A new attitude boosted me out of bed the next day. Empowered, and wearing my black pencil skirt and red button-up shirt with a stiffly ironed collar, I arrived at work twenty minutes early.
Mackenzie’s executive assistant called shortly after eight o’clock. “Hello, Ms. Robert. Mr. Mackenzie will meet with you today to discuss a contract. Be at Alinea at four o’clock sharp.” “Alinea?”“Will you need a car to pick you up from work?”“I’ll manage to get there on time. Thank you, Miss —?”“Mrs. Hellenberg. I’ll tell Mr. Mackenzie that you’ll be there. Have a good day.” Now I had work to do. After Dad moved us to Normal, Illinois, he had kept in touch with Jeff Lohmann, our friend at CPD Violent Crimes Division. Jeff’s children were about the same ages as my brothers and me, so we’d gone on fishing trips and shared vacations together. They were my second family, but lately I felt closer to Jeff than my father. For one thing, he lived nearby.A few years earlier, when Jeff’s daughter Paula got into trouble, I did my best to help her through it. She had been drawn into her boyfriend’s world of drugs and users. Her wakeup call had been getting pregnant. Paula couldn’t go to her mother, a devout Catholic who would have been devastated by her daughter’s choices, so Paula called me. I offered to let her stay with me and my roommate, Roman, until she could get her life back together. We helped her split from her loser boyfriend and went with her to an abortion clinic. She eventually signed up for classes at a local university. Now, three years later, Paula worked as the court reporter at the Cook County Criminal Courthouse. I needed a favor. I wanted to find out more information about Leung Yang’s murder. As a lead homicide investigator, and the department’s face on the news, Jeff wasn’t a corrupt detective like some in the CPD, so I wasn’t sure he’d be willing to help me. He might even reprimand me. But I had to try. Happy to hear from me, he answered cheerfully, “Hello, Wil! I saw your interview on the news the other night. Peterson was acquitted, huh?” Though simple, his question arose from his broad knowledge of criminals. I was sure he knew the man was guilty as hell. “Yep,” I responded.His silence before continuing confirmed it. “That must not have been an easy case for you considering the social consequences. You’re the queen of the courtroom, aren’t you?”“I know how to win,” I explained.“Can I take you out for a beer or something?”“I’d like that,” I answered. After a thoughtful beat of silence, I said, “Jeff, I need a favor.”“Anything, Wil.” “On the news this morning, you made a statement about Leung Yang’s murder. I’m looking for information about her case.” “Thena.” The way he said my name reminded me of my dad. Like my father, Jeff addressed me by my full name whenever I was in trouble. “I’m working for Richard Mackenzie. Has he been questioned?” “You’re his lawyer?”“We’re signing a contract today. That’s why I called. I’m trying to get a heads-up and need to know if he’s been charged with anything. The guy is very rich and powerful. What could he possibly gain by doing this?”“I don’t know. But murder isn’t always about . . . gain.”“Is he a suspect?”“Not yet, but he’s my primary person of interest.”“Simply because she worked for him?”Jeff was silent for a beat. “Her body was found in a dumpster near her apartment, Wil. She looked like she was dressed for a sexy date but bound with duct tape and discarded like garbage. Mackenzie told us that two weeks ago they had flown home from a business trip and gone their separate ways. It was the last time she was seen alive. I’m not so sure of that timeline. From the looks of it—and forensics will confirm—she was alive until the end.”“Kidnapped.”“We think so. We’re waiting for the autopsy report. It appears that drugs were involved. We think she overdosed.”“Did anyone search her apartment?”“Yes. There’s no evidence of a struggle. She made it home after the flight, her suitcase was still packed. Her brother Kanji has told us all about Mackenzie and his sister,” Jeff said. “I’m leaning toward Mackenzie as my primary.”I jotted that down. “Her brother lives in Chicago, too?”“He worked for Prevail Pharmaceutical Software.” Jeff took a pause before saying, “I don’t trust Mackenzie, Wil. Are you sure you have to take this case?”I admitted, “I don’t want another case like—”“Christ! That Peterson is a—” “Don’t say it, Jeff.” I didn’t need confirmation of what that coldhearted man was. “You didn’t tell Dad about it, did you?” I didn’t want my dad to know what was at stake in that courtroom. He strove for perfection. He couldn’t know how hard it had been for me. The verdict would kill him. His job had been to put criminals away, and I was setting them free. “He wouldn’t care. He loves you.” I looked at the ceiling to conceal the wave of emotion. I hadn’t talked to Dad since the Peterson trial began.