by Gregg Loomis
The two men crossed the square and walked along one of the Lower Town's main thoroughfares, Boulevard Anspach. Lang loitered, checking behind him by use of reflections in shop windows. Unlike in most U.S. cities, lunch was not a hurried affair here. It normally consisted of an hour and a half of throngs seeking good food and pleasant company. Consequently, spotting a tail in the crowd was difficult if not impossible.
A few blocks south, Louis stopped in front of the Eglise St-Nicolas, where a Gothic-style church marked the site of a twelfth-century marketplace. They turned left and strolled through the Galeries St-Hubert, a nineteenth- century glass-domed arcade, the location of familiar names such as Hermes and Chanel. Here it would be a lit- tle easier to discern a follower. Men hurried through; women idled in front of shop windows.
There was still no evidence that they were under surveillance.
An ornately decorated exit let out onto the Rue des Bouchers, in English the Street of the Butchers. The narrow alley was lined on both sides with restaurant after restaurant, each with an awning out front for al fresco dining and each featuring moules, mussels, boiled with onion, steamed with wine or beer, in sauce or butter. They were being served in the shell, in stews or cold, with horseradish, ketchup, or bearnaise sauce. Shiny, black-winged shellfish that could be prepared more ways than potatoes.
And Lang knew from experience they were all delicious.
Louis slid behind a small table around which four fragile chairs shouldered one another for room. He motioned Lang in beside him. The waiter had just delivered the menus when a thin man in a loosely cut suit approached.
"Mr. Reilly?" He extended a hand. The nails were bitten to the quick.
Lang stood, a question on his face as he shook.
"I am Inspector Henre Vorstaat." He showed a badge and sat before an invitation could be extended. "I was speaking with M. deVille about the theft of your car."
The man's face seemed too narrow to accommodate the mouth, his expression doleful. Lang guessed the tiny folds around his eyes came more from frowning than laughing.
Hercule Poirot he wasn't.
His English had the hard edge of Flemish. "I also understand Mr. Benjamin Yadish was employed by you. Having your foundation's car forcibly taken and a murder in the same week looks like a crime wave, no?"
"More like a tsunami."
"Oh?"
The waiter was hovering. Both the other men ordered without looking at the menu.
"I'll have the same," Lang said.
He waited until the waiter had retreated before continuing. "We also had an employee killed in the States, apparently the same night as Yadish. One was a physicist, the other a physiochemist."
The policeman was staring at him with eyes that Lang suddenly realized were colorless. The discovery was somehow disconcerting. Lang had the impression the inspector had used those eyes to intimidate more than one suspect.
"Do you believe the two murders are related?"
"After what happened this morning, yes."
"Tell me."
Lang did, omitting only any mention of his possession of a firearm.
As Lang completed his story, the waiter set a copper tureen and an empty plate in front of each, along with crisp brown frites, french fries, standing on end in tall ramekins to conserve their warmth. Lang was uncertain what was in the pale red sauce in which the mussels still simmered, but if it tasted as good as it smelled, he would be happy.
As in France, all conversation not related to food ceased once the meal was served. As each man filled the platter before him with empty shells, Vorstaat and Louis compared these mussels to others they had had here and elsewhere. Was the sauce stronger than before or weaker? Had the chef left out one of the customary herbs? Were Antwerp's mussels any fresher than those delivered daily to Brussels?
Murder took a backseat to gastronomy.
The inspector drained the last of his glass of Duvel and regarded the mound of empty shells before him with what could have been regret. He resumed the previous conversation as though there had been no interruption.
"Do you have the license plate of this Land Rover?"
Lang recited it from memory. Vorstaat had him repeat it as he wrote it into a small notebook.
The inspector leaned back in his chair, fumbled in a coat pocket, and produced a blue box of French cigarettes, Gitanes. Without offering his companions one, he lit up with a wooden match before dumping the match into the bowl formerly full of mussels, where it sizzled.
