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Authors: David O. Stewart

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BOOK: The Wilson Deception
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The other gendarmes joined the argument with Fraser. Siegel, very near to sputtering, roused himself, advising the policemen of a possible advance of Allied troops into Germany. Major Fraser, he insisted, was essential to the invasion. The gendarmes brightened at the suggestion of new fighting with Germany but saw no reason why that would require the release of Cook. They would do their bit for the invasion by releasing Fraser.
Violet returned clutching two bottles of Courvoisier, which she handed to her mother. “These cost four hundred francs!” she whispered.
With a wide smile, Eliza approached the men, holding up one of the bottles. Did they have glasses, she asked.
Two of the gendarmes looked at the third, who shrugged. Mismatched glasses appeared on a desk.
Eliza poured the liquor and tried not to take any for herself. The gendarmes insisted, though, as did Fraser.
“You clever girl,” he said softly. “I'll buy you a case. You can bathe in it.” He offered a toast to Lafayette, to Marshal Foch the commanding general, and to the great Clemenceau. The glasses were soon empty. Each gendarme ran his tongue around his lips, savoring the rich drink. The senior man offered to pour another round, but the Americans declined.
Fraser pointed to the back of the station house and raised his eyebrows. He said only,
“S'il vous plâit.”
The man reflected for a moment, then adopted an attitude of cosmic indifference. He called Siegel to one side while dispatching a colleague to fetch the remaining prisoner. Cook arrived with his head held high, his mouth resolutely shut. The Americans left. The cognac stayed.
Out on the sidewalk, Siegel handed Cook a paper the gendarme had given him. “This says you must leave the country within five days. After that, you're subject to arrest and imprisonment.” He directed his attention to Fraser. “And you, Major Fraser, can hardly afford to be brawling in the public markets of Paris like some hick private on his first leave. I can't believe you and I are engaged in this nonsense at such a critical time.”
“What's this about invading Germany?” Fraser asked. “When did this come up?”
“It's not certain, of course, but the order came through this afternoon. We're to be ready if the Germans don't sign the treaty. Apparently the idea is that we'll all just roll off to war, lickety-split.”
“Colonel, you know that can't happen. It's been seven months. The Germans have to sign. They don't even have a functioning government, and we're not exactly battle-ready.”
“Based on the orders issued to me, General Pershing doesn't share your strategic analysis. I expect you to be at the hospital in an hour, ready to plan our advance into the Rhineland in support of the army.” Siegel made a point of shaking hands with Mrs. Fraser and her daughter as he departed. He simply nodded at the men.
“Well,” Eliza said to the newly freed, “aren't you boys a little old for this sort of thing?” Cook and Fraser dutifully moaned their agreement, but she didn't fall for it. “You seem remarkably chipper for two—what's the best way to say it?—two men of distinguished years, who have been jailed after a street fight.”
“May I say, light of my life,” Fraser said, “that you should've seen the other guys?” With a chuckle under his breath, Fraser ventured off the curb in search of a taxi.
Cook, remaining with the women, shifted his feet. “Well, Mrs. Fraser,” he said, “I thank you for springing me.” He held his hand out. “It's nice to see you again after all these years.”
Eliza took the hand coolly. “Mr. Cook,”she nodded to Violet, “this is our daughter, Violet.”
Violet shook his hand more readily. “Mr. Cook, how is your eye?” Violet said. “Do you need to go to the hospital?”
“No thank you, miss. I received medical care from my fellow prisoner.” He smiled. “You never know who you'll meet in jail.”
“I suppose not,” Eliza said.
“Mrs. Fraser, I don't want you to get the wrong impression of me, what with this arrest and being ordered out of the country and all.”
“I'm not sure it's a wrong impression.”
“Mother!” Violet scolded.
Cook shrugged. “I prefer it when people speak their mind. But this is all about my boy, my son Joshua.”
“Jamie has told me the story.” Eliza's tone was warmer. “I'm sorry for your trouble. For his trouble.”
“What story?” Violet said.
“Later, dear.”
“When it comes to Joshua,” Cook said, “there's nothing I won't do. Nothing. And if your husband's willing to help us, and he has been, then I'm just grateful.” He looked down. “That's all I wanted to say.”
