The Woman in the Fifth

The Woman in the Fifth by Douglas Kennedy

Book: The Woman in the Fifth by Douglas Kennedy Read Free Book Online
Authors: Douglas Kennedy
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end of it. There was a small camera above the door and a spotlight trained on the area below the doorway. There was a keypad with a speakerphone beside it. Kamal punched in six numbers. As he did so, he told me, 'The code is 163226. Memorize it, but don't write it down.'
     
'Why don't you want me to write it down?'
     
'Because I don't want you to write it down. 1-6-3-2-2-6. You got that?'
     
I repeated it out loud, then said it a second time, just to make certain that it had adhered to my brain.
     
'Good,' he said as the door clicked open. We entered a hallway lit by a single naked lightbulb. The walls were unpainted concrete. Ditto the floor. There was a stairway in front of us. Around twelve feet away there was another steel door. Behind it I could hear the low hum of . . . was it something mechanical? . . . machinery perhaps? . . . and the occasional raised voice? But the sound was muffled. As I strained to hear it, Kamal put his hand on my shoulder and said, 'Up the stairs.'
     
The staircase led to another steel door. This was opened by two keys. Kamal had to put his weight on the door to finish the job and gain us access to a small room. Like the hallway, it had unpainted concrete walls. It was ten by ten, furnished with a beat-up metal desk, a straight-back chair, and nothing else. A closed-circuit television monitor sat on one corner of the desk. It was broadcasting a grainy image of the doorway outside. By the monitor was a speaker and a keypad. There were two doorways off this room. One was opened, showing the interior of an old-fashioned stand-up French toilet. You had to face front and squat as you took a dump. The toilet was also unpainted and seemed to lack a light. The other door was wooden and locked with a sliding bolt. There were no windows in the room – and the one radiator wasn't throwing off much in the way of heat.
     
'You expect me to work here?' I asked.
     
'That is up to you.'
     
'This place is a shit hole – a cold shit hole with no light.'
     
'The radiator can be turned up higher.'
     
'I'll need some sort of other heat.'
     
'OK, you can buy an electrical heater for the room—'
     
'And a desk lamp.'
     
'Fine. Will you start tonight?'
     
I looked around, thinking, He's looking for a deadbeat to do a deadbeat's job – and he's sized you up as the perfect candidate.
     
'All right, I'll start tonight – but I want some cash to buy paint and stuff tomorrow.'
     
'If you want to paint the place, you will have to do it during your work hours.'
     
'Fine by me. But doesn't anyone use the room by day? Don't you have a sentry for the morning hours?'
     
'That is no concern of yours,' he said, reaching into his pocket and pulling out a substantial wad of cash. He peeled off three fifty-euro notes and handed them to me.
     
'This should be sufficient for the paint, the brushes, the heater, the lamp. But provide receipts, please. The boss is finicky about expenses.'
     
Kamal lit up a cigarette, then said, 'So here is how the job works. You arrive here every night at midnight. You let yourself in. Once inside this room, you bolt the door behind you and padlock it shut. Then you sit down and do whatever you want to do for the next six hours, always keeping an eye on the monitor. If you see anyone in the alley who is loitering, you press the number 2-2 on the keypad. This will send a signal to someone that there is an unwanted stranger outside. They will take care of the problem. If a visitor approaches the doorway, he will ring a button which will sound up here on the desk speaker. You press 1-1 on the keypad and say one word, " Oui? " If he is legitimate, he will answer, " I am here to see Monsieur Monde. " Once you have received this answer, you press the Enter button on the keypad which will activate the door. You then press 2-3 on the keypad which will inform the people downstairs that a legitimate visitor is on his way to them.'
     
'And what will "the people downstairs" do?'
     
'They will

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