The Thieves of Legend
Page 4
Michael looked about, but his boat was gone, drifted off. The man carried out two more bodies. But this time he didn’t turn. He simply stepped onto his boat and went to the wheel.
He was leaving the assassin to face his death. Michael couldn’t help feeling satisfaction. The man had killed innocents, an entire family. He deserved nothing short of death.
Without another thought, Michael dove off the starboard side, falling headfirst thirty feet into the sea, the icy waters shocking him once again.
He turned toward shore, toward the brightly lit castle that was filled with death, and began swimming faster than he had ever swum before. He heard the engine of the American’s landing craft rev up and speed away, the sound fading with the distance.
The explosion lit up the night, an enormous fireball rolling skyward. Michael could feel the heat hit his back, the shock wave rippling through the water. The ship groaned and screamed in protest as the sea poured in, the twisted hull turning about. And then, as if a giant hand had reached up from the depths, the giant yacht began to sink, slowly at first, but soon hastening its dive to its grave. Within a minute she was gone, the sound of steam and bubbles all that could be heard.
Michael didn’t look back. He swam as hard as he could toward shore; it was only 350 yards away, but the heavy waves made every stroke feel like the effort of four. His legs had already begun to cramp, his joints ached with every kick.
Michael swam for his life.
CHAPTER 1
The stone-and-shingle house sat out of view of Banksville Road, secluded in the middle of twenty acres. It was the place where Michael could forget about the cares and troubles of his days.
He had bought the run-down house out of foreclosure two years ago as an escape from the world and the reality of the death of his wife. He had spent nights and weekends renovating the ranch-style home into a place of comfort. It had become his sanctuary, his refuge as he grieved. And as he worked upon it, as he brought the house back to life, so, too, did it bring him back to life, allowing the scars of his heart to begin to heal, helping him work through the cycles of grief: the pain and anger, the emptiness and rage, the sorrow and denial.
As Michael drove up the long driveway and parked in the gravel circle, Hawk, Raven, and Bear, his three Bernese mountain dogs, came running. They leaped upon him as he grabbed his bag from the rear of the Audi, fighting for attention, nuzzling and herding him until, with weary arms, he patted them as he did every night upon his return.
Michael was exhausted. He had crawled ashore in Italy, his body hypothermic, his muscles barely functioning as he climbed the rock-face stairs up to the castle. The lights were on in the dead of night, the warm glow emanating through the castle windows masking the horror within. Michael raced through the forest for nearly an hour, his legs cramping, his heart pounding as his body fought off the cold.
Simon was waiting in the small Renault, parked in a gravel lot that overlooked the Tyrrhenian Sea. They drove through the night, arriving in Rome at dawn. Michael told Simon what had happened. He told him how he had torn up the three sheets of paper, scattering them at sea. He told him of the horrific deaths within the castle, the torture of the old man, and the subsequent death of everyone upon the yacht except the single survivor who sped away with the bodies of his dead comrades.
“I’m sorry,” Simon said as he nodded in sympathy. “For the family… for those killed on board… most of all, I’m sorry for putting you through this.”
Michael looked out at the moonlit sea.
“And the box?” Simon asked quietly.
“Broken open. It was empty.”
Simon nodded.
“But there was another box.”
Simon looked at Michael.
“Identical, but black, etched with dragons and a tiger,” Michael said slowly. “He held it before the old man. It scared him far more than torture, far more than what they had done to his family.”
Michael caught the first flight out of Rome, chasing the rising sun for eight and a half hours. He tried to sleep but couldn’t close his eyes without seeing the headless bodies of the three women and the young child. He tried everything from reading to music to movies, but the disembodied heads seemed to hang at the periphery of his thoughts, holding on, unwilling to let go.
As he stood in his driveway now, exhausted and aching, he admitted to himself what he had known before he had left. It had been a mistake to do this deed for Simon. He had a feeling it was a mistake that would haunt him for years to come.
And as he looked at KC’s white Lexus in the driveway, the guilt of deception began to settle in.
He was startled from his thoughts by the ringing of his cell phone. He looked at the screen and shook his head as he answered. “Hey, Jo.”
“Where are you?” Jo asked. Michael’s assistant hated small talk.
“My driveway.”
“Good.”
“Why?”
“You have a two o’clock.”
“No, I don’t.”
“You do now.”
“Not a chance. I’m wiped.”
“Take a shower, ’cause you’re heading into the city.”
“Absolutely not.”
“A big contract. That will buy you a bigger bed to sleep in later. And provide all us serfs with a bonus. It’s 300 Park, tenth floor. The guy’s name is Lucas. I’ll send the particulars to your BlackBerry.”
“Dammit, Jo.”
“If you were in the right frame of mind, you’d be thanking me, which you will do later.” And with a mock cheery voice she said, “Good-bye.”
While the exhaustion was getting the better of him, the thought of such a healthy contract helped to awaken Michael just a bit. He closed up the phone and looked at KC’s convertible. She wasn’t expecting him to return from “Chicago” until that evening and would understand if he had to run out for a quick meeting.
