are out of reach. People take sides, they draw big pictures. They get budgets."

"Perhaps you could be more cryptic for me."

"Later. We've got work to do."

"Me? My work here is done."

"Before I went to your hotel, I paid a call on the ambassador. He was surprised to see me."

"I'll bet."

"Actually, I thought he was going to have a stroke. No such luck. When he could finally talk, he picked up the phone and told his aide that they were leaving immediately for Zurich. A meeting, he said. I saluted him from the front steps as his car went out the gate, but I don't think he was mollified. So I went back to his office to write him a note."

"You went into his office?"

"I sat at his desk, actually. He shouldn't leave some of those documents lying around like that. The wrong people might read them. Apparently, the situation is fluid."

"Are we back to cryptic? Because if we are, I'm going to my hotel."

"Before that, you'll have to do some shopping. There are new instructions from the Center for everyone working overseas. They can be summarized as follows: Collect vegetable seeds and food, food, food. Fertilizer if it is to be had, but the first priority is food. So is the second priority. And so is the third. On ships, on trucks, on bicycles-it doesn't make any difference. For the moment, we grovel, we pander, we lick the boots of anyone who will deliver. You won't believe the catchphrase that excuses this madness." Sohn took a pen out of his pocket. "You need a pen?"