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House of Cards n-2

Page 16

by C. E. Murphy


  "Really. And I thought it was just a social call." Rebecca’s smile faded, leaving concern in her brown eyes. "I want you to be careful, Margrit. It’s easy to agree to things you’ll later regret when talking with Eliseo."

  Margrit laughed. "I’ve noticed that. I’ll be careful, Mom, I promise. Thanks for looking out for me."

  "It’s what mothers do." Rebecca stood, glancing toward a clock. "I don’t mean to send you away, sweetheart, but I have a meeting in a few minutes."

  "It’s okay. Thanks for seeing me." Margrit climbed to her feet and gave her mother another hug, then excused herself with a wave.

  A twenty minute cab ride brought her back to Daisani’s corporate headquarters. Margrit nodded to the security guards on her way in, and one waved her over. She cast a glance at her watch before crossing to him.

  He slid a key across the security desk. "Mr. Daisani sent this down for you after you left this morning. Said you’d be needing it. It’s for the elevator bank," he explained.

  Margrit felt her expression clear, then cloud again. "Must be nice to be that confident. Thank you." She palmed the key and nodded toward the other guard, then went to examine the elevators. A moment of fiddling opened the doors of one with a chime, and she stepped inside with a resigned sense of inevitability. Her reflection in the polished brass walls showed just that, and Margrit shook herself, putting on a better game face. When the doors slid open again, the mirrors showed a well-dressed, confident young woman stepping out of the elevator. Vanessa’s office was abandoned, though voices came from a room at the opposite end of the floor from Daisani’s office. Mouth pursed, she walked in without knocking, and Daisani stood up from a boardroom table with a smile. Half a dozen other men stood as well, less friendly than curious.

  "Margrit. Excellent, we were just about to get started. Gentlemen, this is my new assistant, Margrit Knight. She’s a top-notch lawyer, so don’t bother getting clever with your contract language. Margrit?" Daisani smiled again and gestured to a seat to his right, an obvious place of honor at the head of the table.

  Bemused, Margrit nodded, said, "Gentlemen," and sat down to riffle through the stack of file folders at her seat.

  Within seconds she wished her mother was there. Thirty years of experience in dealing with finances would have been helpful in understanding the fine details of the paperwork she’d been presented with. Margrit stuck a pen in the corner of her mouth, chewing it as she studied the contracts. Part of her wanted to giggle, more from relief than real humor. She felt as though she’d walked into a theatre performance and was expected to know her lines and stage directions without knowing the story. Knowing that Daisani was manipulating her with the situation brought a gurgle of irritation that was mostly buried by the sensation of playacting.

  Unexpectedly, her first priority was getting through the meeting without embarrassing herself or her employer: she could deal with the rest of it later. Discussion went on around her, Daisani and the others flipping through papers and arguing over points she only half listened to as she perused the files with as much concentration as she could muster.

  Down the table, one of the businessmen watched her surreptitiously, his hand palm-down on the table and held studiously still. Margrit finished skimming through a contract, seeing nothing that sent up a mental warning, and turned to the next file, whose front page was dominated by a brightly colored pie graph that made her think of board games. A muscle in her watcher’s hand jumped and he stretched his fingers again, then broke into laughter with the rest of the businessmen, the result of a half-heard self-deprecating joke Daisani made. Margrit drew out some scratch paper and tapped her pen against the pad, smiling absently when he glanced her way, then returning to the files. Eventually she heard him say her name, and looked up with a blink.

  "You’ve ignored us entirely for nearly two hours, Margrit," he repeated. "Would you care to join us now for a celebratory lunch? I think we’ve broken out the details to a sufficient degree by now."

