Authors: Kathryn Harvey
“Oh, My God—!”
Trudie cried out in a wild mixture of joy and pain. And when it was over and she lay on
the rich carpet in this wonderful stranger’s arms, she marvelled at the evening she had just
spent. She could hardly believe that it had happened, that it had all been real.
Then a question came into her mind. She wanted to ask but she didn’t want to break
the spell, so she asked only herself: Who was behind this magical operation in the rooms
above Fanelli’s men’s shop? Who thought of it? Who had started it? Who ran it?
Who, in
fact, was…
But terfly
Other Books by
Kathryn Harvey
Stars
Private Entrance
Books by
Barbara Wood
Star of Babylon
The Blessing Stone
Sacred Ground
Perfect Harmony
The Prophetess
Virgins of Paradise
The Dreaming
Green City in the Sun
Soul Flame
Vital Signs
Domina
The Watch Gods
Childsong
Night Trains
Yesterday’s Child
Curse This House
Hounds and Jackals
The Magdalene Scrolls
But terfly
a novel
Kathryn Harvey
iUniverse Star
New York Lincoln Shanghai
Butterfly
Copyright © 1988, 2007 by Barbara Wood
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced by any
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This is a work of fiction. All of the characters, names, incidents,
organizations, and dialogue in this novel are either the products of the
author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.
ISBN: 978-1-58348-763-1 (pbk)
ISBN: 978-0-595-88108-6 (ebk)
Printed in the United States of America
To my fellow player in The Game,
Annie Draper
(You draw the “all night long” card…)
Acknowledgments
I would like to say thanks to
Anne Samstag, Joyce Wallach,
and Mitchell Maher
for their very valuable help.
An extra-special thank-you goes to
Shawn Wilds and Dr. Ted Brannen.
Prologue
It could have been any island in any green sea in the world. A white villa stood at the
top of a sheer cliff, overlooking aquamarine depths and crashing waves. An eighty-foot
yacht rode at anchor, its crew in smart uniforms, keeping the boat ready for the whim of
the man and woman up on the cliff. There was an exotic swimming pool behind the
white villa; a woman swam in it, reveling in the pure air and silence of her retreat. A feast
had been set out under a gently flapping canopy: bowls of iced caviar, chilled lobster and
crab, fruit frosted in sugar, cheeses imported from all over the globe, four kinds of wine
standing in coolers. No one waited in attendance. The two lovers wanted to be alone.
She got out of the marble pool, climbing up the curved white steps and going between
two Corinthian pillars to where chaise longues covered in plush velour towels waited in
the sun.
She moved languidly. She felt hot and sweet and ready for sex.
She didn’t remove her bathing suit. He would do that for her. Instead she stretched out
in the heat and settled her eyes upon the television set that stood in the shade of the
striped canopy. It was on. It was always on. She was waiting for something.
A moment later he emerged from the house, the shimmering water of the pool
reflected in the lenses of his Ray-Bans. His long white bathrobe was open; he was naked
underneath. She gazed at him as he walked slowly toward her. He was tall and lithe, with
sinewy muscles and strong thighs; he walked with the stride of an Olympic gold medalist.
He came alongside her chaise longue. She reached up with a lazy hand. The waves of
heat rising mirage-like from the white walls of the villa seemed to melt her bones. She stirred
on the thick towel, relishing the sensation of its creamy plush pile against her bare skin.
He knelt beside her. She felt strong hands lightly touch her legs. He toyed with the
string of her bathing suit. He kissed the inside of her thighs.
But when his hand traveled up, his fingers exploring beneath the Spandex, she sud-
denly stopped him.
He looked at her, trying to read her expression behind her enormous sunglasses. He
saw that her gaze was fixed on the television set.
He looked at the screen. And here it was at last, the thing she had been waiting for—
a news broadcast from the other side of the earth, via satellite.
It was showing two funerals. One was in Houston, the other in Beverly Hills. Funerals
important enough to be broadcast globally.
She put her hand gently on his head, and stroked him almost absentmindedly as she
stared at the solemn processions—one backdropped by California palm trees with people
arriving in stretch limos, the hearse white because they were burying a woman; the other
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Kathryn Harvey
beneath a hard Texas sun, attended by men in Stetsons who lifted the coffin of a man
from the black hearse. For the moment, she wasn’t on this craggy, remote island and
about to experience a sublime sexual idyll. She was back…back there, at the beginning of
the incredible road that had terminated at last in the two funerals taking place on the
same day, fifteen hundred miles apart…
January
1
Dr. Linda Markus was sitting at the dressing table, her arm raised, about to brush her
hair, when she heard a sound.
Her hand froze. On her wrist there was a gold chain from which a charm—a butter-
fly—was suspended. As she sat suddenly still, listening to the night, the butterfly trem-
bled on its delicate chain, glinting in the lamplight.
She searched the bedroom reflected behind her in the mirror. Nothing appeared to be
out of the ordinary. There was the king-size bed on its dais; the satin canopy hangings and
mattress ruffle, all a delicate peach color. On the bed lay her white hospital coat, her
blouse and skirt, the medical bag she had tossed down after a tiring day in surgery. Italian
leather shoes lay on the carpet next to the tan pool of her panty hose.
She listened. But all was silent.
She resumed brushing her hair.
It was difficult to relax. There was so much to think about, so much demanding her
attention: that patient in the Intensive Care Unit; the meeting of the Surgical Review
Board in the morning; the speech she had yet to write for the annual County Medical
Association dinner.
And then, most puzzling, the phone calls she was getting from that TV producer
Barry Greene—rather insistent, and not a medical problem, his messages said. She had
yet to find time to return his calls.
There was that sound again! A sly, sort of surreptitious sound, as if someone were out-
side, trying to get in, trying not to be heard…
Slowly lowering her hairbrush and placing it among the cosmetics and perfumes on
the vanity table, Dr. Markus drew in a breath, held it, and turned around.
She stared at the closed drapes. Had the sound come from the other side of the
windows?
Dear God, were the windows locked?
She trembled. She stared at the heavy velvet drapes. Her pulse started to race.
Minutes seemed to pass. The ornate Louis XV clock over the marble fireplace ticked,
ticked, ticked.
The drapes moved.
The window was open!
Linda caught her breath.
A cold breeze seemed to flood the room as the drapes began to part. A shadow fell
across the champagne carpet.
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Kathryn Harvey
Linda shot to her feet and without thinking ran to the dressing room. Pulling the door
shut behind herself, she was plunged into darkness; she groped along the wall for the
secret drawer.
There was supposed to be a revolver in it.
Finding the drawer, Linda frantically pulled it open and reached inside. The cold metal
felt obscene in her hand; it was long and hard and heavy. Would it fire? Was it even loaded?
Returning to the door of the dressing room she pressed her ear to it and listened.
Subtle sounds crept through the spacious bedroom: the creak of a lead-paned window, the
whisper of disturbed drapes, the soft hush of rubber-soled shoes on the carpet.
He was in there. He was in the bedroom.
Linda swallowed hard and tightened her grip on the gun. What did she think she was
going to do with it? Shoot him, for God’s sake? She started to shake. Her heart was
pounding.
What if he had a gun too?
She listened. She could hear him moving about. She reached down, grasped the door-
knob, and inched the door open. At first she saw only an empty room. Then…