The History Thief: Ten Days Lost (The Sterling Novels) (62 page)

BOOK: The History Thief: Ten Days Lost (The Sterling Novels)
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S
onia held Michael where he lay on the floor; her body was riddled with those small convulsions that come with fear, fatigue, and a strength having been long broken. She could hardly catch her breath as she pulled with some difficulty his cheek to hers.

“He’s dead.” The voice was strong, deep, and sure.

Sonia uneasily raised her head toward York; the muscles of her face trembled and her voice shook as she asked, “Who are you?”

A rough and calloused hand reached toward Sonia’s cheek and wiped away some of her tears. Michael’s voice was pained but steady, and he said, “Sonia, let me introduce to you Staff Sergeant Jonathon York—United States Special Forces. He’s the one that found you.”

Sonia offered York a weak but genuine smile and then stood.

Putting her arms around York, she said, “Thank you, Jonathon. Thank you for saving my husband’s life and mine, too.”

York looked a bit uncomfortable but awkwardly reciprocated her embrace.

“I thought you were dead, kid,” said Michael matter-of-factly.

“Yeah, me too. That guy shot me, but my Kevlar vest took most of the bullet’s force. It hit a seam, causing a flesh wound; a little bleeding, nothing more. The force knocked the wind completely out of me and put me flat on my ass. I passed out.”

Suddenly York was ashamed for having cursed in front of a lady. His face went slightly flushed as he corrected himself, “Oh, sorry, ma’am; I meant on my backside—it knocked me flat on my backside.”

“No need to apologize, Jonathon; I’ve heard worse,” replied Sonia as she nodded toward her husband.

York smirked.

Michael pushed himself to a seated position but fell immediately onto his side. He groaned oddly.

Sonia ran to him and dropped to her knees. Professional instinct took over as she triaged Michael.

It took but a moment to find the problem; it was made easier, knowing that she had the same one. For nearly two days, she had felt the increasing, recurring surges of burning spikes ravage down her leg.

Sonia applied pressure to the spot on Michael’s leg where they had injected the device. “They put one in me, too, Michael,” she said quietly.

The words were difficult to say; Michael blamed himself. “I know. I am so sorry, Sonia. This is my fault. You should have never been a part of this. I should have quit the Company when I had the chance.”

Sonia’s reply to her husband was stern. “Stop that, Michael! Just stop right now; don’t you dare blame yourself for this! I won’t have it! I have accepted what you do and know full well the risks as the wife of the deputy director of the Clandestine Services. This world needs you, but it doesn’t need some whining sap that puts his tail between his legs every time things get a bit tough!”

Michael’s couldn’t help it when he smiled at the fire in his wife.

“Now what? What’s going to happen?”

Michael remained silent. He didn’t want to give her the answer. But she knew what it would be. The outcome didn’t look good.

Michael slumped flat to the floor. He saw the dead History Thief on one side of the room; he saw the dejected look on York’s face. He didn’t look at Sonia, but he knew that pain would be draped over her gaze.

He couldn’t bring himself to see her this way.

Instead he traced the walls of the room with his eyes until the path put his stare into the hallway. A small lamp was on a decorative table doing its best to keep the narrow passage illuminated. Its low-wattage light spilled onto the white Parian marble.

Its cord was slightly frayed.

“Michael, what are we supposed to do?” asked Sonia again. She wanted an answer, one that Michael didn’t seem to have.

Michael laughed quietly when he thought about the safety hazard created by the frayed cord; it was a bit dangerous. It was an absurd thought to have had. He was minutes from death, his wife hours, and all he could think about was a damn frayed lamp cord.

Michael stared at the lamp wishing a light bulb of his own would turn on over his own head.

And then one did.

Michael closed his eyes and calculated the possibilities. The answer was always the same. Opening his eyes, he reached up and pulled Sonia close. He kissed her deeply and held her tightly.

Pulling apart slightly from one another, Sonia smiled at her husband and caressed his rough cheeks. She put the tip of her nose to his and absorbed every smell, feel, and sensation from him that she could.

Quietly, she said, “Penny for your thoughts.”

Michael stared through her as if lost in thought.

Sonia knew the new look that blanketed his face.

“What, Michael? What is it?”

“The cord, woman, that goddamned cord!” he shouted as he pushed her away from him.

He tried to stand, but fell. “Shit!”

And then he dragged himself with his elbows into the hall. His legs were near useless.

Sonia leaped to her feet, and York ran to his side.

“What is it, Doc? What are you doing?”

With no reason to maintain his pride, Michael commanded, “Kid, grab my arm and drag me to that goddamn lamp; hurry!”

York obeyed without question.

Michael grimaced as his underling pulled him like a sack of dirty laundry down the hall.

Sonia was confused. “What are you doing, Michael, I don’t understand…” and then she stopped mid-sentence. Sonia stared at the lamp. Her eyes found the cord.
The cord.
She knew exactly what he was doing.

“You can’t! It’ll kill you, Michael!”

Michael cocked his mouth to the side; his response was a tad sarcastic. “Kind of already dead, aren’t we, honey.”

Turning to York, Michael was quite clear in his orders. “Kid, yank that cord out of the back of the lamp. Shove it into my thigh! Hold for a three-count!”

There was no conversation, no questions. With conviction, York did what he was told.

As he was about to shove the cord into Michael’s leg, Michael put his hand up and shouted, “Wait!”

He motioned for Sonia to come closer. When she did, he took her by the hand and pulled her toward him until their bodies melted into one. He kissed her deeply and said, “I love you, Sonia. This’ll work, trust me.”

