Tess Gerritsen

In Their Footsteps / Stolen: In Their Footsteps / Stolen


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      “Jordan!” cried a relieved Beryl. She ran to open the door. “Where have you been?”

      Her brother sauntered in, his blond hair tousled from the night wind. He saw Richard and halted. “Sorry. If I’ve interrupted anything—”

      “Not a thing,” snapped Beryl. She locked the door and turned to face her brother. “We’ve been worried sick about you.”

      “I just went for a walk.”

      “You could have left me a note!”

      “Why? I was right in the neighborhood.” Jordan flopped lazily into a chair. “Having quite a nice evening, too, until some woman started following me around.”

      Richard’s chin snapped up in surprise. “Woman?”

      “Rather nice-looking. But not my type, really. A bit vampirish for my taste.”

      “Was she blond?” asked Richard. “About five foot five? Mid-twenties?”

      Jordan shook his head in amazement. “Next you’ll tell me her name.”

      “Colette.”

      “Is this a new parlor trick, Richard?” Jordan said with a laugh. “ESP?”

      “She’s an agent working for French Intelligence,” said Richard. “Protective surveillance, that’s all.”

      Beryl gave a sigh of relief. “So that’s why we were followed. And you had me scared out of my wits.”

      “You should be scared,” said Richard. “The man following us wasn’t working for Daumier.”

      “You just said—”

      “Daumier had only one agent assigned to surveillance tonight. That woman, Colette. Apparently she stayed with Jordan.”

      “Then who was following us?” demanded Beryl.

      “I don’t know.”

      There was a silence. Then Jordan asked peevishly, “Have I missed something? Why are we all being followed? And when did Richard join the fun?”

      “Richard,” said Beryl tightly, “hasn’t been completely honest with us.”

      “About what?”

      “He neglected to mention that he was here in Paris in 1973. He knew Mum and Dad.”

      Jordan’s gaze at once shot to Richard’s face. “Is that why you’re here now?” he asked quietly. “To prevent us from learning the truth?”

      “No,” said Richard. “I’m here to see that the truth doesn’t get you both killed.”

      “Could the truth really be that dangerous?”

      “It’s got someone worried enough to have you both followed.”

      “Then you don’t believe it was a simple murder and suicide,” said Jordan.

      “If it was that simple—if it was just a case of Bernard shooting Madeline and then taking his own life—no one would care about it after all these years. But someone obviously does care. And he—or she—is keeping a close watch on your movements.”

      Beryl, strangely silent, sat down on the bed. Her hair, which she’d gathered back with pins, was starting to loosen, and silky tendrils had drifted down her neck. All at once Richard was struck by her uncanny resemblance to Madeline. It was the hairstyle and the watered-silk dress. He recognized that dress now—it was her mother’s. He shook himself to dispel the notion that he was looking at a ghost.

      He decided it was time to tell the truth, and nothing but. “I never did believe it,” he said. “Not for a second did I think Bernard pulled that trigger.”

      Slowly Beryl looked up at him. What he saw in her gaze—the wariness, the mistrust—made him want to reach out to her, to make her believe in him. But trust wasn’t something she was about to give him, not now. Perhaps not ever.

      “If he didn’t pull the trigger,” she asked, “then who did?”

      Richard moved to the bed. Gently he touched her face. “I don’t know,” he said. “But I’m going to help you find out.”

      

      AFTER RICHARD LEFT, Beryl turned to her brother. “I don’t trust him,” she said. “He’s told us too many lies.”

      “He didn’t lie to us exactly,” Jordan observed. “He just left out a few facts.”

      “Oh, right. He conveniently neglects to mention that he knew Mum and Dad. That he was here in Paris when they died. Jordie, for all we know, he could’ve pulled the trigger!”

      “He seems quite chummy with Daumier.”

      “So?”

      “Uncle Hugh trusts Daumier.”

      “Meaning we should trust Richard Wolf?” She shook her head and laughed. “Oh, Jordie, you must be more exhausted than you realize.”

      “And you must be more smitten than you realize,” he said. Yawning, he crossed the floor toward his own suite.

      “What’s that supposed to mean?” she demanded.

      “Only that your feelings for the man obviously run hot and heavy. Because you’re fighting them every inch of the way.”

      She pursued him to the connecting door. “Hot?” she said incredulously. “Heavy?”

      “There, you see?” He breathed a few loud pants and grinned. “Sweet dreams, baby sister. I’m glad to see you’re back in circulation.”

      Then he closed the door on her astonished face.

      

      WHEN RICHARD ARRIVED at Daumier’s flat, he found the Frenchman still awake but already dressed in his bathrobe and slippers. The latest reports on the bombing of the St. Pierre residence were laid out across his kitchen table, along with a plate of sausage and a glass of milk. Forty years with French Intelligence hadn’t altered his preference for working in close proximity to a refrigerator.

      Waving at the reports, Daumier said, “It is all a puzzle to me. A Semtex explosive planted under the bed. A timing mechanism set for 9:10—precisely when the St. Pierres would be watching Marie’s favorite television program. It has all the signs of an inside operation, except for one glaring mistake—Philippe was in England.” He looked at Richard. “Does it not strike you as an inconceivable blunder?”

      “Terrorists are usually brighter than that,” admitted Richard. “Maybe they intended it only as a warning. A statement of purpose. ‘We can reach you if we want to,’ that sort of thing.”

      “I still have no information on this Cosmic Solidarity League.” Wearily Daumier ran his hands through his hair. “The investigation, it goes nowhere.”

      “Then maybe you can turn your attention for a moment to my little problem.”

      “Problem? Ah, yes. The Tavistocks.” Daumier sat back and smiled at him. “Hugh’s niece is more than you can handle, Richard?”

      “Someone else was definitely tailing us tonight,” said Richard. “Not just your agent, Colette. Can you find out who it was?”

      “Give me something to work with,” said Daumier. “A middle-aged man, short and stocky—that tells me nothing. He could have been hired by anyone.”

      “It was someone who knew they were coming to Paris.”

      “I know Hugh told the Vanes. They, in turn, could have mentioned it to others. Who else was at Chetwynd?”

      Richard thought back to the night of the reception and the night of Reggie’s indiscretion. Blast Reggie Vane and his weakness for booze. That was what had set this