Mitch went to every five-star hotel on the island. Every supermarket, drugstore, bar and car rental office.
"Have you seen this man?
"Are you certain? Look again. If we find him, there's a substantial reward."
In Mombasa, that approach was bound to yield a response of some sort, even if not the truth. Here, nothing. The locals had not seen John Merrivale. As for the divers, Mitch got the impression that they saw themselves as a community, and that they might have protected one of their own from the police even if they did know something. Either way, after three days, the tan on Mitch's forearms had deepened from butterscotch to molasses, but he was nowhere nearer finding John, or Grace.
Harry Bain called. "You got anything?"
"Nope. You?"
"A little. Jonas wasn't bullshitting. Two witnesses at the airport confirm seeing him. It looks like he spent two nights at the Hotel Sakamanga, then moved on. He was talking about going diving. Said he was 'meeting a friend.'"
"I'll stay up here till Monday," said Mitch.
Harry Bain didn't ask the obvious question: And then what?
Pretty soon they would both have to head back to New York. It was a minor miracle that neither Grace's escape nor John Merrivale's disappearance had yet been reported in the media. But at some point, a statement would have to be made. There was music to be faced, and while Mitch could probably hope to be reinstated at the NYPD, Harry Bain knew that if he returned home empty-handed, his career was over.
"Keep me posted." He hung up.
GRACE'S HEART STOPPED.
Coming out of a grocery store, she saw him across the street. The guy from the FBI! Gavin Williams's boss, the one who worked with John. She ducked back into the store.
"Vous avez oublie quelque chose, madame?"
Is he looking for John, or for me?
"Madame?"
Grace blinked at the shopkeeper.
"Me? Oh, non, j'ai toutes mes affaires. I'm fine, thank you."
She peered through the window.
The man had gone.
I must lay low. All I have to do is make it through the weekend. After Monday, I won't care anymore. He can haul me back to Super Max in leg irons.
HARRY BAIN RECEIVED AN ANONYMOUS TIP. A note was left at his hotel.
The man you are looking for is no longer in this province. He is in Toliara. Talk to the rangers at Isalo National Park.
Harry tried to reach Mitch but his cell phone was switched off.
I'll go tomorrow.
WHEN MITCH WOKE UP ON SUNDAY morning, he thought his head was going to explode. He wasn't sure whether to blame the whiskey, or the fact that during the night someone had surgically implanted a church bell into his cranium and was now ringing the damn thing at a hundred decibels.
He got up, staggered to the bathroom, threw up, felt better. Opening the white wooden shutters in his bedroom a crack, he flooded the room with laser-bright light. Must be later than I thought. He winced, closing the shutters and crawling back into bed.
This would be his last day on the archipelago. He ought to have been up at dawn, turning over every rock he could think of in hopes of one sighting of the elusive John Merrivale. But he knew it was hopeless.
He fell back to sleep, but his dreams were disturbing and fitful.
Church bells ringing. He was marrying Helen. "Do you take this woman?" "I do." He lifted Helen's veil, except it wasn't Helen; it was Grace Brookstein. "Forget about me."
He was on a beach, chasing John Merrivale. John turned a corner and disappeared. When Mitch reached the corner, it changed into Detective Lieutenant Dubray's office. Dubray's voice: "This is not your case, Mitch. If it weren't for Celeste and Helen..." Then Harry Bain walked in. "He spent two nights at the Sakamanga. He said he was meeting a friend."
Mitch woke up with a start.
He said he was meeting a friend.
Could it be?
He picked up the phone. "Harry Bain, please. Room sixteen."
There was a pause on the other end of the line. "Mr. Bain checked out early this morning. He'll be back on Tuesday, same room. Can I leave a message?"
The bells in Mitch's head were still ringing, but the pitch had changed. They weren't church bells anymore. They were alarm bells.
I have to get back to the city.
GRACE WAS ALREADY AWAKE WHEN THE alarm went off.
Four A.M.
She pulled back the curtains in her cheap hotel room and looked down at the deserted street. According to weather.com, dawn would break in less than ten minutes. Right now it was pitch-dark outside, the buildings slick with the blackness of night, gleaming-dark, as if they'd been dipped in tar.
Grace dressed hurriedly. The backpack was light, but it contained everything she needed. She looked in the mirror.
For you, Lenny my darling.
It's all been for you.
Silently, she slipped out of the hotel and into the shadows.
Chapter Thirty-Six
THE STREETS WERE DESERTED. ANTANANARIVO SLEPT. In a week's time, the dry season would begin and cold, mountain winds would once again grip the town. Tonight, though, the air was as thick as soup, heavy with threatened thunder. Grace moved like a wraith through the empty city, as silent and deadly as a virus.
Yesterday, she'd panicked. What if he isn't there? What if it's not him, this mystery buyer? What if it isn't John?
But now, as she climbed up the hill toward Le Cocon and the first rays of dawn pierced the stormy April sky, her doubts evaporated. He was here. John Merrivale was here. Her whole body was alive to his presence, like a shaman sensing an evil spirit.
She reached inside her jacket and touched the gun.
The time had come.
"I'M SORRY, SIR. THE EARLY FLIGHT to Antananarivo has been canceled."