Read Stranded with a Spy Online
Authors: Merline Lovelace
Mallory paused just inside the French doors, taking in the splendor of the setting. The conservatory’s fanciful Victorian ironwork, profusion of potted plants and fan-backed wicker chairs produced a gloriously decadent belle epoque feel, while the glass walls provided an unobstructed view of the Normandy coast, now fading into the dusk.
A breathtakingly beautiful chess table set with ivory and ebony pieces occupied place of honor amid scattered lounge chairs at one end of the conservatory. The petite dining salon occupied the other. The round, glass-topped wicker table was set with linen and an array of covered dishes. Candles flickered in tall silver holders. Crystal water goblets sparkled in the candles’ glow.
Cutter stood at the windows close to the table. A highball glass in hand, he appeared riveted by the spectacle of incandescent waves crashing against the rocky coast. He’d showered, too, Mallory saw. His short dark hair curled in still-damp waves and the bristles that had darkened his cheeks were gone. He’d traded his sport coat and shirt for a silky black turtleneck that molded his wide shoulders and, coincidentally or otherwise, hid most of his scars.
What in the world was she doing here? Mallory wondered, in this fairy-tale castle, about to have dinner with this stranger? The ordeal of the past weeks had made her gun-shy and wary around men. With good reason. She couldn’t count the number of sly innuendos and outright insults she’d endured since becoming the butt of so many raunchy jokes tossed out by late-night talk-show hosts.
Even if the media hadn’t made her a target, she would have had second thoughts if she’d encountered Cutter Smith on an empty street or in a deserted parking lot. Despite his expensive loafers and superbly cut sport coat, he carried himself with a tough, don’t-mess-with-me air that would have made Mallory give him a wide berth.
Yet, after knowing the man for all of four or five hours, she’d driven off with him to this isolated château and was about to sit down to an intimate, candlelight dinner for two. Worse, she found herself wanting to trust him, wanting to believe he really was as kind and considerate as he seemed to be.
Not that it mattered. They’d go their separate ways tomorrow. For tonight, though, maybe she could let down her guard enough to simply enjoy his company.
The sound of her borrowed mules clicking against the tiles brought his head around. When he took in her altered appearance, a smile softened the harsh lines of his face.
“I see Madame Picard came through for you.”
“Yes, she did. Thanks for mentioning my lost suitcase, although I have to confess I feel odd invading our hostess’s home
and
wardrobe. Did your friend of a friend tell you what she does for a living?”
“He mentioned she designs clothing.”
“Not clothing.” Tugging up one leg of her borrowed Italian wool slacks, she waggled her foot. “Shoes. Hand-crafted, one-of-a-kind, thousand-dollars-a-pair shoes.”
“Mmm,” Cutter murmured, eyeing the slender ankle above the flashy leopard-and-red slipper. “Nice.”
When she finished waggling and he’d finished admiring, he nodded toward the array of crystal decanters on a sideboard framed by feathery palms.
“Would you like a drink before dinner? Or wine? Gilbért brought a very nice Pouilly-Fuissé up from the cellars.”
He had his spiel all prepared. As requested, Hawkeye had assembled and text-messaged several cheat sheets he’d labeled Wine for Dummies. If Mallory asked, Cutter was all set to expound on the dry, medium-bodied white wine from the Burgundy region of France. Made from the chardonnay grape, Pouilly-Fuissé was not to be confused with Pouilly-Fumé, made from the sauvignon blanc grape variety in the southeastern portion of the Loire Valley.
Thankfully, she didn’t ask.
“I’d better pass on both. As tired as I am, alcohol might land me face down in the vol-au-vent. Which,” she added, sniffing at the tantalizing aroma emanating from the covered dishes on the table, “smells incredible.”
Cutter could take a hint when it whapped him in the face. Grinning, he set his drink aside. “Shall we eat, then? I told Gilbért we’d serve ourselves.”
“Yes, please!”
When he went around to pull out her chair, he had to admit she smelled every bit as good as their dinner. Her skin carried a faint, flowery scent that reminded him of alpine meadows in spring.