“Your heart might stop,” she said through tears.

“You’re the MD; if it does, just do your thing,” Michael said almost casually as he gently dropped her hand and pushed her away.

Michael balled his fists, prepared himself, and nodded to York. “Threecounts. Do it!”

Sonia covered her eyes and wanted to look away but stared through her fingers.

There was no hesitation. York shoved the cord into Michael’s leg; Michael’s teeth smashed together and sputum emerged from both his mouth and nose. Flesh burned. His body went rigid as his eyes rolled white.

York counted silently as told:
one-and-two-and-three-and

The electricity ripped through Michael’s nervous system, muscle, and bone. Inside of his femoral artery, the small implanted device’s circuitry burned until destroyed.

It was rendered inoperable.

York dropped the cord and immediately went to Michael’s carotid artery. He felt for a moment and then put his head to Michael’s heart. He wanted to be sure.

York pulled his hand back and high into the air; he couldn’t help it when he smiled widely. Releasing his hand from its high position above, he slapped Michael across the face, to the surprise of Sonia, who jumped a bit.

“What are you doing?” yelled Sonia at York.

York looked at Michael, whose eyes were still closed, and raised his hand again for another strike, but this time, as he brought it down, Michael’s hand thrust out and grabbed York by the wrist.

Answering his wife’s question, Michael said, “I think he’s trying to take advantage of the situation.”

Both York and Sonia smiled as she said, “I can understand.”

Michael sat up; his nose cringed at the smell of burnt flesh, and he rubbed his thigh with some vigor. Sounding almost hurt, he replied, “Now what’s that supposed to mean?”

“Honey, I love you more than anything, so don’t take this the wrong way, but you can be kind of hard to live with.”

Michael stood up, uneasily testing his legs, but he found his balance. His gait was still uneven as he moved closer to his wife. Bringing her closer, he kissed her once more. She held onto him tightly and then squeezed him even tighter as she buried her face into his chest.

“How did you know it would work?” she asked through new tears.

“I didn’t.” Michael’s response was pithy.

He pulled Sonia’s face upward until their eyes met. “It will take more than some thief’s bloodlust and a little bomb in my leg to take me from you. Now,” Michael’s eyes grew serious, “it’s your turn.”

It was then that Sonia was reminded that she, too, had the same downwardcounting device in her leg.

“Lay down, Sonia; take a breath, hold it in, and close your eyes.”

Sonia looked scared, but she complied.

Michael gave her hand a squeeze and then let go. He nodded to York who quickly repeated the process.

Michael held his breath, too.

York dropped the cord and felt for her pulse. After a moment, he nodded in the affirmative toward Michael.

Michael released his breath in relief. He told York, “Kid, if you even so much as think of slapping her, I’ll kick your ass.”

Sonia smiled painfully at the quip.

Michael helped his wife to her feet. Going to one knee, he applied pressure to the spot into which York had shoved the cord. “You okay?” he asked.

“I think so,” Sonia replied. “Let me take a look.”

Michael pulled his hand away, and Sonia inspected the wound. “Nothing a bit of Neosporin and a couple of Tylenols won’t cure.”

Michael smiled and then walked back into what had been his wife’s cell for nearly forty-eight hours. The History Thief was clearly dead. Across his face was not the look of a man whose life had been lost but that of a man who appeared content. Squatting to the thief’s side, Michael didn’t waste any time wondering what had driven the man to madness.

He didn’t care. That had stopped long ago.

Picking up the vellum, Michael unrolled it; wrapped inside the vellum was the flash drive. Michael shook his head as he read the old piece of calfskin once more.

Without looking at the audience behind him, he barked, “Time to get moving.” Rolling the vellum back into a tight tube with the flash drive still inside of it, he shoved them into his coat.

His face turning serious, without another word, he moved quickly down the hallway. Sonia and York followed close behind.

Shouting out to her husband, Sonia asked, “Where are we going?”

Without as much as a backward glance, Michael answered, “You’ve always wanted to take a trip to Rome; now’s your chance.”

Sonia and York looked at one another; both thought the same question:

Rome?

CHAPTER SEVENTY-SEVEN

AND THEN THERE WERE
THREE LEAVING THE BOIS

 

G
erald was growing tired of the cold as he waited. He stared at his watch.

The hour had passed.

Someone was dead.

Who?

The answer appeared suddenly.

He wasn’t shocked to see the Americans; silently he had rooted for them over the frog. But he was shocked as he stood in the shadows and not two, but three people emerged from the thief’s building.

Gerald kept his distance but trailed them as ordered. At the same time, he thought,
Well, if things ain’t just gettin’ more interesting…

CHAPTER SEVENTY-EIGHT

INTIMATE SECRETS
67 RUE DU CHABROL #4

 

T
he prostitutes were finishing up their shifts; many looked more than tired and unkempt, a few had new bruises. Michael and York ignored them, but Sonia felt slightly embarrassed. She wasn’t sure why. Maybe it was because she was a woman with two men, in a place where that meant only one thing.

One of the few prostitutes that remained laughed.

Sonia tightened her collar and looked at the pavement.

They were on Rue du Chabrol and were walking fast. Then the men stopped.

Michael inserted his key into the brass lock of the large, wooden door.

Quickly they climbed the stairs.

Danielle had been watching desperately from the fourth-floor window for hours. When she had seen Michael, her heart had fluttered, followed by a long breath of relief.

Then she saw Sonia; she didn’t know what to think, or what to do.

Before Michael could open the door to the flat, it flung open, startling Michael and York—and Sonia.

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