The Kill Artist (45 page)

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Authors: Daniel Silva

Tags: #Mystery, #Thriller, #Suspense, #Adventure, #Politics

BOOK: The Kill Artist
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45
 
NEW YORK CITY
 
Tariq circulated through the magnificent rooms overlooking Central Park while the guests carelessly dropped items on his oval-shaped tray: empty glasses, half-eaten plates of food, crumpled napkins, cigarette butts. He glanced at his watch. Leila would have made the call by now. Allon was probably on his way. It would be over soon.
He walked through the library. A pair of French doors led onto the terrace. In spite of the cold, a handful of guests stood outside admiring the view. As Tariq stepped onto the balcony, the wail of distant sirens filled the air. He walked to the balustrade and looked up Fifth Avenue: a motorcade, complete with police escort and motorcycle outriders.
The guest of honor was about to arrive.
But where the hell is Allon?
“Excuse me? Hello?”
Tariq looked up. A woman with a fur coat was waving at him. He had been so absorbed by the sight of the approaching motorcade that he had forgotten he was posing as a busboy.
The woman held up a half-empty glass of red wine. “Can you take this, please?”
“Certainly, madam.”
Tariq walked across the terrace and stood next to the woman, who was now talking to a friend. Without looking she reached out and tried to place the glass on Tariq’s tray, but it teetered on its small base and tipped over, splashing red wine over Tariq’s white jacket.
“Oh, heavens,” the woman said. “I’m so sorry.” Then she turned away as if nothing had happened and resumed her conversation.
Tariq carried his tray back to the kitchen.
“What the fuck happened to you?” It was the man with the apron and the oiled black hair: Rodney, the boss.
“A woman spilled wine on me.”
Tariq placed his full tray on the counter next to the sink. Just then he heard a round of applause sweep through the apartment. The guest of honor had entered the room. Tariq picked up an empty tray and started to leave the kitchen.
Rodney said, “Where do you think you’re going?”
“Back out to do my job.”
“Not looking like that, you’re not. You’re on kitchen duty now. Get over there and help with the dishes.”
“I can clean the jacket.”
“It’s red wine, pal. The jacket’s ruined.”
“But—”
“Just get over there and start on those dishes.”
Douglas Cannon said, “President Arafat, so good to see you again.”
Arafat smiled. “Same to you, Senator. Or should I say
Ambassador
Cannon now?”

Douglas
will do you just fine.”
Cannon took Arafat’s small hand in his own bearish paws and shook it vigorously. Cannon was a tall man, with broad shoulders and a mane of unruly gray hair. His middle had thickened with age, though his paunch was concealed nicely by an impeccably tailored blue blazer.
The New Yorker
magazine had once called him “a modern-day Pericles”—a brilliant scholar and philanthropist who rose from the world of academia to become one of the most powerful Democrats in the Senate. Two years earlier he had been called out of retirement to serve as the American ambassador to the Court of St. James’s in London. His ambassadorship had been cut short, however, when he was gravely wounded in a terrorist attack. He showed no sign of it now as he took Arafat by the hand and propelled him into the party.
“I was so saddened by the attempt on your life, Douglas. It’s good to see you looking so fit again. Did you receive the flowers that Suhla and I sent for you?”
“Yes, indeed. They were the most beautiful in the hospital room. Thank you so much. But enough about me. Come, this way. There are a lot of people here who are interested in meeting you.”
“I don’t doubt it,” said Arafat, smiling. “Lead on.”
Gabriel sped over the Brooklyn Bridge into Manhattan. Jacqueline had regained her composure and was giving him a thorough account of the last forty-eight hours, beginning with the night in the council flat near Heathrow, ending with the gruesome sequence of events in Brooklyn. Gabriel forced himself to listen dispassionately, to set aside momentarily his rage over what Tariq had done to her so he could search for clues to his intentions.
One detail caught his attention. Why did Tariq feel it was necessary to bring Gabriel to
him
by having Leila impersonate Jacqueline over the secure phone link?
The answer was probably quite simple: because he did not believe Gabriel would be at the place where he intended to strike. But why not? If he had come to New York to assassinate the prime minister of Israel, the great peacemaker, then surely he would assume that Gabriel would be at the prime minister’s side. After all, Gabriel had just seen Tariq in Montreal.
Gabriel thought of the painting by Van Dyck: a religious scene on the surface, a rather ugly woman beneath. One painting, two realities. The entire operation had been like that painting, and Tariq had beaten him at every turn.
Damn it, Gabriel. Don’t be afraid to trust your instincts!
He picked up the cell phone and dialed the number for Shamron at the diplomatic mission. When Shamron came on the line, Gabriel said tersely, “Where’s Arafat?”
He listened for a moment, then said: “
Shit!
I think Tariq is there disguised as a waiter. Tell his people I’m coming.”
He severed the connection and looked at Jacqueline. “You still have the girl’s gun?”
She nodded.
“Anything left?”
Jacqueline released the magazine and counted the remaining rounds. “Five,” she said.
Gabriel turned north onto the FDR Drive and put the accelerator to the floor.
 
