Regret No More

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Regret No More Page 1

by Seb Kirby




  Regret No More

  Table of Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Epigraph

  Prologue

  Day 1

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Day 2

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Day 3

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Chapter 41

  Chapter 42

  Chapter 43

  Chapter 44

  Chapter 45

  Chapter 46

  Chapter 47

  Day 4

  Chapter 48

  Chapter 49

  Chapter 50

  Chapter 51

  Chapter 52

  Chapter 53

  Day 5

  Chapter 54

  Chapter 55

  Chapter 56

  Chapter 57

  Chapter 58

  Chapter 59

  Chapter 60

  Chapter 61

  Chapter 62

  Chapter 63

  Chapter 64

  Chapter 65

  Chapter 66

  Chapter 67

  Chapter 68

  Chapter 69

  Day 6

  Chapter 70

  Chapter 71

  Chapter 72

  Epilogue

  Acknowledgements

  Next in Series

  Copyright

  The secret of great fortunes without apparent cause

  is a crime forgotten, for it was properly done.

  Honore de Balzac Le Pere Goriot (1835)

  Prologue

  Hagedet, France, 1983

  Alain Bellard had carried out few stranger jobs than this one.

  The Fuseau Gallery in Hagedet in the Hautes-Pyrenees was well defended by conventional standards. It had the latest electronic security with state of the art laser beam scrutiny. This was quite useless since they had made a cardinal mistake. It would be no match for him.

  In another life he’d been a consultant advising on the protection of valuable works of art and the essential advice he’d given all of his clients was this – do not depend on electronic security alone. He didn’t do that kind of work any more. This paid much better. And no one had given that essential advice to the owners of the Fuseau Gallery.

  They had been clever in concealing the sound sensors and invisible beams that kicked in when you disabled the main system. It might have fooled a lesser thief. But he was delayed only a few minutes while he dealt with the backup system.

  The gallery was his. He could take whatever he wished.

  This was what made this job such a strange one. He was to take just one painting – Picasso’s 1937 portrait Weeping Woman.

  How was it that Picasso painted so many pictures of this same woman, his lover Dora Maar, and all of them were so valuable? It didn’t seem right. When the genius at the height of his powers could produce twenty, maybe even thirty, paintings like this in a month, how could each be worth millions?

  It wasn’t his concern.

  He removed the painting from its hanging place and placed it on the floor. He wrapped it in the dark blue cotton sheet he’d brought with him, placed it under his arm and walked out of the gallery. To demonstrate his mastery, once outside, he reset the alarm system. The remaining paintings inside would be free from harm.

  There was no overnight guard. If they were using CCTV cameras, they would learn little. His face was covered. The waiting vehicle was stolen and he would soon abandon it.

  As he drove away down the steep mountainside road, he thought again about the instructions for the job.

  He should take the painting and place it in one of the lockers in Oloron-Sainte-Marie railway station. He’d been given key number 109 for this purpose. Inside, he would find his payment for the night’s work. Half a million euros. Half a lifetime working as a security consultant. It did not cross his mind to renege on the deal and fail to leave the painting. He knew better than to double cross those who had commissioned the theft.

  Yes, it was a strange job. The more so since his final instruction was to wait six months and then tell the local police where the painting could be found.

  Day 1

  Present Day

  Monday August 19th

  Chapter 1

  It was one of those calls, the kind you know are going to be menacing even before you pick up the phone.

  I could have expected another cold call but I knew from the first that this was something more.

  “Mr. Blake, we have an investment opportunity for you.” It was an American voice, coming from one of those boiler rooms where you could hear the other operatives in the background placing similar calls.

  I tried to keep calm. “There’s no one named Blake here. You have the wrong number.”

  The caller continued. “I know you need the money, that you’re in over your head. This one’s a cert. Bestridge Investments. It’s about to surge. I can show you the proof. You wouldn’t be able to forgive yourself if you didn’t make the most of this opportunity.”

  “I’m not interested. I’m not in over my head. You’ve called the wrong person.”

  “Don’t get fooling with us, James. We know what your exposure is.”

  “I don’t have any exposure. It’s just a mistake. I’m ending this call.”

  I hit the end call key.

  I turned to Julia. She couldn’t hide her concern. “Trouble?”

  The bump in her belly was so prominent now. It was just weeks to go before our son would be born. The ultrasound pictures showed the little man lying there at peace, waiting for his time to come shouting and screaming into the madness of this world.

  “They’ve got our names. They say they’re pushing investments, one of those boiler room scams, but I don’t believe them. They know. The cover must be blown.”

