Ultimate Weapon (21 page)

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Authors: Shannon McKenna

Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Suspense

BOOK: Ultimate Weapon
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He would explode.

He fished his cell phone out of his pocket, and closed his eyes to pluck Donatella’s number out of his long-term memory. It had been five years since the time he’d spent in San Vito, infiltrating that ring of smugglers, and the woman had a complicated, secret, personal life, aside from the rigors of being a Camorra mafia don’s wife. She might well have changed her cell number. She would scratch his eyes out for waking her. But he had never had any difficulty sweetening her.

His jaw clenched at the thought of having to fuck Donatella again. She was a beautiful woman, but she was selfish and spoiled and loud, and she had a streak of random cruelty that chilled him.

Imre.
He forced out a harsh breath and dialed.

The phone rang three times. She picked up. “
Chi cazzo sei?
” she snarled. Who the fuck is this?

“Donatella. It’s me, Valery.” He caressed her with his voice.

“Valerio!
Amore.
I thought you had forgotten me.”

“As if I could,
bellissima
,” he said. “Forgive me for neglecting you. My life has been complicated lately.”

“Hmmph,” she grunted. “I can well imagine. What are you thinking, calling at this hour? Imagine if I had been in bed with Et-tore. How would I explain myself?”

“You would never take a phone with this SIM card into bed with your husband,” he said. “I take it you are in bed with someone else?”

“Do you care, Valerio?” Her voice was falsely sweet.

“Not as long as you love me best,” he murmured tenderly.

“How sweet. Always,
carissimo
. Although it would not do to neglect my succulent young Giuseppe, here.” She giggled, murmured something inaudible. “Perhaps you can join us some evening. The bed is wide enough for three. And Guiseppe looks…mmm, oh,

…most enthusiastic at the idea.”

“Anything to please you,” he murmured promptly. “But first, I have something to ask you. Do you remember the earrings I gave to you, the ones with the poison beads?”

“Of course,
amore
. I treasure them. A fearless gift for a man like you to give to his lover. Did it never occur to you that I might kill you with them in a jealous rage?”

“It occurred to me, yes, but I do not fear death,” he said. “The designer of those earrings will be in Italy day after tomorrow, and she has an entire line of beautiful pieces containing all manner of concealed weaponry, poisons, drugs, explosives. Of course, I thought of you. Appropriate adornments for a dangerous beauty like yourself.”

“Ah, Valerio.
Tesoro,”
she cooed. “Am I so dangerous? Is that why you stayed away for so long?”

“Only for my peace of mind,” he assured her, his voice smooth. “But to give you a treat like this, I will risk coming out of hiding. Would you like to meet this woman, and see her wares?”

“Of course. I wish to see them all.”

“I thought so,” he said silkily. “I have a favor to ask in return.”

“You know that I can deny you nothing,
tesoro
. Ask.”

“Do you know a woman named Ana Santarini?”

“Ignazio Santarini’s boring wife? What on earth do you want with that stupid cow? You cannot possibly intend to fuck her!”

“No, not at all,” he assured her. “But I need an introduction to her for this jewelry designer. Could you arrange it for me? Preferably at her own residence.”

He heard the machinery grinding in Donatella’s mind. “I might be persuaded…if I could have the pleasure of your company once again.”

He sighed silently and rolled his eyes. “Of course,
piccola.
Could you arrange for the day after tomorrow, when I bring this designer?”

“So soon? You are crazy! I don’t even know if she is in town!”

“Invite her to see the jewelry,” he urged. “It would appeal to her.”

“And have that Santarini slut know all of the secrets of the pieces that I buy? She will tell everyone! What is the point of it?”

He clenched his fists. “
Ti prego
,” he said softly. “Please. For me.”

She made an irritated huffing sound. “I am going to Paris for a week to shop,” she announced. “You will join me there?”

“I cannot wait,” he said through clenched teeth.

“The entire week? Prepare yourself. It will be strenuous.”

“Have no fear,” he assured her. “Send me a text message with the meeting time and location with Santarini,
va bene
?”

Donatella paused and made a little clicking sound with her tongue. “Anxious, Valerio?” she purred. “What’s going on? Are you in trouble? Tell Donatella all about it,
bambino mio
. Maybe I can help.”

