The Coil (42 page)

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Authors: Gayle Lynds

BOOK: The Coil
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“Will he be at Dreftbury?” Liz asked.

“His predecessors were, so no doubt he's planning to.” His eyes were heavy.

Liz studied Henry. “You look as if you're falling asleep, Henry. Being up this late can't be good for you. Please go back to bed. You've helped us a lot. Would you mind if we stayed on a few hours?”

“Of course not. Perhaps you'll both rest, too. I believe Clive is preparing the family suite. You can have your old rooms. Simon, would you please open that door?”

Again the long finger stretched out, pointing. On the other side had been Henry's den. But when Simon opened it, he saw it had been converted into a bedroom. Beside the bed stood a wheelchair, which explained why they had not seen him walking downstairs. He had been asleep here.

“Bring her to me, will you?” Henry asked. “I call her Dodd, after another border family. Reliably colorful, the Dodds. Wheelchairs are such a bore. One tries to make them as interesting as possible.” As Simon rolled it toward him, he asked Liz, “Will you check on Clive and the suite? His memory is fading. I've had to hire a larger staff to cover for him. Perhaps you noticed the grounds need care.” Henry shrugged. “Clive doesn't want to retire, and I won't make him. So some things are left untended.”

“Here we go,” Simon said. He helped Henry into the wheelchair. The old baron was light as an autumn leaf.

“I'll say my good nights now.” He beamed. “It's been grand to see both of you. Lively, like old times. But if you're gone by breakfast, I'll understand. And if you don't come to your senses and agree with me, Simon, I'll understand that, too. Perhaps I've been some help. Be careful, you two. I suppose Nautilus could have gone bad, but I hope not. I most sincerely hope not.”

 

Alone in his bedroom, the silence of the stone manse enfolded Henry Percy like an old friend. As he sat in his wheelchair, he held his cell and listened for the voices of his ancestors. These days, he thought about Hotspur often—honored warrior, misunderstood politician—and mourned his early death, not yet forty. And here he himself was, nearing the century mark. Some died too young; others lived too old.

He shook his head, warning himself not to let nostalgia carry him off his path. He had too much brimstone and savvy to have reached “too old.” More than the young people upstairs would ever know. He was retired, not dead.

“Silent, are you?” he said into the hushed air. “Nothing to say? Does one sacrifice the individual for the masses? Or is life so sacred that no one may be sacrificed, no matter the cost to others? What have you learned from the other side of the grave?”

He waited for an answer to his long-standing moral dilemma. When the silence grew painful, he placed the call. Sir Anthony Brookshire answered, but Lord Henry Percy talked.

 

“This is Cronus. What in God's name have you done, Cronus? Are you mad? How dare you cross me like this?”

“What?”

“You heard me, Cronus. Simon Childs and Liz Sansborough are my family, and you bloody well know it. Did you think I wouldn't find out? Did you think I'd do nothing when I did?
How dare you set her up!
And don't tell me you're not behind the reactions of MI6 and Langley. You have one chance, and I give this to you only because I sponsored you. Call off your goons. Simon and Liz are under my protection. If they chase you straight into your grave, your people are not to touch one hair on their heads. The files are her father's. That means she inherits. If she finds them, they're hers.”

“The blackmailer as good as killed Robbie.”

“Robbie's dead. There's nothing we can do for him. Besides, we both know that's beside the point. You want the files for yourself!”

“No, Cronus. You're utterly wrong. This isn't for me. It's for the Coil. It's what's best for all of us!”

“Rubbish! I forbid it. Do you hear me?”

“I should think so, Cronus. You've made yourself perfectly clear.”

London, England

In the hallway outside his bedroom, Sir Anthony Brookshire slowly lowered the cell from his ear.

The old bastard. He was retired! How could he have found out?

Instantly, he knew, because there was only one logical answer. He dialed his cell. “I've discovered where Sansborough and Childs are!”

