The King's Deception: A Novel

 

KATHLEEN WAS LED OUTSIDE, HER WRISTS BOUND BEHIND HER back. People on the sidewalk were stopped by the officers so she could pass and she hated the looks on their faces, wondering who she was and what she may have done. What was the purpose of taking her into custody? Of humiliating her? She was a veteran SOCA officer who’d done nothing wrong.

 

They crossed the street and the rear door to one of the police cars was opened. She was helped inside, the door slammed closed. She sat in muted silence, people hustling back and forth outside. Through the tinted window she could see inside the bookstore and the older woman. None of the four officers had made any effort to speak to the proprietor, which only made her more suspicious.

 

What was this about?

 

 

 

MALONE WATCHED AS RICHARDS, HANDS BEHIND HER BACK, was led across the street and stuffed into the back of a police car.

 

“Why did they take her?” Ian asked.

 

“Maybe she wasn’t SOCA at all.”

 

“She was real,” Ian said.

 

He agreed. Everything about her had rung true.

 

Traffic on the narrow street had returned, cars edging along in both directions, the two police cars parked against the far curb, their lights still flashing. What should he do now? Obviously, there’d be no talk between them. Should he just hand over the flash drive to Antrim and go home?

 

Something was wrong.

 

How had the two men known to come here to this bookstore? How had a SOCA agent known to be here, one who knew his name?

 

And Ian’s safety.

 

That was still in question.

 

A black sedan stopped in the street and a man stepped out. Older. Silver haired, dressed in a three-piece suit. He walked with the aid of a cane, crossing the opposite lane of traffic, rounding the police car that held the bound agent, then opening its rear door and easing inside.

 

 

 

IAN COULD NOT BELIEVE HIS EYES AS HE WATCHED THE OLDER man with the cane.

 

A face he would never forget.

 

“In the car that night, outside Oxford Circus,” he said. “The man who wanted the flash drive. The man who told the other bloke to kill me. That’s him.”

 

 

 

 

 

Thirty-two

 

 

KATHLEEN SHOULD HAVE KNOWN.

 

Sir Thomas Mathews.

 

Who sat beside her in the car.

 

“Will you never learn?” he asked. “Shooting up that store. People could have been killed.”

 

“But they weren’t. Odd, wouldn’t you say?”

 

“Is there some implication in that observation?”

 

“Why don’t you tell me?”

 

“I can see now why your supervisors warned me against involving you in this matter. Not worth the bother, I believe, was the phrase they used.”

 

“The man had a gun. There was a woman and child inside. I did what was necessary.”

 

“And where are Mr. Malone and Ian Dunne?”

 

“The Metropolitan Police didn’t find them?”

 

Mathews smiled, a wiry grin that signaled more agitation than amusement. “You would think that, at some point, you might actually learn from your mistakes.”

 

Actually, she had. “Where’s Eva Pazan?”

 

“Dead, I presume. As you reported.”

 

“You and I both know that is not the case. She doesn’t exist. At least not at Oxford.”

 

Mathews sat with both hands resting atop the ivory globe at the end of the walking stick. He kept his gaze out the car’s windscreen.

 

“I underestimated you,” he finally said.

 

“Does that mean I’m not as daft as you thought I would be?”

 

He turned his head and faced her. “It means I underestimated you.”

 

“What are you doing?”

 

“I am protecting this nation. At the moment it faces a serious threat, one with potentially dire consequences. It’s all quite remarkable, actually. Something that occurred five hundred years ago, and yet could still cause so much trouble today.”

 

“I don’t suppose you would share what that is?”

 

“Hardly. But let me make something clear. It is a real threat, one that cannot be ignored, one that your Blake Antrim has forced us, after many centuries, to finally face.”

 

 

 

MALONE STARED AT IAN. “ARE YOU SURE THAT’S THE MAN?”

 

“He had that same cane. A white ball on the end with markings on it, like a globe. Wore a suit just like that one he has on now. It’s him.”

 

The boy’s revelation was even more incredible considering the man.

 

Thomas Mathews.

 

Longtime head of the Secret Intelligence Service.

 

While with the Justice Department he’d several times worked with MI6, twice dealing with Mathews. The man was shrewd, clever, and careful. Always careful. So his presence outside Oxford Circus a month ago, when Farrow Curry was killed, raised a ton of questions.

 

But one rose to the top.

 

“You told me that the man who forced you into the car was the same guy who pushed Curry into the train. That still true?”

 

Ian nodded. “Same bloke.”

 

He realized that killing was part of the intelligence business.

 

But outright murder? Here, on British soil, by British agents? The victim an employee of a close ally? And the head man himself personally involved? That raised the stakes to unimaginable levels.

 

Antrim was into something massive.

 

“He’s been in that car with her awhile,” Ian said.

 

He caught the concern and agreed.

 

“You think she’s in trouble?” Ian asked.

 

Oh, yeah.

 

 

 

KATHLEEN REALIZED HER SITUATION WAS STRAINED. SHE WAS at Mathews’ mercy.

 

“Miss Richards, this is a vital matter the prime minister himself is aware of. As you noted at Queen’s College, laws have been bent, if not outright broken. National interests are at stake.”

 

She caught what had not been uttered. So why are you so much trouble?

 

“You came to me,” she said.

 

“That I did. A mistake, as I now realize.”

 

“You never gave me a chance to do anything.”

 

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