“Call me when you’ve recovered your health,” she said, smiling.
Stone limped into the house and upstairs. He stretched out on the bed, ready for a nap. The phone rang. “Hello.”
“You’re back,” Dino said.
“I noticed that.”
“I tried you in Maine, but no reply.”
“I’m not there anymore.”
“I thought maybe she might have fucked you to death.”
“Close.”
“Viv’s actually in town for a change. You want to join us for dinner?”
“Sure.”
“Bilboquet at seven-thirty?”
“I thought they closed.”
“They reopened.” Dino gave him the new address, right around the corner from his building.
“You bringing a date?”
“I don’t think I could look at an unmarried woman right now.”
“You’ll get over that.” Dino hung up.
The old Bilboquet had been an indoor postage stamp; the new one was roomier. Dino and Viv were already there. He kissed Viv on the forehead and sat down.
“I hear you’ve been exercising strenuously,” Viv said drily.
“I’m slowly recovering my health. A drink would help.”
Drinks arrived, and they toasted nothing in particular.
“How was Maine?” Viv asked.
“Don’t start.”
“I mean the actual, geographical Maine.”
“I didn’t see a lot of it,” Stone said. “The flight home was nice, though.”
“I take it you’ve figured out how to get the jet in and out of that tiny airport,” Dino said.
“All it took was good brakes landing, full power taking off, and great piloting skills.”
“Have you heard from Gino Parisi’s friends?”
“We had a quiet weekend without them.”
“It was a smart move, going up there where they couldn’t find you. I’ve since heard even more terrible things about Frank and his friend Charlie.”
“I’m happy to have missed them.”
“You need to go on doing that. You didn’t take a cab up here, did you?”
“No, Fred drove me.”
“Good. I don’t want you on the sidewalk waving your arms.”
“Thank you, I will follow that advice, until you tell me the coast is clear.”
“Is Perado still in town?”
“Yep. We close the sale on the Winkle business tomorrow morning. He’ll be going straight back to San Antonio from the closing.”
“Smart move. It shouldn’t take us much longer to get something on Parisi that we can convict him of, then he’ll be out of your hair—and Perado’s.”
“You mean I can’t leave the house until that happens?”
“I wouldn’t advise it. After all, you’ve got Helene to cook—you don’t really have to live on pizza and Chinese.”
“If I can’t go out, then maybe I should have a dinner party. I don’t do that often enough.”
“That’s right, you don’t. Who will you invite?”
“All the old familiar faces. Like you two.”
“We’ll look forward to it.”
“Tell me when you’re free—you’re a lot busier than I am.”
Dino checked his calendar on his iPhone. “Let’s see, how about the day after tomorrow?”
“Great. Drinks at seven, dinner at eight.”
“Done.”
Dino, who was seated facing the street, got up. “Excuse me for a minute.” He walked away from the table and out of the restaurant.
“What’s that about?” Stone asked Viv.
“Beats me.”
Dino returned. “Frank and Charlie have rejoined you.”
“Oh, shit.”
“They’re obviously watching your house. Don’t worry, I had them rousted. Two to one they’re carrying something illegal, so they’ll be out of your hair overnight, at least.”
“Thank you, Dino.”
“It’s all part of the service,” Dino replied.
Stone was at his desk the next morning, making a list of dinner invitees, when Joan buzzed him. “Holly Barker on one.”
Stone punched the button. “Holly? How are you?”
“As well as can be expected,” she said.
“You sound as if the White House is wearing you down.”
“At times. Being national security adviser is even harder than I thought it would be.” She paused and took a deep breath. “Stone, I want to ask a very great favor of you. Actually, the president and I.”
“How could I possibly refuse?”
“Do you remember Major Ian Rattle?”
“The name is familiar.”
“Felicity Devonshire’s dinner party in London.”
“Ah, the MI6 guy who was with your assistant, Millicent . . .”
“Millie Martindale.”
“Got him.”
“He’s arriving in D.C. this afternoon, surreptitiously, and we have to hide him for a week or two.”
“Hide him from whom or what?”
“I’ll explain that when I see you.”
“You’re seeing me?”
“I’ll be in New York tomorrow to give a lecture at the Foreign Policy Association.”
“Will you be here overnight?”
“Yep. You free?”
“No, but I’m having a dinner party, and you’re invited. Major Rattle, too.”
“We’d love to,” she said. “He’s traveling with me. Why don’t we come early and I’ll explain what’s going on?”
“Do you need a bed for the night?”
“I have an apartment there, remember? If I don’t stay there once in a while the doormen will forget who I am and deny me entry to the building.”
“Okay. You can be my date, and I’ll ask an odd woman for Rattle.”
“If anyone knows an odd woman, it’s you.”
“See you at six, then?”
“Right.” They hung up.
Stone wrote down Holly and Rattle, then Dino and Viv, Bill Eggers and his wife, Herbie Fisher and whoever his girl might be, and Mike Freeman and date. He added Caroline Woodhouse as the odd woman, then he gave the list to Joan and asked her to have invitations hand-delivered.
