“Come on, Stocker, let us not be petty,” Sones said. “They probably spent it, hiring that boat, chalk it up to profit and loss.”
“And what about my boat?” the striped-shirted man cried. “Who’s going to pay for the damages?”
“You are,” Lieutenant Gonzales said coldly. “Or would you rather I looked into your dealings with criminals, attempts to meet ships on the high seas outside territorial waters, attempts ...”
“I relish the opportunity to repair it myself, teniente. Please excuse me.”
“How did you track me down here?” Tony asked the policeman as they trudged back to the cars.
“An accident, I am forced to admit. We monitor the Agenzia Terza’s CB wave length, just as they monitor ours. I came simply to see what the excitement was, it was a happy surprise to find you here. Now, much as I enjoy your company, I sincerely hope that you will be leaving Mexico soon. You seem to draw a good deal of trouble, Mr. Hawkin.”
“Lieutenant, I swear, as much as I love Mexico I shall be on the next plane out of here.”
As they reached the cars Sones drew Tony aside.
“Listen,” he said, “what about the Russian girl? We cannot have word of this fiasco leaking back to Moscow.”
“Don’t worry about that, she’s a double agent who reports to the Albanians and everything she knows goes right to Peking. You can use her to funnel any kind of information you want directly to China.”
“How do you know?”
“I wormed it out of her!”
“You are going to be a good agent, even if you are not a killer, Hawkin.” He hurried away.
Tony squeezed in comfortably next to Lizveta Zlotnikova who was holding the forged painting.
“The Cellini is safe and on its way back to Italy. What you have there is all that is left of the Da Vinci. The rest really was destroyed in the bombing. No one else seems to care about it so why don’t you keep it?”
“That is very kind of you, Tony. The fragment, analysis, most valuable. I am sorry I said unkind things about you. When you are in New York you must come see me at the museum.”
“I’ll do better. I’ll take you out. Do you play ping-pong?”
“What ... ?”
“Nothing. Dinner, a show, we’ll eat together.”
He squeezed her hand and she squeezed back, strongly. There was the roar as of many disturbed wasp nests around them as the ranked motor scooters backfired to life, drowning out the complaints of the men who were rowing the unwieldy fishing boat out to sea.
Eighteen
“You will get a commendation,” Sones said.
“I don’t want a commendation,” Tony answered. “I just want out. No, sonny, the big gold FBI badges are a dollar ninety-eight. For your two bits all you can get is a chocolate hand grenade.”
“That is not an easy thing to do, Hawkin, you should realize that. You know a lot about the workings of the FBI, you are an experienced field agent, and besides that He thinks that you did a great job.”
“Wonderful, then why can’t He get me out.”
“Quiet!” Sones hissed out of the corner of his mouth. “Don’t let her hear you.”
“And that’s another reason I want out. Well, Sophie, a nice long lunch hour that runs fifteen minutes late?”
“Would you believe the service was so awful, I could hardly get waited on, you can’t blame me, can you?”
“I don’t blame anyone. Take over here, I’ll be in my office.” As they walked down the hall he shook his thumb back at the sturdy laboring figure of Sophie Feinberg now industriously selling tinted portraits, fingerprint kits, candy bullets, “Let her have my job so I can go back to the National Gallery. She knows as much about it as I do by now. More maybe, since she reads my mail even before I do.”
“She cannot do it, Sophie is a plant, a double agent whom we are keeping an eye on.”
“I knew it! I bet she works for the CIA?”
“She wants you to think that, but she reports to Treasury first.
They are still upset over that hundred dollars you know, I’ve seen their orders to her.”
“I bet she’s not even Jewish.”
“You have an agent’s eye, Hawkin. I told Him that. Her real name, we think, is Mary O’Brien, the other is a cover she took when she was penetrating the B’nai Brith.”
“Where are we going? We just passed my office.”
“Security. Impossible to tell you until we get to a secure part of the building.”
“Can’t you even hint? Am I going to be shot?”
“Usually a sense of humor is a handicap in an agent, but I do appreciate yours. I can tell you this much. Your civil service grade will be increased one rank ...”
“With pay to match?”
“Naturally. And you are going to be personally congratulated for the work you did on Operation Buttercup. Even though we lost Davidson the operation is graded a success, his killer is in custody in Mexico and the CIA is still smarting over the way they bungled the disposal job on Davidson’s body. Higginson has been transferred. He is opening a new branch of Coronel Glanders in Santiago, Chile. Very cold there.”
“All of which is very nice, but what is so secret about that that you couldn’t tell me downstairs?” They emerged from a top security elevator and walked swiftly down the sound-proofed hall.
“What I could not tell you there were all the details and, my boy, I do envy you. I said personally congratulated, did you hear that? Personally. You are really part of the family now.”
They stopped before large, golden, double doors, which slowly opened before them, moved by unseen hands. A beam of golden light shone through and wrapped them in its radiance.
They stepped forward, heads high, to the sound of distant bugles.