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The Secret Servant

The Secret Servant

Titel: The Secret Servant Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Daniel Silva
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heal beautiful paintings, do you engage in work such as this?”
    “Duty,” said Gabriel. “I feel an obligation to protect my people.”
    “The terrorists would say the same thing.”
    “Perhaps, but I don’t murder the innocent.”
    “You just threaten to send them to Egypt to be tortured.” Ibrahim looked at Gabriel. “Would you have done it?”
    Gabriel shook his head. “No, Ibrahim, I wouldn’t have sent you back.”
    Ibrahim looked out his window. “The snow is beautiful,” he said. “Is it a good omen or bad?”
    “A friend of mine calls weather like this operational weather.”
    “That’s good?”
    Gabriel nodded. “It’s good.”
    “You’ve done this kind of thing before?”
    “Only once.”
    “How did it end?”
    With the Gare de Lyon in rubble, thought Gabriel. “I got the hostage back,” he said.
    “This street that he wants us to walk down—do you know it?”
    Gabriel lifted his hand from the wheel and pointed across the square. “It’s called Strøget. It’s a pedestrian mall lined with shops and restaurants, two miles long—the longest in Europe, if the hotel brochures are to be believed. It empties into a square called the Rådhuspladsen.”
    “We walk and they watch—is that how it works?”
    “That’s exactly how it works. And if they like what they see, someone will phone me when we reach the Rådhuspladsen and tell me where to go next.”
    “When do we start?”
    “Three o’clock.”
    “Three o’clock,” Ibrahim repeated. “The hour of death—at least that’s what the Christians believe. Why do you think they chose three o’clock?”
    “It gives them a few minutes of daylight to see us properly in Strøget. After that, it will be dark. That gives them the advantage. It makes it harder for me to see them.”
    “What about your little helpers?” Ibrahim asked. “The ones who plucked me from that street corner in Amsterdam?”
    “Ishaq says if he detects surveillance, the deal is off and Elizabeth Halton dies.”
    “So we go alone?”
    Gabriel nodded and looked at his watch. It was 2:59. “It’s not too late to back out, you know. You don’t have to do this.”
    “I made you a promise in that house two nights ago—a promise that I would help you get the American woman back. It is a promise I intend to keep.” He squeezed his face into a quizzical frown. “Where were we, by the way?”
    “We were in Germany.”
    “A Jew threatening to torture an Arab in Germany,” Ibrahim replied. “How poetic.”
    “You’re not going to give me another one of your lectures, are you, Ibrahim?”
    “I’m inclined to, but I’m afraid there isn’t time.” He pointed to the dashboard clock. “The hour of death is upon us.”…
     
     
     
    The atmosphere along Strøget was one of feverish festivity. To Gabriel it seemed like the last night before the start of a long-feared war, the night when fortunes are spent and love is made with headlong abandon. But there was no war coming, at least not for the shoppers along Copenhagen’s most famous street, only the holidays. Gabriel had been so absorbed in the search for Elizabeth Halton he had forgotten it was nearly Christmas.
    They drifted through this joyous streetscape like detached spirits of the dead, hands thrust into coat pockets, elbows touching, silent. Ishaq had decreed that their journey would be a straight line and would include no stops. That meant that Gabriel was unable to conduct even the most basic countersurveillance maneuvers. It had been more than thirty years since he had walked a European street without checking his tail and to do so now made him feel as though he were trapped in one of those anxiety dreams where he was naked in a world of the fully clothed. He saw enemies everywhere, old and new. He saw men who might be Sword of Allah terrorists and men who might be Danish security—and, in the shelter of a storefront, he swore he saw Eli Lavon playing Christmas carols on a violin. It wasn’t Lavon, only his doppelgänger. Besides, Gabriel remembered suddenly, Lavon couldn’t play the violin. Lavon, for all his gifts, had an ear of stone.
    They paused for the first time at the intersection of a cross street and waited for the light to change. A Bengali man pressed a flyer into Gabriel’s palm with such urgency that Gabriel nearly drew his Beretta from his coat pocket. The flyer was for a restaurant near the Tivoli gardens. Gabriel read it carefully to make sure it contained no

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