“No, I can’t say that I did,” Martin confessed.
“Rephrasing, the FBI agent at our embassy has told Davis that the French court is about to extradite Isaac Festung.”
“And for some reason I don’t understand, you’re annoyed about that?”
“Davis said that as soon as the French court orders his extradition, the legal attache-read FBI agents-there will take custody of his person, and then they and U.S. marshals will escort him home.”
“You’re going to have to explain to me, I’m afraid, what’s wrong with that.”
“When I was on the bench, Alvin, after Festung jumped bail, I spent a lot of effort-and a lot of taxpayers’ money- trying to find him. After he was convicted in my court of murder in the second, and-surprising me not at all-the FBI had not been able to find him, much less bring him back here and lock him up, I spent even more effort and taxpayer money trying to find him and bring him back here.”
“And the FBI was not very useful in this, I gather?”
“What they did, Alvin, was notify Interpol. ‘Hey, fellas, the local cops here are looking for this guy. If you stumble over him, give us a call, huh?’ ”
Mayor Martin was tempted to smile, but wise enough to know that this was not the time to do so.
“And since I became D.A.,” the D.A. went on, “my people- my fugitive guy and others-have spent a fortune running this sonofabitch down all over Europe. We found out from the French cops that he was-wherever the hell he is, in some village in the South of France-and when Interpol and the FBI did nothing to get him back, I sent two assistant D.A. s over there-at the taxpayers’ expense-to light a fire under them.”
“I see,” Alvin W. Martin said, although he really didn’t.
The only thing he knew for sure was that he had never seen the Honorable Eileen McNamara Solomon so angry before, and from which he drew the conclusion that one could anger Mrs. Solomon only at great peril.
“I have no intention of standing there, smiling in gratitude, when the FBI or the marshals take him off the plane,” Eileen McNamara Solomon declared.
“I understand how you feel, Eileen,” he said.
“I want a Philadelphia cop’s handcuffs on him,” she said. “I want a Philadelphia cop to bring him back.”
“I can understand that,” the mayor said.
“Those bastards try this sort of thing all the time. They even showed up in Alabama, trying to steal Jason Washington’s pinch of Homer C. Daniels.”
“I didn’t know that,” the mayor said, truthfully. “Is that what it’s called, ‘stealing a pinch’? That sounds like something that would happen at a high school junior prom.”
It was evident on District Attorney Solomon’s face that she did not share Mayor Martin’s sense of humor.
“Well, what can we do about this, you and I, Eileen, to make things right?”
“What you can do, Alvin, is call Ralph Mariani and tell him to get a cop-preferably one from Homicide-over to France before the FBI gets away with this.”
“Is there going to be time to do that?”
“There will have to be,” Eileen McNamara Solomon declared.
“Homicide, Lieutenant Washington.”
“Mariani, Washington. Is Quaire there?”
“No, sir. He is not.”
“Come up here, please, Jason. Right now.”
After he had explained the situation to Lieutenant Washington, Commissioner Mariani was surprised, and a little annoyed, at the amused look on Washington’s face.
“This is not funny, Lieutenant. We better be able to do something, and do it right now.”
“As it happens, Commissioner, there does happen to be a man from Homicide in France right now.”
“How did that happen?”
“Sergeant Payne-two days ago, anyway-was in Paris, sir.”
“I ordered him to take thirty days’ vacation time!”
“Yes, sir. That’s what he’s doing. He and Mr. O’Hara. Sergeant Payne told his mother, and she told me, that Mr. O’Hara is quite taken with the artistic treasures of the Louvre.”
The commissioner waited for him to go on.
“There is a rumor circulating, sir, that Mr. O’Hara and Mr. Kennedy, the city editor of the Bulletin-”
“I know who he is,” Mariani interjected impatiently.
"— exchanged blows in the city room of the newspaper…”
“No kidding?”
“… and that Mr. O’Hara is on a thirty-day sabbatical from his duties. According to my information-again via Sergeant Payne’s mother-Mr. O’Hara is thinking of writing a book about Festung. Anyway, sir, the two of them are in France.”
“How do we get in touch with them?”
“They are-or were-in the George the Fifth Hotel in Paris, sir,” Washington said. “And Mr. O’Hara, I understand, has one of the new worldwide satellite telephones. It shouldn’t be any problem.”
Commissioner Mariani picked up his telephone.
“Put in a person-to-person call to either Sergeant Matthew Payne or Mr. Michael O’Hara in the George the Fifth Hotel in Paris, France,” he ordered.
Ten minutes later, Commissioner Mariani was informed that both Mr. O’Hara and Mr. Payne had checked out of the hotel that morning and left no forwarding address.
“I knew that was too good to be true,” Mariani said. “What about this around-the-world telephone of O’Hara’s? Can you get the number?”
“I’m sure that won’t be a problem, sir.”
“Well, get it. Get them on it. Tell them to call me.”
“Yes, sir.”
“And you better see who else has a passport… Do you?”
“It’s being renewed, sir.”
“Get somebody else started, in case we can’t get through to Payne. Hell, they may be on their way home.”
A half hour later, Lieutenant Washington telephoned Commissioner Mariani to report that he was having trouble getting O’Hara’s number but he was working on it, and hoped to have it shortly.
He also reported that they had made reservations for someone to fly to Paris. It had yet to be determined who would go, but there would be plenty of time to make the decision. The next available seat to Paris was on a flight leaving New York tomorrow afternoon. When he added that only first-class seats were available, he anticipated the commissioner’s next question:
“It would appear we’re in the tourist season, sir,” Washington concluded.
“In that case, I would suggest that you make every effort to get O’Hara’s phone number,” Commissioner Mariani said. “Keep me advised, Lieutenant. I’m about to tell the mayor we are making every effort to comply with his wishes.”
“Yes, sir.”
Two hours after that, Lieutenant Washington called the commissioner again.
“Sir, I have the number. I had to get it from Mr. Casimir Bolinski. But when I call it, the recording says that it’s been turned off. Probably overnight, sir. I’ll try again in the morning.”
“No,” Commissioner Mariani said, “you, or some one you delegate, will try that number every thirty minutes until someone answers.”
“Yes, sir.”
Mr. Michael J. O’Hara rose at first light and, without disturbing Sergeant Payne, went down the narrow corridor to the communal bath, took one look at it, and decided he would just have to remain unwashed until they found a decent hotel.
Then-with less trouble than he expected to have-he got directions in the form of a hand-drawn map to the Piaf Mill, and got in the Jaguar and drove there.
He had a little trouble getting the shots he wanted. There were half a dozen French gendarmes guarding the place, and when they spotted him, they tried to run him off. But he finally got what he wanted, and even a shot of Isaac “Fort” Festung, standing in the doorway of the ancient mill house.
Then he drove back to Le Relais with a sense of mission accomplished. He had all he needed. He’d wake Matty up, they’d get some breakfast, and then “Sayonara, Cognac-Boeuf! Or whatever the hell this place is called.”
He had already stopped the Jaguar when he remembered he had forgotten to take the telephone with him. He had planned to see how much of a charge it would take plugged into the Jaguar’s cigarette lighter hole.