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chapter 16 Yaoundé, Cameroon
It was shortly after five that afternoon when the bus pulled into the city’s depot.
The area was hard-packed dirt surrounded by low-lying buildings, and teeming with passengers and their boxes and bags, vendors with their wares, and pickpockets and thieves.
Munroe stepped from the bus and slung a heavy backpack over her shoulder.
She wore a short-sleeved button-down shirt, untucked, faded jeans, and heavy, flat-soled boots, which hadn’t been easy to find.
Her hair was military short. A wide elastic bandage wrapped her meager chest,
the same improvisation utilized the night she’d boarded the Santo Domingo, and she wore strong masculine cologne.
But for these she’d made no extra effort. The clothes and hair were subtle cues, enough to distract the eye and make a first impression,
and while the subconscious effect of cologne was never to be underestimated, unless she needed to age past nineteen it had always been attitude and behavior that truly confused the mind.
She took a cab to the Hilton Yaoundé, the best the city had to offer.
The hotel was eleven stories of white concrete, and like a giant monolith it dwarfed most of the buildings that lined the streets in either direction.
Yaoundé, although the capital, was smaller and less developed than its sister on the coast.
But it was where the country’s president lived and thus where the elite guard was stationed,
and so it was there that she would find the Israeli forces that trained them.
She wanted to be in their presence, learn their language and their manner of behavior,
and if possible observe how they interacted with the men they trained.
Perhaps, if she’d been desperate, she would have taken the route of sneaking around, smuggling herself onto the compound, and acting like a spy, as Francisco no doubt expected she was doing.
But there was no need for that. There were better ways, faster and with less personal risk.
Munroe showered and slept for a few hours and then, as the evening deepened, transferred to the hotel’s bar and casino.
There were only three types of venues where she expected to find what she was looking for:
foreign cultural centers and embassies, international schools, and what little nightlife the city had to offer.
The Hilton was as good a place as any to begin looking.
It took two days of cultivating potential information sources before the first genuine lead materialized.
After nights that lasted until nearly dawn and mornings that began shortly after, it was at La Biniou, taking a meal far too late for lunch and still too early for dinner, that segments of language, recognizable but without meaning, filtered across the dining area.
The voices belonged to three teenagers, and it was evident that within the small group there were a sister and brother,
and if body language was any indicator, the third was friend to one and surreptitious lover to the other.
Munroe observed the three and was drawn to the sister.
She was sixteen, seventeen at most, had curly dark hair, dark eyes, a beautiful smile, and a playful personality.
She was the younger sibling, there with her girlfriend no doubt, and oblivious to the smoldering lust between the two across the table.
She would make an excellent mark. If all other things were equal, Munroe would prefer a female.
While men had to be bribed or threatened or their suspicions overcome while they were befriended to get them to spill their secrets over drink, women naturally loved to talk.
And while it was no secret that a man would say most anything when desperate to get between a woman’s legs, that was not the way Munroe worked.
Women, on the other hand, responded to attention,
and while in the persona of a male she could bypass whatever insecurities the female form brought on and gain direct access to a woman’s mind.
The problem was that things were very seldom equal.
Munroe tapped her fingers lightly against the table and watched the trio over the top of a traveler’s guidebook.
The girl would be the easiest way to the parents and, from them, to the rest of the community.
She stood, walked to the table with the guidebook in hand, and in broken French and then fluent English introduced herself as Michael and asked for clarification on several of the book’s entries.
She conversed with the brother and between words made eye contact with his sister and passed her a flirtatious smile or two.
The brother was helpful, but it was the sister who invited Munroe to sit and join them,
and at the end of forty-five minutes Munroe had also been invited to dinner at their house the following evening.
In another place, another climate, the invitation might have seemed audacious,
but not in the world of the Cameroonian expatriate, where the community was small and far away from home.
The girl’s name was Zemira Eskin, and with that piece of information as well as the phone number and directions she’d been given, Munroe headed to the British cultural center.
It took less than half an hour of chitchat to discover that she’d been invited to the home of Colonel Lavi Eskin, commander of the Israeli forces in Cameroon.
The news brought Munroe’s plans in Yaoundé to a full stop.
There was no point in digging further; contact with too many in the community would only backfire.
She had no choice but to wait, and in the solitude Francisco filled her mind.
He was disruption from the focus needed for tomorrow, broken strands of thought in the web of information her mind attempted to spin.
Unable to concentrate, Munroe called the United States and after several attempts got through to Kate Breeden.
The conversation was brief. Munroe received confirmation that the money had been wired to the account in Douala
and reassured Kate that she was indeed alive and well and had no plans to reenter Equatorial Guinea, at least not until after Bradford arrived.
And then Munroe called Francisco. Hearing his voice dropped her into a cocoon of warmth where it was dark and familiar and safe.
