The Devil's Anvil
By Matt Hilton
5/5
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About this ebook
When ex-soldier Joe Hunter agrees to protect grieving mother, Billie Womack, on behalf of a DEA contact, it's a pledge he will come to regret.
Her husband, Richard, was a thief. In a desperate attempt to escape his pursuers, Richard apparently died in a car crash, along with their daughter, Nicole. But the violent people chasing Richard think he escaped the plunge into the river canyon that killed Nicole: they want him ... and the thirty million dollars he stole from them. And they think Billie knows where he is and that Richard will return for the money.
Soon Joe and Billie become fugitives, chased by relentless killers. Joe has no idea who he can really trust, but he'll do everything in his power to save an innocent life. Richard's fate means nothing to him, but protecting the grieving woman is a no-brainer for Joe Hunter, even if it means taking a bullet meant for her.
It's a price he'll pay, and come to regret, when he learns that killers shaped on the Devil's anvil come in unexpected ways.
Praise for THE DEVIL'S ANVIL ...
"There's plenty of heart-in-the-mouth action, smart dialogue and convincing extras ... give me Joe Hunter over Reacher any day." — Crimereview.co.uk
"To sum up, THE DEVIL'S ANVIL is a fantastic novel which is a welcome addition to an excellent series. 5/5." — Crimesquad.com
"Fast paced, entertaining and very readable the story moves along at a frenetic pace ... another great read." — Milorambles.com
Matt Hilton
Matt Hilton is an expert in kempo jujitsu and holds the rank of fourth dan. He founded and taught at the respected Bushidokan Dojo, and he has worked in private security and for the Cumbria police department. Hilton is married and lives in England.
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The Devil's Anvil - Matt Hilton
Chapter 1
‘Keep your head down this time, Billie, and don’t move. They won’t see us if you stay still.’
There were three men in a GMC Suburban hunting us, two in the front and one in the back. The bottle-green SUV was canted on its chassis, the right side sitting in a deep rut in the road where it crested the hill, the other wheels on the grass embankment. One of the men held something to his face, the glint of moonlight off lenses betraying a set of night vision binoculars. He scanned the road and the forest on both sides. His friends relied on their unassisted vision as they checked out the road both front and back.
They couldn’t see the woman or me.
Wilhelmina ‘Billie’ Womack was scrunched in a hollow in the forest floor, with a stack of broken twigs piled in front of her offering further concealment. I was ten feet away, crouching behind the bole of an ancient fir tree. A storm had torn down the upper half of the tree during a previous season, and the tangle of its brittle branches hid me from the watchful eyes of the hunters in the Suburban.
‘Where are the others?’ Billie whispered. ‘What if they’re moving in behind us, Joe?’
‘It’s always a possibility, but I won’t hear them if you keep talking. Do as I say, keep still and stay silent.’
Billie was a spirited woman, not someone who ordinarily took orders lightly. But I was glad to find that this time she knew I was speaking sense, and that it was best to keep her head down.
The Suburban didn’t move. The men inside continued to search the woodland, but none of them was looking our way. The road before them wasn’t an easy track to negotiate, not even for an off-roader. Best-case scenario was if they reversed back the way they’d come, took another route through the forest. Yet it seemed they weren’t ready to give up on the hunt. I listened. Distantly I could hear another engine, alternately revving and petering out as a second SUV pushed its way along another trail. The terrain was hilly, densely forested, and though there was no way of pinpointing the direction of the second vehicle it sounded far off and of no immediate concern. A helicopter kept buzzing overhead, but the canopy was too thick for its crew to see us. More worrying were the searchers on foot who for all I knew could be close.
Occasionally I heard the crackling of twigs, but again the sound was distant. Didn’t mean that a more accomplished stalker wasn’t nearby. My friend Rink could move through this forest without setting a foot wrong or leaving a distinct track, and there were plenty of trackers as skilled as him, some more so. Truth was, the people hunting us were more capable than many. They didn’t rush trying to flush us out; once they’d got in position, they were controlled and methodical in their search. Someone guiding them was laying down a search grid and sooner or later they’d stumble on to our position.