The Belgians, or at least those of Brussels, also shared with the French a total contempt for inconvenient authority. From where he sat Lang could see at least two no smoking, non fumer, nicht rauchen signs, complete with a line drawn through a picture of a cigarette. He could also see half a dozen other smokers.
"You said you believed the murder of your employee and the attempt to kidnap you were related?"
"Yadish and Lewis were working on the same thing, an alternative to fossil fuels."
Vorstaat's nostrils exhaled blue smoke. "We might assume that the killer-or rather, killers-are opposed to the project?"
"Really opposed."
"And who might be both opposed to and aware of your foundation's work?"
Lang thought a moment. "Exxon? BP? Our research projects, like all the money we spend as a tax-exempt charitable foundation, are a matter of public record."
"Surely the world's major oil companies do not need to suppress such Scientific research. They could conduct it themselves. Petrol is not worth murder."
"You seen the price of gas lately?" Lang shook his head, only partially joking.
The policeman sniffed. "Americans! You wail at four dollars per gallon of fuel. Here and in the rest of Europe that would be considered inexpensive."
Lang had no intent of engaging in a debate over comparative gas prices.
Silent since his last mussel, Louis noted, "Our people- or at least Dr. Yadish-are years away from succeeding, if ever. It is hard to think someone would kill over an event that might not ever take place."
The inspector stubbed his cigarette out in an empty ramekin. The prohibition of smoking had succeeded only in abolishing ashtrays. "I've investigated many killings for far less reason, but I think you are right."
Lang was watching a particularly buxom blonde edge her way among the tables. No matter how hard he tried, she reminded him of Gurt. The memory hurt. "In Atlanta, Dr. Lewis's laboratory was wrecked and the records of his daily work taken. Do we know if Dr. Yadish's place was trashed, too?"
Vorstaat reached into his coat pocket, fishing for another Gitane, then apparently thought better of it and made a steeple of his fingers, as though to keep them from being further tempted. "We do not yet know, although I am in contact with the Amsterdam police." The self-willed fingers slid into his lap. "Do either of you know what he was doing in Bruges?"
Lang shook his head. "No."
Louis had been watching the same blonde. "He left a message that he would be in Brussels the morning after he was… killed. He did not give a reason, but that was not unusual. Amsterdam to Brussels is a short ride on the Eurostar. He liked to come by, report his progress, discuss what he was doing. Most of all I think he liked to come to this place to eat."
Vorstaat pursed his lips. "He ate here? I thought shellfish were prohibited to Jews, no?"
Lang shrugged. "Don't ask me. The Jews I know pretty much eat what they like. Same goes for drink, too."
Louis tore his eyes from the blonde and looked nervously around the street, as though eating mussels here might guarantee a violent death.
The inspector poised his pen over the notebook. "And exactly what was he doing?"
Louis shrugged. "I do not know. I understood little of his scientific speech. From the sound of his voice, though, he seemed excited."
"Excited or frightened?" the policeman asked.
Louis said, "I do not know. At the moment I had no reason to think he would be frightened."
&nb
sp; Vorstaat started to say something but was interrupted by a chirping from his jacket pocket.
He stood. "Excuse me a moment."
He stepped into the street as he pulled out a cell phone.
Lang spoke to Louis, but he was looking at the policeman. "Exactly how much did you know about Dr. Yadish's private life?"
The Belgian looked puzzled. "'Private life'? I do not understand."
Lang leaned across the table, lowering his voice to a conspiratorial whisper. "Did the good professor have, perhaps, something he would have preferred kept secret?"
Lang could almost see the cartoon lightbulb above Louis's head click on. "You mean did he have a, er, what do you call it? A woman?"
"Girlfriend?"
"Yes, girlfriend! I do not think so. All he ever spoke of was his wife and his work. He never mentioned a girlfriend."
One easy answer shot down.
"Do you have any idea why he was in Bruges, then?"
Louis shook his head emphatically. "As I told the inspector, none."