The conversation lasted only long enough to pass on the transfer details,
but what she wanted more than anything was to remain on the line, to drag out the information if only to continue to hear his voice.
What she wanted was to return to Douala, to him.
Munroe replaced the phone in its cradle and hung her head in her hands. This frame of mind was dangerous; it was how mistakes were made;
it was why business and emotion were necessarily disparate; it was why she should have shut down that night outside of Bata.
She could still do it— needed to do it— but didn’t want to.
In the silence, voices filled her head, but they were not the demons from within— they were Francisco.
It was nearly seven the following evening when Munroe stood at the gate in front of the house that Zemira had directed her to.
The neighborhood consisted of large compounds, their upper stories and clay-tiled rooftops peeking beyond the eight- and ten-foot walls that surrounded them.
Like most cities on the continent, Yaoundé had no street addresses or house numbers.
There would never be mail service to the door— not even DHL or FedEx could manage that.
Directions were composed of road names and landmarks, distance and neighborhoods, gate colors and house descriptions.
And what Munroe faced now fit with what she had been given.
Armed guards opened a walk-through portion of the gate and called ahead before allowing her onto the property.
Zemira welcomed her at the door, and Munroe greeted her with a kiss on each cheek, each lasting only inappropriately long enough for the teenage imagination to flourish,
and she then presented a bouquet of flowers. “For your mother,” Munroe said.
“Ima,” Zemira called over her shoulder. “Come meet Michael.”
Zemira’s mother was a petite woman who looked young enough to be her sister and left no doubt as to the origin of her daughter’s good looks.
She introduced herself, took the bouquet with a gracious smile, and asked a few polite questions before returning to whatever part of the house she had come from.
It was when they were seated at the table that Munroe met the compelling focus behind the trip to Yaoundé.
Colonel Eskin entered the room, and seeing Munroe, he reached for her hand, and she stood to shake his.
His lips smiled, his eyes said, If you touch my daughter, I’ll castrate you, and the rest of the table heard, “Welcome.”
He was five foot eleven, with a full head of salt-and-pepper hair and what Munroe later realized was a delightfully dry sense of humor.
By all appearances he was a husband and a father at home for dinner with his family,
and if he was used to giving orders and having them obeyed, it was obviously not under this roof.
“So, Michael,” he said, placing a helping of food on his plate, “Zemira tells me you are new to Yaoundé. How long have you been in Cameroon?”
“This time only a couple of weeks, but I was born here.”
The mother passed a bowl in the direction of her daughter. “How interesting. Were your parents military? Diplomats?”
“Missionaries,” Munroe replied, and shrugged. “It’s been interesting coming back. It’s amazing how little changes over time, at least according to what I remember.”
Then the colonel: “How long do you plan to stay?” “Only another week, unfortunately, but I’ll return eventually.”
The truth, however obfuscated, was always the best story, least likely to be questioned and easiest to modify.
Under the table Zemira brushed lightly against Munroe’s hand, and Munroe winked at her. So began the tightrope walk of the evening.
Munroe had no background research to pull from, no idea of the man and his history or interests or passions,
and so she was forced to listen for clues in the talk around the table.
And then as each piece became a clearer part of the composite, she shifted into the character that would endear the mother, earn the father’s approval, and keep Zemira just slightly off balance.
Munroe’s mind worked in a state of hyperawareness, of ratiocination and calculation that translated into exact responses,
and by the time the evening was over and the colonel had offered his driver for the trip back to the hotel, Munroe was mentally and physically exhausted.
The results had been better than she’d hoped: lunch tomorrow at the colonel’s office to view his collection of model military aircraft.
At the hotel sleep came easy and lasted long.
It was the healthy exhaustion of an assignment, exhaustion that brought focus to the present, which silenced the internal voices and kept her mind free of Francisco.
The next day’s lunch turned into a partial tour of the facilities,
and while the colonel played guide, he recounted abstract snippets and stories of daily life in the training of the elite forces.
By the time Munroe returned to the hotel, she had seen and heard all she’d needed.
There was nothing holding her in Yaoundé, no reason to stay.
Good-byes weren’t obligatory, but neither was there any point to being an ass and skipping town,
and so she called Zemira, invited her to dinner, and was sure to have her home early enough to keep the colonel happy.
Then, unwilling to wait for the morning bus, Munroe hired a taxi, paid a round-trip fare for a one-way ride, and left Yaoundé.
The insanity of driving the roads at night was a risk. A calculable risk. Francisco beckoned.
It was after midnight when she arrived in Douala. She’d told Francisco that she would be back in ten days, and she had wrapped it up in six.
She stood now on the doorstep of the apartment, key in hand, and knocked first before inserting it.
The door opened from the inside, and Francisco stood facing her, bare-chested and barefoot, face blank, simply staring.
Except for a table lamp that illuminated a side of the living-room sofa, the flat was dark, and it was obvious he’d been up reading.