I was armed, albeit lightly, with a SIG Sauer P226 and a folding knife. But those that sought us came with heavier armament: rifles, automatic pistols. It was serious artillery to bring down an unarmed, untrained woman. Our only advantage was that those chasing Billie didn’t realise who was with her. The only person who could have told them about me was in no position to do that. He was lying at the bottom of a ravine with a broken neck.
The man with the binoculars swept the ground before us, but continued past without being alerted to our presence. He must have said something, because the driver brought the Suburban forward a few yards. The big car tipped like a seesaw as it negotiated its new position, but it inched forward again. Then, once out of the deepest ruts, the driver steered it down the hill and so close that I could smell the exhaust fumes that plumed from the tail pipe.
‘They’re going to see us…’ Billie’s voice was high-pitched, fraught with anxiety.
‘Hold your position. They’re not aware of you, and things will stay that way unless you move.’
‘Please, Joe,’ Billie said. ‘Don’t let them take me.’
‘I won’t,’ I promised.
My pledge might have rung empty to her. Billie had come to me for protection, and in her mind that might mean firm and resolute action, not hiding like rodents in a burrow. But I was one man against many, outgunned and outmanoeuvred, and her best hope for safety was that we’d go unnoticed by the hunters. I was itching to do something more telling than crouch behind the fallen tree, and if it had been only my life on the line I’d have probably gone for broke. I bit down on the urge to shoot it out with the men in the SUV.
They passed us by.
I sighed as the Suburban jounced a route along the trail and headed up the next incline. I followed the big car’s progress, seeing it through drifting rags of blue smoke that hung in the cold moonlight like will-o’-the-wisps. As it crested the next rise it paused again as the men inside checked the terrain for any telltale signs.
Billie adjusted her position so that she could check where the car was and I heard the crackle of twigs beneath her elbows. The sound was a faint rustle at most, but in the stillness of the forest she might as well have jumped up and down, waving her arms and yelling ‘Over here!’ A corresponding crackle alerted me to the location of something moving through the brush. I hoped in that fraction of a second that it was merely a forest creature, startled by our proximity, but knew our luck was out.
Twisting round, I brought my SIG to bear on the man who’d risen from a dry watercourse about twenty feet behind us. He was wearing cammo fatigues to help blend with the forest. It seemed a lot of trouble to go to when hunting a townie like Billie, as did the rifle the man aimed. The only saving grace was that my movement surprised him. He’d been stalking the woman, closing in on her, and was up until that moment unaware of my presence. He was no weekend warrior though, and my presence gave him only a split second’s pause. He swung his rifle on me even as I shot at him.
Our bullets must have crossed midway because I was knocked back against the tree at the exact same time he folded over my round in his gut. I’d been hit higher up; attesting to that was the way in which my body was spun by the impact and my left arm swung out to compensate. I smacked up against the tree, and then fell on my side, landing badly because my arm wasn’t able to break the fall. The initial shock of being shot was bad enough, but the pain hadn’t hit yet. It would come and when it happened it would be debilitating. Had to stop the hunter before he could turn his attention on Billie. I fought to a good shooting position, even as the man cursed and struggled with the bolt on his rifle. In his shadowed face, his eyes rolled white and his teeth flashed. His concentration was on me as he fired and the impact on my left shoulder made me jerk the trigger of my SIG so that my return shot missed. Blackness edged my vision, and I barely saw the man take an extra step forward, firming his rifle against his shoulder. A hot wetness was pooling in my shirt and my breath hitched in my lungs. So this is it then, I thought, the place I’m going to die?
I pushed the thought aside. I’d reconciled myself to violent and uncompromising death long ago, also resolving that when the time came I wouldn’t lie down and give in to the inevitable.
‘Bastard,’ I snarled as I squeezed my trigger again and again.
The rifleman’s gun flashed, but my hearing had compressed to register only the rush of blood through my veins. He danced a jig, a dark crimson halo puffing around him as my bullets struck repeatedly. I felt the solid thud of his round slam me, and the strength required to pull my trigger fled.