Forty-Three

Northumberland, England

Clive was gone by the time Liz and Simon arrived on the second floor and walked to the back of the house. The door to the family suite was open, and a squad of muscular young men were pulling off dustcovers and putting things in order. Within minutes, everyone was gone, and a calmness settled over the large living room. Two doors on either side opened into bedrooms. Ahead were soaring windows. Liz and Simon went to them and gazed out at the fishpond and apple orchard, silvery in the moonlight. She looked up at the night sky, at the stars twinkling far away in foreign universes.

Liz turned back to savor the familiar room. “It hasn't changed.”

Despite the dark-wood wainscoting, the room was cheerful. Brilliantly hued tapestry covered the chairs and sofas, while pillows in more bright colors lay about on straight chairs and the floor. Every floor lamp and table lamp was ablaze. The rugs were simple—each a solid blue, but in different shades. Tables for lunches and games were scattered about. An old-fashioned reading table stood in front of the end window, where Liz had done homework over spring holidays.

Emotion welled into her throat. “I didn't realize how much we meant to Henry.”

He nodded soberly. “It's like a time capsule. Does make one feel guilty. But on the other hand, we had many good times here. That's what he wanted. Scrabble and gin rummy and laughter.”

“Hide-and-seek. Remember when Mick got locked in the trunk?”

He chuckled. “Was bloody annoyed about that, he was.”

She grinned. “Mick was annoyed a lot.
We
annoyed him.” She set her shoulder bag on the floor next to the reading table and headed for the liquor cabinet. “Here's something different—it's unlocked.” She pulled open the door and studied the bottles. Only for a moment did she consider making her usual martini. She rubbed her hands. “Ah, yes. Cragganmore. Who could resist?” She picked up the bottle of single malt. Little known abroad but highly respected in Britain, Cragganmore came from a small distillery high on the Spey River in Scotland.

“I'll have a wee dram.” Simon sat at the reading table with his gym bag and removed his portfolio. “Didn't your father drink Cragganmore?”

“Yes. Good memory.”

“You developed a taste for it, too?”

“Uh-huh. Let's not probe any more into how similar I am to my parents. I've done enough agonizing about that over the past few days to last several lifetimes.” She found two glasses, poured, and walked them to the table. She handed him his glass.

“You won't hear me disagree.” He held it up to the light.

The whiskey was the rich color of gold. He touched the heel of his glass to the rim of hers. In that gesture, traditional in the Childs and Sansborough families, he saw a world of communication distilled, their shared history, their critical goal now.

Her gaze was sober. “To Sarah and Asher. May we find them safe and quickly.”

“And may Santarosa lead us instantly to the bloody damn blackmailer!”

As they drank, she made herself pay attention to the whiskey. It was full and sweet, mouth-filling. Not a note off-key. There was a touch of astringency in the finish that somehow made it even more satisfying.

She sat and looked at Simon. He was not truly handsome. His features were irregular, and of course his misshapen nose destroyed any refinement to his face. She remembered his undressing in Pigalle. How his muscles had rippled. His long limbs were sleek, like a runner's. He had a tan down to his bikini line. There was something freewheeling about him, from his thick hair and penetrating blue eyes to the casual way his body moved. He had always drawn people to him, but he was not as natural, as unguarded now. Something had made him take on personality traits to hide himself.

She asked, “What's happened to you since the last time we met?”

“What?”

“The last time I saw you, you were easygoing, open. Not hiding out. You were different.”

“You expect me to remember that long ago?” He gave a small smile to buffer not answering.

She studied him, wondering what the truth was.

He changed the subject. “How's your arm?”

“Fine. Hardly hurts at all.” True, or maybe she was just too tired to notice.

“Right. Let's see whether we can find some meaning in the photos.” He arranged the three big prints of the baron's wall left to right. “It might help to tell me more about those Titans you mentioned.”

“Sure. Their names were Atlas, Cronus, Hyperion, Ocean, Prometheus, and Themis. Atlas was the one who carried the world on his shoulders. Cronus was the leader. Hyperion was the father of the sun, the moon, and the dawn. I suppose one could push the analogy for Baron de Darmond and say he could
buy
the sun, the moon, the dawn, and probably all the stars in the galaxy, too. Ocean was the river that encircled the earth. Prometheus was the savior of humanity. And Themis was usually translated as Justice.”

