“Loud and clear.”
He nodded and went back to his announcement. “The cars will be leaving the hangar one at a time and parking in various locations around the airport. Once Kodra arrives and is on the move, we’ll follow him. He’s reserved a hotel room in downtown Lisbon, so it’s possible that he will go directly there to wait or even to meet his contact.” Mikel shifted his gaze to Gabriel. “We’ll do our best to keep a camera and mic on Kodra at all times. However, if he meets someone in a place where it’s feasible, I want to get you near him. Only if it’s feasible, though.”
Gabriel nodded without hesitation. “Of course.”
“Make sure you have the hooded sweatshirt on,” Mikel said.
Gabriel held up the navy garment.
Quinn glanced at Raul to see his mouth tighten with frustration. Mikel was going to have his hands full keeping the prince out of the action.
“Let’s go,” Mikel said, sending them all to their beige, brown, and blue sedans.
“How do you suppose he found the most boring cars in Portugal?” Quinn asked as she slid into the back seat with Gabriel.
“I found them. They have better engines than their appearances would indicate.” The blond woman in the driver’s seat turned to smile over her shoulder. “I’m Anneliese. This is Ivan. We’ll be your tour guides today.”
Ivan pivoted so she could see that he had dark eyes and no smile at all. He nodded and swiveled his gaze forward again. Part of a tattoo was exposed between his short brown hair and the low collar of his gray T-shirt. It looked like the three prongs of a trident.
“Great job on the cars,” Quinn said, politely adding what she knew were unnecessary introductions. “I’m Quinn. This is Gabriel.”
“Bom dia,” Anneliese said as she started the car. “We’re the vanguard.”
“Do you speak fluent Portuguese?” Gabriel asked.
“And a few other languages,” Anneliese said, guiding the car through a garage-sized door at the back of the hangar. “Comes in handy when you work with Mikel. You never know where you’ll end up.”
Chapter 12
The car fell silent as Anneliese cruised around the airport. Gabriel stared out the window. He didn’t feel vulnerable since he had three people dedicated to his protection crammed into a car with him.
It was the next step in this expedition that made his heartbeat speed up and his breath go shallow. He knew what he had to do, but he hated the thought of plunging back into the memories he’d tried so hard to box up and stash away in a dark corner of his mind.
After his release from the kidnappers, Mikel had guided him through the debriefing, saying, “Imagine you are watching a movie. Tell the story to me as though it’s happening to someone else.”
Now Gabriel forced himself to remember when he and Raul had walked down the street, trying to conjure up new details that might help identify the man Kodra was meeting today. But he and his cousin had been so drunk that it was a blur. The alcoholic haze hadn’t begun to clear until the abductors had forced them into the alley.
Since Gabriel had no faces to work with, he focused on voices. He was—once—a musician. Sound and rhythm should be easier for him to decipher than for most people. Except that the only voice he’d heard after that initial encounter had been the disembodied voice that had come over the loudspeaker in his tent, warped by the electronic audio processing. There had been no accent, no rise and fall, no rhythm, not even a gender. The person had spoken Spanish, but he had always felt that it was not the speaker’s native language. Why?
He pulled the memories out of the box. At the beginning, the voice had terrified him. It had told him that no one could find him, that he couldn’t escape, and that if he behaved, nothing bad would happen to him. That last had been a lie, of course.
After the…surgery, the voice had assured him that the doctor was monitoring the progress of his healing, so he shouldn’t worry. One of the masked figures had indeed changed his bandage morning and night, using a cell phone to snap a photo of his wound each time. When he had complained about the pain, the voice had told him to eat the applesauce they’d brought because there were painkillers mixed into it. He’d finally given in after twelve hours and eaten the drugged food, which had sent him into a nightmare-filled sleep.
However, the worst conversation had come twelve hours later, when the kidnappers had discovered that he wasn’t Raul. He’d been asleep, partially due to the drugs, when the voice had yanked him out of his slumber. “You lied to us, Gabriel.”
The use of his real name hadn’t registered at first, especially since the audio processor had filtered any anger out of the voice.
“Why did you lie to us?”
“About what?”
“What do you think?” There was a pause. “Gabriel?”
Then it hit him that they knew they had the wrong person.
Giving them the truth wasn’t a good idea. “I was drunk. I’d been telling girls that I was the prince all night, so it just came out again.”
“I think you’re still lying, Gabriel. You’re the useless musician. I should cut off all your fingers so you can never play the guitar again.”