“I won’t say anything to your old man.”“I appreciate that.”“If it’s any consolation, I told him you’re doing well. I told him you miss him.”Emotion tightened my throat. I was thankful when Jeff changed the subject. He lowered his voice to a whisper. “All I know is, the last three calls on Yang’s cell were made late at night to Mackenzie’s private number. I don’t know the scope of their relationship, but I believe they were more than friends.”“So. That doesn’t make him a killer. What other angle are you taking?”“Her whole life was devoted to PPS and to Mackenzie. I’m not sure there is another angle.” Through the phone I heard people talking in the background. Jeff said, “You said you haven’t signed a contract with him yet.” “This afternoon.”“Don’t do it, Wil.”I rolled my eyes. “Geez, you’re just like my dad. I’m a big girl now.”“I know, but—” he said. “—I don’t want you to get hurt.” I thought about the first meeting with Mackenzie and remembered his intense blue eyes. His handshake. His touch. “I’ll be fine. I’m a black belt. If he tries anything, I’ll throw him to the ground so fast, his head sill spin.”“I’m serious. Can’t someone else take the case?”“I couldn’t turn it down if I wanted to.” And I couldn’t afford my condo if I didn’t take his case. “Besides,” I said, “Mackenzie wants me.”“Of course he does. You’re the best. Look what you did for the Sen—” “So, about that beer. . . .” I said. “How about later this week?” “Yes. I’ll call you,” I said and hung up.It was nice to know someone cared. Even if I couldn’t follow Jeff’s advice, I took it to heart. I respected his opinion, yet there was nothing I could do to refuse the case. Dorman had put the pressure on. And on some intuitive level, I realized, I wanted to represent Mackenzie. I spent the rest of the afternoon preparing an Elements of Engagement contract.Never again would I be late to a meeting with Mr. Mackenzie. At three twenty-five, I threw on my khaki trench coat, then grabbed my briefcase. As I went down to the street to catch a cab, it had just begun to rain. In the time it took to flag down a taxi, the downpour had soaked my hair.
Once inside the cab, I looked up Alinea on my cell phone. With a top-ten, Michelin three-star rating, it was also one of the priciest restaurants in the Chicago downtown area. Alinea was a strange place for meeting with your lawyer. I tried to smooth out my wet hair when I arrived at precisely at three fifty-three. “Ms. Robert?” The tall, slender host dressed better than most of the lawyers I worked with. “Yes.” “Mr. Mackenzie is waiting for you.” He took my wet coat to a nearby closet and hung it up while I brushed droplets of water off my briefcase. “This way, please,” he instructed. The restaurant’s pale walls were decorated with monochromatic modern artwork. Tables topped with black marble were elegantly set with square white plates. Not a soul sat at a table in the low-lit dining room. Modern music—something between meditative spa and computerized pop—played on the sound system. We turned the corner to a more private dining area where Mr. Mackenzie sat with his back to the wall. As we approached, the most desirable bachelor in Chicago stood to greet me. “Ms. Robert. Thank you for being on time. Please sit down.” He had loosened his tie and unbuttoned the top button of his dark blue shirt. The host pulled out a chair for me. “I’ve taken the liberty of ordering you a glass of white wine,” Huen said, motioning to a waiter who stood patiently against a far wall. Do I look like I need a drink? If he’s really a killer I might need one afterward.An empty bottle of Perrier sat beside his half-empty glass with a lime wedge floating in the clear, icy liquid. I wondered if happy hour had already begun for him. “Thank you, Mr. Mackenzie, but I don’t mix business and alcohol.” “You’ll like this wine, Ms. Robert,” he said with surety. He dipped his chin to look up at me.The sommelier set a tall wine glass in front of me. Making a show of elegance, he presented a bottle to Mr. Mackenzie, who nodded approval. With a nice little pop and a flourish, the sommelier uncorked the bottle, then filled my glass with golden liquid. After his fancy presentation, I asked for a glass of water and slid my tablet out of my briefcase.“On to business then,” Mackenzie said with the slightest glimmer in his eye.“Before we start, I’d like to explain something about our lawyer-client relationship. I’m talking about boundaries, Mr. Mackenzie.”