Sooner or later the Ferris couple would show up to return their car. When they did he would confront them. He’d know if they were hiding something. And if they were, he’d get it out of them. First by intimidating them with his Shin Bet credentials. If that didn’t work, there were other ways.
Kesev slipped his left hand into his pocket and gripped the handle of the long folding knife he always carried.
Yes, he thought grimly. He knew other ways, and he was quite ready to use whatever means were necessary to return the Mother to the Resting Place.
THIRTEEN
Tel Aviv
“It should be right around the next corner to the left,” Carrie said, glancing between the street signs and the map on her lap.
“I sure as hell hope so,” Dan muttered from the front seat.
Carrie reached forward and gave his shoulder a gentle rub.
Poor Dan. Not a happy camper at the moment. He’d complained most of the trip that her sitting in the back made him feel like a chauffeur. Carrie was sorry about that, but with the way the Explorer had bounced around the hills, she’d been afraid the Virgin would be harmed. She’d folded down part of the rear seat and pulled the Virgin’s blanket-swathed form beside her to steady and protect it.
But even after they hit paved road she’d stayed here, her fingers gripping one of the cords that bound the blankets. Carrie felt good sitting close to the Virgin. Despite the danger in smuggling her out of the country—Carrie had no idea how the Israeli government felt about smuggling, but she was sure it could cost Dan and her years in jail if they were caught—she felt strangely calm. At peace.
“Damn this traffic!”
Dan was anything but at peace. They’d got lost twice already, and now they were sitting in bumper-to-bumper traffic that would give Manhattan’s cross-town crawl a run for its money, all of which might have been bearable if the air conditioner had been working. Tel Aviv in the summer...almost as hot as the desert they’d left this morning, but suffocatingly humid thanks to the Mediterranean, only blocks away.
“At last!” Dan said as he turned off Ibn Givrol in the northern end of the city.
Carrie saw it too: The Kaplan Gallery. Gold letters on black marble over two large windows filled with paintings and sculpture. A spasm of anxiety tightened her fingers around the cord. She prayed Bernard Kaplan would help them. If not, where else could they go?
Dan had called Kaplan from Jerusalem and asked if he could arrange a shipment for them similar to the one he’d arranged for Harold Gold. Dan said Kaplan had been non-committal on the phone but gave them directions—not very good directions—to his gallery.
Dan double-parked and turned to her.
“Stay with the car. I’ll leave the engine running and go inside. Hope this isn’t a wasted trip.”
Carrie nodded and watched him disappear through the gallery doors. She sat in the heat and fumes, ignoring the glares of annoyed drivers as they inched around the Explorer. As long as they weren’t police...
Dan seemed to take forever inside. Finally, when she was almost ready to run in and see what was taking him so long, he emerged with a man in a gray business suit—tall, tanned, silver hair slicked straight back.
Dan introduced him as Bernard Kaplan. He said Mr. Kaplan had called Harold in the interim and Harold had vouched for them.
“He wants to get a look at the size of our, uh, sculpture.”
“Ah, yes,” Kaplan said with a British accent—or was it Australian?—and flashed a dazzling set of caps as he looked at the bundle. “About life-sized, as you said. I’ll have a couple of my men bring it in and we’ll—”
“That’s okay,” Carrie said quickly. “We’ll bring it in ourselves.”
Kaplan glanced at Dan who nodded and said, “It could be fragile and this way we’ll take full responsibility for any damage.”
Kaplan shrugged. “Right. Very well, then. I’ll have one of my men find a parking spot for your car.”
With Carrie taking the shoulders and Dan the legs, they carried the bundled Virgin the length of the gallery to the shipping area at the rear where they placed her on a bench.
Before she could stop him, Kaplan had a knife out and was cutting the cords.
“What are you doing?” Carrie said.
“Going to take a look at this sculpture of yours.”
“Must you?”
“Of course. How else can I list it for the manifest?”
She watched anxiously as Kaplan cut the rest of the cords and unwrapped the blankets. He gave a low whistle when he saw the Virgin’s face. His diction seemed to regress.
“Well, now, that’s bloody somethin’, in’it?”
He leaned closer and touched the Virgin’s face, running the tip of his index finger over her cheek. Carrie wanted to grab his wrist and yank him away, but restrained herself.
A few more indignities, Mother Mary, then you’ll be on your way to safety.
“What is this?” Kaplan said. “Some sort of wax? I’ve never seen anything like it. The detail is incredible. Where’d you get it?”
Dan glanced at Carrie before he spoke. On the trip from the desert they’d agreed that rather than invent a series of lies, the best course was to give no answers at all.
“We’d prefer to keep our source a secret,” Dan said.
Kaplan nodded and straightened. Carrie sighed with relief as he folded the blankets back over the Virgin.
“Very well. But I see no problem shipping this out. We’ll simply list it as a wax sculpture—a piece of contemporary art.”
An idea flashed in Carrie’s mind. She turned to Dan. “Why can’t we do that ourselves? Ship it home on the plane with us?”
“You could do that,” Kaplan said. “You wouldn’t need me for that. But remember, anything going aboard an El Al flight gets a going over like no other place in the world. Direct inspection, dogs, metal scanners, x-rays—”
“Never mind,” Carrie said quickly as she imagined the Virgin’s skeleton lighting up on an inspector’s fluoroscopic scanner. “We’ll do it your way.”
“Very well. I can include it with a consignment of other crates I’ve scheduled for shipment, and have it on a freighter out of Haifa tonight.”
“Wonderful! When will it get to New York?”
“It’s not going to New York,” Kaplan said. “At least not on this freighter. The Greenbriar will take your shipment to Cork Harbor. After that, we’ll have to make other arrangements for the second leg.”
“Can’t we get a non-stop?”
Kaplan’s smile was tolerant. “No, love. We don’t want a direct route. Why draw a line straight to your door? Much safer to break up the trip. We ship your crate to a fictitious name in Cork where one of my associates picks it up, holds it awhile, then puts it on another ship to New York. Bloody near impossible to trace.”
Carrie was uncomfortable with the thought of the Virgin lying in a moldy warehouse in Ireland, but if this sort of route would safeguard her secret...
“How do we pay you?”
“Cash, preferably.”
She looked at Dan. Cash? Who had cash? All she had was the AmEx card Brad had given her.
“Do you take plastic?”
Kaplan sighed. “I suppose we can work something out.”
‡
Jerusalem
Kesev had given up sitting and waiting. Now he was pacing and waiting. He’d explored every nook and cranny of the lobby, browsed all the shops until he thought he’d explode with frustration. Where were these people, these Ferrises? They had to turn in their rental sooner or later.
Didn’t they?
An awful thought struck him. He ran to the Eldan counter. Chaya was still there. She’d just finished with a customer when Kesev arrived.
“How many offices—rental centers—do you have?”
“I’m not sure,” she said, furrowing her brow. “Let’s see... a couple in Tel Aviv, a couple in Haifa, one at Ben Gurion—”