Authors: Gayle Lynds
She was saying, “After the failure of Bremner's scheme, all of us were sure the Carnivore was dead, but Sarah tracked him to Sicily, near where his grandmother was born. He'd been living there, holed up with his books. Mother told me later he'd returned there occasionally over the years because he felt an affinity for the land and the people. Anyway, Sarah believed he should be brought in to be debriefed, because he'd promised he would, and because she didn't trust him to stay retired. She didn't tell me. Only Asher knew. They arranged with the CIA to helicopter them and some troops to his estate. What they didn't know was he'd rigged his house and land. When he saw them, he set off a string of underground explosions.”
“That's how he died?”
She gave a slow nod. “Sarah said it was horrible. Like a series of earthquakes. Anyway, there wasn't even a body for a funeral, and I'd lost my last chance to see him. When Sarah told me, I didn't speak to her for months. I was furious because I thoughtâI still sometimes thinkâthat if I'd been there, he wouldn't have done it. But then Mom died, and I was alone. What a mess. Of course, Sarah was right to try to bring him in, but she should've told me. I think she was worried I wouldn't agree.”
“He didn't give himself up in Paris with your mother, even after you made the arrangements.”
“I know. I think about that, too. So when Mom died, I realized I had to get on with my life, and I apologized to Sarah. We owed her for what she went through with Bremner, and I owed her again for my anger.” She frowned, fell silent.
“There's something about it that's still bothering you.”
“My husband. Heâ¦he was violent, too.” She hesitated. “He'd go through dark periods, and he'd hit me. It was only later that I figured out it didn't matter what I said or did. That he'd always find some new excuse to beat me.”
His hand clenched on his glass. “You
let
him beat you?” And realized that was where the story about her father had been heading.
“It's more complicated than that. I knowâ¦who'd believe I was a battered wife, right? Tough Liz. Karate-trained Liz. CIA Liz. But I never reported him, and I never fought back. I wonder whether there was something in the air when I was growing up that enabled me to live with his violence. Children sense things, but they don't have the words to express the unsaid. It's the thousand-pound gorilla hulking around the family room that everyone ignores. Oddly, I knew I'd never let anyone else treat me that way. Then, of course, he died. So I lost the chance to develop some backbone and leave him.”
“Did you tell anyone?”
“Maybe some of the guys at Langley guessed.” She glanced at him. “I went through therapy while I was getting my doctorate. That helped. I can give you all the jargon for it, the analysis, but who cares? In the endâ¦I allowed myself to be his victim. And no, I don't think I âloved him too much.' I quit loving him in there somewhere, but I was too damn stupid and needy to do anything about it.”
“And you're still not at peace with it.”
“Apparently not. Since I just told you.” She gave a wan smile.
“Are you feeling your mortality right now?”
“You bet I am. God knows what today will bring.”
“Nothing like trying to make up for one's mistakes at one blow, right? We're a pair. I liked you a lot as a kid. I think I like you even more now.”
“Thank you. It's mutual.”
“Are you as tired as I am?” he asked, his voice low and intimate.
“Maybe. Probably. I have an alarm on my watch. I'll set it, and we can sleep for a couple of hours. Then we should leave for Dreftbury and make plans.”
He checked the hallway outside and locked the door. As she placed one more log into the flickering flames, she decided she liked the sense of safety in this roomâ¦in Henry's house. They met at the sofa. She sat, and he sat beside her again. Closer. Hesitantly, he took her hand. She let him, then his in both of hers. His skin was warm and dry, the muscles and tendons powerful. They leaned back, still holding hands, as the fire flickered and spat, and fell quickly into troubled sleep.
Â
Henry Percy detested the fact that the younger servants kept the fire high in his new bedroom all night. Still, July was often cold here, and at his advanced age, the chill could easily carry him off. He did not intend to die just yet. The problem was that the heat often made him fall asleep in his wheelchair as he read.
He groaned and stretched to ease the pain in his shoulder. What had awakened him? He remembered dreaming of his motorcycle, the old army bike he had brought with him from the war nearly sixty years ago. Or had it been a dream?
