Tom Cain - The accident man

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"Enchante, mademoiselle," replied Leclerc. "I am Magnus Leclerc. But please, Natasha, call me Magnus. Can I persuade you to join me, while we wait for monsieur Vandervart?"

"Are you sure? I mean, if you think it's all right…"

"But of course, I insist."

"Thank you, that would be very nice. I just hope I haven't intruded on you."

She blushed a little as she sat down opposite him, smoothing her skirt over her perfect thighs. She then gave a regretful little shake of her head and a frown of concern.

"You know, Mr. Vandervart is a wonderful man, but I really think he should take it easier. It's not my place to say anything, of course, but men like him work too hard. Of course, they want to do the best for their families, but sometimes they should think more about themselves. Don't you agree?"

Magnus Leclerc would happily have agreed with any proposal the girl cared to put to him. "Absolutely," he said, with an enthusiastic nod.

The girl smiled, as if grateful for his approval. She placed her elbows on the table and leaned forward slightly, letting her scent waft across the table and accidentally giving Leclerc the tiniest glimpse of cleavage as her breasts were squeezed between her upper arms.

"Mmm," she purred, "that martini looks so tempting. It's very naughty of me to have a drink while I'm still supposed to be working, but could you get one for me too? Is that all right?"

"But of course, I'd be delighted," said the banker.

As he got up from the table and walked toward the bar, he realized that his pulse was racing. He ordered a drink and adjusted his tie in the mirror behind the bar. When the martini was ready, the barman raised an eyebrow in a gesture of wry acknowledgment, one man to another. Leclerc smiled back, gave the barman a friendly slap on the arm, and left him a ten franc tip. Then he turned around and carried the drink back to the girl. She didn't like to admit it, but Alix was enjoying herself. She'd felt the eyes following her as she crossed the foyer-the lust of the bellhop and the concierge; the envy of the plain receptionist; the considered, competitive assessment of the pretty one. When she walked into the bar, she'd had to suppress a smile at the comic spat between the old man and his wife. Then she'd watched the banker trying not to gawk at her like a goggle-eyed sixteen-year-old virgin, and she'd known this was going to be easy.

From then on, she'd worked by the manual: the smile, the eye contact, the gestures that would both arouse a man's interest and signal her availability, the conversational gambits that ended in a question, inviting the man to agree. Ask any top-class pickup artist: If you start the other person saying yes, they don't stop, all the way to the bedroom.

She'd been tempted to see if she could work her magic without any chemical assistance, but seducing Leclerc was just a means to an end. They had to get him talking as well.So when he went up to the bar, she'd reached into her bag and taken out her cigarettes and lighter. Anyone watching would have seen that. They wouldn't have noticed the little capsule she palmed, nor seen her snap it in two and deposit its contents into Leclerc's glass as she reached across and idly toyed with the olive on its black plastic stick.

The powder settled on the surface of the martini, but disappeared with a couple of stirs of the stick. Leclerc returned to the table to find Alix looking up at him with a guilty look on her face, saying, "Oops! You caught me! I was just about to steal your olive. I'm sorry. I can't resist them!"

He tried to give her his smoothest smile. "Well, here's one of your very own."

Alix took the olive from the glass Leclerc had placed in front of her and slipped it into her mouth, between her glossy red lips. "Mmm, delicious!" she said, then playfully ran her tongue along her upper lip. She told herself to stop fooling around. If she were too obvious, too easy, Leclerc might get suspicious. Time to be a bit more respectable.

She looked at him slightly wide-eyed, like an eager, respectful pupil sitting at her favorite professor's feet. "I've always been fascinated by Swiss banks. They sound so powerful and mysterious. You must tell me all about your work. I'd really like to know." The bartender's name was Marcel. He'd spent more than thirty years serving drinks, watching the games that play out when men, women, and alcohol collide. He thought of himself as a connoisseur of the art of seduction. So the moment the girl stepped into his domain, then shone her smile at the man in the corner, Marcel's interest was piqued.

He was reasonably certain that this was some kind of con. The man was a mark and she was playing him. After the second martini, she'd discreetly switched to sparkling water, but the man had stayed with his liquor. Marcel chuckled to himself and looked forward to the evening's entertainment.

The bar was beginning to fill up now. A group of businessmen had come in, each in turn checking out the brunette and smirking to one another as they ordered their drinks. Then a bizarre figure strode up and perched on one of the long-legged chairs by the glossy wooden countertop. He was almost two meters tall, dressed in battered, patched jeans and a T-shirt printed in lurid shades of yellow and purple. He had hair like a black man, except it was a pale, sandy color, and his eyes were Nordic blue.

Marcel sighed, sadly, bemoaning the loss of proper standards. Nowadays it was impossible to tell the difference between the beggars and the millionaires. A man in tratty denims could be a rock star, an actor, or one of those American computer tycoons people kept talking about. Maybe he was the hippie son of a wealthy family. When he ordered a Heineken, he gave the number of a junior suite. His watch was a Breitling Navitimer-an expensive chronograph, but also a serious, functional one. He had good manners too. Businessmen tended to place their orders brusquely, without a please or a thank you. But this white Rastaman took the trouble to converse a little in a calm, easygoing voice. He showed respect for Marcel's job and his dignity. Maybe the clothes could be forgiven.

"Would you like some matches, monsieur?" Marcel said, nodding at the Camel cigarettes on the counter, next to the beer glass.

The man smiled. "No thank you, I'm trying to give them up. Keeping them there is like a test. If I can have a couple of beers without smoking a cigarette, I'll know I'm getting somewhere."

He glanced across to the corner of the room, turned back to Marcel, and said, "Have you seen the couple in the corner? She just stroked his face. Then he took her hand and kissed it. Isn't love great?"

Marcel winked. "L'amour, toujours l'amour…" In the earpiece hidden beneath his dreadlocks, Thor Larsson could hear Carver's voice. "Yeah, I saw it. It's almost scary how good she is at this."

Inside the Camel pack there was a miniature video camera pointing through a pin-size aperture, with a signal transmitter linked to a video monitor and recorder in Carver's room. A microphone and an audio transmitter were hidden in Alix's bag. Everything she and the banker did, every word they said, was all going down on tape.

"I wonder what she's like in bed," mused Larsson, apparently for the bartender's benefit.

Carver laughed. "Well don't expect me to tell you."

"If only I could hear what they're talking about."

"Don't worry. I'm getting the audio feed from Alix, clear as a bell."

"Could you get me another beer, please? And some nuts, if you've got them. I think I'll stick around."

47

Grigori Kursk was a patient man. He'd learned that lesson in Afghanistan. Too many of his comrades had rushed into combat, hoping to overwhelm the mujahidin guerrillas with sheer weight of firepower, only to be outsmarted, ambushed, and sent straight to hell. Kursk could wait for hours, days, as long as it took to make the other man move first and expose his position. Only then would he strike.

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