chapter 24
Tracy's house in Eaton Square was a haven. It was in one of the most beautiful areas in London, with the old Georgian houses
facing tree-filled private parks. Nannies in stiffly starched uniforms wheeled their small charges in status-named prams along the
graveled paths, and children played their games. I miss Amy, Tracy thought.
Tracy walked along the storied old streets and shopped at the greengrocers and the chemist on Elizabeth Street; she marveled at
the variety of brilliantly colored flowers sold outside the little shops.
Gunther Hartog saw to it that Tracy contributed to the right charities and met the right people. She dated wealthy dukes and
impoverished earls and had numerous proposals of marriage. She was young and beautiful and rich, and she seemed so
vulnerable.
"Everyone thinks you're a perfect target," Gunther laughed. "You've really done splendidly for yourself, Tracy. You're set now. You
have everything you'll ever need."
It was true. She had money in safe-deposit boxes all over Europe, the house in London, and a chalet in St. Moritz. Everything she
would ever need. Except for someone to share it with. Tracy thought of the life she had almost had, with a husband and a baby.
Would that ever be possible for her again? She could never reveal to any man who she really was, nor could she live a lie by
concealing her past. She had played so many parts, she was no longer sure who she really was, but she did know that she could
never return to the life she had once had. It's all right, Tracy thought defiantly. A lot of people are lonely. Gunther is right. I have
everything.
She was giving a cocktail party the following evening, the first since her return from Venice.
"I'm looking forward to it," Gunther told her. "Your parties are the hottest ticket in London."
Tracy said fondly, "Look who my sponsor is."
"Who's going to be there?"
"Everybody," Tracy told him.
Everybody turned out to be one more guest than Tracy had anticipated. She had invited the Baroness Howarth, an attractive young
heiress, and when Tracy saw the baroness arrive, she walked over to greet her. The greeting died on Tracy's lips. With the
baroness was Jeff Stevens.
"Tracy, darling, I don't believe you know Mr. Stevens. Jeff, this is Mrs. Tracy Whitney, your hostess."
Tracy said stiffly, "How do you do, Mr. Stevens?"
Jeff took Tracy's hand, holding it a fraction longer than necessary. "Mrs. Tracy Whitney?" he said. "Of course! I was a friend of your
husband's. We were together in India."
"Isn't that exciting!" Baroness Howarth exclaimed.
"Strange, he never mentioned you," Tracy said coolly.
"Didn't he, really? I'm surprised. Interesting old fella. Pity he had to go the way he did."
"Oh, what happened?" Baroness Howarth asked.
Tracy glared at Jeff. "It was nothing, really."
"Nothing!" Jeff said reproachfully. "If I remember correctly, he was hanged in India."
"Pakistan," Tracy said tightly. "And I believe I do remember my husband mentioning you. How is your wife?"
Baroness Howarth looked at Jeff. "You never mentioned that you were married, Jeff."
"Cecily and I are divorced."
Tracy smiled sweetly. "I meant Rose."
"Oh, that wife."
Baroness Howarth was astonished. "You've been married twice?"
"Once," he said easily. "Rose and I got an annulment. We were very young." He started to move away.
Tracy asked, "But weren't there twins?"
Baroness Howarth exclaimed, "Twins?"
"They live with their mother," Jeff told her. He looked at Tracy: "I can't tell you how pleasant it's been talking to you, Mrs. Whitney, but
we mustn't monopolize you." And he took the baroness's hand and walked away.
The following morning Tracy ran into Jeff in an elevator at Harrods. The store was crowded with shoppers. Tracy got off at the
second floor. As she left the elevator, she turned to Jeff and said in a loud, clear voice, "By the way, how did you ever come out on
that morals charge?" The door closed, and Jeff was trapped in an elevator filled with indignant strangers.
Tracy lay in bed that night thinking about Jeff, and she had to laugh. He really was a charmer. A scoundrel, but an engaging one.