Simon scowled. “Justice? There was certainly no justice in what they did to you.”

“People are resourceful when it comes to justifying their actions. Anyway, we know Hyperion was Baron de Darmond. Look, here's a fourth photo of Mellencamp.” She dug out her yellow Magic Marker and circled it as she had the three others.

“In this one, the baron and he are with your president and France's prime minister. In the second, they're with John Sloane, Paige Powell, the international financier Richmond Hornish, the Italian ambassador Edward Cereghino, and Christian Menchen, the fellow who runs the car company.”

“Who are Sloane and Powell?”

“Hotshot journalists from the BBC. They did a miniseries about the financial interdependence of Europe and the United States a couple of years ago. Four of the people they interviewed were de Darmond, Hornish, Cereghino, and Menchen.”

“Okay, the journalists aren't going to be high enough up the food chain for the Titans, but Menchen runs Eisner-Moulton, right?”

He knew instantly where she was going: “Eisner-Moulton owned that warehouse where Sarah and Asher were held.”

“My mother always said there was no such thing as a coincidence.”

Simon took lined paper from the table's drawer and wrote:

The Titans

Baron Claude de Darmond (“Hyperion,” deceased)

Grey Mellencamp (maybe “Themis,” deceased)

Christian Menchen—Eisner-Moulton (potential member)

He said, “Here's a photo with Mellencamp, the baron, Nicholas Inglethorpe, and some other fellow. Do you recognize the background?”

“Forget the background.” There was excitement in her voice. “I don't think I got around to telling you that I tried everything to find out who gave the order to cancel my TV series. Finally, I climbed so high up the corporate totem pole that I reached the office of the man whose company owned the network.”

He stared. “Inglethorpe?”

“Yes! He runs InterDirections, which owns Compass Broadcasting as well as a slew of newspapers, radio stations, and other media companies. Compass spent a lot of time and money on my series. It made no sense they'd kill it. I left a message to talk to Inglethorpe, but of course he never got back to me. And there's another connection. He was on the Aylesworth board with Mellencamp and succeeded Mellencamp as chairman. Which meant he was chairman when the board awarded me my chair.”

“Inglethorpe has to be a Titan.” He wrote the name. “Who's the other chap?”

“Another American. Gregory Gilmartin of Gilmartin Enterprises. They're huge in international construction. They do defense production, too—tanks, airplanes.”

Simon pointed. “See those big trees behind them? Those are redwoods. That carving is an owl, the symbol of the Bohemian Grove group. They meet in the redwoods north of San Francisco.”

“I remember reading an article about them. A low-profile, all-boys camp where men go to act like jackasses and bond. But a lot of power and shoulder rubbing, too. Are you saying that if the baron and Inglethorpe were at the Bohemian Grove together and they're both Titans, then Gilmartin may be a Titan, too?”

“Guilt by association. Shaky ground, but in this case, we should consider it.”

She frowned. “That connection's tenuous. Gilmartin's not as active as Mellencamp or Baron de Darmond were, or as Christian Menchen and Nicholas Inglethorpe are now. Gilmartin's quiet, reserved. His father was the flamboyant one.”

“Yes, but he's influential not only in the private sector but in government circles. When MI6 needs to insert someone into the Middle East, we often go in as engineers or technicians for Gilmartin, or as employees in one of their hotels. The company's always building somewhere—because they're so big, they can underbid almost anyone. They put up hotels to house their staff, then they charge the government for housing. That's how their hotel chain started. Of course, once the deal's made, they give a kickback to local officials and apologize that it's all going to cost more than they first thought. You'd think the public would figure it out.”

“Okay, add his name, but put two question marks after it.”

As he wrote, she sat back and stretched. “Let's look at the files you photographed.”

Huddled together, they studied the financial statements and letters. Every time they saw the name of one of the men on their list, Liz highlighted it. At last, they came to a letter recommending an investment in prefabricated pubs.

“Thomas Brookshire?” she said. “Why do I know that name?”

