he thinks these people know where his wife is.”
“He shot at my men.”
“Did you see that?”
Howell hesitated. “No.”
August thanked the doctor, who left without a word. Then he turned to Howell. “Novem Soles.”
“What?”
“You asked him about the words Novem Soles. Is it a group? Could these people be it?”
“These people are apparently cheap traffickers. I doubt they’ve endowed themselves with some grand Latin name.”
“What’s Novem Soles, Howell?”
Howell crossed his arms. “A term heard mentioned on some monitored lines tied to criminal rings, or to government officials who were on the take. I don’t know if it’s a group, or a code name for a person, or what it is.”
“That dead man in Brooklyn had a tattoo of a stylized nine and a sun. Novem soles, nine suns. I didn’t sleep through Latin.”
“Maybe Sam Capra was working with these people on the bombing, and now they want him dead. Or maybe he’s turned against us since we let him walk.”
“We’ve thrown him away; are you surprised he’s landed with trash?” August said.
“The hard, awful truth is that the only survivors of the London office are the Capras. Someone recruited either Lucy or Sam, or both of them. They killed our people. They attacked us with impunity. That’s what’s unacceptable. He’s acting like a criminal. Pretty it up how you want it, August, but he’s a criminal, too.”
“You told him that you had proof he was innocent.”
“I lied,” Howell said. “It was a considered decision to let him go, to see what he did.”
“Then let’s use our contacts in the underworld here. Ferret him out. I’ll talk to him.”
“You,” Howell said, “are going home, soon as we can get you a plane.”
“Sir, don’t. Let me stay.”
“You’ve been shot, Agent Holdwine. Go home.”
“You’re going to kill Sam,” August said.
“Only if he tries to kill me,” Howell said.
“Sir, I request permission to stay. My injury is not that serious, and—”
“Permission denied. Get some rest, August. Read a good book, watch TV. You’ve earned some quiet.”
Howell walked out, shutting the door behind him. On the other side of the door, August considered. He still had the spare phone in his pocket, the number that he’d given to Sam in case someone came after him back in Brooklyn. It had never been used. He felt bad that Sam hadn’t called him after the attack in his apartment. Either Sam didn’t trust him, August thought, or he liked him too much to get him involved. But he still had a few hours in Amsterdam to hope for the phone to ring.
58
DO YOU KNOW WHERE DE Pijp is?”
“Yes.” It was the same district as the Albert Cuyp Market, where Gregor’s shop was.
“Drive there.” Piet gave me directions and an address and dialed his phone. “Yes. Hello. Listen, I have bad news. The machinists’ shop was compromised. Nic turned on us, he was spying. I have an associate who exposed him.” Great, he was claiming ownership of me. “Nic might have been working for the same employer as the Turk. We were attacked, not by police, possibly by rivals. The twins are dead, our cover shipment lost. What do you want to do?”
This had to be Edward. And Edward would have to summon Piet for a meeting. Then I was set. I’d already killed two of them. I figured, from the video I’d seen, that there were about nine more who could damn Yasmin Zaid as a killer.
Nine targets and Edward. I had no weapons on me and couldn’t have counted on taking any because I would be searched before I was brought anywhere close to Edward’s inner circle. Fine. I would have to start killing them before he saw me, before he recognized me as Lucy Capra’s husband. With what? My bare hands?
Bahjat Zaid wanted them all dead. But Zaid had lied to me, and avoided me, and given this group weapons, if Piet was to be believed, all without telling me. I didn’t like being a pawn. So I didn’t feel that I had to follow his orders to the letter. Grab his daughter and get out was good enough for me. And that alone was going to be a nearly insurmountable challenge.
“We lost the shipments, but my partner says he knows how to get replacements.” He listened. Then said yes three times. He clicked off the phone.
“Where are these shipments we can take over?” he asked.
“You can’t steal a legit shipment,” I said. “You can’t redirect it, not if you want to be sure of total