Sidney Sheldon's Angel of the Dark Page 9
“So I hear.”
“Those guys don’t play around. If Didier had fallen foul of them in some way, they’re more than capable of killing him and of raping his wife. They’re animals.”
A pretty dark-haired waitress came over to take Matt’s order, smiling coquettishly at his broken French.
“She likes you,” said Lucien as the girl walked away, deliberately swaying her hips.
“Really?” Matt turned and stared after her, twisting his wedding band miserably.
“Why don’t you ask her out?”
“I can’t. I’m married.”
This seemed to amuse the Frenchman enormously. “So?” He guffawed. “I’m hyperglycemic, but I still like ice cream.”
It was a good line. In another life, Matt would have written it down. As it was, he wrenched the conversation back to the subject at hand.
“What do you think happened to Irina? The widows in the other two cases I’m investigating disappeared shortly after the attacks and were never heard from again.”
Lucien shrugged. “I’m not surprised. I imagine they wanted to leave it all behind them, all the gruesome memories, and start again. You can’t blame Irina Anjou for getting out of France.”
Matt frowned. “Well, you could blame her. You could say that she took the money and ran.”
Lucien Desforges looked genuinely surprised. “Oh no. That’s the one thing no one can accuse her of. Didier wasn’t as well off as people assumed he was, you know. After four divorces, few men are. But before Irina left, she emptied her and Didier’s joint bank account and gave away everything they had to charity.”
Matt watched the goose bumps pop up on his forearms and felt the hairs on the back of his neck start to rise.
“Are you sure about that?”
“Quite sure,” said Lucien. “Face au Monde, I believe the charity was called. Some surgical thing in Paris having to do with cleft palates. They help children.”
CHAPTER TWELVE
DANNY MCGUIRE SPED UP THE TREADMILL, hoping the pain in his legs might distract him. It didn’t.
There was a fully equipped gym at Interpol headquarters, but Danny preferred to frequent Sport Vitesse on the Rue de La Paix. Partly because he needed to get away from other Interpol officers every now and then. As much as he enjoyed his job running the IRT division, the organization itself was bureaucratic and inward-looking, a veritable shrine to red tape. But mostly because the treadmills at the club all faced giant windows overlooking the rush-hour traffic, which reminded him of L.A. Danny loved living in France, the slower pace of life, the history, the architecture, the food. But there were occasional moments when he missed the States, Monday Night Football and buffalo wings. Meeting Matt Daley had brought his homesickness back with a vengeance.
Danny McGuire liked Matt Daley. He liked his honesty, his sense of humor, his tenaciousness. But he wished with all his heart Matt Daley had never tracked him down.
Since the second Matt had walked out of his office, Danny had thought of nothing but the Jakes case and these other, apparently linked homicides. After Matt called him in high excitement from Saint-Tropez to announce that Irina Anjou had also left all her husband’s money to a children’s charity, he finally broached the subject with his superiors.
“The May-December marriages, the rapes, the frenzied nature of the killings, the binding of the victims together. These alone suggest a pattern. But the fact that all three widows evaporated after the fact, and all handed over their inheritance to kids’ charities, including Irina Anjou…it’s got to be worth checking out, hasn’t it, sir?”
Deputy Director Henri Frémeaux blinked inscrutably, his fat face giving nothing away. In his midsixties, totally bald and with the sort of distended belly that might have looked jolly on a less humorless man, Henri Frémeaux was everything Danny McGuire disliked about Interpol: officious, unyielding, deliberately narrow-minded. He was also brilliantly intelligent, a dogged problem solver with a first-class logical mind. But that wasn’t why Henri Frémeaux had risen to the top at Interpol. That he’d achieved by slavish adherence to the rules.
“Which member country has requested our assistance?” he asked Danny bluntly. “I don’t recall seeing anything like this come across my desk.”
“No, sir. It hasn’t yet. I received the information from a private source.”
Deputy Director Frémeaux’s eyebrows slowly lifted. “A private source?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Assistant Director McGuire. As I hardly need to remind you, Interpol is not like other law enforcement agencies. Our purpose is to function as an administrative liaison between the law enforcement agencies of our member countries, providing communications and database assistance.”