Fraser had snared a cab, which was idling at the curb. “So, you'll stay at the same hotel?” he said to Cook.
“I hate to, but it's the only place Joshua knows to find me.”
“He knows how to find me, right at the hospital.”
“I'll risk another night at the hotel.”
“So,” Eliza said, “I assume you boys have hatched a plan?”
Fraser smiled back. “Haven't we, though. There's even parts for you ladies, if you're game.”
Chapter 28
Saturday evening, May 31, 1919
 
“O
h, Allen,” Violet gushed, “don't you love the whole idea of the Paris ballet?” The lobby of the Palais Garnier shimmered with light from chandeliers that dangled forty feet above them, a Damoclean nightmare for any anxious soul inclined to imagine disaster. The Dulles brothers, with Violet and her mother, stood with the shiny crowd. The vast lobby swallowed conversation in a din that rose like a cloud to the distant ceiling. Ordinarily discreet people had to shout to be heard.
“The concierge at our hotel says they've been performing for two hundred and fifty years,” Violet continued, turning toward Foster, who was immaculate in evening clothes. “Why, it's older than our entire country!” Her high spirits brought only a chilly smile from the elder Dulles.
“My dear Violet,” Allen said, leaning over to be heard, “you must recall that Foster's idea of fun is curling up with a debenture agreement that includes an especially ingenious reordering of priorities in bankruptcy.”
“Really, now,” Eliza took Foster's arm and drew him toward the stairs to the performance hall. “We're fortunate to have such dashing escorts when Violet's father couldn't be spared from the hospital.” She rolled her eyes and gave a small smile. “He said something about invading Germany.”
The younger Dulles extended his arm to Violet. “The good fortune is all ours.”
Eliza didn't care much for his grin, which seemed distinctly wolfish. Still, the younger brother seemed more of a person than the one she was walking with. At least the younger one could counterfeit being a person. According to Jamie, Allen had agreed to induce the French authorities to abandon any efforts to arrest Joshua Cook. Allen claimed it must have been a misunderstanding.
Jamie wasn't so sure. He insisted that he didn't trust Allen Dulles. Eliza thought that she might.
 
Opening the door to the service entrance of the Crillon, Fraser shifted his hips in a vain attempt to reorient a trouser seam that was binding a sensitive part of his anatomy. He wanted to reach down and shift the hotel worker's uniform that Cook had pilfered for him, but such a rude gesture would draw attention from the actual hotel workers who lounged at the entrance. Cook had stolen the uniform for Lawrence to use, so it was far too small for Fraser. When the Englishman landed in an Italian hospital following an airplane crash in Rome, he became unavailable for this particular gambit. Fraser agreed to be the last-minute substitute. Despite the sharp discomfort of the garment, he strode firmly through the hotel's back corridors. He needed to reach his destination quickly.
He lifted a wrench from an open toolbox at the side of the corridor. Even in ill-fitting pants, a man with a wrench fades into the woodwork.
Through a chain of reasoning that was not entirely airtight, Speed, Fraser, and Lawrence had decided that Foster Dulles was the American official most likely to be in contact with the Germans. He seemed the one most engaged with German issues at the conference. His law firm—the Cromwell law firm—had extensive dealings with Germany before the war and shrewd Mr. Cromwell would not miss the opportunity to rekindle those. Dulles' uncle was the Secretary of State and his brother was a spy with a finger in every pie in Paris. So Foster Dulles' room was the evening's target.
Of course, if their chain of inferences was wrong, they were taking a lot of chances for nothing. They took some solace, though, from Lawrence's endorsement of their reasoning in typically Delphic terms. That had been enough to persuade Fraser to agree to the plan, but not enough to feel confident in it. They were deep into a double and triple game, working Allen Dulles for favors while burglarizing his brother's hotel room. It was better when Fraser didn't chew over just how many things could go wrong.
When he reached the stairwell, Fraser seized the moment of privacy to adjust his wardrobe. It didn't really help, particularly when he started to climb the five flights to the roof. Each step wrought new damage. After only a flight, he heard someone enter the stairwell above him and begin to descend. Should he duck into the regular corridor? Or simply carry on, relying on his uniform and wrench as insignia of his insignificance?
