In Their Footsteps. Tess Gerritsen
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“So they hire you to keep the nasties away,” finished Jordan.
“Exactly,” said Richard. And he thought, Yes, this is Madeline and Bernard’s son, all right. He resembles Bernard, has got the same sharply observant brown eyes, the same finely wrought features. And he’s quick. He notices things—an indispensable talent.
At that moment, Jordan’s attention suddenly shifted to a new arrival. Richard turned to see who had just entered the ballroom. At his first glimpse of the woman, he stiffened in surprise.
It was that black-haired witch, dressed not in old jodhpurs and boots this time, but in a long gown of midnight blue silk. Her hair had been swept up into an elegant mass of waves. Even from this distance, he could feel the magical spell of her attraction—as did every other man in the room.
“It’s her,” murmured Richard.
“You mean you two have met?” asked Jordan.
“Quite by accident. I spooked her horse on the road. She was none too pleased about the fall.”
“You actually unhorsed her?” said Jordan in amazement. “I didn’t think it was possible.”
The woman glided into the room and swept up a glass of champagne from a tray, her progress cutting a noticeable swath through the crowd.
“She certainly knows how to fill a dress,” Richard said under his breath, marveling.
“I’ll tell her you said so,” Jordan said dryly.
“You wouldn’t.”
Laughing, Jordan set down his glass. “Come on, Wolf. Let me properly introduce you.”
As they approached her, the woman flashed Jordan a smile of greeting. Then her gaze shifted to Richard, and instantly her expression went from easy familiarity to a look of cautious speculation. Not good, thought Richard. She’s remembering how I knocked her off that horse. How I almost got her killed.
“So,” she said, civilly enough, “we meet again.”
“I hope you’ve forgiven me.”
“Never.” Then she smiled. What a smile!
Jordan said, “Darling, this is Richard Wolf.”
The woman held out her hand. Richard took it and was surprised by the firm, no-nonsense handshake she returned. As he looked into her eyes, a shock of recognition went through him. Of course. I should have seen it the very first time we met. That black hair. Those green eyes. She has to be Madeline’s daughter.
“May I introduce Beryl Tavistock,” said Jordan. “My sister.”
“SO HOW DO YOU HAPPEN to know my Uncle Hugh?” Beryl asked as she and Richard strolled down the garden path. Dusk had fallen, that soft, late dusk of summer, and the flowers had faded into shadow. Their fragrance hung in the air, the scent of sage and roses, lavender and thyme. He moves like a cat in the darkness, Beryl thought. So quiet, so unfathomable.
“We met years ago in Paris,” he said. “We lost touch for a long time. And then, a few years ago, when I set up my consulting firm, your uncle was kind enough to advise me.”
“Jordan tells me your company’s Sakaroff and Wolf.”
“Yes. We’re security consultants.”
“And is that your real job?”
“Meaning what?”
“Have you a, shall we say, unofficial job?”
He threw back his head and laughed. “You and your brother have a knack for cutting straight to the chase.”
“We’ve learned to be direct. It cuts down on the small talk.”
“Small talk is society’s lubricant.”
“No, small talk is how society avoids telling the truth.”
“And you want to hear the truth,” he said.
“Don’t we all?” She looked up at him, trying to see his eyes in the darkness, but they were only shadows in the silhouette of his face.
“The truth,” he said, “is that I really am a security consultant. I run the firm with my partner, Niki Sakaroff—”
“Niki? That wouldn’t be Nikolai Sakaroff?”
“You’ve heard the name?” he asked, in a tone that was just a trifle too innocent.
“Former KGB?”
There was a pause. “Yes, at one time,” he said evenly. “Niki may have had connections.”
“Connections? If I recall correctly, Nikolai Sakaroff was a full colonel. And now he’s your business partner?” She laughed. “Capitalism does indeed make strange bedfellows.”
They walked a few moments in silence. She asked quietly, “Do you still do business for the CIA?”
“Did I say I did?”
“It’s not a difficult conclusion to come to. I’m very discreet, by the way. The truth is safe with me.”
“Nevertheless I refuse to be interrogated.”
She looked up at him with a smile. “Even under torture, I assume?”
Through the darkness she could see his teeth gleaming in a grin. “That depends on the type of torture. If a beautiful woman nibbles on my ear, well, I might admit to anything.”
The brick path ended at the maze. For a while, they stood contemplating that leafy wall of shadow.
“Come on, let’s go in,” she said.
“Do you know the way out?”
“We’ll see.”
She led him through the opening and they were quickly swallowed up by hedge walls. In truth, she knew every turn, every blind end, and she moved through the maze with confidence. “I could do this blindfolded,” she said.
“Did you grow up at Chetwynd?”
“In between boarding schools. I came to live with Uncle Hugh when I was eight. After Mum and Dad died.”
They rustled through the last slot in the hedge and emerged into the center. In a small clearing there was a stone bench and enough moonlight to faintly see each other’s face.
“They were in the business, too,” she said, circling the grassy clearing slowly. “Or did you already know that?”
“Yes,