Danny sighed. “Yes, sir. I’ve read the manual. But if this killer is out there, preparing to strike again, then don’t we have a duty to act?”
“No. Our duty is clear: to provide communications and database assistance to our member countries, when requested. Has such a request been made with regard to these crimes?”
Danny might as well have been talking to a brick wall.
It was the same story with Scotland Yard. Chief Inspector Willard Drew had been a lowly detective inspector when he ran the Henley murder investigation. He received Danny’s phone call with a frostiness bordering on arctic.
Yes, Tracey Henley had left the country. No, the authorities were not aware of her current whereabouts, but neither did they suspect any foul play. No, no one had ever been charged with Sir Piers Henley’s murder, despite exhaustive interviews of over eighty possible suspects. No, Chief Inspector Drew had not the slightest interest in reopening the file “because some minor French film star got bumped off by a local mafiosi.”
Danny understood Willard Drew’s defensiveness. He’d felt the same way himself, after Andrew Jakes’s killer got away. The failure stung, like salt in an open wound. But he was also frustrated by it.
The French police were even worse, taking days to return Danny’s call, then laughing off his suggestion of links with the L.A. and London murders as “fanciful” and Matt Daley’s evidence as “circumstantial at best.” No one wanted to reopen this case, to prize the lid off such a horrible, violent, blood-slick can of worms. Around the globe, the sound of collective hand washing was deafening.
Sweat poured down Danny’s back, pooling at the base of his spine as his feet pounded the moving rubber track beneath him. As he ran, his own doubts came creeping back. Yes, the French police were lazy and the British defensive. But were they also right? Lots about the three murders didn’t add up. Interpol’s I-24/7 database was the largest and most sophisticated of its kind in the world, maintaining collections of fingerprints and mug shots, lists of wanted persons, DNA samples and travel documents. Their lost and stolen travel-document database alone contained more than twelve million records. But after an exhaustive search, Danny had found no other crimes that even vaguely matched the Jakes, Henley and Anjou cases. If it really was one killer, why had he waited so long between attacks? And why had he chosen victims so geographically spread out? What did he do between murders? How was he supporting himself? Almost all serial killers that Danny knew of worked within a territory, a familiar “killing patch,” and stuck to it. Professional assassins moved around, but they focused on their targets; they didn’t hang around and rape innocent bystanders.
And there were other discrepancies in Matt’s “carbon-copy” killings. Didier Anjou and Andrew Jakes had both been knifed to death. Sir Piers had had his brains blown out. Jewelry was stolen from the Henley and Jakes homes, but not from Didier Anjou’s, despite the fact that he had an extensive collection in plain view on his bedroom dresser. And what of the Jakes art thefts? The rare Victorian miniatures? Where did they fit into a possible motive?
Exhausted, Danny slowed the treadmill to a fast walk, letting his heart rate drop. Matt Daley was on his way back to Los Angeles. At some point next week Danny would have to call him, to upd
ate him off the record on “progress.” What a joke. He had nothing, nothing except a single number: three.
Three victims. Andrew Jakes, Sir Piers Henley, Didier Anjou.
Three countries.
Three missing wives. Angela Jakes, Tracey Henley, Irina Anjou.
Three.
Hardly the breakthrough of the century.
Instinctively, Danny felt that the key to unraveling the mystery lay in the rape of the young wives. Somewhere behind these crimes was a woman hater. A violent, sexually motivated beast.
He thought about his own wife, Céline, and felt a wave of revulsion and disgust wash over him, tinged with fear. If anything should happen to her, anything, he didn’t know what he would do. He wondered for the umpteenth time about the beautiful Angela Jakes and the other women, Tracey and Irina. Were they alive, living new, unobtrusive lives somewhere, as the police in L.A., London and Saint-Tropez all so badly wanted to believe? Or were they dead too, their three corpses rotting in unmarked graves, silent victims of this most ruthless and cunning of killers?
