Lela saw Jack finish talking on his cell phone. He halted, stood a few moments as if he was trying to make up his mind, then walked on again, disappearing behind a parked green van.
Seconds passed but he didn’t reappear. Ari frowned, still watching with the binoculars. “Where’s he gone?”
More anxious seconds passed but there was no sign of Jack Cane. A frustrated Ari tapped Cohen on the shoulder. “Start the car and cruise closer to the van. For some reason Cane’s stopped behind it.”
Cohen said, “Or else he’s hiding.”
Ari said, “We’ll soon find out. Get ready to grab him.”
Lela saw Ari remove a black silencer from his pocket and screw it on the end of the Sig’s barrel. Ari said, “I want to make sure we don’t alert the Vatican’s security guards.”
“I’ve got a funny feeling about this, Ari. This isn’t you.”
Ari ignored her, finished screwing on the silencer, and cocked the pistol. “Where the heck is he, Mario? Cohen, get closer to the van.”
As they came alongside the green van, Lela saw that it concealed a cobbled alleyway that was completely deserted.
Ari clenched a fist and hammered it on the car seat. “Cane’s suckered us. He’s slipped away.”
114
Jack ran until his lungs seared his chest. He figured that the Trevi was maybe a couple of miles from the monastery.
When he ran down the alleyway behind the van he came down onto an empty street. Five minutes of hard running and he was breathless as he reached the Via della Renella. He reckoned it could take him more than another twenty minutes to reach the Trevi.
He crossed the Tiber and came to a piazza. Halting for a few seconds to catch his breath, he checked his watch. Nine minutes had passed. Eleven minutes remained.
He’d never make the Trevi in time.
Traffic whizzed around the piazza. A rage of car engines, mopeds, and buses merged into a symphony of noise and choking exhaust fumes. Among the mass of vehicles Jack saw a couple of cabs whiz by. He stuck out his arm to hail one down. Not one stopped.
He sweated, panic taking hold now, conscious that with every passing second Yasmin’s life might hang in the balance. Another taxi sped past and Jack shot out a hand. The driver completely ignored him.
Jack felt drenched in sweat. Thirty yards to his right a tough-looking youth wearing a sleeveless wife-beater T-shirt dismounted from a Vespa scooter and put it on its kickstand. He removed his black motorcycle helmet, left it on the seat, and crossed to a kiosk next to a park. He bought a pack of cigarettes, lit one, and strolled over to chat with a couple of girls sitting on a nearby park bench.
Jack crossed to the scooter. The keys were still in the ignition. He looked over at the tough-looking youth, still smoking and chatting with the girls.
He grabbed the scooter by the handlebar and the seat and jerked it off its stand. The helmet rolled onto the ground and he at once heard a roar behind him.
One of the girls pointed to him and yelled at the moped’s owner. The youth spun around and spotted what Jack was up to. A vicious scowl erupted on his face.
Tossing away his cigarette, he balled his fists and strode forward, shouting obscenities in Italian.
Jack ran with the scooter, jumped on, and twisted the ignition key as the youth raced toward him, screaming his lungs out.
The engine started the first time. Jack shifted into gear, revved the engine’s handlebar controls, and released the clutch. He had barely moved ten yards when the youth caught up and reached out to drag him off the scooter.
Jack revved hard and flicked into second gear. The Vespa’s engine snarled and it sped forward with a burst of power. . .
Ten minutes later, with barely a second to spare he turned the Vespa into a side street leading on to the Trevi Fountain. He’d broken the speed limits in his rush to reach his destination, but this was Rome, where almost every motorist was deranged.
He removed the Vespa’s ignition keys and stuffed them in his pocket.
The cops would eventually find the scooter and the youth would get it back, minus his keys, but at least no one else could steal it in the meantime.
Jack crossed to the corner of the Via del Lavatore. He saw no one waiting nearby except a couple of Japanese tourists clutching hand-fuls of shopping bags. Jack was still sweating, from anxiety this time, wondering what would happen next.
He stood on the street corner and turned in a slow circle. The place was busy with tourists and shoppers.
A second later someone brushed up behind him. Jack felt a sharp pain in his shoulder, like the hard stab of a hypodermic needle. He spun around but immediately his legs started to feel like rubber under him. “What the—?”