“You can thank me later.”
“I am making inquiries now as to the whereabouts of your family. They may yield something useful, or they may not. We will know soon.”
“How soon?”
“An hour, perhaps two.”
“And then what?”
“That is your decision,” he said, and I noticed for the first time how colorless his eyes were, an almost silvery gray-white, like the ice that hardens on top of old snow, the kind that can cut your ankle if you step through it the wrong way. “All I ask is that if you do choose to notify the authorities, please use discretion regarding my own involvement.”
“Don’t mention your name,” I nodded. “I get it.” I looked at him. “Why did you say that bringing Gobi here is the most dangerous thing I could have done?”
Erich hesitated as if weighing his words carefully. Before he could formulate an answer, the door behind us swung open and Gobi stepped out.
Right away I couldn’t believe how much better she looked. She was wearing a plain white flannel nightgown and slippers, with her hair wrapped up in a towel. The color had returned to her cheeks, and her eyes looked clear and bright, totally alert and oriented to her surroundings.
After walking over to Erich, she leaned in, took his hand, and murmured something to him in German. He smiled and answered back, squeezing her fingers. Then she looked to me.
“Thank you, Perry.”
“Sure,” I said stiffly. “I mean, you know, whatever. I found the key in your bag, and I didn’t know what else to do, so…”
“You did the right thing.” Gobi looked across the gymnasium and stretched up on her toes. “I spent three years in this room,” she said, “getting ready for my trip to United States.”
“You trained here?” I turned to Erich. “With him?”
She glanced up at him, and Erich nodded with that same cool, expressionless look in his eyes. “In this country,” he said, “every male must serve in the armed forces. After my father got out, he started this… hotel. We operated it together until his death, and I took over by myself. It is not really a hotel.”
“Gee, really?” I eyed the rows of machine guns mounted on the walls. “I was just going to ask about the minibar.”
Erich smiled politely. “There is a saying in certain intelligence community circles. ‘Herr Schoeneweiss runs a hotel in Zermatt that never has any guests.’ However, we do offer accommodations to special clients on a private basis.”
“Special clients?”
“Not everything that I teach here is strictly legal. In fact, some of it is very illegal. There is a soundproof firing and demolition range in the basement. Intelligence, survival, evasion and interrogation tactics, wiretapping and surveillance. The only thing I do not give instruction on is-”
“Driving?”
Erich raised one eyebrow, surprised for the first time. “How did you know?”
“Lucky guess.” I was thinking of Broadway, down by Union Square, the smoking-rubber smell of the Jaguar’s tires as I’d made the turn onto Fourteenth Street with Gobi next to me, calculating distances. “I’ve done a bit of that myself.”
Erich finally let me back into his living quarters, where I caught a shower and changed into an anonymous pair of slightly too-big jeans and black long-sleeved T-shirt that nonetheless felt great compared to the uber-stylish Euro-suit I’d been wearing since Venice. When I came out, he was in the kitchen, dicing garlic while Gobi made a fruit salad. I stood there while she speed-chopped pineapple, mango, and cantaloupe. It was like watching some high-octane mashup of black ops and the Food Network.
“What’s that?” I asked.
“Spinach frittata.”
“Not that.” I pointed. “That.”
Erich glanced over his shoulder into the adjacent room, at the computer monitor on the desk. I recognized Paula’s iPad wired into the CPU as an endless row of IP addresses scrolled upward across the screen.
“I am scanning the incoming and outgoing messages through the iPad, specifically the e-mail of the photo she received. Depending on the level of encryption that your girlfriend was using-”
“Ex-girlfriend.”
“Of course.”
I took a breath. “Any luck?”
“Some, yes.” He walked over to the desk and clicked the mouse, slowing the data flow to check individual lines of code. “Unfortunately, it looks as though Armitage’s people are rerouting messages through several other servers. According to this, your family may be in Reykjavik, Port-Au-Prince, or Las Vegas, or any of several European cities.”
“You can’t pinpoint it any better than that?”
“It will take more time. And perhaps faster equipment than I have here.” He produced a cell phone and glanced down at Gobi as he stepped out of the room. “Excuse me.”
I waited until the door clicked shut behind him, and looked across the table at Gobi. She had finished with the salad and was looking around for something else to chop up. “So, when you were training with him, did you, you know… stay here?”
She smiled a little and put down the knife. “You mean, did we sleep together?”
“Forget it,” I said. “Not my business.”
“When I first came here, my life had been torn apart by what happened to my sister.” The smile slipped away. “I was consumed by rage and grief. Erich taught me many things.”
“Okay.”
She raised an eyebrow. “You should not ask questions, Perry, if you do not want answers.”
“Whatever.”
“You are jealous.”
“Please.” I felt the tips of my ears glowing hot, a feeling that I hated, especially because I knew it was obvious to anyone looking at me that I was blushing. “You and me-”
“Are you still virgin, yes?”
“Okay,” I said, “so not a relevant topic of conversation at this point.”
“That woman Paula. All the time that you were together, you and she did not ever-”
“She wasn’t the one,” I blurted out. I don’t know where that came from. I certainly didn’t intend on telling Gobi any more than I already had about my own life, and up till that moment, I’d never really thought about why Paula and I hadn’t had sex. I’d just assumed it was my hang-up, virginal inertia, fear of the unknown, whatever it was, and dealt with it in private, on my own. Yet here we were in the middle of Switzerland, dissecting the whole thing under bright lights like the squirming toad that it was.
“You are looking for the quiet type?” she asked.
“Actually,” I said, “at this point I’d settle for the not-actively-trying-to-kill-me type.”
“I read all those e-mails you sent, Perry. Every last one.” Now she was sitting directly in front of me, so close that I could hear her breathing. “You know how hard it was for me not to answer? To not tell you where I was?”
“Yeah, well, you did the right thing,” I said. “I mean, we can’t even share the same continent without somebody turning up dead.”
She made a mock frown. “Is deal-breaker then?”
“What?”
“Me and you.”
“Is bigtime deal-breaker, yeah.”
“Well, whoever she is”-Gobi smiled again and picked up the dishes, putting them in the sink-“I hope you find her before you get yourself killed.”
28. “King of Pain” — The Police
After a late breakfast I lay down on Erich’s couch, propped my head on the armrest, and let my eyelids sink shut. I’d only intended to rest for a minute, but last night’s trip must have completely sandbagged me, because when I finally opened my eyes, long shadows had filled the studio, and it felt like evening.
“What time is it?” I sat up, disoriented, trying to make sense of the room around me. “How long have I been asleep?”
Erich looked down at me. “Most of the day.”
“You didn’t wake me up?”
“You looked like you could use the rest.” He was wearing a white judogi with a thick belt and heavy weave that I only recognized because I’d taken a year of judo back when I was nine.