He frowned and listened but heard nothing. Yetâ¦had a motorcycle come to a stop somewhere nearby? As a faint click sounded in the silent room, he immediately felt a quick draft of air, there and gone. He whirled his wheelchair around, staring at the long drapes that covered his French doors. Had they moved?
His pulse raced, and fear shot through him. His gun was in his bedside table. He was half out of his wheelchair when a man stepped from behind the drapes.
“Good evening, Baron.” He aimed his pistol.
Henry Percy stared at the weapon, then raised his gaze to the man's face. “You!”
As the noise of a motorcycle engine stopped abruptly, Liz forced herself awake, her eyes still closed, not sure what she had heard. She listened to the mutterings of the old timbers in Henry Percy's mansion, aware of Simon beside her on the sofa. Her head lay on his shoulder, his cheek resting against the crown of her head. She wanted to stay here forever. He smelled good, irresistible, like walnuts and raisins with a soupçon of fine malt. She listened to his light snore, a heavenly sound, and turned to nuzzle his shoulderâ¦until she recalledâ
Her eyes snapped open. Had there been an engineâa motorcycleâthat had quit before it reached the house? She settled back, considering. Maybe one of Henry's servants had returned from a tryst. Or maybe one of the gardeners had arrived early for work. She waited for whispers, giggles, voices, a door closing. Nothing. But then, Simon and she were at the back of the house, on the second floor. Anything that occurred at the front or in the main rooms or even in the kitchen was difficult to hear.
Judging by the flames crackling in the fireplace and the darkness of the night, they had not slept long. She was not sure she had even heard the engine. The truth was, she was on edge, her mind roiling. That was the real problem. She tried to relax, but her thoughts returned to their long conversation with Henry about Nautilus and his role in it, then finally moved on to their deducing the five remaining members of the Coil.
She wondered about themâ¦the respect their names evoked internationally. Their towering wealth and influence. The dry-lipped awe of those struggling to reach the same exalted career heights.
Yet they had treated her like a rat in an experiment, and they had murdered Kirk and the dean and the dean's wife. How could they? The easy answers were greed and ambition for her father's files. But that was unsatisfactory, superficial. Repulsed, she recalled what Sophocles wrote in
Oedipus Rex
: “God keep you from the knowledge of who you are!” That was it: The ancient Greek playwright had known the human soulâthat the ultimate judge and jury was oneself. To keep a high opinion of themselves, people rationalized away their less-than-stellar deeds. The more they rationalized, the better they became at it. And the greater the evil they could justify.
She repressed a shudder. Simon seemed to sense her unease. He pulled her closerâand a single gunshot shattered the silence.
It was like a knife through her heart. “Simon!” She shook his arm.
He was already awake. “Damn! What⦔
“A shot.” She disentangled and ran to the high windows.
He was at her side. “Did you hear anything else?”
The fishpond and forest looked untouched, full of deep shadows as the moon sank toward the horizon. Nothing was out of place. Simon opened the window.
“Before the shot,” she told him, “there might have been a motorcycle engine.”
“A motorcycle and a single gunshot could mean a poacher.” He listened, but there were only the dawn songs of insects.
“Maybe.” She crossed the room and grabbed her shoulder bag.
He followed and snatched up his gym bag. “You think it's someone after us.”
“If I'm wrong, we can always come back and finish our nap.”
“We're going to have to wait for that, I should think.”
All business, he checked his pistol, and they hurried to the door.
Liz cracked it and peered out. “No one.” Her voice was tight.
He pressed it open wider and gazed through the space beneath the hinges toward the opposite end of the dimly lit hall. “No one this way either.”
She flung the strap of her bag across her chest. The Glock in both hands, she slid out. He followed with his Beretta, the handle of the Uzi jutting conveniently from his bag. Silence. Liz nodded toward the short end of the hall. He nodded, agreeing. They sprinted along the carpet, passing portraits of Henry's stern-faced ancestors. At one time, family and friends had filled the suites and rooms in this wing every weekend. Now the emptiness resounded.
The corridor ended at a back landing. At the arched opening, they studied the elaborately carved staircase that curved up and down. No movement. No sound. The silence was eerie, like the hush before a thunderstorm. They left their cover and glided down the stairs, then stopped abruptly when they heard four or five sets of feet padding across a wood floor.
