controlling at least herself in this volatile moment.
Strand turned on her. “This is no concern of yours, lady. Get out of here.”
She slowly tilted her head to one side. “No…” It was a plea, not a refusal.
“Get out!” Strand yelled.
“Oh, no, please don’t do this. I can’t… I won’t.”
“Get out!” Strand screamed this time, furious with her, frantic to get her out of there, to get it under control before Schrade arrived. He glanced at Knight, whose eyes were darting back and forth between them. Even in his confusion he was beginning to calculate the meaning behind Mara’s surprising refusal to flee a shocking, dangerous situation.
“You go with me,” she said emphatically, “or I don’t go at all.”
Strand looked at her. She knew very well what she had just done. With that one sentence she had taken them past the turning point. When it was all over, Knight would remember those words. Knight was a witness. It was one thing to kill Schrade… It was over.
“Christ,” Strand said, looking at her. His shoulders sagged. God, what had he done in that fatal moment on Bond Street, when, even against his will, something in his unconscious had frozen his fingers on the trigger of the pistol? He turned to Knight.
“Get up, Carrington.”
This time Knight recognized something familiar in the voice. His eyes narrowed, then he rolled over like a large, awkward child and got to his feet, standing defensively against the newel post.
Strand turned back to Mara. “Okay,” he said, “okay, that’s it, then. It’s over.”
In that instant he could see in her face that she was relieved, that although she had committed herself to him, it had been a commitment she had made in spite of her own deepest feelings, not because of them. God, he didn’t care anymore, he just wanted to be away from it all. He wanted it to be over, and he wanted them to be together and gone and away from it all, even if only for a little while. He would worry about Schrade later. He would treat him the same way most people treated their inevitable last hour of life, by ignoring it entirely until they were unavoidably face to face with it. Why the hell did he think he should be any different?
“Let’s get out of here,” he said. He dropped his arm and turned to Knight. “It’s a long story, Carrington.”
“Harry Strand?!”
“Yeah, it’s me.”
“ Bloody hell, Harry… what’s… A mask?”
“I’m sorry.”
“Harry.” Mara interrupted him. “There’s something else. Claude Corsier is alive, and he was just here.”
Strand turned. “He was here?”
“He left just a little while ago. He was already here when I came in. He’d brought two Schiele drawings, new ones that he’d unearthed somewhere. That’s why Schrade’s coming here, not because of my drawings. It was a coincidence, the drawings. Claude left half an hour ago.”
“Coincidence.” He knew there was no coincidence. He turned back to Knight. “What’s going on here, Carrington?”
Knight, stammering, speaking in bursts, quickly spilled out the story of Corsier and his drawings. In his agitation he confused the sequence of the story and went back to explain and then doubled back again to pick up loose ends. He could hardly speak at all. Though he could not even come close to imagining what was happening here, he knew that he had got caught up in an intrigue that was far beyond his world and his experience. And he knew that it was sinister.
“This is not a coincidence,” Strand said to Mara.
“But how could Claude know…”
“The timing, maybe. Probably. No one could have known about us and the drawings, our schedule. But the Schieles…” He looked at Knight. “The anonymity…” He was talking to himself, thinking out loud. “We’ve all sold to Schrade. We all know what he wanted. What he coveted. I could have chosen Schiele. Claude could have chosen the others. Either way…”
“God, Harry.” Mara was following him. She saw it all taking shape, too.
“Carrington,” Strand said, “Claude knew Schrade was coming this morning? He knew the time?”
“Of course. Yes, yes.”
The doorbell rang.
Everything in Strand’s mind turned inside out.
“Carrington!” he snapped, again pointing the gun at the art dealer. “Get over here.”
Knight looked as though he were going to faint, as though if he let go of the newel post, he would fall down.
“Get over here!”
Knight came over, his face pasty.
Strand looked at Mara. “Get around the corner, out of sight.”
“Harry, there’s got to be another door, a back door…”
“Yes, yes, there’s a back door.” Knight had stopped in the middle of the entry, suddenly hopeful that this could all be made to go away, literally, through a back door. “Oh, please, yes, the back door.”
“Get around the corner,” Strand commanded Mara, his mind suddenly jumping track, changing agendas. He waved at Knight, who cowered over to him like a threatened lapdog. Strand grabbed him, speaking hoarsely.
“Just answer the door and get him inside. If you do anything, if you try to run, I’ll step outside and blow off the back of your head. Open the door, but step back, don’t leave my sight.” He looked at the petrified Knight. “Do you understand?”
Knight nodded.
“Hold yourself together just long enough to play the part. Okay?”
The doorbell rang again.
Knight nodded vigorously.
“Just get him inside,” Strand repeated, stepping back behind the door.
Knight was massaging his hands and whispering to himself, “Shit shit shit shit.” He ran his fingers through his silver locks, shifting his weight repeatedly from one foot to the other in a little mambo. He looked at Strand nervously and punched the button for the electric lock on the door. When it clacked, he opened the door.
“Wolf! Wolf! Good of you… good of you… Come in, come in…” He backed away from the door, stretching out his right arm in a magnanimous gesture of welcome.
Wolfram Schrade was inside.
Strand closed the door and in the same movement put the pistol to the back of Schrade’s neck before he had a chance to react.
“Be very careful,” Strand said.
Schrade froze.
“I’ll explain the gun,” Strand said, remaining out of sight behind Schrade, his left hand on top of Schrade’s left shoulder. “It contains a neurotoxin. If it breaks the skin, you’re dead. In less than a minute. There’s no ‘wounding’ with this.”
Silence.
Knight was standing between Schrade and the stairs, his mouth hanging open stupidly.
“Harry Strand,” Schrade said in his heavily accented English, recognizing the voice.
“Is your driver parked in front?” Strand asked.
“Yes.”
Strand took his left hand off Schrade’s shoulder, reached back without turning around, and punched the electric lock.
“We’re going to get away from the door,” Strand said. “Upstairs.”
They stepped forward, and Schrade caught Mara’s figure in his peripheral vision as she waited inside the gallery doorway. He turned to look at her. He stopped.
“Mara Song.” He said it as if he were ticking off the names on a list.
“Mara Song?” Knight was completely adrift.
Strand pressed the gun into Schrade’s neck again, and they all started up the winding staircase.