Dangerous to Know

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Dangerous to Know Page 17

by Merline Lovelace


  “Morn…ing,” she rasped.

  Paige had heard bullfrogs with more melodious voices. “Good morning. Sorry I slept so late. Certain people failed to wake me.”

  “That’s probably my fault,” Adam volunteered. He pushed back his chair, one of two around the graceful Italian table that had been dragged in from the sitting room and placed next to Maggie’s bed.

  A total absence of sleep certainly hadn’t lessened Adam Ridgeway’s air of command, Paige thought. His blue shirt wasn’t quite as crisp as last night, and the crease in his dark slacks had all but disappeared, yet he showed no other visible signs of his long night, except the dark stubble shadowing his cheeks and chin.

  “Doc and Maggie were bringing me up to date on the operation,” he explained.

  Paige glanced at the papers and drawings littering the table’s tooled-leather surface.

  “So I see.”

  Her respect for the other woman edged up another notch. As sick as Maggie was last night, she’d recovered enough to participate—nonverbally, Paige hoped—in a mission briefing.

  “Control came through with a detailed description of Swanset’s villa,” David told her. “The place has thirty-six rooms, including the servants’ quarters. I’ve drawn out a floor plan for you to memorize before we go in.”

  Her jaw sagged. “You want me to memorize thirty-six rooms?”

  “You can’t go in blind.”

  “No, of course not,” Paige said weakly. Good God, while she was sprawled blissfully across the bed, David had been sketching out thirty-six rooms for her to memorize!

  He pulled a folded sheet of notepaper out of his shirt pocket. “We’ve revised the emergency codes, as well.”

  “New codes?” she asked, her heart sinking. “I’ve got them down, at least the important ones. One-one-three for emergency assistance. Two-three—”

  She stumbled, trying desperately to remember the digitized signal for “Agent in place, backup requested.”

  “The numeric system allows too much possibility of error during translation at headquarters,” Adam interjected smoothly. “We’ve switched to a selection of code words that allow immediate voice recognition.”

  “Voice?” Paige threw Maggie a doubtful look.

  The patient grinned. “Only…one…word. Can’t…mistake…it.”

  Paige knew darn well that this small, select committee had made the switch from numbers to words for her benefit, not because of any translation problems at headquarters. She was grateful, relieved, and just the tiniest bit annoyed that she hadn’t been consulted in the matter.

  “I’ll study the codes and the floor plan later,” she told David. “Why don’t you and Adam take a break and go into the sitting room?”

  He flipped through his little notebook, frowning at the neat lists. “We’ve got a lot of work to do here.”

  “We can do it later,” Paige said firmly.

  Adam rolled his shoulders a bit, finally demonstrating a little human weariness, but seconded David’s opinion. “If Maggie’s up to it, we should go on.”

  “La…ter,” the patient croaked.

  Paige ushered the two men out and shut the door behind them. Her shoulders sagging, she leaned against it.

  “Are they always like this on the job?”

  “Doc…is.”

  “And Adam?”

  “Don’t…know. Am…finding…out.”

  Paige caught a flicker of what looked like intense, personal satisfaction in the other woman’s brown eyes. She was dying to ask how the long night had gone with the impeccable Mr. Thunder waiting on Maggie hand and foot, but she respected her privacy too much to pry.

  Levering herself away from the door, she walked over to the bed and dumped the contents of her purse onto the satin coverlet.

  “I brought some essential sickroom supplies,” she announced. “Perfumed bath oil. Meredith’s complete makeup kit. Silk panties. And your little lavender kimono, guaranteed to make the wearer feel like a million dollars and the observer loose his cool completely.”

  The private satisfaction in Maggie’s eyes went very public. She stroked the short, silky kimono with the tip of one finger and gave Paige a wicked grin.

  “You…doll!”

  By late afternoon, Maggie’s energy, Paige’s ability to concentrate and Doc’s patience were all wearing thin.