She wondered what his relationship with Baroness Howarth was: She knew very well what his relationship with Baroness Howarth
was. Jeff and I are two of a kind, Tracy thought. Neither of them would ever settle down. The life they led was too exciting and
stimulating and rewarding.
She turned her thoughts toward her next job. It was going to take place in the South of France, and it would be a challenge. Gunther
had told her that the police were looking for a gang. She fell asleep with a smile on her lips.
In his hotel room in Paris, Daniel Cooper was reading the reports Inspector Trignant had given him. It was 4:00 A.M., and Cooper
had been poring over the papers for hours, analyzing the imaginative mix of robberies and swindles. Some of the scams Cooper
was familiar with, but others were new to him. As Inspector Trignant had mentioned, all the victims had unsavory reputations. This
gang apparently thinks they're Robin Hoods, Cooper reflected.
He had nearly finished. There were only three reports left. The one on top was headed BRUSSELS. Cooper opened the cover and
glanced at the report. Two million dollars' worth of jewelry had been stolen from the wall safe of a Mr. Van Ruysen, a Belgian
stockbroker, who had been involved in some questionable financial dealings.
The owners were away on vacation, and the house was empty, and - Cooper caught something on the page that made his heart
quicken. He went back to the first sentence and began rereading the report, focusing on every word. This one varied from the others
in one significant respect: The burglar had set off an alarm, and when the police arrived, they were greeted at the door by a woman
wearing a filmy negligee. Her hair was tucked into a curler cap, and her face was thickly covered with cold cream. She claimed to
be a houseguest of the Van Ruysens'. The police accepted her story, and by the time they were able to check it out with the absent
owners, the woman and the jewelry had vanished.
Cooper laid down the report. Logic, logic.
Inspector Trignant was losing his patience. "You're wrong. I tell you it is impossible for one woman to be responsible for all these
crimes."
"There's a way to check it out," Daniel Cooper said.
"How?"
"I'd like to see a computer run on the dates and locations of the last few burglaries and swindles that fit into this category."
"That's simple enough, but - "
"Next, I would like to get an immigration report on every female American tourist who was in those same cities at the times the
crimes were committed. It's possible that she uses false passports some of the time, but the probabilities are that she also uses her
real identity."
Inspector Trignant was thoughtful. "I see your line of reasoning, monsieur." He studied the little man before him and found himself
half hoping that Cooper was mistaken. He was much too sure of himself. "Very well. I will set the wheels in motion."
The first burglary in the series had been committed in Stockholm. The report from Interpol Sektionen Rikspolis Styrelsen, the Interpol
branch in Sweden, listed the American tourists in Stockholm that week, and the names of the women were fed into a computer. The
next city checked was Milan. When the names of American women tourists in Milan at the time of the burglary was cross-checked
with the names of women who had been in Stockholm during that burglary, there were fifty-five names on the list. That list was
checked against the names of female Americans who had been in Ireland during a swindle, and the list was reduced to fifteen.
Inspector Trignant handed the printout to Daniel Cooper.
"I'll start checking these names against the Berlin swindle," Inspector Trignant said, "and - "
Daniel Cooper looked up. "Don't bother."
The name at the top of the list was Tracy Whitney.
With something concrete finally to go on, Interpol went into action. Red circulations, which meant top priority, were sent to each
member nation, advising them to be on the lookout for Tracy Whitney.
"We're also Teletyping green notices," Inspector Trignant told Cooper.
"Green notices?"
"We use a color-code 'system. A red circulation is top priority, blue is an inquiry for information about a suspect, a green notice puts
police departments on warning that an individual is under suspicion and should be watched, black is an inquiry into unidentified
bodies. X-D signals that a message is very urgent, while D is urgent. No matter what country Miss Whitney goes to, from the
moment she checks through customs, she will be under observation."
The following day Telephoto pictures of Tracy Whitney from the Southern Louisiana Penitentiary for Women were in the hands of
Interpol.
