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The Quest: A Novel

The Quest: A Novel

Titel: The Quest: A Novel Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Nelson Demille
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five.”
    “Six. See you then.” He hung up and said to Vivian, “I can go alone.”
    “I’ll come. Lots to talk about.”
    “There always is with Henry.”
    “Now that it’s becoming real… I’m getting a little apprehensive.”
    He looked at her. “I always feel that way before an assignment into a hostile area.” He assured her, “It’s normal.”
    “Ethiopia was my first time in a war zone.” She smiled. “I was excited and clueless.”
    “Now you’re an experienced veteran.”
    “God will watch over us. He did last time.”
    Purcell thought that God’s patience with them might be wearing thin, and he didn’t reply.

Chapter 24
    T he Excelsior bar and lounge, Purcell guessed, was probably Old World when it was brand-new, and Henry was at home here, and everyone seemed to know him. Someday they’d name a drink after him.
    They were escorted to a good table by the window, and they gave their orders to a waiter, Giancarlo, who had greeted Signore Mercado by name, of course, and knew what he was drinking.
    Purcell thought back to Harry’s Bar when Signore Mercado had told him never to darken his doorstep at the Excelsior. They’d come a long way. Purcell noted that Henry was wearing a sharp blue suit with a white silk shirt, and what looked like an Italian silk tie. Apparently Henry had gone shopping. Vivian, too, had gone shopping, in Florence, and she looked good in a white winter silk dress, which Henry complimented.
    Purcell was feeling a bit underdressed in the only sport jacket he’d brought from Cairo. He would have gone shopping, too, but they weren’t going to be here long.
    It was New Year’s Day evening, a quiet night back in the States, Purcell recalled, but the Excelsior bar and lounge was full, and Mercado informed them, “The Italians will take the rest of the week off.”
    Purcell inquired, “And you?”
    “The printing presses never stop, as you well know.” He added, “I’ll do half days.”
    Vivian asked, “Will Jean be joining us?”
    Mercado replied, “She had to go to London.”
    Purcell lit a cigarette.
    Vivian asked him, “So do we have our visas?”
    Mercado pulled two passports from his inside pocket and handedthe blue one to Purcell, then opened Vivian’s red Swiss passport and said, “This photo never did you justice.”
    Vivian reached across the table and Mercado gave her her passport.
    By this time, Purcell thought, he’d have clocked the guy, who was pissing him off, but he decided to see if Henry continued to be an asshole, then take it from there.
    Henry said, all businesslike now, “Same as last time, the visas are stamped inside.” He drew two sheets of paper from his pocket. “And these are copies of your visa applications, signed and stamped by the consul general.” He handed a visa to each of them.
    Purcell glanced inside his passport and saw that the new visa stamp, unlike his last one, had been altered by someone, who’d scratched out the Lion of Judah in red ink. His visa application had the same rubber stamp, similarly altered to show that things had changed in Ethiopia.
    Their drinks came and Henry informed them, “Tonight is on L’Osservatore Romano.”
    They touched glasses and Purcell asked, “Do you have our press credentials?”
    “I do.” He handed each of them a press card, and also a larger document written in several languages, including Amharic, Arabic, and Tigrena, which he said was sort of a journalist’s safe-conduct pass. He smiled.
    Neither Purcell nor Vivian returned the smile.
    The waiter brought over an assortment of nuts, olives, and cheese, which Purcell suspected was Henry’s dinner on most nights.
    Purcell asked, “Any good news about the Ethiopian College?”
    “Not yet.” Mercado explained, “The college is closed until the Epiphany.”
    “Good time to break in.”
    Mercado looked at him, but did not respond.
    Vivian, too, had nothing to say about that, but she asked, “Will I be allowed in?”
    “No.”
    Purcell inquired, “What do you make of this refusal to let us see their library?”
    Mercado pondered that, then replied, “That depends on your level of paranoia.” He informed them, “The Ethiopian College is a very cloistered place. I’m sure there is nothing strange or secretive going on there, but they like their privacy.”
    “We all do, Henry, but this place is not a monastery on a mountain—or in the jungle. It’s on Vatican City property, under the authority of the papal

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