Sidney Sheldon's Reckless (24 page)

Read Sidney Sheldon's Reckless Online

Authors: Sidney Sheldon

And yet they hadn't found Hunter Drexel. Once again he'd slipped through the net. Even Sally Faiers was claiming he'd gone to ground.

“I haven't heard anything in weeks,” Sally told Tracy. “I'm worried about him.”

So am I,
Tracy thought. The little voice inside her, telling her that Hunter was the key to everything that had happened, had become a deafening roar. She also couldn't shake the disturbing feeling that if Walton and Buck
did
find Drexel, she might never learn the whole truth.

“The CIA think he was involved in the Camp Paris shootings, don't they?” Sally asked Tracy bluntly. “They think he's a terrorist.”

“I honestly don't know,” Tracy replied. “If he was in Paris at the time, it certainly raises suspicions.”

“He wouldn't do that,” Sally said fervently. “I know he ran from the Americans in Bratislava. And maybe he does have some sympathy with Group 99's beliefs. He denies it, but I could see him going native to some degree. Being turned by them or whatever. But he would never, never be a part of something like what happened at Neuilly. I know him.”

Do you?
wondered Tracy.
Do any of us really know anyone else, deep down?

How many murderers and rapists are there in prisons around the world right now, whose girlfriends didn't have a clue?

Still, she shared Sally Faiers's concerns. The fact that Walton and Buck were being so secretive about their search for Hunter didn't bode well. Did they really want to rescue him? Or to silence him, permanently? Tracy didn't know the answer. But the question haunted her. Because whether he was a terrorist or not, Tracy needed to find Hunter Drexel alive. She couldn't get answers from a dead man.

Tracy sat up suddenly. “I feel guilty,” she told Cameron.

“Why?” He kissed her neck lovingly.

“Because I shouldn't be here. I should be in France right now. And we both know it.”

Cameron sighed. “Come on, Tracy. We've been over this.”

He traced a finger lazily along the top of Tracy's thigh. In a tropical-print bikini, her long legs glistening with oil, and with her wet hair slicked back, she looked even sexier than usual.

No one was more surprised than Cameron by his feelings for Tracy—both how quickly they'd happened and how intense they were.

Then again, Cameron Crewe's life had been one long string of surprises. Some wonderful. Some terrible. He'd become a master at expecting the unexpected, or at least of adapting to new realities.

“You've nothing to feel guilty about,” he told Tracy. “Paris isn't going anywhere. You'll be there in a few days. And in the meantime, it's not as if you haven't been working. This is the first time I've seen you without a laptop in your hands since we arrived.”

This was true. Though Tracy wasn't sure what good it had done her. So far there was nothing at all to link Althea to the Neuilly attack. With the exception of Bob Daley's execution—and perhaps Nick's “accident”—Althea's actions for Group 99 had all been sophisticated, slick and nonviolent. After each one she'd left a clue of some sort, a virtual calling card, not because she was careless, but because she was proud to take responsibility for her work.

Neuilly was different. Sending gunmen into a school to massacre teenagers, simply because their parents were rich? That wasn't Althea's style. Her deafening silence online and everywhere confirmed it.

It seemed to Tracy that Group 99 was becoming ever more like the mythical hydra: strike at one head, and two more grew before your eyes, each more lethal than the first.

And meanwhile, Hunter Drexel was still out there, holding on to his secrets until he could find somebody brave, or reckless, enough to publish them, to snatch away all the masks and mirrors and show all the players in this dreadful, violent drama as they truly were . . .

“Come here.”

Cameron pulled Tracy onto his lap and slipped his arms around her waist. “Please stay a little longer. I need you.”

FROM A VILLA ACROSS
the bay Jeff Stevens watched the scene on Tracy's balcony through a high-power telescope.

A range of emotions flowed through him, none of them good.

Jeff tried not to hate anyone. But he was finding it extremely hard to warm to Mr. Cameron Crewe.

What's a billionaire fracking magnate doing sniffing around Tracy? Who just happens to be working for the CIA in their fight against Group 99? Who just happens to view billionaire fracking magnates about as positively as the rest of the population views pedophiles?