Daniel Cooper put in a call to J. J. Reynolds's home. The phone rang a dozen times before it was answered.
"Hello..."
"I need some information."
"Is that you, Cooper? For Christ's sake, it's four o'clock in the morning here. I was sound - "
"I want you to send me everything you can find on Tracy Whitney. Press clippings, videotapes - everything."
"What's happening over - ?"
Cooper had hung up.
One day I'll kill the son of a bitch, Reynolds swore.
Before, Daniel Cooper had been only casually interested in Tracy Whitney. Now she was his assignment. He taped her
photographs on the walls of his small Paris hotel room and read all the newspaper accounts about her. He rented a video cassette
player and ran and reran the television news shots of Tracy after her sentencing, and after her release from prison. Cooper sat in his
darkened room hour after hour, looking at the film, and the first glimmering of suspicion became a certainty. "You're the gang of
women, Miss Whitney," Danie Cooper said aloud. Then he flicked the rewind button of the cassette player once more.
If Tomorrow Comes
Sidney Sheldon's books
- If Books Could Kill
- Deadly Gift
- Lucifer's Tears
- The Face of a Stranger
- The Silent Cry
- The Sins of the Wolf
- The Dark Assassin
- Death of a Stranger
- Seven Dials
- The Whitechapel Conspiracy
- Anne Perry's Christmas Mysteries
- The Sheen of the Silk
- Weighed in the Balance
- The Twisted Root
- Funeral in Blue
- Defend and Betray
- Execution Dock
- Cain His Brother
- A Breach of Promise
- A Dangerous Mourning
- A Sudden Fearful Death
- Gone Girl
- Dark Places
- Angels Demons
- Deception Point
- Digital Fortress
- The Da Vinci Code
- The Lost Symbol
- After the Funeral
- The Adventure of the Christmas Pudding
- A Pocket Full of Rye
- A Murder is Announced
- A Caribbean Mystery
- Ordeal by Innocence
- Evil Under the Sun
- Endless Night
- Lord Edgware Dies
- 4:50 from Paddington
- A Stranger in the Mirror
- After the Darkness
- Are You Afraid of the Dark
- Bloodline
- Master of the Game
- Memories of Midnight
- Mistress of the Game
- Morning Noon and Night
- Nothing Lasts Forever
- Rage of Angels
- Tell Me Your Dreams
- The Best Laid Plans
- The Doomsday Conspiracy
- The Naked Face
- The Other Side of Me
- The Sands of Time
- The Sky Is Falling
- The Stars Shine Down
- Windmills of the Gods
- Pretty Little Liars #14
- Ruthless: A Pretty Little Liars Novel
- The Lying Game #5: Cross My Heart, Hope to Die
- The Lying Game #6: Seven Minutes in Heaven
- True Lies: A Lying Game Novella
- Ali's Pretty Little Lies (Pretty Little Liars: Prequel)
- Everything We Ever Wanted
- Pretty Little Liars #12: Burned
- Stunning
- The First Lie
- All the Things We Didn't Say
- Pretty Little Liars #13: Crushed
- Pretty Little Liars #15: Toxic
- Pretty Little Liars
- Pretty Little Liars: Pretty Little Secrets
- The Good Girls
- The Heiresses
- The Perfectionists
- The Sacred Lies of Minnow Bly
- Vicious
- This Old Homicide
- Homicide in Hardcover
- Murder Under Cover
- The Lies That Bind
- 3:59
- A Cookbook Conspiracy
- Charlie, Presumed Dead
- Manhattan Mayhem
- Ripped From the Pages
- Tangled Webs
- The Book Stops Here
- A Baby Before Dawn
- A Hidden Secret: A Kate Burkholder Short Story
- After the Storm: A Kate Burkholder Novel
- Her Last Breath: A Kate Burkholder Novel
- The New Neighbor
- A Cry in the Night
- Breaking Silence
- Gone Missing
- Operation: Midnight Rendezvous
- Sworn to Silence
- The Phoenix Encounter