Tiffany Reisz

The Mistress


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Grace.” Father Stearns came to his feet. “I no longer wish to kill Kingsley. No more than usual, anyway.”

      “You’re welcome, Father.” Grace’s voice quivered but Father Stearns was polite enough not to point it out. Perhaps he’d had enough playing with her mind tonight. Pity. She already rather missed it. At least it had distracted her from the gnawing terror for a few minutes.

      He reached a hand down to her, a hand she took with more pleasure than she felt comfortable admitting to herself.

      “You’re welcome to call me Søren. I’d prefer it if you did.”

      “Of course … Søren. That’s what Nora always calls you. She says she can’t call you ‘Father Stearns’ without wanting to giggle,” she said, coming to her feet. She straightened her clothes, which had gotten rumpled while sitting on the floor. “Søren’s a Danish name, yes? What does it mean?”

      “It means ‘stern.’ A good name for me, I’ve been told.”

      “I beg to differ. I don’t think you’re quite as stern as you’re letting on.”

      “Careful, Grace … it’s dangerous behind the wall.”

      His tone was teasing but she heard a real warning in his words, a warning she decided to heed.

      “So, what now?” she asked, deciding a change of subject might be for the best. “What should we do?”

      “The only thing we can do is wait. For a week now she’s been playing a game with us. Sending photographs, breaking into homes—my sister’s, Eleanor’s … She stole a file from Kingsley’s office. This is a woman who wants to play a mind game with us. Eleanor will stay alive as long as Marie-Laure enjoys playing the game.”

      “She will be fine. Nora will,” Grace said again, more for her sake than his. “I mean if any woman can get through this, it’s Nora. Isn’t it?”

      “She’s strong, intelligent and cunning. She’s well-trained. If forced to defend herself, she can. She knows how to hurt people and hurt them badly. As a teenager she got into a few fights, but as an adult, she’s never hurt anyone without their consent. She may have to now.” He paused and Grace watched as his large hands curled tight into fists before he relaxed his fingers once again. “I would pay any price to save her from this.”

      She took his hand in hers and held it a moment.

      “I know you would. I’d give anything to know something … anything. What is Marie-Laure waiting for?”

      “I don’t know. But surely she knows the silence and the waiting are the worst of tortures.”

      “It has to end. It’s been a day already. Something has to—”

      The sound of heavy footsteps in the hallways cut off the end of Søren’s sentence. She heard doors opening and slamming shut. She and Søren stepped into the hall. The man who’d escorted her to Kingsley’s office, Griffin, exhaled with relief at the sight of him.

      “Søren,” the man said, almost panting in his panic. “There’s a girl here asking for you.”

      “A girl?”

      “She’s down in the front room.”

      He looked at Grace and she knew it had happened. Finally. Marie-Laure had started the game.

      “Did she tell you her name?” Søren asked as they strode down the hall, Grace following close behind.

      “Nope. But she’s looks about eighteen, she’s blonde, she sounds foreign and she’s fucking gorgeous. You got a daughter you never told anyone about?”

      “No,” Søren said, his pace quickening. “But I have a niece.”

      

       10 THE PAWN

      Laila pulled her knees to her chest on the sofa and shivered. Why was it so cold in here? Was it cold? Somewhere over her head one man spoke to another man. Although she spoke English almost as well as her native Danish, their words did not register with her. She heard static, white noise, and could only stare with fixed eyes at the doorway.

      “What’s your name?” a gentle male voice asked in English. “Can you tell me your name?”

      Finally the words cut through the static.

      “Laila,” she whispered.

      “Laila. That’s a pretty name. I’m Wes.”

      “Hi, Wes.” She blinked and looked at him. Her eyes finally started to focus and she at last saw the person who’d carried her into the house. Before he’d just been a presence, male and tall. Now she saw him. He had shaggy blond hair and warm brown eyes and easily the most handsome face she’d ever seen on a man in her life. Man? Maybe not. He didn’t look that much older than her. Nineteen? Twenty, maybe.

      “Are you hurt anywhere?”

      She shook her head.

      “I don’t think so.”

      “Your face is bleeding a little. It looks like you scraped it on the concrete. We’ll clean it up and you’ll be okay.”

      “Okay.”

      He spoke with such quiet confidence that Laila believed him immediately even if he meant only the cut on her face would be okay.

      He took her hand in hers and she clung to it, desperate for comfort from this stranger. He didn’t feel like a stranger to her, though. He didn’t ask her questions about what had happened to her, how she’d gotten here. He knew somehow. He was part of this. They were part of this together.

      “Laila?” A familiar voice cut through the haze and she sat up immediately, throwing herself in her uncle’s arms. The one moment of peace she’d felt looking in Wes’s eyes disappeared as the floodgate broke. She sobbed against his shoulder as he gathered her to him on the sofa. In between her choking sobs, she told him the story. She’d come to surprise him. She’d gone into the rectory. She thought no one was home. She heard footsteps … something covered her head. She fought, she struggled, but no amount of thrashing would get her free. They’d taken her somewhere in the trunk of a car. It felt like days in the car but probably only a few hours. When the car stopped, someone pulled her out and when they yanked the blindfold off, she saw …

      “I saw Tante Elle. They have her,” she said, switching to English. Other people had come into the room while she was speaking—a beautiful woman with red hair and freckles and a man with dark hair, olive skin and dangerous eyes. They looked as scared as her uncle, as scared as her.

      “Who?” Wes asked, over Laila’s shoulder.

      “Eleanor,” Søren explained, kissing Laila on top of her head. “Laila and her sister consider Eleanor their aunt. Go on, Laila.”

      “She was there on the floor.”

      “Was she hurt?” Wes asked.

      Laila shook her head. “She has some bruises on her arms, on her face. There was another woman there and a man with a gun.”

      “What did the woman look like?” asked the man with shoulder-length dark hair. He spoke in a French accent. Kingsley, that was his name. Her aunt had told her about the handsome Frenchman who she called the bane of her existence. From her tante Elle it had sounded like a compliment.

      She stared at him.

      “She looked a little like you.” The man shook his head and he swore under his breath. He turned his back to the room. “But older,” Laila continued. “And angry. She was smiling but she looked very angry.”

      “What did she say?” Her uncle brushed the hair off her face.

      “She