Authors: James Patterson
Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Romance, #Suspense, #Thriller, #Anthologies (multiple authors), #Fiction - Espionage, #Short Story, #Anthologies, #Thrillers, #Suspense fiction; English, #Suspense fiction; American
excused herself for a moment, leaving Frank Millay in the living-room section while she went, ostensibly, to use the bathroom.
One of her cameras that looked like a pen she had arranged on
the dresser—it would automatically snap a picture every minute
until she turned it off. The video camera was her cell phone,
which she arranged and propped on one of the bed tables.
In the bathroom, she flushed the toilet for verisimilitude’s
sake, then stepped out into the bedroom, undoing her blouse
now, taking it off, laying it on the bed. “Frank,” she said, “aren’t
you going to come in here?”
“Sure.”
He appeared in the doorway and stopped, taking her in.
She saw the hesitation now. He still had his coat and tie on.
And it was one of her inviolable rules—she would give each of
her victims one last chance to save themselves, to prove to her
that they were better than they appeared. Even Frank Millay
might still escape, although she didn’t want that to happen.
She gave him what she knew was her finest smile. Winsome
and seductive at once, playful but with a serious edge of promised passion underneath. “Are you sure you’re comfortable with
this?” she asked him. “I don’t want to force you to do anything
you don’t want to do.”
He broke a small smile that seemed to mock himself. “If you
hadn’t wanted to force me,” he said, “you would have left your
shirt on.”
She unclasped the hook on her skirt and let it drop to the floor.
“Well, then,” she said, stepping out of it, sitting on the bed where
she knew the cameras would capture everything. She patted the
mattress next to her. “Why don’t you come over here?”
Still, he seemed to hesitate for one last moment before he
started moving toward her. When he got in front of her, she
reached for his zipper, traced her finger down the bulge in the
front. “Oh, my,” she said.
She felt his hands in her hair, traveling down the sides of her
head to cup her face, which he lifted so that she looked up at him.
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“I’m so sorry,” he said as his hands slipped lower.
“No. You don’t need—” But suddenly she felt the hands pushing down on her shoulders, holding her where she sat, then
slowly, almost as though he were caressing her, closing around
her neck.
“Don’t you see?” His face suddenly inches from hers. “I can’t
take the risk. Someday you might tell.”
“But no, I—”
And then there was no way to make any more sound. She tried
to call out, to straighten up off the bed, to kick at him, but he
was nearly twice her size and now seized with an irresistible
power. He pushed her back onto the bed and fell upon her, his
hands closing tighter and tighter around her windpipe.
Her vision exploded into yellows and purples and greens and
then they all blended to a muddy blue, then a darker, colder blue.
And then no colors at all. Only black.
I hadn’t heard from Lucy for two weeks when I turned on the
news late one night and watched her face appear on the screen
while a reporter described the brutal murder that had taken
place in San Francisco.
“The killing was recorded on Lucy Delrey’s cell-phone camera, which the police discovered at the scene.”
Immediately in the hours, days and weeks afterward, Millay’s
PR machine went into action and it was clear that by the time the
case went to trial, his attorneys would have spun it so that the
world at large would perceive Lucy Delrey as a psychotic nymphomaniac who got pleasure from setting up men sexually in order
to destroy them. Frank Millay had been her hapless victim.
The sympathy would be with him by then, but I’ve got to believe that even in San Francisco, if you strangle a woman on
videotape, you’re looking at some kind of a stretch in prison. Millay’s career—his entire life—would be ruined. It could never be
the same.
And the strange thing was, just as I had asked her to, Lucy had
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found the complicated truth. No matter what had happened in
those final minutes, she had gone out there to destroy him and
she’d done it.
David Liss’s first novel,
A Conspiracy of Paper
began with what
may have been an unlikely inspiration for a thriller: his ongoing doctoral work on the 18th century British novel and
its relationship to emerging modes of finance. Liss succeeded
by showing how the rise of paper currency was surrounded by
an air of mystery, danger, urgency and cultural paranoia, but
he also succeeded because of his intrepid protagonist, Benjamin Weaver, a daring and reckless thief-taker—roughly a
combination of modern-day private eye, police-officer-forhire and hired muscle. Weaver’s fearlessness on the lawless
streets of 18th century London, and his willingness to meet
danger head-on, won the character many fans, and he returned in
A Spectacle of Corruption
and will be back again in
The Devil’s Company.
Liss has stated in interviews that he tremendously enjoys
writing about Weaver and the violent and colorful world he
inhabits, but he feels the need to divide his time between that
character and his stand-alone thrillers,
The Coffee Trader
and
The Ethical Assassin
. Unfortunately, between writing more
tales of Weaver and the time required to explore other interests, Liss has had no time to pursue a project that has in-
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terested him since completing
Conspiracy
—a story set in the
same world inhabited by Weaver but focusing on other characters—with Weaver occupying the role of secondary figure.
Until now, that is.
The Double Dealer
has at its center an aging highwayman
who wants to tell one last story before he dies, the story of
an encounter years ago with the young Benjamin Weaver,
once a highwayman himself. The fun in a project like this,
according to Liss, is to rethink some of the most basic ideas
of a recurring character in order to see him anew. Liss enjoys
writing about flawed protagonists and sympathetic villains
because in real life no one is perfect or perfectly bad, and
everyone is the hero of his or her own story.
The Double Dealer
has given Liss the chance to present his
ongoing hero as the villain of someone else’s story.
I’m old and like to die soon, and no one will care when I do, and
that’s the truth. But I’ve a story to tell before I go, and I’ve paid
this here gaunt scholar fellow with a face of a rotten apple to write
it down. I aim to make him read it back, too, as I don’t trust him
and I’ll not pay a penny until I like what I hear.
