From
THE PARIS BETRAYAL
by
James R. Hannibal
The
following scene didn’t make it into The Paris Betrayal. This impromptu
meeting between Ben and his spymaster, the Director, was meant to be a humorous
calm before the coming storm. It was also meant to be an allegorical come as
you are moment where man meets his Creator. The Director shows up
unexpectedly while Ben is in his boxers. Our Creator sees us and sees through
us no matter how we dress ourselves up, and we serve His timetable, not the
other way around.
In
the end, though, the scene felt wedged into the story and required some
technology that needed too much explanation. I clipped it out to keep the
action moving for the reader and consolidated Ben’s run-in with Clara with
another moment later in the story.
DELETED SCENE, CHAPTER SEVEN
A blue-haired
girl came down the steps as Ben entered his apartment building’s stairwell.
“Haven’t seen you in a while, Jacob.” Her Slovakian heritage colored her
English, which—as she had told Ben when they first met—was better than her
French. She knew him by his local cover name, Jacob Roy, a wool salesman from
Montreal. She held a dachshund close to her chest. He looked as tired as Ben
felt.
“Winter sales
route. Lots of stops. Big time of year for wool.” He tried to squeeze past.
The girl,
Clara, did not give him much room. “We could get something later, if you like.
No need to cook if you’re worn out.” The dachshund lifted its head from her
forearm, eyes pleading for the extra evening company.
“Thanks, but
not tonight. Maybe another time.”
She always
asked. He always declined. It felt like a sad game.
“Yes.” Clara set
the dog down at the base of the steps. “Another time.”
Bed.
Ben dropped his
bag on the floor of his flat and collapsed onto his king size mattress, eyes
closed. Traffic had picked up on the streets outside, honking and beeping. A
pounding above told him the upstairs neighbors were renovating. But he could
easily have slept—if not for the file burning a hole in his smartphone’s case.
His eyes popped
open, and he held the phone before them, frowning. “Stupid analysts.”
He threw open
his wardrobe and divided his hanging shirts. A three-inch false panel at the
back covered the slick where he kept his A19 Matchbox decryptor. Without the
Matchbox to unscramble the data, the file was useless, and keeping the software
in a separate device added an extra layer of security. Before digging it out,
he hung up the jacket he’d bought in Rome and stripped down to his T-shirt and
boxers. Might as well get comfortable.
The Matchbox
had no switches and only one connector. He plugged it into his phone and
waited. Usually charts and maps popped up on the phone’s screen in rapid
sequence—new forms to fill out. The Company nerds liked an overabundance of
detail. But the Matchbox decrypted only one page with one line.
channel two
“What on
earth?”
Ben read the
line again. Channel two. What was
that supposed to mean?
His phone did
not operate like a radio. There were no channels. And he had no other
communication devices. He stared at the empty wall beside the bed for a long
moment, then glanced at the TV. “Okay. Channel two.”
The TV always
powered up on Channel 8. He’d never bothered to ask himself why. He waited for
the backlight to warm up, giving him a clear picture, then pointed his remote
and punched the channel down button. The numbers in the corner counted
backward. 07, 06, 05, 04, 03.
02
The screen went
black for a moment, then resolved to a video of a white-haired man with his
back to the camera, wearing blue-jeans and wool coat with the collar flipped
up. Ben cocked his head left, then right, taking a step toward the screen. This
guy looked familiar—the back of him, anyway.
The man turned
to face the camera, and Ben lost all doubt. “The Director,” he said under his
breath. “It’s a video message from the Director himself.”
Many at the
Company knew him as the Old Man, but the nickname didn’t fit, not to Ben. Sure,
he had white hair—snow white—but the lines on his forehead spoke more of
experience than age. And though he was tall, the Director never stooped. He
eyed the camera with a look of mild surprise, then slipped his hands into the
pockets of his coat and smiled. “Hello, Mr. Calix. Did I catch you at a bad
time?”