  Even Henri’s inexhaustible curiosity had petered out. He had stopped trying to listen in while they conferred, and had taken up residence in front of the armoire housing the entertainment center. A huge bowl of sweet black cherries kept him company.

  “Let’s go over the mission objectives one more time,” Doc instructed.

  “A—I pass the microdot,” Paige parroted. “B—you convince Swanset to demonstrate his digital imaging technique, and in the process insert a virus into his system.”

  “Go on.”

  “C—we leave the villa, giving him time to play with the stolen information. You activate the virus by remote signal, thus destroying his system, and that of anyone who tries to access the stolen technology.”

  Doc nodded. “Right. No heroics. No flashy stunts.”

  “No making hamburger out of Swanset’s face,” Paige added sweetly.

  “And D—” Maggie croaked, her voice almost recovered, “OMEGA sweeps in for the kill.”

  Doc rubbed the back of his neck. Compared to many of his missions, this one sounded relatively tame. Passing a subtly altered microdot and slipping an electronic time bomb into a computer wasn’t exactly the stuff of an Ian Fleming or Tom Clancy novel.

  But this technology was on the cutting edge. Right now only a handful of international military and paramilitary organizations, like police and drug-enforcement agencies, were using its awesome, high-speed video and data imaging capabilities. If an outsider with his own agenda was to tap into or divert the flow of essential security information, he could hold some of the most powerful governments in the world hostage.

  The psychological profile Claire had pieced together on Victor Swanset showed them he would be merciless with that kind of power.

  It had taken most of the night and all of this morning to sort through Swanset’s many dummy corporations and his tangled financial dealings, but OMEGA now knew that Victor Swanset himself had destroyed Albion, the studio he’d built from the ground up. Rather than see it produce what he felt were inferior films after the war, he’d anonymously reacquired large blocks of shares in both the studio itself and its major suppliers. In a ruthless move that sent shock waves through international stock markets, he’d dumped the shares and caused several major entertainment corporations to fold.

  He’d brought down two successive governments, as well, all without leaving his mountain fortress above Cannes. Since then, his financial empire had spread around the globe, until he gained controlling interests in several multinational communications-industry corporations.

  The man felt no ties, no loyalty to any country, Claire had emphasized. Nor to any other person. Only to himself. And to his art, which was now a thing of the past.

  Or was it?

  There was something missing in this picture of Victor Swanset, international financier. Something that didn’t add up. Some piece of illogic that nagged at Doc, although he couldn’t quite put his finger on it.

  In his precise, methodical way, Doc had broken everything they knew about the onetime star down to specific categories of information and tied them together in every possible combination. The trail always led back to Albion. To Swanset’s days of glory.

  And to a dead cook.

  The pieces of the puzzle didn’t fit, and Doc was not the kind of man to be satisfied until they did.

  “Let’s go over this again,” he said.

  Paige gave a small groan.

  Even Maggie sagged back on the pillows, protesting. “Doc! E…nough.”

  “We’re missing something,” he insisted.

  “Maybe we’ll see what it is if we come at it f
rom a fresh perspective later,” Adam commented quietly.

  It was a suggestion only, and Doc accepted it as such. Adam had kept in the background throughout the long afternoon, informing them that he had no intention of second-guessing his agents in the field. This was their mission. Theirs and Jezebel’s.

  The slow smile that accompanied that remark had gone a long way toward softening Paige’s attitude toward Adam Ridgeway.

  After half a day in his company, she still wasn’t quite sure she liked him. He was too controlled, too enigmatic. She couldn’t tell what he was thinking, and that made her nervous. But she could certainly understand why Maggie was attracted to him. Even after twenty-four hours without sleep, he radiated an unshakable confidence, not to mention an undiluted masculine potency.

  Paige knew that she could never handle a man like Adam Ridgeway, and she didn’t want to. She had David. All twenty or so different versions of him.

  She also had Henri, she remembered belatedly.

  “Before we adjourn this meeting,” she said, lowering her voice so that it wouldn’t carry to the sitting room, “I have another item to place on the agenda.”