Vorstaat returned to his chair. "Forgive the interruption. While I was on the telephone I asked about automobile accidents at the place you described. The car involved, the Land Rover, was deserted. Its license plates had been stolen, as had the automobile itself. The investigating officers searched it completely."
Lang waited.
"Unfortunately, whoever took the automobile was careful. There were no fingerprints, no spent cartridges."
"In other words, nothing."
Vorstaat came as close to a smile as Lang guessed he ever did. "I did not say that, Mr. Reilly."
He also knew the drama of a pause.
"Well?"
"Something must have fallen out of someone's pocket. My men are checking with the vehicle's owner to make sure it is not his."
Lang was too impatient to endure another delay. "And it was…?"
"It is torn and wrinkled, but it appears to be the bill from a bistro in Bruges."
THIRTEEN
Grand Place
Brussels
Five Minutes Later
The three men stood in front of the yellow-stone baroque facade of Le Pigeon while Vorstaat finished another Gitane.
"What are your plans now, Mr. Reilly?"
"First I'll check at the Amigo Hotel, see if they have my baggage. I'm due to change shirts sometime soon."
The policeman made a sound that might have been a chuckle had there been any humor in it. "You will be staying in Brussels how long?"
"Other than a hot shower, I have no reason to stay at all. I came to make sure the foundation's work was continuing, and Louis assures me it is."
"So you will be returning to America?" The inspector's inflection implied he doubted it.
"First I need to go to Amsterdam with Louis, see exactly where we are on Benjamin Yadish's research, then go by and offer condolences to his wife. Then home."
Vorstaat was studying Lang's face with a stare he surely knew made Lang uncomfortable. "This research, it will continue?"
Lang was taken by surprise. "I… I'm not sure. Our two leading guys-one here, one back homer-are both dead."
The policeman dropped his cigarette and crushed it into the cobblestones with more enthusiasm than was necessary. "Has it occurred to you that these two men were murdered not just to halt their research but to steal it?"
Lang's mind flashed back to the pages torn from Lewis's notebook. "Has anything from Dr. Yadish's laboratory been taken?"
"The Amsterdam authorities tell me his wife said the CD on which he keeps his records is missing. She could not tell them what was on it, but they intend to speak to her again when she has had time to collect her… collect her thoughts. Perhaps next week."
Lang was hardly surprised that Vorstaat had already been in touch with the Dutch police. It was the obvious thing to do. "Did she have any idea why he was in Bruges?"
The policeman was staring at him harder than ever. "He told her he was meeting you."
Stunned, Lang said nothing for a moment. "The night he was killed I was in the United States. I have both a priest and a policeman who can attest to the fact."
That humorless grin spread across wide lips. "You may need them, Mr. Reilly. For the moment, though, I suggest you use care."
Was the man a comedian or just prone to understatement?
"You can count on it."
Vorstaat started to turn to go and then stopped. "One more thing, Mr. Reilly." He reached into a coat pocket and handed Lang a business card. "Please give me a call before you leave Europe. I may have learned more."
Lang slipped the card into his wallet. "Certainly."
Lang and Louis watched him cross the square without looking back.
"He will tell us if he learns more?" Louis asked.
"If he learns more, he will want to ask more questions," Lang said.
"He did not ask many today."
"He knows very little today."
***
Book of Jereb
Chapter Two
1. And Pharaoh sent forth his army, his archers and chariots into the desert to return the Israelites to Egypt so that they found the Israelites on the shore of the sea. The Israelites saw the army of Pharaoh; they murmured* unto Moses, saying, "Hast thou brought us into the desert and to the sea only to die by Pharaoh's hand?"
2. Moses said unto them, "Fear not in your hearts, tor thy God shall save thee." And once the Israelites had passed through the shallow sea came a wave at the hand of the one God that swept away Pharaoh, his chariots, his archers and horses so that none were left to pursue.