The smell of cordite wafted past, replaced by the coppery tang of spilled blood: whether the gunman’s or mine I couldn’t be sure.
My hearing was still muffled, and a heavy fog descended through my field of vision. Billie clawed herself free of her foxhole, began crawling towards me. I showed her my empty palm. Droplets of blood peppered the back of my hand.
‘Leave me,’ I said. ‘Go back the way we just came. Try to get to the road.’
Perhaps the words were only in my head, or she was more spirited than I’d already thought, because she didn’t run away. She went down on her knees beside me, and I realised I was lying on my back, peering up at her. She’d found my knife. Her hair whipped round her face as she slashed and stabbed in an arc around her, her voice screeching a challenge.
‘I…I’m done. Get away before the others come.’
Between killing the rifleman and Billie grabbing my knife, I must have passed out. I’d lost time. There were already men standing around us, pitiless in the way they aimed their guns down at us both.
Billie shrieked something at them, lunging with the knife.
One of the silhouetted figures grabbed her by an elbow and yanked it away. She fought to break loose. Her captor struck her across the face and she slumped. I tried to struggle up, but if anything only my astral form moved, because I wasn’t going anywhere. My arms were numb, as were my legs. My body felt as heavy as a mountainside. Only my eyelids had the ability to move, but even that strength was slipping away.
Someone crouched close by my side. A hand roughly patted me down, checking for other weapons. I’d no idea where my SIG was.
‘So who the hell is this guy?’ a voice asked, the words coming to me as if from a great distance.
‘Doesn’t matter now,’ said another. ‘Finish him, Danny.’
My lids flickering, I tried to face death.
I saw the metallic gleam of a gun barrel.
A flash.
That was all.
Chapter 2
Days earlier…
Billie Womack loved her home. It was a ranch-style, two storeys, with a peaked roof and stone chimneystack at one end and a flower garden out front. A porch ran the length of the front of the house, with a pitched roof to sluice off the frequent rain showers, or for depositing the accumulated snow during the winter months. Beyond the house was an old two-car garage, a reclaimed barn from the days when farming was the primary occupation in the region. In the garage she kept her father’s ancient Chevrolet pick-up truck and her smaller runaround, a VW Jetta SportWagen, as well as a quad bike for when she needed to get around her land on maintenance chores. The house stood on a spit of land above a pebble embankment marking the southern shore of a lake known locally as ‘Baker’s Hole.’ A stream plumed from the higher hills to the south of the house, disappeared beneath the access road, then wound a narrow path past her front garden and emptied into the lake. Tree-capped hills dominated the horizon whichever way she looked.
She’d inherited the house and fifteen acres of land on the southern side of the lake years ago, but never tired of standing on her porch viewing the changeable hills as each successive season passed. She recorded the passage of time with the hues of each season, painting them in oils and acrylics, occasionally in the somber hues of charcoal and pencil when her mood plummeted from longing to regret. She was certain her daughter, Nicola, would have loved her home too, but Nicola was no longer there to appreciate it.
These days her paintings were Billie’s main source of income. She’d earned herself a name in the art world, and occasionally sold her creations to buyers over the Internet, but most she sold to tourists from a boutique gallery she ran in the nearby town of Hill End, Washington State. Her artwork was a reason she’d held on to her dad’s old pick-up, as temperamental a vehicle as it was: carting her easel and paints and all the attached paraphernalia around—wasn’t easy in her Jetta, particularly when she went off-road to capture the scenery from a higher vantage point than the lakeside. On occasion she used the back of the pick-up as a platform on which she erected her easel, usually when the ground was thick with snow or boggy from rainfall.
