“I think you know.” He let go. Blood welled out of the red marks that his nails had left. “Struggle is necessary. Punishment exalts.”
“Easy for you to talk of punishment. You did not suffer as I did, with your father’s money to protect you.”
Novak went very still. Georg cringed away, sensing that he had gone too far.
Georg was wrong. His father had taught him about punishment. That lesson was frozen in his mind, dead center. A tableau in a globe of imperishable crystal. He turned away from the memory and held up his left hand. “Does this look as if I know nothing of punishment?”
Georg’s eyes dropped in shame, as well they ought.
A gull shrieked in the darkening sky. Novak looked up, and exulted in the wild creature’s freedom. Soon he would be reborn, with no father, no mother. He would be spotless, surrounded by gods and angels. He would be free at last, and he would never look back.
He jolted himself back to the present. “Be grateful that you have been chosen as my instrument to make this sacrifice, Georg. My gods are not for cowards, or weaklings.”
Georg hesitated. “I am not weak,” he said sourly.
“No, you are not.” He patted Georg’s shoulder. The younger man flinched at the contact. “You know my tastes just as I know yours. I would rip their throats out with my teeth and drink their blood, if I had that luxury. But I cannot compromise this new identity before I have even established it. You know exactly what it will cost me to step aside and let you play…while I watch.”
Georg nodded reluctantly.
“I have chosen you to tear them to pieces for me, Georg,” Novak said gently. “And still, you cannot wait. You whine. You complain.”
Georg’s eyes narrowed. “Do you plan to give it up, then?”
“Give up what? Drinking the blood of innocents?” Novak toasted Georg with the skull goblet and smiled. “You know me too well to ask such a stupid question.”
Streaks of purplish red appeared on Georg’s cheeks. The flush faded almost instantly to ghostly pallor. “I will help you,” he said.
“I know you will, my friend,” Novak said. “And you will be rewarded for your loyalty. You must be patient, and trust me.”
The terrace door opened, and Tamara and Nigel stepped out. Nigel looked uncomfortable, but that was his natural state of being.
Tamara smiled, stunning in her brief, ice-green dress. She’d changed her chestnut hair to red and her golden eyes to green since he had sent her to monitor the household of Victor Lazar, his old friend and nemesis. He suspected that she had done her duty there with a fraction too much zeal. Perhaps he was being unfair.
In any case, red suited her, and after six months of enforced celibacy, it suited him, too. She was astonishingly beautiful. He would settle for nothing less in his bed. And her ability to hack into computer databases and change the nature of reality to suit his whims was nothing short of magic. She was immensely talented.
Nigel cleared his throat. “The courier has just delivered the blood samples from Switzerland,” he announced.
Novak nodded his approval. Plans were proceeding with orderly smoothness. “Excellent. You know what needs to be done. See to it.”
“The switch is arranged,” Nigel said. “I have identified a technician at the DNA laboratory named Chuck Whitehead who is perfect for our purposes. I will arrange for him to do the switch late Sunday night. According to my statistical analysis, that’s the period when the laboratory is most deserted. I will dispose of him afterwards myself.”
“I have some good news, as well,” Tamara said. “We won’t need to bait the trap after all. The transponder on McCloud’s car shows him parked outside Erin Riggs’s apartment for thirty-five minutes this afternoon. He then followed her to her mother’s house.”
His eyes wandered over her body, appreciating how the sheath set off her long, perfect legs. “Wonderful. Stalking the poor girl already.”
Tamara’s smile widened. What a remarkable creature. Wanted all over the world for computer crimes and fraud, and her sexual skills were just as prodigious. She would do absolutely anything.
In fact, now that he thought about it, her lack of squeamishness was almost inhibiting. A touch of disgust or fear was like a pinch of salt that brought out the flavor of a dish. After so long without sex, he had been less discerning than usual, but his natural high standards were quickly reasserting themselves.
He was irritated. He wondered if she were doing it deliberately. Unacceptable, that one of his servants should presume to manipulate him. How dare she.
Georg stirred restlessly, his fists clenching. “So the police must have told McCloud that we are free,” he said.
Tamara turned her brilliant smile upon him. “It would seem so.”
“Then Erin knows that I am coming for her.”
Tamara’s smile faltered at the concentrated malevolence in Georg’s voice. Then the smile quickly reappeared…and gave him an idea.
“No, Georg,” he said. “Don’t be obtuse. Erin knows nothing of the sort. I have spent a great deal of money to arrange for reports of our sighting in France.”
“I am dying,” Georg moaned, in dialect. “I suffer.”
Novak sighed. Georg could be so tedious. The poor man was a volcano of festering anger from his traumatic prison experience.
Perhaps he should offer Tamara to Georg, and observe the results. He could gauge her loyalty and commitment, and at the same time, siphon off some of Georg’s restless, dangerous energy.
“Stay and help us celebrate, my dear,” he said. “Georg, would you care to indulge? Let Tamara ease your torment.”
Georg’s ruined mouth twisted in a feral smile.
Novak studied Tamara’s reaction. Her expression did not waver, but he sensed the tightening in her jaw as the smile froze into place.
His loins stirred. Yes. This was what had been missing. Delicious.
He smiled at Nigel. “Nigel, you may stay. Tamara likes to be watched, no? Did you learn to love it during your time with Victor?”
Her smile was like a neon sign, bright and empty. “Of course, boss,” she said, without missing a beat.
Nigel’s face paled, but he knew better than to decline. Poor, sexless Nigel. This would be good for him. He was less manually skilled as an assassin than Georg, but the mask he presented to the world was impeccable. He was a dried-up, forgettable, middle-aged gray man, whereas Georg had lost his ability to blend. Georg was now no more than a deadly weapon to be kept hidden until violence was called for.
Georg wrenched Tamara’s fragile dress down. The shoulder straps broke, and she stood naked on the terrace, the chilly evening breeze making her dark nipples tighten. She waited, unsure of what was expected of her. It was rare, to see her at a loss. Arousing.
Nigel grimaced, afraid to look away. Georg unbuttoned his pants.
He settled back on his chaise, lifted the skull goblet to his lips, and gestured for them to begin.
It occurred to him, as he watched the spectacle, that he could liberate Tamara after her usefulness was done. The danger to his new identity would be minimal. Tamara was estranged from what family she had. She barely existed on paper. The contacts through which he had found her would not ask questions. Her body would never be found.
Perhaps she had been offered to him just for this purpose.
Georg was being very rough. Novak