
Shamron sat down at his desk and, remote in hand, spent the next five minutes scanning the world’s television media for as many overt details as he could. Then he picked up the telephone and made three calls, one to an old contact at the Italian Embassy named Tommaso Naldi; the second to the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs, located a short distance away on Yitzhak Rabin Boulevard; and the third to Office headquarters on King Saul Boulevard.
“He can’t talk to you now,” said Lev’s secretary. Shamron had anticipated her reaction. It was easier to get through an army checkpoint than Lev’s secretary.
“Put him on the phone,” Shamron said, “or the next call will be from the prime minister.”
Lev kept Shamron waiting five minutes.
“What do you know?” Shamron asked.
“The truth? Nothing.”
“Do we have a Rome station any longer?”
“Not to speak of,” said Lev, “but we do have a Rome katsa. Pazner was in Naples on business. He just checked in. He’s on his way back to Rome now.”
Thank God, thought Shamron. “And the others?”
“It’s hard to tell. As you might imagine, the situation is rather chaotic.” Lev had a grating passion for understatement. “Two clerks are missing, along with the communications officer.”
“Is there anything in the files that might be compromising or embarrassing?”
“The best we can hope for is that they went up in smoke.”
“They’re stored in cabinets built to withstand a missile strike. We’d better get to them before the Italians do.”
Tamara poked her head inside the door. “He wants you. Now.”
“I’ll see you at five o’clock,” Shamron said to Lev, and rang off.
He collected his notes, then followed Tamara along the corridor toward the prime minister’s office. Two members of his Shabak protective detail, large boys with short-cropped hair and shirts hanging outside their trousers, watched Shamron’s approach. One of them stepped aside and opened the door. Shamron slipped past and went inside.