She’d used the pick-up to get to a high point on the western hills, from where she could barely make out the roof and chimneystack of her house in the distance. On most days she’d have had no view of her home but today the weather was clement. Although the sky was pale grey, the clouds were insubstantial and very high. A little of the sun’s heat made it to the valley floor, but it wasn’t warm enough to shed her coat and boots yet. She was painting the undertones on to canvas; readying a landscape view she’d later take indoors and finish by memory in the attic bedroom she’d converted to a studio. It was important that she lay down the basis of the painting, not so much that the detail was exact later on. She took delight in inventing facets of her artwork that did not exist in the real world, and also by leaving out those that did. In that way she could paint the same scene over and over but each would be unique. Her current work showed the rock-strewn shore of Baker’s Hole, the still waters stretching half a mile to an undulating forest. For undertones she was using a sepia palette. But then she dipped her brush in the cadmium red and directed a single vertical stroke near the water’s edge. That was where Nicki would stand in the finished painting. Nicki featured in all her paintings without exception. It was her way of keeping her daughter’s memory alive.
In her paintings Nicki’s features were always left blank. It wasn’t through lack of trying that Billie couldn’t bring to mind her child’s face, and she had no desire to do so wrongly. She had any number of photographs of Nicola, digital and regular, but refused to refer to them for inspiration. The featureless girl had become her trademark and she preferred things to remain like that. She doubted she could have done her daughter’s beauty justice anyway.
She wasn’t maudlin as she applied the red paint to canvas. Nicola had been dead more than four years, the first raw flush of grief behind Billie now. When she thought of her daughter these days it was with a smile, and not the soul-devouring rage that once drove her to slash at the canvas with charcoal.
Finished for now, she stepped back, measuring the proportions of her creation, judging angles and depth, the play of shadow and weak sunlight, and she nodded in something approaching satisfaction. Never full satisfaction, because like all artists she was never confident that her creations were as good as they could be. It would do, she told herself, and washed out her brushes. She loaded her kit in a purpose-built lock-box, and placed it on the back of the pick-up with her collapsed easel. The canvas she set on the passenger seat for safety. After a half-dozen turns of the ignition key the old pick-up started, belching blue smoke. Driving back down the hillside, she took it slowly, and not just because she barely trusted the vehicle to complete the journey; she had no wish for the still-wet canvas to fall against the dashboard and smear.
A narrow track wound between trees, before the woodland opened up to the valley and lake. Birds broke from the tree line, startled to life by the sputtering growl of Billie’s vehicle. The engine noise and the cawing of birdlife carried far across the still waters, before echoing back from the line of hills. Billie part-squinted at each high-pitched call of the birds, sensing that if they continued it would herald the onset of a migraine headache. She had no desire to retire to a darkened room to stave off the pain and nausea, so instead elected to wind up her window and block the shrieks. She urged the pick-up along the road, seeing again her lovely house heave into view. The rise and fall of the road made it impossible to see all of the property in one go, and at first she could only make out the gable, the chimney stack and the garage; then when only a quarter-mile from home she saw something that was out of place.
‘Who’s that?’ she wondered aloud.
Parked in front of her house was a gunmetal-grey sedan car. Occasionally she received visitors, but they were few and far between. Generally it was a neighbour who called by, or someone interested in purchasing her artwork having been guided to the house by Hilary Bartlet, who worked part-time at Billie’s shop in Hill End. She wondered if this latest arrival had come in search of a particular piece of art, or to commission work, because the grey car wasn’t a vehicle she recognised. Billie craned to make out a figure inside it, but from this distance the windows were opaque, as blank and formulaic in colour as the car’s paintwork.
A man of similarly bland colours was standing on her porch.
That of itself wasn’t surprising. Someone who’d made the effort to drive all the way out to Baker’s Hole might decide to wait for her on receiving no reply when they knocked. Even as she figured the visitor had come to such a decision, he straightened and spied back at her. The man then turned briefly, and from the way he snapped his attention back on the approaching pick-up she guessed he’d hailed someone else. She followed the direction in which he’d turned and saw a second man walk out from the front of her garage. For obvious reasons, Billie experienced a twinge of concern. Hilary wouldn’t have sent these men to Billie’s house like this, not to the home of a single woman out in a remote corner of the hills. There was no formula to spotting an art lover, but Billie doubted the men in suits and raincoats were the type to while away the hours in any gallery—other than a shooting gallery. They looked like cops, or maybe FBI.
