She was well trained now, however. She didn't even glance at the first restroom she passed, or the second. She probably wouldn't use a bathroom until she got to her hotel room.
Bean, when are you coming? Did they get you onto the next flight? How will we find each other in this city?
She knew he would be furious, however, if she lingered in the airport hoping to meet his flight. For one thing, she would have no idea where his flight would be coming from--he was wont to choose very odd itineraries, so that he could very easily be on a flight from Cairo, Moscow, Algiers, Rome, or Jerusalem. No, it was better to go to a hotel, check in under an alias that he knew about, and--
"Mrs. Delphiki?"
She turned at once at the sound of Bean's mother's name, and then realized that the tall, white-haired gentleman was addressing her.
"Yes." She laughed. "I'm still not used to the idea of being called by my husband's name."
"Forgive me," said the man. "Do you prefer your birth name?"
"I haven't used my own name in many months," said Petra. "Who sent you to meet me?"
"Your host," said the man.
"I have had many hosts in my life," said Petra. "Some of whom I do not wish to visit again."
"But such people as that would not live in Damascus." There was a twinkle in his eye. Then he leaned in close. "There are names that it is not good to say aloud."
"Mine apparently not being one of them," she said with a smile.
"In this time and place," he said, "you are safe while others might not be."
"I'm safe because you're with me?"
"You are safe because I and my...what is your Battle School slang?...my jeesh and I are here watching over you."
"I didn't see anybody watching over me."
"You didn't even see me," said the man. "This is because we're very good at what we do."
"I did see you. I just didn't realize you had taken any notice of me."
"As I said."
She smiled. "Very well, I will not name our host. And since you won't either, I'm afraid I can't go with you anywhere."
"Oh, so suspicious," he said with a rueful smile. "Very well, then. Perhaps I can facilitate matters by placing you under arrest." He showed her a very official-looking badge inside a wallet. Though she had no idea what organization had issued the badge, since she had never learned the Arabic alphabet, let alone the language itself.
But Bean had taught her: Listen to your fear, and listen to your trust. She trusted this man, and so she believed his badge without being able to read it. "So you're with Syrian law enforcement," she said.
"As often as not," he replied, smiling again as he put his wallet away.
"Let's walk outside," she said.
"Let's not," he said. "Let's go into a little room here at the airport."
"A toilet stall?" she asked. "Or an interrogation room?"
"My office," he said.
If it was an office, it was certainly well disguised. They got to it by stepping behind the El Al ticket counter and going into the employees' back room.
"El Al?" she asked. "You're Israeli?"
"Israel and Syria are very close friends for the past hundred years. You should keep up on your history."