  We were living as Charles and Mary Harrington. Three years had passed since the events in Florence that had nearly cost Julia her life. We’d moved from London to the Dorset countryside, just outside Weymouth. James and Julia Blake no longer existed. We’d built new lives. Julia was making a gradual but successful recovery.

  The police promised no one would be able to find us once we were helped to change our identities. Nothing had come back in the last three years, not from Italy or from the Landos. But now there was this.

  The Lando family operation had been slowed. Their illegal waste dumping scam was exposed for what it was. Alfieri and Matteo were dealt with. Alfieri was dead. Matteo was given a life sentence for his father’s murder.

  Yet Alessa Lando escaped punishment. Her lawyer, Santoni, created enough doubt in the mind of the jury that they were unable to be sure she’d been involved in the scam and the lawlessness that went with it. It was her husband, Alfieri, and her son, Matteo who were the real protagonists. She was
acquitted.

  We’d not been troubled. No one knew where to find us. Until now.

  Neither of us wanted to say the Lando name out loud but we both knew that the day we’d feared throughout those three years was here.

  I held Julia’s hand. “Don’t worry. I won’t let any harm come to you or the baby.”

  Chapter 2

  Wolfgang Heller shook his head – a gesture that would come close to costing two lives.

  Here was this guy in the Jeep with the skinny blonde beside him and he was roaring down the street way too fast – here of all places, in this quiet suburb of San Diego in one of the pristine streets surrounding Mission Bay where respectable people raise kids, for God’s sake. And, just as Heller was walking by and was about to cross the intersection with the neighboring street, the guy in the Jeep insisted on cutting him up by turning into the side road at speed, causing Heller to make a sharp halt at the curb as he passed.

  That’s what produced the shake of the head.

  Now the driver had stopped the Jeep and was staring, as if his manhood was challenged in front of the blonde.

  The head shook again.

  The driver was coming out of the vehicle and starting to show rage.

  “Hey fella, you got a problem? Shaking your head at me?”

  He’d been working out, building up his muscles, Heller observed. He thought he was tough and he looked tough. OK, he would have frightened many a solid citizen with that pumped-up body and all that tattoo work. And, of course, today Heller looked like a respectable, mild-mannered citizen, an easy touch. Why would he want to draw attention to himself in his line of work?

  Heller shook his head again.

  He let the driver come within touching distance, bringing him on with a smile. Before he could reach out, Heller struck. A double-fingered jab in both eyes all but blinded the oncomer. Unable to see, he was easy meat. Heller aimed a kick to the right leg and shattered the knee. The driver fell down, screaming. Heller stamped down hard on the nearest outstretched hand and heard the fingers crack. There was another scream. Then Heller shattered the other hand. The guy might never drive again.

  Now, he had his boot on his neck. It would be easy to break the neck, to put this lesser mortal out of his misery forever. No, it was better to let him recover in agony. He aimed six punishing kicks to the groin. That would make servicing the blonde quite difficult for a few months to come. It was no surprise, then, that the driver passed out in this world of pain descending upon him.

  The blonde was out of the vehicle, screaming at him, brandishing her mobile phone, yelling that she was calling the police. Heller walked straight over and kicked closed the door, trapping her hand. He heard her scream and, seeing the phone fall to the floor, he stamped the life out of it with his boot.

  He threw the woman against the Jeep. He cuffed her hard across the face and held her beneath him. He could see the fear in her eyes, the heaving of those silicone breasts. He grabbed her nose and twisted it out of shape until she passed out. That would take more than a little plastic work to sort out.

  Someone once told him only the truly psychotic could respond like this, without the need to go through the ritual of adrenalin arousal, the arguing, the shouting – like a coiled spring waiting to deploy at any time, in the moment, in the right here and now.

  Was he psychotic? He did not think so. After all, he was the responsible citizen. People shouldn’t drive with such disregard for others. Children would be playing in the streets if it wasn’t for incompetents like this driving too fast and without due care.

  He walked on. The police wouldn’t be long in arriving. He would be gone by then. He wouldn’t need to be in this town for long once the job was done.

  Chapter 3

  It was early evening. A vehicle was drawing up outside.

  I looked through the window. It was too late to run now. Whoever it was out there, whoever it was coming for me and my family, we would now have to face them.

  There was no outright attack. Just a polite ring of the doorbell.

  He was American. A military-style buzz cut set off his determined, angular face. The eyes told of knowing determination. Yet the mouth was more appeasing.

  “Jack Franks, FBI.”

  “There’s nothing I can do for you. Please go.”

  “This won’t take long. Let me inside and I’ll let you know why I’m here.”

  I opened the door just wide enough for him to enter.

  “So, Mr. Franks.”

  “Call me Jack.”

  “OK, Jack. Why are you here?”