Billie fumbled her cell phone from her coat pocket and checked for missed messages. There were none. Hilary would have warned her if the men had been at the store inquiring after her whereabouts. She put the phone away. She didn’t take her foot off the gas. Momentarily she considered bypassing her house, keeping going until she was in Hill End, where she would feel less intimidated by facing the strangers. But what if she was worrying about nothing? The appearance of the men—cops, FBI agents or whatever—might have nothing to do with her former life. And, if it had, trying to run wouldn’t make any difference. Better to face things than have the grey car chase her along the valley.
She slowed, then pulled the Chevrolet into the drive. By now the first man she’d noticed was leaning on the porch rail, smiling faintly as she drew up alongside the sedan. His friend had stalled midway between the garage and house, and looked mildly embarrassed that he’d been caught snooping where he’d no right. She gave him a disapproving squint through her bug-encrusted windshield as she turned off the ignition. The engine continued to sputter a few beats after she withdrew the key.
As she climbed out of the pick-up, she looked at the two men in turn, before settling on the one on the porch. It was obvious from their manner that the one on her porch was the senior, in age and in rank. She directed her question at him. ‘Who are you people, and what the hell do you think you’re doing trespassing on my land?’
On the porch, the man adjusted his raincoat so that Billie got a look at the official shield clipped to his belt. ‘We’re looking for Wilhelmina Womack.’
‘Why?’
‘I’m Agent Brandon Cooper. I need to speak with her concerning her husband.’
Billie scowled at the man. ‘Why would a federal agent be asking after a dead man? You do know that Richard died?’
The agent snorted, before approaching the steps and moving down them at a leisurely pace. Billie waited. She folded her arms, a defensive posture. On her right forearm was a smudge of paint which she rubbed at with her opposite thumb, then allowed her arms to swing down by her sides. She felt awkward and knew that the agent would recognise her ill ease.
‘Mrs Womack,’ he said as he came to a halt in front of her. He was taller than her, slight of build, a man with neat grey hair, but he carried the faintest buzz of beard growth on his chin. She guessed that the agents had driven through the night to reach her home this morning. ‘Can we speak candidly and cut to the chase? You are Wilhelmina Womack?’
‘Billie…but I don’t need to answer your questions. I’ve already been through all this with the police, so I’ll ask you to leave.’ She pointed at their car.
Neither man budged.
‘Go on, get the hell out of here,’ Billie demanded. ‘And don’t come back without a goddamn warrant.’
‘Why would we need a warrant?’ asked Cooper. ‘I only want to speak with you.’
‘Show me that shield of yours.’
Cooper grunted at her attitude, but flicked back the front of his coat.
‘How do I know that it’s official? For all I know you guys are weirdos who seek out lone women while pretending to be federal agents. A badge like that, I could buy one of those at Toys R Us. Any other form of identification?’
For the first time Cooper’s look of smug satisfaction slipped. He dug in his breast pocket and brought out a leather wallet, flicking it open and holding it close to Billie, who studied an ID card inside it in detail.
‘Satisfied now?’ Cooper asked.
Billie checked his face against the photograph ID on the card. ‘Why would an ATF agent wish to speak to me about my deceased husband?’
‘Wouldn’t you rather we went inside? It’s a bit cold out here, don’t you think?’
Billie folded her arms: to hell with looking defensive. ‘We’re not going inside. I’m fine where we’re at; if you don’t like it, then you’re free to leave.’
Cooper glanced once at his fellow agent, turning his mouth up at one corner in a sour smile of acceptance. ‘It could take a while,’ he said.
‘I haven’t much to say about Richard. We ended on very acrimonious terms…and that was before he killed our daughter.’
Cooper appeared momentarily knocked off-stride by her bluntness. He again glanced at his colleague, this time indicating that he return to the sedan. ‘I’ll handle this, Ray. You may as well stay warm.’
‘This is your show, Brandon,’ said the other agent and turned away.
