annoyed, and we donât know how long theyâre going to stay accommodating. A half hour later the deputy ambassador of Indiaâwho was also pretty concernedâpulled me aside and asked me to come to the ambassadorâs condo and get him. Which is right here.â He nodded up at the skyscraper above their heads.
âThe man was shot at,â Caitlin said. âCanât they give him a couple hours off?â
âItâs not about him, Cai. Itâs about using events as platforms. The ambassador was already late and his absence gives everyone time, and an excuse, to get back on a partisan soapbox.â
âI understand,â Caitlin said. âBut the ambassador isnât why Iâm here.â
âNo,â Ben said solemnly.
What would pull a diplomat out of a crisis session but a crisis at home? Caitlin felt a twinge as she remembered her own fatherâs careful, loving attention. âThe daughter?â She had heard about the shooting on the news.
Ben nodded, stared down the street, then back at the doorman.
âWhatâs happening with her?â Caitlin asked.
âItâs . . .â Benâs mouth tightened, then he exhaled. âItâs disturbing. Cai, youâll have to see for yourself.â
Taking her by the elbow, he walked her into the building. The concierge at the desk did not bother calling up, obviously familiar with Ben.
âThey brought her in through the service elevator,â Ben said.
There were security cameras in the lobby and one in the corner of the elevator. Loose lips sink ships , Caitlin thought as they rode up to the penthouse. Ben had not spoken another word. She could not imagine what was so dire that it could not be spoken about . . . and had unsettled him so much that he still had not released her elbow.
The elevator door opened on a corridor that was eerily silent. There was a vacuum cleaner running in an apartment but the hallwayâs thick carpet muted the sound.
But itâs more than the silence , she realized as they headed toward an apartment at the far end. There was the kind of stillness one felt at sunset in the wild, when all decent things went into their huts, tents, or burrows, and predators woke to feed. It was a strange and surprising sensation here.
On their first knock an anxious-looking woman in a red-orange sari opened the door.
âThank you, Benjamin,â she said, but was looking at Caitlin, studying her with experienced eyes.
âDr. OâHara, this is Hansa Pawar, wife of the ambassador.â
âHello,â Caitlin said as a young beagle tried to slip through the door into the hall.
âJack London!â Mrs. Pawar snapped, and the beagle slunk back inside. The dog was low to the ground and subdued as he turned to sniffing Caitlinâs ankles. His attentions were brief, perfunctory.
Caitlin ran her hand down the dogâs back as she reached down to take her shoes off; she had spent enough time in Mumbai to know that removing shoes was the cultural norm.
Mrs. Pawar stopped her. âDonât worry about that. Please just come with me.â
Caitlin felt another chill as the woman hurried them through a spacious room. It was filled with light from a wall of windows facing the UN building and the East River. There was a pleasant hint of jasmine tea in the air. The apartment was overflowing with artifactsâCaitlin recognized not just Hindi sculptures and Muslim painted texts, but a Sikh helmet, a Christian cross, a Georgia OâKeeffe landscape.
Ben noticed Caitlinâs wandering eyes. âGanak calls interculturalism âthe peace of many choices,â â he murmured to her. âHeâs trying to embody it and teach it.â
Caitlin didnât have much more time to look around before they were ushered into a bedroom, the second off a long corridor.
Though the drapes were drawn, enough sunlight filtered through for Caitlin