Double Dealing: A Menage Romance(70)
I meant every word.
Chapter 34
Francois
The day should have been wonderful. I was back in Paris with Charani, Syeira, and, of course, my soon to be wife, Jordan. We’d come back to handle the passing over of some of the bank accounts to my signature, but of course I was mostly happy to be back in the City of Lights. Our home in Albania is one thing, and we would go there soon, but Paris . . . Paris is special.
I should have been happy, but instead, I was put off. There was something in the way that Jordan and Syeira were acting that concerned me. It had started a week before, but now that we were in Paris, it seemed stronger than ever.
It started with just the occasional look, a look in Jordan's eyes as we would talk, or when I would come home after doing work for my new position as King of our tribe. It was a look I'd never seen before, one of questioning me. It was different than any other expression she'd given me before. When Felix and I had first kidnapped her, she had looked on me with wariness, but not outright distrust. Then, later on, she looked at me with eyes filled with desire, then love. When Felix had 'died,' her eyes were filled with sadness. But now . . . now she didn't trust me, even though she loved me. And I didn't know why.
These thoughts whirled through my mind as I sat in the offices of La Banque Postale, waiting for the accounts manager to come back from his verifications. I was dressed in my finest suit, my hair slicked back and styled in the latest French fashion, a day's worth of stubble on my face. All in all, I looked like a successful French businessman and not a Romani thief. The fools.
The account manager came back, holding in his hand the thick envelope I'd been hoping for. “Monsieur Hardy, thank you for waiting,” he said to me in French as he sat down. “I apologize for taking so long.”
“It is not a problem,” I said, waving it off. “I understand that this sort of situation doesn’t arise very often.”
“To say the least,” the accounts manager said. “However, your forms are correct, and we have added you to all the accounts you requested. Please note, this does not take your brother off of the accounts, but merely adds you as a signatory, so if either of you wish for the accounts to be closed, or to take out a loan against the account, you must have both signatures. Also, please, next time you speak to your brother, remind him that before he goes on a year long sabbatical in Indonesia, to come to the bank and get the accounts handed over properly first.”
“Of course, although from what I understand it'll be a month before he gets my next letter,” I said with a chuckle. “In the meantime, will I be able to access the accounts online and such?”
“Of course, Monsieur. We can set up your own profile and password right now, in fact.”
I nodded gratefully. “Thank you.”
After I left the bank, I decided to walk back to the barge instead of taking a taxi or the bus. Strolling along, I tried to think of what could’ve caused Jordan to stop trusting me. It couldn’t just be intuition. I don’t know if it was guilt getting the better of me, but it seemed like she knew that I sold Felix out.
Maybe I said something in my sleep? I knew I tended to mumble when I slept, it was a bad habit that had caused Felix and I to have separate bedrooms when we were children after he’d complained for three nights in a row after we'd stayed up late to watch Dawn of the Dead together. Even Charani said that I would often talk out loud, in a voice loud enough that it sounded like I was holding a normal conversation.
I wasn't sure, but it racked my mind as I walked. Of course, Syeira being suspicious of me was something that I could have expected. After all, I walked away unscathed while her son had supposedly perished. Looking back, I should have at least given myself some superficial cuts or something to show that I'd been hit by something, but I thought my story of ducking bullets had been enough. I wasn't going to shoot myself in the arm just for a cover story. Still, I winced as my shirt rubbed over the still tender flesh of the scars on my back, and chuckled. Perhaps not totally unscathed, but the fresh X-shaped scars proved who I was now.
Finding a little cafe, I took a seat, careful in leaning back. My scars were tender, but once I found a stable position, they tended not to pain me too much. I'd be able to go back to exercising soon, which I hoped for. Of course, in the week after the memorial service, Jordan and I made love many times, which is a workout in and of itself, but I wanted to get back into real shape to prove to myself and to the whole world that just because one of the Hardy brothers was now no longer around, the world's antiquities and fine art still wasn’t safe. It was a given that the target would be easier and less ambitious than the Quran that had been Felix's downfall, but there had to be something that would attract the right sorts of attention. Now was my time to shine.
The waitress, a pretty little thing with a tiny waist that looked just about large enough to not get blown away in a stiff breeze, came over and took my order, an espresso and croissant. While I waited for my order, I took out my iPhone and opened the web browser, looking for new displays of items that I personally liked to steal. It was Felix and Father who liked fine art, I was more into the antiquities area. What good is having the Mona Lisa, anyway? It's just a painting on a wall. And I had plenty of pictures on the wall to look at.
Not that I'd turn down stealing fine art, of course. If the prize was good enough, I'd go after nearly anything I thought I could pull off. I knew that Charani wanted me to retire from being a thief, and thought that my taking the position of King would have made me too busy, but I was still a young man, not ready to settle down. Three or four more years, the right heists, and then I'd be ready to start a family with Jordan. We weren’t exactly taking precautions against having a baby, but we weren’t trying either. And if fate moved differently for me, so be it.