Sidney Sheldon's Reckless (34 page)

Read Sidney Sheldon's Reckless Online

Authors: Sidney Sheldon

BOOK: Sidney Sheldon's Reckless
6.01Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Jeff made straight for the bar and ordered a whisky. Only once the drink was in his hand did he look up.

Drexel was sitting at a table in the corner. He was with a woman. From the corner of his eye, Jeff could see that she was a brunette, somewhere in her thirties. She was attractive and well dressed, expensively dressed, in cream wide-leg pants and a gossamer-thin cashmere sweater. She wore a classic gold chain at her neck, and diamonds on her fingers, which she was jabbing accusingly at Hunter.

“Take it,” he was saying, pushing something in the woman's direction. Without turning around and looking directly it was hard for Jeff to make out what it was, but eventually he realized it was a check.
Harry Graham's winnings.

“I don't want it. I don't need it!” She was angry. Upset. “Do you think I came here for money?”

“I didn't say that.” Hunter's tone was conciliatory.

“This was never about the money. Never!”

To Jeff's dismay, someone behind the bar turned up the music. He could no longer hear what the two of them were saying. Even worse, right at that crucial moment his phone rang, so loudly that both Drexel and the woman turned and stared at him.

Turning his face away, Jeff left a note for the barman and hurried back out into the street. To take the call. Only two people had this number. One was Tracy.

But it wasn't her.

“What the hell?” Jeff barked at Frank Dorrien. “I had Drexel sitting five feet away from me! Why are you calling?”

“Where are you?”

“In a bar. He's meeting a woman.”

“A girlfriend?”

“I don't know. Could be. They seem close. He tried to give her money but she wouldn't take it. It could be Althea, Frank. I need to get back in there. They were talking . . .”

“Did he go to the bar straight from the game?”

Frank's tone sounded urgent.

“Yeah. Why?”

“And you had eyes on him the whole time?”

“Since he got to the Charles house, yes. What is it, Frank?”

“Sally Faiers is dead. Someone blew a hole in her torso the size of a rugby ball. About two hours ago.”

Jeff exhaled slowly. Tracy had liked Sally.

“Jesus.”

“I doubt he had much to do with it. Our guys are over there now, cleaning up. We can't have the Belgian police getting mixed up in this.”

“Hold on,” said Jeff. “How did you know? Was someone watching the bungalow? I thought you said I was alone here.”

“Never mind that,” Frank said dismissively. “Are they still in the bar?”

“Yes. I . . . shit. They're coming out.”

Wordlessly, Jeff slipped the phone into his pocket without hanging up and stepped back into the shadow of the Basilica.

“Stay away from me!” The woman was crying. “You're a liar!”

“No, I'm not. I know what happened to Daniel. I
know,
Kate.”

“I mean it. Stay away!”

With a sob, she physically pushed Hunter backwards, so hard that he slammed against the wall just feet from where Jeff was standing, frozen like a statue. Then she took off into the night like a gazelle, her long hair flying behind her

“Kate!” Hunter yelled after her, giving chase. “Come back! Kate!”

Jeff pulled out his phone the instant Hunter took off.

“Did you hear that?” he asked Frank Dorrien.

“Every word.”

“What should I do?”

Frank hesitated for a second. Then he said “Forget Drexel. Follow the girl.”

CHAPTER 25

A
RE YOU SURE YOU
won't ride with me to the airport?”

Cameron was standing by his chauffeur-driven Mercedes in the driveway of his French château. Tracy had come outside to see him off.

“Or better yet, come to New York?”

“Soon, I promise.” She kissed him. “I have a few loose ends to tie up here first.”

After five days spent recuperating in Cameron's mansion outside Paris, sleeping, reading and generally being waited on hand and foot, Tracy felt better. Better, and bored, and itching to get back to the job of finding Althea and Hunter before Jeff stole too much of a march on her.

Greg Walton had visited her in person yesterday. Cameron had been persuaded, reluctantly, to let him in. What he had to say was disturbing, to say the least.

“We now know for a fact that Hunter Drexel visited Camp Paris on no less than four occasions in the days leading up to the shooting. Multiple witnesses place him there. He was posing as a theater producer by the name of Lex Brightman, and had offered jobs to some of the students. Including Jack Charlston.”

“Richard Charlston's son.”

