They were in a small uncrowded restaurant in Piraeus. The food was superb and the view, of lights twinkling on the water and white boats bobbing at anchor in the harbor, was lovely.
Pan grimaced and shook his head. “Well, perhaps. And perhaps not so awful. Some bystanders were hurt, and property destroyed, which is to be regretted. Yet the passersby were not badly injured, and are recovering nicely in hospital.”
“The news said four people were killed,” Annja said.
“Indeed,” Pan said, nodding. “Four terrorists.”
“Terrorists?”
Again he nodded. “Albanians. Or, rather, ethnic Albanians from Kosovo. Two were burned beyond recognition, and the other two fatalities carried papers falsely identifying them as Krasnovar Serbs from Croatia. But we have an injured survivor under guard in hospital, with third-degree burns over fifty percent of his body and badly broken ribs. He is expected to survive to face trial. He has confessed. It appears he was the racketeer and was unwise enough to fire his launcher inside a small imported sedan, apparently in ignorance that the rocket exhaust produced a substantial fiery backblast.”
“That’s a terrible thing to go through,” she said. “Not that they didn’t have it coming, I guess. And from the way you’re looking at me—”
He laughed softly. “Can’t I just enjoy looking at you?”
“Do you?” she asked, surprised.
“What man would not?”
“Well—a man who was mainly interested in looking at me wouldn’t look at me in that particular way. At least I hope not,” she said.
“I suppose not.”
“So they were Bajraktari’s men?”
He nodded.
“I don’t suppose any of them happened to be Bajraktari? Or Duka?” she asked.
“Don’t you know?”
“Don’t I know? How on earth should I?”
“Well, to start with, you know full well Enver Bajraktari is a cagey fox. Would he let anybody on an operation he commanded in person do anything so foolish as to fire an RPG inside a car? Unless he meant to produce a diversion to allow the real killers to strike.”
Annja struggled to keep her face impassive. Fortunately she had had lots of practice. “The real killers?” she asked.
“We suspect the other two dead men were the real hit team. We found them several blocks away.”
“I thought you had a confession,” Annja said with a sinking sensation.
Pan shrugged. “The burn victim has confessed to taking part in a terrorist attack. He claims it was merely to strike a blow for independence of all ethnic Albanians from the former Yugoslavia. That seems unlikely. Bajraktari isn’t the sort to indulge in violence for mere political posturing. He takes his violence far too seriously for that.”
“And the others?” Annja asked.
“Our suspect disclaims all knowledge of them.” Pan sipped his ouzo. “He may be telling the truth. In fact, he may be telling the whole truth. As he knows it.”
Annja knew otherwise, but she wasn’t going to tell him how.
“But it smells like an assassination. The two dead men had Skorpion machine pistols in their hands. Nasty pieces of work. You know them?”
She realized she was nodding. “I’ve read about them. I have to admit I’m mildly interested in firearms.”
Comfortable as she was coming to feel in his presence, she knew she had to tread carefully. She didn’t dare play dumb with him—he knew her background too well for that. She’d already shown Pan ample evidence she knew how to react in combat simply by getting out of that Kastoria warehouse alive. So she reckoned being up-front about a familiarity with guns would make him least suspicious.
“The two on foot would seem to have been closing in on a target,” Pan said.
“What happened to them?”
“They were killed by someone wielding a weapon with a long, double-edged, sharp blade. Exceedingly sharp. One of them was almost decapitated at a single blow. Although the position in which his body was found indicated he was running, which would add his own momentum to the force of his blow, that is…unusual, to say the least.”
“Didn’t you find similar wounds in the warehouse?” It’s coming out anyway, she thought.
He sat back from her, turning slightly sideways in his chair and crossing one long lean leg over the other. “Exactly.”
She took a bite of her stuffed grape leaves. “I guess they went after the wrong person.”
Pan’s chuckle had an edge like broken glass. “It would certainly appear so. The other man was stabbed clean through the torso. Our medical examiner says both entrance and exit wounds had the cleanest edges of any stab wounds he had ever encountered.”
“Seriously,” Annja said faintly, laying down her fork. She hoped he’d think such a detailed postmortem made her feel appropriately squeamish.
His eyes were intense as a falcon’s as they gazed at her. “The most obvious person for Bajraktari to expend such effort to target,” he said, “is you, Annja. And you were at the warehouse.”
She laughed weakly. “Somebody else must’ve been, too,” she said. “Or do I look like Conan the Barbarian to you?”
He laughed. “You are an exceedingly strong and fit woman,” he said after a moment. “And you clearly know how to handle yourself in dangerous situations. But no—” he shook his head “—I can’t see a woman delivering a decapitating blow. Call me a male chauvinist if you will. And there is of course the astonishing fact that the weapon, which the medical examiner judged must have been nothing less than a broadsword, is unwieldy and most inconvenient to carry. Much less conceal. Especially on a frame as spare as yours.”
“Are you saying I’m skinny?”
He held up his hands defensively and laughed. “I didn’t say that. I just mean you’d have to be built like an ox and dressed in a tent to have a hope to hide such a weapon.”
“That’s not my style,” she said.
“Of course not.” He shook his head. “It’s a mystery. It preys on my mind. Yet rationally it cannot concern you. So let’s put it aside and enjoy our meal, yes?”
“Yes,” she said. “I have news, anyway. I found something fantastic today.”
He turned forward and leaned closer. “And what is that?”
“At the museum I found a remarkable story in a Medieval Latin translation of a Byzantine manuscript. It told of how Alexander faced increasing discontent from his Macedonian soldiers, worn out by marching so far and fighting so much. His treasury was getting low. Then from an informant he learned of a cave shrine high up in the mountains of Nepal that contained a vast treasure. He sent a general from his bodyguards with a small handpicked force to seize it. And guess what?”
“I’m all ears.”
“The general’s name was Pantheras. Isn’t that strange?”
Pan went still. Then he leaned back slowly until his face was shadowed in the darkness of the restaurant. Outside a patrol boat putted across the harbor, probing left and right with a blue-white spotlight.
“So how did the mission turn out?” he asked after a moment of silence.
“I don’t know. The fragment ended there.”
She could see a smile play over his lips. “That’s too bad,” he said.
A