It ain’t often I like what I hear. Them newspapers are full
three, four, maybe five times a year of the great deeds of that
worthless Jew, Benjamin Weaver—that great man, what done this
favor for the ministry, or that for the mighty Duke or Arse-Wipe
or good Squire Milksop. Old as he is, he’s still at it. They forget,
they do, but old Fisher don’t forget. I recollect it all, as I crossed
with him when we was both young and he was no better than
me—maybe worse, for his being a Jew withal.
It ain’t no secret, but not oft spoke of neither, that time was
this hero, a “thief-taker,” claims to make streets safe for the likes
of what calls themselves ordinary man. No better than one of my
number, a prig and one of the highway, and he’d have been at
ease with the shitten likes of any blackguard cutpurse.
The world remembers that he was once a pugilist, and lived
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by his fists. They know him now as some kind of do-gooder, but
there was a time between that, when his fighting days was done,
and he ain’t yet figured out this thief-taking lay. I know all about
it, and I aim to make it public.
So, I begin with a piss-rainy autumn day, maybe 1717 or ’18—
maybe ’19 or ’20. Can’t say as I quite recall, being as I said old
and having blood come out both me lungs and me arse. But that
ain’t your concern. Yours is that when I was young I come ’pon
a handsomely dressed spark finishing his business with a mighty
fine-looking equipage—lonely all of them, on a nice, ripe deserted stretch of highway. He had in his hands a sack full of coins
and jewels and mighty pretty things, and then said his farewells
to a pair of ugly bitches, past thirty, and so good for nothing. He
charmed them, though, as he called himself Gentleman Ben,
and they blushed and bat their eyelashes like he were a spark at
a dance and not the man what bound up their coachman and
took their precious dainties. His partner, a fellow called Thomas
Lane, were some twenty feet down the road, keeping his eye
sharp for trouble.
These two were like brothers, never thinking to do a lay, one
without the other. They even looked alike, with their dark hair,
tall stature and wide backs, both. And that’s the thing, ain’t it?
You don’t want to mess with these sorts of prigs, these coves what
are never one without the other, these sparks what come to be
like blood, for you do wrong by the one, you must surely face
the other.
So it was that I rode close to Thomas Lane (though I didn’t
hear his name ’til later). The other one, what I learned was
Weaver, was at the equipage, making pretty talk to the ladies. The
sun, peeking through them clouds, were before me, and I
couldn’t see Lane’s face all clear, but I could see it crumpled well
enough and I knew he’d had enough and more of Weaver’s fripperies with these hags. He were looking back ’pon Weaver and
not forward to me, so that he never heard me nor saw me neither, and I rode real quiet, as I trained my horse to do, and snuck
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up to him all silent like and pummeled him hard in his head. He
fell over but not down, and so I struck him in the head again,
and once again in that very same pate to make certain he stayed
quiet, and this plan worked well enough, for this last blow, I later
heard, quite killed him, but I didn’t think so then. All I knowed
was that he made not a sound more, and that contented me.
I had no plan to kill him. He weren’t no friend of mine, but
he was a brother prig, and I meant no more but his silence. Still,
once it were done, there could be no helping it. No tears will
squeeze the breath back into him, will it?
Now, coming from the other way were my friend and partner
in these affairs, a spark called Ruddy Dick. There were some three
or four fellows I regularly engaged with for my adventures, but
none were more trusted by me than old Dick, an aged fellow, as
I thought then, though some twenty years my junior to where I
am now. So, I catch old Dick’s eye, and we know at once the lay,
for we were longtime friends, like I said.
This Weaver might have not been keeping his wits about him,
but those what he robbed were, and they saw the freaks I played
’pon Thomas Lane. They pointed and cried out, as though these
two highwaymen were friends and I the enemy. Never once did
they presume I come to save them, but that’s the curse of this here
face, even more terrible when I was young, if you’ll credit that.
With the hags crying out and then taking shelter in their
coach, I turn to this gentleman bandit, and I shout to him. I say,
“Ho, my spark, I’m afeard I’ve quite bludgeoned your fellow, and
I’m afeard you’re next.”
Weaver—though, as I says, I knew not yet his name—turns
to me and stares not with surprise or horror or sadness, but with
a rage burning in those dark eyes, clear enough through the
misty rain. In the time it takes between you cut yourself and the
blood starts its flowing, he understood all. He observed the
scene, observed what I intended, and I knew then that I’d made
an enemy.
That were the bad news, as they say. The good news were that
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I didn’t expect he’d live long, not with Ruddy Dick coming down
’pon him hard. He’d spurred his horse to a good gallop and drew
his blade, ready to take off the distracted Jew’s head as though it
were the foreskin ’pon a privy portion.
Now, there’s Weaver, staring at me with those hateful eyes, and
there’s me, holding his gaze, keeping him distracted while Dick
rides hard. It’s but a tick of the clock, or less even, before this
angry fellow is a headless angry fellow, but all at once, like he’s
got eyes peeking through them locks behind him, he turns. He
drops his sack of goodies, and in an instant his blade is out and
swinging, and it’s at Dick before Dick’s blade is on him. Nothing
quite so colorful as a beheading, but the blade swings and opens
Dick’s throat, and the blood’s all ruddy fountainish. That was it,
then. The death of Dick.
Right tragic it was, a good friend such as he, who I shared my
victuals and coin and whores with. Still, life must march forward,
and Weaver weren’t the only one who could see all clear and easy
in the blink of a rat’s eye. I spurred my horse, and make like I’m
like to take a swipe at Weaver, all revenge-ish, but instead I reach
down, grab the sack of plunder as was dropped, and I speed away,