Chapter 15
Paris
When the gunman fired into the crowd at the Cluny, complete pandemonium broke out.
Charlotte half-crawled, half-ran, her arm bleeding, to a side street. From there she found the Boulevard Saint Germain, hailed a taxi, opened the door, and jumped in.
The driver looked startled by her appearance. He began to say something about it, but she slid her hand into her purse, staring hard at him, letting him worry about what might be hidden in there as she gave him an address. He paled. His expression stark, he nodded, turned his back to her, and headed straight for the location she named.
She sank back against the seat as her thoughts swirled.
The Agency had done everything it could to comfort and take care of her after Dennis died. Dazed and grief-stricken, she hadn’t questioned anything they told her or paid attention to areas he was investigating when he died. Over the years, whenever questions niggled at her subconscious about his death, she pushed them aside. It hurt too much to do otherwise.
Al-Dajani had gone back to look at what Dennis had been investigating. Now, he and Bonnetieu were dead. And their killers traveled internationally with ease, brutally shot bystanders, and organized cold-blooded murders in two secure facilities.
She knew of only one person who might help her. Years ago, Dennis introduced her to Laurence Esterbridge as an old friend and owner of an art gallery. Before long, she realized their true association.
Dennis’s position was originally to work with Israeli intelligence, but it soon became apparent that Dennis was receiving orders and assignments from Esterbridge.
A few times she had traveled with Dennis to Paris. Often, he would meet with Esterbridge while she toured museums and other attractions, but on a couple of occasions, they dined together in an expensive restaurant, and once at his beautiful apartment on the top floor of a stately building on the rue Clement Marot.
She went to that apartment now and rang the bell. There was no answer. She waited, and as someone walked out the main door to the building, she slipped inside before the door shut and locked again.
She took the elevator to the top floor, and there, knocked on Esterbridge’s door. When no one answered, she tried the doorknob. The door was not locked.
She went on alert and pushed the door open without stepping inside. The living room was directly in front of her and on the sofa she saw Esterbridge. He wore a stylish brocade smoking jacket. His impeccable hair was white now, with a carefully constructed wave over his brow held in place by a good amount of hairspray. An apparently forgotten pair of reading glasses perched low on his nose.
And a bullet hole marred his high forehead.
She stepped backwards and leaned against the wall in the hallway as she tried to catch her breath.
She wanted to tell herself his murder had nothing to do with her or Dennis … but she couldn’t.
She looked at the elevator, then opted for the stairs. Her head spun, and she felt faint from shock and pain from the gash the bullet had torn in her arm.
She went down to the parking area in the basement and waited, hiding, until she saw a woman drive in alone. She stepped in front of her and when the driver stopped, she pointed her gun and told the woman to get out of the car.
Looking ready to collapse with fright, the woman complied.
Charlotte ordered her to remove her coat and turn around. She did. Charlotte then hit the back of her head with the butt of the gun, and the woman fell, unconscious.
Charlotte put on the coat and drove out of the garage. She soon abandoned the car after wiping her fingerprints from the door handle and steering wheel.
At a pharmacy she bought bandages, alcohol and antibiotic ointment, then went to a department store where, in a women’s restroom, she cleaned and bandaged her wound. That done, she bought and changed into a non-descript outfit, tossed the stolen coat into an outdoor dumpster, and then took the Thalys train from Paris to Amsterdam. There, she caught a flight to Washington D. C. People would be watching the Paris airport; people looking for her.
She did all she could to be sure no one followed her; all she could to stay alive.