"Music," he replied.
"Mozart?"
"A combination of different things."
He had met Mircea after being released from prison the first time. She'd been a dissident and had an excellent ear for politics, but not for music.
Mircea gave him a playful tap.
"When you see Julian, then your attention will be with us," she said, referring to their eight-year-old son, who was to meet them at their mountain home near Stulpicani with his nanny. "Until then, you are a man of the state. Or of music."
"Both." Voda smiled, then looked out the car window, admiring the countryside.
"You can put the gun away," Danny told the shadow in the hallway behind the open door. "I'm Danny Freah."
"Let me see your hands," a woman replied.
Danny held his hands out. "How many black guys you think there are in Romania? Black Americans? Up here? Looking for you?"
"Keep the hands where I can see them."
"Usually we say please." Danny raised his arms higher. "We have only a half hour to make the rendezvous. A little less."
The shadow took a step forward, and the woman's features became more distinct. She was about five-six, not much more than 110 pounds. Dark hair, green eyes, hard expression.
"Like I said, we have less than a half hour. And we have some driving to do."
Sorina Viorica took another step forward. The pistol in her hand was aimed squarely at his face.
"Where's your gun?" she asked.
"I don't have any."
"I don't believe you. Unzip your coat."
Danny slowly complied. He'd left his service pistol in the car, unsure what the local laws were about civilians carrying them.
"Turn around," she told him.
Danny sighed but complied again. He held his coat up. She took two steps toward him — he knew he could swing around and grab her, knock the weapon out of her hand. But there was no sense in that.
She patted him down quickly. A light touch — she had done it before.
"Why aren't you armed?" she asked, stepping back. "Because I thought it would be unnecessary," he said, turning back around. "All right. Let's go." "Don't you have a bag?" "I have everything I need."
Danny led her out to the street, crossing quickly. Sorina hung back, checking her surroundings, making sure she wasn't being set up. Inside the car, she pulled her jacket tight around her neck, though the heat was blasting.
"Do you have a cig?" she asked.
"Cigarette?"
"Yes."
"I'm afraid I don't." She frowned, looked out the window. "I haven't smoked in years," she said. "But today I feel like it."
"You want to know the itinerary?" "Mark explained it."
"I'll be with you until I hear from them. Myself and another one of my men."
She shrugged. Danny watched her stare out of the side of the car, her eyes focused far away.
She turned suddenly, caught him looking at her.
"Have you ever left your home?" she asked. She sounded as if she were accusing him of a crime.
"All the time," said Danny.
"And known you were not coming back?"
"No."
"It's different."
"I'd guess it would be."
She frowned, as if that wasn't the answer she wanted, then turned back toward the window.
It started to snow a few minutes before they got to the field Danny had picked for the rendezvous. The flakes were big disks, circles of white that flipped over like falling bingo chips scattering across the road. Though sparse, they were thick and heavy, slow to melt; as they landed on the windshield of the car they made large ovals, giving way slowly to the heat of the glass.
"An aircraft called an Osprey is coming for us," Danny told her as he pulled to the side of the road. "It can land like a helicopter but flies like a plane. It has some heavy cannon under the nose."
Sorina said nothing.
"I'm just telling you because it can look pretty fierce when you first see it. It's black."
"I've seen things much fiercer than helicopters, Captain." "You can call me Danny." She didn't answer.
Danny got out of the car and walked around to the trunk, where he'd left a rucksack with some gear. None of the lights in the houses across the street were on, but there was a glow farther down, near the church and the center of the city. Behind them to the east the thick layer of clouds were preventing the sun from opening the day with a grand display, tinting its rays dark gray and obscuring the horizon.
"The weather is my future," said Sorina. And then she continued speaking to herself in Romanian.
Danny felt no pity — the memory of her friends' massacre remained vivid — but he was curious about her. He wondered why she had decided to help; Stoner hadn't said.
Most likely, he thought, it had to do with money. Yet her austere air and simple clothes seemed to indicate a person not moved by material possessions.
Revenge? Perhaps. Or maybe she'd traded her life. But she moved like a person already dead, a wary ghost waiting for her ride to oblivion.
He heard the heavy whomp of the aircraft's rotors in the distance.
"They're coming," he said.
Sorina stared toward the glow of the church, opposite the direction of the Osprey as the plane came in. Just as he turned to start for the rear ramp, Danny saw her reach her finger toward her eye. But he couldn't tell in the dim light if she was brushing away grit or a tear.
General Locusta studied the lawn and surrounding property of President Voda's mountain retreat. It had been quite some time since it was farmed, and Locusta guessed it had never been very profitable. The property rose sharply behind the house and fell off across the road in front of it; there were large rock formations, and tilling the fields had to be difficult. With the exception of the front lawn, trees had long ago taken over whatever had been cultivated.
The driver stopped in front of the house. Locusta got out, taking his briefcase with him. A man in a heavy overcoat watched him from the front steps. He was a bodyguard, though his weapon was concealed under his coat. In accordance with Voda's wishes, only the president's personal security team was stationed at the house. Locusta had a company of men a half mile down the road, ready to respond in an emergency.
Or not, as the case might be.
"The president is waiting in the den," said Paul Sergi, meeting the general outside the door of the house.
"Very good," said Locusta, ignoring the aide's arrogant tone. Sergi, Voda's chief assistant and secretary, had never gotten along with anyone in the military.
Inside the house, Locusta turned to the left instead of the right. As he corrected his mistake, he caught a glimpse of
Voda's son, Julian, constructing some sort of contraption out of a set of Lego blocks. The boy whipped it upward — obviously it was meant to be some sort of airplane or spaceship, for he made whooshing noises as he moved it through the air.
Locusta smiled at the boy, then felt his conscience twinge. He hadn't realized the child would be here.
It was a brief twinge. These were the fortunes of war.
Sergi knocked on the study door, then pushed it open. The president was working at his desk, his wife standing next to him. Locusta gave her a feigned smile — he would have no qualms about her death; her record as an antipatriot was very clear.
"General, thank you for coming," said Voda, rising. He glanced at his wife as he extended his hand to shake.
"I'll leave you men to talk," said Mircea. She gave Locusta a patently phony smile as she left.
Voda sat in one of the chairs at the side, gesturing for Lo-custa to take the other. The seat was old, its leather well worn, but it was very comfortable.