MATT DALEY PULLED INTO HIS DRIVEWAY feeling as nervous as a teenager on his first date. He’d been gone for almost three weeks, the longest he’d been physically apart from Raquel since they married. Despite her anger—since he refused to fly home for her lawyers’ meeting a week ago, she hadn’t contacted him once and had refused to return his calls or e-mails—Matt was surprised to find that he’d missed her. The break had given him a renewed determination to put things right with his marriage.
I’ve been neglecting her, he told himself. No wonder she spends so much time chasing an imaginary pot of gold in her lawyer’s office. Why wouldn’t she, with me cooped up in my office all day, or flitting around the world trying to solve these murders?
The thought crossed his mind that if he actually cracked this case, with Danny McGuire’s help, if he found the killer and brought him to justice, he might make Raquel proud of him again. Then he could write a screenplay about it, sell it to a major studio, and make more money than even Raquel could dream of. It was a nice fantasy, but in the meantime he had to spend more time with her. And he would. Now that he was back, he’d make everything right between them again.
Inside, the house was in darkness. Matt pushed aside his disappointment. It’s still early, he told himself. She’ll be home soon. At least this way he’d have time to shower and change after his long-haul flight. Air France’s economy seats had clearly been designed by a double-jointed munchkin and Matt’s lower back was killing him.
Upstairs, the bedroom was pristine, a testament to his long weeks away. Matt threw his suitcase down on the pale pink counterpane and began to undress. Only then did he see the envelope propped up against his bedside lamp. His name was on the front, in Raquel’s distinctive large-looped handwriting.
Matt’s stomach lurched.
Stop thinking the worst. It might be a welcome-home card.
But even as he tore open the letter, he knew that it wasn’t.
IT WAS THE BANGING THAT ROUSED him. It was deafening. Lying on the floor, a small pool of saliva staining the peach shag carpet in front of his face, his first thought was, Someone’s trying to demolish my house. With me inside it.
His second thought was, Good luck to them.
Raquel was divorcing him. He’d driven her away and she was never coming back. At that moment few things seemed preferable to being crushed instantly to death by a giant pile of rubble, the debris of what had once been a happy home.
BANG, BANG, BANG!
Not a wrecking ball. A fist. On a door. An angry fist.
“Open up, Matt. I know you’re in there.”
The voice was familiar, but Matt couldn’t place it. Then again, after two bottles of wine washed down with the dregs of a bottle of vodka left over from last New Year’s Eve, Matt had trouble placing his own legs. Tentatively he lifted his head off the floor, pushing back with his arms so that he was on his knees. The bedroom swam around him in peach swirls. He retched.
BANG, BANG, BANG!
“I’m coming! Jesus.” Matt staggered downstairs, clutching the banister like a paraplegic in a bounce house. Every step was torture, but he had to stop the noise. He opened the front door. “Oh. It’s you.”
Claire Michaels wrinkled her nose as a waft of alcohol fumes hit her in the face. Her brother looked as if he’d aged ten years.
“Raquel’s left me.”
“I know,” said Claire matter-of-factly. “She stopped by my place to leave a stack of unpaid bills for you, ‘in case you should ever deign to come home,’ as she put it.”
“What am I gonna do?” sobbed Matt hopelessly. “I love her, Claire. I can’t live without her.”
“Oh, baloney,” said his sister, pushing past him into the hall. “Go upstairs and take a shower and I’ll make you some breakfast. You can tell me about France. Oh, and Matt…? Drink a bucket of mouthwash while you’re up there, would you? Your mouth smells like something that died two weeks ago.”
CLAIRE’S BREAKFAST WAS DELICIOUS. FRESHLY MADE pancakes with blueberries, walnuts and maple syrup, smoked salmon frittata and a huge pot of strong Colombian coffee. Afterward, Matt actually felt semihuman again.
“She’s already filed for divorce, which has to be some kind of world speed record,” he told Claire gloomily. “She wants half of everything.”
“Except the bills.”
“Except the bills. Which I totally can’t pay. When they slice my credit cards in half, I’ll make sure to send her her share.” He smiled weakly. “What the hell am I going to do?”