Tariq walked to the entrance of the kitchen and peered through the passageway into the party. Flashbulbs popped as guests posed for photographs with Arafat. Tariq shook his head. Ten years ago these same people had written Arafat off as a ruthless terrorist. Now they were treating him like a rock star in a kaffiyeh.
Tariq looked around the room for Allon. Something must have gone wrong. Perhaps Leila had been unable to get through on the telephone. Perhaps Allon was playing some sort of game. Whatever the case, Tariq knew he could not wait long to act. He knew Arafat better than anyone. The old man was prone to last-minute changes in plans. That’s how he had survived all these years. He could walk out of the party at any time, and Tariq would lose his opportunity to kill him.
He had wanted to kill them both at the same time—Allon and Arafat, one final act of vengeance—but it looked as though that was not to be. Once he killed Arafat, the bodyguards would swarm him. He would fight back and leave them no choice but to kill him.
Anything is better than letting the tumor kill me.
Allon would miss everything, and therefore his life would be spared. Arafat the traitorous coward would not be so lucky.
Rodney tapped Tariq on the shoulder. “Start washing dishes, my friend, or this will be the last party you ever work.”
Rodney walked away. Tariq went into the pantry and switched on the light. He reached up to the top shelf and removed the bag of Tunisian dates he had hidden there an hour earlier. He carried the dates into the kitchen, arranged them on a white china plate. Then he started picking his way through the crowd.
Arafat was standing in the center of the main drawing room, surrounded by a half-dozen aides and security men and a crowd of well-wishers. Ambassador Cannon stood at his side. Tariq moved forward, the butt of the Makarov pressing into the flesh of his abdomen. Arafat was now ten feet away, but there were five people between him and Tariq, including a bodyguard. Arafat was so short that Tariq could barely see him through the crowd—only the black-and-white of his checkered kaffiyeh. If he drew the Makarov now, surely one of the bodyguards would spot it and open fire. Tariq had to get closer before he drew the gun. He had to play out the ruse with the dates.
But now Tariq had another problem. The crowd around Arafat was so tightly packed that he could move no closer. Standing directly in front of him was a tall man in a charcoal-gray suit. When Tariq tapped him on the shoulder, the man turned briefly and, spotting the tray and Tariq’s white jacket, said, “No thank you.”
“They’re for President Arafat,” Tariq said, and the man reluctantly stepped aside.
Next Tariq was confronted with a woman. Once again, he tapped the woman on the shoulder, waited for her to step aside, and moved another three feet closer to the target. But now he was standing beside one of Arafat’s aides. He was about to tap the man on the shoulder when he heard a cell phone chirp. The aide reached into the breast pocket of his suit jacket and brought the telephone quickly to his ear. He listened intently for a moment, then slipped the phone into his pocket, leaned forward, and whispered into Arafat’s ear. Arafat then turned to Cannon and said, “I’m afraid I have an urgent matter to attend to.”
Tariq thought:
Damn it, but the man has the luck of the devil!
Arafat said, “I need to conduct a telephone conversation in private.”
“I think you’ll find my study to your liking. Please, come right this way.”
Arafat disengaged himself from the crowd and, together with Cannon and his bevy of aides, moved along a corridor toward the back of the apartment. A moment later they disappeared into a room. One of Arafat’s bodyguards immediately took up a post outside the door. Cannon and the aides emerged a moment later and rejoined the party.
Tariq knew he had to strike now or he would lose his chance. He sliced his way through the crowded living room, and walked down the hallway, stopping in front of the bodyguard. Tariq could see he was a member of Arafat’s personal security unit, a man who would know that the Palestinian leader loved nothing more than a good Tunisian date.
“One of Mr. Arafat’s assistants asked me to bring these to him.”
The guard looked at the plate of dates, then at Tariq.
Tariq thought:
We can do this one of two ways. You can let me pass peacefully, or I can take out my gun and shoot you in the face and then go inside.
The guard snatched one of the dates and popped it in his mouth. Then he opened the door and said, “Leave the plate and come right out again.”
Tariq nodded and stepped into the room.
 
Gabriel double-parked the minivan on Eighty-eighth Street. He climbed out, ignoring the shouts of a foot patrolman, and ran to the entrance of the building on Fifth Avenue, Jacqueline a few strides behind him. When they entered the lobby, three people were waiting for them: a member of Arafat’s personal security unit, an American Diplomatic Security Service agent, and a New York City policeman.
A doorman was holding one of the elevators. He pressed the button for the seventeenth floor as the five people piled into the car.
The DSS agent said, “I hope to hell you’re sure about this, my friend.”
Gabriel removed his Beretta, chambered the first round, and slipped it back beneath his coat.
The doorman said, “Jesus Christ.”
 
It was a small study: a carved antique desk with leather inlay, recessed lighting high in the molded ceiling, bookshelves filled with volumes of history and biography, a wood fire burning slowly in a marble fireplace. Arafat was on the telephone, listening intently. Then he murmured a few words in Arabic, replaced the receiver, and looked at Tariq. When he saw the plate of dates, his face broke into a warm, childlike smile.
Tariq said in Arabic: “Peace be with you, President Arafat. One of your aides asked me to bring these to you.”
“Dates! How marvelous.” He took one, inspected it briefly, and bit into it. “This date is from Tunisia, I’m sure of it.”
“I believe you’re right, President Arafat.”
“You speak Arabic with the accent of a Palestinian.”
“That’s because I am from Palestine.”
“What part of Palestine?”
“My family lived in the Upper Galilee before
al-Nakba.
I grew up in the camps of Lebanon.”
Tariq placed the plate of dates on the desk and unbuttoned his jacket so that he could get at his Makarov. Arafat cocked his head slightly and touched his lower lip. “You are not well, my brother?”
“I’m just a bit tired. I’ve been working very hard lately.”
“I know what fatigue looks like, my brother. I’ve seen what lack of sleep has done to me over the years. I’ve seen what it’s done to the men around me. But you are not suffering only from fatigue. You’re sick, my brother. I can see it. I have a very powerful instinct for these things.”
“You’re correct, President Arafat. I am not well these days.”
“What is the nature of your illness, my brother?”
“Please, President Arafat—you are far too busy, and too important, to worry about the problems of a common man like me.”
“That’s where you are wrong, my brother. I’ve always thought of myself as the father of
all
the Palestinian people. When one of my people suffers, I suffer.”

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