The English Assassin
collection. He told her the things he had learned from Emil Jacobi and that the professor had been killed the previous night in his apartment in Lyons. Finally, he told her about the documents he had found in her father’s desk—the documents linking him to Hitler’s spymaster, Walter Schellenberg.
When he was finished, he laid the photographs on the bed and went into the bathroom to give her a moment of privacy. He heard the click of the bedside lamp and saw light seeping beneath the bathroom door. He ran water in the sink and counted slowly in his head. When an appropriate amount of time had passed, he went back into the bedroom. He found her coiled into a ball, her body silently convulsing, her hand clutching the photograph of her father, admiring the view at Berchtesgaden with Adolf Hitler and Heinrich Himmler.
Gabriel pulled it from her grasp before she could destroy it. Then he placed his hand on her head and stroked her hair. Anna’s weeping finally became audible. She choked and began to cough, a heavy smoker’s cough that left her gasping for breath.
Finally, she looked up at Gabriel. “If my mother ever saw that picture —” She hesitated, her mouth open, tears streaming down her cheeks. “She would have—”
But Gabriel pressed the palm of his hand against her lips before she could utter the words. He didn’t want her to say the rest. There was no need. If her mother had seen that picture, she would have killed herself, he thought. She would have dug her own grave, put a gun into her mouth, and killed herself.
THIStime it was Anna’s turn to retreat into the bathroom. When she returned she was calm, but her eyes were raw, and her skin was without color. She sat at the end of the bed with the photographs and documents in her hand. “What’s this?”
“It looks like a list of numbered accounts.”
“Whose numbered accounts?”
“The names are German. We can only guess at who they really are.”
She studied the list carefully, brow furrowed.
“My mother was born on Christmas Day, 1933. Did I ever tell you that?”
“Your mother’s birth date has never come up between us, Anna. Why is it relevant now?”
She handed him the list. “Look at the last name on the list.”
Gabriel took it from her. His eyes settled on the final name and number: Alois Ritter 251233126.
He looked up. “So?”
“Isn’t it interesting that a man with the same initials as my father has an account number in which the first six digits match my mother’s birthday?”
Gabriel looked at the list again: Alois Ritter . . . AR . . . 251233 . . . Christmas Day, 1933 . . .
He lowered the paper and looked at Anna. “What about the last three numbers? Do they mean anything to you?”
“I’m afraid they don’t.”
Gabriel looked at the numbers and closed his eyes. 126 . . . Somewhere, at some point, he was certain he had seen them in connection with this case. He had been cursed with a flawless memory. He never forgot anything. The brushstrokes he had used to heal the painting of Saint Stephen in the cathedral. The tune that had been playing on the radio the night he had fled the Niederdorf after killing Ali Hamidi. The smell of olives on Leah’s breath when he had kissed her good-bye for the last time.
Then, after a moment, the place where he had seen the number 126.
ANNAcarried a picture of her brother always. It was the last photo ever taken of him—leading a stage of the Tour of Switzerland the afternoon of his death. Gabriel had seen the same photograph in the desk of Augustus Rolfe. He looked at the number attached to the frame of the bicycle and the back of his jersey: 126.
Anna said, “It looks like we’re going back to Zurich.”
“We have to do something about your passport. And your appearance.”
“What’s wrong with my passport?”
“It has your name in it.”
“And my appearance?”
“Absolutely nothing. That’s the problem.”
He picked up the telephone and dialed.
THEgirl called Hannah Landau came to the hotel room at ten o’clock that night. She wore bangles on her wrists and smelled of jasmine. The case hanging from her arm was not unlike the one Gabriel used for his paintbrushes and pigments. She spoke to Gabriel for a moment, then drew Anna into the bathroom by the hand and closed the door.
One hour later, Anna emerged. Her shoulder-length blond hair had been cropped short and dyed black; her green eyes had been turned blue by
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