A muscle in his jaw started to twitch. He was in a bad way if even an empty-headed
vacca
like Donatella was tuning in to his nervous tension. “You already are helping me,” he said softly. “My angel.”

“February seventh, in Paris,” she reminded. “Mark it on your calendar.” There was a thread of steel in Donatella’s voice.

“Certainly.
A dopo, dolcezza
.”

A tedious back-and-forth of stupid endearments, and finally he managed to close the telephone. He released a long, controlled sigh.

Three steps back. A week of stud service in a luxury hotel in Paris was not too much to pay for Imre’s life. He would do it if he had to. But a sour, wrong feeling clung to him. It made him want to take a bath.

Ah, well, what the fuck. He might be dead by February seventh anyway. That was the best he could do to cheer himself up.

He headed back to the hotel, preparing himself for disaster. Steele had probably fled in the time it had taken to do this infernal errand.

But when he peered into the ballroom, she was there, wrestling a whimpering, protesting Rachel into her coat, bulging black diaper bag dangling on her other shoulder. She was deep in conversation with Erin McCloud. Now the other woman talked earnestly, looking worried. Tam shook her head in response. The McCloud woman patted Steele’s shoulder. Tam nodded, hoisted the child onto her hip, and headed toward the exit. Her pale face was set in stark lines, her eyes haunted. She looked so different with her hair down, shining and loose, brushing her perfect ass. Everyone stared as she passed.

She ignored the swathe of speculative murmuring in her wake.

He backed into the lobby and positioned himself carefully, waiting only until the direction she was going to turn was clear before he melted around the corner and into a stairwell.

Relief made his knees weak. She was not going out the front, to the parking lot. She was going out the back toward the breezeway that led to the guest houses. She was not running from him. Not tonight.

He was grateful. He did not have the strength to chase her again. He had no more cards to play, no more tricks. He was all out of ideas. If Steele ran now, his choices were brutally simple.

Steele or Imre. One of them would have to die, badly.

He followed at a safe distance, took note of the door she and Rachel disappeared into, and then strolled along the herringbone path.

A wrought iron bench sat in the shadows of a huge tree roughly opposite her guest room door. He sat down, bone weary. A thousand years old. The cold of the hard metal bench penetrated his clothes, burning into his flesh. He would have to get his coat if he meant to sit here any length of time, he thought, but he did not move.

He could not take his eyes off that door.

He didn’t like being compelled by anything, whether the forces originated from inside himself or out. Being manipulated by Novak, Hegel, even Donatella, was bad enough. Being jerked around by the shadow parts of his own fucked-up psyche was intolerable.

Yet there he sat, rooted to the bench, his ass turning to ice. Guarding her door but not to prevent her from escaping. On the contrary, he wanted to fend off the dangers that lay in wait for her.

He was cast in the wrong role in this fucking Greek tragedy.

People passed by without noticing him lurking motionless in the dark. Then a couple came ambling by. The tall, fair-haired man’s face was revealed in a beam of light slicing through the tree boughs. Sean McCloud and his wife, Liv. Sean spotted him and turned off the path. He guided his wife across the frosted grass until they stood before him.

The man’s piercing eyes made Val squirm. The picture he made revealed too much. Him sitting like an asshole with no coat outside a woman’s closed door. Hands filled with a bristling array of Steele’s deadly hair ornaments. A whining, hungry dog hoping to be let in.

Begging for scraps.

“What are you doing out here in the cold?” McCloud demanded.

Val’s long exhalation made a vaporous cloud in front of his face. “Standing guard,” he said.

His wife, a luscious, buxom brunette, gave him a polite but suspicious look. “If there’s any woman on earth who can look out for herself, it’s Tam,” she said.

Val acknowledged that with a shrug. “Overkill.”

McCloud grunted. “Well, then. You’ve got your work cut out for you.” He hesitated, looking puzzled. “Good luck,” he added. “I think.”

Val inclined his head. The couple turned and walked on. McCloud threw a troubled glance back over his shoulder. The low murmur of their voices faded into the darkness.