“Tom Brookshire's my age. The letter says this is his first company. He can't be a Titan, for God's sake.”

Liz pointed to the letterhead. “It's from his father. Didn't Sir Anthony and Lady Agnes have dinner once or twice a year with your parents?”

“Right. He was chancellor of the Exchequer, and now he's an EU commissioner. He's held various portfolios in Tory governments for decades.”

She read the letter again, looking for hidden meanings. She sat up abruptly and pointed to the lower left-hand corner.

“Simon, look!”

 

He frowned. “All right, so old Tony Brookshire doodled one of those Slinky toys that kids like. Or maybe a pinwheel. Or it could be a coil of rope or a snake's coil. So?”

She was already digging through her bag. “Here it is.” She brought out the crumpled paper with the dean's address from Santa Barbara and described finding it on the ground after she and Mac had put the corpse into her car trunk.

“You think the paper fell out of the janitor's clothes?” he asked.

She started to nod but stopped. Her eyes narrowed. “That's what Mac said, and it seemed logical. I figured I'd missed it when I searched the body. But what if it fell out of Mac's pocket instead, when he leaned into my trunk? Mac worked for the kidnappers. The Titans. Their emblem or sign could be this squiggle or coil.”

“Coil?” Simon's pulse quickened as he remembered. “There's something else. I remember now…. When the baron was telling the blackmailer off, he said he'd fight him at Dreftbury. Then he threatened him: ‘I'll even tell the Coil that you're the one.' The
Coil.
That's what this mark is, and I'll bet that's what these Titans call themselves—the Coil!”

“You could be right. The inside of a nautilus shell is a spiral—”

“A coil!” He tapped Brookshire's letter. “And it's the key to this puzzle!”

It took only seconds. They found ten more photo prints with the same symbol, always in the lower left-hand corner, always small and written lightly in pencil. Easily erasable. They were also in the same hand, as if the baron were marking which documents would receive his special attention. Each was a request or application for a loan or investment, or for backing for a large stock or bond offering. Some were linked directly to the living names on their list—Brookshire, Gilmartin, Inglethorpe, and Menchen. Others were from partnerships in which one of these men was involved, while a few were from companies downstream from the parent, subsidiaries that one of the men ran or in which he had a financial interest. Several letters and applications included two or more of the names. The sweep of multinational alliances was staggering.

Simon was excited. “Until now, we've been guessing and deducing. With the Coil symbol, we have confirmation about Sir Anthony and the others. That leaves us needing the last member. Let's take a look at those four photos again.”

They returned to the pictures Liz had circled in yellow. The second had shown Baron de Darmond, Mellencamp, the two journalists—Sloane and Powell—Italian ambassador Edward Cereghino, automotive wunderkind Christian Menchen, and the legendary financier Richmond Hornish.

Liz said, “Didn't we just read about Hornish?” She sorted through the prints. “Yes. Here's the letter from him. Hornish wanted the bank to help guarantee a new securities instrument.” She looked up. “He's the international speculator who almost destroyed Malaysia's economy by betting against their currency.”

“Right. Malaysia and six other countries. Now he's making showboat charity donations—buying computers for kids in Latvia, funding a free university in Bulgaria, promising college scholarships to every kid who graduates from one of Chicago's inner-city schools.
Shazam
—his face on the cover of
Time
magazine, awards from churches and temples, and a shot at the Nobel Peace Prize. He's buying himself respectability. I'd believe his sincerity a lot more if he weren't still up to the same dirty business. To hell with the people who starve because of his greed.”

She tapped the discreet coil on his letter. “This proves it. He's the final one.”

“Agreed.” He snapped out a clean sheet of paper and wrote the names alphabetically.

The Titans

Brookshire, Sir Anthony—EU commissioner & politician.

Gilmartin, Gregory—Gilmartin Enterprises, international construction.

Hornish, Richmond—InQuox & investment vehicles, speculator & investor.

Inglethorpe, Nicholas—media & communications empire, including InterDirections, which owns Compass Broadcasting.

Menchen, Christian—Eisner-Moulton, automobiles & transportation.

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