MAX WAS BLINDFOLDED and put in the back of an SUV. The trip to Pétionville took a good while, a lot of it uphill over bumpy ground, leading Max to think that Paul’s hideout was in the mountains. There were two other people in the car with him: Vincent Paul and the driver. There was plenty of talking in Kreyol, some laughter.
Max reviewed the conversation he’d had with Paul, starting with the truth about Charlie’s parentage, the shock of which still reverberated through him. He hadn’t doubted it was the truth when he’d studied the photograph of Vincent with his father. Charlie looked something like the younger Vincent had, but he took strongly after his paternal grandfather—same eyes, same expression, same stance. Paul had shown him an album of family photographs going back to the late 1890s, every face in it containing a trace element of the missing boy’s physiognomy; all of Paul’s ancestors had been white or very light-skinned—right up until his black grandmother. He explained that Charlie turning out the color he had wasn’t really that uncommon in Haiti, given the nation’s mixed bloodline. Max thought about Eloise Krolak and the blue-eyed, near-Caucasian descendants of Polish soldiers in the town of Jérémie. As a formality, Paul had shown Max a copy of Charlie’s paternity test.
They talked about the investigation. Paul told him he’d been in the area when Charlie had been kidnapped. He’d rushed to the scene, arriving in time to see the mob pull Faustin out of the car and stab and beat him to death, before cutting off his head, sticking it on a spiked pole, and dancing it away into the slum. Charlie was gone. Nobody had seen him being taken out of the car, but then nobody had seen how Francesca had managed to end up halfway down the road either. Paul guessed that Francesca had held on to Charlie so tightly, the kidnappers had had to carry or drag them both away until they’d broken her grip. He had no witnesses to this, only people who’d seen Francesca coming to on the sidewalk.
Paul had checked out Faustin. He’d been to Saut d’Eau and spoken to Mercedes Leballec, and he’d checked out the house in Port-au-Prince. He’d found the vévé, but nothing else. The trail had gone cold from there. He thought the boy had been kidnapped by one of Gustav’s many enemies and smuggled out of the country via the Dominican Republic. He’d searched there too, but drawn a blank. Paul was sure Charlie was dead.
They’d discussed Claudette Thodore. Paul didn’t think the kidnappings were related.
Max revealed some but not all of what he’d uncovered. He didn’t mention the tape he’d found nor the potential Noah’s Ark connection. He didn’t mention what it told him—that Haitian children were being stolen, brainwashed, and turned into potential sex toys for foreign pedophiles.
Paul knew he’d been following someone from Noah’s Ark but he didn’t know whom. Max refused to tell him, because he didn’t have the evidence he needed. Paul agreed to let him complete his investigation and offered to help him in whatever way he could.
The blindfold came off on the outskirts of Pétionville. The SUV they’d been riding in was wedged between a military jeep with UN markings and Max’s Land Cruiser.
Max stared out at the passing streets in the near evening, right before the end of daylight. Christmas was coming but there was no sign of the impending holiday—no Santas, no trees, no tinsel. It could have been any time of the year. He wondered what Haiti had been like before its troubles, in more peaceful times. Had those ever existed here? He was starting to care a little about the place, to want to know more about it, to want to know how it could produce people like Paul, for whom he had to admit a repulsed admiration—loathing his methods but lauding his intentions, and even understanding his reasons for getting into the business he was in. Would he have gone the same way if he’d had Paul’s life? Possibly, if he hadn’t fallen apart first. Would Paul have gone the way Max had? Probably not, but if he had he’d have steered a clearer, quicker course and never fallen down the way Max had.
“We didn’t talk payment,” Paul said as they rolled into the Impasse Carver.
“Payment?”
“You don’t work for free.”
“You didn’t hire me, so you don’t owe me,” Max said.
“I’ll give you something anyway—for your troubles.”
“I don’t want anything.”
“You’ll want this.”
“Try me.”
“Peace of mind.”
Max gave him a quizzical look.
“Solomon Boukman.”
“Boukman?” Max started. “You got him?”
“Yes.”
“How long have you had him?” Max kept his tone and posture as even as he could, riding out the shock waves, stifling any signs of anger or excitement in his voice.
“Since your country returned him to us. The really dangerous ones—the killers, the rapists, the gang leaders—I have picked up at the airport.”
“What do you do with them?”
“Lock them up and let them rot.”
“Why don’t you just kill them?”
“They didn’t commit their crimes here.”
“What about the rest? Do you give ’em jobs in your HQ?”
“I don’t employ criminals. Bad for business, especially in my line of work.”
Max had to laugh. They pulled up outside the gate of his house.
“Find out what happened to my son and I’ll bring you and your nemesis together. Just you, him, four walls, no windows. He won’t be armed and you won’t be searched,” Vincent said.
Max thought about it for a while. He’d wanted Boukman dead in America, and when he’d heard they’d let him go he’d still wanted him dead. But now he wasn’t sure he could shoot him in cold blood. In fact, he knew he couldn’t do it. Boukman might’ve been a monster, the worst criminal he’d ever encountered, but killing him would make Max no better than him.
“I can’t accept that, Vincent. Not that way,” Max said and got out of the car.
Paul wound down the window.
“Your country had him and they let him go.”
“That was their business. I’m not a cop anymore, Vincent. You seem to forget.”
“You too.” Vincent smiled and handed Max back his Beretta and holster. “I didn’t think you’d accept.”
Paul nodded to his driver. The car started up.
“Oh, and, by the way—remember I told you how Gustav Carver bulldozed our family estate? This is what he built over it. Enjoy your stay,” Paul said and flashed a smile both sad and defiant, before the tinted window blocked it from view and Max found himself staring at his reflection as the car drove away.