  "I don’t think you have." Margrit shifted her papers into a different order, digging up the pie-graph file and two others, then rapping her pen on the scratch pad, where she’d left a pageful of arrows and notes. "They’re written to obscure it, and they do a good job, but these three reports and the contract riders are all moving to buy options on the same company. Different branches, which is why it’s hard to see, but this is the risky one, a media development project for a new cable station. Lot of capital needed there, and it’s shaky, which is why it looks like a good sale. But it’s got a couple of widely diversified backers, one in the corporation’s oil industry and the other in clothes manufacturing. They sweeten the pot to take on the risk of a failure with the cable station, but if I’ve got these figures right they leave the corporation with holdings that are just shy of majority numbers. It’s slick, but the legal department should have caught it. You might want to check and be sure everybody’s still on your payroll." Margrit squeezed the back of her neck. "I’d say celebrating is premature."

  Daisani curled a slow smile and stood. Everyone, including Margrit, followed suit, and Daisani opened his hands in mock apology. "Forgive me, gentlemen, but it appears there’ll be no deal today. I’ll be back in touch after a new legal team’s examined everything." Insufferably polite handshakes went around, more than one of the businessmen giving Margrit a sour look as they left the room. Daisani turned to her, eyebrows elevated. "Well?"

  She sat down again, rolling her head to loosen her neck. "The tall one down the table from me was watching everything I did. He twitched and tensed up when a couple of those reports were discussed, so I started looking for the smoking gun. You could’ve lost a lot of money."

  "Unlikely. I was aware of the contract problems, but since you arrived so precipitously I thought I would see where you took things, given your head." Daisani poured her water over a plant and brought her a new glass, ice ringing against the crystal. "These meetings are, in part, tests."

  "For me?" Margrit’s voice shot up, offense coloring it.

  "For the men I’m working with. Once in a great while someone’s honesty overtakes his avarice, or the other way around, and that tells me things I wasn’t formerly aware of. I couldn’t have made this a test for you. I didn’t know you’d be here. But it worked out nicely, didn’t it? That was very well done, Margrit, and that’s exactly why I need you. The human perspective is indispensable to me. It’s unlikely I’d have noticed the body language that tipped you off."

  "That’s flattering, but it’s hard to believe. You must pay attention to that sort of thing." Margrit’s temper settled at the realization that Daisani couldn’t have known she’d come back during his meeting.

  Delight shaped Daisani’s thin features to a sort of good looks, his smile going further to create an illusion of handsomeness. "My first impulse is to listen for the heartbeat, the taste of fear, the bodily reactions that give someone away. These men are very good at hiding those things. I know human emotion well. I’ve studied it for centuries. But even after so long, my sense for the subtler hints of high emotion is drowned beneath the sound of a beating heart. As a lawyer, you’re trained in body language as much as legalese. And you’ve just proven that you’re willing to step up to the plate, whether you want to or not. You could have turned around and walked out of here."

  "What, and lose face?" Margrit picked up her water glass and drained it, wishing the action wasn’t so obviously a distraction. "Besides, I needed to talk to you."

  "I’m at your disposal." Daisani sat down, hands folded in front of him, the picture of attentive interest. Margrit set her glass aside and studied him for a few seconds, then sighed.

  "Why didn’t you just tell me Russell was in your pocket?"

  CHAPTER 16

  Daisani went still the way it seemed only the Old Races could, all life in him stopped. A heartbeat later his eyelashes flickered, a tiny motion that in Alban would have gone unbetrayed. Fair enough; Alban couldn’t move as obscenely fa
st as the vampire could. They all had their strengths.

  Then Daisani was in action again, standing to pour another glass of water. The frozen moment was so thoroughly vanquished Margrit half wondered if she’d imagined it. "What an astounding conclusion," Daisani said. "Tell me how you came to it."

  "Oh, for-" Margrit let out an exasperated breath. "Russell got rich off insider trading from one of your companies. He had too many cases overturned on appeal when he’d been defending Janx’s men. You both use the same phrase-that somebody’s got to keep track of the details, and you’re the best man for the job."

  "It’s hardly an uncommon phrase."

  "Eliseo." Margrit recognized the same impatient tone she’d used with her mother a few hours earlier. Daisani tucked his chin in and lifted an eyebrow in surprise. "You also thought there was an obvious reason for me to come to you about Russell’s death, in wake of Janx’s peoples’ deaths. You just said human intuition was indispensable to you. This is my intuition at work."

