The Black Widow (Gabriel Allon #16) - Daniel Silva Page 0,57

or hesitation. Soon, warned Dina, others would be asking the questions.

She was visited during this time by a number of observers who sat in on her lessons but did not participate in any way. There was a tough-looking man with cropped dark hair and a pockmarked face. There was a bald, tweedy man who conducted himself with the air of an Oxford don. There was an elfin figure with thinning, flyaway hair whose face, try as she might, Natalie could never seem to recall. And, lastly, there was a tall, lanky man with pale bloodless skin and eyes the color of glacial ice. When Natalie asked Dina his name, she was met by a reproachful glare. “Leila would never be attracted to a non-Muslim,” she admonished her pupil, “let alone a Jew. Leila is in love with the memory of Ziad. No one will ever take his place.”

He came to Nahalal on two other occasions, both times accompanied by the wispy-haired man with an elusive face. They looked on judgmentally as Dina pressed Natalie on the small details of Leila’s relationship with Ziad—the restaurant where they ate on their first date, the food they ordered, their first kiss, their final e-mail. Ziad had sent it from an Internet café in Amman while waiting for a courier to take him across the border into Iraq. The next morning he was arrested. They never spoke again.

“Do you remember what he wrote to you?” asked Dina.

“He was convinced he was being followed.”

“And what did you say to him?”

“I told him I was concerned for his safety. I asked him to get on the next plane to Paris.”

“No, Leila, your exact words. This is your final communication with a man you loved,” Dina added, waving a piece of paper that purported to contain the text of the e-mail exchange. “Surely, you remember the last thing you said to Ziad before he was arrested.”

“I said I was sick with worry. I begged him to leave.”

“But that’s not all you said. You told him he could stay with a relative of yours, is that not correct?”

“Yes.”

“Who was this relative?”

“My aunt.”

“Your mother’s sister?”

“Correct.”

“She lives in Amman?”

“In Zarqa.”

“The camp or the town?”

“The town.”

“Did you tell her that Ziad was coming to Jordan?”

“No.”

“Did you tell your mother or father?”

“No.”

“What about the French police?”

“No.”

“And your contact in Jordanian intelligence? Did you tell him, Leila?”

“What?”

“Answer the question,” snapped Dina.

“I don’t have a contact in Jordanian intelligence.”

“Did you betray Ziad to the Jordanians?”

“No.”

“Are you responsible for his death?”

“No.”

“And the night of your first date?” Dina asked, tacking suddenly. “Did you drink wine with dinner?”

“No.”

“Why not?”

“It is haram,” said Natalie.

That night, when she retired to her room, the volume of Darwish was back on her bedside table. She would be leaving soon, she thought. It was only a question of when.

That same question—the question of when—was the subject of a meeting between Gabriel and Uzi Navot at King Saul Boulevard later that evening. Between them, arrayed upon Navot’s conference table, were the written conclusions of the various trainers, physicians, and psychiatric specialists assigned to the case. All stated that Natalie Mizrahi was of sound mind and body, and more than capable of carrying out the mission for which she had been recruited. None of the reports, however, were as important as the opinions of the chief of the Office and the man who would succeed him. Both were veteran field operatives who had spent much of their careers working under assumed identities. And they alone would suffer the consequences were anything to go wrong.

“It’s only France,” said Navot.

“Yes,” said Gabriel darkly. “Nothing ever happens in France.”

There was a silence.

“Well?” Navot asked finally.

“I’d like to give her one more test.”

“She’s been tested. And she’s passed every one with flying colors.”

“Let’s get her out of her comfort zone.”

“A murder board?”

“A peer review,” offered Gabriel.

“How rough?”

“Rough enough to expose any flaws.”

“Who do you want to handle it?”

“Yaakov.”

“Yaakov would scare me.”

“That’s the point, Uzi.”

“How soon do you want to do it?”

Gabriel looked at his wristwatch. Navot reached for the phone.

They came for her in the hour before dawn, when she was dreaming of the lemon groves of Sumayriyya. There were three of them—or was it four? Natalie couldn’t be sure; the room was in darkness, and her captors wore black. They pulled a hood over her, bound her hands with packing tape, and frog-marched her down the stairs. Outside, the grass of the garden was wet beneath her bare feet, and the air was cold and heavy

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