9/17

30

“I’m sorry to interrupt you, m’lady, but a large box of documents has been delivered by Simpson and Simpson, and I wondered where you wished me to put it.”

Arabella put down her pen and looked up from the writing desk. “Andrews, do you remember when I was a child and you were second butler?”

“I do, m’lady,” said Andrews, sounding somewhat puzzled.

“And every Christmas we used to play a game called Hunt the Parcel?”

“We did indeed, m’lady.”

“And one Christmas you hid a box of chocolates. Victoria and I spent an entire afternoon trying to find them — but we never did.”

“Yes, m’lady. Lady Victoria accused me of eating them and burst into tears.”

“But you still refused to tell her where they were.”

“That is correct, m’lady, but I must confess your father promised me sixpence if I didn’t reveal where they were hidden.”

“Why did he do that?” asked Arabella.

“His lordship hoped to spend a peaceful Christmas afternoon, enjoying a glass of port and a leisurely cigar, happy in the knowledge that you were both fully occupied.”

“But we never found them,” said Arabella.

“And I was never paid my sixpence,” said Andrews.

“Can you still recall where you hid them?”

Andrews considered the question for a few moments, before a smile appeared on his face.

“Yes, m’lady,” he said, “and for all I know, they are still there.”

“Good, because I should like you to put the box that Simpson and Simpson have just delivered in the same place.”

“As you wish, m’lady,” said Andrews, trying to look as if he had some idea what his mistress was talking about.

“And next Christmas, Andrews, should I attempt to find them, you must be sure not to let me know where they are hidden.”

“And will I receive sixpence on this occasion, m’lady?”

“A shilling,” promised Arabella, “but only if no one else finds out where they are.”


Anna settled herself into a window seat at the back of economy. If the man Fenston had sent to track her down was on the plane, as she suspected he was, at least Anna now knew what she was up against. She began to think about him and how he’d discovered that she would be in Bucharest. How did he know her mother’s address, and was he already aware that her next stop was Tokyo?

The man she had watched from the check-in counter as he ran up to Sergei’s taxi and tapped on the window wasn’t hoping for a ride, although Sergei had clearly taken him for one. Anna wondered if it had been her phone calls to Tina that had given her away. She felt confident her close friend would never have betrayed her, so she must have become an unwitting accomplice. Leapman was well capable of tapping her phone and far worse.

Anna had purposely dropped clues in her last two conversations to find out if there was an eavesdropper, and they must have been picked up: going home and there will be a lot of people like that where I’m going. Next time she would plant a clue that would send Fenston’s man in completely the wrong direction.


Jack sat in business class sipping a Diet Coke and trying to make some sense of the past two days. If you’re out there on your own, always prepare for the worst-case scenario, his SSA used to repeat ad nauseam to each new recruit.

He tried to think logically. He was pursuing a woman who had stolen a sixty-million-dollar painting, but had she left the picture in Bucharest, or had it been transferred into the new crate, with the intention of selling the painting to someone in Hong Kong? Then he turned his thoughts to the other person who was pursuing Anna. That was easier to explain. If Petrescu had stolen the painting, the woman was clearly employed by Fenston to follow her until she found out where the picture was. But how did she always know where Anna would be, and did she now realize that he was also following her? And what were her instructions once she’d caught up with the Van Gogh? Jack felt the only way he could redeem himself was to get a step ahead of both of them and somehow stay there.

He found himself falling into a trap that he regularly warned his junior officers to be wary of. Don’t be lulled into believing that the suspect is innocent. A jury will make that decision for you. You must always assume they are guilty, and occasionally, very occasionally, be surprised. He didn’t remember his instructor saying anything about what to do if you found the suspect attractive. Although there was a directive in the FBI training manual that stated: “Under no circumstances must an agent enter into a personal relationship with any person under investigation.” In 1999 the guide had been updated following a congressional directive, when the words “male or female” had been added before “person.”

But it still puzzled Jack what Anna intended to do with the Van Gogh. If she was about to try and sell the picture in Hong Kong, where would she deposit such a huge sum of money, and how could she hope to benefit from the spoils of her crime? Jack couldn’t believe she was willing to live in Bucharest for the rest of her life.

And then he remembered that she had visited Wentworth Hall.


Krantz sat alone in first class. She always flew first class, because it allowed her to be the last on, and first off, any flight, especially when she knew exactly where her victim was traveling.

But now she was aware someone else was following Petrescu, she would have to be even more cautious. After all, she couldn’t afford to kill Petrescu with an audience watching, even if it was an audience of one.

Krantz was puzzled by who the tall, dark-haired man could be and who he was reporting back to. Had Fenston sent someone else to check up on her or was the man working for a foreign government? If so, which one? It had to be Romanian or American. He was certainly a professional because she hadn’t spotted him before, or after, his crass mistake with the yellow taxis. She assumed he must be an American. She hoped so, because if she had to kill him, that would be a bonus.

Krantz didn’t relax on the long flight to Hong Kong. Her instructor in Moscow was fond of repeating that concentration usually lapsed on the fourth day. Tomorrow.

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