“Want me to do the honors?” she asked when he’d taken the seat opposite.
“Be my guest.”
While she wielded silver tongs and ladles, Cutter stretched his legs out under the table and revised his strategy. He’d planned to loosen her up with wine, charm her over a drawn-out dinner, and get her talking. The utter fatigue underlying her movements told him he’d better speed things up or she might fall asleep here at the table.
She helped by taking the lead. First she filled two plates with pastry shells topped by cream sauce swimming with chunks of mussels and fish, then added spears of tender white asparagus. Passing one plate to Cutter, she picked at the other.
“I’m curious,” she commented. “How did you get into the wine business?”
“By accident.”
That was true enough.
“I pulled a couple of hitches in the Army. During one of them, I was stationed at a small site in Germany. I got to know the locals pretty well.”
That was true, as well. His gut tightening at the thought of one particular local, Cutter ruthlessly slammed the door on the memory of the traitorous bitch who’d almost incinerated him before he’d taken her down.
Would this one try something equally desperate?
“One of the people I got to know was a wine wholesaler,” he told Mallory, improvising from that point on. “We kept in touch after I left Germany. When I was looking for something to do after I left the Army, I contacted him and we went into partnership.”
She speared a tender mussel with her fork but didn’t bring it to her lips. “What did you do in the Army?”
He knew what she was edging around and decided to bring it out in the open.
“I trained as an explosive ordnance specialist before I transferred to the Rangers. Thought I knew all there was to know about cluster bombs, combined effects munitions and IEDs. Individual Explosive Devices,” he translated at her blank look. “Turns out I didn’t know as much as I thought. One of ’em blew away half my face.”
He didn’t add that the IED was part of a cache of stolen weapons he’d been tracking…or that his NATO partner on that op was a cool Scandinavian beauty who’d been playing a dangerous double game that had ended when their collaboration literally blew up in Cutter’s face.
Months of reconstructive surgery and skin grafts had followed. The docs had wanted to do more, but Cutter had finally called a halt. He’d left the Army soon afterward, lured to OMEGA by Mike Callahan. His first mission had been to track down the woman who’d betrayed him and her country. Now, all these years later, he was working the same kind of op with another blonde.
Almost the same, he amended. His gut told him Mallory Dawes was at best an unwitting accomplice, at worst a mule transporting something she didn’t know the value of. He’d watched her every move, listened to every nuance in her voice when her car sank. She’d panicked, sure, but the only real concern she’d expressed was for her passport and traveler’s checks. There’d been none over her suitcase or what it contained.
Until Cutter knew how the disk had found its way into her suitcase, however, he wasn’t ready to let her off the hook…or out of his sight. Smoothly, he redirected the thread of their conversation.
“I have to admit, I’m enjoying my new line of work more than the old. I’ve got an appointment with a local vintner tomorrow morning. Why don’t you come with me?”
“I’d love to, but I can’t. I need to find a notary and fax my signature to the American Express office. And follow up with the embassy about my passport. And sort out this mess with the rental-car agency.”
“I’m sure Gilbért knows the location of a notary. We’ll stop by and obtain his or her chop on the way to the vintner. You can make any calls you need to on my cell phone.”
“Thanks, but I’ve already imposed on you too much.”
“Why don’t you sleep on it? We’ll talk again in the morning.”
“Speaking of sleep…”
Her shoulders sagging, she laid down her fork. She’d taken only a few bites of her dinner. Cutter could see that was all she’d manage. The color had seeped from her cheeks and left them gray with fatigue.
“I’m afraid I’ll have to poop out on you. Jet lag is catching up with a vengeance.”
“No problem.” He rose and came around to slide back her chair. “I’ll see you tomorrow. Sleep well, Mallory.”
“You, too.”
As she turned to face him, her flowery scent teased his senses again. Cutter resisted the urge to brush a wayward strand of corn-silk hair off her cheek. If her allegations against Congressman Kent held even a grain of truth, Ms. Dawes didn’t take kindly to being touched.
