with evident relief. “Hell, no. That was Jill. You missed Kelsey, Rose and Caroline.”
“Ah. I see,” Connor murmured. “So what’s with this Julia?”
Sean winced. “Curly blonde hair, big blue eyes, five-inch heels. I met her at a club a few weeks ago. It was fun for a while, and then bam, out of nowhere, she mutates into this gigantic bloodsucking insect.”
Connor winced. “Shit. I hate it when that happens.”
“Me, too. Lurking in the dark outside my condo all night, brrr. Creeps me out. Next thing I know, she’ll be boiling my bunny.”
Connor made sympathetic sounds. “Sounds painful.”
The screen door flew open, kicked by Davy’s massive booted foot. He laid two plates before his brother. Thick slabs of grilled ham, a heap of scrambled eggs full of melted cheddar. Four pieces of toast, dripping with butter. A pile of fresh honeydew, cantaloupe, and pineapple chunks with a big scoop of cottage cheese perched on top.
Connor blinked. “Whoa. So, uh…where’s my damask napkin and my lemon-scented finger bowl?”
Davy shrugged, unembarrassed. “You need protein.”
No arguing with that. He dove in, ignoring his rapt audience. A few minutes later, he pushed back two highly polished plates. “Let me have it,” he said. “What’s up with Claude Mueller?”
Davy flipped open a manila folder full of computer printouts. “There’s not as much as I would’ve expected, for such a rich guy,” he said. “Born in Brussels in ’61. Mother Belgian, father Swiss, a big shot industrialist. Outrageously wealthy. Claude was sickly as a child, suffers from some weird form of hemophilia, now more or less under control. A reclusive loner type. He studied art and architecture at the Sorbonne from ’80 to ’83 and then gave it up due to ill health. In 1989, his parents were killed in a car accident. Claude was the sole heir to a fortune of around a half billion or so.”
Connor choked on his coffee, and wiped his mouth. “Jesus,” he said. “Hard to wrap your mind around that much money.”
Sean gave him an evil grin. “My mind is stretchier than yours.”
“Poor Claude was traumatized by his parents’ deaths,” Davy went on. “From that point on, he secluded himself on a tiny private island off the south of France. Never married, no children. All he cares about are antiquities. He had a collection of medieval reliquaries, weapons, Viking and Saxon artifacts, and of course Celtic stuff. He’s a big presence on the ’Net. Spends lots of time in art history chat rooms and message boards. He administers the Quicksilver Fund, which he established in the early nineties. It’s a stinking pile of money that he doles out to arts organizations. All of whom suck his virtual toes.”
“Photos?” Connor asked.
“I couldn’t find a recent one. These are over sixteen years old.” Davy shoved a pile of color printouts across the table to him.
Connor pushed aside his plate and leafed through them.
Claude Mueller was thin, nondescript, neither handsome nor ugly. Bland features, olive skin, blue eyes, thinning brown hair. The clearest of the lot was a passport photo taken two decades ago. A chubbier version of the same man, with a mustache and goatee.
Connor studied them, letting his mind float open like a net, scooping for images, connections, snags, feelings. Nothing jumped out, nothing flashed by. All he felt was a prickling, restless unease. “Novak could pass for this guy,” he mused. “Same height and build.”
Davy and Sean’s swift glances clearly continued a conversation they must have started last night after he’d gone to bed.
Davy shook his head. “I got into the database of the Quicksilver Fund last night. I found the transactions for the plane tickets Mueller bought for Erin in the past few months. The pressing business that kept Mueller from meeting Erin in Santa Fe was ill health. I saw the medical records. Two days before she was scheduled to go to Santa Fe, Mueller was admitted to a posh private clinic in Nice for a bleeding ulcer.”
Something tightened steadily in Connor’s stomach. Even though he knew this news should be making him feel better.
“I hacked into the clinic’s records,” Davy continued. “He couldn’t make it to the meeting because he was vomiting blood, Con. Not because he was sitting in jail, plotting Erin’s downfall.”
Connor set down his cup. Davy’s tone was flat, his voice unreadable. “Since when do you read French?” he demanded.
“I hung out in northern Africa for a while after Desert Storm, remember? They speak a lot of French in Egypt and Morocco. I picked it up. It’s not hard, if you already know Spanish.”
Connor stared into his coffee. So Davy knew French. His brother was full of surprises. “Wasn’t it a little too easy, finding all this info?”
“Yeah, it was easy,” Davy said slowly. “It’s possible that it’s an elaborate, fiendish plot. Anything’s possible. But spending untold amounts of money to put together a cover story this complicated, all for Erin Riggs’s benefit? Come on, Con. Sure she’s a cute girl, but—”
“I’m not suggesting that it would be all for Erin’s benefit,” Connor snarled. “It’s to Novak’s benefit to have another identity.”
Davy looked away. “It’s like Nick said, Con. Novak’s run home to hide under Daddy’s wing. It’s the smart thing to do.”
“But he’s insane.” Connor looked from Davy to Sean. Both his brothers avoided his gaze. “He doesn’t reason like a normal human.”
“You have to face reality, Con.” Sean’s mouth was tight.
Connor clenched his jaw. “And what is your version of reality?”
Sean looked like he was bracing himself. “That you hate the idea of this girl you’ve always wanted going to meet a filthy rich guy who goes nuts for Celtic art. Nobody could blame you for hating it.”
The food in Connor’s belly congealed to a cold lump.
“Let her go, Con.” Davy’s voice was heavy. “Move on.”
Connor rose to his feet and snatched the sheaf of paper from the table. “Thanks for your help. If you’ll excuse me, I’ve got stuff to do.”
“Yo, Con,” Sean said, as Connor shoved open the door.
Connor jerked around with a this-had-better-be-good expression.
“The guy may have more money than God, but hey…he urps blood,” Sean pointed out. “Bleeding ulcers are not sexy. Take what comfort you can from that.”
Connor slammed the porch door so violently that it rattled in its frame. They braced themselves. Slam went the front door, too.
Sean dropped his head down and bonked his forehead against the table. “Shit, shit, shit. Just shoot me now. Put me out of my misery.”
“Yeah, that was brilliant.” Davy’s voice was dour. “You always hit a nerve. Straight on, bull’s eye.”
“It’s a family trait.” Sean raised resentful, narrowed eyes.
“You were the one begging to be put out of his misery,” Davy observed. “Not me.”
Sean slumped down into his chair. “I didn’t think things could suck any worse for him than they already did. I was wrong.”
“Things can always get worse,” Davy pointed out. “Always.”
“Aw, shut up,” Sean muttered. “Goddamn pessimist.”
Chapter
5
It was sunset in the woods. She was naked beneath her gauzy dress. Her hair was loose, her breasts