The Defector
supervisor, me , abreast of all her movements, personal and professional. Perhaps you would be good enough to remind her of that fact.”
“I’ll try, Uzi, but she never listens to a thing I say.”
Navot glared at his wristwatch. A large stainless steel device, it did everything except keep accurate time. It was a newer version of the one worn by Shamron, which is why Navot had bought it in the first place.
“I have some business in Paris and Brussels. I’ll be back here in three days to pick up you and Chiara. We’ll go back to Israel together.”
“I’m sure we can find the airport by ourselves, Uzi. We’re both well trained.”
“That’s what concerns me.” Navot turned around and looked at the bodyguards. “And by the way, they’re staying here with you. Think of them as heavily armed houseguests.”
“I don’t need them.”
“You don’t have a choice,” Navot said.
“I assume they don’t speak Italian.”
“They’re settler boys from Judea and Samaria. They barely speak English.”
“So how am I supposed to explain them to the staff ?”
“That’s not my problem.” Navot held a trio of thick fingers in front of Gabriel’s face. “You have three days to finish that damn painting. Three days. Then you and your wife are going home.”
7
VILLA DEI FIORI, UMBRIA
GABRIEL’S STUDIO was in semidarkness, the altarpiece shrouded by gloom. He attempted to walk past it but could not—as always, the pull of a work in progress was far too strong. Switching on a single halogen lamp, he gazed at the pale hand reaching toward the apex of the panel. For an instant, it belonged not to Saint Peter but to Grigori Bulganov. And it was reaching not toward God but toward Gabriel.
Promise me one thing, Gabriel. Promise me I won’t end up in an unmarked grave.
The vision was disturbed by the sound of singing. Gabriel switched off the lamp and climbed the stone steps to his room. The bed, unmade when he left, now looked as if it had been prepared for a photo shoot by a professional stylist. Chiara was executing one final adjustment to a pair of decorative pillows, two useless disks trimmed in white lace that Gabriel always hurled on the floor before climbing between the sheets. An overnight bag lay at the foot, along with a Beretta 9mm. Gabriel placed the weapon in the top drawer of the nightstand and lowered the volume on the radio.
Chiara looked up, as if surprised by his presence. She was wearing faded blue jeans, a beige sweater, and suede boots that added two inches to her tall frame. Her riotous dark hair was constrained by a clasp at the nape of her neck and pulled forward over one shoulder. Her caramel-colored eyes were a shade darker than normal. It was not a good sign. Chiara’s eyes were a reliable barometer of her mood.
“I didn’t hear you drive up.”
“Maybe you shouldn’t play the radio so loudly.”
“Why didn’t Margherita make the bed?”
“I told her not to come in here while you were away.”
“And of course you couldn’t be bothered.”
“I couldn’t find the instructions.”
She gave him a slow shake of the head to show her disappointment. “If you can restore Old Master paintings, Gabriel, you can make a bed. What did you do when you were a boy?”
“My mother tried to force me.”
“And?”
“I slept on top of the bedding.”
“No wonder Shamron recruited you.”
“Actually, the Office psychologists found it revelatory. They said it displayed a spirit of independence and the ability to solve problems.”
“So is that why you refuse to make it now? Because you want to demonstrate your independence?”
Gabriel answered her with a kiss. Her lips were very warm.
“How was Venice?”
“Almost bearable. When the weather is cold and rainy, it’s almost possible to imagine Venice is still a real city. The Piazza di San Marco is overrun with tourists, of course. They drink their ten-euro cups of cappuccino and pose for photographs with those awful pigeons. Tell me, Gabriel, what kind of holiday is that?”
“I thought the mayor drove the birdseed vendors out of business.”
“The tourists feed them anyway. If they love the pigeons so much, maybe they should take them home as souvenirs. Do you know how many tourists came to Venice this year?”
“Twenty million.”
“That’s right. If each person took just one of those filthy birds, the problem would be solved within a few months.”
It was odd to hear Chiara speak so harshly of
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