“The two goons are out there again,” Joan said, nodding toward the street.
“Which two goons?”
“That ex-cop and his shadow.”
“Ryan and Al Parisi?”
“That’s the ones.”
“I don’t think we can do anything about them.”
“What happened to the dangerous-looking ones?”
“Dino had them busted last night. I don’t know if he was able to hold them, or if they’ll be out soon.”
“Gee, I miss them,” she said.
“Let me know if they turn up.”
The phone rang, and Joan answered. She pressed the hold button and said, “Dino’s on the line,” before walking out the door.
Stone picked up. “Good morning.”
“You were kind of down last night. Feeling better?”
“I was just tired—a good night’s sleep did the trick.”
“First one for a while, huh?”
“Don’t start.”
“I thought you’d like to know about Frank and Charlie.”
“I certainly would.”
“They were both carrying, but they had permits. I’m going to see what I can do about getting those revoked.”
“Good idea.”
“When my guys searched the car they found what they called a kidnap kit: black hood, duct tape, plastic ties, et cetera.”
“Is that illegal?”
“I’
m afraid not, but it says something about their intentions.”
“Can you hold them?”
“They lawyered up immediately. They’re already on the street.”
“Not my street—not yet, anyway. Parisi hasn’t forgotten about me, though. Ryan and Al Parisi are parked on my block again.”
“I’ll see what, if anything, I can do about that.”
“Thanks. We’re on for tomorrow night. Holly Barker is coming in from Washington, and she’s bringing a Brit from MI6 that I have to hide for a while.”
“Hide from what?”
“Evildoers of some sort, I guess. She promised to explain tomorrow.”
“Aren’t you attracting enough evildoers of your own, without some Brit drawing more?”
“Oh, what the hell, another chunk of bait in the house can’t hurt. Listen, I’ve got to go to Queens for Perado’s closing. See you tomorrow night.” They hung up.
He grabbed his briefcase and buzzed Joan. “I’m headed to Queens for my closing. Please buzz Fred and ask him to meet me in the garage.”
“Will do.”
Stone went to the garage and got into the Bentley. Fred got in and entered the address into the navigator, buzzed the door open, and backed into the street. The garage door closed behind them, and Stone got a glimpse of two uniforms, who were bent over the hood of a car, talking to Ryan and young Parisi. “I don’t think we’ll have a tail this morning,” Stone said.
“I hope I don’t fall asleep, sir,” Fred replied.
—
The closing was held in a conference room in Marty Winkle’s offices, and it went smoothly. Winkle and Pepe Perado signed a stack of documents, a cashier’s check with a lot of zeros changed hands, and the two men shook on it. Cerveza Perado was officially a New York presence.
Stone walked out of the building with Pepe. “Can I give you a ride to the airport?”
“Thanks,” Pepe said, “but my two guardians are taking care of that. They’ll walk me all the way to the gate. I’m sending my son to New York next week to manage the new company. Marty and his son are staying on for a month, maybe two, to help with the transition, and I gave Brad Kelly’s brother-in-law a nice check as a finder’s fee. He’ll get a promotion soon, too.”
“I know you’ll be glad to get home, Pepe.”
“Not all that glad. I’ve enjoyed New York. I’ve already got a realtor looking for an apartment. I’ll be back often, I expect, once Gino Parisi is dealt with.”
“That’s two of us who want Parisi dealt with.”
“How are you going to manage that?”
“I’ve got an idea, but it’s half-baked—I’ve got some more thinking to do on that subject.” Then Stone looked up and saw Frank and Charlie’s car waiting in the street. He shook Pepe’s hand, and his two guards appeared and took him to their car.
Stone got back into the Bentley. “We’ve got a tail again,” he said to Fred. “How the hell did they know where we were?”
Stone was waiting in his study when Holly Barker arrived with Ian Rattle. Stone shook Rattle’s hand. “Please excuse Holly and me for a few minutes. Fred will show you upstairs to what used to be my son’s rooms, before he moved to Los Angeles. You’ll have a sitting room and a study.”
“Thank you, Stone,” Rattle said, then turned and followed Fred.
Stone embraced Holly and kissed her.
“Mmm,” she said, “you make me sorry I’m not staying the night.”
“Anytime,” Stone said. “What can I get you to drink?”
“I seem to recall vodka gimlets being constantly on hand.”
He poured her one and himself a Knob Creek, then he sat down beside her on the sofa. “So, what is Major Rattle running from?”
Holly took a deep breath and started. “While you were in England a few weeks ago, dealing with your own problems, like the destruction of your airplane, I—and especially Millie Martindale—were dealing with an entirely different kind of problem that you were not a party to.”
“I recall being asked to leave Felicity Devonshire’s dinner table, along with the ladies, so that Millie and Rattle could brief the prime minister and half his Cabinet on something important.”
“It certainly was something important. They were dealing with a group who were planning to simultaneously assassinate the prime minister and the president.”
“Good God!”
“I recall using those exact words when I learned about it.”
“Did the attempt take place? If it did, I certainly heard nothing about it.”
