Travers looked like a slight breeze would’ve knocked him over.
Someone from the back of the crowd whispered, “Oh, my God. And we let the terrorist responsible get away!”
“Yes,” Kaederman said with enough frost to freeze every cup of water in the room, “you did. And we’re here to find him. Now, does anyone have a photo of Tyrolin and his porter? I want to make a positive identification of that bastard before we ride out after him and his hostages.”
“I have a photo,” a woman spoke up, pushing her way to the front. “I should have several, in fact.” She ignored Kaederman, addressing Kit, instead, which left the Wardmann-Wolfe agent bristling. “Ellen Danvers, Mr. Carson, professional photographer. Hired to do the wedding party. I’ve been taking pictures steadily with a digital camera. I can bring all the disks for you to study, if you like.”
Three minutes later, Skeeter found himself staring at a photograph of Marcus on the miniature screen at the back of Ellen Danvers’ digital camera. He was clearly in disguise, but a guy didn’t live through what Skeeter’d lived through, trying to rescue his friend from slavery, without getting to know that friend’s face well enough to recognize him under any circumstances. The only reason he’d failed to spot Marcus at the gate’s opening was Joey Tyrolin’s masterful performance, drawing attention away from everything else within a thousand paces.
Ellen Danvers scrolled through shot after shot. “Joey Tyrolin was camera shy, considering how drunk he was all the time. I didn’t get many shots of him. In fact, I had to work hard to get any photos of his face at all, and my client specifically asked for candids of the entire competition group.” She’d used up dozens of disks taking pictures of just about everything but the horse dung.