That was two years ago. Now he was staring at Henrik Thorvaldsen, their roles reversed. His friend was the one in trouble.
Thorvaldsen remained perched on the edge of the bed, an assault rifle lying across his lap, his face cast with a look of utter defeat.
“I was dreaming about Mexico City earlier,” Malone said. “It’s always the same each time. I never can shoot the third guy.”
“But you did.”
“For some reason, I can’t in the dream.”
“Are you okay?” Thorvaldsen asked Sam Collins.
“I went straight to Mr. Malone-”
“Don’t start that,” he said. “It’s Cotton.”
“Okay. Cotton took care of them.”
“And my shop’s destroyed. Again.”
“It’s insured,” Thorvaldsen made clear.
Malone stared at his friend. “Why did those men come after Sam?”
“I was hoping they wouldn’t. The idea was for them to come after me. That’s why I sent him into town. They apparently were a step ahead of me.”
“What are you doing, Henrik?”
“I’ve spent the past two years searching. I knew there was more to what happened that day in Mexico City. That massacre wasn’t terrorism. It was an assassination.”
He waited for more.
Thorvaldsen pointed at Sam. “This young man is quite bright. His superiors don’t realize just how smart he is.”
Malone spotted tears glistening on the rims of his friend’s eyes. Something he’d never seen before.
“I miss him, Cotton,” Thorvaldsen whispered, still staring at Sam.
He laid a hand on the older man’s shoulders.
“Why did he have to die?” Thorvaldsen whispered.
“You tell me,” Malone said. “Why did Cai die?”
“Elena Ramirez Rico,” Thorvaldsen said, “prosecuted cultural crimes. Mainly art and artifact thefts. That’s big business in Mexico. She was about to indict two men. One a Spaniard, the other a Brit. Both major players in the stolen artifact business. She was murdered before that could happen.”
“Why would her death matter?” Malone asked him. “Another prosecutor would have been assigned.”
“And one was, who declined to pursue the case. All charges were dropped.”
Thorvaldsen studied Malone. He saw that his friend fully understood.
“Who were the two men she was prosecuting?” Malone asked.
“The Spaniard is Amando Cabral. The Brit is Lord Graham Ashby.”
TWELVE
CORSICA
ASHBY SAT ON THE SOFA, SIPPING HIS RUM, WATCHING THE CORSICAN as
“Those four Germans left something with the fifth,” Ashby finally said. “That has long been rumor. But I discovered it to be fact.”
“Thanks to information I provided, months ago.”
He nodded. “That’s right. You controlled the missing pieces. That’s why I came and generously offered what I knew, along with a percentage of the find. And you agreed to share.”
“That I did. But we’ve found nothing. So why have this conversation? Why am I a captive?”
“Captive? Hardly. We’re simply taking a short cruise aboard my boat. Two friends. Visiting.”