looking for him?”

“We want to … talk with him.”

“Talk with him? Really? I get the feeling you want to do more than that.”

Stepka said nothing.

“All right,” Quinn said. “Tell me about the woman.”

“What woman?”

“The woman who is here searching for him.”

“Petra,” Stepka said. “She is the team leader.”

“How many in her team?”

“Now? Just two. She and a man named Mikhail.”

“Why is she interested in me?”

“You have information that will help us find Palavin.”

“I have no such information.”

“Of course you have,” Stepka said. “You’ve been working for him. We need what you know. Petra will find you. She will—”

“Take him off speaker, Scott,” Quinn said. He shared a look with Orlando.

There was a faint click, then Bethel said, “Okay, it’s just me.”

“Put him on ice for right now. Someplace no one can find him for a few days. I’ll let you know when you can release him. But don’t hurt him. Feed him and give him a place to sleep.”

“I can do that.”

“Good,” Quinn said. “We’ll be in touch.”

As soon as he hung up, Orlando said, “What do you think?”

“If Palavin really was Wills’s client, then that might explain why Annabel Taplin had his picture with mine. But even then, whatever these Russians are up to could mess things up for us. My family’s safety comes first. I’m not going to allow them to get in my way.” He paused. “What we really need to do is have a little chat with Ms. Taplin. Can you find out if she’s returned to London yet?”

Orlando smiled. “I can do that.”

Chapter 32

Petra visited restaurants and grocery stores and hotels and massage parlors and whatever else she could find that was owned and operated by Russian expats. At first, when they realized she was also Russian, they were friendly enough. But when she showed the drawing of Quinn and started asking more questions, they became wary. Some refused to give her any more answers, while others kept their responses to one or two words.

She knew the look in their eyes well. She’d borne it herself more times than she could remember. It was the fear and suspicion that came with having grown up in the former Soviet Union.

She returned to the apartment just before 9 p.m., unsuccessful and completely drained.

“Mikhail?” she called out.

There was no response.

She sat down at the table and tried calling Stepka, but he didn’t answer. So she left a message, folded her arms, and lay her head down, intending to rest her eyes for a moment.

The sound of a key turning in the lock of the front door made her snap back up. The side of her mouth was damp, and she realized she’d fallen asleep. She glanced at her watch, surprised to see a half hour had passed.

She rubbed her face as she turned toward the door. That’s when she got her second surprise. It wasn’t Mikhail. It was a young woman.

She was beautiful. Long blonde hair that had been clipped in place so that it flowed down her back, bright blue eyes behind a fashionable pair of semi-rimless glasses, and a trim but appropriately rounded figure that would go unnoticed by no one.

“Who are you?” Petra asked, rising from her chair.

An instant later Mikhail entered behind the woman. “Please,” he said to the girl in Russian, motioning toward the table. “Sit down.” The woman looked at him uncertainly, so he smiled and pointed again. “Please.”

Once she’d sat, Mikhail signaled for Petra to join him near the door.

“Who is she?” Petra whispered.

“Her name is Natalia,” he said. “She recognized the picture.”

Petra’s eyes widened as she glanced at the girl.

“I was checking a couple of Russian-run hotels in the West End,” Mikhail went on.

“She saw him in a hotel?” Petra asked.

“Well, yes, but not the one I found her in. She works at two different places. Where I met her, and another in Belgravia called the Silvain Hotel. It’s not owned by Russians, but they employ several of our people.”

“So she saw him there?”

Mikhail led Petra to the table, then said to Natalia, “Tell her what you told me.”

The girl looked nervous. “A man like the one in the picture arrived at our hotel last night.”

“The Silvain,” Mikhail clarified.

“Yes.”

“Describe him,” Petra said.

Natalia bit her lip, then closed her eyes for a moment. “Brown hair, dark and cut short above his ears. I don’t know age, probably less than forty.”

“Height? Weight?”

“Maybe five foot ten. Normal weight. In shape.”

“Did you at least get his name?”

“The last name he used was Shelby. The first name I don’t remember. I wasn’t the one who checked him in, so I didn’t look at his passport.”

Shelby? The name meant nothing to Petra. “Did he arrive alone?”

“Yes.”

“And you’re sure he looked like the man in the drawing.”

“Very close,” Natalia said. “Please, I need to leave. I’m supposed to be at work by ten, so I’m already going to be late.”

“Where are you working tonight?” Petra asked.

“The Silvain.”

Petra looked at Mikhail. “What do you think?”

“It’s worth checking.”

She nodded. It’s what she’d been thinking, too. To Natalia, she said, “Did you see him leave this morning yet?”

“No, but my shift was over at seven a.m. Can I go now?”

“We’ll all go,” Petra grabbed the girl by the arm and started to pull her up. “Come on. We don’t want you to be late.”

* * *

Despite her reluctance, Natalia proved more than adequate. Not only did she supply Petra and Mikhail with all the information the hotel had on James Shelby, she also learned from one of her colleagues that Mr. Shelby had left the hotel around 8 a.m. that morning and had not returned.

To top it off, Natalia made a copy of the keycard to Mr. Shelby’s room.

Petra and Mikhail had waited down the street, out of sight, while all this had gone on. When Natalia showed up with the information and the key, Petra paid her the two hundred pounds she had promised her.

“And our rooms?” Petra asked.

“Two,” Natalia said quickly. “In the same part of the hotel as Mr. Shelby, but one floor up. I’ve put them on hold, but you’ll have to check in at the desk.”

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