Authors: Anne Stuart
Tags: #Assassins, #Soldiers of Fortune, #General, #Romance, #Romantic Suspense Fiction, #Suspense, #Fiction
With huge thanks to my fabulous wizard of an agent, Jane Dystel,
and to my splendidly appreciative editor,
Margaret O’Neill Marbury
and a much-belated thank-you to Lynda Ward,
who helped me innumerable times.
Bless you all!
Prologue
Then
Mary Isobel Curwen had never shot a man before. She stood there, numb, unmoving. She’d never fired a gun before, and the feel of it in her grasp was disturbing. Her hand and arm tingled with the recoil, and she could smell the cordite, the blood. She wouldn’t look at him— he was down, unmoving, and there was nothing on this earth that would make her walk over to him and see what she’d done.
Had she blown a hole through his head? His chest? Was he dead or just wounded? She knew she ought to check.... She’d had every reason to shoot him, but you couldn’t very well let a man bleed to death, could you? she thought dazedly. Even if he’d been trying to kill you?
Or maybe you could. Maybe you could drop the gun, turn and run, as fast as possible, before he suddenly stood up and came after you, before one of his buddies came running to see where the noise had come from. Maybe you could take the gun with you, just in case.
She still had her backpack over her shoulder, which struck her as slightly crazy. She put the heavy handgun into it, noticing that her hands were shaking. Of course they were. She’d just killed a man.
He still wasn’t moving, and she could see a pool of blood gathering beneath him. He was definitely dead. How was she going to live without him? It had begun to rain sometime during the last few hours. The streets were soaked, the lights glinting off the wet pavement as she ran out into the night, closing the heavy door of the abandoned building behind her without a sound. She was wearing loose sandals and wanted to kick them off, but you couldn’t run barefoot when you were in the middle of a city. Even with a gun in your backpack and the man you loved lying dead in the dirt.
Running would attract too much attention. She shoved back her wild hair, trying to stuff the thick tangle into a knot. She straightened her shoulders and walked on in the rainy night, calm, composed, the scream buried so deep in her heart that it would never escape. By the time they found his body she’d be long gone, and there’d be nothing to connect Mary Isobel Curwen with a dead terrorist in a run-down part of Marseille. No one would ever know. Except she would. And she’d live with it, as she’d learned to live with everything else life had handed her. Killian was dead. Long live Mary Isobel Curwen.
Without him.
1
Now
Madame Isobel Lambert was exhausted. It had been a draining weekend in the
Sunday fines
with her for the train ride back to
She waited for the water to get hot, then stepped beneath it. And only then did she cry, silently, steadily. Not for the men. But for her own lost soul. Peter Madsen looked up when Madame Lambert walked into the office the next morning, a cardboard cup of coffee in one hand, a newspaper under her arm. He had the same paper open in front of him.
“Shame about the car accident near the Lohan Cliffs,” he said evenly, watching her out of the icy blue eyes that saw too much. “Indeed.” she said calmly. He would have been the one to do it, but he’d pulled back from that kind of work. Everyone reached their limit when it came to wet work—either they burned out or made one too many mistakes. Peter was deskbound, not because of his bad leg but because he’d seen and done too much. His focus had changed to his American wife and the semblance of a normal Life, and Isobel wasn’t going to do anything to change that, even though she could.
But she was running out of people she could trust to do what was necessary and nothing more. In the three years since she’d taken over Harry Thomason’s role as head of the Committee, she’d lost three effective operatives. Bastien had disappeared into the mountains of
She hated not knowing things.
“You look rattled,” Peter said his voice cool and devoid of sympathy, as she needed it to be.
“I’m fine. It’s just been awhile. Any sign of Taka’s cousin?”
“Not yet. You had some calls.” There was something about the tone of his voice that twisted her stomach into a small knot of dread. She turned her impassive face back to him. “I imagine I did. Harry Thomason, I suppose?”
“
Among others.”
There were only the two of them in the Kensington offices of Spence-Pierce Financial Consultants, Ltd., their very effective cover. Anyone who managed to get through to them had every business doing so. More mundane matters were conducted at a distance.
Isobel took the leather club chair opposite Peter’s desk, crossing her legs. Good legs for a woman in her sixties. Good legs for a woman in her forties. Not even bad for someone her real age.
“You may as well tell me.” She pried the lid off the
coffee and took a drink. “I’ve never known you to spare my tender feelings.” Peter laughed, a sound she was slowly getting used to. In the first ten years she’d known him she didn’t think she’d ever heard him laugh. “Sensitivity was never my forte,” he said. “Thomason wants to know what you’re going to do about the situation with Serafin.”
“Thomason can blow himself’ Isobel said sweetly. “Who have we got on him?”
“No one. Bastien did some of the preliminary work, as did I. But things stabilized and we had more important situations to deal with.”
“Serafin.” she said. “The Butcher.” Her day had gone from bad to worse. “I thought he was just going to fade away like Qaddafi.”
“No such luck. Only the good die young and Josef Serafin doesn’t fit that category.”
She glanced longingly toward her office. She could go in there, close the door behind her and put her head down on the massive teak desk. Maybe bang it a few times for good measure. Peter was watching her, reading her mind. That was the problem with working with someone like Peter—he was smart enough and intuitive enough to know what she was thinking at all times.
She wasn’t going anywhere. “Fill me in’ she said. “Tell me we’re finally going to get to kill him. Please.”
“I’m afraid not. We’re going to have to save the son of a bitch’s life.”
“I hate this job,” Isobel said, leaning back and closing her eyes for a moment. She gripped the coffee tightly. If her hand revealed even the faintest tremor. Peter would see it. “Details. Everything we know about Serafin, and why in God’s name we have to keep him alive. Maybe I’ll figure a way around it.”
“I doubt it. He’s got nine lives. Even Bastien wasn’t able to take him down when he was ordered to.”
“I forgot about that. Details,” she said again, wearily.
“Josef Serafin, somewhere in his early forties. It’s anybody’s guess where he was born—probably in a slum in
“Lovely man,” Isobel murmured. “And we’re supposed to save his life?”
Peter didn’t bother to answer her question. “He’s hiding out in
“And we’re saving Serafin because?”
“Because of the Intel he brings with him. He knows just about all there is to know about the major players in the world of terrorism, and he’s willing to trade that information for safe passage out of Morocco. That’s where we come in.”