“All right.” His eyes were the color of the ocean before a storm. I tried not to look directly at them. “The first thing you’ll need to know about me is that I don’t mix business and pleasure. In the past I’ve found it necessary to get that out in the open right away,” I said. “I can see why, Ms. Robert. Any man in his right mind would want to . . . date you.” “I hear the same is true about the most eligible bachelor, Mr. Mackenzie.” “Touché.” I turned on my tablet and said, “You told me the police questioned you. And you are a person of interest in the case, not a suspect.”“Yes,” Mackenzie replied without emotion.“At the time you were questioned, did you know you were a person of interest?”“I wanted to help. Leung had been missing for more than a week. It’s important to me to take care of my employees. I went in to offer assistance.” With cold professionalism, I said, “The next time you speak to the police, make sure you have a lawyer with you.” “That’s why you’re here.” No wonder Jeff wanted me to stay away from this case. Fanatics—sociopathic killers—frequently insert themselves into the investigation. I couldn’t read his emotions, so hoped to provoke a reaction. “How did that go for you?”He narrowed his eyes. “I think we both know how that went, and that’s why you’re here.”“She was your personal assistant, but I want more details. I want to know everything.” “I knew I could count on you, Ms. Robert.” “Okay, tell me about the cell phone calls.” “Phone calls?” “The CPD found her phone. Her calls to you were the last ones she ever made.”“I can’t imagine why she called me,” he responded. “She left no messages. By the time I returned her calls the next day, she hadn’t come in for work.”“I assume that you were more than friends.” I took notes as he spoke.Unfazed by my implication, he said, “She was not my friend. She was my assistant. She worked for me.” “So, you didn’t have a relationship outside the office with her?” I asked.“She wasn’t my type.”“Did you see her on the night she went missing?”He picked up his glass and jiggled the ice. “You know I did. Look, I’m not on trial here.” I explained, “I’m still determining if I want to be your lawyer, Mr. Mackenzie.”He looked over the rim of the glass at me. “I need you, Ms. Robert. You will represent me.”I ignored his egotism. “I expect you to be frank with me. If I’m going to work for you, I need to know the details.” Mackenzie leaned forward and placed his elbows on the table. The intense look on his face was serious. Deadly. “I’m not a subtle man. I’ll give you anything you want.” I sat back and tilted my head to the right. “I again advise you not to speak to the police without your lawyer present.”He nodded.“If they call you in for questioning, contact me,” I said.“Excellent. That’s exactly what I want. I knew you were the one.”I shook off an uneasy feeling. “I’ve written up an Elements of Engagement contract, so we can get started.”“I expected as much.”“The Elements contract describes the scope of my representation and how we shall proceed. It describes the cost of my services and how the expenses shall be allocated.” I placed the tablet with the document in front of him. “Why don’t you begin reading?” He took his time—seeming to pay close attention to details—with his focus on the tablet. He lacked the typical end-of-day stubble and had probably shaved before this meeting. Despite the fact that we were worlds apart, I liked him. In different circumstances, he could be a man I’d like to get to know better. While he read, I raised an unwritten issue. “How did you get my unlisted number?”The question broke his concentration, and he looked up at me.I said, “I don’t take business calls on my cell unless it’s urgent. I don’t want you to use that number—the one you called—again.” “I’ll file it along with your no-dating clause.” A thin grin graced his lips.Unsure if he was joking, I said, “I’ll send a copy of the contract to your office. You have forty-eight hours to sign.”“Elements of Engagement,” he said and reached out to shake my hand. “I look forward to doing business with you.” When we touched, I couldn’t help noticing how soft his strong hands were. I pulled my hand away and spoke quickly. “Is there anything you’d like to add to the contract or have removed? I’m open to any suggestions, though that doesn’t mean I’ll agree to them.” “What will you agree to?” He was hinting at something else. Something sexual? I peered at him through narrowed eyes.He met my gaze with good humor and simultaneously, we grinned. He said, “Your fees are not a problem. I’ll have the retainer sent to your office first thing in the morning.” He pushed the tablet toward me, and when I reached for it, my fingers brushed his again. He allowed the touch to linger. Though heat rose to my cheeks, this time I didn’t want to pull away. He must have seen the rosy color on my face. “Relax. The business meeting is over.”Closing my briefcase, I took the deepest breath of the day, as if he had just given me permission. Every fiber of my being loosened, and even the tension in my shoulders and neck muscles let go. I sipped the wine. “This is refreshing.”