Chapter Twenty-Seven #2
So, even though there were surely ways to breach Chateau Laurent, Court knew it would be tough to breach without laying up for hours and hours to get a feel for the security measures.
He would not have hours and hours. A couple hours’ watch at most before daylight.
And again, that was only if he left Paris right now, and that was not his plan.
—
At one a.m., Gentry sat in the Café le Luxembourg and drank his second double espresso of the evening among the young and the beautiful on the Rue Souf flot.
A small ham sandwich sat untouched on a plate in front of him.
The coffee was bitter, but he knew the caffeine would help him through the next few hours.
That and good hydration, so he chugged his second five-euro bottle of mineral water while he pretended to read a day-old copy of Le Monde.
His eyes darted around, but they kept returning to a building across the street, number 23.
Really, Court just wanted to get up and go, get out of town without pursuing his objective in Paris.
He knew he would be taking a tremendous risk to pay a visit to the man in the apartment building across the little street, but he needed help, not just for himself but also a way to get the Fitzroys clear.
The man across the street was named Van Zan, he was Dutch, a former CIA contracted ferryman and an awesome pilot of small prop planes.
Court had planned to pay him a surprise visit, wave some cash under his nose, grossly underplay the danger in making a five a.m. trip up to Bayeux to pick up a family of four and Court himself, and then fly them low over the channel to the UK.
Van Zan was a known associate, so Lloyd would have had his phone tapped within minutes of beginning this operation and would have planted surveillance outside his door.
Court knew he couldn’t call Van Zan, but he figured he could duck past a watcher or two and drop in for a personal visit.
Yeah, it was a good plan, Court told himself as he gulped bitter espresso and pointed his unfocused eyes at the newspaper in front of his face.
But slowly he realized it wasn’t going to happen.
Sure, Court knew he could slip a couple of surveillance goons and make it in to see Van Zan.
A couple, yes.
But not a half dozen.
While sipping his espresso, he’d compromised five definite watchers, and there was another person in the crowd who did not belong.
Shit, thought Court. Not only did he now know there was no way he could get into Van Zan’s place to make him an offer, but he was beginning to feel extremely hemmed in and vulnerable, surrounded by a half dozen eagle eyes.
There were two, a young couple hanging out in the Quality Burger across the street.
They checked out each white male passerby, then jacked their heads back towards the doorway to the alcove to Van Zan’s place.
Then there was the man alone in his parked car.
He was Middle Eastern, strummed his fingers on the dash like he was listening to music, watched the crowd as they passed.
Number four stood at the bus stop in front of the Luxembourg Gardens, like he was waiting for a bus, but he never even glanced at the front of any of the buses that pulled up to see where they were going.
Five stood on a second-floor balcony, held a camera with a lens the size of a baguette, and pretended to take photos of the vibrant intersection, but Court wasn’t buying it for a second.
His “shots” were up and down the pavement below him and across the street at the alcove.
Nothing of the well-lit Panthéon up the road to his left.
Nothing of the typically French produce stands and the beautiful iron fencing around the Luxembourg Gardens.
And number six was a woman, alone, in the café just a few tables ahead of Gentry.
He’d made sure to get a table towards the back but near the window that ran along the side of the eatery.
From here he could keep an eye on everyone in the room with him while covering his face with the paper, and yet still look to his right to Van Zan’s place and those around it.
She had done the same thing, sitting just ahead.
Number six was slick. She spent 80 percent of her time looking down to her big, foamy mocha, not bouncing every glance out the window.
But her mistake was her dress and her attitude.
She was French—he could tell by clothes and countenance—but she was alone and did not seem to know anyone in the café.
A pretty French girl in her twenties who spent Saturday night alone, away from friends but still out in the crowd, in a café unfamiliar to her, in a part of town she did not know.
No, Court determined, she was a pavement artist, a watcher, a follower, paid to sit there and keep her big doughy eyes peeled.
After eating his little sandwich and finishing his coffee, after giving up on his great plan to set up a foolproof escape route after saving the Fitzroys, he decided he needed to get away, get out of town, get up to Bayeux and work something out.
His spirits had ebbed to their lowest point since yesterday morning—he was even more dejected than he’d been when sitting in the moldy pit in Laszlo’s laboratory—but Gentry knew the absolute worst thing he could do right now was sit and sulk.
He dropped a wad of euro notes on his table and slipped down a back hall to the bathroom.
After relieving himself, he continued down the hall, ducked into the kitchen like he belonged, walked straight to a back door and then through it onto the Rue Monsieur le Prince.
No one in the kitchen looked up at the man in the black suit.
The Gray Man had that ability.
—
Five minutes later, Riegel stood again on the walkway on the roof and stared through the crenellations at the moonlit gardens.
The scent of the apple orchard in the distance mixed with the cold darkness.
Riegel hoped to clear his head a bit, to get away from Lloyd and the Tech and the Belarusians and the incessant radio reports from the watchers in Paris who had yet to see anyone and the kill squads who had yet to kill anyone.
His phone chirped in his pocket. His first inclination was to ignore the call.
It was probably one of the foreign intelligence service chieftains wondering why their team hadn’t checked in and how the fuck they could have all been wiped out working on a commercial job.
Riegel knew he’d spend months or years smoothing over this catastrophe, and that was only if the Lagos contract did get signed by eight a.m. If not, and Riegel did not want to even think of this, but if not, he’d likely lose his job or at least his position.
Laurent had too much riding on this to not put every possible pressure to bear.