She was no longer merely tasting the champagne; she was guzzling. Greedily, she drained the last drop from her glass and reached for the bottle.
He slid it out of her reach. “I said I need your help.”
She wiped her chin with the back of her hand. “What kind of help?”
“Not much.”
“Ha. That’s what you always say.”
“A pistol. Automatic. Plus several clips of ammunition.”
“What if I don’t have a pistol?”
“Then you will find me one.”
She shook her head. “This is not the old days. You don’t know what it’s like here. Things are difficult.” She paused, looking down at her slightly crepey hands. “Saigon is a hell.”
“Even hell can be made comfortable. I can see to that.”
She was silent. He could read her mind almost as easily as if her eyes were transparent. She gazed down at the treasures he’d brought from Bangkok. She swallowed, her mouth still tingling with the taste of champagne. At last she said, “The gun. What do you want it for?”
“A job.”
“Vietnamese?”
“American. A woman.”
A spark flickered in Chantal’s eyes. Curiosity. Maybe jealousy. Her chin came up. “Your lover?”
He shook his head.
“Then why do you want her dead?”
He shrugged. “Business. My client has offered generous compensation. I will split it with you.”
“The way you did before?” she shot back.
He shook his head apologetically. “Chantal, Chantal.” He sighed. “You know I had no choice. It was the last flight out of Saigon.” He touched her face; it had lost its former silkiness. That French blood again: it didn’t hold up well under years of harsh sunlight. “This time, I promise. You’ll be paid.”
She sat there looking at him, looking at the champagne. “What if it takes me time to find a gun?”
“Then I’ll improvise. And I will need an assistant. Someone I can trust, someone discreet.” He paused. “Your cousin, is he still in need of money?”
Their gazes met. He gave her a slow, significant smile. Then he filled her glass with champagne.
“Open the caviar,” she said.
“I NEED YOUR HELP,” said Willy.
Guy, dazed and still half-asleep, stood in his doorway, blinking at the morning sunlight. He was uncombed, unshaven and wearing only a towel-a skimpy one at that. She tried to stay focused on his face, but her gaze kept dropping to his chest, to that mat of curly brown hair, to the scar knotting the upper abdomen.
He shook his head in disbelief. “You couldn’t have told me this last night? You had to wait till the crack of dawn?”
“Guy, it’s eight o’clock.”
He yawned. “No kidding.”
“Maybe you should try going to bed at a decent hour.”
“Who says I didn’t?” He leaned carelessly in the doorway and grinned. “Maybe sleep didn’t happen to be on my agenda.”
Dear God. Did he have a woman in his room? Automatically, Willy glanced past him into the darkened room. The bed was rumpled but unoccupied.
“Gotcha,” he said, and laughed.
“I can see you’re not going to be any help at all.” She turned and walked away.
“Willy! Hey, come on.” He caught her by the arm and pulled her around. “Did you mean it? About wanting my help?”
“Forget it. It was a lapse in judgment.”
“Last night, hell had to freeze over before you’d come to me for help. But here you are. What made you change your mind?”
She didn’t answer right off. She was too busy trying not to notice that his towel was slipping. To her relief, he snatched it together just in time and fastened it more securely around his hips.
At last she shook her head and sighed. “You were right. It’s all going exactly as you said it would. No official will talk to me. No one’ll answer my calls. They hear I’m coming and they all dive under their desks!”
“You could try a little patience. Wait another week.”
“Next week’s no good, either.”
“Why?”
“Haven’t you heard? It’s Ho Chi Minh’s birthday.”
Guy looked heavenward. “How could I forget?”
“So what should I do?”
For a moment, he stood there thoughtfully rubbing his unshaven chin. Then he nodded. “Let’s talk about it.”
Back in his room, she sat uneasily on the edge of the bed while he dressed in the bathroom. The man was a restless sleeper, judging by the rumpled sheets. The blanket had been kicked off the bed entirely, the pillows punched into formless lumps by the headboard. Her gaze settled on the nightstand, where a stack of files lay. The top one was labeled Operation Friar Tuck. Declassified. Curious, she flipped open the cover.
“It’s the way things work in this country,” she heard him say through the bathroom door. “If you want to get from point A to point B, you don’t go in a straight line. You walk two steps to the left, two to the right, turn and walk backward.”
“So what should I do now?”
“The two-step. Sideways.” He came out, dressed and freshly shaved. Spotting the open file on the nightstand, he calmly closed the cover. “Sorry. Not for public view,” he said, sliding the stack of folders into his briefcase. Then he turned to her. “Now. Tell me what else is going on.”
“What do you mean?”
“I get the feeling there’s something more. It’s eight o’clock in the morning. You can’t have battled the bureaucracy this early. What really made you change your mind about me?”
“Oh, I haven’t changed my mind about you. You’re still a mercenary.” Her disgust seemed to hang in the air like a bad odor.
“But now you’re willing to work with me. Why?”
She looked down at her lap and sighed. Reluctantly she opened her purse and pulled out a slip of paper. “I found this under my door this morning.”
He unfolded the paper. In a spidery hand was written “Die Yankee.” Just seeing those two words again made her angry. A few minutes ago, when she’d shown the message to Mr. Ainh, his only reaction was to shake his head in regret. At least Guy was an American; surely he’d share her sense of outrage.
He handed the note back to her. “So?”
“‘So?’” She stared at him. “I get a death threat slipped under my door. The entire Vietnamese government hides at the mention of my name. Ainh practically commands me to tour his stupid lacquer factory. And that’s all you can say? ‘So?’”
Clucking sympathetically, he sat down beside her. Why does he have to sit so close? she thought. She tried to ignore the tingling in her leg as it brushed against his, struggled to sit perfectly straight though his weight on the mattress was making her sag toward him.
“First of all,” he explained, “this isn’t necessarily a personal death threat. It could be merely a political statement.”
“Oh, is that all,” she said blandly.
“And think of the lacquer factory as a visit to the dentist. You don’t want to go, but everyone thinks you should. And as for the elusive Foreign Ministry, you wouldn’t learn a thing from those bureaucrats anyway. Speaking of bureaucrats, where’s your baby-sitter?”
“You mean Mr. Ainh?” She sighed. “Waiting for me in the lobby.”
“You have to get rid of him.”
“I wish.”
“We can’t have him around.” Rising, Guy took her hand and pulled her to her feet. “Not where we’re going.”
“Where are we going?” she demanded, following him out the door.
“To see a friend. I think.”
“Meaning he might not see us?”
“Meaning I can’t be sure he’s a friend.”
She groaned as they stepped into the elevator. “Terrific.”
Down in the lobby, they found Ainh by the desk, waiting to ambush her. “Miss Maitland!” he called. “Please, you must hurry. We have a very busy schedule today.”