“Exactly. Heir to Brecon Natural Resources and the first victim to be shot, after the poor teacher in the parking lot. There's no good reason for Drexel to be there, Tracy,” Greg said grimly. “None that I can think of anyway.”

“No,” Tracy murmured. “Me neither.”

“Tell me about Montmartre,” said Greg. It was such a non sequitur, it caught Tracy completely by surprise. Which presumably had been his intention. “You were there, weren't you? When the shots went off.”

“I'm guessing you know I was,” said Tracy.

“Did Hunter show up at the poker game?”

“No. But he was expected. And he was still using the Lex Brightman persona. Obviously I wasn't the only person who knew that. Whoever was on that motorbike was there for him.”

“Who told you that?” the CIA chief asked archly. “Jeff Stevens?”

Tracy sighed. There didn't seem much point in denying it now.

“How about we're honest with each other, Tracy. I know I can't trust the British. But I need to trust you.”

“Fine,” Tracy replied. “As long as it works both ways.”

Greg grinned, and Tracy remembered what it was she'd liked about him in the first place. “I'll show you mine if you show me yours.”

So Tracy filled Greg in on her conversation with Jeff, minus his unfounded suspicions about Cameron, and their private words about their son.

“MI6 have pictures of Hunter with a young French student. He may have been shot in the leg and this girl was helping him. They think he was heading for Belgium. That was the last I heard before . . .” She touched her head where her hair covered the stitches.

“Well, let me update you,” Greg said. He wasn't grinning any-more. “The girl, Hélène Faubourg, is dead.”

Tracy looked aghast. “How?”

“Poisoned, apparently. Her sister found the body, still slumped over a bowl of ramen noodles. She'd ingested enough polonium to kill an ox.”

“Do we know who . . . ?”

“We never know who,” Walton said darkly. “All we know is, you meet Hunter Drexel, you die. He did go to Belgium, by the way. Sally Faiers met him there. Drove him to Bruges.”

“How is Sally?” Tracy brightened. “Is she talking to you directly now?”

“No. She's dead too.”

Tracy listened horrified as Greg gave her the details.

“Someone went in before the police could get there. Cleaned the place up so there were no prints, no nothing. Except Faiers's corpse.”

“Don't.” Tracy winced. Somehow Sally's death made this whole nightmare much more personal. “What about Hunter?”

“Evaporated,” Greg said. “We had a team on him. But the guy's slipperier than an eel in a vat of oil. We think he's left Belgium. At any rate he never went back to the bungalow again, where he and Faiers were staying.”

Tracy processed all this in silence.

“Why was Agent Buck so anxious to keep me out of the hunt for Drexel?” she asked Greg Walton directly. “Every time I asked him anything, he shut me down.”

“Because it was dangerous,” Greg said simply. “When I brought you into this the idea was for you to track Althea via her computer trail. I wanted you safe on the other side of a screen. Not out in the field in harm's way.”

“You sent me to Geneva, Greg,” Tracy reminded him.

“I know. And maybe I shouldn't have. But this is different. Hunter Drexel is a dangerous man, Tracy,” Walton said. “He's not who he seems to be. We think he's been part of Group 99 from the beginning.”

“It's possible,” Tracy admitted.

“More than possible. We believe he faked his own kidnapping to get Group 99 national attention. In our view he was complicit in Bob Daley's death—maybe he and Althea planned it together? We can't tie him to the Geneva bombing yet, but we will. We know he was at Neuilly. In all probability one of his 99 buddies killed Hélène Faubourg, a totally innocent student whose only crime was to try to help him. We think another executed Sally Faiers.”

“Why?”

“My guess is that both those women knew too much. Saw through him, maybe, in the end.”

Tracy rubbed her temples. She felt terribly tired all of a sudden.

“What do you need from me?”

“Number one, honesty. Whatever you learn from Stevens about Drexel, or anyone else, you share that intel with me or Agent Buck.”

“Jeff hasn't contacted me since that night,” Tracy said, unable to keep a note of disappointment out of her voice. Jeff must have known she'd been attacked. The British would have told him. Yet he'd made no attempt to visit her at the hospital, or afterwards. That hurt.

“He will,” Greg said. “In the meantime, go back to Neuilly and any other contacts you have here in Paris who might be able to help us. Once the hysteria about the shootings dies down and the media moves on to the next story, my guess is Drexel will be back. I don't think he's done here.”