He wanted to, though, with a sudden, gut-twisting urgency that surprised the hell out of him. Controlling the urge, he stepped away from her.
Cutter Smith wasn’t like the others.
The thought teased at Mallory’s tired mind as she dragged up the stairs.
She’d seen that spark of heat in his eyes a few moments ago. Felt the sudden, subtle tension sizzle through the air between them. But he’d promised she’d be safe with him.
He’d also promised he wouldn’t hit on her unless she wanted him to. Now here she was, wishing she’d given him the green light.
Was she an idiot, or what?
S
till on Central American jungle time, Cutter’s internal alarm failed to go off in time for his usual dawn run. He didn’t jerk awake until his cell phone buzzed.
The ring tone sounded ordinary enough, but he was so attuned to the sequence of musical notes that he went from total unconsciousness to fully alert in two seconds flat.
“Yeah, I know,” Mike Callahan said when his craggy face appeared on the screen. “It’s early as hell.”
“It is for me,” Cutter agreed, scraping a hand over his chin. “Late as hell for you.”
Callahan must have stayed at Control a second night in a row. Wondering what had kept him there, Cutter threw off the duvet and swung upright. He’d left the windows open to the sea breeze last night. The air carried a damp bite this morning, but that wasn’t what prickled the skin of his bare chest and arms. Callahan wouldn’t have initiated contact without good reason.
“What’s up, Hawk?”
“Thought you might want to know about your friend, Walters.”
Cutter’s mind clicked instantly to the heavyset tourist who’d accosted Mallory yesterday. Robert Walters. Age: fifty-three. Siding and storm doors. High roller.
“Did you pull his phone records?”
“I did,” Mike confirmed. “Found some very interesting threads, but that’s not why I contacted you. I intercepted State Department message traffic a few hours ago. The Bureau of Consular Affairs is trying to locate Walters’s next-of-kin. Seems he met with an unfortunate accident yesterday, a few hours after your run-in with him.”
“What kind of an accident?”
“He tumbled down some steps at Mont St. Michel and broke his neck.”
An image of the steep, narrow passageways cut into solid rock flashed into Cutter’s head. The steps were accidents waiting to happen, particularly to unwary tourists who’d imbibed one glass too many in a local bistro.
“What do the preliminary police reports say?”
“Although they’re treating it as a ‘suspicious’ death and conducting a full investigation, they’ve found no witnesses or evidence to indicate the fall was anything but accidental. The inventory of the deceased’s personal effects raised a red flag at
Direction Centrale,
however.”
The hair on the back of Cutter’s neck lifted. France’s central director of police also served as head of their Interpol Bureau. As such, he played an integral role in combating international organized crime.
“Turns out our boy Walters had a soggy piece of paper in his wallet. The writing on it was blurred and almost obliterated…”
Surprise, surprise,
Cutter thought wryly.
“…but they managed to lift an address. It checks to a small-time hood in Marseilles with suspected ties to the Russian.”
“Well, hell!”
“I thought that might be your reaction,” Mike drawled. “I checked the schedule of the tour Walters and his buddies were on. After visiting the Normandy beaches, they were scheduled to cut south to Bordeaux, then west to Marseilles before hitting the Riviera and the casino at Monaco.”
Gripping the phone, Cutter paced to the windows. The heavy drapes were open, the gauzy curtains fluttering in the damp breeze. He barely registered the chill blowing in as his mind ran with the possibilities.
Had Walters’s horny tourist bit been an act? Was he the go-between designated to retrieve the disk from Mallory, either with or without her knowledge? Had he been instructed to deliver it to this thug in Marseilles?
If so, Cutter had interfered by busting up that little scene in the alley. After which, he’d spirited Mallory away and sequestered her here in this isolated château.
Then Walters had tumbled down a flight of steep steps. Was it an accident, or retribution for failing to retrieve the disk?
The last possibility presupposed the Russian had someone else shadowing Walters and/or Mallory. If so, had that someone witnessed her car floating out to sea? Did they know the disk was still in the trunk?
