on Sonny when he made those calls. Sit down,” she said, indicating the two chairs placed near the room’s one window. She remained standing. “Why was your name deleted from the course records? There is no mention of your training, training I know you had.”
“What training would that be?” He glanced meaningfully at the window, reminding her that anyone with a parabolic microphone could be listening to every word.
“Don’t worry, this place has been screened to hell and back, as well as those buildings across the street. No ears. No cameras. I’m very thorough.”
“And quite mysterious,” he commented. “Apparently you don’t even exist other than in my feverish imagination.”
Her full lips quirked at his sarcasm. “Feverish? Why, Mark, I’m so flattered.”
He smiled back. “No birth, no schooling, no employment, not even a driving license.” He recalled the ride here. “But that last bit I can well understand.”
“You might have found something under my maiden name had you bothered to ask what it is.”
Mark was already shaking his head. “You weren’t married, either. Not officially anyway.”
She strolled to the window and raked back the sheer curtain to look down at the street below. “What’s your real agenda here?”
He stood and headed for the door. “Food, bath, sleep, in that order.”
She dropped the curtain and headed his way. “There’s a café several doors down that’s open late. Food’s cheap but edible.”
He was a bit surprised at how easily she acquiesced but held the door for her to exit first. “So long as we won’t need to drive there.”
They took the stairs at a fast clip, Mark preceding her as she insisted.
He found himself actually looking forward to spending time with Renee, an unusual turn for him to take when he knew very well he ought to be working this alone. He always worked alone. He didn’t like having to worry about anyone else’s safety. Or their potential for making mistakes.
She would only get in his way, distract him, maybe even get one or both of them killed if Trip was around and in his usual form.
He thought about how ironic it was that the very lack of available information about their previous occupations in intel had virtually verified their loyalties.
What a strange world it had become. At any rate, Mark felt like celebrating the fact that he didn’t have to kill her.
They exited the building and she turned left. Mark walked beside her, confident they had a sort of truce going on.
“If the wine proves drinkable, perhaps we could have a little toast,” he suggested. “Something along the lines of good health and long life.”
“Or world peace,” she said with an inelegant snort that made him laugh.
“Ah, but then we’d both be out of work, love.”
She stopped, halting him with a hand on his arm. “Did you cross over, Alexander?”
“Did you, Leblanc?”
For a long moment, she stared into his eyes, then threw her trust at him like a fast ball. “No, I didn’t. I’m working.”
He almost groaned. Was she mad? She must be to grant him that much information without even knowing him. “So I suppose this is where I declare undying love for my country and promise to fight evil to the death?”
She inclined her head and pursed her lips. “Yeah, Mark, this is the place where you do that. Only you had better make me believe you.”
“Or you’ll do what?”
She smiled and managed to look downright evil. “Or I will kill you. Right where you stand.”
It was only then that Mark felt the gun barrel prod his belly.
Chapter 3
“Deborah, you try to make me jealous? Is this why you hired Alexander? I do not trust him in spite of the glowing recommendations.”
“Do not try my patience, Sonny,” she warned. She watched him study her face and knew he wondered who she really was. If he knew, he would be more afraid than he already was. Cassandra DuMont held more power in her small, soft hands than this man could ever imagine. She toyed with the idea of telling him, but decided against it.
Sonnegut was a tool. The double entendre of a thought made her smile as she stroked his sweaty brow. She raked a beautifully manicured nail along his cheek, scraping the roughness of stubble that had caused a delicious burn moments earlier. In bed, he was unequaled, even by John Trip. Trip’s value lay in his inventiveness. Sonny’s size and boundless energy provided an interesting contrast.
He kissed her gently. “You are such a soft, cultured creature, Deborah. Not at all like the women I am used to.”
“Soft?” She laughed at that. “Only on the surface, darling.”
He sighed and lay back, one hand behind his head, the other toying with her breast. “Ah, yes, there are times when I glimpse the steel beneath your charms.”
At the moment, lying with him on silk sheets in her fancy rococo bed, she was soft and wearing nothing but a contented feline smile.
He exhausted her, helped her to sleep soundly, a feat for which she had amply rewarded him. This walk on the wild side had worked in that respect. She loved the edginess of it, operating in disguise, meeting in dark places, the risks of leaving behind the protection of who and what she was.
Becoming Deborah Martine allowed her a certain freedom and keen excitement that she lacked as Cassandra DuMont, doting mother to her son and the chief executive of her family business. Also, this little vacation afforded a perfect opportunity for another, even deadlier strike against Corbett Lazlo. She would give him his own mini version of nine-eleven and bury his people beneath tons of steel and stone.
Sonnegut stroked her tousled hair and inhaled the rich, heady scent of her perfume. He brushed the smooth curve of her lips with his, tickling them with his tongue. “Tell me that you are not attracted to this man, Alexander. You cannot trust him, you know.”
She tweaked his chin. “Ah, darling, I trust no one.”
“Not even me?” he demanded with a pretense of anger.
Cass rolled her eyes playfully. “Don’t be tiresome, please!”
He rolled away from her and sat up on the edge of the bed. “First you enlist that…girl. She is dangerous, that one. And much too young to be of any use.” Cass knew Sonny mistrusted youth. He probably recalled how he had misspent his own doing stupid things that had earned him time behind bars.
Cass sat up and trailed her nails down the center of his back. “We shall soon see what she can do. Alexander will keep an eye on her. As long as she does what’s required of her, that’s all that matters. Once we’ve accomplished our little task here in Paris, we’ll no longer need either of them.”
“Then I can kill them?” he asked, cracking his knuckles, obviously anticipating how he would do it.
Again she laughed, leaned her head against his shoulder and snaked her arm around his waist. “You are such a bloodthirsty savage.”
“You like me the way I am,” he said, reeking with confidence and manly sweat.
“At times like this, I admit I do,” she assured him. Actually there were only two reasons a woman like her, with her upper-class education and manners, would have use for a man of Sonnegut’s talents. He had just fulfilled one—messy, uninhibited sex. The other, he so far had failed. She would give him one chance to redeem himself. If not, then Trip would take care of him along with the others.
He got up and found the bottle of expensive