“That's no poacher,” Liz whispered. “They're in the house.”
Before Simon could agree, a violent fusillade exploded from the front. Windows shattered. Bullets whined and thudded. There was the noise of ripping wood and the loud pinging of rounds striking metal. Instantly, people inside returned fire.
“We've brought them down on Henry!” she said.
“Damnation!” Simon reached the first floor in one jump.
Liz was on his heels. They raced down the hall, slid inside the foyer, looked carefully both ways, and started across.
A fusillade smashed in, fracturing windowpanes and puncturing the massive front door. The noise was deafening. Wood splinters flew like arrows. Liz and Simon dived onto the marble floor and covered their heads.
As soon as the firing paused, they crawled around glass shards and across to the parlor, where three servants in pajamas huddled beside windows, their hands shaky as they held a motley collection of shotguns and ancient bolt-action rifles. The low moon filled the room with gray light and eerie shadows. Another short round of shots blasted inside. A painting crashed to the floor. A wooden lamp splintered. When the firing paused again, the men rose up to shoot wildly out the windows and duck back.
Liz and Simon hurriedly crab-walked to Henry's servant Richard, hunched like a praying abbot beneath his window.
“Who are they?” Liz asked. “How many?”
“I don't know.” His face was half in shadow, making him look far older than when he had invited them into the mansion. He turned in alarm as another volley sounded. “A dozen. Maybe more. Well armed.”
“Where's Henry?” Simon asked worriedly.
“In his bedroom with Clive, sir.”
As another shot slammed through the window, Richard flattened against the wall. Window glass exploded like glinting ice. He waited, darted up to fire out wildly, and fell back, his face twitching with fear.
More isolated shots followed, pinning everyone down, riddling the walls. As the servants returned fire, Liz and Simon scuttled back to the foyer and down the hall to what had once been Henry's den and was now his bedroom. The door was open.
Liz froze, shocked. “Oh, no!” Her throat tightened, and she fought a sudden ache behind her eyes.
“Henry!” Simon's quick intake of air sounded like a gasp.
Lord Percy lay on his back in a pool of blood, motionless, his face bone white, his gray eyes staring upward. Sitting cross-legged next to him, Clive wrung his hands and muttered under his breath. From the French doors, where the drapes had been pushed back, dingy moonlight illuminated them.
Liz and Simon ran to him. Clive looked up, his grizzled cheeks streaked with tears. They knelt, and Clive gently closed Henry's eyes. Sharp pain pierced Liz's heart and lingered. Instantly, shots detonated somewhere outside, and bullets screeched in through the panes of the French doors, spraying glass.
Clive started to rear up, but Simon yanked him down to the floor.
“Stay here!” he ordered, clamping him flat.
More bullets rammed into an upholstered chair. Goose down burst out in a white cloud. Other gunfire crashed into distant wallsâthe east wing. There was the sound of a door's being battered open there.
“They're coming inside!” Clive looked around frantically and tried to sit up, but Simon held him down. “They want
you,
” Clive said. “Go. Hurry!”
Liz resisted. “No. We can't leave you. Weâ”
“He's dead,” Clive insisted tearfully. “You can't help Lord Henry. And if you're not here, they may leave us alone!”
Running feet sounded in the east wing. His memory might be bad, but Clive was right. There was no way the untrained servants with their sporting weapons could hold out. There were too many attackersâand too many servants to be savedâfor Liz and Simon to force a better result.
Clive rolled away and sat up. “Go! Now. Please! So we can surrender!”
Liz and Simon exchanged a look. They leaped up and ran back down the hall as the gunfire outside halted suddenly, indicating the invaders were likely inside. The lull was Liz and Simon's only advantage. They sped past the curved staircase and into the cross corridor at the rear of the house as shouts erupted from the foyer. Feet thundered after them.
They slammed through the rear door and tore around to the grape arbor and their parked Jeep. In the lead, Liz vaulted into the driver's seat. Simon tumbled in on the passenger side. The engine sputtered, then started.
As the first two attackers stormed out of the house after them, Liz gunned the engine and screeched the Jeep in a sharp J-turn, fishtailing until her tires gripped the cobblestones and the vehicle straightened out.