  He wet his lips, reminding Margrit unnervingly of how she’d licked her own lips, to get the vampire’s sugary, sticky blood off them. A shudder ran through her, lifting hairs on her scalp. To her relief, Daisani ignored her reaction. "Who else have you told about this connection of dots? You’ve obviously spoken to your mother." He was at the window, leaving Margrit to blink and try to convince herself she’d actually seen him move.

  "I didn’t tell her about the Janx link. Does she know about you, Mr. Daisani?" Desperate hope drove Margrit to her feet. "Does she know you’re a-"

  "She knows I am extraordinary." Daisani spoke to the windows, his voice reverberating softly off the glass. "She was younger than you are now when we knew each other. There was an accident. Construction, one of those rare moments when something goes wrong. A cable snapped. I believe it was determined to be sabotage, in fact. I bought the offending company for an embarrassingly low price and sold it seven years ago at a two hundred forty-four percent profit."

  He fell silent and Margrit stepped forward slightly, afraid to interrupt. "We were to meet for lunch that day, she and Russell and I," he said eventually. "She was on the opposite side of the street from me, perhaps halfway up the block. I’d just gotten out of my car and she saw me and waved. I think I saw the shadow rather than the girder itself, or perhaps my subconscious comprehended faster than my thoughts could. I pulled her to safety, though I’m afraid I bruised her ribs quite badly. My strength isn’t remarkable, but the cessation of momentum…"

  He turned to offer Margrit a half smile. "I recall it quite vividly. She’s taller than I am, you know, and she wore heels, as you usually do. I remember it very clearly, the way she looked down at me. Humans so typically refuse to believe what they see. Logic dictates that I simply must have been closer than she thought, because no one can move that fast. On the rare, rare occasions when one of us is exposed in that fashion, it’s what people force themselves to think.

  "Your mother did not for one moment disbelieve her eyes. The sidewalk and steel were still ringing from the impact, and I doubted anything I said would be heard, anyway. I put my finger over my lips-" and he did, light careful motion "-and Rebecca didn’t so much as nod. She simply looked at me for what may have been the longest moments of my life, then turned away to see if anyone had been injured in the accident. No one was," he added more brightly. "The newspapers called it a miracle."

  "But why?" Margrit blurted. "Why’d you risk it?"

  Daisani arched an eyebrow. "I wanted lunch."

  An incredulous laugh slipped out. "Of course. I should’ve guessed." Margrit flattened her hands against her mouth, then sighed. "I haven’t told anyone about the link. I’m not even sure I could prove it if I did. I don’t imagine you’ve got any obvious connections to Janx." Relief mingled with regret over having not told Tony more than she had. His suspicion that she was withholding information from him would only make things more difficult between them, but she couldn’t see arguing the tenuous connection in a legal case. The two rivals were linked by an ancient feud, not modern associations. A flare of irritation arose in her and she added, "Even if you did have him get Malik to run me down."

  Daisani flashed a smile. "But not through a traceable meeting, I’m afraid. I’m glad you haven’t mentioned this to your police officer friend. It would only complicate things."

  "Do you have any idea how much it complicates my life to not tell him? What do I get out of keeping my mouth shut? Do I get to walk away from here free and clear?"

  "Is that what you want? You acquitted yourself very well earlier. I dare say you were even enjoying it."

  Margrit admitted, "I was," grudgingly. "But I still feel like Russell’s death changes everything. How many more people are going to die because of this fight you two have going on?"

  She saw a hint of amusement in Daisani’s eyes and knew she’d lost the bid to change the subject gracefully, but he responded, "I told you. I’m not responsible for Janx’s losses."

  "And you’re just going to sit back and let Russell get killed?" A needle of doubt slid into Margrit’s certainty and she forced it out again. Daisani had all but admitted her theory was correct.

  "My talents are many, but bringing people back from the dead isn’t among them. Would you have me escalate this dangerous business even further?"

  She bit back an irrational yes! as defeat sluiced through her. "No. That wouldn’t help. I’d rather have justice than revenge, but if it’s not you, who is it? Who do I go after?"