It was a sobering thought.

Now that Cameron was leaving, Tracy could devote herself full-time to the hunt for Hunter Drexel. It wasn't only about Nick anymore, and what Hunter might be able to tell her about Althea. It was about Sally Faiers too. And Hélène Faubourg, and all the other people who'd lost their lives because they'd somehow gotten in Hunter Drexel's way.

Poor Sally.
She loved Hunter the same way I loved Jeff.

The difference was, she trusted him.

Tracy wasn't about to make the same mistake.

“Promise me you'll get some rest. You won't push yourself too hard,” Cameron said, closing the door of the car and leaning out of the window to say his goodbyes.

“I promise,” said Tracy.

Uncrossing her fingers, she walked back into the house and began making calls.

Who do I know in Paris who might have seen Lex Brightman?

Where would a rich, gay, poker-playing New York theater producer hang out?

A FEW HOURS LATER,
Tracy stopped by an old friend's jewelry boutique on the Left Bank.

Not that she thought Hunter would have been one of Guy de Lafayette's customers. But because Guy was
the
epicenter of Paris theater—land gossip, and the comings and goings of the left bank's rich and famous residents.

Tracy described Hunter to Guy.

“He may be going by the name Lex Brightman. Or Harry Graham, or any number of other pseudonyms. It's vital that I find him.”

Guy said, “That's funny.”

“What's funny?”

“Jeff said exactly the same thing to me a few days ago.”

“Jeff?”

“Yes. He told me the pair of you are working together again. Something ‘top secret.' ” The old man gave a conspiratorial wink.

“Did he now?” said Tracy.
The sneaky little so-and-so. Back in Paris already and not so much as a call.

“Oh, Tracy, darling,
do
tell me the two of you are back together again,” Guy gushed. “I could die happy if that were the case, I really could.”

Clasping his hands together, the diminutive jeweler hopped up and down like a small child in need of the bathroom and looked pleadingly at Tracy with his twinkling, impish eyes.

Tracy did not share his enthusiasm. “When was Jeff here?”

“He came to see me a few days ago, bless him. And my goodness he did look handsome! The man is ageless. You both are.”

Tracy looked murderous.

Let's work together. It'll be just like the old days.
So much for that baloney! Jeff was doing this on his own. Or worse, he was still acting as Frank Dorrien's lapdog. Well, two could play at that game.

Tracy felt a rush of righteous anger, conveniently forgetting that she, too, had sought out Guy on her own and had just agreed to report everything she learned back to the CIA.

The problem with using her old contacts to help Greg Walton was that they were Jeff's contacts too.

“So Jeff asked you for leads on the same man?”

“He did.”

“And what did you tell him?”

“I sent him to Madame Dubonnet, of course.” Guy smiled. “I understand your quarry is a gambler?”

“Among other things,” Tracy said.

“Any serious poker players in Paris end up at Dubonnet's. Didn't Jeff mention it?”

Tracy said through gritted teeth, “It must have slipped his mind.”

MADAME DUBONNET WAS A
toothless old hag who wore too much rouge, smelled of eau de violettes and Gitanes, and wore her blouse unbuttoned low enough to reveal a large expanse of crêpey cleavage. She had a deep, gravelly voice and a raucous laugh, and her gnarled, veiny hands were encrusted with diamonds as big as barnacles.

Despite her advanced years, however, she clearly considered herself to be sexually alluring. Tracy could instantly picture her being charmed by Jeff. And, no doubt, by the handsome Hunter Drexel, if Guy was right and he really had shown up here.

“Your friend told me you'd be coming.” Madame Dubonnet talked down her long nose at Tracy. She was clearly not fond of the company of younger, more attractive women.

“My friend? You mean Guy?”

“Guy? Who is Guy? No! The American. Monsieur Bowers.”

Other books

Innocents by Cathy Coote
BegMe by Scarlett Sanderson
A Sea of Purple Ink by Rebekah Shafer
Desert Stars by Joe Vasicek
La lucha por la verdad by Jude Watson
Thirty-One and a Half Regrets by Denise Grover Swank
Just Once by Jill Marie Landis
Snowbound and Eclipse by Richard S. Wheeler
Quicker (an Ell Donsaii story) by Dahners, Laurence