Dammit! It irritated the hell out of Cutter that he still had a
helluva
lot more questions than answers. Not the least of which was Mallory Dawes’s role in all of this.
“You haven’t had any movement on the disk, have you?” he asked Mike.
“Negative. It’s still resting at the bottom of the sea. I’ve confirmed that the rental agency isn’t going to attempt to raise the Peugeot, by the way. A salvage operation would cost more than the car is worth.”
Frowning, Cutter turned away from the window and marshaled his thoughts.
“Okay, here’s how I want to handle this. First, I’ll work from the assumption that Walters was the designated go-between, sent to retrieve the disk from Dawes and deliver it to this thug in Marseilles. Second, I’m going to assume his death was no accident. That means there was someone else on scene, someone who engineered Walters’s fall, either in retribution or anger over his bungled attempt. Third, unless and until a diver tries to retrieve the disk from the submerged vehicle, I’m assuming whoever wants the damned thing believes Dawes had it with her when she trudged up the ramp at Mont St. Michel to rendezvous with Walters.”
“In which case, that someone has to believe she’s still got it with her.”
“Exactly.”
“So you’re going to use her as bait.”
It wasn’t a question, nor was there a hint of censure in Mike’s voice. Cutter knew Hawk would do exactly the same given the circumstances. Staking out suspects like sacrificial goats was all part of the job. Cutter just wished this particular goat wasn’t starting to get to him. He hadn’t forgotten the fierce urge to touch her that had gripped him last night.
“Don’t see that I have much choice,” he bit out. “This place is a modern-day fortress. The Russian can’t get to Mallory or the disk here. I’m taking her with me on my ‘business’ call to the local vintner you set me up with this morning.”
“You got the cheat sheets I sent you, right?”
“Right. Good thing you warned me the Calvados region is more known for its brandy than its wine.”
“That came from Lightning. Evidently this Monsieur Villieu provides private stock for Nick’s restaurants. He said for you to confirm his order for the entire lot of 1989 Prestige blend, by the way.”
Cutter was more of a beer-and-pretzels man than a brandy aficionado. If Nick Jensen wanted the entire stock of this stuff for his string of high-priced restaurants, though, it had to be something special.
When Cutter followed the aroma of fresh-brewed coffee to the petite dining salon some time later, he found Mallory ensconced in one of the fan-backed wicker chairs. The mist was fast burning off the cliffs outside but Cutter didn’t spare the spectacular view a glance. His attention was centered on the woman slathering butter on a flaky croissant.
“Good morning.”
When she looked up, her smile was warm and welcoming and plowed right into him. “Good morning.”
“How do you feel?”
“Like a new woman.”
He had to admit she looked like one, too. She wore the same outfit she’d had on last night: jewel-toned blouse, slim brown slacks, frou-frouey shoes. But she’d swept her hair up into a twist that showed the smooth, clean line of her neck and jaw.
Her cheeks had regained their color, he noted. The gray tinge of exhaustion was gone. So was the wariness that had kept her voice cool and reserved. If she had lost sleep over a bungled exchange with Robert Walters, Cutter couldn’t see any sign of it.
Filling a demitasse cup with coffee strong enough to substitute for roof tar, he carried the cup to the glass-topped wicker table. Mallory eyed the undiluted coffee with a raised brow.
“Don’t you want some cream in that? It’s high-octane.”
“No, thanks.”
Cutter welcomed the jolt to his central nervous system. After Mike’s call, he needed it. While he ingested the caffeine, his breakfast companion nudged a basket of croissants and a small brown crock across the table.
“Well, you
have
to try this apple butter. Madame Picard says it’s made from apples grown here in Normandy. After my first taste, I regretted every nasty word I muttered when I was stuck behind all those tractors hauling the fall harvest yesterday.”
Cutter took advantage of the opening she’d just handed him to segue into his role. “That’s not all they make from apples around here. The vintner I’m going to visit this morning produces some of the world’s finest grape-based apple brandy.”
“Grape-based apple brandy? Sounds almost like a contradiction in terms.”
