BOOK THREE • PART ONE
Author's Note:
I promised the third book by mid-October but managed to get it done quite a bit sooner. There are two parts and they should be out within about 7-10 days of each other if everything goes well. There is still a little bit of part two that is unfinished as I always like to see a few comments/receive some feedback in between publishing.
Of course, if you are new to this story, please start with books one and two, lest you be completely lost.
All sexual activity is between characters that are 18 or older. This is a work of fiction and any resemblance to real persons, places or events is purely coincidental. The below is not intended to serve as a guide for real-life sexual encounters or relationships. Stay safe, happy and healthy! :-)
As always, feel free to reach out with any feedback!
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Prologue • Tunisia
Vallance poured himself a notch of Scotch only to toss it down the drain just before it touched his lips... He'd been poisoned twice before and didn't want to risk a third time.
The old spy had been a servant of queen and country for four decades and stayed alive by not taking any chances. His tiny safehouse in Tunis prioritised security over comfort. He settled on a rickety chair to write his final report with pen and paper, not trusting electronic devices of any type. He stared at his tobacco and cigarette papers for a while before sighing and turning to his work.
Blonde, blue-eyed, sophisticated... He was very much what you'd expect.
When Cassandra Nash approached her old friend with her crazy theory, he had his doubts. Only intuition led Nash to suspect that the prime minister's wife, and supposed daughter of a century-old noble house, was not who she claimed to be. The story seemed too surreal, but it wasn't long before evidence emerged to prove even the wildest speculation.
He should've known she'd be right. After all, you know what they say about a women's intuition...
Turning to his old tape recorder, Vallance played an interview some spooks in London managed to secure with the woman who claimed to be Rosemary Payne. They'd seen her on several occasions, giving her the codename Lyric to distinguish her from the girl whose life she stole. She seemed more than happy to sit and taunt them with her arrogance and wickedness, insisting she would tell them anything but refusing to testify before a court or the commons.
"I admit I'm not who I say I am," the recording started.
"You confess?"
"Confess? Ha! And what's my crime?"
"What happened to the real Rosemary?" the interviewer asked. "Society circles gossiped about an alleged assault -- that she was raped at her family home while her father was in London. Is that why he replaced her? Was it some sick way to preserve his fragile honour?"
"Yes," Lyric answered casually, as though she were revealing something ordinary and innocent.
Even over the recording, Vallance could sense a change in tone as the interviewer shifted into a higher gear. These spies were cold and even jaded, yet even they could only stomach so much vileness.
"That's not the whole story, is it?"
An irritated Lyric struck back. "I just told you--"
"You just lied!" the spy accused. "Years after the attack, a pair of journalists wanted to publish the details of that night, but the courts prohibited it to keep the victim's identity a secret. Years later, another journalist discovered new evidence, and that's when your 'father' leaned on the government to suppress the story!"
"What story?!"
"The identity of the perpetrator: The fact that he was a student at one of the nearby boarding schools..."
"You know nothing--"
"We know your husband, the prime minister, attended one of those schools and visited the manor regularly. He was Payne's protege, and Payne wanted to protect the boy he dreamed would become the leader of the government. He wanted to protect him even more than he wanted to protect his daughter; his own flesh and blood."
A second interviewer added, "Maybe she insisted on going to the police, or perhaps she simply wouldn't marry the man after what he'd done, defying her father."
The fake Rosemary snapped. "Fuck you, tossers! I'm here voluntarily, and now I'm leaving."
Shaking his head, Vallance hit pause on the tape before making some notes. Throughout his career, he'd been sent to investigate witchcraft and war crimes. This matter seemed far more horrible...
A father who loved power more than his only child and a prime minister who'd committed an unspeakable crime. All of them, including the actress playing her minor role, made him sick. Leaning back in his chair, the wizened old spy looked for a distraction and found it. Picking up an unmarked silver coin with straight edges, he spun it on the desk and watched it until it fell. It was the little reality-check he needed before continuing his work.
Changing the tapes, Vallance played a section of an interview between the pretender and representatives of the Orwell Organisation. Oliver Orwell wasn't happy when Nash called upon her spy friends instead of letting his people handle the matter internally, but Vallance knew the kid would thank them in the end.
This was big. Too big for him to handle.
Eventually, the spooks relented and allowed for one session where Orwell's crowd could take the lead. An American -- a former police officer named Isabelle -- conducted the interview with a woman named Trixie Roth accompanying her. Trixie had recently joined the Family and previously worked for MI6, which meant they wanted her in the room.
"They say Rosemary fell pregnant after the attack," Isabelle posited.
"She did."
"Did the baby survive whatever happened to her?"
The tone changed as the pretender took aim at her interviewers. "Look at you two... Little lapdogs for a rich man who wants to play detective. Tell me, puppies, does he rub your bellies and pat you on the head when you come after people like me?"
"People like you?" Isabelle asked calmly, unfazed by the insults, having worked as a beat cop in New York and quite used to all sorts of toxic name-calling from criminals.
"I'm an innocent party!" Lyric protested. "I was picked up off the street and told to do this job! I never asked for it; I just happened to match the poor girl enough to pass for her."
"No, my dear," Isabelle rebuffed, "you weren't innocent then, and you certainly aren't innocent now... You're not some sensitive little flower being exploited against her will. I think you loved every moment of stealing Rosemary's identity -- that you still love it. You feel entitled to it. You feel you deserve it more than she deserved to live a happy and full life."
"I do!" the interviewee barked. "God knows, I spent a few weeks with her before they kicked her into a ditch. She thought it was so lovely that her dear papa found her a friend to help as the pregnancy progressed. She even made remarks about how similar we looked. All the while, I wanted to wrap my hands around her neck and--"
Suddenly, there was an interruption on the tape, which Vallance knew to be when Trixie Roth jumped out of her chair and nearly beat Lyric to a pulp. Luckily, she was restrained by her companion and couldn't do any damage. The outburst should've been no surprise considering Roth was discharged from the Service due to her volatile personality.
Vallance, who'd been around the block a few times, smiled as he remembered being young and reckless. He too was picked for the job because he wanted a place in the world and was a little crazy. Though, he'd managed to settle his temperament when others never achieved the same -- people like Roth who walk around with anger and hatred and nausea that won't go away as they fail to accept the rigid limits of justice and fairness in a world full of evil most people believe only exists in films and television.
Feeling contemplation hit, Vallance carefully rolled a cigarette, igniting it with his trusty nickel and pigskin lighter before taking a slow drag. If he'd ever had a wife, she'd have probably gotten him to stop smoking.
Fast forwarding, he picked up the interview where it had resumed, with Lyric sounding far more humble.
"The baby? Alright..." she drifted from one word to the next. "Uncle Eddie was going through some hormonal nonsense or something. You know, estrogen pumping and whatnot? He planned to adopt the kid with his girlfriend. It sounded like a good idea for a while, but the people who found me were very against it. Still, he wanted the child to have a life, so they named her Sian and posted her to Wales, where she lived with some dirt-poor family that didn't have a flushing toilet... It's a fate crueller than death if you ask me."
Isabelle questioned, "Uncle Eddie? Edward Sardonis? He knew Lord Payne and assisted with the cover-up?"
"Yes."
"He and his girlfriend wanted a child? You mean, Elizabeth Wharry?"