He decided that French workmen would never take the stairs in an elevator building, so he stepped out onto the second floor. Two Americans—their nationality obvious from ruddy complexions and brisk steps—passed him without a moment's pause. God bless that wrench. He stepped resolutely in the other direction, ignoring the pain. Reaching the end of the corridor, he pantomimed a man who had forgotten something, acting the part for himself if for no one else. Back to the stairwell, where he could hear the footsteps now below him. He resumed his ascent, pausing at the top to catch his breath. No reason to give Cook an opening to remark on his sorry physical condition.
When Fraser opened the door to the roof, Cook stood ten feet away, a rope coiled at his feet. The glow of Paris outlined his figure. The night air felt fresh and warm. A nearby ventilation outlet released a soapy wetness from the laundry; another produced a yeasty kitchen scent with the tang of crusted animal fat.
Fraser moved awkwardly to ease the pressure of the trouser seam. “These pants are agony.”
“Take'em off,” Cook said. “No one here to see you.”
After looking around, Fraser agreed. The relief was exquisite. Not wearing pants would be easier to explain than what they were doing on the roof in the first place.
“I sure preferred letting myself into the hotel room with the key,” Fraser said.
“Amen.” Cook had tried to lift a key to Foster Dulles' room, but the hotel had increased its security measures in response to the threat, however remote, that the Germans wouldn't sign the treaty and war would resume. “They think some nuts might target the people in the hotel.” He shrugged. “Nuts like us.”
“Seriously, though, who would want to block peace? And why would anything done at the Crillon have that effect?”
“Damned if I know. Bolsheviks, Germans, Italians, take your pick.” Cook was laying the rope between a thick ventilation pipe and the rear of the hotel. “Lots of crazy people out there who'd love to throw a spanner into the works, whether it made any difference or not.”
“I still don't get it.”
“You know,” Cook suddenly sounded short. “I wouldn't have believed it after all these years, but you still do it.”
“Do what?”
He stopped his task and looked at Fraser. “That white man thing. You figure nothing bad's gonna happen, because nothing bad's ever happened to you.”
“Get off it.” Anger flashed through Fraser, his hands clenched. “You're not the only person on earth who's had troubles, who's felt pain. How many wives have you buried? How many of your babies? Come to think of it, how many white men have you taken this kind of risk for, the way I am for you and Joshua?”
“On that last question, one.” Cook pointed a finger at Fraser. “Exactly one.” Their glares were reciprocal. After a moment, Cook dropped his arm, then his head. “It's nerves, Jamie. Pregame nerves. Both of us.” He returned his attention to the rope. “Come on. We're up here. You're looking fashionable. Might as well do this thing.”
Fraser, still simmering, gave him an appraising look. “What're you up to now, 240? 250? I liked this idea a lot better when it was Lawrence going over the side.”
“Hey, I'll be glad to hold the end of the rope if you want to go down there.”
Fraser, his blood still warm, stalked to the stone barrier at the building's edge. He looked down. His head swam and his vision clouded.
Cook grabbed him by the shoulders and pulled him back. “Whoa, Nellie,” Cook said. “The plan says we keep you up here, right? Let's stick to the plan.”
Rubbing the back of his neck, Fraser nodded.
Cook, who had learned a few knots during his seaman days, tied the rope around a sturdy-looking ventilation pipe that rose from the roof. He wrapped the other end around his waist and cinched it, but not with a knot. He wanted to descend gradually. He pulled on his gloves and tossed another pair to Fraser, who dropped one. Cook draped the strap of Violet's camera over his neck and one arm.
Fraser put on the gloves. He picked up the slack of the rope and looped it once around his waist.
“No more looking down,” Cook said. “Just hang on. It's not that far to the balcony. Maybe twenty feet. You got the pipe there backing you up. Don't be afraid to rely on it.”
Fraser nodded and gripped the rope, testing the best angles for his hands. He looked up. “Let's make this the last time for this kind of stuff, okay?”
“As long as I find that connection with the Germans that Lawrence was talking about.” Cook didn't speak his greater fear: that finding a connection between Dulles and the Germans would prove useless because it was thoroughly authorized by the president. Or that Foster Dulles wouldn't mind having those connections disclosed. Cook clenched his jaw. “If I had a better idea, that's what we'd be doing right now.”