“It did, and it was rather brilliantly nipped in the bud in an operation that was conducted on both sides of the Atlantic, and it was kept very, very quiet. The problem began after the culprits were taken—diplomats in D.C. and London, a pair of them twins. They were declared persona non grata in both countries and shipped back to their home country—a tiny Arabian sultanate called Dahai—in one of the sultan’s fleet of jets, escorted by British and American jet fighters. Nearly all the way.”
“Nearly?”
“The fighter pilots were ordered to break off the escort once the jet was over the Arabian Sea. At that point, Lance Cabot took it upon himself to intervene.”
“Intervene how?”
“I was assigned by the president to investigate the incident, and I managed to get an admission out of Lance that he called the CIA station head in neighboring Yemen and suggested that he might prevail upon the head of an organization called Freedom for Dahai, who oppose the sultan, to station some men on the beach near the approach end of the runway, equipped with a Russian-made, shoulder-fired, laser-guided ground-to-air missile.”
“With what result?”
“The jet was blown out of the sky, a couple of miles out to sea, killing all aboard. Freedom for Dahai then issued a statement, claiming responsibility for the event.”
“Well, that was all neatly tied up, wasn’t it?”
“From Lance’s point of view, yes. He was doing what he believed the president would do, while giving her airtight deniability. From MI6’s point of view, however, things got messy fairly quickly.”
“How?”
“The twins aboard the jet were said to be the sons of the sultan by a member of his harem, and the third diplomat was the sultan’s nephew. Somebody in Dahai intelligence got wind of Ian Rattle’s involvement—he led the team that squelched the assassination attempt in London, extracted the twins, and shipped them back to Dahai. There were subsequently two attempts on Ian’s life in England—one in London and one at what was thought by MI6 to be a safe house in the country. Both narrowly failed, and Felicity thought it advisable that he be spirited out of the country and made to vanish, until they could track down the leak in MI6 and make England safe for him again. They smuggled him aboard a diplomatic flight out of an RAF base, and he landed at Dulles this morning. The Agency transferred him to my custody for the flight to Teterboro. Now here we are, and you can blame me.”
“Why would I do that?”
“I knew about the security upgrades to this house that the Agency undertook when you were experiencing difficulties with a Russian mob a while back, and it was my suggestion to the president that yours would be a perfect safe house.”
“I’m flattered that you thought of me, and, of course, I’m glad to have Ian as a guest for as long as this takes.”
“I knew you would be gracious, Stone, that’s the other reason I recommended you. MI6 is now going through an autoproctological examination more extensive than anything since they were trying to root out the Soviet mole Kim Philby in the late fifties and early sixties. In that instance, they knew who the culprit was, but they couldn’t prove it. In this case, they’re starting from scratch.”
“As I recall, the Philby effort ended badly.”
“Right. They were unable to get a confession and
unable to produce other than circumstantial evidence against him, and he was cleared by a Foreign Office and parliamentary investigation. They satisfied their betters by booting him out of MI6. A decade later, after things had cooled off, the service took Philby on again as a freelancer in Beirut, where he remained until they got some more evidence. His best friend extracted a confession from him, then looked the other way, so that Philby could escape to Moscow, where he lived the last twenty years of his life as a celebrated nobody.”
“Has MI6’s investigation produced a suspect?”
“If so, they haven’t shared that information with me. Understandably, Dame Felicity is playing her cards very close to her lovely chest.”
“Is Millie in any danger in all this?”
“We don’t think so, but nevertheless, precautions have been taken. I thought of shipping her up here, too, but I’m not sure she would be entirely safe in your house.” Her lip curled a bit.
“That was a very unattractive smirk.”
“I should have said, safe from Ian Rattle.”
“Had they been an item when she was in London?”
“No. In fact, she had an FBI beau during the operation, and she continues to see him. However, Ian has a reputation as a ‘bit of a lad,’ as the Brits like to put it, so why complicate things by shutting them up here together?”
“I can see how that might complicate.”
“Which brings me to ask, whom have you paired him with for dinner this evening?”
“Her name is Caroline Woodhouse. She’s a graphic designer at an ad agency and very attractive. I have a feeling that she and Ian might find each other interesting.”
“Stone, forgive me for saying so, but it sounds as though you might be looking to turn Ms. Woodhouse’s attentions away from you.”
Stone was groping for a reply to that when the doorbell rang. “Ah, my guests,” he said, rising.
The group was too large for Stone’s study, so they had drinks in the living room. Fred poured the champagne and the drinks and by the time the last guests, Herbie Fisher and his beautiful new girlfriend, Heather, arrived the party had upshifted from cordiality to conviviality, though nobody was wearing a lamp shade yet.
At the stroke of eight o’clock, Fred rang the silver dinner gong that Stone had found at a shop in the King’s Road, London, some years before, and the guests began looking for their place cards. Stone had put Ian Rattle and Caroline at the far end of the table from where he sat with Holly on his right and Heather to his left. For insurance, in case Caroline did not find Ian sufficiently attractive, he had placed Herbie on her other side.
Naked Greed (Stone Barrington) Page 7