The Hadrian Memorandum - Allan Folsom [101]
They had no luggage at all; everything was carried on their person, the same as it had been after they’d left the Hotel Adlon in Berlin. Anne had her basics—toiletries, change of underwear and sleeping T-shirt, passport, credit cards, money, BlackBerry and phone charger—in her shoulder bag. Marten’s passport, his toothbrush, the dark blue throwaway cell phone, and his wallet with his British driver’s license, credit cards, and cash were neatly distributed between his jeans and his summer-weight sport coat.
“Where do we go from here?” Anne said quietly and with a furtive glance toward the police and their dog.
Marten steered her toward the main entrance. “Out the front door, then look for a bus into the city.”
“Bus?”
He looked at her sardonically. “Don’t tell me you’re above using public transportation.”
She shot him an indignant glance. “My father and I rode buses for years when we were traveling and trying to build the business. There was no money for anything else. But in case you’ve forgotten, buses are narrow enclosed places filled with people who just might watch TV or surf the Net or read newspapers. I have to think that by now your friend the Hauptkommissar will have spread your name and picture all over the EU. Maybe mine, too.”
Marten ignored her protest. “After the bus we’re going to need a car.”
“Are you going to rent it or steal it?”
“You are going to rent it.”
“Me?”
Marten glanced at her. “I can’t risk using a credit card and having my name show up in some kind of commercial data bank,” he said quietly. “Anyone looking for me would know exactly where I am.”
“What about anyone looking for me?”
“We’ll have to take that chance.”
Again came the indignant look. “We will?”
“Unless you want to walk. Where we’re going isn’t exactly around the corner.”
They were still in the crowd when they moved past the police and the sniffer dog and out into bright sunshine. Two police cars were parked on the far side of a center island directly across from them, with three uniformed officers standing nearby chatting and keeping their eyes on the terminal entrance.
“There are car rental agencies here at the airport.” Anne moved a step ahead of Marten. “It’s crazy to risk being seen on a bus.”
“True. But not so crazy when one considers that airport rental agencies and taxicabs are the first place anyone following us will look.” Marten nodded toward a city bus as it pulled to the curb not twenty yards in front of them. “They’ll look but they won’t find. By the time they think to check the agencies in the city we’ll be long gone.” He glanced back at the police. “I hope.”
“To where?”
Marten shook his head. “Not yet, darling.”
“You still don’t trust me, do you?”
“No.”
7:10 A.M.
65
FARO, MONTENEGRO DISTRICT. STILL SUNDAY, JUNE 6. 8:12 A.M.
Nicholas Marten stuffed his hands in his pockets and walked across the street to a small tree-lined park and sat down on a bench. In the distance church bells tolled for Sunday Mass. Somewhere nearby was the faint odor of cultivated garlic. Marten looked around for the decorative plant, curious as to what variety it was and where it was. Farther down two elderly men played chess under a large almond tree that he estimated was at least forty years old.
For a moment he did nothing but sit there. Finally he turned and looked across the narrow street behind him to the Auto Europe rental car office where Anne was, and had been for more than ten minutes, hopefully just because that was how long it took to rent a car, not because the use of her credit card had attracted the police as she had feared. He turned back, then stood and strolled deeper into the park. He’d been casual enough for long enough. He glanced at his watch.
8:18 A.M. IN FARO.
3:18 IN THE MORNING IN WASHINGTON,