“It’s a Chenin Blanc from South Africa.” “Do you know a lot about wine?” I wasn’t an oenophile. Box wines and ten-dollar brands were, at best, my specialty.“I know enough.” Mackenzie sipped his Perrier.When the waiter brought a square white plate to the table with something that looked more like an artistic rendering than food, I asked to be excused. As I crossed the room, I noticed the two large men who had been guarding the door at our first meeting. The blond one sat at the bar and eyed me as I walked quickly by. In the bathroom, I stared into the mirror. My hair, a wavy mess from the rain, made me look wild and uninhibited. It wasn’t the impression I wanted to give to my client. I fixed my hair the best I could without a brush and dabbed on lip gloss. Then I closed my eyes and let my shoulders fall.Several minutes later, I sat back down at the table. He asked, “What do they call you, Ms. Robert? Thena is cumbersome. Is it Thena for short?”Reluctant to tell him my nickname, I said, “No.” “What do they call you?” With his fingers, he took a piece of something that looked like sushi from the plate. A flower and some delicate herbs sat on top of the mouthful. He popped it neatly between his parted lips.I stared at him. At those gray-blue eyes and soft lips. And I gave in and answered, “Wil. They call me Wil.” Then I took another swallow of wine. Mr. Mackenzie lifted the bottle from the tableside wine cooler and refilled my glass. “Why not Thena?”“I don’t know.” I looked down at the table. “It’s always been Wil. I grew up in a house full of boys—” “I like Thena better.” Though he must have been joking, he wasn’t smiling. I sat back. “No one calls me that.”Disregarding my statement, he said, “Thena Murray married Jonathan Harker and was seduced by the dark side.” He smiled ever so slightly.“Seduced by Dracula, you mean.” I knew my vampire lore. “Yes.” He sipped his drink without taking his eyes off me, as if he were Jonathan and I were Thena, lovers who endured incredible horrors and stood the test of time. “Dracula was a killer.”“Perhaps.”“Are you?”“I’ll let you decide, Thena.”Richard had initially called me the night before he became a person of interest in Leung Yang’s murder. Though I followed the news, only the method of her death had been gleaned by investigators. Leung overdosed on fentanyl—China Girl was the street term—shortly before she was found. Before that, she’d been missing for two weeks. All leads to the timeline between her disappearance and the discovery of her body were dead ends. Even after I did my research I couldn’t find anything to incriminate my client. I wondered if Mackenzie would hire an investigator. He certainly had the money for it.Friday night crept up on me like a stalker. When I looked at the clock and realized that almost everyone at the office had gone already, I packed up my weekend homework and left for the private gym. I bought my pricy membership last year during the trial of another sexual predator. Though I loved the size of the pool at the YMCA, this quieter gym had additional security. And now as always, I needed m
Mackenzie had gone through all the correct channels and returned the signed Engagement contract. After he wired the retainer fee in the full amount to the firm, Domie stopped by my office and offered his congratulations. He wore an ear-to-ear grin. “Look at you! Talk of the town!” I grimaced, not in the mood for his praise.“God, what I would give for a client like him!” “Domie, you don’t know what you’re saying.”“So? You’re famous now, Wil. This case is all over the news.” “If I could, I would give it all to you.” Especially, I thought, the guilt.“Want to join me for lunch?” Domie leaned on the frame of my office door. With his arms and feet crossed, he appeared to be posing for a photo.I desired to be alone, but I was hungry, and the idea of a stale sandwich from the vendor cart didn’t appeal. “Are you ready to go?” I asked with less civility than I intended.“Let me grab my phone.”Perry watched us, overly interested in our conversation. She had been spending an inordinate amo
Monday morning news reports filled my TV screen. Claire Russo spoke of the latest happenings in the Middle East while an alert scrolled across the bottom. Investigators were trying to link J. T. Mackenzie to Leung Yang’s murder. With the company’s CEO becoming a possible suspect in her murder, PPS stocks were declining, the newsfeed said. I took my usual route to work on the Robert Line. I owned a car, but it had been parked in the underground lot beneath my building for four months. I hadn’t secured a parking permit yet, and that was next on my to-do-list. The car was coated with a layer of grime. It needed a carwash. For now, riding the el to work seemed like less hassle. Once seated, a woman twice my size spilled into the seat next to me. Leaning my shoulder against the window, I called Bolman Underwood of Underwood Investigations. He had worked for me before, and though high strung, he was well connected and worked quickly and efficiently. “What can I do for you, Wil?”“Hi, Bolm
