Whodunit is answered: Larry Beck had the $32,000,000. Harry got it back, all but $100,000 in cash and $2,000,000 in cryptocurrency he let Beck have in exchange for information about Jordan Regan and Richard Bertram. Harry left, giving Beck a chance to run. Beck either didn't run or didn't run fast enough. He was tortured and killed, along with his girlfriend, Nikki. The single shot to the head with aĀ .22 suggested that Mitchell did it.
Whodunit might be answered, but it's not over. The ones who done it are in the slave business, and that's not okay with Harry. And once they figure out someone knows what they doĀ ...
āC
CHAPTER 6
"Nine hundred thousand cash," I said, dumping the red carry-on I'd taken from Beck's cabin. I dropped a piece of paper next to it. It wasn't an elaborately engraved bearer bond containing secret codes hidden in printer's marks. It was the torn back of an envelope I'd scooped from Beck's desk on which I'd scribbled an account number and the precious sixty-four characters of the password using a cheap-ass ballpoint. "And twenty-nine million in there. Change the password or move it or whatever the hell just so long as it's not my responsibility anymore.
"You're short two point one," I went on, "because Beck already bought himself a stretch of beach in Honduras." Beck had suggested that story, and it seemed reasonable to me. "If that's a problem, take it up with the real estate people down there."
"Only two, Mitchell acquired the remaining cash," Regan said absently. That told me two things. One, it confirmed Mitchell had been the one to kill Beck. Second, it told me that Mitchell had fucked up. He either hadn't realized that Beck still had an account with millions in it, or hadn't been able to break him. I was betting the former. I doubt Mitchell would fail at the second. The password died with Beck, and that money was gone into the ether forever.
Regan still had the alpha-male hauteur, but I could see the tiny easing of tension in his body as he contemplated what I'd delivered for a moment longer. Then he looked up. "I said get me the thirty-two, so maybe I'll have
you
take it up with the real estate people down there."
"Well, there you might have a problem." I took a moment of pleasure in watching the spark of interest in his eyes. Regan liked breaking people to his will, but see, I found I liked frustrating him. "I'm not sure you know this, but Honduras isn't one of the fifty states." He looked at me blankly. "I don't have a passport."
I didn't. It had expired during the bad year after Amber left, and getting it renewed had never percolated up to the top of my priority list. We'd used it to travel, she and I. When I'd crawled out of the bottle, there were only fuckbuddies in my life, and I wasn't going to say to Lexie, "Hey, how does Santorini sound?"
Though, Harry, now there's Sydney, and Santorini would beĀ ...
I dragged myself back from a moment's contemplation of Sydney and one of the topless beaches on the island. I set another item in front of Regan. "My bill, including itemized expenses."
I watched the wheels turn as he contemplated my refusal to track down a mythical waterfront property in Honduras. "Well, perhaps I'll put Mitchell on that problem."
"Where is your pet rattlesnake? I'm used to him coiled up in the corner."
"Other business." He pulled the bill over and glanced at it. "Well, I didn't expect you to succeed, but you did. So I guess I need to take care of this." He reached into the red carry-on and extracted some banded packets. "You ran a little bit over my time limit. I'm not paying you extra for that. But I said sixty." He counted six of the packets onto the desk. "And it's a little more than your expenses, but call it a tip." He added a seventh and gave me a wide smile. "Nice doing business with you, Harry."
I slid the packets into my jacket pocket, gave him a curt nod, and made my way out.
"Maybe we'll talk again," he said as I left the room.
I'd misused a metaphor earlier. Mitchell wasn't a rattlesnake. Mitchell was a mamba, striking silently out of the brush.
A seven thousand dollar tip over and above expenses, the easy acceptance of being stymied, the wide smile of "nice doing business"Ā ...
that
was what the dry rattle from behind a rock sounded like, even if the snake didn't realize it was warning me.
⢠⢠ā¢
"Is it over?" Sydney asked.
"Most of it," I lied. "Beck's dead and most of the money's returned. But I have no way of knowing if friends of those dead cops won't take a little revenge. They may come after me." I hesitated, then gave her a tiny morsel more because she wasn't entirely safe, not after Mitchell had seen her take my arm that day. "It's possible that Regan will want all traces of this mess to disappear, including anyone who knows about the millions."
I didn't think Regan would give a damn about people knowing of the millions. But I was certain he'd give a damn about people knowing what his business was. When Beck tried to bribe me with informationĀ ... well, when Beck
did
bribe me with information about Bertram, I'd followed a trail of logic. That trail led to Richard Bertram wondering if that bribe attempt had been made and information traded hands. The same logic applied to Jordan Regan. I had a feeling Regan's ego meant he wasn't always careful, but he wasn't stupid, not in his business.
"I think you should disappear for a while," I continued. "I know you said you didn't have family anywhere, but maybe a trip down to the Keys or something, some place warm where there're no bad guys in your vicinity."
She shivered but shook her head. "No. I'm staying with you. You've protected me so far. If we're leaving, it's together. We could go to Europe. Maybe we could find some way to get the money Larry left. Two million is enough to disappear in Europe."
"Sorry, hon, I don't think so. Even if he did, I don't have a passport."
We argued. She was scaredārightly soāand wanted to flee, but she wanted me along to protect her. She insisted.
I resisted. As much as the thought of lolling about the Mediterranean with Sydney appealed to me, I knew I'd never lose the burning sensation in my gut that came from knowing what was happening back here and doing nothing about it. It was hard to argue with her because I didn't tell her everything. Beck had stolen money, end of story as far as our conversation went. Nothing about the business they were in. I was reluctant to let her see the filthy side of men she'd shared a bed with. I didn't want her skin to crawl or nightmares to haunt her.
"I'm going to convince you," she announced when it was plain that neither of us were budging. "You'll see."
"How?"
"You're going to tell me your fantasies, every single one of them. And I'm going to promise to make all of them come true, every single one of them. And that will make you realize that saying no to me is a very, very silly idea." She had a wide grin. "I'm gonna guess one's a threesome because every straight man has that oneĀ ... so that's the sweater."
"The sweater?"
"Yep. Short-term incentive while I work on the long-term promises." She stood and stripped her sweater off. She glanced down. "Six pieces of clothing left. Tying me to the bed, and then doing whatever you want? Aah, you don't need to answer because your expression already has. That's the right shoe. Okay, I need five more."
I hemmed and hawed.