3. And so began the forty years of the Israelites in the desert.
4. The one God commanded Moses to make unto him an ark, measuring forty-five inches long, twenty-seven inches wide, and twenty-seven inches high. [1] And He commanded the box to be made of wood. The Lord told Moses both the inside and the outside should be laid with the purest of gold, and gold rings at each end so that it might be borne by men. A seal should be placed upon the same so that the lid of the box should not fall off should a man stumble.
5. When the ark had been completed, Moses said to the Israelites, "Behold, your one God has created a weapon that you have never seen." And Zete, son of Zel, doubted the words of Moses, and reached to touch the ark and was struck dead by a bolt that came not from the heavens, and the people bowed to Moses, saying, "You are our savior." And Moses became angry, replying unto them, "Your savior is the one God, who hath brought you forth from Egypt."
6. While the Israelites were encamped at the base of the mountain across the sea but south of the land of the Midi- anites, being the mountain of the God of Abraham, the one God said unto Moses, "Come to me on the mountain and I will give you commandments I have written, that thou might instruct the Isrealites, and you shall put these commandments into the ark I commanded you to build"
7. And Moses was upon the mountain a great time, requiring neither food nor water but sustained by the one God. While Moses was on the mountain, the children of Israel began to murmur, fearing he was dead or would not return to them, and they said among themselves, "Let us make a god so that we may worship it." And they melted down their gold and constructed a golden calf and fell down before it, worshiping it.
8. When Moses returned and saw the Israelites worshiping an idol, he threw down the tablets the Lord had given him, breaking the same and rewrote the same, on tablets in his own hand.
9. And Moses cast the golden calf into the fire until it was consumed.
FOURTEEN
Centraal Station
Nieuwe Zijde
Amsterdam
Two Days Later
Lang had never seen a weather vane on a rail station, but then, he'd never seen one where the wind's direction was displayed on a clock face, either. Located along the harbor, the building featured a Dutch-Renaissance-style facade adorned with colored allegorical depictions of maritime trade, a tribute to the city's nautical past. The interior
was somewhat seedier: prostitutes vying for customers among the new arrivals, and college-age kids lighting perfectly legal joints. The smell of cheap perfume and marijuana was overpowering.
Leaving the Gulfstream at the Brussels airport had been an easy decision: The proximity of the Dutch city meant a train ride could be completed nearly as fast as the necessary flight plan could be filed and approved. And the foundation didn't have to pay a thousand-dollar-an-hour fuel burn, either.
Louis was trying to ignore a woman in a dress that fit like a sausage skin. There was no room in it for most of her bosom. "Do we wish a car?" Louis asked.
Lang looked at the taxi stand. "How far do we need to go?"
The hooker was smiling seductively. Lang repeated the question.
Louis snapped to as though surfacing from a dream.
"Fifteen-, twenty-minute walk."
"It's a nice day for a stroll."
Each man was carrying a small case he had packed for no more than a single night's stay.
They walked in the shade of trees along a canal. The waterway was lined with gabled houses and long, narrow boats that obviously served as dwellings. Occasionally a craft would slowly make its way past, leaving ducks and geese rocking in its gentle wake. Although now and then a car crept past on the narrow street, bicycles outnumbered them five to one.
"The canals," Louis said, "form a crescent with the open part facing north. Almost all connect with the river, the Amstel, which goes to the sea. This one is the Singel, the innermost."
Lang craned his head back to look at a particularly steeply gabled house. "You've been here often?"
Louis stopped to let a woman on a bicycle pass. A baby gurgled from the wicker basket on the handlebars.
"I came two or three times a year to see how Dr. Yadish was coming along, yes."
The nostalgia in his voice said he would miss the free lifestyle of the Netherlands as well as Yadish..
Passing through the "new" market, an open square, they entered the Oude Zijde, the city's southwestern corner, and home to the university district. Signs everywhere advertised sex toys, peep shows, and "live" entertainment, all in English, even though lurid pictures made most text unnecessary. Scantily clad women posed provocatively in the shop windows of clubs whose neon signs, also in English, promised unimaginable delights.