Authors: Irving Wallace
Tags: #Bernadette, #Saint, #1844-1879, #Foreign correspondents, #Women journalists
Reggie was momentarily without an easy or logical answer. "Well, because—" he said hesitantly, "because—well, I'd feel better about what you're doing once the miracle is officially confirmed."
"Oh, that," she said, dismissing it, "if that's all you're worried about, you needn't bother. My cure has been confirmed, really. It'll be officially confirmed—a technicahty, as we both know—the day after tomorrow. I spent the morning with Dr. Berryer at the Medical Bureau. He's obtained the services of one of the two best men in the field—one with much experience in sarcoma cases—a Dr. Paul Kleinberg in Paris, who is arriving tomorrow to review the papers on my case and have the final look at me."
"Tomorrow?"
"Absolutely. Dr. Berryer will phone me after Dr. Kleinberg arrives, and let me know when to see him on Wednesday. Dr. Kleinberg will then confirm the miracle and it will be announced."
"Well, in that case," said Reggie, displaying his relief, "that's different, and I shouldn't be worrying. Since that's happening, I guess it's all right for you to talk about your cure."
"Of course it is, Reggie. I'm glad you agree."
"Yes, I'm sure it's all right," said Reggie smoothly, "and, as you say, it does give so many suffering people the belief that they can be cured, too. Yes, I'll go along with you, Edith. You are doing wonderful missionary work, just like the first apostles, spreading the word of miracles." He paused, his face lighting up. "In fact, we should celebrate again. Jamet has finished remodeling the new restaurant—it's a grand place now—and he and I are having our reopening tonight—we're plastering the town with handbills announcing the great event—"
"How wonderful!"
" -- and I want you right there beside me to greet the guests. There should be a huge turnout. We'll have a special table and we've invited eight or ten important people, not just from Lourdes, but pilgrims from everywhere, to join us. I know they'll all be thrilled to meet you. And you can answer their questions. They'll be inspired to hear every detail of your story. What do you say, old girl?"
"Of course I want to be there, and tell them whatever they want to know. I don't mind if you're sure you don't mind."
"I insist on it," said Reggie with a half smile. He bent over and kissed Edith's cheek. "You're my little lady, my miracle lady. We're going to go far together."
8 • • • August 15
It was early afternoon, and Mikel Hurtado was sound asleep in his room on the second floor of the Hotel Gallia & Londres, and he might have slept much later into the afternoon if the insistent ringing of the telephone on his bedstand had not awakened him.
It rang and rang without stop, until Hurtado finally shook himself awake, realized it was the telephone, and reached for the receiver, almost knocking the phone over as he brought the receiver to him.
"Yeah?"
"Mikel Hurtado, please." It was a faintly familiar female voice asking for him in English. "Mikel, is that you?"
"It's Mikel. Who is this?"
The events of the early morning hours came back to him, the attempted rape next door, his own role in beating up the rapist, the gratefulness of the beautiful and helpless blind girl next door, her name was Natale, and at first he thought that it was this Natale phoning to thank him again.
But the voice on the other end of the line was deeper and now speaking to him rapidly in Basque. "I've been ringing a long time," she was saying, "and I was just about to give up, when you answered. Mikel, don't you know who this is? This is Julia. I'm calling from San Sebastian."
Julia Valdez, his colleague in the Basque underground, calling long distance.
He was immediately annoyed, becoming angry.
"We agreed you were not supposed to call me in Lourdes," he snapped out. "I want no calls here. Are you crazy?"
"I had to call," Juha implored. "It is important."
Resigned, he said, "What can be so important?"
"Your life," said Juha, lowering her voice.
She had always had a tendency to be melodramatic, he told himself, being so young and immature. So he remained calm.
"My hfe?" he said. "What are you talking about?"
"It's my fault, in a way," Juha was saying. "I'd better explain. Augustin came looking for you this morning."
Augustin Lopez, as leader of the ETA, rarely had time to meet with him unless it involved some pending action. Hurtado wondered if the assassination of Minister Bueno had been revived. He was instantly alert. "Do you know what he wanted?"
"He said that he must see you. Luis Bueno has set a conference on our autonomy to begin in Madrid right after the reappearance of the Virgin. The minister is so confident the reappearance will occur that he has set a definite date for talks. Augustin wanted to inform you, and to consult with you about a strategy and agenda for the talks."