  David paused in the act of gathering his notes. “What’s that?”

  “Henri.”

  Frowning, David made an automatic check of his back pocket. Satisfied that his wallet was still in place, he glanced at the red head planted in front of the TV. “What about Henri?”

  In her best David manner, Paige ticked off her short list.

  “A—he needs clothes. B—he needs shelter. And C—he needs protection. All of which OMEGA is going to provide.”

  Adam sent her a cool look. “It is?”

  “Yes,” Paige replied. “It is.”

  Chapter 14

  Henri glanced at the closed bedroom doors of Maggie’s suite, then turned to glower at Doc.

  “Me, I do not like this.”

  “So you’ve said. Several times.”

  The boy’s face settled into stubborn lines. “I should go with you to this villa in the hills. I am the guide.”

  “Not this time, Henri.”

  “Someone must watch Mademoiselle Paige while you are busy,” he insisted. “I will protect her, as I did last afternoon in the alley.”

  “I’ll take care of her.”

  Henri’s lower lip jutted out. “I do not like this.” He stuffed his hands into the pockets of his new jeans, hunched his shoulders and began to pace the sitting room. It was a measure of his agitation that he walked right past a cart laden with silver dishes without giving it more than a passing glance.

  Feeling almost as edgy as Henri, Doc glanced at Adam. Sprawled at his ease in an upholstered armchair, the director wore a thoughtful expression as he watched the boy pace. Earlier this afternoon, while Paige and Doc took Henri on an expedition to the Carlton’s exclusive gift shops to accomplish the first item on her list, Adam had set Control to working on items two and three. Claire wasn’t quite sure what the French authorities would come up with for the boy in terms of shelter and protection, but she’d promised to get back to them as soon as possible.

  Doc slid back the cuff of his white dress shirt to check his watch. What in the hell were Maggie and Paige doing in there? Swanset’s car would be here at any moment. Doc wanted to go over the contingency plan and the emergency codes with Paige one more time before they left.

  As he stared at the closed doors, Doc found himself wondering if he’d recognize the woman who would step through them. Folding his arms across his chest, he considered just how much he’d learned about this incredible, complex woman in the past few days. Far more, he guessed, than she’d learned about him.

  His sometimes timid, usually sweet, Paige was showing an inner resilience and stubborn courage that alternately irritated and amazed him.

  She was as nervous as a cat about tonight, he knew. She’d all but worn a track in the carpet with her pacing during the mission brief. Her color had fluctuated with each mention of Swanset’s name, and she’d stumbled more than once over the emergency codes. But she wasn’t about to give up on her damned adventure.

  If everything went as planned tonight, Paige would have her adventure. If not…

  Doc felt his jaw tighten as the urge rose in him to call off this part of the operation. Now, before Paige stepped through those doors. Now, while they still had room to maneuver and time to activate an alternate plan.

  In the past forty-eight hours, however, he’d learned to accept the fact that this wasn’t the fifteenth century, when a man could shut his wife away in a stone tower to keep her from harm or chain her to his bed, if he wanted to.

  Not that this Paige would have allowed him either option, in the fifteenth or the sixteenth or any other century. What was more, Doc acknowledged ruefully, he couldn’t have loved a woman who would allow it.

  Although his need to protect his mate was as natural to him as breathing, either consciously or otherwise he’d chosen one as strong as he in her own way. One who would not sit quietly on the sidelines while others acted. Despite his reservations about her involvement in this mission, Doc felt a reluctant pride and silent admiration for Paige’s determination to see it through.

  Still, he admitted, glancing at his watch once more, the idea of those chains did hold a lingering appeal as the minutes until their meeting with Swanset ticked steadily by.

  When the bedroom doors finally opened and Maggie walked into the sitting room, Doc straightened. Smiling, she gave him a thumbs-up, then stood aside.

  The woman who stepped through the double doors after her was not quite Meredith Ames and not quite Paige Lawrence, but a fascinating combination of both.