With the dogs trailing him, he walked into the house, dropped his bag by the door, and headed through the great room to the kitchen. “KC?”
Michael walked upstairs. The bed was made; the bathroom still held a touch of humidity from the shower. He checked their workout room in the basement, the laundry room. “KC?”
KC had become good friends with Paul’s wife, Jeannie, and on more than a few occasions, Jeannie would pick her up unannounced for shopping, a quick lunch, or just company when she took her two kids to the park.
Michael thought of calling KC’s cell, but as it was already after twelve, he decided to do it on his way into the city. He hopped in the shower, the hot water washing away the ache in his bones, quickly dressed in a suit, and grabbed a tie to put on in the car.
As Michael headed out of the bedroom, he finally saw her, sitting on the terrace in the back. He went downstairs and out the back door to the terrace where KC was sitting in a wicker chair, dressed in a heavy sweater, sipping tea, her blond hair glowing in the midday sun.
“I’m sorry; I didn’t know you were back here.” He leaned over and kissed her cheek, but she barely moved.
As she slowly looked up, Michael knew that she knew.
“Hey, Jo just called, I’ve got to run into the city for a meeting,” Michael said, trying to start a conversation, but she remained silent.
Michael stood there a moment, knowing that a firestorm was coming. He sat in the chair across from her, leaned in, and tried to look her in the eye, but she stared off at the rock gardens.
“Why?” KC finally whispered.
Michael took a deep breath and spoke quietly, “Simon asked me…”
“Simon asked me, too,” KC said, still staring off into the backyard.
Michael rolled up his tie and tucked it in his pocket.
“That bastard asked me and I told him no. We made a vow.” KC finally turned and looked at Michael. “Your words. ‘A vow.’ And you couldn’t keep it for even two months.”
Michael paused before answering. “You don’t understand—”
&nbs
p; “Did you do this for Simon or yourself?”
“Since when did I ever go off and do it for myself?”
“Seriously? We both know not to go down that road. What if you were killed, arrested?”
“But I wasn’t.”
“Look at you.” KC waved her hands up and down. “You’re exhausted. Why didn’t you tell me? Why did you lie?”
“To protect you.”
“To protect me? No, Michael, to protect yourself. How many other ‘out-of-town meetings’ were there?”
“KC, you know me better than that.”
“Do I?”
The conversation fell to silence.
“KC?”
“No.” She was fighting back tears now. “I can deal with you not being able to fully commit, I can deal with the ghost of your wife haunting your decisions. But I can’t deal with being lied to, being deceived. And if you deceive me on this now, what else will it be? Didn’t you think about me? Does Simon come before us? Does everyone come before me?”
KC paused, holding tight to her cup of tea as a tear ran down her face.
“You’re so afraid of protecting your own heart, you forgot about mine. You know, a few months ago, when I found that small jewelry box in your sock drawer, my heart soared. I know I was being nosy, but for the briefest of seconds, I felt secure, I thought we had a future.”
“We do have a future.”
“I don’t know about that. Maybe we were both kidding ourselves. Maybe our relationship is based on the wrong things.” KC finally stood. “I think I need a break.”
“What?”
“Where is my life, sitting around here waiting for you? Waiting to get married, waiting to have children, waiting while you’re off trying to come to terms with your own heart, waiting while you’re off stealing something?”
They looked into each other’s eyes as if examining each other’s soul, the moment dragging on until…
“I’ve got to go,” Michael said, standing up.
“Of course you do,” KC shot back. “Run away.”
“I have a meeting,” Michael said quickly.
“Where? Chicago, Italy… ?”
“Can we finish this when I get back?”
“No.”
“I’ll be back by six.”
“I won’t be here.”
“What are you talking about?” Michael’s anger rose.
“I’m going home.”
“You are home.”
“No, I’m in your home. It seems I was just visiting.”
Michael couldn’t look at her. So he looked at his watch. “I need to go.”
KC walked past Michael into the house. “So do I.”
CHAPTER 2
The man stood six feet, one inch tall in a sharply creased dark-blue suit. His shoulders were wide, his face deceptively young for its fifty-six years, and his short black hair had yet to know the color gray. He stood ramrod straight as he reached out to shake Michael’s hand.
“Isaac Lucas.” His voice was deep and he spoke softly.
“Michael St. Pierre.”
“Please take a seat.”
They sat in the small conference room of Braden and Associates, an executive suite for those who needed the prestigious Park Avenue address but couldn’t afford the rent, a facility that presented the façade of success and power, but on an hourly rate as opposed to a ten-year lease. Michael didn’t mind stretching his legs in the city for a change, riding the express train in—the ride giving him time to think, time to figure out how he would fix things with KC. He’d exited in Grand Central and walked up Park Avenue, among the skyscrapers that had so attracted him in his youth.
“You come highly recommended,” Lucas said.
“Thank you.”
“I understand you were traveling.”
“Yes, a sudden business matter.”
“You were successful, I trust?”
“Yes, very much so.” Michael had trouble lying. KC could read his face like a children’s book, but when it came to half-truths to strangers, words flowed far more easily. “I just returned, in fact.”
