Thirty-four
IN THE NIGHT, THE VAST GARDEN AT THE HEART OF the
Palais Royale was empty. The shops under the arcades were closed.
The last patrons of the opera had eaten their toast and paté at a
restaurant and wandered home. On the upper floor, behind closed
doors, men gambled and whored, but only a shadow of sound spilled
into the night.
The man who still thought of himself as Thomas
Paxton stood alone in the middle of the garden, looking up. The
moon rode over Paris. Over London too, and Bonn, and the cities of
the New World. Lots of world out there. Dozens of places he could
hide.
He stretched his arm full length and measured the
angle of moon above the horizon against the width of his hand, a
rough sextant. Two and a half hours to moonset, which made this
about three in morning. Hawker would be staying in the café till
morning, giving him a good long head start.
It was August, but the nights had been chilly
lately. There was no warmth in moonlight.
He’d have been outside tonight anyway. The meteor
showers in the constellation Perseus were at their peak. Only
happened once a year.
There. That was one. A streak of white on the sky.
He held his breath to the end of it. It seemed worthwhile to tilt
his head back and tell the sky, “The abyss of endless time swallows
it all.” Marcus Aurelius said that.
In the morning, he’d take Hawk with him when he
went to Carruthers.
He didn’t have a decision to make. If you were
Service and you blotted your copybook, you reported to the Head of
Section for judgment. He was Service. He’d made his choice a good
long time ago.