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SING A SONG OF SPYING
BLURB:
A last minute substitute, choir
director Robin Sabine finds herself the reluctant leader of six
difficult teenagers for an international choral competition in
Jerusalem. Almost immediately she runs into a former love from whom
she parted under difficult circumstances – the last time they met he
accused her of trying to break into a safe containing top secret
documents. She also meets an attractive British diplomat who is more
than ordinarily attentive.
After a shopping trip in
the Old City Robin discovers that there are a number of people
intensely interested in her movements. Her room is searched. She has
difficulties with the competition. Neither man in her life trusts
the other and after being ruthlessly abducted, Robin realizes that a
number of people – including her teenaged charges – believe she is a
spy. Now she must stay alive long enough to prove she is not.
EXCERPT:
He shrugged and to my relief let the subject drop. Picking up the
bottle, he scrutinized the level and then poured. “One more glass
apiece.”
“And then magic time is
over?”
“Magic time?”
“This.” My gesture could have encompassed the world
instead of just the view from the Old City wall. “Don’t you think it’s
magic?”
“This time it’s my turn
to toast. To magic. To shared magic.”
We clinked glasses ceremonially.
There was more said, of course, but it was as if the magic of the
evening ended there. Grey chatted on in his best tour-guide manner
as we finished the last of the champagne.
One thing had begun to
bother me; I could get almost no personal information on Greystoke
Hamilton-ffoulkes. The man seemed to talk incessantly, but on every
subject except himself. Since we had met I had found out only that
he had been born in Hampshire, that he spoke Arabic, French and
German, and that he had a brother two years older than he. Also, he
was allergic to peanuts. And that was it. All of it. A small thing,
but one I found very bothersome. In my limited experience every man
loved to talk about himself and one who didn’t was different enough
to be suspect. Refreshing, but suspect.
“All done? I suppose we’d
best be getting on.”
Wordlessly I handed over
my empty glass and wished that there were some way to be transported
down from this lofty height. As we had been sitting the memory of
those horrid stairs had risen again to haunt me.
We didn’t go down the
same staircase, but the one we did was just about as bad. This time
Grey sensed my terror and insisted on going down ahead of me and
holding my hand. I appreciated the thought, but he had to carry the
basket and that left him no hand to balance himself. Then in a fit
of heroic self-sacrifice he offered to take my purse. I declined
that, too, remembering what lay wrapped in newspaper and dark cloth
in the bottom. Despite the basket he was able to descent the
hollowed steps with an easy grace. I finally abandoned all pride and
came down the last few yards sitting down.
“My dear girl, I do
apologize. I had no idea you were so… so… susceptible.”
“It’s the steps, mainly,” I said,
valiantly brushing off the seat of my dress and hoping that the dust
of ages was not permanently ingrained. “But I wouldn’t have missed
up there for anything.”
To expiate my cowardice
once we were outside I insisted on holding the empty basket while
Grey locked the thick wooden door. This stairway had no
corresponding grille and it took me a minute to figure out where we
had come down. When I did I felt foolish for even wondering. We were
in the zig-zag corridor of Damascus Gate, now a tunnel of darkness
barely relieved by a few streetlights at each end, and just a few
yards from where our car and driver waited. Grey had indeed worked
everything out to perfection. I just wondered…
“Isn’t Damascus Gate
locked at this time of night?”
There was a grin in
Grey’s voice. “Indeed it is. I see you’ve been reading your
guidebooks.”
“Does this mean we’re
going to have to walk around to Jaffa Gate?”
This time he chuckled,
then swore at the recalcitrant key. “Damn this thing! Do they never
oil these locks? To answer your question, Robin, yes, Damascus Gate
is locked. There is also a small portal which, with the application
of a little folding grease, can be opened on appointment.”
I shouldn’t have worried.
Grey was the type who would think of everything.
It was that much more
surprising, therefore, when a figure, a red and white kaffiyeh
bundled over his face, dashed out of the darkness and without
stopping ripped the basket from my hands before vanishing down a
small street.
My scream of surprise alerted Grey, who dashed after him
into the warren of the Arab quarter beyond the gate and left me
alone in that small, dark corner
If I were the stuff of heroines,
those indomitable females who brave storm and danger for the sake of
principle, I would have rushed after him to render what aid I could.
Sometimes I kid myself that if I had had more time to think, if I
had been ready, I would have done something heroic, but isn’t it
true that heroism is doing what has to be done at the moment when
you aren’t ready for it?
Whichever it is and
however I try to defend myself to myself, I just stood there.
I was still standing
there some thirty seconds later when a strong arm reached out of the
darkness, latched onto my wrist and pulled.
“Come,” said a familiar
voice.
I recognized him despite
the dim light, just as I had earlier. I even remembered his name.
“Selim! You didn’t die in the fire. What are you doing?”
“We must get you out of
here. Come!” And he pulled me inexorably toward the dark beyond the
gate.
Even I heard the crunch.
At first I didn’t know what it was, but when Selim’s handsome face
went blank and his grip on my arm loosened I was not at all
surprised when he fell into a boneless heap at my feet.
This time I was ready for
action. He hadn’t even hit the ground before I was off and running.
I didn’t know where, but as long as I could put one foot in front of
another I was going to go somewhere. I heard my name called softly;
it was hollow and ghostly and almost unrecognizable in that deep
maze of stone. It could have been Death calling me.
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