Lucas didn’t respond and allowed the seconds to tick by.
As Michael assessed the man, he ignored his body language, his lack of mirth; Michael stared into his eyes and felt a chill run through his gut. He saw something there—
“What was your last job, Mr. St. Pierre?”
“We upgraded the security systems and protocols for a Fortune 500 firm.” Michael nodded. “And please, call me Michael.”
“Do you do international work?”
Michael paused. He had done international work on several occasions, most recently twenty-four hours ago, but not the kind of work this man was referring to, and there were certainly no written contracts for it.
“What type of work are you referring to?” Michael asked.
“Your expertise, of course.”
The warning bells grew louder in Michael’s mind. He didn’t need to be told that this man wasn’t looking for an alarm system to be installed, for fortified security measures to be implemented.
“Specifically?” Michael prodded, trying to draw the man out.
“A security matter,” Lucas said, as if it were obvious.
“I need specifics.”
“Due to the nature of the matter, I cannot reveal specifics, but I will tell you the matter is complex, involves an existing system, and you will be rewarded very handsomely.”
“I trust you know my résumé,” Michael said, not so much as a warning but as a way out.
“If you’re referring to your time in prison, yes.”
“Are we talking installation, consulting, or design?” he asked in order to move the matter along.
“You may call it procurement.”
The bells in Michael’s head grew deafening.
“Understand, we are well aware of your activities beyond the norms of your business.”
Michael stared at the man, his mind spinning.
“For instance, what you did in Istanbul was interesting. Not many people could survive that.”
Michael stared at Lucas. No one but his closest friends was aware of what he had done in Istanbul.
“Do not be troubled,” Lucas continued, his voice trying to convey the reassurance his eyes couldn’t. “Your activities in the last several years are of no interest to the United States, but what they do show is that you possess the expertise we require for a certain job.”
“You’re with the government?” Michael said, concealing his alarm.
“We all hide behind façades, Michael.”
“Don’t you have whole divisions for procurement?”
“For security reasons, I can’t say.”
Michael took a breath and took the tactful approach. “Well, thank you, it is an honor to be called on by you, on behalf of the U.S. But I must say no thank you.”
Lucas sat there. He didn’t move or fidget, he didn’t reach for the unopened bottle of water in the middle of the table, he simply stared at Michael as if his force of will could make him change his mind.
“Well.” Lucas nodded. “I don’t think I made myself clear. We need you to do this job.”
“You never mentioned what branch of the government you’re with.”
Lucas reached in his jacket pocket, withdrew his billfold, and slid it across to Michael. “It’s actually Colonel Lucas.”
Michael flipped it open and examined the official military ID of Colonel Isaac Lucas, U. S. Army. Michael felt his world spinning; this meeting was no coincidence.
“Is that the uniform of the ‘new’ army?” Michael said with a false smile, gesturing at the man’s dark blue suit, trying to maintain his calm.
“Nothing draws more attention than an out-of-place military man on Park Avenue,” Lucas said. “It makes those we work so hard to protect nervous.”
Michael nodded in understanding. But uniform or not, Michael understood this man excelled at making people nervous. T
he man traveled alone, a rare thing in this day of corporate posses, and even rarer in the regimented hierarchy of the military. There was no attaché, no lieutenant to open doors, take notes, call out for sushi. This man was a loner—Michael could see it in his dark brown eyes, eyes that carried a hint of Asian heritage that had been watered down by some strain of European blood.
There was no doubt who this man was. It had been dark, Michael had never seen his face, but he recognized his voice, his body language, the way he carried himself.
But Michael was sure he hadn’t been seen by this man or anyone else on the ship. Lucas had been the lone survivor and had been unaware of Michael’s presence as he’d carried his dead comrades off the yacht. Though the chances of this meeting… this was no coincidence.
He had to get out of this room.
“I’m more than flattered to be considered, but my schedule is overbooked as it is.”
“Your government needs your help.” Lucas glared at Michael as if giving an order.
Michael couldn’t believe he’d just said that: “Uncle Sam needs you,” as if his patriotism would force his hand. Michael loved his country in his own way, the same way people believe in God, believe in the afterlife, in their own way.
“I help our government by paying my taxes. Way too much, I might add.” Michael’s joke fell on deaf ears. “You should move on to the next man on your list.”
“You’re the only man on our list, and I must insist.” Lucas’s tone grew deep, demanding. Michael could tell he was not used to being refused.
“Sorry, Colonel, thank you for considering my firm, but you’ll have to find someone else.” Michael rose from his chair, trying to keep his nervousness from showing. He shook the colonel’s hand. “I really must be going; I’ve got some issues to deal with at home.”
Michael walked out of the execu-suite, holding his anger in check. The colonel’s demands and assignments were no doubt dealings the U.S. should not be dealing with. This man knew too much about Michael: He knew his life, his activities beyond U.S. shores. Was this really the same man on the boat? It had been so dark, he had worn a hat, his face never in the light. But the voice, the cadence of his speech sounded the same.