sheâs on the level and we bring someone along unannounced, she might get suspicious. If sheâs trying to trap us, we need to travel light. Adding Jacques to the mix could put us in jeopardy.â
âI hear you,â Joe said. âAnd I say we pack up some more of the symposium stuff, just in case.â
They went to their dadâs room and checkedthrough the samples of spy gear and surveillance equipment that he had collected so far. They each packed a pair of folding night goggles, and Frank chose a voice alterer.
Then they both grabbed a powerful, twenty-first-century device. âMan, these handhelds are way cool,â Joe said, holding one of the black devices in his hand. It looked like a cross between a cell phone and a handheld computer. He checked some of the features.
âOkay, itâs a phone, of course,â he told Frank. âBut look. This clicks on the computer. And you can access the Internet like this.â He played with the device for a few more minutes.
âYou take photos here,â he explained, âand you can store them or download them to another computer.â
âHow do you set up the GPS?â Frank asked. âThe global positioning system.â
Joe tried a few buttons. âThere. See?â He demonstrated for Frank. âNow itâs on, and this toggles it off. Dad said we can locate and track one another from anywhere to anywhere.â
âAnd it works underwater or underground,â Frank added.
âRight,â Joe said. âBut remember, these are only prototypes. So all the bugs might not be out of them yet. We canât fully depend on them.â
âOkay,â Frank said, packing his handheld away in his backpack. âLetâs go.â
They had a few hours before the meeting with Isabelle, so they decided to get in a little sightseeing. They took the Metro to the Arc de Triomphe and walked up the stairs to the observation deck on top for a panoramic view of Paris. Then they walked the Champs-Elysées back toward the Tuilleries, a large park bordering one end of the Louvre complex.
Halfway along the avenue, they stopped for croque-monsieurs âa popular French sandwichâand pommes frites . Then they continued along the Seine to the Louvre. As planned, they arrived an hour early.
They walked across the vast courtyard, surrounded on three sides by the huge former palace. They stepped into the clear glass pyramid that sat like a pointed spaceship in the middle of the courtyard. It was like walking into the middle of a prism. They bought their entrance tickets and then rode the escalator down to the underground reception area of the museum.
They stood in the large open room under the glass pyramid and surveyed their position. Gift shops, restaurants, and snack bars surrounded them. Steps led from the lobby into different wings specializing in certain periods or types of art. Crowds of people moved from the exhibits to the shops to the food and back to more exhibits.
âThis is even bigger than I thought,â Joe said.
The Hardys walked into the Denon Wing, whichhoused the famous sculpture of Winged Victory. They found the sculpture immediately. The huge headless body seemed about to launch itself from its pedestal and soar out over the large sweeping staircase beyond.
Isabelle hadnât arrived yet, so they wandered through some of the enormous exhibition areas. Occasionally smaller rooms led off the main larger spaces. âWe donât have nearly enough time really to go through this wing,â Frank said. âLetâs just do the best we can.â
âWhoa, ahead at two oâclock,â Joe said, nudging Frank to look up ahead and to the right.
Frank looked up and saw a young man with a camera around his neck. The man was standing against the wall, scanning the crowd.
Joe stepped behind a column and Frank followed. âThatâs the Victoire guy I taped yesterday in the
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