Cooper pushed his wallet inside his coat pocket, and then flicked a hand towards the lake. ‘If you’re unhappy about going inside, will you walk with me? It was a long drive over from Seattle, and I’m feeling every mile in my bones. Do you mind taking a stroll down by the lakeside?’ After a moment he added: ‘I can see why you’d live out in these hills. It’s beautiful here.’
As the younger agent climbed inside the sedan, Billie brought an extra coat from the passenger seat of her pick-up. It was through stubbornness that she’d refused to go inside, and now she was regretting it. While painting she hadn’t felt the cold, but down here where a chill breeze blew off the lake she found that she was trembling. Then again, it was more to do with Cooper’s loaded words than the low temperature, so it would probably make no difference. She shrugged into the coat, and then indicated that Cooper lead the way. His patent leather footwear wasn’t conducive to walking along the rocky shoreline, but it had been his decision to go that way, and his discomfort gave her some slight satisfaction.
Ripples of water sloshed on the pebbles along the shore. A recent storm had thrown leaves and twigs on to the lake surface; now they were piled in a small drift a foot or so higher up than the waterline. Cooper walked, using the mound of flotsam as a route marker, keeping it always at a pace to his right. Billie moved along, a step behind his left shoulder. A couple hundred yards further on Cooper halted and stared across the lake to where the hills on the far shore shimmered in the breeze. He exhaled, long and slow, purging some of the weariness of the journey from his bones, but also, Billie thought, girding himself for what was to come next. She also settled her gaze on a point on the distant shore, and nodded to herself.
‘Has Richard been in touch?’
Billie blinked a couple of times in confusion, but it was a waste. Cooper was still watching the far shore. Billie shoved her hands into her coat pockets. ‘What? Like via an Ouija board or something? Are you forgetting he’s dead?’
Cooper’s shoulders rose and fell an inch. He still didn’t turn towards her. ‘His body was never found. I know that you filed to have him recognised as deceased, and your petition was granted, but that’s not the same as us discovering his corpse.’
Images flashed across Billie’s vision of a vehicle plummeting from a bridge, with her daughter Nicola inside, screaming in terror all the way down to the shocking collision. It was easy to imagine the terrific impact of the car as it slammed hood first into the river: from the height it had fallen, it would have been akin to striking concrete. She saw the structure of the car collapse, roof and doors bursting open like a rotted fruit, the windshield smashing to glittering atoms as frothing water cascaded inside to force Nicola from her seat. She thought of her unconscious daughter expelled by the displacement of pressure, to tumble and turn in the dark, freezing water, until finally she’d been caught by the clinging tree roots a quarter-mile downstream, to perish from her injuries and hypothermia. Nicola had not drowned, but it was easy for the investigators to assume that had been Richard’s fate. They thought that the freezing waters had claimed him, sucked him down to some deep, dark place beneath the boulders from which the subsequent police dive team had failed to discover him.
‘You suspect that Richard’s still alive somewhere?’ she said, her voice a raspy whisper. ‘How could he have survived the fall, or being swept along by the freezing water? Our daughter Nicola died. He did too.’
‘That’s assuming that he was still in the car when it went off the bridge.’ Cooper finally turned and faced her. His features had taken on a hangdog expression. ‘I know it’s not something you wish to contemplate, but he could have jumped clear before the car went through the balustrade.’
‘That isn’t what the police investigation concluded. They said that the car was moving at speed when it hit, it had to be to smash through the barriers, and that—even if Richard had jumped clear and survived—he’d have been severely injured. There would have been signs to show where he struck the ground: blood, clothing fibres, scuff marks, those kinds of things.’
Cooper gave a noncommittal shrug. ‘It sounds as if they took the lazy approach to me. Just because they didn’t see the obvious doesn’t mean that more subtle indicators weren’t there. I dug into the police report, and also others on file concerning the same bridge. The fact that the safety barrier had been damaged by a previous collision seems to have escaped the investigating officers, or they simply discarded it as being unimportant. It suited them to believe that both Richard and Nicola were in the car when it crashed. But it’s easy to conclude that the car wouldn’t have needed to be travelling as fast as they assumed. In fact, a car driving at as little as twenty miles per hour would have had enough force behind it to break through the previously damaged barrier. Your husband could quite easily have jumped clear at the last moment, without leaving any trace on the asphalt.’