Claire began clearing away the plates. “You could always try working. You know, getting a job? It’s this thing where you go into an office and do stuff for other people, and they pay you for it. It’s really catching on.”
“Ha ha,” said Matt. “I have a job. I’m a filmmaker.”
“Oh!” Claire’s eyebrows shot up sarcastically. “I see, Ingmar Bergman. And how’s the great opus going? Was France everything you dreamed it would be?”
“It was great.” Matt’s eyes lit up for the first time that morning. He told his sister about his meeting with Danny McGuire and the unexpected developments in the Didier Anjou case, with Irina leaving her husband’s estate to charity, just as the other two widows had done. “I know it’s the same killer, the man who killed our dad. And I’m pretty sure McGuire knows it too, though he’s cagey about promising too much.”
Claire frowned. “Andrew Jakes was not ‘our dad.’ Dad was our dad. Jakes was just some fucking sperm donor.”
Matt was taken aback by her anger. “Okay. Maybe he was. But he didn’t deserve to have his head hacked off by some psycho, and for the guy to get away with it.”
“Maybe he did deserve it?” said Claire, loading Matt’s dishwasher with a series of loud clangs. “Maybe he was a lousy SOB. Maybe they all were.” She turned to face her brother. “You’ve already lost your marriage, Matt. Mom’s upset with you, I’m upset with you. You’re flat broke. Isn’t it time you gave up this wild-goose chase and got your life back together? If three police forces and Interpol have all failed to solve these murders, what makes you think you can do it?”
“I’m smarter than them?” Matt grinned, earning himself a look of withering disdain from Claire. He knew she was right. He had to find paid work, and soon, if he was going to survive this divorce and keep a roof over his head. He could still work on the documentary, still keep in touch with Danny McGuire. But he couldn’t let the unsolved murders consume him the way they had been.
The phone rang. They both stared at it, thinking the same thing. Raquel.
“Keep your cool,” cautioned Claire. “Don’t yell at her. And don’t cry.”
Matt picked up the handset, shaking. “Hello?”
Danny McGuire’s voice sounded distant and tinny, but the excitement and adrenaline were both clear as a bell. “There’s been another murder. Last night, in Hong Kong.”
“Is it our guy?”
“Same MO,” said Danny. “Rape, bodies bound together, rich elderly victim. Miles Baring.”
Matt was silent for a moment. It took a few seconds for the full import of what McGuire was telling him to sink in. The killer was not only still out there. He was becoming bolder and more active. It had barely been a year since his last hit, and yet here he was, striking again on the opposite side of the world. Almost as if he knew that someone was watching him, knew that someone had finally found the scattered puzzle pieces and cared enough to try to arrange them into a coherent picture. After ten long years, he’s playing to an audience, Matt found himself thinking. He’s playing to me.
“Where’s the widow?”
The elation in Danny McGuire’s voice was unmistakable. “That’s the best part. The Hong Kong police have her in protective custody. I called the guy in charge and told him what happened with the other wives. Lisa Baring’s not going anywhere.”
Matt hung up in a daze.
“Who was that?” asked Claire. “Not Raquel, I take it?”
“Hmm? No,” said Matt. “I need to go pack.”
“Pack?” Claire looked at him despairingly. “Matthew! Have you listened to a word of what I just said?”
Matt walked over to his sister and kissed her on the cheek. “I have. And I agree with it all. You’re absolutely right, and I promise to look for a job the moment I get back from Asia. In the meantime, how are you fixed for time? I don’t suppose you could give me a lift to the airport, could you?”
PART II
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
HONG KONG WAS LIKE NOTHING MATT Daley had ever seen before.
He considered himself a man of the world. Not in the James Bond sense, obviously. No one could call Matt Daley sophisticated; still less, suave. Most days he considered it an achievement if he remembered to go out wearing matching socks. But neither was he some Midwestern farm boy who’d never been exposed to other cultures. Matt might have grown up in a small town, but he’d lived in New York and traveled extensively in Europe and South America when he was in his early twenties. Even so, Hong Kong filled Matt Daley with genuine awe.