  "I believe I’ve agreed to give you the time to discover that before you begin working here full-time, Margrit." Another glint of amusement passed through Daisani’s eyes. "Am I being unreasonable?"

  "Only in so far as you’re not letting me have my own way. Things in my world have changed. It seems like things in yours ought to change, too, to accommodate me." She lifted a hand, stopping anything he might say. "And I guess you have, giving me time to follow up on this. It’s just…"

  "I do understand," Daisani said mildly. "But you don’t get to be in my position by being accommodating, I’m afraid. You offered a deal. I accepted it. You’ve cited being a turncoat to Legal Aid as your reason to welsh on our agreement now, but I suspect the real problem is that having given your word, you’re reluctant to go back on it even if you have good reasons."

  "That and there’s an actual possibility you’ll bite my head off if I refuse. That’s less of a problem in the real world."

  "You’re afraid of disappointing me."

  "Literally afraid. Not nervous or worried, but afraid. Because I don’t know which way you’ll jump." Margrit scowled at the vampire. Admitting fear seemed like a bad idea, but frustration with the situation overrode her caution, pushing her to the truth. "If you were human, I’d expect you to make it hard, maybe impossible, for me to find another job if I wanted to leave Legal Aid. But you’re not, and I don’t know what the hell you do when people disappoint you. I have a pretty good idea of what Janx does, in a mob boss kind of way, and I don’t want to risk that, either."

  "The obvious solution is to not disappoint me."

  Margrit’s scowl deepened. "Well, it doesn’t look like I’m going to, does it? Some kind of overdeveloped sense of responsibility made me step up to the plate when I walked in here today. The rest of it is just me making noise." She sighed and dropped her chin to her chest, both grumpy and relieved at the admission. "Can I ask you something?"

  "Certainly. Whether I respond or not…."

  "Yeah." Margrit looked up. "Why didn’t Janx stop shunting people to Legal Aid and hire a lawyer of his own instead? He must’ve known Russell was doing your evil bidding."

  Daisani straightened, clearly caught between offense and amusement. "My evil bidding?"

  "Come on, you were manipulating the legal system to your own ends, and I’m a lawyer. What else would I call it?"

  "Capitalism at its finest, perhaps. You’d have to ask Janx, Margrit. He rarely pays out for his men when they get in
to trouble. It keeps the connections between them more tenuous. I suppose he may have found a degree of pleasure in keeping one of my people running laps around several of his, as well, but I’m the wrong person to ask."

  Margrit sighed. "I guess so. I’m just tired of chasing all over hell’s half acre for answers." She groaned as she looked at the time. "And it’s almost four. I’ve blown most of the day. Again. When I come to work for you I want a twenty hour a week schedule if I’m going to be dealing with your esoteric factions all the time. Otherwise I’ll feel guilty at never being in the office."

  "I think I can assure you that any time spent out of the office dealing with esoteric factions will not be held against you with an eye toward a completion of more mundane tasks. You’ll be my personal assistant. We can always hire another one for you."

  "Oh, well, hell." Margrit raised her hands in acquiescence. "If I’m going to be somebody’s boss, I want my salary doubled. I’ll see you at Rockefeller Center tonight, Mr. Daisani. I’m going to go home and try to be normal for a while."

  "Cam?" Cole’s greeting came from the kitchen over the sound of food sizzling. "You’re early."

  Margrit took a deep breath of the rich peppery scent and collapsed against the door with a contented sigh. "No, it’s the other woman in your life. The dusky-skinned beauty, remember? Whatever you’re cooking smells delicious."

  "Garlic, onions and butter. A healthy evening meal." Cole appeared in the kitchen doorway, grinning. "The only dusky beauty I ever dated turned out to be just-friends material. Dating was a disaster. Like dating my sister."

  "Cole Grierson, are you telling me you’ve dated your sister?" Margrit threw her coat over a hook and toed her shoes off, padding to her bedroom. "Because I think that’s illegal even in Louisiana, and you’re from San Francisco."

 

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