  “The boiler room call, we’re sorry about that. We just had to know it was you.”

  “Just tell me why you’re here.”

  “Voice recognition. We have voice patterns from the interviews you had with Inspector Manieri in Florence. We had to be sure you were here, James.”

  I tried to keep down my anger. “Look, I don’t know what brings you here, but we just want to be left alone. My wife, can’t you see she’s expecting? Third trimester. We have a life to live.”

  Julia said nothing. Her blank stare was enough.

  Franks nodded. “I understand.”

  “Show me some ID.”

  He pulled out his badge. “I’m out of Washington, not Langley.”

  “Didn’t know you did international operations.”

  “Well, we do.”

  “Give us a reason why we should talk to you?”

  He pulled out an iPad from the leather file case he was carrying. “Let me show you this.”

  He handed over the tablet with a video playing. The legend said: Sollicciano Prison (Florence). The video showed a face I knew and, though changed in the three years since I’d last seen it, one I recognized as Matteo Lando.

  He was staring straight at the camera. Life in one of the toughest prisons in Europe hadn’t been kind to him. His Latin good looks were fading fast. He had emptiness in his eyes that told of what it took to survive in such a place.

  Franks knew he had me. “There’s sound. Turn it up.”

  “How did you get this?”

  “It’s a Skype call. He thinks it’s secure but we found a way of hacking it.”

  I turned up the sound. It wasn’t clear who Matteo was talking to since there was no image of the replier. Yet this wasn’t the most important thing on my mind, it was what Matteo was saying.

  “A time will come when I can get out of here. My men will find a way. Meantime, I can do most of what I want to do from in here.”

  A man’s voice. “But you want my help?”

  “A debt I want to call in.”

  “Anything. You know I’d do anything you need.”

  “Blake. And his wife. The ones that got Emelia killed and put me in here. I want them. I want them killed.”

  “Why now? After all this time?”

  “Because this could not come any sooner. And because they remain a threat to the family.”

  “They may not be easy to find. They will have new identities by now.”

  “To make it easier. A million dollars. A million dollars for each of them.”

  I turned back to Franks. “Tell me what I can do to help.”

  Chapter 4

  Heller found the house he was looking for. Facing onto Mission Bay, it was just the type of place he would have liked for himself.

  The whole area was pleasing. The Bay, artificially produced by excavating the bed of a local river, was a calm and reassuring sight. Joggers ran on the path circling the lake. Women on skateboards pushed toddlers in big-wheeled buggies. Young people exercised in that peculiar American power-walking way. Cyclists wheeled past. Heller knew he was with dependable, respectable people.

  Across the narrow strip of land carrying Mission Bay Boulevard stood the Pacific Ocean with its bold, unpredictable waves crashing ashore. He thought now of how he’d sat in the waterfront bar the evening before looking out across the ocean as the huge sun had dipped below the horizon and he�
��d wondered at a view that took the eye all the way to Japan. And, yes, in the twilight, he had seen the green flash.

  It was a designer house, built in the last five years in faux Art Deco style. A large central stairwell ran all the way up through the house to a flat-topped roof where you could sunbathe in privacy. Rooms led off the central stairwell. They were not stuffy square enclosures. They retained a circular, open symmetry and were more like spaces to be used for studying or relaxing or sleeping. It was a pleasing and challenging construct.

  It was easy to break in and look around. There was no one here. The targets must have been tipped off. That was worrying. It meant the assignment would take more time and more ingenuity than expected.

  He knew from his search of the house that they would not be back. Such knowledge came with experience of having done this many times before. Those small personal things were missing, the kind of things you would take if you left in a hurry. The family laptops, the wife’s jewelry and cosmetics, the photos of the kids, were all missing. There was no point waiting for them to return or searching further. The family had been moved.

  It was time to leave. Time to reassess.

  Chapter 5

  Agent Franks had my full attention.

  “So, James, you can see why we had to get to you as a matter of urgency. To warn you. You, your wife and child.”

  I didn’t like the way he said “child”. The thought that he might have known about Julia’s pregnancy before he made contact, that he’d somehow factored this into his pitch, made the hairs on the back of my neck stand up.

  I looked shaken, I know. “If you can find us, the Landos can find us. And that’s before they place two million dollars on the table. But why are you helping us?”

  He leaned closer. “I have to tell you I wouldn’t be here if there weren’t national security issues involved. This is not only about Matteo Lando and his threat to you.”

  Julia interrupted. “It’s about Alessa Lando, isn’t it?”

  Franks turned to her. “We know she left Italy after her acquittal. We traced her to South America but then she disappeared.”

  That did nothing to calm my fears. “So, do we know who Matteo was talking to in the Skype call?”

 

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