  A skilled application of Meredith’s makeup had heightened Paige’s delicate features. Shadows deepened the tint of mossy green eyes and added thickness to the sweep of her lashes. Her full lips were melon ripe and glossy and altogether too alluring for Doc’s peace of mind.

  The sophisticated Meredith had drawn the wings of her hair back from her face and pinned them up in some kind of elaborate braid, but the rest of Paige’s silky mane hung down her back in a shining curtain of pale gold.

  The gown she wore could have been designed for either woman. It was elegant, elaborate, seemingly demure and totally erotic. Doc didn’t quite understand how a long-sleeved, floor-length creation that, for once, concealed more skin than it showed could engender immediate fantasies in his mind about peeling the thing off, but this one did.

  Maybe it was the color, a deep olive green that added a glowing luster to her smooth skin. Or the fitted bodice that hugged her slender form like a glove. Or the tiny crystal beads accenting the bold trim at the neckline and waist and wrist. The beads shimmered and sparkled with each breath she took, each small movement she made, drawing Doc’s eyes like tiny beacons of light.

  Her only jewelry was a magnificent pair of drop earrings, made from the finest Swarvoski crystal. Doc had purchased them this afternoon in one of the hotel’s gift shops. Just an hour ago, the left earring had been fitted with a highly sensitive state-of-the-art wireless communications device. Paige had only to murmur the new emergency code words, and the earring would transmit them instantly to Maggie’s receiver.

  Between this miniaturized communications system and the electronic tracking device implanted under her skin, Paige wouldn’t be out of contact for a moment. The knowledge should have reassured Doc, should have eased his knife-edged concern for her safety. But despite her dramatic appearance, this was Paige. His Paige. The small smile she’d plastered on her lips didn’t disguise her nervousness. Not from him.

  Fear was a healthy emotion for any field operative, Doc reminded himself as he walked across the room. It kept agents alert. Kept their senses tuned to the least fluctuation in the environment, the hidden nuances in a target’s voice or behavior. Anyone who didn’t experience fear was a fool.

  Doc just didn’t like seeing that particular emotion in Paige’s eyes. He stopped in front of her and reach
ed up to brush back a wispy tendril of hair with one knuckle.

  “You take my breath away.”

  His quiet, confident tone seemed to reassure her far more than the compliment. Her shoulders relaxed a bit, and her mouth curved into a smile.

  “You’re having a very similar effect on my respiratory system.”

  In fact, Paige thought she’d never seen David look quite so devastating. It wasn’t so much the crisp white dress shirt, or the stunning black tux that molded his wide shoulders. It was his assured air, his absolute mastery of the tension she knew must be gripping him as it was her. Paige could only marvel at the iron control she’d once resented and now drew strength from.

  “You’ve got the microdot?” Maggie croaked from behind her.

  “Yes, in my purse.”

  “And the mascara?”

  Paige paled a little, but nodded. “Yes.”

  “Pah!” Henri snorted, coming across the room. “That toy! Here, Mademoiselle Paige. Take this.”

  Paige stared at the worn black knife handle resting on his upturned palm. She knew the deadly blade enclosed by that handle, and didn’t want any part of it. But she also knew what it meant for Henri to offer the one possession he valued.

  The knife was the only object he’d insisted on keeping after their excursion to the hotel shops this afternoon. He’d gleefully tossed everything else—his ratty sweater, the well-worn shorts, even his sandals and scruffy underwear—into the wastebasket. After a bath and a grooming session supervised by David, the boy had sauntered into the sitting room clothed in new Adidas, designer jeans, a jaunty blue-and-red-striped polo shirt with the Carlton’s distinctive crest on the pocket, and a broad grin.

  There wasn’t any sign of the grin now, and his brown eyes carried a grim knowledge that made Paige’s heart ache.

  “You press the side of the handle, like so,” he said with deadly seriousness. The blade slid out with a soft click. “Hold the knife low, mademoiselle, and go for the gut, like so.”

 

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