He pulled the rope tight while Fraser braced himself, leaning back against a rooftop shed, then dropped the end of the rope to Foster Dulles' balcony. It reached. Good start. Cook put one foot up on the stone barrier at the edge of the roof. He looked back and nodded, then swung up, pivoted, and stepped off.
Even braced, Fraser wasn't ready for Cook's weight. Fraser's boots slipped on the roof's pebbly surface. He staggered forward a jerky step, then another, but steadied himself. He leaned back and looked out at the rooftops of Paris, heart racing.
Cook had intended to let himself down hand over hand, but the lurch of the rope startled him. His grip slid. The gloves didn't hold. He jabbed his foot against the wall to slow himself. After another few feet, his toe caught in a space between stones. His hands kept sliding, forcing his upper body away from the wall. Realizing he could flip upside down, he pushed his foot off from the wall and slid the rest of the way down. He landed hard, his feet on a planter. The impact crushed whatever had been growing there. He stood for a moment, gathering his breath and his balance. And feeling lucky.
His palms throbbed from the friction. His shoulders ached. His hip felt like it had been yanked from its socket. Not any worse, he told himself, than catching a Saturday doubleheader.
The French window leading into Foster's room wasn't latched. He was on a winning streak. He yanked three times on the rope.
Fraser hauled it back up to the roof.
 
It was after midnight when Eliza and Violet entered their suite, having consented to a post-opera drink with the brothers Dulles. Fraser was in an armchair, in his own clothes. The marital reunion had progressed to the point where he had his own key to the suite.
“Did anyone get arrested this time?” Eliza demanded.
“Nope,” Fraser said. “A few bumps and bruises, but your favorite second-story men have cheated French justice one more time. How was the show?”
She walked over and kissed him on the forehead. He reached up and guided her face down for a real kiss.
She straightened up and began to remove her gloves. “I declare, Violet,” she said over her shoulder, “have you ever seen your father as happy as when he's rushing around Paris doing disreputable things with that mangy, broken-down ex-ballplayer.”
“Mother, he's not at all mangy,” Violet protested.
“And if you saw him shimmy down the side of the Hotel de Crillon this evening, you wouldn't call him broken down,” Fraser said. “By the way, I thought you preferred me disreputable.”
Eliza stepped to the mirror to remove her hat. “So, did you ne'er-do-wells get what you were looking for?”
“Sadly, no.”
Eliza turned around with the hat in her hands. “Do you mean it was for nothing that I sat through that long evening with the Messrs. Dulles? As aptly named a pair as I have met.”
“I think Allen is rather nice,” Violet objected, dropping into a chair facing her father.
“Well,” her mother answered, “I had the duller Dulles.”
“He may be the duller one,” Fraser said, “but he's intelligent enough not to leave sensitive papers in his hotel room.”
Eliza said to Violet, “You get ready for bed now.”
“I'm not a child, Mother. I think I played my part tonight rather well.”
“Yes, dear, you did. But sometimes old married people need to speak to each other.” Following Violet's self-consciously dignified departure, Eliza asked, “So what do we do now?”
“I had no idea you two would make such bully conspirators.”
Eliza sat on the couch and reached for Fraser's hand. “There's a good deal to be said for being in these things together, however odd it may be.” She squeezed his hand. “Jamie, I'm afraid I can't bring myself to like your Mr. Cook very much, but if Violet were in trouble, I hope I'd break as many laws to protect her as he's willing to break for his son.”
“What a splendid sentiment. Because we have further need of you and your charming daughter.”
Eliza smiled and sat back. “Women of intrigue, at your service.”
“Without a document connecting Foster Dulles to the Germans, we're going to have to keep him under some sort of watch and hope to track him to an actual meeting with them. There's only a week until the deadline to sign the treaty.”
“He wouldn't meet them at the Crillon, would he?”
“I thought we agreed that he's dull, not stupid. So we have to keep an eye on him, which is a bit tricky. Speed's hotel job puts him in a good place to do that while he's working, but when he's off shift, we'll have to share watching the hotel. Take turns.”
BOOK: The Wilson Deception
11.68Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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