And how convenient that he's whisked her away to Maui just as the shit's hitting the fan in France.

Jamie MacIntosh had informed Jeff yesterday that Hunter Drexel was definitely in Paris and that MI6 were “very close” to apprehending him. The Americans, according to Jamie, were still stabbing around in the dark.

Jeff knew he should be cheered by this news. And by the fact that Tracy was safe on the other side of the world, at least for now, and out of imminent danger.

But he was finding it increasingly hard to focus.

According to Google, Hawaii suffered an average of three shark attacks per year.

Was it too much to ask that Crewe be one of the three?

TRACY SAT AT HER
computer, cross-referencing French intelligence files on Henri Mignon, the dead Neuilly shooter, with CIA data on known Group 99 operatives working within the United States. A number of survivors from Camp Paris had confirmed that one of the masked gunman had an American accent. So far Tracy had failed to find a single link.

Rubbing her eyes tiredly, she decided to take a break and try something else.

Hunter Drexel. If the sightings were accurate and he really was in Paris, he was doing a good job of living under the radar electronically. He wasn't using a credit card or a mobile phone or any of his known email addresses. He'd also managed to cross a number of European borders without a passport, or any ID. That meant one of two things was happening. Friends were helping him. And/or he was living on cash.

“Poker.” Tracy said aloud.

“Hmmm?” Cameron wandered in from the bathroom with a towel wrapped around his waist. He'd spent most of the afternoon in the hotel gym while Tracy worked, and had just taken a long shower prior to dragging her away from her computer and out to dinner.

“Hunter Drexel plays poker. I'll bet that's where he's getting his cash.”

“Maybe,” Cameron said. “Does that help us?”

“It might.” Tracy looked up at him excitedly. “I could go to Paris, posing as a dumb Texan divorcee with a gambling habit and money to burn. Get myself invited to all the high-stakes games in town.”

“And what, run into him?” Cameron asked skeptically.

“Stranger things have happened,” said Tracy. “Even if I don't find him, I'll hear rumors. Pick up clues. Maybe learn what alias he's using, what his plans are . . . something. It's worth a shot.”

“Greg Walton will have you shot if he finds you're still hunting for Drexel when you're supposed to be looking for Althea,” Cameron reminded her, pulling on a pair of white linen pants.

Tracy said, “I don't care about Greg Walton. Besides, I am looking for Althea. That's exactly why I need to find Hunter before they do.”

A knock on the door interrupted them.

Cameron scowled. “Who the hell can that be?”

“Did you order room service?” Tracy asked.

“No.”

The knocking was getting louder and faster. Hammering.

“What on earth . . . ?” Tracy got up to answer it when Cameron suddenly grabbed her.

“Wait. Don't open the door.”

“Why on earth not?”

“We can't afford to take chances, Tracy.”

Pushing her to one side, Cameron pressed his face to the glass peephole. Tracy saw his shoulders relax and his jaw tighten. Tension was replaced with irritation. He sighed deeply.

“You have
got
to be kidding me.”

“Who is it?” Tracy asked.

Cameron pulled open the door. “My ex-wife. Tracy, meet Charlotte. Charlotte, this is Tracy.”

Charlotte Crewe burst into the suite like a Greek Fury, slamming the door behind her. She wore simple white shorts and tennis shoes, with her hair tied back in a girlish ponytail.

She's terribly pretty,
Tracy thought.
And so young.

But the most striking thing about Cameron's ex-wife was the expression of boiling, tight-lipped rage on her face. With her clenched fists and almost comically aggressive body language, Charlotte Crewe looked like a human bomb that might go off at any moment.

“What are you doing here?”

Cameron's greeting was less than affectionate. Perhaps understandably given the way Charlotte was glaring at him. It was all rather odd. Cameron had told her the marriage ended amicably, and the CIA files said the same thing.

“Take a wild guess,” Charlotte hissed.

“I really have no idea.” Cameron sounded bored. “Although, whatever it is, I can't imagine that we couldn't have discussed it over the phone.”

