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Kind face or not, the driver had gone to sleep. In the Turks' hearse-black Land Rover,
farther down the track, a second driver sat with his mouth open, gawping straight ahead of
him, seeing nothing.
"Hoban," Winser said.
A shadow fell across his eyes, and the sun by now was so high that whoever was casting
it must be standing close to him. He felt sleepy. Good idea. Wake up somewhere else.
Squinting downward through sweat-matted eyelashes he saw a pair of crocodile shoes
protruding from elegant white ducks with turnups. He squinted higher and identified the
black, inquiring features of Monsieur François, yet another of Hoban's satraps. Monsieur
François is our surveyor. He will be taking measurements of the proposed site, Hoban had
announced at Istanbul airport, and Winser had foolishly granted the surveyor the same
tepid smile that he had bestowed on Signor d'Emilio.
One of the crocodile shoes shifted and in his drowsy state Winser wondered whether
Monsieur François proposed to kick him with it, but evidently not. He was offering
something obliquely to Winser's face. A pocket tape recorder, Winser decided. The sweat in
his eyes was making them smart. He wants me to speak words of reassurance to my loved ones
for when they ransom me: Tiger, sir, this is Alfred Winser, the last of the Winsers, as
you used to call me, and I want you to know I'm absolutely fine, nothing to worry about at
all, everything ace. These are good people and they are looking after me superbly. I've
learned to respect their cause, whatever it is, and when they release me, which they've
promised to do any minute now, I shall speak out boldly for it in the forums of world
opinion. Oh, and I hope you don't mind, I've promised them that you will too, only they're
most concerned to have the benefit of your powers of persuasion...
He's holding it against my other cheek. He's frowning at it. It's not a tape recorder
after all, it's a thermometer. No it's not, it's for reading my pulse, making sure I'm not
passing out. He's putting it back in his pocket. He's swinging up the hill to join the two
German Turk undertakers and Signor d'Emilio in my Panama hat.
Winser discovered that, in the strain of ruling out the unacceptable, he had wet
himself. A clammy patch had formed in the left inside leg of the trousers of his tropical
suit and there was nothing he could do to conceal it. He was in limbo, in terror. He was
transposing himself to other places. He was sitting late at his desk at the office because
he couldn't stand another night of waiting up for Bunny to come home from her mother's in
a bad temper with her cheeks flushed. He was with a chubby friend he used to love in
Chiswick, and she was tying him to the bed head with bits of dressing-gown girdle she kept
in a top drawer. He was anywhere, absolutely anywhere, except here on this hilltop in
hell. He was asleep but he went on kneeling, skewed upright and racked with pain. There
must have been splinters of seashell or flint in the sand because he could feel points
cutting into his kneecaps. Ancient pottery, he remembered. Roman pottery abounds on the
hilltops, and the hills are said to contain gold. Only yesterday he had made this
tantalizing selling point to Hoban's retinue during his eloquent presentation of the
Single investment blueprint in Dr. Mirsky's office in Istanbul. Such touches of color were
attractive to ignorant investors, particularly boorish Russians. Gold, Hoban! Treasure,
Hoban! Ancient civilization! Think of the appeal! He had talked brilliantly,
provocatively, a virtuoso performance. Even Mirsky, whom Winser secretly regarded as an
upstart and a liability, had found it in him to applaud. "Your scheme is so legal,
Alfred, it ought to be forbidden," he had roared and, with a huge Polish laugh,
slapped him so hard on the back that his knees nearly buckled.
Copyright © 1999 by David Cornwell. Reproduced with permission of the publisher.
Sometimes I think we're alone. Sometimes I think we're not. In either case, the thought is staggering.
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