"The talks," Hurtado said with contempt. "Augustin really thinks they will take place and amount to anything? He's becoming senile. Julia, that's what you called me about?"
"Mikel, no, I am calling about what followed. Augustin kept insisting that he must see you. I couldn't tell him where you were, of course. So I tried to stall. But he's pretty smart, the old man is, and he started becoming suspicious. He pressed me to tell where you were, when you'd be back in the apartment. I told him soon, promised him you'd be back in a few days. Mikel, he kept pushing me. 'Back from where?' he kept saying. 'Where has he gone?' He knew that I was hiding something. He pressed me and pressed me, and was beginning to lose his temper—and you know his temper, Mikel—and he started saying I was keeping something from him, and he demanded to know what, and would force an answer out of me unless I was honest with him. I had to tell him—"
"So you told him the truth," Mikel interrupted bitterly. "You told him where I was. You told him I went to Lourdes."
"Mikel, I had no choice but to be truthful," she begged. "He'd see through any he. He always does. I was forced to say you'd gone to Lourdes to—to see what was going on. Augustin saw through that at once. He wouldn't let me get away with it. 'You mean our Mikel has
suddenly got religion, hopes for a chance to see the Virgin Mary?' He was shouting at me. Then he said, 'Bullshit! He's gone there to cause some trouble, to do something, anything, to keep me from negotiating with Bueno, to force me to approve of direct action, of terrorism.' Au-gustin kept saying that, words like that, trying to make me confess that I knew what you were up to. When I refused to confess, he lost his temper grabbed me by the wrist, twisting it—"
'That doesn't sound like him."
"I know. But he was really out of control. He kept on shouting. He said. If Mikel has gone crazy, thinks he can get anywhere with an act of violence in Lourdes, he's got to know that all he'll blow up is our chance for a peaceful settlement with Spain. He is going to try something violent, isn't he?' Mikel, he was hurting me, painfully. I had to tell him the truth."
Hurtado's own anger rose. "You told him the truth?"
"I had no choice. Then Augustin said, 'Do you know where to reach him?' I said I did, but I'd never tell. I told him he could kill me first. He said, 'The minute I leave, you reach him. You find Mikel. You order him to stop whatever he is planning, to stop in my name. You order him to return to San Sebastian immediately. That is a strict order. If he attempts to defy it, he will be disciplined. I expect to hear from him today.' Mikel, those were his very words. Please listen to them. Augustin knows best."
Hurtado was furious. "Fuck Augustin. Fuck you, too, for being so stupid as to tell him what you did."
"Mikel," she pleaded on the phone, "be reasonable. He's smarter than I am. He knew without my telling him. He's just too smart."
He's also your father figure, your authority figure, and you want him to love you, Mikel thought, and he gave himself seconds to sinmier down and be reasonable. "All right, Julia, I shouldn't blame you. I know you were on the spot."
"I was, Mikel, I was, I'm glad you understand."
"But I'm not forgiving him, not forgiving his sudden softness," Hurtado went on implacably. "He wants my answer today? You can give him my answer today, in fact right now. Go and tell him I am not returning to San Sebastian, tell him I am not leaving Lourdes until I've done what I've come here to do. Got it?"
There was silence on the other end. Julia's voice finally filled the void. Her tone was a tremble. "Mikel, you—you're not actually going to—to do what—what you told me you were going to do?"
"You're damn right I'm going to do it."
"Mikel—"
"Stay out of this, Julia. I'm going ahead. No one is going to get in my way."
Julia's response was hushed. "Mikel, if you could have seen him, you'd know. He won't let you. He will stop you. He'll say it is for the good of the cause. But he won't let you go ahead. He will stop you."
Hurtado gave an angry laugh. "Let him try."
With that, he hung up.
He remained seated on the bed, his legs still under the blanket, trying to think. He did not like what was going on, but what the whole matter came down to, Mikel felt convinced, was that Augustin would not move to undermine a fellow fighter in the movement. In the end, Augustin would be reasonable himself and loyal. It had been an empty threat to display authority. Augustin Lopez would make no real effort to stop him.