The morning of Fourth of July, my friends Roman and Jen and I went shopping on Michigan Ave. We meandered between dress racks and I dragged my fingers across a shirt here, a pair of slacks there. Unless I liked the feel of it I wouldn’t pull any garment off the rack. “How do you deal with it, Wil?” Jen referred to the media attention my job had lately gotten. Jen was a nurse in the pulmonary wing at Rush Hospital. She lived in the same building where Roman and I lived as roommates and that was how we’d gotten to know her. “I guess I ignore it.”“She compartmentalizes, like a serial killer.” Roman brushed past me with her eye on the upper racks. Roman and I had known each other longer. We met in college and our sisterly relationship had only grown stronger over the years.“Thanks!” I said sarcastically.“Teasing!” she retorted.Jen brushed her bangs to the side revealing a creased brow. She seemed broody. “All that attention would bother me. I’d never go out.” Very private, Jen hardl
Richard dismissed the cook and waitstaff after the fireworks display over the lake. Darren and Maddie left because she was tired, and the baby was kicking. Shortly after that, Jack and Whitney returned to their hotel room. With a glass of Chardonnay in my hand, I followed Richard to the patio. Lake Michigan’s dark edge was clearly delineated by twinkling lights along the waterfront. The boats’ red, white, and green running lights accented the abysmal dark farther away, like stars on the night water. I stood at the balcony rail overlooking the curved shore of Lake Michigan. On the table behind me, the flames of several pillar candles flickered.His voice was low. “Do you like the view?” he asked, gazing down at me. His black hair glistened in the candlelight.I took a deep breath. “It’s magnificent.” “I need to discuss the case with you. Mrs. Hellenberg texted me about an hour ago. Leung’s body was released to her family.” I returned my gaze to the black expanse of Lake Michigan. “
Early the next day, Jeff called me. I was to meet him with my client at the Chicago Violent Crimes Division. Jeff had come across the same emails that Richard spoke of. They had been cc’d to Leung.Chicago VCD was raucous with activity. In the hallway, two officers dragged a thin, handcuffed man who shouted about his rights. Richard and I passed a dozen or so tables cluttered with stacks of paper and coffee cups on our way to Jeff’s office. Detectives and officers hustled about. At one desk, a couple held hands and tears streamed down their faces as a detective solemnly read from a sheet of yellow paper. In the center of the maelstrom, a hysterical woman held her young son by the shoulders as she yelled something about statutory rape. To the right, a bored detective questioned three men who were more interested in a group of scantily clad women. Half-starved prostitutes with too much makeup on their young faces couldn’t care less. Jeff waved from across the busy room and met us halfw
In the days that followed, I worked on another client’s case. Though Jeff hadn’t called, I figured they were working hard at finding Leung’s killer. In the meantime, I looked for news of Leung’s funeral on the internet before turning to YouTube. There, I was lucky to find postings from Kanji Yang. In grief, he made announcements for the family and shared the family’s gratitude for the love and support from friends. While researching this, my phone rang.Richard sounded irritated. Unnerved. “Thena, early this the morning, around two AM, I got a call from an old girlfriend, Valerie Schakowsky. It was too much like Leung’s call the night before she was abducted. I’m afraid someone has taken Valerie too. I need to discuss this with you.” The news hit me like a cold splash of water. “Did you talk to Valerie? What makes you think she’s been abducted?”“Valerie sounded strange. Not like I expected. She was drugged, slurring her words. It’s not like her to get drunk, but I couldn’t understa