“It does, doesn’t it?” Tearing apart a still-warm roll, he loaded it with creamy butter. “The appointment is for ten-thirty, but I can slip that if we need more time to locate a notary.”
“Oh,” she mumbled around a mouthful. “About that.”
She flicked her tongue over her lower lip to capture a stray crumb. Cutter followed the movement with an intensity that annoyed the hell out of him.
“I really don’t want to impose on you or your time. I’ll get Gilbért to drive me to town.”
Not hardly,
he thought. He wasn’t letting Ms. Dawes out of his sight.
“No sense both of us driving that way.”
He took a bite and felt his taste buds leap for joy. Swallowing, he stared at the other half of his croissant.
“My God! This stuff is amazing.”
Mallory had to grin at the expression on his face. He looked like a kid who’d just discovered a hidden stash of chocolate.
“Told you,” she said smugly.
When he took another bite, the play of his throat muscles drew her gaze. He was wearing the silky black turtleneck again, paired with tan pleated slacks and a leather belt holding his clipped-on cell phone. The turtleneck covered most of the scars, but enough remained visible to tug at Mallory’s heart.
She could only imagine the agony he must have suffered when the bomb he’d told her about last night exploded, taking part of his face with it. Thinking about his anguish, about how he must have had to fight for his life, made Mallory’s own ordeal seem trivial by comparison. Slowly, inexorably, the tight knot of fury she’d carried around inside her for so many weeks loosened. As the knot unraveled, chagrin replaced the bitter, corrosive anger.
How stupid she’d been to lose all perspective the way she had! How egotistical to think her problems were so earth-shattering. People all over the world were battling cancer or dying of starvation or losing all they owned to war or the ravages of nature.
Yet here she sat, bathed in bright Norman sunlight, munching on warm croissants and apple butter, in the company of the most intriguing male she’d met in longer than she could remember. She’d be fifty times a fool not to savor every moment of this escape from harsh reality.
Those thoughts were still tumbling through her mind when Cutter downed the rest of his croissant and swiped his napkin across his mouth.
“That settles it. If the locals can work this kind of magic with apples and butter, imagine what they can do with apples and brandy. You’re going with me this morning.”
Mallory capitulated with a rippling laugh. She’d tackle the American Embassy and the rental-car agency this afternoon. For now, she’d savor the bright sunshine and Cutter Smith’s company.
“Okay, I’m going with you this morning. Let’s get directions from Gilbért on how to find a notary.”
Mallory hadn’t counted on the French propensity for ignoring posted schedules.
Despite Gilbért’s call to confirm the office hours of the town clerk, Mallory and Cutter sat on a bench and waited for more than twenty minutes for
le notaire
to pedal up. He offered a nonchalant apology, stuffed his beret into his jacket pocket, and led them to an office musty with the smell of old documents and wood imbued with damp from the salt-laden sea breeze.
To Mallory’s relief, a computer and fax sat side-by-side with ranks of cloth-bound ledgers that looked as though they were left over from the 1800s. The clerk booted up and set out the tools of his trade.
“You wish me to witness your signature, yes?”
“Yes. Then I need to fax the authentication to the American Express office in Paris.”
“Bien.”
He waved her to the chair beside his desk. “We begin.”
While he and Mallory took care of business, Cutter wandered over to examine an array of yellowed photos displayed on one wall. Mallory joined him a few moments later. One glimpse at the photographs explained his grim absorption.
The stark, unretouched images portrayed the epic battles that had raged along the beaches to the north during the Second World War. Coils of wire gleamed in the gray light, encircling turrets. Anti-aircraft artillery peeked from cement blockhouses. Machine-gun emplacements sat perched high on rocky ledges. And far below, at the base of the cliffs, row after row of lethal steel spears protruded from the surf.
“My grandfather takes these photos,” the clerk said, coming to stand beside them. “He was an old man, you understand, and crippled, but he bicycles north to Côte de Nacre—what you call Omaha Beach—to make photos of German defenses and provide them to
la résistance.
”