‘If that was the case, wouldn’t Nicola have jumped as well?’
‘Not if she was incapacitated in some way. There were bruises on her face, as you may recall from the County Coroner’s report, sustained before she died. Now the lazy thing is to assume that your daughter suffered her injuries when the car struck the river, or while she was being carried along by the floodwaters…’ Cooper allowed the suggestion that Nicola’s bruises had been delivered at the hands of her father to hang, urging Billie to come to her own conclusion.
She shook her head angrily.
‘It’s something you have to consider,’ Cooper said. ‘Your belief was that your estranged husband snatched Nicola, after you refused him access to her during the divorce proceedings. You also believed that he drove the two of them to their deaths out of some bitter sense of revenge. In other words, if he couldn’t have his daughter, then neither could you. But what if his reason for taking her was for an entirely different reason?’
Tears stung Billie’s eyes, but she refused to allow her emotions to overwhelm her. ‘That’s ridiculous. Despite everything, Richard loved our daughter. I can accept that out of torment and irrationality he might—on the spur of the moment—drive them off the bridge in some misguided act of desperation. But no, I’d never believe that he’d set out to purposefully murder Nicola so that he could…what? Disappear? Why would he do that? Where was the gain? Our divorce was acrimonious, and he was contesting ownership of my family home, but disappearing like that would simply mean he’d end up with nothing. In fact, if anything, without having to split everything, not to mention the payout from his life insurance policy, it made me a relatively wealthy person. Isn’t that the exact opposite to what you’d expect from him?’
‘Not if he was attempting to disappear completely, without fear of ever being hunted down. Believe me, Billie, he stood to be far wealthier that way than taking half of your combined assets.’
‘How? What in God’s name are you talking about?’
‘You didn’t know about the cash Richard stashed away in offshore accounts then? Hmm, I can tell by the look on your face that this is all news to you.’
‘I hadn’t the faintest clue,’ Billie said. ‘How much are we talking about here?’
Cooper pulled a notebook out of his coat pocket and opened it to a page marked by a blue ribbon. Billie doubted that he needed to refresh his memory; Cooper’s actions were designed to add gravitas to the announcement. He turned the notebook towards her. ‘Count the zeros, Mrs Womack. And, before you ask, no I haven’t forgotten to add the decimal point.’
Staring at the open page, Billie totted up the zeros as instructed. Before she’d even finished she was shaking her head. ‘No. This can’t be right. There’s simply no way possible. My ex-husband didn’t have access to that kind of money.’
Cooper merely raised his eyebrows.
Billie shook her head.
‘It’s true, Billie,’ Cooper said. ‘Your husband disappeared with more than eighty million dollars.’
Chapter 3
It was evening in Tampa. Most Brits—as I once did—tend to think that it’s always hot in Florida, but not so. There’d been a bit of a cold spell, and for the first time in ages I’d dressed in blue jeans, a navy sweatshirt and black leather jacket. I could still feel the nip in the air, and shivered involuntarily as I walked towards where Rink had parked his Porsche Boxster. It was out of sight of the main strip in an otherwise deserted parking lot.
‘Any movement?’ Rink had wound down the window and leaned out with one elbow dangling over the door. He too had foregone his usual bright attire to pull on a dark-coloured jacket that he’d zipped up to his throat.
‘Not a thing,’ I said. ‘I’m beginning to think that Redmond’s worrying over nothing.’ What were the chances of a repeat of the two previous weekends’ burglaries tonight? Pretty slim, I thought.
‘Who knows? But chances are they see his place as a soft target and will try again.’
‘Hope they come soon,’ I said. ‘Don’t know about you, Rink, but I don’t fancy hanging around all night. It’s bloody freezing out here.’
‘Lovely and warm in here.’ Rink offered a grin.
‘Don’t rub it in.’ I scrubbed my palms vigorously on my opposite upper arms.
‘I thought you Brits were supposed to be used