As she raced the Jeep past the shadow-drenched front lawn, Simon yanked the Uzi from his bag and leaned out the window. She glanced at him once, caught his implacable expression. In the moonlight, beads of sweat glinted on his forehead.
“Here they come!” he warned, voice taut. The killers were ghostly shadows, legs pumping as they chased the Jeep and raised their weapons. “Looks like at least a dozen.”
“On foot?”
“So far.”
“We'll outrun them then.” With a jolt of adrenaline, she floored the accelerator.
But they could not outrun bullets. A volley crashed into the Jeep's tail and screamed past their windows. The horrible noise penetrated to her marrow. Simon squeezed off a burst and ducked inside just as a shot detonated his side-view mirror. Pieces exploded into the air and pinged against the door.
“A tad close, that.” His voice was grim and breathless.
“Too close!”
She bit back fear as Simon ducked out and fired again. Still, the bombardment from their hunters was lessening.
“Are we out of range?” she asked hopefully.
Simon fell into the front seat again. “Yes. Their bullets are going wild.” He stared back over his shoulder through the shattered rear window, watching.
She nodded silently and eased up on the accelerator. She glanced up at the rearview mirror, glimpsing a dark-clothed figure who paced alone ahead of the pack of gunmen, his movements radiating anger and frustration. Her breath seemed to freeze in her lungs when she thought she saw a limp. She ripped her gaze away to concentrate on keeping the hurtling Jeep on the dark, narrow drive that led back to the country road.
“Do you see a limping man back there?” she asked anxiously. “The limp should be on the right side.”
“Yes. It's on the right. Didn't the man at the Eisner-Moulton warehouse have a limp?”
She nodded. “I think he's the one who dropped the jacket with the Cronus note inside. I didn't get a good look at him then, and I don't dare try now. Do you see any signs of a car?”
“Yes! Here comes one now!” A van had paused beside the hunters, and they had jumped inside.
Pulse pounding, Liz killed the lights as she sped the Jeep into the tunnel of brush and overgrown trees. They might as well have been inside an inkwell. The only light came from her dashboard. Branches screeched against the Jeep's sides. Simon seized the door handle, holding tightly. The towering vegetation blurred past like a long brushstroke of black paint. Behind, headlights pierced the night ominously, searching.
Simon said nothing, tension radiating from him like heat from an oven. She stared ahead, her eyes aching with the strain of trying to see the road. It was as straight as a bullet's path, or at least that was what Henry had always said. She gripped the steering wheel, unconsciously leaning forward, trying to spotâ¦waitingâ¦there it was. A break in the trees! The faint shine of the stream. The glen!
But at this heightened speedâ¦still, it did not matter. She had little choice.
“Hold on!”
She slammed the brakes and yanked the steering wheel. The wheels banged on rocks as the vehicle thudded blindly over the roadside and dropped, throwing them against their seat belts. She held the steering wheel tightly while letting the vehicle find its own way as it smashed saplings and rolled over rocks. She controlled it enough to keep it upright and still moving in the general direction andâ¦there were the headlights again, glowing through the trees as if a monster were out looking for them with searchlights.
“There!” Simon pointed to a leafy horse chestnut tree.
“They won't see the stream from the drive,” she said, turning the wheel, “unless they kill their headlights.”
“Unless they know where to look.”
“That thought doesn't make me happy.”
With a queasy feeling, she braked and yanked the steering wheel once more, nosing the Jeep under the tree. Branches draped themselves across the rear, cloaking it. The front pointed at a sixty-degree angle to the spring. She killed the engine.
They were not only silent but completely hidden. Simon reached out. She took his hand. With his other hand, he covered hers. They lifted their heads, listening. The growl of the engine approached, and the illumination brightened. They stared back. She found herself holding her breath.
Breathe, dammit.
Up on the drive, a large van charged past, its engine so powerful it could not help but advertise itself with its immense, smooth strength. In an abrupt Doppler effect, the noise level dropped. And the immediate danger was gone, red taillights soaring onward.
She inhaled deeply. “Did you see what kind of van it was?”
“Not a prayer. Much too fast. But it was big enough to hold the dozen men who were chasing us.” He watched the taillights disappear. “You're a hell of a good driver.”