“Are you going to let me in?” Munroe asked. Francisco stepped aside to let her pass.
She entered and dropped the backpack on the floor. He closed the door and turned toward her, the shock on his face replaced by neutrality.
“If this is a problem,” she said, pointing first to her head and then to her body, “I have other clothes and a wig.”
In response he pulled her close, held her head to his shoulder, and wrapped his hand around the back of her neck. “I missed you,” he said.
“I know,” she whispered. “Me, too.” And then, “Trouble sleeping?”
He nodded, brought her mouth to his, and when she kissed him back, he pushed her away and held her at arm’s length.
He unbuttoned the shirt, pulling it down over her shoulders.
“I’m still the same person,” she said, but saw on his face that the words were unnecessary.
He loosened the bandage that secured her chest, allowing the elastic to unfurl and drop, and forced her against the door.
All the reserve, all the control was gone. She wrapped her legs around his waist and kissed him back just as forcefully.
He grasped for her face, for her mouth, and somehow, after knocking first against the hallway door and then against the wall, brought her to the bedroom but never made it to the bed.
Afterward as they lay on the floor, tangled in sheets that had been torn from the bed, pillows scattered beyond them,
he said to her, “We could find a compromise, perhaps take the trawler to an island, someplace where we could live and forget the world.”
She smiled, rolled over, and then straddled him.
She had no words for this: to care, to want, to fear, to hurt in the knowledge that for his sake and hers there would necessarily be a good-bye.
She leaned forward, placed a kiss on his forehead, his chin, his mouth, and then, saying nothing, lay beside him, head on his shoulder.
The next morning Munroe knew it was late before she’d opened her eyes, and when she did, Francisco was beside her, staring.
She smiled and whispered, “How long have you been watching me sleep?”
“An eternity and a heartbeat,” he said, and then traced his fingers along her forehead and down her jawline.
“Promise me that you’ll never walk away without warning. I can bear it if you promise me just that.” “I promise,” she whispered.
No pain of captivity came with the words, and she smiled and closed her eyes.
IT WAS FOUR days later at Douala’s international airport that Munroe stood in a pilot’s uniform on the tarmac near the Jetway, waiting for the Air France flight to taxi to the terminal.
The A340 had landed minutes earlier and was now a mark in the distance, growing larger by the second.
Not far from where she stood, baggage handlers and ground crew prepared for the disembarkation,
and they paid little attention to her or to the white van that passed as an ambulance idling nearby.
Such was the simplicity of uniforms: No one looked, especially in a place like this where an extra ten euros were all the identification a person needed.
Bradford was bringing with him two trunks courtesy of Logan.
They would be filled primarily with junk that would pass for what a typical traveler would pack,
and if Munroe was lucky and Logan had been kind, some of it would be in her size and style.
Buried among the superfluous would be communications equipment, uniforms, video equipment, GPS systems,
and a mobile satellite phone high-tech and expensive enough to catch a signal from the remoteness of the equatorial jungle.
The trunks would have been specifically tagged, and Munroe had taken great pains to be sure that Beyard knew what he was looking for.
Once the matériel was inside the country, they would be fully equipped for the run to Mongomo,
and these were items that they couldn’t afford to have pass through Cameroonian customs, not even a cursory check by a bribed official.
The ambulance would make sure the goods were safely escorted into the country, and Bradford’s unconscious body would help complete the picture.
The A340 turned toward the gate. Munroe waited to see if the machine would position for the passengers to disembark at the Jetway or, as was typical, via a mobile staircase.
The plane continued to the terminal, and the Jetway began to scroll, so she headed up the stairs.
According to plan, the trunks would be loaded into the ambulance by the time she returned with Bradford.
Munroe stripped off the pilot bars that had done their job through a perfunctory security check, tucked them into a pocket, and stood waiting beside the door hatch with a wheelchair.
She greeted passengers as they disembarked, and if the airline personnel felt she was out of place, they said nothing.
Munroe spotted Bradford before he stepped off the plane, and his eyes went from hers to the wheelchair and back again, the look on his face saying, I can’t believe you’re doing this.
She stepped beside him and said, “If you would, Mr. Bradford, it’s for your own well-being.”
He sat, and before Munroe began to wheel him away, she handed him a small bottle of orange juice.
“We’re taking you out in an ambulance,” she whispered over his shoulder. “So be a good little boy and take your medicine.”
“I’ll go along with the ruse, but there’s no way I’m taking this,” he said.
“You’ll do it or I use a hypodermic.” She smiled, not at him but for the benefit of those who might be watching.
“You fucked up in coming back, Miles. Deal with it. You want to be here, you play it my way.”
She took the bottle of orange juice from him, unscrewed the cap, and handed it back. “Drink up.”
His expression was a mixture of anger and helplessness.
After watching him tilt the contents of the bottle into his mouth, Munroe grinned and wheeled him down the Jetway.