Feeling better, Hurtado looked out the window into the sunny afternoon. The grotto would be teeming with visitors right now. He would wait a few hours, wait until the crowd in the domain thiimed out before dinner. Then he would carry his goodies down to the grotto, and there, at the first opportune moment, secrete them in the small forest above. After that, he would walk back to the hotel for a hearty dinner, and after dinner bide his time until midnight, maybe an hour or so after midnight, to return to the grotto to do the job.
After the satisfactory lunch at the Gallia & Londres hotel, spurred by the incentive of a 400-franc bonus from Sergei Tikhanov if she could find him a hotel room (and certain that she could find him a room), Gisele Dupree decided to drive with her aflBuent chent to Tarbes right away to collect and move their belongings to Lourdes. There was still time, Gisele could see, better than two hours, before she was scheduled to guide a Nantes pilgrimage group to the grotto. Tikhanov readily agreed with her new plan.
On this trip she drove the red Renault fast, at breakneck speed, and they arrived at her parents' apartment in Tarbes in almost no time at all. Inside, she was able to pack her two suitcases swiftly. Tikhanov, who had unpacked very httle the night before, was in the living room and ready with his single bag when she came out with her suitcases and a note to leave for her parents.
Again, with minimal traflSc on the highway to slow them, Gisele covered the distance between Tarbes and Lourdes at high speed, as Tikhanov sat stiffly and nervously beside her. Once inside Lourdes, and having swung into the Rue de la Grotte, heading for their destination near the foot of the Chateau Fort, she broke her concentrated silence.
"We're just about there," she said to Tikhanov. "I'm taking you to the Hotel de la Grotte. Very elegant and merely ten minutes from the domain and the sanctuaries."
"Are you sure you can find me a room there?" Tikhanov asked worriedly.
"Do not be concerned, Mr. Talley. I have the best connections."
Indeed, she did have a good connection at the Hotel de la Grotte. She had done favors for the main receptionist, Gaston, and, in turn, he had done favors for her. They had an understanding about a spare room that was usually available for a guest prepared to pay for it with a bonus.
The huge white stucco five-story hotel, with the lettering HOTEL DEL LA GROTTE strung across the top of its roof, loomed before them. Gisele drove her Renault through the open black wrought-iron gates, entered the blacktop forecourt that curved past the blue awning and glass doors of the front entrance, and bore right into the half-filled guest parking lot.
"You wait here," said Gisele, leaving the car. "I have to see my friend and find out about the room."
"I'll be here," said Tikhanov. "Where else would I be?"
Gisele strode rapidly back to the hotel, and once inside turned right to the reception and key desk. It was unattended, but then she saw her friend Gaston coming from the blue lounge beyond the main lobby and returning to his station.
"Gaston!" she called out, and the diminutive figure in the black suit and bow tie halted, searched off" and recognized her. His face broke into a show of pleasure, as he minced toward her. They hugged, kissed each other's cheeks, and parted for business.
"Gisele, my child, it has been a while."
"But well worth waiting for. Listen, Gaston, I need a room. Do you have one?"
"It depends," Gaston said warily. "This is a very, very busy season, you know."
"I have an important American chent out in the car," said Gisele, "a New York professor. He offers a four hundred-franc bonus for a spare room. Half for you, and half for me."
"I will check. I think there is a space available on the third floor."
Pleased, Gisele clapped her hands, signaled a bellboy to follow her, and dashed out to the parking lot.
A few minutes later she came back with Tikhanov in tow, grandly introduced him with a short biographical sketch to Gaston, whispered to her chent that it was the moment to dehver the bonus. Waiting while
Tikhanov peeled off the 400 franc notes, she slipped 200 francs to Gaston, and held on to the rest. Once Tikhanov had been safely registered, he was off to the elevators to be shown to his room by the bellboy.
"See you around, Mr. Talley," she called after Tikhanov.
"Thank you. Mademoiselle Dupree," he answered.
Once more in her car, noting tfiat she still had time for her next two stops before taking on her afternoon tour, Gisele drove to her first stop, parking on the Avenue du Paradis, around the comer from the Cafe Jeanne d'Arc. Walking to the cafe, she peered inside and made out her friend Dominique clearing a table near the bar.
Gisele went inside. "Dominique, is the apartment free? I'd like to move my things in."