Live rock music drowned my voice. I leaned closer to my friends and spoke loudly over the small square table, “He’s better looking in person than any photos. His stormy-blue eyes have this quiet intensity. He always seems to be considering what you say. Like it’s the most important thing in the world.” Jen’s jaw hung loosely. She seemed mesmerized by my description of Richard. Steph’s pale blue eyes were riveted on me while I talked about Richard. She plowed the fingers of her right hand through shoulder-length blond hair. Roman had her eyes on the guitar player who was also the lead singer of the band.“He works out, too,” I told them. “So he has really great shoulders.”Roman nodded. “Okay, now we know she’s slept with him,” she said to Jen and Steph.Steph didn’t get it. “How do we know that?”“I haven’t slept with him!” Truth was in the wording. A lawyer’s tactic for sure. I hadn’t, technically slept with anyone. Jen shook her head at Roman. Roman asked, “Why not?” Steph said,
The bed was still warm where Richard’s body had lain, but my lover was gone. In bare feet, I padded to the kitchen and found a pile of torn paper on the counter. Our dominant/submissive contract, in pieces. Beside it, a bright pink sticky-note—a love-note with his handwriting—stuck to the black granite counter. As a submissive, you have all the control. Love, Richard.He’d told me that before, and I never grasped the meaning. Yet when I thought of our relationship as a whole, I realized Richard gave me everything I ever needed. He gave me punishment when I asked for it. He gave me space when I—like a child having a temper tantrum—walked away from him. Through it all, he had been there for me in every way I needed. He loved me. And I loved him. Where do we go from here?I pulled up his number on my cell phone and dialed. The call went to voicemail, but I left a message. “Hey. Thanks for stopping by last night.” I didn’t know what to say. “I . . . uh, I wanted to see if you’ll go on a
Natasha sat on the bed and leveled the rifle at me while I got a pair of jeans and a shirt out of my suitcase. He ripped them from my hand and threw them into the closet. “Where is the dress I sent to you? The one you wore at the fundraiser.”I snarled, “I threw it in the trash.” “A shame. Find something else. Something nice!”I held up a sleeveless black dress and he seemed satisfied. I dressed behind the closed bathroom door then put on a pair of black high heels.Natasha’s beady eyes followed me like a coyote seeking fresh prey. “Where is your diamond collar?”I’d left it here the last time I returned to Chicago. The black velvet box sat on top of the dresser still. Natasha saw where my gaze landed and prodded me with the rifle. “Wear it.” I clipped the necklace around my throat as Natasha came to my side to examine the jeweled collar. My shoulder. My hair. His touch sickened me. He clasped his hand around my throat and squeezed. “He marked you with this. He thinks he owns you.
He said he’d be there for me when I returned. Since the weekend trip was short, I packed a small bag that included a bathing suit, change of clothes and one sheath dress for dinner the night before my dive. On the late-night two-hour flight from Chicago to Burlington, Vermont, I perused Google’s list of top sights near Lake Champlain. I’d never before been to South Burlington, where American history and museums abounded. My finger hovered over the link to the Church Street Marketplace—an outdoor shopping mall that stretched four blocks. It brought to mind the horrific day Roman was kidnapped. I shut my laptop and lay my head back on the headrest. I envied the woman sleeping across the aisle from me. Her deep breathing sounded peaceful. That kind of contentment felt out of my reach.At seven-thirty last night, Greg had driven me to The Office Bar, where I met with Charlie Reid for a much needed pep-talk. She walked me through a plan to help Bohdi Michaels avoid the twenty-year priso
I spent a week in Chicago, visiting Roman and diving into work. I avoided Richard because I needed time to think things through. Richard said he loved me. He’d done everything in his power to help find Roman. Then he donated the one million dollars to the battered women’s shelter.I needed to go to him. I needed to see if he could give me what I wanted.I stepped into the dimly lit Lake Forest house with my agenda at the forefront of my mind. With the FBI team gone, an unusual sense of quiet had settled over the house. Security guards hung around quietly minding their own business, yet ever watchful.The scar on my leg ached. I dropped my things in the bedroom and went to the one place where my dark fantasy could be realized. Where the security guards would not be. The dungeon. In the basement, I pushed open the unlocked door to Richard’s playroom. As if he’d been expecting me, red nightlights on two walls cast long shadows of the X-rack and a coffin-sized cage. My eyes adjusted, an
