Thirty-seven
HE DIDN’T WANT TO LEAVE OWL, BUT HIS JOB WAS to
find the Englishman before the French did.
She was alive. Coughing, wheezing, eyes watering,
with a nasty burn on her back, but alive. She’d feel the hurt
later, when she stood still.
He spent one minute with her, just long enough to
hear her breathing clear. No time to say he’d thought she was going
to die—thought they both were going to die—and he would have traded
his life to get her out.
No time, no place, to kiss her. They’d do that
later. He’d find the Englishman and wring his damn neck. Then he’d
take Owl to bed.
He signaled Pax, and they took off, following the
route the Englishman must have taken, down the corridor and out the
door, into the courtyard between the Tuileries and the
Louvre.
Ten feet from the door he let himself look back.
Owl had attached herself to that bastard Napoleon, playing guard.
She was drawn up straight, all steel, ready to shoot anybody who
looked at Bonaparte cross-eyed.
The best strike came after the first one failed and
the target relaxed. If he was running an operation to kill that
cove, he’d do it now.
Clever Owl. Consummate professional. Nothing she
didn’t see.
Smoke plumed out of a line of windows to his left.
The whole side of the building was covered with a blanket of black.
Men pumped water into the horse trough, scooped it up, and ran with
buckets into the Tuileries.
He motioned Pax to the center of the courtyard and
some clear space. “Our Englishman is six foot, built heavy, brown
hair going thin on top, red face. Fifty years old. Dark blue coat
with brass buttons. Blue vest.”
“I got one look at him, running away.” Pax kept up.
“He won’t be out here where everybody can see him.”
“He’ll stay, though. Stay to see what
happens.”
“Amateur.”
“This all stinks of the amateur.”
A hundred people had come out to stare at the fire.
Office clerks, maids, cooks, and floor scrubbers from the
Tuileries. Gaggles of art lovers running across from the Louvre,
pointing and shouting. Soldiers headed in from all quarters,
dodging the gawking idiots, trying to get to the fire and do
something useful.
The Englishman was here, somewhere.
“A professional would have killed you so you
couldn’t move that heavy bit of furniture away from the door. He’d
have shot Napoleon when he came out of the smoke. And he’d be
halfway to Montmartre by now.”
“That’s what you’d do.”
“That’s what anyone sensible would do.” They were
jostled by men wanting a better view of the fire. “Only a bloody
amateur traps six dozen people in a fire. When you set out to kill
a man, you kill the man. You don’t burn half a bloody palace doing
it.”
“Lots of places for him to hide and watch.” Pax
looked from door to door, window to window, rooftop to rooftop. “Or
set up a gun.”
He stripped away the anger and considered the kind
of man who put together a plot with so many deaths. “He doesn’t
have a gun. He planned one big, showy spectacular moment. Mopping
up afterward isn’t in his calculations.”
“He doesn’t kill face-to-face.”
“Right. It’s not the gut hit and the blood he’s
after. He wants to wind everything up like a clock and set it down
and watch it happen. He wants to be . . . like the ceilings in this
place. All those gods sneering down from the clouds. Jupiter. That
lot.”
“The classical gods.” Amusement from Pax, but he
was thinking about it too.
“He wants to look down on everybody. He’s tucked
himself up where there’s a good view.”
Lots of places to hide in the attics of the Louvre.
The top floor, up under the roof, had big, wide windows with
pointed tops and—what were they called?—plinths running up beside
them. Arrogant-looking windows. “What’s on the top floor over
there?”
Pax would know. He was like Owl, always running
over to the Louvre to see some picture or other. He tapped finger
to finger as they walked, counting off. “Exhibits on the ground
floor. The office of the curator upstairs. Top floor, it’s
workshops. The studios where they do restoration. There’s
storage.”
“He’ll use a storage room. Damn, but I need a map
of this place.” They were in step, eating the distance across this
churned-up gravel. Not moving so fast they stood out in the general
mob scene. “He’s upstairs, watching the Tuileries.”
“Likely.”
They crossed one of the charcoal arrows he’d drawn
on the ground. “Who did Carruthers send?”
“Hawk, everybody’s scattered out. She’ll send what
she can, but . . .”
“Damn.” He thought about it for a while and said,
“Damn,” again. “We’re on our own. There’s at least three others
with the Englishman. They needed that many to block both doors at
once.”
“Let’s hope we don’t run into them all at once.”
Pax touched one pocket of his coat and then another. “I have two
shots.”
“The Frenchmen have sense enough to get out of—” In
a high window, a patch of light color moved against dark. Somebody
stood there. “See that? Someone’s taking an interest. What do you
want to bet that’s the ballock-sucking pustule who sets fire to a
room with women and kids?”
