Ultimate Weapon (McClouds & Friends #6)(97)
“How soon?” Ana’s eyes glittered with eagerness, and suddenly, Tam wondered about the woman’s relationship with her husband.
“Tomorrow?” Val suggested. “At four o’clock?”
Ana frowned. “Four o’clock is not good for me,” she said. “I have an appointment at five. Can you come earlier?”
“Three?” Tam offered.
“Very well. I will expect you tomorrow at three.” Ana gave her a sugary smile. “I assume you prefer cash?”
“If possible. And you might consider dismissing the domestic staff for the day,” Tam said. “So we can have privacy to speak freely.”
“I’ll see to it,” Ana assured her.
They exchanged bright, glittering f*ck-you smiles once again.
Donatella broke in. “And when can we meet to arm mine?” she demanded petulantly. “I need my jewelry armed soon.” Her voice dropped, and her eyes flicked toward Val. “I will need them, to keep a certain tall, dark, and handsome lover in his proper place. In Paris.”
Paris? What the f*ck was that about?
Tam made an appointment with the woman for the following week, but such was her feeling of unreality, she did not even note the time or date they agreed upon. The information just came out of her mouth and then floated out of her head. Who knew if the appointment would take place? She could die a horrible death by that day.
But who knew from one minute to the next when death would pounce? It was always a rude surprise. Who could have imagined that hot August morning that her family had gotten up. A morning like any other. Breakfast like any other. Laughing and teasing and squabbling.
But that had been it. The last day. The last morning. The last breakfast. Who knew?
The high-pitched, empty-headed chatter of the two women faded in her mind. The sound of hens clucking. Faraway dogs barking. The distance between herself and the rest of the world widened into a vast buffer of awful silence. She was utterly alone, sealed inside it.
Tomorrow she was going to find out once and for all if revenge could make any difference. Ghosts clustered around her: Mamma, her father, and Irina standing next to her, clutching Tam’s knee with her chubby, dimpled ghost hand. Her liquid dark eyes so uncannily like Rachel’s eyes. She’d been barely two when—
No. Not now. No fits. Not in front of Ana and Donatella.
Tam shut her eyes and saw the dirt scattering into their wide-open eyes. Her ears were starting to roar, her heart to pound.
She tried to tune into the hens clucking, dogs barking, just to grab onto something else. Focus on anything else. Anything at all.
“…so we can eat late,” Donatella was cooing into Val’s ear, in a tone Tam was not meant to overhear. “The cook at La Cantinola will be happy to cook for us, even after eleven o’clock. I’m a special client. And there’s a lovely room above La Cantinola, with a sea view…”
Listen to that. Brazen slut. Trying to coax Val into meeting her for dinner and a quickie.
Val, to his credit, was wiggling like an eel, vacillating between lavish compliments and careful excuses. But the bitch’s hands were all over him. And he was not pushing them off.
The anger helped. It made that sick, sinking feeling back off.
Good. Anger worked, so she embraced it. Bastard. Dog. Porcone.
He would pay for that, later. In blood.
The atmosphere in the car for the drive back to San Vito was subzero. Tam did not even look at him, she just stared straight ahead, radiating a bone-chilling cold with more vicious intensity than he’d ever felt from a woman. Or at least, that he’d ever bothered to notice.
“Would you tell me my crime?” he demanded finally, when they were approaching the San Vito exit.
“No crime,” she said, her voice cool, toneless. “I just can’t imagine how you actually managed to go through with it, that’s all.”
“With what?” he demanded. Although he knew.
She shot him a glance that indicated that she knew that he knew and did not appreciate his dissembling.
He sighed and offered it up. “It was some years ago. I was undercover. Investigating a smuggling ring. Her husband was involved. She was angry at him. I needed info. It was unavoidable.”
“Oh, really? I suppose you fought, tooth and claw,” she said.
“No. I did my job,” he said stiffly. “Just as you have always done.”
“Oh, so now we’re throwing whore darts, are we?”
He shook his head. “It was not particularly memorable,” he said flatly. “Nor was it altogether unpleasant. I have no burning desire to repeat the experience. It did facilitate my job.”
“Works with me, too, eh? Smooth, Val. Fucking your targets into boneless submission. What a trick.”
“Bullshit,” he spat out. “After this morning, you know that is not true.”
“How do I know that? With a man as slick and smooth and pretty as you, how could I possibly know that for sure? Gigolo Janos. So you have a date to meet her in Paris, hmm? If you want to go meet her for dinner and cunnilingus tonight at La Cantinola, please feel free.”
He pulled into the hotel parking, muttering obscenities, and grabbed her jewelry case. “Come,” he snarled. “I will walk you to the hotel, and then I must go to Salerno.” He had planned to keep her close to him, but not in this mood. They would end up killing each other.
Shannon McKenna's Books
- Standing in the Shadows (McClouds & Friends #2)
- In For the Kill (McClouds & Friends #11)
- Fatal Strike (McClouds & Friends #10)
- Extreme Danger (McClouds & Friends #5)
- Edge of Midnight (McClouds & Friends #4)
- Blood and Fire (McClouds & Friends #8)
- Baddest Bad Boys
- Right Through Me (The Obsidian Files #1)