“Oh, you can't imagine? Is that right? You, who haven't taken a single one of my phone calls, or my lawyer's phone calls, in the past eighteen months,
can't imagine
why I didn't just ring?”

Tracy stepped forward for the first time. “Tracy Whitney. Nice to meet you.”

She offered Charlotte her hand. To her surprise, Charlotte took it and shook it warmly. “You too.”

Was it Tracy's imagination, or was there suddenly something compassionate, even pitying, in Charlotte's tone?

Whatever it was, it evaporated the moment she turned back to her ex-husband.

“You haven't made a payment in eight months,” she snarled at Cameron.

“That's not true,” Cameron said smoothly.

“It is true! You know it's true. You're one of the richest men in America, sitting here like Croesus on your dirty empire of shale gas. And I'm being evicted from my apartment while you live it up here in the Presidential Suite with your latest, trusting little girlfriend. No offense to you, Miss Whitney,” she added to Tracy. “It's not your fault he's a lying, conniving snake.”

Tracy frowned.
Dirty empire.
What did Charlotte Crewe mean by that? Was it just a bitter ex-wife talking? It could be, of course. And yet something seemed off. Charlotte and Cameron had had a son together after all. Lost a son together. Didn't that mean anything? For all her ranting and raving, Charlotte didn't come across as the spiteful type to Tracy.

She found herself watching Cameron closely for his reaction.

“Charlotte, this is ridiculous,” he said curtly. “Please stop. You're embarrassing me and you're embarrassing yourself. No one's evicting you. This is a complete fantasy.” He glanced apologetically at Tracy. Then turning back to his ex, he asked, “When did you last see Dr. Williams?”

That seemed to push Charlotte over the edge.

“Fuck Dr. Williams!” she yelled. “And fuck you, Cameron. You're a disgrace. Playing these pathetic little power games, with all the money you have? Marcus would be ashamed of you.”

Something very close to hatred flashed in Cameron's eyes. “Don't you dare bring Marcus into this.”

“I'll bring Marcus into it whenever I want,” Charlotte said defiantly. “He was my son. You don't own his memory, Cameron. You can't buy that, like you buy everything else. And you can't fucking silence me!”

She turned back to Tracy. “Do you think I'd be here if I weren't completely desperate? I could barely afford the flight. Please. Talk some sense into him. Tell him to pay what he owes.”

“Charlotte.” Cameron's tone was measured but firm. “You are not well. You need help, and I will get you that help. No one is evicting you. But I need you to leave now. I don't want to call security, but I will if I have to. Please, darling. Go home.”

He reached for her arm but she shrugged him off furiously.

“Like I have a home to go to. Don't worry, I'm leaving. But you haven't heard the end of this, Cameron. I want my money and I'm going to get it. You do
not
scare me.”

She emphasized the word “not” by jabbing him in the chest with a finger. Tracy saw a small muscle in his jaw leap twice, then go quiet. He looked positively murderous.

A prickle of unease swept over her. She felt the hairs on her forearms stand on end.

“Goodbye,” Charlotte said to Tracy. “And good luck.”

She left, slamming the door behind her.

For a moment, neither Tracy nor Cameron said anything. Then Cameron pulled Tracy into his arms.

“I'm sorry about that. You OK?”

“I'm fine,” Tracy lied. “Just surprised. I thought you said that you and Marcus's mother had a good relationship.”

Cameron let go of her and sat down on the edge of the bed.

“We do,” he said.

Tracy's eyebrows shot up.

“When she's well,” Cameron explained. “You mustn't judge Charlotte too harshly. It's no wonder she's mentally unstable. She's been through hell, as you know.”

“Yes,” said Tracy. She did know. And the truth was, she wasn't judging Charlotte harshly. The woman had seemed perfectly sane to her. Angry, certainly, and emotional. But not crazy.

“It's been a long time since I've seen her like that.” Cameron shook his head sadly.

“Like what?”

“Well, you saw her. Delusional. Lashing out with these insane conspiracy theories.”

“So she's not being evicted?” Tracy asked calmly.

Cameron looked wounded. “Evicted? What? No! Of course not. I would never let that happen. Financially Charlotte has more than she could ever need, and she always will.”

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