The Messenger
column, carrying a sign that read STOP THE HATRED NOW , was Hannah Weinberg.
“Has she ever been to Israel?”
“At least four times. Shabak is working that end of things to make certain she wasn’t sitting up in Ramallah plotting with the terrorists. I’m sure they’ll turn up nothing on her. She’s golden, Gabriel. She’s a gift from the intelligence gods.”
“Sexual preferences?”
“Men, as far as we can tell. She’s involved with a civil servant.”
“Jewish?”
“Thank God.”
“Have you been inside her flat.”
“I went in with the neviot team myself.”
Neviot teams specialized in gathering intelligence from hard targets such as apartments, offices, and hotel rooms. The unit employed some of the best break-in artists and thieves in the world. Gabriel had other plans for them later in the operation—provided, of course, Hannah Weinberg agreed to part with her van Gogh.
“Did you see the painting?”
Navot nodded. “She keeps it in her childhood bedroom.”
“How did it look?”
“You want my assessment of a van Gogh?” Navot shrugged his heavy shoulders. “It’s a very nice painting of a girl sitting at a dressing table. I’m not artistic like you. I’m potted chicken and a nice love story at the movies. You’re not eating your soup.”
“I don’t like it, Uzi. I told you I don’t like it.”
Navot took Gabriel’s spoon and swirled the dab of sour cream, lightening the hue of the purple mixture.
“We had a peek at her papers,” Navot said. “We rummaged through her closets and drawers. We left a little something on her phone and computer as well. One can never be too careful in a situation like this.”
“Room coverage?”
Navot appeared hurt by the question. “Of course,” he said.
“What are you using for a listening post?”
“A van for the moment. If she agrees to help us, we’re going to need something more permanent. One of the neviot boys is already scouting the neighborhood for a suitable flat.”
Navot pushed the remnants of his potted chicken to one side and started in on Gabriel’s borscht. For all his European sophistication, he was at heart still a peasant from the shtetl.
“I can see where this is going,” he said between spoonfuls. “You get to track down the bad guy, and I get to spend the next year watching a girl. But that’s the way it’s always been with us, hasn’t it? You get all the glory while the field hands like me do all the spade work. My God, you saved the Pope himself. How’s a mere mortal like me supposed to compete with that?”
“Shut up and eat your soup, Uzi.”
Being Shamron’s chosen one had not come without a price. Gabriel was used to the professional jealousy of his colleagues.
“I have to leave Paris tomorrow,” Navot said. “I’ll be gone only a day.”
“Where are you going?”
“Amos wants a word with me.” He paused, then added, “I think it’s about the Special Ops job. The job you turned down.”
It made sense, Gabriel thought. Navot was an extremely capable field agent who’d taken part in several major operations, including a few with Gabriel.
“Is that what you want, Uzi? A job at King Saul Boulevard?”
Navot shrugged. “I’ve been out here in the field a long time. Bella wants to get married. It’s hard to have a stable home life when you live like this. Sometimes when I wake up in the morning, I never know where I’m going to wind up at the end of the day. I can have breakfast in Berlin, lunch in Amsterdam, and be sitting in King Saul Boulevard at midnight briefing the director.” Navot gave Gabriel a conspiratorial smile. “That’s what the Americans don’t understand about us. They put their case officers into little boxes and slap their wrists when they step outside the lines. The Office isn’t that way. It never was. That’s what makes it the greatest job in the world—and that’s why our service is so much better than theirs. They wouldn’t know what to do with a man like you.”
Navot had lost interest in the borscht. He pushed it across the table, so that it looked as though Gabriel had eaten it. Gabriel reached for the glass of wine but thought better of it. He had a headache from the train ride and the rainy Paris weather, and the kosher wine smelled about as appealing as paint thinner.
“But it takes its toll on marriages and relationships, doesn’t it, Gabriel? How many of us are divorced? How many of us have had affairs with girls out there
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