The Hostage - By W. E. B. Griffin Page 0,124

Julio and the autopista. As soon as the street is clear, the ambassador’s car, the embassy Yukons—three, one for the casket, two for the honor guard—plus a bus for the Argentine soldiers, back in here with the SIDE tail vehicles. Mass is over, honor guard moves casket to Yukons, that convoy takes same route to Ezeiza. Okay with you?”

“Fine.”

“Where’s your car?”

“Around the corner,” Castillo said, gesturing. “With two SIDE cars.”

“I’d say go with the ambassador, but these SIDE people are not going to like it if they’re not in the parade. Your call.”

“I’d say screw them, but they’re liable to insist and cause trouble.”

“I agree. I’ll have your car and theirs lined up back there,” Santini said, pointing to the rear of the cathedral. “When the SIDE and embassy lead cars pull out of the street, the ambassador’s car will get in the line, and then after the Yukon with the casket passes, you’ll get in the line with your SIDE cars, then everybody else. Okay?”

“Tony, you know what you’re doing. We’ll do whatever you think we should.”

Santini nodded, then turned to the man with the Uzi. “You heard that?”

“Yes, sir.”

“Set it up.”

“Yes, sir.”

Santini raised his voice for the benefit of those out of earshot: “I’m going to check inside. If everything looks all right, we take the Mastersons in.”

“You want me to go inside with you?” Castillo asked.

“Your call, Charley.”

“I’ll follow the Mastersons in,” Castillo said.

Santini nodded and entered the cathedral. Ninety seconds later, he came out again.

“Okay, we move them!” he ordered, and walked quickly to the closest Yukon and opened the rear side door.

A very tall slim girl of thirteen or so got out first. Santini smiled at her, then showed her the door to the cathedral. Then a ten-year-old boy got out and followed his sister into the cathedral, and then Mrs. Masterson climbed down from the Yukon. She looked at Castillo, and then turned back to the truck.

“Just climb over the seat, Jim,” she ordered, and then a six-year-old appeared in the open door.

Mrs. Masterson put her arm around his shoulders and led him toward the door in the cathedral wall.

As she passed Castillo, she said: “I can’t tell you how sorry I am about Betty and the Marine.”

Castillo didn’t reply.

The only difference between the Masterson kids and Pevsner’s kids is the color of their skin. Same sexes, same ages, same intelligent eyes.

Wrong. There’s one more difference: Some sonofabitch shot the Masterson kids’ daddy.

Castillo followed Mrs. Masterson and the six-year-old into the cathedral.

The President of the Republic of Argentina, whose face Castillo recognized, was now sitting across the nave of the cathedral with another man and two women, who Castillo guessed were the foreign minister and the appropriate wives. Colonel Gellini stood behind the President.

The organ, which had been playing softly, suddenly changed pitch and volume, and Castillo heard the scuffling of feet as people stood up.

Thirty seconds later a crucifer appeared in the nave, carrying an enormous golden cross and leading a long procession of richly garbed clergy, in two parallel columns, which split to go around the flag-draped casket of the late J. Winslow Masterson.

[TWO]

Estancia Shangri-La Tacuarembó Province República Oriental del Uruguay 1045 25 July 2005

Jean-Paul Bertrand had been sitting in his silk Sulka dressing robe before the wide, flat-screen Sony television in his bedroom since nine o’clock, watching the ceremonies marking the departure of J. Winslow Masterson from Argentina, first on Argentina’s Channel Nine, and then on BBC, CNN, and Deutsche Welle, and now on Channel Nine again.

Jean-Paul Lorimer had acquired a Uruguayan immigration stamp on Jean-Paul Bertrand’s Lebanese passport indicating Bertrand had legally entered Uruguay on July fourth, and another document dated the next day attesting to his legal residence in that country as an immigrant.

July fourth, of course, predated by nine days Jean-PaulLorimer’s having gone missing from his apartment in Paris. It was unlikely that any party attempting to find Lorimer would be interested in anyone crossing any border on a date prior to a date Lorimer was known to have been in Paris.

He could, of course, have picked any date to be placed on the passport—the immigration stamp and the Certificate of Legal Residence had cost him ten thousand U.S. dollars in cash—but he had picked, as a fey notion, July fourth because it was now his, as well as the United States’, independence day.

Once Jean-Paul Bertrand had the documents in his safe at Shangri-La, Jean-Paul Lorimer had ceased to exist, and Jean-Paul Bertrand could—after a suitable period, of

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