“I never bet with you, Hawk.”
They ran the last fifty paces. In a minute,
Napoleon was going step out into the courtyard and show himself to
everybody, letting the world know he was safe. The Englishman was
going to realize he’d failed. He’d run.
Through the door, into this piece of the Louvre.
Pax drew his gun and cocked it. Acres of white marble on the floor.
Marble and bronze people on pedestals, not wearing clothes.
Archways and columns. Three hundred places for some cove to jump
out and shoot a hole in you.
At the end of this gallery, the steps going up were
more goddamned marble. A hell bitch to run on. Carved marble grapes
and cherubs frolicked around the banister, flight after flight, all
the way up. Pax followed him up, keeping an eye behind. If anybody
had a gun, he and Pax were going to get holes shot in them on these
stairs.
On the second floor, they met two men jabbering
their way along the hall, all excited.
“Get back in your office. Stay there.” It was
enough to send them skittering. Ten years of war and riot had
taught people to get out of the way fast when somebody barked
orders.
Outside, shouts and cheering echoed sharp on the
stone. Napoleon must have walked out into the courtyard.
Pax said, “The First Consul of France escapes
again. Let joy be unconfined.”
“I should have put a knife in him as I passed by.
There are some opportunities it is just a sin and a shame to
miss.”
Pax whispered, “We do not assassinate foreign heads
of state.” They were at top of the stairs, backed to the wall. He
leaned to look down the row of doors. “Without orders.”
“I would have saved ten thousand English lives on
the battlefields of Europe.”
“It’s not that simple.”
“Listen.” Somebody was up here. Footsteps. The
middle door opened, and a man ran past, headlong.
Got ’im. He grabbed the man’s coat. Swung
him to crash against the wall. Now we do a little talking.
Twisted an arm behind his back. For all the brute size and muscle,
it was easy to force the gasping, thrashing ape to his knees.
“Who’s in it with you? Talk to me, you bastard.”
Pax grabbed the man’s hair and pulled his head back
so they could see him.
From the man, in English, “I don’t understand. I
don’t speak French.”
This wasn’t the man in charge. This was somebody’s
cat-spaw. This was the fool. Le fou. He switched languages,
“Who are you working for? Give me their names.”
“You’re English!” Relief filled the man’s face.
“Thank God. You have to get me out of here. They’ll be after us in
a minute.”
“Who sent you to France?”
“I can’t be taken by the garde. I have
important work to finish.”
Killing women and kids. “Who gave the
orders?”
“I have to get away. He has to be stopped.”
“Who gave you the fire starter?” He ratcheted the
man’s wrist tighter. It was pointless. The stupid lump was
incoherent with fear and frenzy. He didn’t feel anything. “You
didn’t think of this yourself.”
“Napoleon must die. No peace till he dies.” He was
fighting, trying to get up, sputtering, “Have to try again. I’ll
get him next time.”
Pax had his head to the side, listening. “They’re
coming. A lot of them.”
The man was spewing English loud enough to tell the
world they were up here. “He killed my boy. Killed my Roger. Roger
Cameron, Lieutenant of The Valorous. My boy died at the
Battle of Aboukir. He killed my boy.”
A man willing to murder a hundred innocents because
his son died in a naval battle. He’d do this again. The next bomb
might go off in the middle of the Comédie-Française.
Shouts from below and the tromp that meant
soldiers. They were about to deal with the French
authorities.
“Napoleon must die.” Spittle and gasps from the
Englishman. “Only way to save England. The army’s behind me.
Important men. Highest levels. They know what he is.”
“Give me the names.” But this man didn’t know
anything. He was a tool in somebody’s hands. He hadn’t been sent
here to kill Napoleon. He’d been sent here to be captured and
talk.
“I’m doing this is for England. For England.”
Casus belli. This blind idiot, this
bull-headed, stupid animal would be the cause of war.
Soldiers shouted back and forth in the marble halls
downstairs. No getting the Englishman away where they could
question him. Only one choice.
“Get back.” He wouldn’t make Pax part of this. He’d
keep the load on his own conscience.
It didn’t take strength. It took knowing how to
balance the weight. It took being used to the work of killing. It
took being the Hawker.
The Englishman rolled over the banister with
chilling grace. The man let out one yelp on the way down. He had a
second to be scared. Probably less.
The body sprawled faceup at the bottom. It had a
cleanly broken neck, among other things. A fast and clean way out
of life. Better than dying in a fire.
Better than what the French would do to him and
Pax, if they caught them. “Let’s get the hell out of here.”
They took off with the soldiers pounding up the
stairs after them.