“Not alone. Major Asanova was a formidable asset. Whoever did this—”
“I’ll need a team of five. We have twenty men from Directorate S within three hours of Marseille. Find me the best. And make sure one of them is a decent shot. If Mr. Coluzzi thinks he can toy with me, he is sorely mistaken.”
Chapter 52
It was a drive through the most beautiful landscape on Earth. They made their way south along two-lane roads that rose and fell with the hills and valleys, past vineyards and wheat fields and grand country estates, through towns and hamlets, the air rich with the warm, fertile scent of the earth, the colors a palette of russet tones.
Driving was one of the few activities that relaxed Simon. Often, the faster he drove, the calmer he grew. Today, he made sure to check those instincts. He kept to the speed limit and obeyed every light and stop sign. They were off the radar. He wanted to keep it that way.
Nikki asked him again about his past. This time he told her, joking he had better take the opportunity while he still had it. He told her the real story as he knew it, not the sanitized version he’d grown used to recounting even to those he was close to. It was the truth with the emotions exposed; he was surprised at how raw some still were all these years later.
He told her about the fear and abandonment he’d felt after his father’s suicide, the bottomless well of anger at his not having left a note, the lingering notion that Simon was in some way responsible no matter how much he knew it wasn’t the case. The move to Marseille, the beatings he’d endured at his stepfather’s hand, until one day he’d decided enough was enough and he hit back. The decision to quit school. His first days on the street—un petit voyou—a little thug working the block. His distaste for the drug users he shepherded in and out of the dealers’ lairs, until he started using drugs himself. His move up the food chain to stealing cars, the unbeatable rush of leading a dozen police cars on a two-hour chase through Marseille and the surrounding countryside. No one knew the area as well as he—every street, every alley, every shortcut. No one.
All the while, Nikki nodded and said she understood or asked him a question about how he’d felt or why he hadn’t done something differently. Simon heard no judgment in her voice, just curiosity and empathy. And so he went on.
And then, the bigger move up to knocking off armored cars. The first time as part of a crew, surrounding the vehicle on all sides, one team charged with getting the cash, the other with fending off the police. The wild firefights in broad daylight, bullets whizzing everywhere, none by the grace of God hitting him. To this day, he admitted, he loved blowing off a clip of ammo on full auto with his AK. Yes, he owned one, but he kept it at his shooting club in London. He had lots of guns there. One day he’d show her.
He told her about the day he was arrested, what it felt like to be shot—it hadn’t hurt until later; at the time, he’d been too pumped with adrenaline to feel anything. He knew who had betrayed them but told no one.
“Why?” Nikki asked.
But Simon had moved on. The answer was coming. He didn’t want to get ahead of himself. He was back in Les Baums, and for the first time he told another person about killing Nasser-Al-Faris, how he felt nothing looking down on his dead body, not remorse, not guilt, not relief. Nothing. He was dead inside.
And then, his punishment in “the hole.” His certainty each and every day that he was losing his sanity. The endless hours made worse by not knowing how long he must endure. A month. A year. Longer. And all of it avoidable if he gave up one man’s name.
“Why didn’t you?” Nikki asked in disbelief. “You knew who betrayed you. He was responsible for the death of Bonfanti’s son. Not you.”
“We were all responsible,” Simon replied. “The second we decided to rob that truck, we’d given up any right to justice. Still, I should have known he was a rat.”
“I don’t understand. You could have walked out after a day.”
“Looking back, the decision’s easy. Then, things were different. I was different. I wanted to be the one who gave it to him. Face-to-face.”
“How long were you in solitary confinement?”
“The hole? Two years, give or take.”
“You were only nineteen. A boy.”
“I was old enough.”
Simon went on to tell Nikki how the worst experience in his life had turned into the best, all because of one man.
The monsignor.
He related the miracle Paul Deschutes, SJ, had wrought, a lifetime of education in one year, days that were too long, suddenly not long enough. The new and ineffable joy of learning. The wonderment of knowledge for knowledge’s sake and the power that came with it. Eureka. Simon had found his purpose.
“What happened to him?” Nikki asked, her eyes lit with Simon’s enthusiasm. “Did you stay in touch after he got out?”
“He didn’t get out. He was sick. He knew he was dying. I never saw him after I was let out.”
Simon slowed as he drove through the commune of Rognac. To their right, an inland lake, the étang de Berre, spread to the horizon. They crested a hill, and he could see the Mediterranean, twenty miles in the distance.
“Then Coluzzi showed up. I can’t remember what he’d done. All that time I’d dreamed how I was going to kill him. It was the thought of revenge that had kept me alive until I met the monsignor. But when I saw him, I couldn’t do it. The monsignor wouldn’t have allowed it. The last day we were together in the yard, one of those Sundays, he told me he had no one else in the world. His daughter had died ten years earlier. He hadn’t seen her mother since long before that. He said I was the only one he had left. I remember him looking at me…looking into me with his blue eyes…he told me he had only one thing of value to give anyone. It was in a safe deposit box in a bank in London. He didn’t have the key. He couldn’t remember the box number, just the name and branch of the bank. He told me that it was very valuable, that it would, in effect, leave me rich for life. Before we went back inside to our cells, he made me promise that I would find a way to open the box and take possession of what belonged to me.”
“Did you?”
“Yes, I did.”
“How?”
“There was really only one way. I went to college. I earned my degree in economics. I applied for a job at the bank. I made sure I was assigned to the private banking department. Even then, I had to work for years before I could gain access to the files that showed which box was his and to convince someone to break the rules and open it for me.”
“But you managed it? You opened the box.”
“I did.”
Simon narrowed his eyes, remembering the moment, standing alone in the small, cramped room deep in the ground beneath the bank. From one cell to another, he’d thought. For a while he sat on the hard metal chair, staring at the box, afraid to open it. Afraid of being disappointed. Afraid of discovering something that would change his life just when it was the way he liked it. Mostly, he realized he was afraid of all that the box represented. It was, after all, the end of his journey with the monsignor.
And then, remembering that his colleague was waiting for him, and that he was due back at his desk in a few minutes’ time, and he must prepare for a client arriving just after lunch, he inserted the key, gave a crisp turn to the right, and opened it.
“Well?” asked Nikki. “What was inside?”
“Nothing. The box was empty.”
“Empty? There was nothing in it?”
“I didn’t say that.”
“But he lied to you. He said it would leave you rich for life.”
“It did.”
For a moment Nikki didn’t answer. Simon looked at her and saw the disappointment in her eyes. Like everyone, she had expected a different ending.