Part IV
Chapter 28
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Callahan woke early the next morning and walked to the kitchen, only to find Didi Goodman had already prepared coffee...and as soon as she heard Harry was up and moving around the stove was prepared and breakfast was waiting on the table - hot and fresh.
"I'm not used to this, you know?" Callahan said as he sat at the same table he'd sat at with Avi barely two months before.
"I thought," Didi began, "that with the hard day you have ahead that a good breakfast might help."
"So, this was your father's idea? You coming here?"
"In a way. There are papers and other matters I had to account for before anyone else could be allowed access to the house."
"You work for the government, then?"
"Of course. You didn't know that?"
"No. Your father just mentioned you'd be a good choice to manage all this. I assumed you came here for that reason."
"Odd. He didn't mention that to me."
"Do you have some sort of accounting experience? I mean, why would he recommend you for that?"
She chuckled on hearing that. "No, but he accuses me of having OCD..."
"OCD?"
"Obsessive-compulsive. Everyone calls me the 'clean freak.' I assume they mean when I'm given an assignment I get it done right the first time."
Callahan looked at the girl anew: she looked to be mid-twenties, black hair, and fierce blue-gray eyes. Skin deeply freckled, feminine build but on the muscular side, strong legs...a runner's legs. Eyeglasses on the countertop, so probably for reading. An NYU t-shirt so schooled in the US, or wanted to be...
He ran down his usual checklist, watching the way she moved when he wasn't eating.
"So, I'm not sure exactly what would be involved, but would you be interested?"
"What? Working for you?"
"Yeah."
"In San Francisco?"
"I don't know. Whatever works, I reckon."
"I'd do it if I could live in San Francisco part-time. That would be the boss."
"The boss?"
"Cool."
"Ah. Any other relevant experience I need to know about?"
"No, not really. I just kinda go where they need me." Of course, she omitted her six years service in the Mossad, and that she had been assigned to one of the teams tracking down the Munich terrorists. And, oh yes, that she had been assigned to Avi's protective detail when he had traveled inside Israel...
"Well, it suits me. I'll let the lawyers in Tel Aviv know and you can start to get a handle on things as soon as we get back."
"Okay, so just to be clear...I'm working for you now?"
"I think that's what your father wants, and I'm at a place right now where his voice is one of the few I trust in the world."
When he said that she looked at Callahan with something akin to empathy, then she came over to the table and sat next to him.
"I think he'd appreciate knowing that, sir."
"No sir to me, okay. I'm Harry or the deal's off."
"Okay, Harry," she said, holding out her right hand, "you got a deal."
He took her hand and smiled. 'Smooth skin, but very strong grip. Index finger heavily calloused so she spends a lot of time at the range. Interesting.'
"Visiting hours at the clinic begin at 0900 hours. It's not an easy walk, so you'd better let me drive you."
"I've made the walk before. Besides, I think I'll need it after that breakfast."
"Okay. Also today, your mother's piano has been moved from the compound; it's arriving here this afternoon."
"Oh...?"
"Avi's residence in the compound belongs to the government, so of course..."
"I understand. Good thing this house belonged to him."
She nodded. "More than anything else, he wanted to retire here with your mother."
"Yeah, he told me more than once this is his favorite place in the world."
"Did he ever tell you he regarded you as his son, or at least the son he should have had?"
Callahan shook his head. "No."
"I hesitate to say this, but he told me as much more than once," she added. "He was a very complicated man, Harry. Honorable, but complicated."
"So is your father."
"Benny? Well, really he is a very simple man. He exists to serve Israel."
"And you call that simple?" Harry said, grinning.
"Ah yes. I get your point?"
"So, do I call you Didi?"
"Works for me."
"And is there a Mister Didi?"
She laughed at that. "No, most men grow bored with my OCD. They can't stand to be around me once it kicks in."
"Well, I'm kind of a neat freak myself. And speaking of, I need to get ready to go."
She went to the kitchen and returned with an envelope. "Here are all the local telephone numbers you'll need, as well as some currency and a credit card. I took the liberty of activating the card, by the way. It's linked to one of your Swiss accounts so your credit limit is rather high. Be careful, in other words, to keep it secure."
"Not much crime around here, or at least I assumed as much?"
"More than you'd think. But it tends to be centered on diplomatic matters. There are many spies at work around here, if that matters to you."
"Oh? American?"
"Mainly Russian, more than a few Brits. Several politburo members have chalets here, including Brezhnev, so electronic eavesdropping facilities are also a feature of life around here."
"Shit."
"I think Avi once said the exact same thing."
"Do they cause any problems?"
"The Russians? No, more the exact opposite, I think. I think they prefer to keep a very low profile, as it wouldn't sit well in the Soviet Union if word of these properties ever leaked out. Radio Free Europe manages to get the word out one way or another, and because of that the Swiss actually work with the Russians to keep these properties off the books."
"Well..."
"Yessir. I'll be standing by here at the house in case you need me."
"Harry, not sir."
"Got it."
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The air was crisp, not quite cold, and rain was in the forecast - which meant more snow on the mountain - yet Callahan was enjoying his walk into town. He only had a light windbreaker with him so he stopped and picked up a new jacket in town, then he hailed a taxi for the final stretch up the mountain to the clinic.
There was a depressing sort of alternate reality hanging around the main clinic building as he approached - like it had been constructed to contain the patients inside, and to somehow keep them well insolated from the outside world...like the two were somehow mutually exclusive. Hulking gray stone, white windows and a copper roof that had turned green a hundred years before - the building had been on this spot for as long as anyone could remember, and Europe's nobility had sent their ailing children here for 'the cure' as far back as the French Revolution. The poor were, needless to say, not in attendance.
He went to the reception and asked to speak with Sara's physician, and he was guided to a conference room, provided with hot tea, and was asked to wait. A few minutes later Sara's psychiatrist came in, and she looked glum.
"Ah, Herr Callahan, so nice to see you again."
"You too. How is Sara?"
"Deteriorating, I'm afraid. Once you left her depression worsened, but more troubling still is a repetitive hallucination she's experienced."