The words, more than the money, forever placed him in Edward’s debt. And, somewhat ironically, Edward had become the financial handler for the Lazlo Group.
With Adam, Corbett had fled the country, coming to France. When he’d created the Lazlo Group, Adam was the first agent he recruited to join. Together, they oversaw the labor pains of its concrete formation. But if asked, Adam always gave him the credit for the group’s inception. It was the Lazlo Group, not the Lazlo–Sinclair Group.
Originally, the agency had been created as a means to prove Corbett’s innocence. His intention was to discover who had planted all the damning evidence against him. But even now, more than a decade later, he still had no answers.
He had, however, managed—thanks to the advances in forensic science and the introduction of DNA as a tool—to prove that he had never betrayed his country.
Apologies were issued. The S.I.S., saying all was forgiven, wanted him back. But he hadn’t wanted it back. Because all was not forgiven, as far as he was concerned.
These days, he had little time to pursue a trail that was close to seventeen years cold. The Lazlo Group had grown from two to more than fifty. It was now an international team of highly trained agents with a myriad of talents and skills, not the least of which was discretion. Corbett’s nephew, Edward’s son Joshua, had surprised Corbett by becoming one of his best agents.
The Group was also perhaps the best-kept secret in the free world among the upper rungs of governments. Usually called in as a last resort, or when a situation was of such a delicate, discreet nature that no one else could be trusted to handle it, the ever-growing organization had more work than it knew what to do with. Consequently, there was no time to investigate a personal wrong done to him so many years ago.
But he would eventually solve the puzzle, Corbett promised himself. He didn’t believe in loose ends.
Corbett had no idea how long he’d been in his office at the high-tech yet largely inconspicuous Lazlo Group headquarters before he heard the low, melodic sound that indicated he’d received another missive on his computer.
He swung his swivel chair around to face the state-of-the-art machine that Lucia, his wizard of all things computer, had insisted he get, and looked at the flat panel screen.
There was a single sentence on it.
The day of repentance draws near, Lazlo.
The moment he read it, his phone rang. Only a handful of his operatives and a select few heads of state had the direct number to his office. In the case of the latter, the signal was bounced and rerouted to several terminals throughout the world before it finally reached him. Just another device to protect his whereabouts and his people. Trust No One was more than just a once-popular cult saying. It was a credo that kept him alive and strong.
Picking up the receiver, he said, “Lazlo,” in a calm, resonant voice. The same voice that had soothed distraught world leaders when they were confronted with the kidnapping of a loved one. The same voice that promised secrecy and a swift resolution above all else.
There was no hint of the disquiet that currently resided beneath his reserve.
“It’s Henderson.”
After Sinclair, Wallace Henderson was the group’s oldest operative. Even more than Sinclair, Henderson prided himself on remaining unruffled. But Corbett’s trained ear detected a strain in the other man’s voice.
He wasn’t wrong. After a beat, Henderson said, “Lazlo, someone killed Jane Kiley.”
The already military straight posture stiffened even more. Corbett’s hand tightened on the receiver. His words of praise were few and he showed no signs of making emotional connections, but that didn’t change the fact that he was very protective of his people.
“When?” he demanded. “How?”
Henderson recited the bare bones. “An hour ago. Lisbon. Car bomb.”
Henderson’s voice cracked. It wasn’t the result of one agent’s indignation over another’s murder. Corbett knew about his people, knew without being directly informed by the parties involved that Henderson and Kiley had been lovers ever since they’d been partnered on a case a little more than a year ago. They probably thought they were being discreet enough to avoid detection. But few things escaped Corbett’s notice.
“Do we know who?” he asked, already making notes to himself. When it came to keeping track of events, he reverted to paper and pencil. The old way. But this time around, he also didn’t want to use the computer any more than he had to until Lucia took a look at it. There had to be a way to trace the sender of the message.
“No.” Henderson ground out the word, frustration echoing in his voice. “She’d just wrapped up the case you sent her on. The munitions were safely returned to their original owner, as per instruction. She’d had the money wired to the Swiss account and verified the transaction.” One tiny, shaky breath escaped before Henderson regained control. “She was coming home.”
“Find the son of a bitch who did this,” Corbett ordered. There was no emotion in his voice, only volume, but his people understood that was his way of coping. “And bring her back,” he added more quietly.
“But—”
He heard the bewilderment in Henderson’s voice. They both knew what the end result of a car bombing looked like. A charred body at best, a disintegrated one at worst.
“Whatever you can find, Henderson,” Corbett told him, his voice less gruff despite the fact that he was having a difficult time coping with this news. They’d lost only one man on the job since the group came into being. Nathaniel O’Hara had been a demolitions expert trying to disarm a bomb strapped to a man’s chest. Neither the man nor O’Hara made it out of that afternoon alive. But the bomber had been brought down a week later. Corbett had been in on the kill. “I’m sending Taggert to go over the scene.”
He ended the call before Henderson could say anything more. The next moment, he called Taggert with instructions to take the first flight to Lisbon.
After that, he sent for Lucia. He wanted to know where the message on his screen had come from.
The perspiration forming along his hairline did not go unnoticed. There had to be a tie-in between what had happened to Kiley, the message on his screen and his nightmare. He didn’t believe in coincidences, not even when they involved dreams.
Most of the time, Prudence Hill, daughter of the prime minister of England, liked to shake things up. By definition, she was not a creature of habit. However, some things in her life just naturally seemed to fall into a pattern. Barring a monsoon or a pronounced case of the flu, she always jogged first thing in the morning. And her route was always the same.
Unencumbered by bodyguards, which she vehemently refused to live with, she ran clockwise along the oblong perimeter of St. James Park until it eventually fed back to the street she started out on, at which point she’d jog back to her apartment. It was as close to a country setting as she could get in the West End.
Pru preferred running as early as possible, when there were fewer cars out. She was more than a little aware of the irony of attempting to maintain a healthy cardiovascular regimen while breathing in the exhaust fumes being belched out by the many vehicles that sped or crawled along the London streets. But it couldn’t be helped. Since breathing in exhaust was a permanent part of the equation in London whether or not she jogged, she chose to jog.
Perspiration slid down her spine, working its way through her sports bra and turning her baggy T-shirt into an uncomfortable collection of cotton threads that adhered to her body. The air was heavy. The famous runner’s high had found her less than midway through her jog, but it was battling mightily with fatigue because the weather was so oppressive.
Jogging in