A heavy-set man in a black suit opened the tall glass doors of Red Lace Escort Service for us. I recognized him as the man who—weeks earlier—handed me the titanium business card with Bohdi’s number. He pulled back his jacket and showed us his pistol. I followed Richard into the brightly lit office, where two other thugs were waiting. One stood near the office door with his automatic rifle in hand. One had been reclining on the fuchsia loveseat and when we walked in he sat up at attention, pointing his Uzi our way. I had left my Browning with Greg. Curbelo had outfitted us both with bullet-proof vests. The heavy armor made my breathing shallow. I wore the micro-transmitter—a necklace that looked like a tear-drop pendant—because Curbelo was afraid Richard would be frisked.“Ms. Robert,” the heavy man said. “’Dis way.” He pointed to the hall that lead to Angelique’s office but didn’t follow us. I understood now that the organization wanted me to represent Bohdi because they didn’t think
Fy scorched me inside. If Richard knew something about Roman’s disappearance, he’d have hell to pay. Once we arrived at Lake Forest, I flew around the house looking for him. He wasn’t in the kitchen, nor was Grant. The empty black leather desk chair in his office faced the window as if watching for someone to return.Two at a time, I leapt up the stairs and opened the Kendo room door—hushed quiet. I exited quickly. Down the hall to my left, Richard’s stark bedroom. I swung the door wide and let it crash into the wall behind it. Benjamin Kyle stared back at me.“Richard?” I called.No answer. Frustrated and angry, I backed out of the room and right into Jonathan’s arms.“Thena. I—”“What the hell, Richard?” I backed away from him and faced him head on. “This is your fault!” I was furious. I was frightened. I was losing control.“I’m so sorry.” Richard didn’t say a word in his defense. He looked me in the eye. “I’m calling FBI Agent Curbelo now. We need to inform her.” Richard already h
I removed my suit jacket before climbing into the air-conditioned Mercedes. Disheartened, I sank into the leather seat and looked at my phone. I called Bohdi Michaels, and he picked up on the second ring.“Ms. Robert?”“I have a question for you.”Greg slid into the driver’s seat and started to put the car in gear. I held up my hand, asking him to wait till I finished. “Go ahead,” Michaels said.“I’ve just visited your psychiatrist—”“Oh, Jesus!”“—I need him as a character witness. So I asked him a few questions.” Bohdi’s reaction made me think he’d really opened up to his doctor. I suddenly worried what might be exposed if I put him on the stand.“Why him?”“Because Dr. Beaman is a respected professional who knows you well. Trust me, it’s a good call.”“Okay,” he softened. “I trust you.”“Slater would need a court order to have your records released. And I can see no reason your medical information would be necessary for this court hearing. But that doesn’t mean Slater won’t call f
Sticky sweat glued our bodies together. Satiated and basking in the incandescence, we moved slowly, unwilling to let go. I wanted to lie in his arms until Natasha’s threat and all that surrounded it disappeared. I could love Richard.When finally the source of summer heat sank beneath the horizon, I opened a window and let in a cooling breeze. Our stomachs growled. Richard and I sat up from my bed. His hand on my back. My fingers on his cheek. His lips on my shoulder. I donned panties and a t-shirt—still too hot to wear anything else. Richard slid into his slacks and hung his shirt to smooth the wrinkles. He took a call in the bathroom. When he exited wearing only his slacks, Richard said he checked in with Greg and Erik. The second shift bodyguards had arrived so they could get dinner. They would stand watch in the building lobby and the underground garage.“Let me cook for you,” he said.“I didn’t know you had the talent.”“There is much you still don’t know about me.”Truer words
The presence of the security team at Richard’s mansion reminded me of Travis King, the bodyguard who had attacked me, and how even they might be swayed to turn against us by the promise of power . . . or a deeper purse than Richard’s. They made me leery.For the rest of the day I worked in solitude on my laptop from the bedroom. Richard—busy with work and his own investigation—checked on me several times. Richard had a private team of analysts looking for ways to avoid giving Natasha the money. We discussed the limited options which included shipping me off to someplace remote and having the FBI make an arrest during the handoff. He seemed preoccupied but never too distracted to forget to kiss me or rub my shoulders. Every moment brought us closer together.I began to long for more time with him. His woodsy fragrance. His caress. It had been too long since we’d been intimate. With Bohdi Michaels’ trial weeks away, I looked deeper into terrorist groups and specifically the Russian maf