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At immigration control, Jonathan watched with anxiety as his passport was scanned and whatever information its security strip held was displayed on the official’s monitor. Five seconds passed-an eternity by Jonathan’s newly calibrated soul.

“The purpose of your visit?”

“Business,” said Jonathan.

The official compared Jonathan to his picture, then brought down his stamp. “I wish you a pleasant stay.”

Jonathan accepted the passport in return, then stood for a moment like an idiot before realizing that the passport was good and he had been cleared to continue.

As instructed, he waited five minutes after seeing Danni pick up her luggage and clear customs before following suit. It was easier said than done. With typical Swiss efficiency, his bag was already on the carousel when he arrived, and he had to force himself to stand still and watch it go past again and again.

Suitcase in hand, he left the terminal and crossed the street to Parking Structure B. A gray minivan was parked at the farthermost recesses of the third floor. He opened the door and saw Danni in the rear seat, cloaked in shadow. “Get in,” she said.

“Now, please, Dr. Ransom,” said the driver. “We have a bit of a drive ahead of us.” English with a hard Swiss-German accent. The driver was a compact man with sloped shoulders, a stern countenance, and gray hair cut to a commando’s stubble. Jonathan’s breath caught.

“You?”

“Hello again,” said Marcus von Daniken, director of the Service of Analysis and Protection, Switzerland’s counterespionage agency. “Please shut the door. I have the heat on.”

Jonathan climbed into the middle seat and pulled the door closed. “How’s your arm?”

“I won’t be playing tennis anytime soon, but at least I can still watch it on television.”

Von Daniken had been wounded helping Jonathan and Emma thwart the attack on the Israeli jetliner ten months before.

“So you know Connor?” asked Jonathan.

“Frank and I are colleagues of long standing. The affair last February brought us into closer contact and enabled us to recognize our mutual interests. I help when I can.”

“It’s good to see you,” said Jonathan.

“Really, Dr. Ransom, politeness is not a requisite of this profession.”

“I just mean-”

“Yes, I know what you mean.” Von Daniken met his gaze in the rearview mirror. Something close to respect pulled at his steadfast eyes. He nodded gravely, then said, “I am disappointed in one thing.”

“Oh?”

“I see you’re still hanging around with the wrong kind of woman.”

“Shut up, Marcus,” said Danni, but she didn’t mean it. Von Daniken laughed and Danni joined him, and Jonathan had the feeling of being odd man out in a shadowy, ever-shifting fraternity.

Von Daniken put the van into gear and steered them out of the parking structure and onto the superhighway. For a while they drove along the outskirts of Geneva, which in the gathering dusk was as faceless and depressing as any other central European city. Then the buildings fell away, the highway climbed a rise, and the vast expanse of Lake Geneva stretched before him, an anthracite-colored sea guarded to the west by the imposing peaks of the French Haute-Savoie.

The heat was too much, so Jonathan cracked a window. Bitterly cold air redolent of fallow farmland rushed in, stinging his nostrils. Instantly he was awake, his senses keen. He looked at Danni, her eyes closed, dozing. A flash of anger passed through him. She knew everything-why he was here, what he was to do, how he was supposed to do it-yet she refused to tell him. Need to know. The three words drove him crazy. If anyone needed to know, it was Jonathan. And he needed to know now.

The highway followed the shore of the lake, past Lausanne and Montreux and Vevey, until finally the lake narrowed to its confluence with the Rhone River and the mountains drew closer on both sides, their shadows pressing in on the valley like sentinels of the gods.

“Dammit, where are we going?” Jonathan demanded.

Danni opened her eyes. But instead of telling him once more to mind his own business, she yawned and said, “Marcus, Dr. Ransom wishes to know where we’re going. Would you be so kind as to tell him?”

“We’re going where every couple should go when there is plenty of snow and they are rich and in love,” said Von Daniken. “Gstaad.”

The Palace Hotel sits atop its own hill at the north end of the village of Gstaad, a fairy-tale castle presiding over a sugarcoated kingdom. Strands of sparkling white bulbs danced over the road leading toward it through the village. Von Daniken turned sharply right and shifted into lower gear as the van began a steep, winding climb. For a moment the hotel disappeared from view, replaced by a hillside of snow and barren birch trees. Another curve and it was there again, much larger than before, a symphony of lights and red carpets. Frock-coated chasseurs waited beneath the porte cochere to open the door.

“Help me with this, would you?” Danni extended her wrist, and Jonathan clasped the diamond tennis bracelet. She wore an emerald on her right hand and a canary yellow diamond the size of a Brazil nut on the other.

“Are they real?” he asked.

It wasn’t until the last hour of the drive to Gstaad that she’d finally briefed him on the details of his mission. According to their cover, they were Mr. and Mrs. John Robertson of Austin, Texas. He was something big in real estate. (“If they ask, say ‘land,’” Danni had advised. “In Texas, that says it all.”) And they’d come to Gstaad for a restorative holiday. Sun, skiing, and a little nip and tuck courtesy of Dr. Michel Revy. Revy was the target, the Swiss plastic surgeon Lord Balfour had contracted to travel to Pakistan to alter his appearance.

“Of course,” she answered, eyes fluttering like a debutante’s. “Baby loves her ice.”

For a moment Jonathan didn’t answer. He wasn’t shocked by the quality of their passports or the explanation of why they’d come to Gstaad and what he was to accomplish. He’d been waiting for hours, if not days, to find out, and his responsibilities weren’t as demanding as he’d expected. What shocked him was Danni’s voice. All trace of her accent had vanished. She spoke English as if she’d been brought up in the shadow of her daddy’s oil well on the great Permian Basin.

“Baby?” Jonathan looked to von Daniken for support, but the Swiss policeman was already climbing out of the van and instructing the bellmen that he would not be staying.

Check-in proceeded without a problem, if one didn’t count Jonathan’s need to consult his passport to ensure that he spelled his name correctly, “Robertson” being exotic to the novice operative’s eye. A credit card was on file, and when asked, Jonathan replied that yes, all expenses were to be placed on it. The resident manager guided Jonathan and Danni to their room and spent no less than ten minutes describing the various features controlled by the bedside panel.

Room 420 was a junior suite, with a small salon leading into a spacious bedroom. The carpet was the color of honey and decorated with patterns of the fleur-de-lis. The furniture was lush and modern. A liter of Passuger mineral water was cooling in one sterling silver ice bucket and a bottle of Veuve Clicquot in the other.

“Shall I open the champagne now?” asked the hotelier.

“No, that won’t be-” began Jonathan.

“Of course, Herr Ringgenberg,” interceded Danni, who somehow had remembered the man’s name. “We’re parched, aren’t we, darling?”