He was good at telling lies. The trick was to enter so completely into whatever role he was playing, he practically believed them himself even as he told them. But what he had said to Steele was not a lie. He had blurted out the raw truth to her. More truth than he’d ever told to anyone, even Imre. Braided together with half-truths, yes, but even so.

I’ve never wanted anything the way I want you.
The truth of those words reverberated through him, an explosion from within. It blasted his whole relationship to the world out of alignment. A dangerous secret.

Dangerous secrets are beautiful, don’t you agree?
He had taken Steele’s words in Shibumi as meaningless banter, but now, they rang in his head, as a fundamental truth. Imre had always been his dangerous secret. A treasure that he had to hide just so it could survive.

Most people had to hide their ugliness, their shame. With him, the situation was inverted. He had to keep the beautiful things secret.

Or else risk finding them dead on the bathroom floor.

Ironic. A man like him compelled by an irrational longing to protect Steele, instead of exploiting her. A dangerous secret, indeed. Like her jewel-studded pendant earring bombs. Her taser necklace. It was an urge he would have to keep secret even from her.

He sensed very strongly that she would not welcome it.

 

The key rattled in the heavy metal door, jolting Imre out of his deep contemplation. He had been mentally walking through the rooms of the Uffizi Gallery, looking at all the pictures he could call to mind. Which was to say, all of them, though his favorites were the clearest.

The mental construct disintegrated. Waves of faintness and dread washed over him.

Another visit. It pleased Gabor Novak to check upon Imre’s progress, or degeneration, to put it more clearly. The man liked to prod and pry for weaknessess, to inflict all the psychological torment that he was able. He was fiendishly talented at it.

Imre’s defenses were limited to silence, but it was a poor defense. Already, he was cringing as if he was to be beaten or burned.

The metal door swung wide, clanging with an ear-bruising bang against the concrete blocks. Two large men walked in, one training an automatic pistol at Imre, the other carrying a folding chair.

Novak shuffled into the room and seated himself. Beaming.

Imre focused somewhere beyond the man’s shoulder, clasping and unclasping his hands and fighting the urge to sit upon them to hide his frightened fingers.

He’d told himself not to be afraid. He was dying anyway, no? Soon he would lose everything he had to lose. If some parts, like fingers, for instance, died sooner, what of it? The pain would soon be behind him.

His efforts were futile. He could not talk himself out of the fear.

Imre was grateful, at least, that he was not wearing his spectacles. Only one lens was still intact. The other had been shattered in the second beating. Having one corrected eye and the other blurred gave him a blinding headache. Since the last thing he needed was more pain from any quarter, he had given up on the glasses altogether, and hidden them under his mattress. Thus, he could not see the hideous details of Novak’s face, the feverish glow of those jaundiced, bulbous eyes, only a malevolent blur.

Although he smelled the stench of the man’s breath all too well.

“I have been thinking about you a great deal, Imre.” Novak had the air of a man conferring an honor. “I believe you and I have something in common.” The man’s voice was pleasant, chatty.

God forbid
, Imre thought, dropping his gaze to his twitching fingers. He willed them to lie still, to not draw attention to themselves.

“I can see by your color, your thinness, that you are being consumed by some wasting disease,” Novak said. “Cancer?”

Surprise betrayed Imre into looking up and meeting Novak’s eyes.

He dropped his gaze just as quickly, but Novak chuckled, pleased.

“I thought so. Liver, stomach, brain? Not long for you now, is it? I can feel it on you, Imre. How ironic for Vajda, is it not? Working so valiantly to save the life of a dying man. How long did they give you?”

Imre tried to swallow, but his throat was too dry. He began to cough, and once he started, he could not stop.

“Not long, no?” Novak laughed again. “Three months? They like to say three months. It’s their standard phrase. That’s what they told me seven months ago, but I live on, see? Rotting from within, true, but here I am. The pleasure I will take in this woman’s death will grant me another month, at least. These punishments charge me like a battery. Would you like to participate? It might have the same effect upon you.”

Imre looked up at him once again. “No,” he said hoarsely.

Novak blinked and smiled, pleased to have dragged another response out of him. “Then you can be a spectator when the time comes. It won’t be long. Vajda works fast. He has always been efficient.”

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